Is The Koch Network Winning Its War On Occupational Licensing? – TPM

When Joe Biden launched his presidential campaign in late April at a Teamsters hall in Pittsburgh, his speech was characteristically long on talk of restoring Americas heart and soul and short on specifics. But after noting that workers feel powerless, too often humiliated and bellowing, I make no apologies; I am a union man! he mentioned another way in which workers were being screwed by runaway corporate profiteers: Why should someone who braids hair have to get 600 hours of training? he demanded to know. It makes no sense. Theyre making it harder and harder in a whole range of professions, all to keep competition down.

The crowd sort of cheered, in a half-hearted and rather puzzled way, because thats what theyd come to do. But Bidens speech or rather, those three sentences in the middle of it prompted loud and sustained applause from small-government conservatives and libertarians. At Real Clear Politics, former Federalist and Washington Examiner reporter Philip Wegmann gloried in the vision of reliably Democratic voters all cheering the kind of government deregulation that has been the pet project of libertarian billionaires like Charles and David Koch for half a decade, expressing the hope that Bidens shout-out could begin a larger national discussion about state and local licensing rules that govern everything from hair braiding to pet walking. Shoshana Weissmann, a fellow at the Koch-allied R Street Institute, called it a BIG DEAL, especially for a Democrat, not to mention a big win. Clark Neily, a vice president at the libertarian Cato Institute, was so carried away that he cracked, heck, I might even vote for him.

It was, indeed, a landmark moment of sorts for one of the oddest and most successful propaganda and policy campaigns in recent years: the Koch networks legal, legislative, academic, and public-relations crusade against occupational licensure the state and local rules under which professional boards, from doctors and nurses to truckers and electricians, certify that workers in hundreds of occupations are properly trained to do their jobs safely and well. Over the past half-century, as membership in labor unions has plummeted and manufacturing work has given way to service jobs, the number of professions requiring licenses has risen on an inverse curve; somewhere between one-quarter and one-third of American workers now go through mandated hours of training, take tests, and pay fees that allow them to legally practice their chosen trades. It can be a hassle, in terms of time and money. But licensed workers earn, on average, 15 percent higher wages about the same benefit that union membership yields.

Free-market purists hate licensing with a red-hot passion always have, ever since Milton Friedman railed about the incipient rise of silly licensure laws in his 1962 classic, Capitalism and Freedom. Licensing is just as offensive as organized labor, writes Wegmann of Real Clear Politics, because both create barriers to entry into the workforce and shield workers from increased competition from newcomers. For decades, conservative and libertarian economists have cooked up studies showing that licensed services cost consumers more, that the work of licensed professionals might not be substantially higher in quality, and that licensings only real benefit is to the trade groups that get to oversee it along with state and municipal governments that take a cut, and training schools and community colleges that receive tuition for required courses. Its downright un-American and economically unwise, as the Koch-funded Institute for Justice puts it, for people to need permission slips from the government to do a job. Its socialism on wheels.

As the number of jobs requiring licensure multiplied over the years from dozens to hundreds, the howling from the free-marketeers grew louder. Except nobody else was listening. In the mainstream, most people viewed job licenses if they thought about them at all as ways to ensure safety and quality: the government was guaranteeing that you could hire an electrician to rewire your house, say, and be pretty sure shed know how not to set the place on fire. Licensure also gives consumers a meaningful way to complain when the house is set ablaze, or when an elderly parent or a child is mistreated by a caregiver; the boards can take away licenses just as they can grant them. What could be controversial about that?

But just as Friedman predicted those many decades ago, licensing got a little out of hand. While licensing requirements arent typically onerous for those who want them the average is $209 in fees, one exam, and nine months of training in some states, for some jobs, they can be: Aspiring cosmetologists in a few places need 2,100 hours of beauty school training at a cost upwards of $20,000, to cite an example that critics cant seem to repeat often enough. Some states license jobs that involve no clear public health or safety concerns. Those requirements provide grist for the anti-licensing mills: Do florists in Louisiana, for example, really need to be licensed?

Soon after the Kochs funded its inception in the early 1990s, the Institute for Justice a legal nonprofit that likes to call itself the national law firm for liberty began challenging licensing in court. The lawyers at IJ cannily chose cases that were low-hanging fruit, suing on behalf of aspiring and aggrieved casket-makers, tour guides, limousine businesses, computer technicians, eyebrow-threaders and, yes, florists.As a bonus, these peoples stories why do I need an expensive license for that? made lively human-interest fodder for local news. The results of the litigation were mixed, but in some instances, states and cities deregulated these occupations to get clear of the lawsuits. And some non-libertarian economists, most notably President Obamas chief economic adviser, the late Alan Krueger, began to agree that licensing was locking some low-income Americans out of good jobs.

That was pretty much the extent of anti-licensing activism, until the Koch brothers decided they needed to rebrand their image. By 2014, Charles and David (who died in August) desperately needed a public relations facelift. Their massive corporate empire, Koch Industries, had become known for dangerous workplaces and for being one of the countrys top air, water and climate polluters. Their high-dollar activism on behalf of libertarian policies and far-right Republican candidates was making them equally toxic to manyespecially after the rise of the Tea Party, which had been organized and underwritten by their main political arm, Americans for Prosperity, and the resulting radicalism that roiled state capitals and gridlocked Congress. On the Senate floor, Majority Leader Harry Reid began regularly ripping into the Kochs for trying to buy America, once famously declaring, Its time that the American people spoke out against this terrible dishonesty of these two brothers who are about as un-American as anyone that I can imagine.

So the Kochs did what mega-billionaires do. They hired a pricey team of public-relations specialists, led by a PR whiz for the tobacco industry, and embarked upon what The New Yorkers Jane Mayer called the best image overhaul that money can buy. After spending zilch on corporate advertising in 2013, Koch Industries flooded the airwaves in 2014 and 2015 with soft-focus ads about their life-giving products and their happy, diverse employees. More important, they sought out new policy initiatives to make them, in the words of public-relations specialist Mike Paul, look more compassionateand so their theme is that they care about the poor.

The Kochs started doing all kinds of unexpected things. They poured money into a nonprofit group, the Libre Initiative, with a mission to equip the Hispanic community with the tools they need to be prosperous; the initiative began handing out free school supplies, Turkeys at Thanksgiving, and offering Spanish-language drivers education, English-proficiency classes, and free tax-preparation assistance. They gave $25 million to the United Negro College Fund. They started initiatives that offered healthy life style advice in low-income neighborhoods. They bankrolled criminal justice reform efforts, partnering with liberal organizations like the ACLU and NAACP. And in 2016, under the guise of defending low-income Americans right to earn an honest living, they declared war on occupational licensing.

* * *

A few days before Christmas in 2015, the Anchorage Dispatch News published an op-ed by Mark Holden, Koch Industries senior vice president. What should Alaska lawmakers New Years resolutions be? Holden asked. I have a suggestion: Break down barriers to opportunity for the least fortunate. He knew just how they could do it: Elected officials in Anchorage City Hall and the state government in Juneau should start by rolling back burdensome occupational licensing regulations, which stand in the way of low-income job-seekers and budding entrepreneurs.

After reading Holdens piece, which cited evidence from a Koch-funded think tank to bolster his argument, Dispatch News columnist Dermot Cole finding it a little odd that a powerful Kochster would be taking the time to write about job licenses in Alaska did a little digging around. He discovered that at least 35 papers across the country had published nearly identical op-eds by Holden, with just the cities and states and a few fill-in-the-blank statistics about their licensing laws altered. There were New Years resolutions for legislators in Reno, Nevada; Portland, Maine; Casper, Wyoming; Oklahoma City; Fort Myers, Florida; Wilmington, Delaware the list went on. Its just like a Mad Lib, if Lib were short for Libertarian, commented Andy Cush at Gawker. The job licensing argument, he noted, is an unsurprising point for a Koch executive, considering his companys stringent opposition to government regulation of all kinds.

Holdens New Years resolutions signaled the blast-off for a public-relations blitz behind licencing reform that hasnt slowed down since. Publications like USA Today were writing uncritical features about the newly discovered plague of occupational licensing, and the Kochs fledgling campaign against, as Holden told the paper, government overreach that is restricting the ability for people to help improve their lives and remove barriers to opportunity. When the reporter asked how much the Koch network would spend on the effort, Holden responded: We dont constrain ourselves by a budget.

Indeed, pretty much every big tentacle of the Kochtopus the best of many nicknames for the sprawling policy, political, academic, industrial, and media empire would be activated in the drive to gut occupational regulations. The Institute for Justice would step up the pace of its lawsuits. The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) would write model bills for state legislators to copy-and-paste, and promote them at the lavish conferences it throws to wine-and-dine conservative lawmakers. Americans for Prosperity would organize its state chapters the largest, in Wisconsin, has 130,000 volunteer activists, eight field offices, and a handful of paid organizers behind those proposals. Koch-funded think tanks, including a newly opened one at Saint Francis University called the Knee Center for the Study of Occupational Regulation, would churn out research demonstrating the damage wrought by licensing cartels.

Meanwhile, Koch-funded websites like the libertarian Reason and the right-wing Daily Caller, along with the always-friendly Wall Street Journal, would publish op-eds by Koch allies, treat each new Koch-funded study and ALEC-inspired piece of legislation as news, profile the lawmakers sponsoring the bills, and gin up outrage with feature stories about the human casualties of runaway licensing the Institute for Justice was representing in court. When the Kochs were rethinking their image, Arthur C. Brooks, president of the (yes, Koch-funded) American Enterprise Institute, had advised them to lead with vulnerable people in making the case for their free-market agenda. Telling stories matters, he said. By telling stories, we can soften people.

So the Koch network told stories. There was the one about the boy shoveling his grandmothers snow in Normandy, Missouri, who received a warning from police because he didnt have a permit for snow-shoveling services. There was the kid who set up a lemonade stand outside the Saratoga County Fair in New York, only to be shut down by a state health inspector when licensed lemonade vendors at the fair complained. (Sadly, wrote Reasons Scott Shackford, not enough people make the connection between these lemonade crackdowns and the broader ways licensing and permitting laws restrict peoples ability to earn a living.) There was the poor department store florist in Louisiana a widow, mind you who lost her job because she kept failing the state boards floral arrangement exam, and ultimately died in poverty in 2004 because the state had prevented her from working to support herself. There were the inmate firefighters in California, risking their necks to save lives and homes, who would be barred upon release from making a living doing the same because state law didnt allow anyone with a criminal record to become a professional firefighter. And who could soon forget the sad tale of the Kentucky minister who tried to dispense eyeglasses to the poor, and was blocked by the state boards of Optometric Examiners and Ophthalmic Dispensers?

The pace of legislative action has accelerated in the last two years. Already in 2019, more than 1,000 occupational licensing bills have been introduced in state capitals, up from around 750 last year.

But most of all, in story after story, there were the military spouses and the hair-braiders. The first lawsuit brought by the Institute for Justice, in 1991, was on behalf of an African-American hair-braiding shop in Washington, D.C., that had run afoul of the local cosmetology licensing board. When the case became a local news cause celebre, and the district wound up nixing the requirement for hair braiders to make the lawsuit go away, the Koch network knew it was onto something. The hair-braiding cases were easy to make, both legally and in the court of public opinion: Since the process doesnt involve the use of chemicals, dyes, or scissors, why should its practitioners be required to go to pricey beauty schools, where hair-braiding usually isnt even taught?

The fact that licensing requirements disadvantaged black stylists in particular because of the braidings racial and cultural roots, as The Atlantic put it in reporting on an Iowa lawsuit in 2016, made these stories pitch-perfect for the Kochs big adventure in rebranding: Now the evil white corporatists were doing their part to help African-American women keep their ancient tradition alive and make a business out of it. Recognizing the propaganda value inherent in this, the Institute for Justice set up a slick, full-blown website, Braiding Freedom. Hair braiders started calling the Institute to help them sue their states. Local media along with, apparently, former Vice President Biden were enamored of the womens stories, all of which dutifully repeated the Koch rhetoric about the perils of job-killing occupational licenses holding ambitious Americans down.

The military spouse sagas illustrated, in stories overlaid with stars and stripes, the problem of licensing portability the ability to use an occupational license from one state when you move to another, rather than having to go through your new states licensing regime. In The Wall Street Journal, Shoshana Weissmann and C. Jarrett Dieterle of the Koch-allied R Street Institute decried the plight of Heather Kokesch Del Castillo, whod set up shop as a health coach in California; when the Air Force transferred her husband to a base in Florida, she restarted her business there until a Department of Health investigator showed up at the door of their new home with a cease-and-desist letter and a $750 fine. She retained the Institute for Justice, a public-interest law firm, to fight the law that stripped her of her livelihood.

This was a genuine problem for military spouses, who move a lot. But when it came to the moral of such stories, the Koch network tended to stretch things a bit as it did with the other tales of licensing woes. First, Weissmann and Dieterle suggested, the obstacles to getting licenses in new states perhaps account for the high unemployment rate of military spouses (16 percent). In a far broader context, the difficulties with licensing portability were used to explain a troubling development that economists had fretted about for years: As Morris Kleiner of the University of Minnesota has noted, The overall interstate migration rate is about half what it was in 1980, and it can reduce the efficiency of the labor market in the economy.

Licensing, of course, is only one factor in that historical trendline and some economists have found that it has no impact on interstate mobility at all but the idea that licensing was forcing people to stay in place became the rationale for some of the most ambitious reforms to emerge from the anti-licensing campaign. The first piece of federal legislation clamping down on licensing, co-sponsored by Republican Sens. Mike Lee and Ben Sasse was pitched as a solution to the plight of military spouses. But the law went far beyond that narrow concern: the Alternatives to Licensing that Lower Obstacles to Work Act (ALLOW) would have permitted the District of Columbia, military bases, and national military parks as federal enclaves to apply licensing laws only to those circumstances in which it is the least restrictive means of protecting the public health, safety or welfare.

Lee said he intended the bill as a model for state legislators to adopt and several of them would. The upshot of this model was that the impetus would be put on licensing boards to prove that nothing short of their licensing regimes could protect the public from the potential health or safety perils of their services a far higher legal bar than the one that previously existed.

* * *

After nearly four years of sustained assault from the Koch network, the vast majority of occupational licenses remain in place. But the issue, which almost nobody had heard of or given a passing thought when Mark Holden began issuing his New Years resolutions in 2015, now actually is an issue that many Americans are aware of and almost all their awareness involves horror stories of little guys and gals with their ambitions cruelly flattened by the iron fist of big government colluding with all-powerful trade associations. Its a testament to the power of the propaganda that the Koch network can muster. And theres every sign that theyre in this for the long haul. Regulatory regimes dont tend to crumble quickly, as Kochworld knows. And labor unions werent gutted in a day.

The most tangible impact of the anti-licensing crusade, not surprisingly, has been a raft of states upwards of 20 so far exempting hair braiders from licensing requirements. Almost as many have eased restrictions on licensing ex-convicts. More than a dozen states have deregulated a host of other professions. Some look like no-brainers: Arizona rolled back requirements for citrus fruit packers, cremationists, assayers, and yoga instructors; Charleston, S.C., set tour guides free; Rhode Island de-licensed fur buyers, kickboxers, and beer line cleaners. But regulations have been eliminated or eased for several jobs for which safety and public health concerns are real; in Nebraska, for instance, audiologists, nurses, and school bus drivers now only need easy-to-obtain certificates to ply their trades.

The pace of legislative action has accelerated in the last two years. Already in 2019, more than 1,000 occupational licensing bills have been introduced in state capitals, up from around 750 last year. And in the past few years, at least seven states have passed laws that sound innocuous, but may ultimately be the most consequential: sunset reviews like the one that Ohio Governor John Kasich signed this past January. Once every six years, Ohio legislators will now decide which licensing laws stay intact based on the question of whether theyre the least restrictive form of regulation for each profession. Those subjective decisions, in turn, can be challenged: If the Institute for Justice thinks that nurses could be regulated less restrictively, for instance, theyll now have a basis for taking Ohio to court.

Most of the new laws, whatever form they take, incorporate a sentence taken straight from ALECs models: The right of an individual to pursue a lawful occupation is a fundamental right. You dont have to rack your brain to see how that new right could lead to a raft of litigation that weakens licensing regulations going forward.

One of the reasons that its taken just a few years to turn licensing into a conservative cri de coeur is that Kochs propagandists have been arguing in a void. While trade associations will unleash lobbyists and supporters when theyre directly challenged in a state legislature, you dont see a lot of op-eds and feature stories singing the praises of licensing regimes. Who wants to read that? But in the last couple of years, as the propaganda has taken hold, economists have issued findings that shoot down many of the now-popular assumptions about the effects of licensing.

Rather than hurting low income Americans, for instance, a recent (non-Koch-funded) study found that licensing provides the greatest benefits, in terms of higher wages, to workers who dont have a high school or college degree. Another shot down the idea that allowing people to move and still use their previous state licenses would increase mobility in the workforce. And the idea that licensing laws hold back African Americans economically? The opposite is true, according to multiple studies: Nobody gains more from holding a job license than black women and men. (Conversely, nobody benefits less from licensing than white men, who earn about the same with them or without them.) But where it used to be libertarians who hollered about licensing without being heard, now its the mainstream economists who find that licensing is good for less educated workers, for women, and for people of color who cant get anybody to lend them an ear.

The Koch people have some serious message discipline. You have to grant them that. Theyve stuck religiously to their scripts when they talk about occupational licensing: They simply want to help lift people up, to get the government off the backs of the aspiring classes. Braiding freedom, everybody! But once in a while, somebody slips and gives the game away. Exulting after Ohios mandatory-review law passed, for instance, Lee McGrath of the Institute for Justice told a reporter: Occupational licensing should only be a policy of last resort. The least-restrictive last resort: Now, that sounds like classic Koch.

Bob Moser, the author of Blue Dixie: Awakening the Souths Democratic Majority, is a contributing editor at The American Prospect and The New Republic.

Image at top: TPM Illustration / Getty Images

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Is The Koch Network Winning Its War On Occupational Licensing? - TPM

District Attorney candidates debate at SUNY Broome: Here are the takeaways – Pressconnects

Three contenders for Broome County District Attorney squared off Wednesday in a packed theater at SUNY Broome Community College in Dickinson, tackling public safety issues ranging from how to work with crime victims, fostering community relationships with law enforcement and incarceration concerns at the jail.

Paul Battisti, a Republican; Debra Gelson, a Democrat; and Michael Korchak, a Libertarian, are running to secure a four-year term as District Attorney.

Election day is Nov. 5.

The debate was organized by SUNY Broome, the colleges History, Philosophy and Social Sciences Department, the League of Women Voters of Broome and Tioga Counties, the Binghamton University Center for Civic Engagement, Andrew Goodman Vote Everywhere at Binghamton University and WSKG Public Media.

[Click here for a recording of the full debate by WSKG]

Broome County District Attorney candidates (from left) Paul Battisti, Debra Gelson and Michael Korchak, debate Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2019, at SUNY Broome Community College.(Photo: Anthony Borrelli / Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin)

Here are some key takeaways from the debate, based on the order in which candidates responded:

Korchak: This is a very important topic because it involves the issue of plea bargaining. Plea bargaining is a necessary element of the criminal justice system whether you like it or not. We have 1,500 felony cases coming through the criminal justice system every year and two county court judges so it's not possible to try every case.

You have to take into consideration the wishes of the victim; you don't want to re-traumatize the victim. A victim of a rape case should not be forced to testify to make the DA look good. From Day One, I was taught as a prosecutor that victims come first. You treat the victim as if the victim is a member of your own family.

I've worked with sexual abuse victims, I've worked with the families of homicide victims. You can't force someone to testify against their will and that's why sometimes there are plea bargains that the public sees and they're not 100% in agreement with them. You have to take into consideration the wishes of the victim and if they're unable or unwilling to testify, that has to be factored in to the way the case is resolved.

Battisti:When there's been a victim of a crime, they must be advised of all their rights. It doesn't always happen. We've got to ensure face-to-face time with that victim. We have to make sure we're using all our community partners, whether it's the Crime Victims Assistance Center, whether it's RISE, whether it's CPS.

We need to make sure this victim knows we're there for them. We need to ensure that victim has a voice. We need to ensure that victim has an order of protection so they feel safe.

In recent meetings with community agencies, I was made aware of the "buddy system," and it's a new piece of technology ... where a defendant will wear an ankle monitor. The victim of a crime will have a device with them, so if that defendant gets near them, it alerts the victim that they're nearby so they can call for help.

It's things like this that we need to do so that victims are aware that we're there for them, so our actions and not just our words show they mean something to us.

Gelson: I understand what these victims are feeling. Everyone heals different, everyone's circumstances are different. So when I became the director of a sex crimes child abuse unit (in New Jersey), I initiated a vertical prosecution, where I took the case from the very beginning and worked with the victim all the way up through grand jury, including trial.

In my last year as a District Attorney and director of the sex crimes unit, I tried 16 jury trials sexual abuse, rape cases, child abuse cases I won 16 out of 17.

I attribute that to my trial skills, but I attribute that we were able to get victims into a position where they no longer felt guilty. They no longer were afraid. They felt that we supported them. They felt that we would help them. We empowered them.

And by the time the case came ready for trial, they were ready for trial. That's not always the case, but that is what the job, in my opinion, is to do: Advocate as well as to help those victims.

Korchak: If there's a criminal activity or if there is evidence of criminal activity, the District Attorney's Office does investigate. There is a difference between civil liability and criminal liability in a death case. There could be neglect, there could be an incident where someone didn't get proper medical treatment, but that isn't necessarily in and of itself criminal activity.

Many of the individuals who go to the jail are coming in under horrific circumstances: they're detoxing, they're going through withdrawal of drugs or alcohol, and many have pre-existing medical conditions.

The jail unfortunately is not a hospital, they do have a medical unit.Obviously, improvements can be made in the evaluation of individuals coming into the jail, but I can assure you that if there's any criminality involved in the circumstances surrounding someone's death, the Broome County District Attorney's Office does look into that and they're doing that now with every death that comes out of the Broome County jail.

Battisti: The New York State Department of Corrections does in fact have a task force that will look into a death in a correctional facility. The District Attorney's Office can be part of that, if they so choose. If there's allegations of criminal conduct that's brought to the District Attorney's Office, then the DA's office will be involved.

The District Attorney has a very important role, but we have to make sure we stay within that role. We need to ensure we're doing our job, specifically our mission. We don't want to see anybody pass (away), but when people come into the correctional facility, sometimes they're not in the best condition.

There are medical units (in jail), the medical units have been expanded; they do transport people to hospitals. They do ensure people are getting care and they are trying to do what they can to ensure people are being treated appropriately and effectively.

Gelson: Things must change in the jail. I've personally represented a number of inmates, and granted, inmates will tell you stories, but I have witnessed some horrific situations. Fortunately, none of my clients passed away. But no one's above the law.

The District Attorney's job is to independently and objectively investigate any allegation of criminality, and that is what I would do with our DA's office as well as coordinate with the Attorney General's office.

Any death must be thoroughly investigated, as well as other issues of neglect and/or abuse. I can tell you that after 35 years, Broome County is one of the toughest jails I have ever worked in.

Related news: Backed by supporters, four plead not guilty to disrupting Binghamton parade

Korchak:I've attended Neighborhood Watch meetings, and this is a very important interaction. I've spoken at various senior centers about scams and frauds that have been coming into our community. These are very important issues, and the District Attorney's Office along with the police are already working on it. This information is invaluable.

The District Attorney's Office accepts calls into our investigations unit from any concerned citizen who has a complaint or just has information. The old "See something, say something" line is very applicable to community policing and neighborhood watch groups. This information is then taken out to the streets and can be utilized to make the streets safer.

The District Attorney's Office has, in the past, held events for members of the community in certain neighborhoods where members of the DA's office go out to public parks and basically throw a picnic for members of the community. We field their questions and answer what their concerns are. We need to expand this, but it already in progress.

Battisti:There's got to be an effective working relationship between the District Attorney's Office and law enforcement. If there's an appropriate working relationship that's built on respect and trust, then this can work. We need to ensure that working together, we are the community.

We need to establish trust. We need to establish trust with the men and women that reside in our wonderful community, as well as children. If we can do that, that is much more beneficial for each and every one of us here in this community.

Currently, there are some programs, but they need to be dramatically expanded. We've got to ensure programs are put into effect that do in fact work. We need to ensure the District Attorney is part of those programs, that the DA is in the community, that the DA is working with these agencies putting these programs in place and then assigning tasks to individuals within our office.

I have been humbled throughout this election to have the respect and support of many unions that represent the men and women of law enforcement in Broome County. It's these relationships that have been built over the years that will allow us to work together to reach maximum benefit.

Gelson: I support community policing. During a difficult period, while I was working as a judge in the City of Trenton, there was a great deal of difficulty and lack of public confidence. We implemented a program and training where officers were assigned to various neighborhoods and they worked very hard. The officers did an excellent job of calming the situation down and working within their neighborhoods.

There's no question that law enforcement wants to be close to their own communities. They want to be engaged. We need to build the trust and the public confidence in our law enforcement. And that can be done.

We have so many wonderful officers that I've met. That is the way that we fight crime, that is the way we get witnesses to come forward. Trust. That is the way we successfully prosecute criminal offenses.

We must work together; we all have the same goal to make Broome County the safest community we possibly can.

Paul Battisti has worked as a private-practice defense lawyer representing criminal defendants in the state and federal court levels. The Broome County native has also worked on the Broome Drug Treatment Court Team and is a former president of the Broome County Bar Association.

Paul Battisti(Photo: Provided)

Debra Gelson has worked as a private-practice lawyer in Vestal since 2017 and been assigned or retained for more than 50 criminal cases in the Broome County area. The Herkimer County native previously worked as a prosecutor and attorney in New Jersey, and in 2001, was appointed as a municipal court judge in that state.

Debra Gelson(Photo: Provided photo)

Michael Korchak, currently the chief assistant district attorney, spent six years as a prosecutor in Bronx County before becoming a prosecutor in Broome in 1996. He left the DA's office in 2007 after challenging former DA Gerald Mollen, then returned to the office in 2016. He's also a former Town of Union justice.

Michael Korchak(Photo: Provided photo)

DA primary: Where Paul Battisti, Michael Korchak stand on the issues

DA race: Michael Korchak launches new campaign under Libertarian Party

Broome County District Attorney Steve Cornwell, a Republican, is not seeking a secondterm. In June, he launched a campaign for New York's 22nd Congressional seat, currently held by Democrat Anthony Brindisi.

Follow Anthony Borrelli on Twitter@PSBABorrelli.Support our journalism and become a digital subscriber today.Click here for our special offers.

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District Attorney candidates debate at SUNY Broome: Here are the takeaways - Pressconnects

What the Kentucky governor candidates’ running mate’s role will be in the administration – Courier Journal

Here's what you need to know to come prepared to the polls. Nikki Boliaux, Courier Journal

Election Day is quickly approaching, with a marquee showdown between Republican incumbent Matt Bevin and Democratic Attorney General Andy Beshear brewing in the race for governor.

Here's a breakdown of howBevin, Beshear and Libertarian candidate John Hicks' lieutenant governor will play in their administration.

Kentucky lieutenant governor candidate Jacqueline Coleman spoke at the 2019 Fancy Farm Picnic. Jeff Faughender, Louisville Courier Journal

Kentucky attorney general

City:Louisville

Running mate:Jacqueline Coleman

Website:andybeshear.com

Im proud to be the only candidate who selected an active educator as my running mate. As an educator, mentor and coach, Jacqueline Coleman has spent her life serving her community in rural Kentucky.

Ilet her know when I asked her to join my ticket that I wanted her to play an active role and to define her own portfolio. She wants to focus on: public education, rural economic development and getting women involved in leadership (including boards and commissions, running for office, community engagement, etc.).

Matt Bevin's running mate Ralph Alvarado spoke at the 2019 Fancy Farm Picnic. Jeff Faughender, Louisville Courier Journal

Kentucky governor

City:Louisville

Running mate:Ralph A. Alvarado

Website:mattbevin.com

Matt Bevin did not respond to The Courier Journal.

Read more: Lt. Gov. Jenean Hampton sues Gov. Matt Bevin over firing her staff members

Also: Matt Bevin tells Louisville Tea Party why he dropped Jenean Hampton

Ann Cormican(Photo: Provided by John Hicks)

IT Consultant

City: Louisville

Running mate: Ann Cormican

Website:hickscormicanforkentucky.com

Ann Cormican much like our current Lieutenant Governor Jenean Hampton is an eloquent advocate for a free and flourishing Commonwealth benefiting all Kentuckians. Ann is an expert in agricultural economics and brings ample business experience to the job, having worked at the Toyota plant in Georgetown for 25 years. As our state constitution specifies, Ann will be a free agent with full authority to staff and run her office as she sees fit.

Shannon Hall is a digital producer with the Courier Journal. Reach her atsshall@courier-journal.com; Twitter: @sshall4.Support strong local journalism by subscribing today: http://www.courier-journal.com/shannonh

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What the Kentucky governor candidates' running mate's role will be in the administration - Courier Journal

Services That Help With Education – The Libertarian Republic

Its tough to be a student. But as Billy Ocean once sang When the going gets tough, the tough get going. Completing all assignments and getting high grades for exams is a formidable test of nerves. A student might even have to work to pay his student loan. How to manage?

When it comes to essay assignments, students rightfully worry. Or even panic. Where am I going to find the time? And where is the money going to come from if I want to hire someone to help me? Well, free essays are not so hard to find. Just download essays from a professional academic writing service. And you will be good to go. In case of doubts, look for paper writing service reviews online. This will help to increase your success rate.

There are 2 ways to go about producing essays. Or you feel confident and have the time to write them yourself, or you reach out for help. Its wise to contemplate both options before deciding. By the time we reach our conclusion, we will sound as a Julius Caesar impersonator. Veni, Vidi, Vici!

Two ways to get to Rome

Option 1

In this section, we will go into tips and guidelines that will assist you in your writing process. Its climbing a mountain, it really is. But when not letting the mountain come to you, you will need all the help you can get. And dont feel restricted to the guidelines we will provide. Spread out your wings and browse for more guidelines, examples, and samples online.

You will need a thorough understanding of the topic, excellent research skills, comprehend what you are reading. And then the ability to organize your notes and ideas, and grammar/vocabulary/spelling mastery.

Okay. Lets transfer your skills into creating your paper.

A good soldier arrives at the battlefield fully armed

Even if you are a do-it-yourself student, its wise to consult free essay samples. Its very easy to find free essays online, so why not take full advantage? After, practice online and get better at writing your homemade college essay.

Option 2

Possibly you made your mind up about using free college essays. In other words, approaching experts to help you out.

Free samples of essays written by academics, professional writers, in short: experts, are a good starting point. If you like what you see, which is almost a certainty, you can put an order for a complete tailored end product.

Why would you consider this option?

As mentioned before, a students life is a tough existence. Many demands are made and not coming from your college only. That workload plus the jobs many students have to take on to pay for the entire enterprise it can feel like staring at an avalanche rolling of the Mont Blanc.

Writing good content isnt easy at all. Save yourself precious time.

How to go about it?

Find a trustworthy writing service. Things to look out for are:

Without purchasing any service, the samples will already teach you a lot. Use the format, style, writing technique, and original approach the professionals master.

Vici!

Whatever approach you prefer, you can be sure practice makes perfect. At least use samples, tips and practice your writing skills. Whether you already are a college student or knocking on the door, come prepared as a good soldier.

For high school juniors and seniors who are preparing to take the SAT test: be aware that the test will measure your writing skills too. Instead of asking your peers for samples, you can simply download essays from the internet. Get free SAT practice here. Pass the SAT test with flying colors, and you will be on your way to academic success. And most importantly, you want your application to higher education to be accepted for starters.

Your education is vital for the rest of your life. Services that help you to succeed cant get too much praise. As Nietzsche said: There will always be rocks in the road ahead of us. They will be stumbling blocks or stepping stones; it all depends on how you use them.

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Services That Help With Education - The Libertarian Republic

Justin Amash: Republican who took on Trump won’t rule out White House run – The Guardian

Justin Amash, the Michigan congressman who left the Republican party over his criticism of Donald Trump and support for impeachment, has refused to rule out a run for the White House.

I think Im very effective in the House, the Michigan independent told NBCs Meet the Press on Sunday. I think my constituents want an independent congressman. My support in the district has been great as an independent.

But we do need new voices on the national stage running for national office, including the presidency.

Amash criticised the Democrats seeking their partys nomination in a sprawling field.

I dont think that the current Democratic field is sufficient, he said. If you look at the top three candidates on the Democratic side Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren theyre all over 70 years old.

The presidents over 70 years old. I think that there is a large segment of the population that is not represented in the top candidates on either side of the aisle, and thats something I think about.

Amash is running for re-election as an independent but he told NBC he wouldnt say 100% of anything.

Im running for Congress, he added, when asked about the possibility of being the Libertarian candidate for the White House, but I keep things open and I wouldnt rule anything out.

In the 2016 election, Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson won 4,489,221 votes, 3.28% of ballots cast. Hillary Clinton beat Donald Trump in the popular vote by nearly 3m but Trump won the presidency in the electoral college.

Amash is a libertarian-tinged founder member of the hard-right Freedom Caucus who drifted away from its support for Trump.

He first called for impeachment and was attacked by Trump in return earlier this year, over the presidents behaviour in relation to Russian election interference and the investigation into links between Trump and Moscow led by special counsel Robert Mueller.

The current impeachment inquiry is focused on Trumps attempts to have Ukraine investigate his political rivals.

Earlier this month, Amash told the Hill: Assuming the articles are drafted properly, yeah, I think theres impeachable conduct that could be included in articles that I would support.

Amashs former Republican colleagues are under increasing pressure. On Friday, Francis Rooney of Florida indicated that he could support impeachment if it comes to a vote on whether to send Trump to the Senate for trial.

On Saturday, Rooney told Fox News he had decided to retire, becoming the 14th Republican to decide to leave the House in 2020.

On Sunday he told CNNs State of the Union he had not made up his mind about impeachment. He also said he did not know if he still called himself a Republican, and added: We only have one thing in our life, and thats our reputation And so Im not going to ruin mine over anything, much less politics.

Originally posted here:

Justin Amash: Republican who took on Trump won't rule out White House run - The Guardian

Billy Bragg Wants Three-Dimensional Freedom. But Can We Afford That? – Reason

Over the past four decades, British musician Billy Bragg has carved out a singular position as a modern-day troubadour who takes popular music and politics equally seriously.

Early albums such as Talking with the Taxman about Poetry (1986) and The Internationale (1990) merged concerns with the poor and the powerless while updating and reinvigorating older folk forms with punk sensibilities. At the turn of the century, Bragg partnered with the members of Wilco to release new songs using previously unheard lyrics by Woody Guthrie. The Mermaid Avenue recordings occasioned rave reviews and, in Bragg's own telling, were designed to humanize Guthrie, to transform a left-wing legend back into a real person with physical wants, desires, and needs.

For Bragg, like Guthrie, the personal and the political are never exactly separate. In August, Bragg released a full-throated polemic against rising populism and free market globalism, which he denounces as neo-liberalism. In The Three Dimensions of Freedom, Bragg writes, "Freedom has been repackaged as the right to choose, but genuine choicein housing, in the workplace, at the ballot boxis hard to come by."

Nick Gillespie sat down to talk with Bragg about British and American politics, Donald Trump, Brexit, and his idea that we need to embrace "freedom" in what he says are its three dimensions: liberty, equality, and accountability. Apart from strongly supporting free speech, Gillespie and Bragg didn't agree on much, especially about whether living standards and individual freedom have increased in the 21st century and whether economic liberalization and globalization have helped the average man and woman.

Audio production by Ian Keyser.

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Billy Bragg Wants Three-Dimensional Freedom. But Can We Afford That? - Reason

These Trump Voters Say They Might Abandon Him Over Vapes – VICE

Justin Watson's son begged him to quit smoking. But he had already tried everythingchewing nicotine gum, slapping on the patch, going cold turkeyand none of it worked. Then a friend introduced him to vaping. Eventually, he was able to walk up the stairs without being completely out of breath. Plus, he no longer smelled.

The 36-year-old Pennsylvania resident had no real intention, though, of getting political about his new habit.

This was in 2013, at the height of Barack Obama's presidency, and before JUUL Labs, the vaping behemoth currently estimated to control at least 50 percent of the marketplace in the United States, started to dominate.

Now, six years later, the U.S. finds itself in the middle of a full-blown vaping crisis, as government agencies are struggling to land on a definitive cause for the spate of illnesses that cropped up this summer and has stretched into the fall. (The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, has linked many, though not all, of the nearly 1,500 cases and 33 deaths to black-market THC carts.) The reaction to this frenzy, for the most part, has been a series of vape bans in states across the country, and President Trump has even urged the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to institute a nationwide ban of flavored vaping products.

For Watson, JUUL's rise came unexpectedly. He said he still has never even met a single person who JUULs. The group of like-minded vapers he flocked to online uses a variety of different rigs and discusses them almost as if they were hobbyistsbut also as something more than that. They discovered a device, they believe, that is a safer alternative to smoking traditional cigarettes. But now the whole thing has become political, and so has he.

Vape shop owners and vapers who told their stories to VICE, most of them Republican- or libertarian-leaning, suggested that no cause matters to them more than this one. Like Watson, they had not really been interested in other domestic or foreign affairs in the past; these were not necessarily super political people. Now, some of them vow to be single-issue voters, insisting they will choose a presidential candidate simply based on their vaping stance. It's a possibility, as Axios theorized, that could affect the 2020 election, because a fair number of them reside in places like Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, states Trump narrowly won in 2016.

"A lot of people are now realizing that the consumers themselves are going to have to stand up for this," Watson said. "I, for one, believe that vaping is worth fighting for."

Do you know anything we should know about vapes, or anything else? You can contact staff writer Alex Norcia securely at alex.norcia@protonmail.com.

On the surface, vaping can seem like a frivolous enterpriseespecially considering, this week alone, Kurds have been displaced, Trump compared the Democrats' impeachment inquiry to a "lynching" on Twitter, and a Brexit deal didn't happen again. But former smokers such as Watson fundamentally think it has provided them with a new lease on life. It sounds silly, but they're under the impression that without vaping they might otherwise be dead. They enjoy citing statistics, like one from Public Health England in 2018, which said vaping was 95 percent less harmful than smoking and could help users ditch the habit. (The United Kingdom has a totally different approach to vaping than the U.S. so that stat does not apply statesideand in fact, the U.S.'s CDC is advising Americans to stop vaping entirely until more information is known about the source of the vape illnesses.)

Dray Moorman, the founder and CEO of the South Floridabased online shop Mig Vapor who voted for Trump in 2016, said vaping policy would make or break a presidential candidate for him in 2020. He hopes he and fellow vape-activists can somehow persuade the administration to change its stance on the vape ban. He suspects his customer base, much of which skews older, shares a similar sentiment.

"Vaping did save a lot of people," added Nick Orlando, an ex-smoker who transitioned to vaping and owns a handful of shops not far from Tampa. "It's become their niche and their community. For many, it's also become their livelihood, because they were vapers, and then they wanted to help others." (This summer, Orlando estimated that he lost up to 30 percent of his sales following hysteria over vape illness, though Florida as a whole has adopted a relatively measured approach to the epidemic.)

"I'm more political than I've ever been in my entire life," echoed Robert Lucas, a 33-year-old vaper who lives near Ann Arbor, Michigan, and said he voted for Trump and the Republican Party across the board in 2016. "Truly, nothing even compares." (Michigan has instituted a ban on flavored vape products, albeit one that has run into obstacles in court.)

"If this federal flavor ban actually happens," Lucas continued, "everybody I know who vapes and voted for Trump told me they're either going to stay home on Election Day, or vote for a Democrat with normal regulations."

Lucas said he often posts on social media to spread the word, and that he was attempting to educate smokers on the perceived benefits of switching to vaping. Essentially, he comprises part of the "We Vape, We Vote" movement, which has emerged as a hashtag on Twitter. That coalition is not anything brand new, as Matt Culley, a popular vape activist on YouTube, likes to emphasize, because it's been around since at least 2015. It does, however, appear to have ballooned amid vape crackdowns over the past few months.

Recently, Culley called on his fellow vapers to join Twitter. It's a platform he thought would have a wider impact than the insular community"an echo chamber," he saidthey had previously formed on Facebook and Instagram. And they're certainly getting noticed, so much so that newspapers like the Wall Street Journal (and members of Congress) are wondering if a majority of the accounts are actually bots. (That does not necessarily seem to be true.) A rally is planned for next month near the White House, with turnout expected by activists involved to be in the thousands.

"As with anything else, the more threatened people feel, the more active they are," Culley said.

For Lucas's part, he claimed the public and press were "strongly underestimating how many actual vapers there are." (Past estimates have suggested at least 10 million.)

Nonetheless, pollsters and political experts canvassed by VICE were reluctant to offer predictions on the impact vapers might have, though they generally said they would be surprised if it was substantial.

"I tend to think that few voters are single-issue," said Georgy Egorov, a professor of managerial economics and decision sciences at Northwestern University who has researched elections. "It is the politicians who tend to be."

Egorov, naturally, said he did not anticipate nuanced vaping strategy to be any serious candidate's rallying cry. But other scholars find it all a bit hard to ignore, even if they can't offer a precise prediction.

"I do think that it is rational to fear pissing off vapers based on these numbers," said Amelia Howard, a sociology PhD student at the University of Waterloo in Canada who has been researching vaping. "In Michigan, for example, there are 400,000 vapers. Trump won by 11,000. It wouldn't take that many Michigan vapers to stay home or change their vote to give it to the Democratic candidate."

Still, whether or not you believe vapers would have that much of an influence, particularly on a nationwide scale, the issue is still two-fold for most of them: Not only do they view it as a safer replacement to smoking combustible cigarettes, but the off-the-cuff reaction by local, state, and even the federal governmentprimarily leaning toward prohibitionhas invited the the closure of mom-and-pop vape shops that once flourished. It's the exact opposite, in other words, of what Trump promised during his campaign: to restore the working class and business world to glory.

Although no candidate has spent too much time talking about the issue, Democratic contender Elizabeth Warren has proposed stricter regulations (a tactic almost all of the industry supports), whereas Bernie Sanders hasn't said much about vapes other than using vape bans to point to the absurdity of not banning assault weapons. JUUL, meanwhile, has ramped up its lobbying efforts this past year or so, and has reportedly favored the Democrats with its campaign dollars.

"Vaping has become a culture," said Azim Chowdhury, an attorney who has represented the vaping industry for close to a decade. "[Vapers] have bonded together like any minority group would in the face of what they view as a discriminatory, dehumanizing attack by powerful elitists."

"Someone like Sanders or Yang, candidates who are generally against big corporations," he continued, "should really be taking a good look at this."

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These Trump Voters Say They Might Abandon Him Over Vapes - VICE

David Harsanyi, American Hero, Heads To National Review – The Federalist

My favorite moment in more than six years working alongside David Harsanyi as co-senior editors of The Federalist occurred in June 2018.

David and I were the third-string hosts of the Federalist Radio Hour, and almost always did it as a pair. Because we designed The Federalist intentionally against an inside-the-beltway mentality, we have staff and writers all over the country. Even those of us who live in the D.C. area work from home.

Recording the podcasts is one of the few times we get to be together. I absolutely treasured doing the podcasts with David. As our producer Madeline Osburn can attest, David and I would spend a half hour discussing which songs to play during the podcast. He has excellent taste in music, and a deep and abiding love of songs with guitar-heavy intros. Hed roll his eyes at my love of alternative R&B. But wed figure it out eventually.

The shows were full of us discussing issues of the day, sometimes squabbling a bit over them. David is far more concerned about populism than I am and recent years have amplified that difference between us. He never took our differences personally, something that is less common than it should be in political sparring. Last year, we were taping an episode of the podcast, discussing immigration policy and the recently released inspector general report detailing some of James Comeys failures as head of the FBI.

At the end of our podcasts, we discussed pop culture, namely what movies and TV shows we were watching, and any updates about our problematically large vinyl record collections. David is an incisive cultural critic. But he has the worst taste in television shows of anyone I have ever met. For years I would start watching his recommendations only to fall asleep or otherwise be bored. I teased him about it mercilessly.

After telling him that Id recently re-watched and enjoyed Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, he began telling me about a new television show hed taken up. He described it as something like, People from England take their retirement nest and go to Croatia or Brittany and spend an hour looking for a place to retire, checking out neighborhoods.

From the moment he began describing it (somewhere around the 44:00 mark), I fell out laughing. He made me laugh all the time during our podcasts our rapport couldnt be better but this time I completely lost it. I couldnt stop guffawing, explaining between gasps for air that I wasnt sure if he was making up a show to sound really boring or if it really exists.

Its called Moving to the Continent,' he dryly said, over my uncontrollable laughter. It is real, although its actually called Escape to the Continent. We went on to discuss how much we prefer the stoicism of British reality television to the melodrama of U.S. reality shows. And even though I swore I would stop taking his television recommendations, I shared the advice with my husband and we watched a few episodes. They were better than some of his other recommendations, but still not worth it.

I used to occasionally re-listen to the part of the podcast where he made me laugh. After he told me that he was moving on after more than six years of daily, side-by-side work putting out The Federalist, I listened again and cried. I have never enjoyed working with a colleague as much as I enjoy working with David Harsanyi.

We started together as the first senior editors of The Federalist in September 2013. I had long admired David, but had never met him. He had previously held my dream job the classical liberal columnist at the Denver Post. I read him religiously and loved his writing. In a sea of boring and predictable columnists, David has always somehow been both consistent and invigorating.

Its safe to say that neither of us truly knew what we were getting into when we launched our daily web magazine. David and I worked as closely together as anyone. Our staff was so small then, and we were writing, editing, commissioning pieces, and generally working around the clock. We slept so little those first couple of years that I have no idea how we made it.

We had ideas about what our roles would be, but nothing quite like what they ended up being. If I recall, I was going to handle cultural issues and he was going to handle politics. We ended up sharing both issues. And Im not sure if he or anyone else realized how much of the writing load he would carry.

David has written more than 800 articles for The Federalist, and whats amazing is how good they all are. Another colleague says David has the best on-base percentage of any writer he knows. His writing is always a model of clarity and logic, but at the same time he always finds a way to say something that is not obvious and not said by anyone else.

As Ive been cycling through the stages of grief over Davids departure hes headed over to work with our friends at National Review and we wish them all the best I reviewed those 800 articles. His body of work is pound for pound better than anyone elses in the last six years.

He was an early skeptic of claims that Democrats had an issue advantage or that it was the destiny of the United States to adopt progressive policies.

A consistent classical liberal, he was able to be critical of the excesses of libertarianism and the failure of some conservatives to embrace liberty. His pieces in praise of libertarian judgmentalism, encouraging social conservatives to embrace libertarianism, skeptical of the libertarian moment, discouraging libertarians desire to be liked by liberals, discouraging libertarians dislike of conservatives, critiquing media failures to understand libertarianism, and so many others on the general topic hold up well.

David is a non-believer who cares deeply about religious liberty. His pieces about Jack Phillips, the Christian baker in Colorado who eventually won a Supreme Court case against the Colorado commission that has been harassing him to violate his beliefs, are among the best weve run. He went back to Colorado, my native state and where he lived for eight years while working at the Denver Post, to report on the situation and write, How A Cakemaker Became An Enemy of the State.

He also criticized President Donald Trump for his disappointing executive order on religious liberty, watered down by internal advisors. When Phillips won his case, he noted that religious liberty was not as protected in the decision as First Amendment proponents would hope for. As is always necessary, David criticized the media for their abysmal failure to report on religious liberty accurately.

Its popular now to criticize the progressive and emotional Jennifer Rubin, but David was onto her failures early. He rejected the foreign policy establishments shutting down of criticism by claiming opposition to unnecessary or poorly strategized invasions meant one was an isolationist. And he encouraged Congress to reassert its Article 1 authorities over warfighting. In general, David appealed to constitutional governance and criticized Democrats and Republicans for straying from it.

His resistance to both political rage mobs and sycophancy produced fun pieces, such as arguing that Hillary Clintons best trait is that she got super rich. He argued, contra President Obamas claim that the future cannot belong to those who criticize Islam, that the future must belong to those who can criticize it. David cheered on the attacks on Woodrow Wilson.

David remains the Federalists expert on princess movies, a designation he earned with his article strenuously arguing that Tangled is better than Frozen. A trip to Disney World produced Disney World Is The Worst Thing Ever And You Should Definitely Go. He watched and wrote about The Walking Dead, his secret shame of being addicted to 19 Kids And Counting, and how Chip and Joanna Gaines were threatening to destroy his marriage. He loathed Survivor, listed five movies critics love that are actually garbage, and correctly ranked every single Tom Cruise film ever made. His look back at Fight Club is definitely worth a re-read.

David argued that Steven Avery from Making A Murderer was guilty as hell, revisiting it three years later to write he was still guilty as hell. His true crime interest extended to the Jon Benet Ramsey cold case, and casting a suspicious eye toward the parents of the murdered girl.

The Federalist was one of the only publications to consistently express skepticism toward the Resistances conspiracy theory that Donald Trump was a traitor who had colluded with Russia to steal the 2016 election. It is remarkable how much David contributed to our reporting. He noted in 2016 how the Russia story was being used by Democrats to invalidate the 2016 election. On January 4, 2017, he worried that the Russia obsession was getting out of hand and a few weeks later that the Russia fake news scare was actually about chilling speech. He noted, again early on, how media spin on since-fired FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe was wrong.

Notoriously precise, David kept reminding the media and others to stop regurgitating Hillary Clintons false claims that Russians had hacked the election. He was skeptical about the Russia hoaxers attempt to sideline Rep. Devin Nunes for exposing the hoax. When people criticized the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligences memo about FISA abuse, it was ridiculed by the groupthinking hordes in the media. It has since been thoroughly vindicated even as Rep. Adam Schiffs response to it has been shown to be riddled with errors.

David wrote a piece in support of the FISA abuse memo, and how it showed an independent investigation was needed. At a time Russia hysteria was at its peak, David noted that Democrats were rewriting history to make Trump look bad. When it was revealed that Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee had secretly funded the Russia-sourced dossier, David said it was a test of whether Democrats really care about Russian interference, noting that if they did, theyd be critical of Clinton and the DNC. He noted the media ignored Susan Rices lies about her role in the Obama administration unmasking scandal.

When many in the media demanded reflexive support of the FBI, David noted they should not be considered above the law. The medias defense of Obama administration spying defies logic, he wrote. He read the inspector general report that undermined FBI credibility. He noted that Attorney General William Barr was proven correct by the Mueller report.

When the media wanted to avoid taking responsibility for their role in the damaging and dangerous Russia hoax, he called them out. He repeatedly noted that journalists should demand evidence before calling Trump a Russian asset rather than saying it without evidence. And he was skeptical of some of the specific Russia collusion theories involving Cambridge Analytica and the National Rifle Association.

Davids most recent book is excellent. First Freedom: A Ride Through Americas Enduring History with the Gun is an engaging and thorough read. His articles correcting threats to the right to keep and bear arms are excellent. He criticized The New York Times for failing to understand the history of gun rights, warned about doctor threats to gun rights, clarified that the Second Amendment has always been an individual right, warned about gun proposals attacking due process, debunked misleading panics about 3-D guns, and corrected misinformation about the AR-15.

Because of the media industrys failures, honest critics must speak about the problem. David did not shy away calling out the media for destroying their own credibility, for CNNs shameful anti-gun town hall, for CNNs lengthy recent history of getting stories wrong, the many problems with fact-checkers, how one specific CNN story showed why conservatives dont trust the media,

And so much more. On Israel, GOP failures to pass late-term abortion bans, questions the media should ask pro-choice politicians, the problems with abortion eugenics, liberals calling political opponents traitors, how the resistance helps Donald Trump, on the stages of grief of losing an election to Trump, why the whataboutism charge is stupid,

His worst piece remains his call to bring the designated hitter to the National League.

More than 800 columns and feature stories. A remarkable track record of getting the story right day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year.

I love all of my colleagues here at The Federalist, but everyone knows that David Harsanyi is my favorite. I will be forever grateful for the guidance and support he gave me when we started this enterprise. He is a rock. His work is consistent, productive, done to a high standard. He is supportive of his colleagues.

What started as a professional admiration quickly turned into a personal affection. David is a thoroughly decent human. He adores his wife and children. He is kind and supportive. He doesnt complain and he never has any drama. Again, unlike so many other people in Washington, he is not only civil in disagreement, he seems to enjoy friendly debate.

I would be remiss if I didnt mention that David Harsanyi never paid up on our bet. I bet him in 2016 that Donald Trump would win the presidency and he bet me that he wouldnt. I won, but he never paid up. Its difficult to be upset, though, as he honored every other commitment he ever made to me and this publication. And he more than made good on all the risks we took together.

Having seen how much of an impact David had on The Federalist, we are excited to see what hell do at National Review. The Federalists loss is the conservative movements gain.

Thank you for everything, David.

Link:

David Harsanyi, American Hero, Heads To National Review - The Federalist

Less government is main focus for Libertarian candidate Darcy Neal Donnelly – The Review Newspaper

The best government is very little government, according to Darcy Neal Donnelly.

The Libertarian Party of Canada candidate in Glengarry-Prescott-Russell has been part of a combination of three federal and provincial elections in the past.

Theres only so many laws our country needs, said Donnelly.

He explained that the only necessary laws are for protecting individual rights, freedoms, and markets.

The Libertarian Party supports having police, courts and the military for the purpose of protection, and not control.

On climate change, Donnelly explained that the government has given big corporations the right to pollute and that property rights should be the basis of environmental protection. He said that the environment would be better protected by private owners who had to take responsibility for it, including for environmentally significant places like national parks.

When asked about ethics issues like the SNC Lavalin scandal, Donnelly said problems like corruption occur when governments and corporations are too big. He said the influence of global corporations and government bureaucracy needs to be reduced.

Donnelly strongly criticized the spending of taxpayer dollars on corporate welfare. As an example, he referred to the $18 million in support the Trudeau government announced over the summer for Heico, the American parent company of Ivaco Rolling Mills in LOrignal.

According to Donnelly, Canada has a mixed economy containing some free markets, fascist markets, and communist markets. The Libertarian Party wants a free market for everything.

Competition leads to better solutions in markets, Donnelly said.

According to Donnelly, the Libertarian Party of today is more in line with the Liberals during the days of Sir Wilfrid Laurier.

Donnelly said the Libertarian Party would end the federal income tax for everyone and the governments sources of revenue would be through trade and voluntary gifts. Health care and social services for the less fortunate could be provided through benevolent organizations. He highlighted how successful private institutions such as Shriners Hospitals are, as an example.

Libertarians see themselves as influencers on other parties, said Donnelly. He said the party is not totally dedicated to some day governing, but tries to influence existing candidates and parties with its ideas. He said the Peoples Party of Canada, led by Maxime Bernier has ideas that represent 80 per cent of what the Libertarians have been recommending, and he is pleased that they have had that influence on Berniers party.

Donnelly is also the Secretary of the Libertarian riding association for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell. He is hoping more people get involved. More information is available at libertarian.ca

James Morgan is a freelance contributor.He has worked for several print and broadcast media outlets.James loves the history, natural beauty, and people of eastern Ontario and western Quebec.

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Less government is main focus for Libertarian candidate Darcy Neal Donnelly - The Review Newspaper

Could our next president be a Libertarian? | TheHill – The Hill

As they look ahead to the 2020 election, few political pundits have considered the possibility that a Libertarian Party candidate could be elected president. Yes, I know it's a long shot, but not as long a shot as it might initially seem.

Because of the Electoral College system of voting, third-party candidates have a better chance of winning than most people think. If no candidate gets a majority of the electoral votes, the House of Representatives chooses the president from among the three candidates with the most electoral votes.

To be in the running, all that a third-party candidate must do is receive enough electoral votes to ensure that neither the Democratic nor Republican nominee wins an Electoral College majority, in which case the spoiler becomes a credible final contender. In a close race, the candidate might need to win just one state to send the election to the House of Representatives.

At that point, the third-party candidate would have to convince members of the House to vote for him or her rather than for the major-party candidates. It's unlikely, but not impossible. It depends on who's running.

Libertarian ideas on social policy appeal to Democrats, while libertarian ideas on economic policy appeal to Republicans, so a skillful pitch on those ideas might win over Representatives dissatisfied with their own partys candidates. Although the Libertarian Party is often perceived as a fringe party, libertarian ideas are about as widely held as consistent liberal or conservative views by the general public. Many Americans have views that are socially liberal and economically conservative.

Currently, its not a complete stretch to think that many Republicans might abandon their president to vote for a third-party candidate. President TrumpDonald John TrumpKamala Harris calls for Twitter to suspend Trump account over whistleblower attacks Clinton jokes she 'never' had to tell Obama not to 'extort foreign countries' John Dean: 'There is enough evidence' to impeach Trump MORE is not that popular with House Republicans, judging by the significant numbers of GOP lawmakers who have announced they will not be seeking re-election. If the Democratic nominee is way outside the mainstream as is easy to picture given the partys current field of candidates then a coalition of Democrats might join with some Republicans to support the third-party candidate.

For a Libertarian to win the presidency, the first step is for the Libertarian Party to choose a candidate who appears more reasonable to Americans, and especially to members of the House of Representatives, than the major-party candidates.

The second step is to campaign in just a few key states. In a close election, a third-party candidate could win only Texas, for instance, and still prevent rivals from winning an electoral majority thus throwing the election to the House of Representatives. The candidate should publicly announce this strategy beforehand, so that voters can see that the candidate has a real chance of victory and that their Libertarian votes would not be wasted .

An attractive Libertarian candidate with only a few electoral votes would then have the same status before the House of Representatives as the major-party candidates and a coalition of disgruntled Democrats and Republicans could put a Libertarian in the White House.

Keep in mind Ross Perot. In 1992 he received 19 percent of the popular vote, but his support was spread throughout the country, so he didn't receive a single electoral vote. If he had concentrated his campaigning in a few states, however, he might have converted his popular support into enough Electoral College votes to pitch the contest to the House. And who knows what might have happened then.

Could something similar happen in 2020? It is unlikely. But if 2016 proved anything, its that we must not dismiss improbable-sounding electoral outcomes out of hand.

Randall G. Holcombe is a research fellow at the Independent Institute and DeVoe Moore Professor of Economics at Florida State University. His latest book is Liberty in Peril: Democracy and Power in American History (Independent Institute, 2019).

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Could our next president be a Libertarian? | TheHill - The Hill

Who’s Right on Impeachment: Rand Paul, Justin Amash, or Jeff Flake? – Reason

Sen. Rand Paul (RKy.) says it's a "fake witch hunt" ("BASTA!"). Rep. Justin Amash (IMich.) is in the same "impeachable conduct" camp he's been in since May; adding such recent commentary as "Nearly every Trump ally's defense has been an effort to gaslight America." And now-retired Rep. Jeff Flake (RAriz.), from the much-hated temperamental center, has in this morning's Washington Post charted out a third way between those two poles, arguing that "the president's actions warrant impeachment," but that Flake still has "grave reservations" about launching those proceedings, so instead wants elected Republicans to not endorse the president's re-election because Trump is "manifestly undeserving of the highest office that we have."

So which of these libertarian-leaning legislators, current and former, has the better argument? That's the subject of this week's editors' roundtable edition of Reason Podcast, featuring Nick Gillespie, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Peter Suderman and Matt Welch. Is it possible or meaningful to separate out impeachment proceedings from articles of impeachment from a Senate conviction thereof? Are there important differences between Trump's conduct and that of previous administrations? What is the role/position/rooting interest for those outside of the two corners? We talk through all of this and more, while fighting a losing battle against profanity, invoking Inception, and explaining how all art is basically a primer on management.

Audio production by Ian Keyser and Regan Taylor.

'Rocking Forward' by XTaKeRuX is licensed under CC BY 4.0

Relevant links from the show:

"Trump's Civil War Tweet Is Bad. This Other Tweet May Be Unconstitutional." By Elizabeth Nolan Brown

"Whether Trump Stays or Goes, We Need To Rein in Presidents and Congress," by Nick Gillespie

"Did Trump Commit a Crime by Seeking a Ukrainian Investigation of Joe Biden? And Does It Matter for Impeachment Purposes?" By Jacob Sullum

"Evidence Increasingly Indicates Trump's Ukraine Pressure Tactics Usurped Congress' Power of the Purseand that he may have Committed a Federal Crime in the Process," by Ilya Somin

"Did the President Commit Witness Tampering?" By David Post

"Is Impeachment a 'Constitutional Duty'?" By Keith Whittington

"Trump's Ukraine Call Was an Abuse of Powerand This Time, He Can't Claim Ignorance or Inexperience," by Peter Suderman

"John Yoo Warns That Impeachment Would Undermine Presidential Power. That's the Point." By Jacob Sullum

"Whistleblower Report Alleges Trump Used Presidential Power for Personal Gain," by Elizabeth Nolan Brown

"Congress Should Not Be Satisfied With Ukraine Call Transcript, Given the Trump White House's History of Fiddling With Records," by Eric Boehm

"Nancy Pelosi Announces Trump Impeachment Inquiry Over Ukraine Scandal," by Billy Binion

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Who's Right on Impeachment: Rand Paul, Justin Amash, or Jeff Flake? - Reason

#CivilWarSignup Trends on Twitter After Trump Suggests His Impeachment Will Lead to Civil War – Mediaite

After President Donald Trump posted a quote on Sunday which claimed Democrats would cause a civil war if the President were impeached, several civil war-related hashtags began to explode on social media. One hashtag, #CivilWarSignup, became the number one trending topic on Twitter, Monday, and a wave of political and media figures made both serious and humorous comments in response.

Maybe instead of #CivilWar2 we could just make the government smaller so this isnt a problem ever again? declared the Libertarian Partys official Twitter account.

Mr. President, maliciously attacking a whistleblower and promoting civil unrest to avoid impeachment wont save you. You should have already been impeached for your bigotry, corruption, and disloyalty to our country, reacted Rep. Al Green (D-TX).

Former U.S. Navy senior chief petty officer Malcolm Nance accused President Trump of being backed by communists in his response to the civil war hysteria.

TRUMP IS A DICTATOR: Call him #DictatorDonald. Only a communist backed wannabe tyrant lacking all morals, loyalty to his oath & steeped in immeasurable stupidity would call for American lawmaker to be arrested for for investigating his own crimes, Nance wrote. Beware. He wants #CivilWar2.

As soon as Im done with hot yoga, Ill be there. Im not so good with the fighting stuff but Ill help with the tweets, jested author and journalist Molly Jong-Fast, before making a more serious observation: The sad truth is that trump threatening civil war is so good for traffic that twitter will never suspend him.

I will bring hundreds of Star Trek uniforms to form my own zouave unit. We will be strictly posting spicy takes, joked journalist Wilson Dizard, while Ellen Show Executive Producer Andy Lassner asked, What do you even wear to a civil war?

The Bulwark founder Charlie Sykes posted, Lets be clear here. The president is tweeting about Civil War. In a Civil War, Americans would be killing one another, while New York Times contributing oped writer Wajahat Ali commented, People we are joking about a Civil War because Trump, with utmost seriousness, warned of #CivilWar2 if Congress did it job and kept him in check. None of this normal. Please realize he will get worse and someone will get hurt.

What Trump means by Civil War is that a bunch of racists will attack people of color. Hes a racist, pure & simple, remarked director Morgan J. Freeman, while conservative blogger Carmine Sabia claimed, The progressives want a #CivilWar2. No one takes your impeachment seriously when you have been calling for it since Election Day. You wanted to find any reason. But I would not support a war to fight fellow Americans.

Journalist Deborah Copaken also did not see the humour in a potential second civil war.

Call me a killjoy, but Im not finding the #civilwar2 jokes funny. I spent 4 years covering civil wars. Ive seen their human toll. Our president just signaled, with 1 tweet, a large swath of our population with all the guns to get ready to use them, she declared. This shakes me to my core.

Other pundits who joined in with the online conversation included the Daily Shows Roy Wood, writer Elie Mystal, Pod Save The People co-host Brittany Packnett, NBC News legal analyst Glenn Kirschner, Democratic Coalition co-founder Jon Cooper, former Obama Administration staffer Brandon Friedman, commentator Bob Cesca, former Stormy Daniels attorney Michael Avenatti, The Atlantic staff writer Adam Serwer, and Mediaites own Tommy Christopher.

[Photo via Richard Ellis/Getty Images]

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#CivilWarSignup Trends on Twitter After Trump Suggests His Impeachment Will Lead to Civil War - Mediaite

Williams: Youth and ignorance | Opinion – Longview News-Journal

Camille Paglia is a professor of humanities and media studies at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, where she has been a faculty member since 1984. Paglia describes herself as transgender, but unlike so many other transgender people, she is pro-capitalism and hostile to those whod restrict free speech. Shes a libertarian.

As to modern ideas that include gender-inclusive pronouns such as zie, sie and zim, Paglia says it is lunacy. In a 2017 interview, she was especially irritated by the thought police running college campuses today. In defending University of Toronto professor Jordan Peterson, who has become a pariah for his refusal to cave in to nonsensical gender-inclusive pronouns, Paglia said that the English language was created by great artists such as Chaucer and Shakespeare, Wordsworth and Joyce. She added: How dare you, you sniveling little maniac, tell us how were gonna use pronouns! Go take a hike.

On feminism, Paglia criticizes what she calls the antisex and repressively doctrinaire side of feminism. She calls it victim feminism and complains that everything wed won in the 1990s has been totally swept away. Now we have this endless privileging of victimhood, with a pathological vulnerability seen as the default human mode. Everyone must yield to it in the workplace, in universities, in the demand for safe spaces. Paglia adds, What I am saying throughout my work is that girls who are indoctrinated to see men not as equals but as oppressors and rapists are condemned to remain in a permanently juvenile condition for life.

Paglias bold statements got her in a bit of hot water last April. University of the Arts students demanded that she be fired over public comments shed made that were not wholly sympathetic to the #MeToo movement, as well as for an interview with the Weekly Standard they called transphobic. That latter denunciation is particularly slapstick, because Paglia describes herself as transgender, writes Tunku Varadarajan, Hoover Institutions institutional editor, in his Aug. 30 Wall Street Journal article A Feminist Capitalist Professor Under Fire.

The students demand that Paglia be fired fell on deaf ears. Fortunately, there are a few college presidents with guts and common sense. President David Yager is one of them. He wrote in an open letter to students: Artists over the centuries have suffered censorship, and even persecution, for the expression of their beliefs through their work. My answer is simple: not now, not at UArts.

Theres another part of this story thats particularly interesting considering todays young peoples love of socialism. Paglia says children now are raised in a far more affluent period. Even people without much money have cellphones, televisions, and access to cars. Theyre raised in an air-conditioned environment. I can still remember when there was no air-conditioning.

Paglia says: Everything is so easy now. The stores are so plentifully supplied. You just go in and buy fruits and vegetables from all over the world. Young people ignorant of history and economics have a sense that this is the way life has always been. Because theyve never been exposed to history, they have no idea that these are recent attainments that come from a very specific economic system.

Young people led by Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez fail to realize that capitalism has produced this cornucopia around us. But the young seem to believe in having the government run everything, and that the private companies that are doing things for profit around them, and supplying them with goods, will somehow exist forever. For the feminists, Paglia says, I insist that capitalism has produced the glorious emancipation of women. Today, they can support themselves and live on their own, and no longer must humiliatingly depend on father or husband.

Reading Varadarajans article made my day knowing that theres at least one intelligent radical feminist. But what else is to be expected from anyone whos a libertarian capitalist?

Walter E. Williams, a professor of economics at George Mason University, is a columnist with Creators Syndicate. His column appears Tuesday.

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Williams: Youth and ignorance | Opinion - Longview News-Journal

Early voting starts soon | News – Kokomo Perspective

On Oct. 8, early voting starts in Howard County for this years municipal election. At stake is the mayors office, which is up for grabs for the first time in 12 years in a wide-open race between Democrat Abbie Smith and Republican Tyler Moore. In addition, every seat on the Kokomo Common Council is up for election, as is the city clerk position.

After early voting commences voters can cast an early ballot at the Howard County Government Center, 120 E. Mulberry St., from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. until Nov. 1. Then, on Oct. 26, early voting opens at Indiana Wesleyan, 1916 W. Markland Ave., from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

On Oct. 29 early voting will ramp up, with additional locations open at Indiana Wesleyan, Carver Community Center, Russiaville Lions Club, Titan Annex, and UAW Local 685. Through Nov. 3 these locations will be open from 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. with the exception being that Indiana Wesleyan will be open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. On Nov. 2 and 4 the Howard County Government Center will reopen for early voting. From 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Nov. 2, and on Nov. 4 from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.

Absentee voting also will commence on Oct. 8.

Voting on Election Day on Nov. 5 runs from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. In total, 13 vote centers will be open throughout Howard County. Those are Indiana Wesleyan, Carver Community Center, Russiaville Lions Club, Titan Annex, UAW Local 685, Eastern Performing Arts Center, First Assembly of God Church, Good Shepherd Church, Kokomo High School, Maple Crest School, Oakbrook Church, Senior Citizens Center, and Kokomo-Howard County Public Library South Branch. To see the locations of these vote centers, view the accompanying map.

The deadline to register to vote is Oct. 7.

In total, 11 positions within Kokomo government are up for election this year. However, only nine races are contested with the incumbents in Kokomo Common Council District 5, Republican Cynthia Sanders, and District 6, Thomas Miklik, not facing challengers this year.

In the mayoral race, Moore and Smith will be listed on the ballot alongside Libertarian Michael Virgin. However, Virgin recently announced a withdrawal from the mayoral race while endorsing Moore. But because the Libertarian didnt make the decision prior to a state-mandated deadline, he still will appear on the ballot.

Voters also will be tasked with selecting three candidates for the three at-large positions on the Kokomo Common Council. In that race, the incumbent candidates are Democrats Robert Hayes and John Michael Kennedy. Republicans Matthew Grecu, Kara Kitts-McKibben, and Antonio Stewart as well as Democrat Matthew Sedam also are on the ballot. The three candidates with the most votes will earn the at-large offices.

In the District 1, Republican Jason Acord faces incumbent Democrat Michael Wyant. In District 2, Democratic incumbent Robert Cameron is pitted against Republican Lynn Rudolph. For District 3, voters will select either Republican Ray Collins or Democrat Cathy Cox-Stover, who both seek to replace Councilwoman Janie Young after she chose not to seek reelection this year. Theres a three-way race in District 4, with Democratic incumbent Donnie Haworth facing Republican Greg Jones and Libertarian Danial Purvis.

And in the city clerk race, Republican Diane Howard is going against incumbent Democrat Brenda Brunnemer-Ott.

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Early voting starts soon | News - Kokomo Perspective

November election will include many contested races – OBSERVER-REVIEW.COM

TRI-COUNTY AREA--Despite several one-candidate elections, voters in Yates, Schuyler and Steuben County still have plenty of contested local elections to sort through come November.Three districts in the county legislature have contested elections, with five candidates vying for four seats in District 1, four candidates and three seats in District 2 and six candidates for four seats in District 3. District 1 consists of Italy, Jerusalem and Middlesex, District 2 encompasses Benton, Potter and Torrey and District 3 is Milo.Along with voting for county positions, Benton, Jerusalem, Italy and Milo also have contested elections along with Barrington. Wayne and Urbana will see some contested elections while the village of Hammondsport will not. The county judge race highlights a number of contested elections in Schuyler.

Yates CountyDistrict 1 (Italy, Jerusalem, Middlesex) - two-year term (four seats open)Edward A. Bronson - Republican, ConservativeTimothy P. Cutler - Republican, ConservativeDouglas Paddock - Republican, ConservativeK. Dixon Zorovich - DemocraticPatrick Killen - Republican

District 2 (Benton, Potter, Torrey) - two-term (three seats open)Terry L. Button - RepublicanPeggy Focarino - DemocraticRichard L. Wilson - RepublicanRichard J. Harper - Republican

District 3 (Milo) - two-year term (four seats open)Earle Gleason - RepublicanLeslie Church - RepublicanDaniel Banach - RepublicanCarlie Chilson - RepublicanValerie Brechko - DemocraticTeresa Hoban - Democratic

BarringtonTown Council - four-year term (two seats open)Calvin C. Crosby - RepublicanThomas J. Petro III - Republican, Barrington RenewalSteven Brigham - Barrington Renewal

BentonTown Council - four-year term (two seats open)Alan D. Tomion - RepublicanRichard J. Harper - RepublicanBill Roege - Democratic

Highway Superintendent - four-year termJayson Hoover - RepublicanSteven Vaughan - Conservative

ItalyTown Council - four-year term (two seats open)Debra Cook - RepublicanBenjamin A. Dempsey - RepublicanMalcolm MacKenzie - Vote MacKenzie

JerusalemTown Supervisor - two-year termJamie L. Sisson - RepublicanK. Dixon Zorovich - Democratic

MiloTown Council - four-year-term (two seats open)Dale Hallings - RepublicanArden G. Sorenson Jr. - RepublicanValerie Valerie Brechko - DemocraticMildred A. Phillips-Espana - Democratic

Steuben County (Observer coverage area)WayneTown Supervisor - two-year termThomas A. Dunbar - Democratic, RepublicanSteve Butchko - Our TownChristopher Curry - Chris For Wayne

Town Clerk - two-year termMary Cornish Starkweather - Democrat, ConservativeWilliam Mahr - Republican, Independence

Councilman - four-year termLiz Kenyon - Democrat, Republican, IndependenceShona Freeman - RepublicanJulie A. Haar - Home Sweet Home

Superintendent of Highways - two-year termGary E. Perz - DemocraticDouglas Howard - Republican

UrbanaTown Supervisor - four-year termBee Keck - DemocraticEdward P. Stull - Republican, Wise Owl

Councilman - four-year term (two openings)Michele Foster - DemocraticDavid J. Luppino - RepublicanAlzina L. Turner - DemocraticDavid Shaw - RepublicanSchuyler County (Observer coverage area)

County Judge - ten-year termMatthew C. Hayden - Democratic, WOR/Schuyler First, SamSteven J. Getman - Republican, LibertarianJessica M. Saks - Independent, About JusticeDaniel J. Fitzsimmons - Home Town Law

Legislator District 7 - four-year termPaul J. Bartow - Democratic, UnityMark F. Rondinaro - Republican, Libertarian

Legislator District 8 - four-year termMaggie Coffey - Democratic, Working 4 YouGary L. Gray - Republican, Libertarian

TyroneCouncil Member - four-year term (two openings)Thomas R. Allen - Democratic, IntegrityNorman G. Knight - RepublicanEdward Perry, Sr. - Republican

DixJustice - four-year termBrian T. Eslinger - Democratic, Fair & BalancedKristina A. Vondracek - Republican

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November election will include many contested races - OBSERVER-REVIEW.COM

MAGA Hat Wearers Harass the Elderly (Kidding, It Was Antifa) | VodkaPundit – PJ Media

Antifa's special brand of bullying madness has arrived in full force in Canada. Left-wing thugs can be seen on video chanting, "Nazi scum! Off our streets! Nazi scum! Off our streets!" at an elderly couple trying to do nothing more than use a public crosswalk. As you can see, the woman can apparently get around only with the aid of a walker, yet still poses some kind of threat to Antifa.

The reason for Antifa's appearance was to "protest" an event at Mohawk College sponsored by Maxime Bernier, leader of the Peoples Party of Canada, and American libertarian political commentator Dave Rubin.

The local Hamilton Spectator reports that more than 100 Antifa showed up at the sold-out event. The school allowed Sunday's show to go on, despite "concerns" raised by various students and faculty members' about PPC's supposed "far-right" agenda.

Bernier is a former Canadian cabinet member under PM Stephen Harper's Conservative party government, but left to form the PPC last year. Bernier complained that the Conservatives had grown too "intellectually and morally corrupt" to take on "extreme multiculturalism," which he believes creates division among Canadians.

Sunday's event sold out the 1,000-seat McIntyre Art Centre at $50 per ticket. Not a bad showing at a school of 30,000 students, and the extra security the administration had to provide wasn't to keep the conservatives and libertarians in line.

Meanwhile in Seattle, Major League Soccer caved to Antifa hooligans, agreeing to allow the black flag to fly during a Seattle Sounders games at CenturyLink, and elsewhere.

Give in to thugs, get more thuggery.

I was about to say things are going to get ugly, but they already have. The question is, how much uglier we'll let things get before the inevitable backlash.

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MAGA Hat Wearers Harass the Elderly (Kidding, It Was Antifa) | VodkaPundit - PJ Media

Protecting Big Tech From Big Government: A Conversation with TechFreedom’s Berin Szoka – InsideSources

The following interview with Berin Szoka, president of TechFreedom, is part of an ongoing series of Q&As with leading policy professionals in Washington, D.C. This interview is edited for brevity and clarity.

InsideSources: What inspired you to found TechFreedom?

Berin Szoka: I started TechFreedom because the Progress and Freedom Foundation (PFF) closed during the financial downturn. One, I wanted to continue the work PFF had been doing, and do the things PFF wasnt but should have been doing, like civil liberties and surveillance work. The reason I went to PFF in the first place is because I wanted to be a principled voice in debates over how to govern the future of technology.

I dont think the perspective we take [at TechFreedom] was or is well-represented. I think there are existing organizations that have a very strong ideological agenda. There are people that start from strong ideological premises on both sides of the debate, and thats just not really what we do.

Were really first and foremost lawyers who try to think through these hard problems and provide good analysis. We have our own philosophical approach, but thats really secondary, and my chief frustration with dealing with the people in our field across the political spectrum is there arent that many people who are honest analysts and thinkers first and advocates for a political view second. Were not activists, were not an advocacy shop, were really a public interest law firm.

InsideSources: Tell me about some of the biggest policy issues TechFreedom is focused on right now.

Berin Szoka: As with everything we do, we ask, is this something people are looking at? Section 230 gets a lot of attention, but very few people take the time to lawyer through. A lot of people defending 230 speak in platitudes about how 230 made the internet possible. Thats not what we do. What would be the practical effect of a reasonableness expectation for immunity [like Sen. Josh Hawleys (R-Mo.) bill]? The practical effect would be you as a website operator would no longer be able to get rid of lawsuits, and after all that hassle and expense, you could perhaps get the lawsuit dismissed. What could be done to open the door into that avalanche of lawsuits? There are very few people in the policy world engaged in that analysis.

The only way were going to safeguard against future abuses of power is to have a combination of statutory protections, transparency, and tools that allow people to blow the whistle, whatever the right thing for the circumstance. For example, I am profoundly concerned about the way the administration appears to have weaponized the enforcement of antitrust laws. It appears to me they are operating to suit the political agenda of the White House. Its pretty clear Trump is trying to use antitrust laws against political rivals.

Our general theme IS about not giving too much discretion to regulators. There are some very specific changes we would like to see made. The presidents war powers under the Communications Act is essentially an internet kill switch. They are very broad, there are essentially no safeguards, and if youre really concerned about someone abusing power in secret and potentially shutting down communications, those are the sorts of things that should be addressed now. So we are reaching out to people across the political spectrum to be engaged. I dont think that gets enough attention, and its very different from what most people in this field do. People are focused on short-term partisan fights.

The next administration will have an opportunity to start implementing these kinds of reforms for all sorts of things, like how we appoint commissioners over agencies, that process is breaking down. We would really like to sit down with people and fix these problems with the regulatory state. They will really have an opportunity to step back from the normal partisan fights and institute safeguards.

InsideSources: What do you think are some of the biggest misconceptions surrounding some of these issues?

Berin Szoka: Most people think that the debate over the last few years has been about net neutrality, when really its been about the FCCs authority over internet services. The only way were going to resolve this issue is to distinguish those two things. Democrats still say Mike Doyles bill will resolve this fight, well no it wont, it restores the FCCs open internet order. It restores the FCCs authority over internet services, and thats something weve always objected to, not the net neutrality principles.

The really big misunderstanding that underlies that whole debate is that people on both sides of the aisle, especially Republicans, is that they really dont understand the problem of scale. The reason Section 230 is so vital is because its one thing for a newspaper to filter all the letters to the editor and third-party op-eds, but any website, not just Google and Facebook, theres no way you or I could manage all the comments. The problem just grows from there.

When Republicans complain about bias and social media content moderation, what theyre really seeing is the result of the vast scale of these services. Its just not possible to make perfectly thoughtful decisions all the time. We cant have the courts litigating every single time someone complains about content on the internet. We have to have cruder, faster mechanisms that are imperfect and will result in a lot of absurd cases of content being taken down that shouldnt be.

The other bigger point I would make that relates to abuse of power: Im constantly amazed at people who propose something like broad power to a regulator with open discretion and then dont think about how that power will be abused when theyre not in power.

When we start thinking not from a knee-jerk ideological perspective and start practically thinking things through, how will this power be abused? What will people on the other side do with it?

InsideSources: Which issue are you most passionate about?

Berin Szoka: At the moment, I would say Im most passionate about defending internet services against Republican hypocrisy.

Last year [when I testified at the April 26, 2018 House Judiciary Committee hearing] I naively expected I would hear some Republican attacks but at least most or some would be willing to say whatever mistakes tech companies might make in content moderation, we dont think the government should dictate what tech companies should do. But instead every single one of them took the opportunity to rave about Republicans being censored without any anecdotal examples.

InsideSources: What triggered your interest in these tech issues?

Berin Szoka: Im essentially doing today what I wanted to do as a freshman or sophomore in college. The book The Future and Its Enemies by Virginia Postrel Ive always said has been my lodestar. Thats sort of generally libertarian, but you dont have to be a libertarian to feel that way about the internet and evolving services. Essentially, [its about how] were better off not trying to put the future in some neat and tidy box.

Beyond that, the net neutrality debate wasnt really my choice, that kind of took over the field, and its the same for Section 230. Groups like the Media Research Center figured out that net neutrality was a great fundraising issue, and are essentially taking the playbook from Fight for the Future and doing the same thing.

InsideSources: Are there any experiences that stand out in how they influenced your political views and policy positions?

Berin Szoka: The April 26, 2018 hearing was, for me, the last straw. It was at that hearing that I realized the Republican Party is completely lost. If that hearing happened a year before, every single Republican there would have said all the same things about how terrible the Fairness Doctrine was, and now they turn around and push that exact same idea for social media. Theyre the ones who have rushed to say for 10 years that net neutrality is the Fairness Doctrine for the internet.

InsideSources: What politicians, economists and other influencers have influenced your views and policy positions?

Berin Szoka: Virginia Postrel and her book, which I really cannot recommend enough. In college I also read The Innovators Dilemma by Clayton Christiansen, and its fundamental point is still quite right, that the really important thing about innovation is that Facebook isnt going to be disrupted by another Facebook, but by someone who does something completely different that disrupts their business model.

Thats the heart of our work, to make sure regulation doesnt lock in a way of doing things because that will lock in our current giants and their interests. I also read an early law and economics take on internet regulation, Information Rules by Hal Varian and Carl Shapiro, thats still a great work. Also Hayek.

InsideSources: Do you have any nerdy, unique hobbies?

Berin Szoka: Well,I row.I row on the Anacostia and have the river to myself and think about things.LanguageIm a pretty good French speaker, andIm taking German again, but my German is pretty bad.My license plate is BAROQUE, I love baroque music. Bach is my favorite.

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Protecting Big Tech From Big Government: A Conversation with TechFreedom's Berin Szoka - InsideSources

What to Know About Ridesharing Accidents – The Libertarian Republic

Uber, Lyft, Juno and other ridesharing services have grown extremely popular in recent years. At this point in time, you or someone else you know regularly relies on these services to obtain a ride to a specific destination. Ridesharing services are very convenient and inexpensive, which makes them so hugely popular. Unfortunately, due to the large number of ridesharing drivers now taking to the roads to transport passengers from point A to point B on a daily basis, there are even more vehicles on the road than ever. As a result, many more car accidents are bound to happen. Its important to understand the situation based on your particular circumstances with a ridesharing vehicle and how you can recover the compensation you are due if you are injured in such an accident.

Basic Steps to Take After a Car Accident

First and foremost, if you are involved in an accident involving an Uber, Lyft or other ridesharing vehicle or in any car accident, in general, there are certain basic steps you must take. They include the following:

Make sure everyone is okay after the crash. If there are any injuries, it might be possible to administer basic first aid. However, if anyone is seriously injured, its important that they get immediate medical attention and get checked out by a doctor and other healthcare professionals at the hospital. At the same time, even if you or anyone else feel completely unharmed, adrenaline is running high after such a harrowing experience, which means you may not even realize that you are injured. The symptoms, including aches and pains, may not show up until hours or even days later. Additionally, there may be internal injuries that require immediate medical attention. Call 911 to summon police officers to the scene of the accident. The police should come to assess the situation and make a police accident report. If you later decide you want to file a personal injury claim, you can also use a copy of the police report in your case. A Lyft accident attorney can use it as part of the evidence to back up your claim for damages. Snap plenty of photos of the scene of the accident. Snap as many as possible and get shots of the vehicles, the damage they have sustained, the road, skid marks, road conditions and weather conditions. You can use a digital camera or your smartphones built-in camera. Gather up the names and contact information of everyone involved in the accident. Specifically, you should focus on information belonging to the other drivers, including their names, phone numbers, drivers license and license plate numbers. Talk to people around the scene who were witnesses to the accident. Ask them to make a statement of what they saw and get their names and phone numbers. You may want to ask them to write down what they recall or record their statements. Contact your insurance company and inform someone that you were injured in an accident. Keep a journal and write down anything and everything you can think of pertaining to the accident. This can be helpful when you decide to speak with a uber accident lawyer about starting your own injury claim. Always stay calm. Panicking can only make the situation worse.

What Happens When a Ridesharing Vehicle Gets Into an Accident?

These days, ridesharing services are a big part of regular everyday life for many people. Lyft, Uber, Juno and other ridesharing services are so popular because its easy to request a ride. All you have to do is download the app of the ridesharing service of your choice to your smartphone, open the app and request a ride. You only have to wait for the vehicle to show up and dont have to fight for a car to take you to your desired destination. This plus the cheaper price is what makes ridesharing services so much more convenient than traditional taxi cabs, which require you to stand on the street and gesture for a ride.

In a nutshell, ridesharing services have essentially been a game-changer in the transportation industry as a whole. As of the summer of 2018, there were more than 75 million users relying on ridesharing services. This means there are now millions of vehicles on the road providing the service. Considering this fact, its only natural that there would be so many more accidents involving ridesharing vehicles.

Situations Involving Ridesharing Accidents and Claims

If you use Lyft, Uber, Juno or any other ridesharing service, you are unfortunately at risk of being involved in an accident with one of those vehicle. Furthermore, even if you are merely a bystander a pedestrian you can become injured if you are the unfortunate victim of an accident involving a ridesharing vehicle. Its important to know what your rights are and how you can claim compensation for your medical expenses and other damages. The various situations include the following:

You are a passenger in the ridesharing vehicle: If you are a passenger in a ridesharing vehicle that suddenly gets into a crash, you can rely on the ridesharing companys $1 million insurance policy, which covers injuries to passengers. Its wise to take advantage of this coverage, but you should definitely speak with a lawyer to ensure that your rights are protected. You are a bystander and the driver didnt have the app on: If you were injured in an accident with a ridesharing vehicle but the driver did not have the app on, you would have to rely on the drivers personal auto insurance policy to cover your medical expenses and other damages. Unfortunately, the ridesharing companys policy would not apply. If the drivers policy is insufficient in effectively compensating you, you would have to use your own underinsured or uninsured policy as well. You are a bystander and the driver has the app on while waiting for a ride request: If the driver is riding around with the app on while waiting for a request for a ride and hits you, the ridesharing companys insurance policy applies. Coverage includes $50,000 up to $100,000 max per person per injury and $25,000 per property damage. You are a bystander and the driver is traveling to pick up a passenger: If you are a bystander who is injured in an accident with a ridesharing driver who is on the way to pick up a passenger, the ridesharing companys $1 million insurance policy applies. Its easy to prove that the ridesharing company is liable for your medical expenses, lost wages and other damages due to the drivers GPS. Regardless, its smart to speak with an attorney so your rights can be protected. You are a bystander and the driver is transporting a passenger to a destination: If you were injured in an accident as a bystander after a ridesharing vehicle crash and the driver was transporting a passenger, the $1 million insurance policy again kicks in. However, you should still retain an experienced lawyer to ensure you get the compensation you deserve.

Unfortunately, accidents involving ridesharing vehicles are not going away anytime soon. If you have suffered an injury using one of these vehicles or as a pedestrian, its important to speak with a Lyft accident attorney at West Coast Trial Lawyers. When you contact West Coast Trial Lawyers, you can discuss your case with a skilled ridesharing accident attorney and can learn about your options.

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What to Know About Ridesharing Accidents - The Libertarian Republic

Former GOP Gov. Weld backs Joe Kennedy in his bid to unseat Sen. Markey – Greenwich Time

Annie Linskey, The Washington Post

It might not be the support he's looking for, but Bill Weld, the former Republican Massachusetts governor, said Thursday he backs Rep. Joe Kennedy in his bid to oust Sen. Edward J. Markey in the Democratic primary.

The race between Kennedy and Markey is shaping up to be among the most watched intramural contests this election cycle, pitting the scion of one of the country's more famous political families against Markey, a longtime member of Congress.

Kennedy is expected to formally launch his Senate bid on Saturday in Boston.

"I'm for Kennedy," said Weld, who held a wide-ranging conversation with Washington Post reporters. "I've known him since the day he was born."

"He doesn't want my endorsement," Weld added quickly.

He also praised Markey.

"I've known Ed for a long time and he's a hero in a lot of areas," Weld said, listing Telecom and the environment as two key issues where he said Markey has provided leadership.

Emily Kaufman, a spokeswoman for Kennedy, said, "Joe appreciates the kind words. He'll be making a a campaign announcement this Saturday and looks forward to speaking with folks then."

Weld, who served as governor from 1991 to 1997, waged an unsuccessful bid for Senate in 1996, trying to unseat then-Sen. John Kerry. Weld is currently seeking the Republican presidential nomination, taking on President Donald Trump. His strategy involves trying to win New Hampshire, where he's been heavily campaigning. There have been few public polls of the Republican primary in New Hampshire, but an April survey showed Trump more than 60 percentage points ahead of Weld.

During his conversation with reporters, Weld ruled out running on the Libertarian ticket or as an independent if he fails to secure the GOP nomination. In 2016, Weld clinched the Libertarian Party's nod for vice president and ran on a ticket with Gary Johnson.

Weld avoided offering any endorsements on the Democratic side, but shared some thoughts about the candidates.

About fellow Bay Stater Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Weld said: "She sure is smart and she sure is filled with energy." But he added that her economic policies are too far left for the country and predicted she would lose in a general election.

Weld sounded more impressed with former vice president Joe Biden, who is atop most of the Democratic polls. "I've known Biden the longest of any of these folks," Weld said.

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Former GOP Gov. Weld backs Joe Kennedy in his bid to unseat Sen. Markey - Greenwich Time

Trump launches ambitious play to turn New Mexico red – POLITICO

The Trump campaign has an unprecedented war chest to spend on watch-list states like New Mexico. | Patrick Semansky/AP File Photo

2020 elections

The strategy centers on wooing Hispanics in the state, which has voted for a Republican presidential candidate only once since 1992.

By GABBY ORR

09/16/2019 05:03 AM EDT

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. John McCain lost New Mexico by nearly 15 percentage points in 2008. Four years later, Mitt Romney pulled two top staffers from the ground here with weeks to go before Election Day admitting defeat even before Barack Obama trounced him by 51 points in the Santa Fe area.

The Land of Enchantment has voted for a Republican presidential candidate only once since 1992. With a considerable nonwhite voter population and all-Democratic congressional delegation, its not exactly fertile ground for a surprise GOP victory.

Story Continued Below

But then, President Donald Trump has seldom shied away from a long-shot challenge.

Despite the Democratic Partys statewide success here last November winning two congressional seats up for grabs, defending a third and defeating Republican nominee Steve Pearce for the governors mansion Trump and his aides are betting they can flip New Mexico next fall and expand his electoral playing field.

Their efforts begin Monday night with a campaign rally in Rio Rancho, which sits in a county Trump lost by 1,800 votes in 2016. The Hispanic-heavy city is four hours north of El Paso, Texas, where the president held a reelection rally in August that prompted campaign manager Brad Parscale to add New Mexico to his watch list a list of nontraditional battleground states, including Maine, Colorado, Minnesota and Virginia, that the Trump campaign has its sights set on.

Ive continued to say the presidents policies are a win for Latino voters across America and one of the first symbols of this was the El Paso rally, Parscale told reporters on a call last week. We saw in the data thousands of voters who did not vote for the president in 2016 show up to a rally, come listen to the president and register [to vote].

As we started doing polling there, we saw a dramatic increase from 2016 and I went over this with the president and he said, Lets go straight into Albuquerque, Parscale recalled.

poster="https://static.politico.com/eb/36/868c6ab4463cb2341d00657e5d89/immigration-eugene.png" true

Political forecasters and local officials remain puzzled by claims that Trump with his restrictionist immigration policies, white-identity politics and below-average approval ratings can woo enough voters to turn New Mexico in his favor.

What weve seen of the presidents immigration policy has been cruel and inhumane. I think Democrats and New Mexicans, in general, are much more interested in making sure our communities feel welcome and safe, said Miranda van Dijk, a spokeswoman for the Democratic Party of New Mexico, which is counterprogramming Trumps rally with an event focused on unity and diversity.

Hes a batshit racist, adds Chris Luchini, a New Mexico native who sits atop the states Libertarian Party. Im very skeptical that New Mexico is up for grabs with him.

The Libertarians of New Mexico earned major-party status in 2016 after Gary Johnson the states former Republican governor, who became the Libertarian presidential nominee in the past two elections carried nearly 10 percent of the statewide vote. Luchini contends that the party has become somewhat of a refuge for disaffected Democrats who are too conservative for the progressive politics of their state Legislature, but too appalled by Trump to reregister as Republicans.

Traditionally, the normal thing that most political operatives have believed is that people who vote Libertarian are disaffected Republicans. That is no longer true in New Mexico, he explained.

Luchini said he often calls voters when they reregister as Libertarian to ask what prompted the change, and what I get on the phone calls a lot are traditional conservative Democrats who can no longer stomach being called a Democrat, but are self-selected not to be Trump voters.

The trend he describes is consistent with the Trump campaigns attraction to New Mexico, though questions remain about whether the current political climate here is truly advantageous for the president. His net approval rating in the state has decreased by 34 percentage points since he took office, and recent matchup polls in bordering red Texas have shown him losing to the top three candidates in the Democratic presidential field.

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But Trump campaign officials say the numbers theyre looking at paint a different picture of a state in which Hispanic Catholics and rural voters feel abandoned by progressive lawmakers who have pushed to codify reproductive rights, increase taxes and mandate the creation of gender-neutral restrooms in commercial buildings. Furthermore, they maintain that the presidents actions on immigration are attractive to a particular subset of Hispanic voters who support border security or have family members who entered the U.S. legally.

That is, only if Trump can ditch the harsh rhetoric he typically employs when discussing his immigration policies and preferences, says Pearce, the failed gubernatorial candidate, who has spoken to the campaign about the presidents language in his current capacity as chairman of New Mexicos Republican Party.

This is a lot about tone, and youve got to watch that, Pearce said. You dont have to be cautious about saying you want to secure the border. You just have to say it with firmness and without anger.

Republicans in New Mexico are also eyeing retiring Democrat Tom Udalls Senate seat as a means to boost voter turnout and help the president in 2020. Two Republican candidates have already declared in addition to 10 different people who are interested in running, whom Pearce says he has spoken to though neither is viewed as particularly competitive in what is seen as a relatively safe seat for Democrats.

Still, van Dijk says Democratic activists and state party officials are not taking anything for granted for this cycle and will focus heavily on defending Udalls seat and appealing to voters from every corner of the state.

Were really excited about supporting our eventual nominee for Senate and lucky to have an incredible county party structure, she said. We are in every part of our state and were making sure our initiatives are focused in every part of our state.

By Parscales telling, Trump who hasnt visited New Mexico since October 2016 has long been eager to return. Campaign officials believe that Johnson attracted tens of thousands of would-be Trump voters during the presidents first White House bid. And if they can just win over those voters this cycle, it will bring Trump closer to having five more electoral votes in his pocket.

It wasnt until mid-August, though, that Trump himself was convinced of the idea. The president has spent months polling his inner circle about the political landscape in New Mexico, according to two people familiar with those conversations, one of whom recalled his asking an aide whether coming here would be a waste of time.

I started talking to them saying they shouldnt write off New Mexico in January. They didnt believe that in the least, Pearce said.

He continued: Eventually Brad began to watch it, and three to four months ago he said he wanted to come into New Mexico and do a little something with the party, and that morphed into Don Jr. coming with him, and then the president started wanting to come about the time of his New Hampshire rally in August.

With an unprecedented war chest, the Trump campaign has ample cash to spend on watch-list states like New Mexico, where at least a half-dozen staffers are expected to be stationed before the end of the year. If Mondays rally meets expectations, the president could turn the state into a regular stop on the campaign trail as 2020 draws near particularly if his prospects begin to dim in key battleground states.

He starts off with 164 electoral votes automatically, a Republican official familiar with Trumps strategy recently told POLITICO. What I would tell you is, I feel like hes going to win Texas, but I dont know that we have opportunities in Colorado, Virginia [or] New Mexico.

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Trump launches ambitious play to turn New Mexico red - POLITICO