Monthly Archives: July 2017

Syracuse Mayoral Democrats Turn in Petition Signatures; One Candidate Switches to Libertarian Party – WAER

Posted: July 18, 2017 at 4:37 am

Another major milestone has been reached in the Syracuse mayoral election. Democratic hopefuls have submitted their petitions to stay in the race. There are five Democratic candidates: Joe Nicoletti, Juanita Williams, Alfonso Davis, Raymond Blackwell, and Marty Masterpole. But getting enough signatures doesnt mean theyll all be on the ballot. Onondaga County Board of Elections Commissioner Dustin Czarny says there are two main reasons candidates can be knocked from the race: If they failed to collect enough signatures from registered Democrats within the city, or if their witnesses to those petitions were not qualified.

"Every candidate has had a general objection filed against them, which means that the possibility of specific objections against a any candidate could come in against any candidate over the next week or so. In all likelihood, maybe one or two won't survive, but we just won't be able to tell until the end of thechallenge weeks."

While parties and candidates must encourage voting, Czarny says the Board of Elections will engage with local media to remind citizens of registration and voting deadlines. Czarny is hopeful that the circumstances of this primary could motivate more participation from the people of Syracuse.

"Primary elections tend to be the most low-turnout elections. My hope is with the number of candidates and the open mayoral seat, we'll see a higher turnout in this primary than we would have, say, four years ago."

The Board of Elections has found that in years with an open mayoral seat like this one, more people vote in primaries. However, Czarny believes that political tension nationally could also contribute to greater local voting interest.

"What could be different this year is you see this wave of activism sweeping the country now. Even special elections are getting higher turnout. The increasedawareness of local elections and elections in general could translate to higher turnout numbers in the fall."

One candidate who will not be on the Democratic line is Chris Fowler, who didn't submit the 1,000 required signatures from party members to secure a spot on the ballot. He recently gained the Libertarian Partys nomination, but now must gather more than 1,300 signatures to create a Libertarian Party line on the ballot. Also running for mayor are Republican Laura Lavine, Green Party's Howie Hawkins, and Independent Ben Walsh. Primary elections are September 12th; the general election is November 7th.

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Anti-nuke ship and crew welcomed in Vallejo – Vallejo Times Herald

Posted: at 4:37 am

The anti-nuclear movement is alive and kicking, something obvious to anyone who happened to be at the Vallejo Yacht Club on Friday when the Golden Rule made a stopover here.

The Golden Rule Peace Boat, arriving on Thursday, was here as part of a 2017 campaign, its crew members said.

It was great, project manager Helen Jaccard said. The yacht club was very welcoming. We had a few minutes to talk, and got applause from everybody, and several people came up to me later and thanked us for being part of this mission and several took a tour of the boat, and I think some may even go online and make a donation. It was a very successful event. Im glad we did it.

The yacht club allowed the group to dock the peace boat overnight before it set sail again, she said.

Often times here Im preaching to the choir, she said. These people (at the Vallejo Yacht Club) are not activists, and when we speak to people like that, the further our message can get out.

That message is the urgent need to ensure the United States doesnt launch a nuclear strike without Congress first declaring war, as well as working toward a nuke-free planet, Jaccard said.

Its important to know the anti-nuclear movement isnt dead and in fact is having a big revival with (President Donald) Trump getting into office, she said. We aim to advance Veterans For Peace opposition to nuclear weapons and war, and to do so in a dramatic fashion.

The ocean-bound movements history goes back decades.

In 1958, four Quaker pacifists sailed the Golden Rule toward the Marshall Islands to interfere with nuclear bomb tests, organization members said.

She sank in 2010 in Humboldt Bay and Veterans For Peace (VFP), Quakers and others rescued and worked to restore her, they said.

Since 2015, the VFP Golden Rule Project has been sailing for a nuclear-free world and a peaceful, sustainable future, they said.

We have recovered and restored the original peace ship, the Golden Rule, that set sail in 1958 to stop nuclear testing in the atmosphere, and which inspired the many peace makers and peace ships that followed, they said.

This year theyre sailing the ship down the California coast to San Diego, and future planned voyages include ones to the Gulf Coast, the East Coast, all around the Great Lakes and down the Mississippi, organization members said.

Contact Rachel Raskin-Zrihen at (707) 553-6824.

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Non-interference no more the golden rule for rising Chinese aspirations – Economic Times

Posted: at 4:37 am

It is not just Bhutan where China is perceived to be meddling in the internal affairs of a smaller country. Chinas longstanding principle of non-interference in other states internal affairs is evolving with its growing global footprint unlike India, according to a study made public last week by the International Crisis Group (ICG), an independent organisation working to prevent wars worldwide.

As Chinese overseas investment and business links grow in scope and depth, Beijing faces increasing threats to its citizens, economic interests and international reputation, claims ICG. That, in turn, has confronted China with the inherent limitations of its traditional hands-off foreign policy posture, the study notes.

"The most prominent test case appears to be Africa and, within the continent, South Sudan, where Chinese measures to protect its citizens and economic interests, coupled with its support for an end to the war and pursuit of humanitarian objectives, seem a calculated trial run for a more proactive global role," according to ICG.

Interestingly China's bilateral approach is contradictory to its position -- on non-interference in other's states affairs -- at multilateral platforms including BRICS. However, since 2012-13, China has been keen to play a role of security guarantor in countries where they invest and have strategic interests, pointed out an expert on Chinas foreign policy. Pakistan falls in this category. Besides, China has militarised South China Sea region where it has significant economic and strategic interests. Beijings naval presence in the Indian Ocean Region are also on the rise.

Elaborating on Beijings role in Sudan, ICG recalls, China first experimented with deeper involvement in Sudan in response to powerful international criticism (culminating in calls to boycott the 2008 Beijing Olympics) of its support for Khartoum, which was fighting a brutal counter-insurgency campaign in Darfur. Using its influence with the Sudanese government and in the UN Security Council, China helped ensure deployment of UN peacekeepers to Darfur in 2008 When South Sudans civil war broke out in late 2013, Chinese advocates of a more flexible interpretation of the non-intervention policy saw an opportunity to try new approaches to protect their nations interests.

China engaged in the peace process held in Ethiopia, hosted discreet talks among warring factions in Sudan, shaped the UN Security Council action, sent peacekeepers to the UN peacekeeping mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) and joined the August 2015 peace agreement oversight body, according to the ICG report released on July 10.

Beijings forays in Sudans hydro-carbon sector dates back to 1997 when China National Petroleum Corporation was new to acquiring hydrocarbon assets abroad. Keen to tap into an underdeveloped market with, at the time, few competitors, Chinese nationals and companies flocked to South Sudan after it achieved formal independence in July 2011. But the region soon proved volatile and risky for businesses. In January 2012, Juba shut down oil production after negotiations over pipeline fees with Khartoum deadlocked.

Production did not restart until April 2013. Civil war broke out in December that year and disrupted production again. Oil workers had to find shelter in UN bases until companies could airlift them to safety. Chinese nationals scrambled to flee the war zone; their shops were looted and business projects halted. Beijing made the unprecedented decision to step in, with three related aims: (1) protect Chinese citizens and economic interests; (2) support an end to the war; and (3) serve humanitarian objectives. Although this was an emergency response, it also became a calculated trial run for a more proactive role in step with Chinas expanding overseas footprint and international stature.

China, according to ICJ report, is taking into account the desire to export its own governance and development model and shape global norms. Such a distinction increasingly may blur if Beijing comes to see cultivating local political allies who share its views as the most effective means to protect Chinese interests and if it gains the confidence and capability to do so.

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Non-interference no more the golden rule for rising Chinese aspirations - Economic Times

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Texas Republicans take aim at liberal cities – The Hill

Posted: at 4:36 am

AUSTIN The sunset red granite of the Texas state capitol stands at 302 feet. It towers over nearby Travis County and Austin municipal buildings, as if to convey a physical superiority over those lesser government bodies. When legislators return for a special session this week, they will advance a series of laws that would make that state supremacy more concrete.

Republicans who run Texas are increasingly targeting laws passed by cities and counties with so-called preemption measures, bills that would restrict a local government's power to pass laws regulating certain industries or setting policy. It is part of a national trend in which Republican legislators are moving to preempt local governments, on issues ranging from minimum wage laws to immigration enforcement and even the use of plastic bags at retail establishments.

Supporters say the preemption laws are meant to create a consistent set of laws around a state. Opponents say it is a way for conservative legislatures to overrule more liberal city governments, at the cost of local control.

"Part of it is motivated by our urban communities that are very blue and Democratic and have different ideas about the environment and workers rights. I think it's just offensive to Republican leaders," Gina Hinojosa, a Democratic state representative whose district includes the core of downtown Austin, said in an interview in her Capitol office.

In Texas, where Gov. Greg Abbott (R) has the power to set the agenda in this week's special session, legislators will consider eight new measures to take power away from county and municipal governments.

Two proposals would set caps on taxes and spending. Two others would govern permitting and construction projects. One would prevent cities from requiring homeowners to seek approval before cutting down historic trees on their own property. Another would set a statewide standard for texting while driving, superseding local efforts to crack down on distracted driving.

The last, and perhaps most controversial, would limit a local government's ability to dictate whether transgender students have the right to use bathroom and locker room facilities of their choice.

The bill, similar to one passed in North Carolina last year, has generated intense opposition from business groups across Texas.On Friday, IBM, one of the largest employers in the state, took out a full-page ad in major papers around Texas opposing the bill. Business groups plan a rally at the CapitolMondayto reiterate their opposition to the bill, which they say will cost Texas billions in lost economic activity.

Abbott said the legislation is his way of ensuring local governments do not step on the rights of Texans.

"What we've seen in Texas is a growing rise of actions at the local level that infringe upon people's liberty. And just like I fought back against the federal government that was infringing on people's liberty, I'll fight back against federal, state or any government that infringes upon people's liberty," Abbott said in an interview in San Antonio, where he kicked off his bid for a second term as governor.

As Republicans have built their political power in state capitals across the country, Democrats who run the nation's largest cities have increasingly found themselves at loggerheads with state officials. Some state legislatures have prohibited local jurisdictions from raising the minimum wage. Others have blocked cities from enacting tougher restrictions on gun possession.

Earlier this year, Texas passed a law meant to crack down on so-called sanctuary cities, where local police do not comply with federal immigration detainer requests even though there are no sanctuary cities in Texas.

"Austin is always number one on that target list," Hinojosa said.

Nationally, at least 140 measures preempting local government actions were introduced in legislatures this year, according to Grassroots Change, a California-based group that opposes preemption laws. Nineteen of those measures became law, including three so far in Texas.

"These have really become just out-and-out fights between the state legislature and communities," said Mark Pertschuk, who runs Grassroots Change. "This is an issue of democracy."

One state, Arizona, has passed a law that could withhold state funding from city and county governments that pass laws any state legislator finds objectionable, a so-called blanket preemption. Texas Republicans proposed a similar measure, though state House Speaker Joe Straus (R) quietly killed that plan.

Pertschuk said laws that start at the city and state level have frequently become national models on everything from workers' rights to public health like child labor laws, fire prevention measures and smoking bans.

"Almost everything that keeps us from being crushed to death or dying from chronic disease too early in the history of the United States has been done at the local level," he said. Preemption laws "will stop innovation in civil rights, in safety and in community health."

Abbott, a former state Supreme Court justice and Texas attorney general before winning the governorship in 2015, said the state is well within its rights to set standards for local governments. It is the state constitution, not the United States Constitution, that lays out a city's or county's powers.

"Tell me in the [U.S.] Constitution where it mentions cities. Tell me where it mentions counties," Abbott said. "The way the country was created, the way it was designed, the architecture of the United States of America puts states at the centerpiece. States create counties and cities and give them the authority that they can have."

Both Abbott and Hinojosa said the clash stems from a changing Texas, in which the state's population is increasingly moving from rural areas to urban cores and booming suburbs. Four of the 10 counties that added the most new residents in the last year are in Texas, the Census Bureau reported in March.

Since 2010, 26 counties in America have added more than 100,000 new residents; eight of those counties are in Texas, more than any other state. That growth has meant a shifting power dynamic between cities and rural communities one the legislature wants to shift the other way.

"People have gone from a rural setting in Texas to a largely urban setting. With these rules and regulations coming out the way they are, at the local level, there truly is a patchwork quilt of rules and regulations that makes it impossible for people to live their lives, to know how they're governed," Abbott said. "It makes it difficult for Texas to retain its brand as a low-government, low-tax state."

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Liberal think tank in Seattle ordered to pay $30000-plus in campaign-disclosure fines – Seattle Times

Posted: at 4:36 am

The Washington Budget & Policy Center has agreed to pay more than $30,000 in relation to violations of state campaign-disclosure law, according to the state Attorney Generals Office. The action stems from a complaint by the right-leaning Freedom Foundation.

Seattle Times Olympia bureau

OLYMPIA The Washington Budget & Policy Center has agreed to pay about $30,000 in relation to violations of state campaign-disclosure law, according to the state Attorney Generals Office.

The center didnt properly report independent expenditures that it made while opposing Initiative 1366, according to court records detailing the settlement.

Voters in 2015 approved I-1366, a Tim Eyman-sponsored, anti-tax proposal.

But a court tossed the initiative a few months later.

Under a Thurston County Superior Court judgment, the center, a liberal think tank based in Seattle, received $33,510 in penalties.

Half of that is suspended for four years, however, as long as the center doesnt commit any other campaign-finance violations during that time.

The court also ordered the center to pay $13,790 in attorney fees and court and investigation costs, according to a statement by the Attorney Generals Office.

The action stems from a complaint filed by the right-leaning Freedom Foundation, according to Misha Werschkul, executive director for the center.

We are committed to tracking and disclosing all reportable activities and we have taken action to update our internal policies and practices for campaign reporting, Werschkul wrote in an email.

The settlement comes as the Attorney Generals Office takes action on another Freedom Foundation complaint. The office last week announced a lawsuit against SEIU 14 over alleged campaign-finance violations.

The office determined the union made significant campaign contributions but failed to register and report as a political committee in at least 2014 and 2016, according to a statement released last week.

That lawsuit marks the seventh time in less than two years Freedom Foundation complaints have led to legal action and/or penalties against government unions or their allies for violating state campaign finance laws, according to a Freedom Foundation statement.

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Liberals pounce on Obamacare vote delay – Politico

Posted: at 4:36 am

Protesters gather outside Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake's office voicing their opposition to Republican plans to repeal and replace Obamacare on July 10, 2017. | John Shinkle/POLITICO

Liberal activists fighting to save Obamacare are seeking to capitalize on an unexpected gift at least another week, if not more, before the Senate GOP will bring its repeal plan to the floor.

Progressive groups already had stocked this week with public protests against the Republican legislation, expecting a make-or-break vote. But Sen. John McCains absence from the Capitol following surgery for a blood clot handed the left a major opportunity to rally opposition and keep the spotlight on the GOPs struggle to even begin debate on a bill that polls dismally with the public.

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Activists are preparing protests well into next month aimed at keeping the pressure on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's (R-Ky.) conference, particularly the half-dozen most closely watched moderate swing votes.

Every day the Senate doesnt repeal ACA and gut Medicaid is a day that makes it less likely theyll be able to, MoveOn.org Washington director Ben Wikler told reporters. "Every day this bill is dangling out there in public, it becomes more unpopular."

The fresh push kicked off on Monday. The Bernie Sanders-backed group Our Revolution staged sit-ins at a half-dozen Senate GOP offices throughout the day, while the upstart liberal organization Indivisible prepared for more than 100 demonstrations in 39 states on Tuesday. More activist groups returned to the Hill for a series of near-daily rallies against the bill, with appearances by Democratic senators.

The right mounted no similar flurry of public activity in defense of the bill, underscoring the mismatch in grassroots energy between liberals and conservatives who had pressed McConnell to embrace a more straightforward repeal strategy.

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And the harder McConnell pushes for a vote on uprooting the Affordable Care Act, the more his opponents relish his failure to notch that quick victory.

With only two public GOP no votes on taking up the bill Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Rand Paul of Kentucky activists are expecting to see several Republicans hop off the fence at once. They acknowledge that the extra time provided by McCain's recuperation also gives McConnell time to cajole undecided Republicans one-on-one, but they're banking on the imminent Congressional Budget Office score of the bill and negative headlines to make the majority leader's job even harder as the clock ticks toward August.

"Extra time matters a lot more when youre appealing to the general public that despises this bill than it does when youre playing an inside the Beltway game of trading buy-offs and favors with people who were listening anyway," Jesse Ferguson, a veteran Democratic strategist advising pro-Obamacare groups, said in an interview.

Rather than organize the sort of massive marches that anti-Trump groups favored earlier in the year, health care organizers are focusing on personal stories from constituents appealing directly to their senators. Capitol Police reported arresting 33 demonstrators in the Senate as of midday Monday during liberal groups' protest actions.

"The message weve been telling our groups, especially the ones in D.C., is to go to an office," said Indivisible policy director Angel Padilla. "You want to go rally and march? Great! But if you want to be effective at congressional advocacy, go to your member's offices and make sure they see you inside."

In that vein, Planned Parenthood is setting up a Wednesday event for supporters to share personal stories about how the seven-year-old health care law has helped them and call their senators, national organizing director Deirdre Schifeling told reporters. Another liberal group UltraViolet told reporters Monday that it had commissioned planes to fly in Ohio, Alaska and West Virginia all swing states represented by moderate Republicans undecided on the repeal bill.

Ferguson also identified another benefit to anti-repeal activists from the delay in a Senate vote: The CBO may have time to release a nonpartisan score of a new addition to the legislation, authored by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), that would allow insurers to sell plans not compliant with Obamacare. Republicans had suggested they might rely on a score of the Cruz proposal from the Trump administration if the CBO were not able to finish an independent assessment in time for a vote this week.

"They would have to rely on whatever sham analysis" the Department of Health and Human Services could produce, Ferguson said, "but now theyve lost that excuse."

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NDP to usher in gender-balanced cabinet as it ousts Liberal-appointed staff – Vancouver Sun

Posted: at 4:36 am

NDP Leader John Horgan, shown after his June 29 meeting with Lt.-Gov. Judith Guichon at Government House in Victoria, will be sworn Tuesday as B.C.s 36th premier. CHAD HIPOLITO / CANADIAN PRESS Files

VICTORIA B.C.s New Democrats will introduce a gender-balanced cabinet Tuesday, as the party transitions to power a day after laying off more than 100 Liberal political appointees at the legislature.

The cabinet will be a mix of old and new NDP MLAs, but will also maintain a balanced proportion of male and female ministers. Yet the NDP will stop short of creating a stand-alone ministry of womens equality, which the party has operated in past governments. Instead, the new government is expected to consider womens equality and gender equity issues in each ministry separately.

Premier-designate John Horgan will become B.C.s 36th premier during a ceremony at 2 p.m. at Government House, where his cabinet will then be officially unveiled. NDP MLAs who made the cut received phone calls late Monday evening telling them of their portfolio.

Horgans first public event will be anopen house at the legislature Tuesday evening, where the new premier and his cabinet will mingle with the crowd.

Its an opportunity for the public to come and tour the legislature, to meet the new cabinet, to meet the new MLAs and to have a chance to see their new government get down to work, said NDP MLA Carole James, who is widely expected to be named finance minister on Tuesday.

We expect a big crowd and lots of families.

Former NDP leader Carole James is expected to be named as B.C.s new finance minister on Tuesday. CHAD HIPOLITO / PNG

Tuesdays swearing-in of the new NDP government waspreceded Monday by its transition team terminating numerous Liberal staff, senior civil servants and communications officials inside government, as the party prepared to install its own officials in key positions.

Across government about 125 BC Liberal-appointed staff are leaving, said NDP spokesperson Jen Holmwood. The staff we are replacing were politically appointed by the Liberals. This is not unique to our government. This is actually fewer than the Liberals let go in 2001.

Such terminations are not unusual when one political party replaces another in government.

Staff inside the 220-person government communications branch appeared particularly hard-hit by the firings, with deputy minister John Paul Fraser being removed by the NDP. The incoming New Democrat head of the civil service Don Wright will set his own senior management team of deputy ministers, and several other Liberals were believed to be displaced.

Several communications directors were also let go, including finance ministry communications director Jamie Edwardson, widely considered one of the most professional and non-partisan of the officials in government communications. Many staff in ministerial offices were also fired, which includes a mixture of partisan assistants and non-partisan scheduling clerks.

James described the staff turnover as a routine part of transitioning to a new government and downplayed the numbers.

You are not looking at wholesale change. You are looking at people who are able to fit and able to be committed to the agenda we are moving ahead with, she said. So its a number of very committed civil servants who are staying and doing good work and will continue to do good work and you will see some changes that you always see with a change in government.

James said the NDP will at a future date release the exact figures on firings. Terminated staff are eligible for severance of generally up to 18 months salary depending on their years of service, age and other considerations though the NDP did not have a breakdown of costs available yet or a list of the new NDP staff.

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3 new liberal faces emerge as groomed Aurora city council candidates – Aurora Sentinel

Posted: at 4:36 am

AURORA | Aurora City Council could become considerably bluer this fall if three candidates, all graduates or soon-to-be alumnae of a program designed to get more Democratic women involved in politics, are as successful as their peers across the state and country.

A trio of women running for three different city council posts this November were each molded by Emerge Colorado, an organization that guides women who are also registered Democrats through a six-month-long crash course in how to run a political campaign.

The three candidates are: Allison Hiltz, whos running for one of two available at-large seats, Crystal Murillo, whos currently the sole challenger to Ward I incumbent Sally Mounier, and Nicole Johnston, whos vying for the up-for-grabs Ward II seat. The current Ward II representative, Renie Peterson, is term limited.

All three of the candidates running in Auroras upcoming election have not run for political office before. Both Hiltz, a policy associate for the National Conference of State Legislatures, and Murillo, who works in the admissions office at the University of Denver, graduated from the Emerge Colorado program last summer. Johnston, a community activist and consultant for non-profit organizations, is still in the process of finishing the Emerge program during its week-long summer intensive course.

The Colorado chapter of Emerge is the local spoke of a nationwide network, which comprises efforts in 21 states. Since it was founded in 2002, the group has trained more than 2,500 women across the country, according to the Emerge America website. The Colorado branch was founded in 2012.

But the organization has seen a considerable uptick in interest since last years presidential election, according to Jenny Willford, executive director of Emerge Colorado.

Willford said Emerge chapters nationwide saw a nearly 90 percent bump in inquiries. Locally, the chapter saw at least a two-fold increase in the number of inquiries, she said.

Its exciting to see all of the renewed interest and almost like a sense of duty to step up, Willford said. And, yes, I think this new interest in politics is going to translate to municipal elections.

After applying and paying a tuition fee, about 20 women in last years Emerge class attend 70 hours of training, which is spread over the course of about one weekend each month, according to Hiltz and Murillo. Training topics ranges from campaign finance to constituent relations to media navigation.

In Aurora, each of the Emerge-affiliated candidates said they want the local city council to better reflect the city it serves. That means candidates who are younger and of various political persuasions and backgrounds.

I just felt it was necessary to add a different perspective, especially when realizing the lack of representation embodied on our current city council, said Murillo, who is 23-years-old.

Auroras current city council is made up of six females and fives males, the vast majority of whom are white Republicans. The average age among council members is roughly 64 years old, according to voter registration records.

The median age in the city is about 37 years old, according to data compiled by Aurora officials. Nearly one-third of the citys population identifies as Hispanic, according to census data. Less than half of the citys some 350,000 residents report their race being white alone, according to statistics reported by City-Data.com.

Emerge has experienced wild success in Colorado in recent years, with a nearly 90 percent win-rate in municipal-level and state-level elections last year. Seven of the eight graduates who ran in a 2016 election won. Two of last years Emerge winners make up a portion of Auroras delegation in the state legislature; Dominique Jackson in House District 42 and Dafna Michaelson Jenet in House District 30.

And its not unusual for several Emerge candidates to run in the same race, as they are this year in Aurora, according to Willford. In 2015, three different Emerge graduates won three seats on the Westminster City Council. A previous Emerge alumnus, who was already on the council, brought the total number of Emerge Councilmembers in that city to four more than half of the total seats.

Across the country, the group succeeds in placing about 70 percent of affiliated candidates into elected office, according to the Emerge America website.

But Willford said the Emerge Colorado graduates are not targeting specific cities with vulnerable seats. The organization and its participants are more focused on creating a more well-rounded government, she said.

I would say the community is changing in a way that who is representing (community members) on council should be reflective of the voters, she said. At the end of the day, we dont want to take over city council. We want a more reflective democracy.

Aurora Sentinel reporter Cassandra Ballard contributed to this report.

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How "The Progressive Liberal" Dan Richards Became the Media’s Favorite Wrestler – Paste Magazine

Posted: at 4:36 am

It takes a village to make a wrestler.

Though the fans of Appalachian Mountain Wrestling (AMW) may not appreciate The Progressive Liberal Daniel Richards for the far left ideology he brings to the ring, Richards appreciates the fans, and the promotion that gave him a platform to become an overnight internet sensation. Just a month ago, AMW had a couple hundred followers on their YouTube channel, with maybe twice that many views on the episode that caught the eye of Deadspin at the end of June.

Were approaching 50,000 the last time I checked, Daniel Richards said, in an interview this week with Paste. Our subscribers have gone up by a hundred, which proportionally is significant. We had 230-something before, and now were approaching 350 or more. Thats big for a little independent promotion like us.

Its a metaphor for the whirlwind month Richards has had. Part-time wrestler Daniel Richards by night, successful realtor Daniel Harnsberger by day, the 36-year-old has found himself at the center of a media whirlwind all thanks to his unusual gimmick: a true blue, die hard, yellow dog liberal decked out in Democratic donkeys and a shirt covered in Hillary Clintonphotos, hitting the mat with conservative foes deep in the heart of Trump Country.

To me its only made it more exciting and more enjoyable, Richards said of the extra attention. I think its brought a little extra fanfare which of course is a great thing. I dont know if it means Ill strike it rich, but it certainly helps. Even if it means a few extra hours of work, maintaining his businesses and new bookings in the wake of his newfound national notoriety. I still have my real estate businesses to tend to, and thats been harder. At the end of the day Im not going to fail, its just been less sleep for this liberal.

Though Richardss on-camera relationship with the AMW roster, and certainly with their passionately conservative fans, is combative, he paints a more bipartisan picture of AMWs perspective on his moment in the spotlight.

Everyone knows whats going on. I think at the end of the day everyone there realizes its a good thing for everybody, and theres not been an interview of any significance that Ive done where I havent promoted AMW, Richards said. I think I know that. Its not like Ive gotten a big head about this, Beau [James] hasnt. Beau and I, with all the coverage weve gotten, were still the same two people we were before. Maybe itd be looked at negatively if I was being an arrogant prick or something, but Im not.

Beau James, Richardss mentor and a man with more than twenty years of experience in the world of wrestling, went to a great deal of effort to smooth Richardss path in the locker room when he first joined the AMW ranks, and Richards has mentioned in previous interviews James would feed him his lines and coach him on the gimmick in front of other wrestlers to make sure they knew Richards wasnt just showing up to stir the pot.

When asked if that was still the case, Richards explained, That was at first, because Im an outsider to fans, I still am. But when I first came there I was an outsider to that locker room. So to make sure that I didnt have instant heat in the dressing room, Beau made sure that people heard him giving me the direction. If Id just come out and said that stuff, itd be understandable, itd be like who is this jerk? To put it mildly.

So that was definitely done with my best interest in mind, and I appreciate that. But thats the beauty of working for someone like Beau, because Beau is a wealth of knowledge and has the experience to understand a dynamic like that. Hes been around 28 years, wrestled all over the country, and rubbed elbows with some of the greatest wrestlers in the entire business. So Im a beneficiary of his education, and Im fortunate that hes passing down part of it to me.

Not to say that Richards isnt as liberal as his gimmicka gimmick topped off by a cross-arm neckbreaker finisher called the Liberal Agenda. Though he may not be quite as pompous as his Daniel Richards persona, Harnsberger is a proud liberal, and just as outspoken about it, a rarity in an entertainment business dominated by a family of wealthy Republican donors and a Trump cabinet member.

Harnsberger is surprised by everyone elses surprise at his liberal leanings, but is quick in interviews to confirm theyre all his. Its shocking to me that everyone is shocked, even Chris Hayes on his shows said, you know, at first we thought this was a conservative playing a liberal, then we figured out hes an actual liberal! And Im like, yes!

In the radio interviews they quickly find it out, and Im pleased the feedback I get is, well, you know what youre talking about. I dont know every nuance of every policy but I do follow the news. I think its more important than ever to follow the news, not only because of the time and the President that were living in and under, just being in wrestling, I think its important to keep a pulse on whats going on in the world.

What is it like, then, to feel so passionately about your politics and climb into a ring where you know theyll get booed nine shows out of ten?

Im a villainized version of myself because the fans, Harnsberger said. Beau could book me any way possible to try to get me loved by the fans, but if I just have the name The Progressive Liberal Daniel Richards, that alone Im just gonna get heat. Its just heat with those people there. Itd be a tough go.

So thats why Im villainized, and I play off of it, but I think thats how you would go in real life. If you went to work and people were talking shit to you, you would justI guess some people would wilt, but thats not me. I would fire back. And thats me. I antagonize them in the ring and then in my interviews, I try to. Theyre so narrow-minded over there, including one of the wrestlers who thinks that if youre liberal, youre gay. And first of all, theres nothing wrong if that is the case, Im not, but I dont really care that they think I am, so Ill throw in a lot of extra flamboyance I maybe wouldnt otherwise. Its just to egg them on because they dont like it. Thats fine. Theyre on the wrong side of history, and you know, Im not.

Theres a level of nuance there even most big name wrestlers often missbeing a progressive character without going out of your way to make your progressive views the problem, and instead, just accepting the responses as they come. For Harnsberger, being Daniel Richards means putting a little salt and pepper on the person he is when he wakes up in the morning, but not making his ideals the butt of the joke. (More big name wrestlers could take a hint from Harnsberger in this regard.)

He doesnt go out of his way to engage fans in political debate after matches, though, and has an old-school view of keeping kayfabe. I try to stay away from any interactions from fans, he said, Because theres nothing I hate more than watching someone whos trying to be a heel and at the end of the night theyre glad-handing fans and holding babies, and I see that a lot.

After a movies over, Tom Hanksisnt coming out like, oh, this thing was all fake. It doesnt happen. And I dont want to compromise the hard work Ive put in, especially with my character, to kill the suspension of disbelief Ive worked so hard for.

He did admit, though, that I printed some pictures, Im selling those bad boys.

Theres a band I really like called One-Eyed Doll, the lead singer, her names Kimberly Freeman. Ive seen them three times live, and shes so interactive and personal with her fans I think I take part of that and make it mine when it comes to interacting with fans of mine.

For Harnsberger, the key to the gimmickimparted to him by Beauis understanding the audience and rolling with the crowd response, without letting his gimmick get lost or changed by the added attention. Ive got bookings in the future where people are going to cheer for me because of where I am. Ive got a show in Annandale, Virginia, which is Northern Virginia, and Ill be cheered there, or Im pretty confident I will be. I look forward to that. I dont need cheers, boos dont hurt my feelings. Its just an interesting change of pace, just like all this has been.

The Progressive Liberal gimmick does give him some freedom to have fun toying with fans, though. We went out to Gray, Tennessee, to a festival, and people are just booing me and saying stuff. And I interact with them, but totally as a heel. Im considered smug and arrogant and all that so I play that up as Im setting up my table, Im like, Move, move, the most famous wrestler in the world, setting up! Gotta sell pictures!

I dont walk around thinking that, Ive certainly gotten a lot of notoriety out of it I did say in a post-match interview with Kyle [Maggard], on the live mic I said, How does it feel to be beaten by the most famous wrestler in the world? And at least for the first week I might have had a justifiable claim there. Thats not for me to say, but at least in the first week I had a justifiable claim.

Whether hes been the most famous wrestler or not, Harnsberger has stayed humble and up front about his origins, and in most interviews only has kind words for AMW, Maggard, James, and the other professionals who have helped him hone his craft and find a home for his gimmick.

The reason trickle-down economics doesnt work is because of people, Harnsberger said firmly, dipping back into the toes of the ideological waters that make him Daniel Richards even as he discusses his passion for AMW and appreciation for the help and support hes been given since he returned to the wrestling ring. Republicans say, oh the rich guys are gonna start paying everyone else more when you give them the tax break. And thats not what happens.

In my universe, I just feel like you use good things that have been given to you to lift other people up, but also recognize what got you there, and to me, thats all Im doing is giving props to people who deserve it. The Richmond Times-Dispatch followed me around for most of [Monday], they photographed me while I was working out, but I wanted my trainer Jennifer Rothemich to be there with me. Shes helped me with my diet, I broke my hand like my second match for AMW Jennifer helped me with that. I wanted her to be there so she could get a rub from it, at least people know hey, this gal is a personal trainer and it couldnt hurt her for sure.

Though Rothemich couldnt make the interview, Harnsberger said, I try to do that on all levels because its all a product its just a team effort. Were all independent contractors but truly, for this to work, everyones got to be involved and pitch in. I came up with a great gimmick, and its my idea and all that, but Beau helped me understand it better and then helped me understand my audience better. Its not a one-man show.

As for future opportunities, The Progressive Liberal has his eyes on one opponent for a potential future feud. I think theres a match that needs to happen between myself and Sam Adonis, an independent wrestler in Mexico who wrestles as an ardent supporter of President Trump. I knew about Sama friend of mine, she sent me an article about Sam and thats how I first knew about him. Now its funny, now that Im having my little run right now, people are putting us in the same light. Usually you see a story about me and theres a story linked about him in the related section.

A midterm election grudge match, maybe?

We need to have something and we need to do it now, strike while the irons hot. But well see. So Sam is one, the whole dynamic there if anything.

He still has an eye on the big fish of sports entertainment, the WWE. Thats where Ive wanted to go since I was a kid. I stepped away from the business and had this big hiatus that I think really killed my chances of having any kind of stardom, but I made my goal this year that I want to be on there for a one-time match. And that can happen! Well see. I wanted that and to be ranked in Pro Wrestling Illustrated, so well see if either happens.

C.K. Stewart is a freelance writer with a lot of opinions about comics, wrestling and wrestling comics. He can also be found at Newsarama or livetweeting terrible pay-per-views on Twitter @ckayfabe.

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How "The Progressive Liberal" Dan Richards Became the Media's Favorite Wrestler - Paste Magazine

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Alberta’s legacy – Stettler Independent

Posted: at 4:36 am

Opinion Column by MLA Rick Strankman. FILE PHOTO

Only by protecting our financial legacy can we protect our future.

A legacy is something we leave after were gone. Some families leave financial legacies. For others, a legacy can be good character passed from grandparents to children to grandchildren.

Farm and ranch families leave legacies that involve turning over the work of earlier generations to a new one, positioning them to begin their journey from a more advantageous starting point. They recognize that younger family members are able to build upon the labour and efforts of those whove gone before.

Governments also leave a legacy a set of lasting circumstances that will influence peoples lives. One of Canadas more unfortunate political legacies can be seen today in Ontario. The province has shed more than 300,000 manufacturing jobs due to a number of factors, including unrestrained government spending and runaway electrical rates (among the highest in North America).

Ontario is now the worlds largest sub-sovereign (non-national government) borrower. According to Ontarios Consolidated Debt Portfolio, its outstanding debt is $332 billion. In the past, the province has paid as much as 15.5 per cent of its revenues on interest. Any rise in interest could easily create serious problems for legislators and taxpayers, because every dollar spent on interest is a dollar that cant be used for education, health, or seniors.

For many years, Albertas political legacy was the envy of the nation. It is said that Premier Ernest Mannings home number was in the public phone book. Anybody could call him. Premier Peter Lougheed left Albertans with the Heritage Trust Fund and a legacy of economic development.

Ralph Kleins legacy was fiscal restraint and his genuine love for Alberta. Klein became premier at a time when the province was wallowing in red ink. Back then, interest on debt consumed nearly 10 per cent of provincial revenue equal to 32 per cent of health spending, 36 per cent of education spending, and 75 per cent of social services spending.

As premier, Klein knew that if Alberta didnt get a handle on its debt, the provinces legacy would be one of financial bondage instead of financial freedom. He stopped the drain. Though some people later vilified him, the truth is that by eliminating the debt, Klein saved health and education. As premier, he even protected these two portfolios from the deep spending cuts applied elsewhere.

Albertas present political legacy is now being carved out by the New Democratic government. Unfortunately, it doesnt look good. Rather than maintaining a legacy of fiscal freedom and responsibility, our current government is creating a long-term financial dilemma a mountain of debt that will hang like an albatross around the necks of Albertans for decades to come sharply influencing the way citizens and future governments will be forced to budget and spend.

Our premier says that Alberta taxpayers will owe $70-$80 billion by 2019-20. Her fiscal planning thus far has resulted in multiple credit downgrades, which in the end, drive up interest costs paid by taxpayers.

In the past, Albertans have always risen to the need of the hour, making the decisions necessary to ensure a legacy of financial freedom and opportunity. Now, to maintain and renew this proud legacy will require growing numbers of men and women, elected and otherwise, who will insist upon fiscal responsibility from the capitol.

Only by protecting our financial legacy can we protect our future, and the important role that our province plays in Canada.

Kitchen Table Talk is a forum consisting of a small group of Official Opposition MLAs who each week, get together to talk through a legislative policy issue. As part of the process, a short commentary is compiled and edited. Editorial committee members include GRANT HUNTER (Cardston-Taber-Warner); RICK STRANKMAN (Drumheller-Stettler); DON MACINTYRE (Innisfail-Sylvan Lake); and WES TAYLOR (Battle River-Wainwright).

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Alberta's legacy - Stettler Independent

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