Posts Tagged ‘Committee’

Ten legislators abandon controversial Republican Study Committee

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Former Colorado Springs Senator Dave Schultheis is no longer holding forth on bills on the Senate floor in Denver, but he has continued to exert influence this year as the powerful force behind the conservative Republican Study Committee of Colorado. Now that influence may be waning. This week, a third of the RSCC flock quit the committee, rejecting the would-be radical-right revival.

The RSCC claimed 34 Republican members in the state Legislature – 11 in the Senate and 23 in the House – prior to Tuesday. At least 10 legislators quit in the wake of allegations that it was crossing ethics boundaries in influencing lawmaker votes, directing legislative aides and meddling in the race for state GOP chairman.

The committee drew media attention this year for pushing Arizona-style anti-illegal immigration legislation. It held informational hearings that were stacked with anti-immigration witnesses, some with clear ties to white spremacist organizations.

A high-profile surprise rebuke

The committee also took a strong stand in the race to replace Dick Wadhams as head of the Colorado Republican party this month. Schultheis and most conservative study committee members had endorsed RSCC member Senator Ted Harvey, R-Highlands Ranch.

The committee members scrambled on stage last Saturday to nominate Harvey but their “we’ve got it nailed” confidence withered when the Republican Party Central Committee overwhelmingly elected state GOP Legal Counsel Ryan Call on the first ballot with 167.6 votes to Harvey’s 74.4.

As the vote was being read, RSCC Vice Chair Senator Kent Lambert tweeted, “They didn’t buy these ballot boxes at the magic store, did they? ;)

The committee members and other hard-right Harvey supporters shouldn’t have been so surprised. Wadhams, dogged this year by Tea Partiers as a compromised establishment figure, received an enthusiastic standing ovation at the event. Also, influential RSCC member Senator Shawn Mitchell had seconded Call’s nomination as the kind of leader who could unify a party still reeling from the fractured 2010 Republican primary races for governor and U.S. Senator, offices the GOP lost in the general election.

The rump committee

Gone from the RSCC website membership page are photos and names of House Speaker Frank McNulty, Majority Leader Amy Stephens, Majority Caucus Chair Carole Murray, Majority Whip B.J. Nikkel and Representatives Cindy Acree, Kevin Priola, Ray Scott, Ken Summers, Spencer Swalm and Libby Szabo.

Several legislators recently questioned whether Schultheis and the group had crossed the line between a policy ad-hoc committee and a volunteer lobbyist coalition. They wondered whether the committee compromised a legislative aide who might have breached ethics by disseminating positions on bills and by twittering opinions.

The RSCC produces Senate and House reports – up to 20 pages long – that designate whether a bill “DOES” or “DOES NOT” support conservative values.

For example, an RSCC report evaluated HB 11-1144, which requires health benefit plans to cover medical evaluations of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders. The disease is preventable by treating the mother during pregnancy.

The bill, sponsored by Democratic Representatives Judy Solano, Edward Casso, Andy Kerr, Nancy Todd and Democratic Senator Lois Tochtrop, passed in both chambers and was signed into law, despite receiving the thumbs down by the RSCC.

The RSCC said the bill “DOES NOT” support the principles of “constitutional limited government, free markets and personal responsibility.”

That judgment sounded eerily familiar to Schultheis in 2009 citing the need for personal responsibility and less government regulation when he voted against a bill to protect fetuses exposed to the HIV virus. In a Rocky Mountain News interview, he reasoned that as an AIDS-afflicted baby grows up, “the mother will begin to feel guilt… The family will see the negative consequences of that promiscuity.”

The Colorado Springs wing

Earlier in this legislative session, Schultheis candidly discussed his role in monitoring bills and votes for the RSCC with the same eagle-eyed scrutiny he once brought to his search for illegal drug runners and undocumented workers on his treks with the group to the Arizona-Mexico border, most recently in August.

Schultheis appears to be going underground. He claimed “he’s not the brains behind the RSCC” and he blocked public access to his Facebook page.

The RSCC operates under the Legislative Support Group, a nonprofit organization registered with the Secretary of State’s office in June 2006. Schultheis registered the RSCC trade name and designated the entity as an “Other Non-Profit… Social Welfare” located at 1250 Golden Hills Road in Colorado Springs.

The base of operations is Schultheis’ 0,000-plus home perched above the canyon community of Pinecliff, where he rises before daybreak each weekday to assess legislative bills, their sponsors, and the votes cast by members of the Colorado House and Senate.

“It’s frustrating. The Republicans are acting like RINOs,” groaned Schultheis in late February. Among the GOP legislators gone rogue and drawing the ire of Schultheis by defying his version of conservative principles is House Speaker McNulty.

Skewing the initiative process to favor liberal ideology

The source of Schultheis’ anxiety was Senate Concurrent Resolution 11-001, sponsored in the Senate by President Brandon Shaffer and Nancy Spence and in the House by Majority Caucus Chair Murray and Minority Caucus Chair Lois Court. McNulty joined the bill’s numerous co-sponsors.

The resolution aims to tighten requirements to amend the state Constitution. It passed third readings in both chambers, and is pending Senate approval of House amendments. If approved, the measure will go before voters on the 2012 general election ballot.

Schultheis opposed SCR11-001 in a Feb. 23 memo dispatched to House State, Affairs Committee Republican Representatives Randy Baumgardner, Don Coram, Larry Liston, Jim Kerr and Mark Waller. The resolution’s numerous co-sponsors also included Baumgardner, Coram and Liston.

“As conservatives and those who advocate their allegiance for TABOR (Taxpayers Bill of Rights), it seems very apparent to me that should the legislature pass this bill, that two very onerous conditions will result,” wrote Schultheis, who asked that the resolution be killed or at least postponed.

If the resolution passes, Schultheis predicts that TABOR would be repealed and that “more liberal Constitutional amendments will be passed.” He said he had analyzed voter-approved initiatives and amendments over the past two decades, particularly those that passed by at least 60 percent of the vote.

“The shocker is that you will notice that all but one that passed placed liberal ideology in the Constitution,” said Schultheis in a memo. “You can verify that in the initiative summary that I’ve asked Lauri (sic) Bratten to provide you.”

Defining lobbying

Some RSCC members bristled at the notion that Schultheis or the RSCC has lobbied for or against legislation. According to Amendment 41 passed by voters in 2006, statewide elected officials cannot become paid lobbyists until two years after leaving office. Schultheis is free to voice opinions as a citizen or volunteer lobbyist although the latter are supposed to register with the House Clerk.

“I don’t consider the [RSCC] as lobbying,” countered Rep. Jerry Sonnenberg, an RSCC member. “They’re just trying to promote Republican ideals and which they stand for. I don’t think they’re lobbying. There’s no difference between the RSCC and Colorado Municipal League or CEA (Colorado Educators Association).”

Both CML and CEA employ registered lobbyists.

More skeptical legislators said Laurie Bratten, referenced in Schultheis’ memo, is dangerously teetering on the ethics line.

Bratten is Director of Communications for RSCC and married to RSCC Executive Director Rich Bratten. She is also the paid legislative aide to RSCC-affiliated Senators Harvey and Scott Renfroe.

The legislators spoke on the condition of anonymity in fear of RSCC members killing their bills or dredging up a primary contender in future re-election bids. They objected to a legislative aide circulating information to influence votes and twittering opinions on bills and politics during committee and floor discussions.

For example, Bratten twittered about Senate Bill 126 that proposed in-state college tuition rates for high school graduates who attended a Colorado school for the three previous years regardless of immigration status. It was introduced and discussed in the Senate on Feb. 2.

On that day, from 1:00 – 1:19 p.m., Bratten pecked several tweets bashing the bill.

“Your kids can’t get a break for tuition in CO but Dems thinks they should give tuition money to illegals,” wrote Bratten.

“CO Dems just CANNOT stay focused on jobs and the economy! Giving an tuition to 4 illegals pressuer NOW.”

“Dem Senator Michael Johnston and the CEA are sponsoring this redistribution to a special class. Be afraid.”

“We have 8.8% unemployment in CO and a 1.5 billion $ deficit & CO Dems want 2 subsidize illegals college degrees?”

The rule governing legislative aides is well known to Schultheis, whose legislative aide Dave Crater testified before the House State Affairs Committee on behalf of the “Dr. Laura” bill in March 2001. The committee rejected Schultheis’ bill to mandate counseling for couples seeking a divorce, and Crater lost his job as a legislative aide.

“We can’t have someone on the state payroll that is advocating for the passage or defeat of a piece of legislation,” then-House Speaker Doug Dean, a conservative Republican, told The Colorado Springs Gazette.

Crater was demoted to an unpaid intern working for Schultheis. The senator, however, admitted that he’d personally padded Crater’s 0-a-month salary to the tune of more than ,000 a month.

Has Laurie Bratten been inadvertently placed in a similarly compromising position?

“We’re very careful to simply put the legislative analysis in the perspective of whether a bill is consistent or inconsistent with our principles,” said RSCC Executive Director Bratten who refused to comment on his wife’s role. “I suppose that’s a question you will have to ask Senator Harvey.”

“It’s kosher!” laughed Harvey.

Harvey said that the legislative aide’s work on behalf of RSCC is part of her duties for himself and Renfroe, and asserted that other Republican senators’ aides also assist. Legislative aides, he said, follow the directives of their bosses.

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The Colorado Independent

Amherst County Democratic Committee

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

Amherst County Democratic Committee Meeting Tommorow Night, March 8th at 7 pm.

To All Amherst County Democrats:

Dear Friends,

The Committee will meet at the Madison Heights Library, tomorrow, Tuesday 8th, at 7PM.    Everyone is welcome.    It’s important that Precinct Reps attend (see list below).

Following a lull in activity this winter, we will begin to strengthen and organize for the fall elections – this year and in 2012.     Your participation is crucial to our success.      There are leadership positions open in most precincts, as well as officers’ positions within the Committtee.

We encourage you to get involved as much, or as little, as you feel comfortable with.      Or just come and watch the democratic process in action where we can really make a difference – at the local level.


We’ll spend a short time after the meeting stuffing envelopes for our annual membership mailing.     It’s actually kind of fun – and an opportunity to meet fellow dems from around the county.


Remember – meeting is Tuesday the 8th, 7PM, at the Madison Heights Library.     Hope to see you there.


For the Amherst County Democratic Committee,

David Burford

Precinct Reps

101 - Wright Shop – Magnolia Braxton


102 - New Glasgow – Ned Kable, OPEN


103 - CoolwellOPEN


201 - Court House – Mary Anne Hostetler, Alix Ingber, OPEN


202 - Temperance – Marvin Gilbert


301 - MonroeOPEN


302 - Elon – Marita Taylor, Mary Truitt, OPEN


303 - Plsnt View – Curtis Johnson


401 - Amelon – Robert Perry, Jason Fleshman, OPEN


402 - Lonco - Francis Wayne


501 - Madison Hts – Jeff Price, Dan Hughes, Allen Freeman

This email was sent by dave_burford@verizon.net


Amherst County Democratic Committee
PO Box 1411
Amherst
VA
24521-1411

Amherst County News

Please Don’t Forget The Meeting

Virginia News

REPUBLICAN SHAME and VENOM

Lets look at the Republican budget and what it means to us here in Virginia.    It Prevents the government from implementing health reform, it rolls back critical patient protections and cost savings, and it returns control of your health care to insurance companies. Removing restrictions on how businesses operate and allowing big business and insurance companies complete control of how they deal with the public are hallmarks of the Republican Party.    The GOP also wishes to limit your ability to sue for damages when you are harmed by these companies.

Forget Early Education



It Slashes funding for preventive health services that millions of American women depend on through Planned Parenthood and eliminates 2,000 community health center jobs across Virginia. Thats 2,000 more Virginians without a job and millions of American women with nowhere to turn for help with their health services.     All thanks to the right wing Republican plan to restructure how society deals with womens issues while it pretends to deal with the deficit.

Do We Need To Spend Money on This?     We could give the rich another tax break.



It Guts investments in education and infrastructure that will grow the economy and create jobs, assuring more Virginians will be unemployeed.

It Cuts Virginia homeland security investments by .2 million, hindering local law enforcement’s ability to keep our families safe and Drops 3,340 Virginia children from Head Start, an early-education program proven to help students thrive later on.     The Republicans hinder law enforcement as they try to keep our families safe and drop children from early education.     What do Republicans stand for?     The only thing they don’t cut is the big tax breaks the rich get.

Lets face it.    If you are poor, a working person, a child in head start, unemployeed, a senior citizen or a person who has suffered injury at the hands of big business or a woman in need of health care, a homeless veteran,   THE - REPUBLICAN  – PARTY - HATES - YOU.


And across the nation it could mean nearly 1 million American jobs lost — all without making a dent in the deficit.


Thats the Republican plan.    Isn’t it time you stood up and said something to Republican leadership.    Do Republicans walk lockstep in stupidity because it the only way they can stand?    How can you guys call yourselves the Family Values Party?    You must mean the Tony Soprano mob family.

If you are a Republican in Amherst County Virginia I’m Calling You Out.     Change starts down here at the grass roots level.     Its time for you to stand up to the Leadership in the Republican Party.    They work for the wealthy and big business, they do not work for you.     Its time for you to open your eyes and use your mind because You Are Responsible for the Actions of the GOP.     We can’t change the whole world but we might be able to heal the thoughtlessness of  the Republicans in Amherst County.

Oh!, Look its a Veteran.     Show him Republicans care.     Let him look at your flag pin.    Tell him you wear it all the time and move on quickly.     Someone might see you.



Refuse to accept partisan games from the GOP that will cost thousands of Virginia jobs.    Demand the TRUTH from the Republican Party.    If you have no power to bring the Republican Party into the 21st century there is an action you can consider.    It wouldn’t kill you to Vote Dmocratic if thats the only way to send the message.     However you do it straighten out the lap dogs of big business known as the Republican Party.     You do yourself a dis-service associating with people like that.     Let Republican Leadership know that you mind your own business  and you allow ohers to do the same.
 

Amherst County Virginia Democratic News

Montana House committee passes bill to overrule Missoula’s efforts to make marijuana enforcement a low priority

Monday, February 21st, 2011

In Montana, where voters overwhelmingly approved a measure legalizing medical marijuana back in 2004, the winds of change are blowing.

A few days ago the Montana House took a trip into local politics, voting by a 3-1 margin to pass a bill out of committee that would repeal a Missoula initiative instructing local law enforcement to make marijuana laws its lowest priority.

The Montana House has already voted by a wide margin to overturn the state’s medical marijuana laws.

The Senate will take the matter up soon, but in the Senate there are competing bills, with some legislators favoring additional regulation instead of outright appeal.

Some Democrats in the Legislature say it wouldn’t be right to outlaw the medicine outright legislatively,
considering it was passed by voters. Republicans, though, tend to take the stance that the voters were duped and that people are using medical marijuana recreationally.

In Missoula, recent debate has centered on the economic impact of repeal, which could be large, putting people out of work and causing commercial real estate to take a nose dive.

From a University of Montana newspaper:

Dave Stephens, owner of Better Life Montana, said that if the repeal is passed, he predicts the loss of thousands of jobs, lost city revenue from business taxes and many more people relying on food stamps.

“It’s a bad idea all the way around,” Stephens said.

Stephens owns and runs Better Life on his own and said he had hoped to hire employees in the next year. However, if House Bill 161 is passed, Stephens said, “We’d be out of business.”

He is hopeful that the bill will not be approved by the state Legislature and isn’t actively anticipating having to close down his business.

“I feel like the governor will veto it if it comes down to it,” he said.

The governor, Brian Schweitzer, is a Democrat.

In Colorado, where the right to medical marijuana is guaranteed by the constitution, the Legislature cannot ban the medicine outright, but can only craft laws by which to regulate that right.

That hardly seems to make the matter less contentious, however, as evidenced by a recent fracas in the Capitol that pitted medical marijuana advocates against a legislator who was trying to take their side in the debate.

Colorado Independent

Amherst County Democratic Committee Meeting

Friday, February 4th, 2011
Amherst County Democratic Committee Meeting
Tuesday Feb. 8th, 2011          7pm

                                          “SKIPPER
                                           Mr. R. Fitts
                                              and
                                     President Obama

              Extend Their Inviaion to YOU

The Committee will meet at CVCC AMHERST CENTER, Tuesday Feb. 8th, 2011 at 7pm.   Everyone is invited and will be welcome.
If you’re interested in joining us as a member, The Amherst County Democratic Committee is always looking for devoted Democrats who are interested and willing to help our Democratic candidates get elected.



As a Committee Member, your primary responsibility will be to help endorsed candidates win with your vote and your support.


Attending monthly meetings to discuss strategy, and receive updates from candidates and elected officials.     If you can’t come every month but can attend occasionally, thats OK we want you.


At campaign time you could Volunteer to place yard signs, work phone banks, and help with mailings.


Helping with fundraising efforts is good if you are comfortable doing it.    Working as a greeter and representative at local festivals (Apple, Garlic) and handing out campaign literature and answering questions is fun if you like it.


Or Doing Anything You Are Comfortable With.    Nothing, if thats your comfort level.    We Want You and We Need You.

Attend monthly or just the occassional meeting.    Come as you are.     Pick Your Own Level of Participation.


Make no mistake about it.   We are Democrats.    In Amherst County we are the underdogs and we must work harder.    Your ideas and help will be appreciated.


With your help, Democrats will have a stronger future here in Amherst County.

If you’re interested in the Amherst County Democrats and know any of the Precinct Reps listed, please discuss it with them.    If you know where the Food Lion Grocery Store just below the traffic circle on Route 60 is,  then you can find us.

We meet at the Central Virginia Community College, Amherst Branch which is next to the Food Lion.    We meet at 7pm on
the second tuesday of every month.     If this ever changes check the Amherst County Democratic News for up to date info.


You are invited to attend the monthly meeting.    We will happily welcome you on board.



The folks listed below are Precinct Reps.


101 – Wright Shop – Magnolia Braxton


102 – New Glasgow – Ned Kable, OPEN


103 – Coolwell – OPEN


201 – Court House – Mary Anne Hostetler, Alix Ingber, OPEN


202 – Temperance – Marvin Gilbert


301 – Monroe – OPEN


302 – Elon – Marita Taylor, Mary Truitt, OPEN


303 – Plsnt View – Curtis Johnson


401 – Amelon – Robert Perry, Jason Fleshman, OPEN


402 – Lonco – Francis Wayne


501 – Madison Hts – Jeff Price, Dan Hughes, Allen Freeman

If you are reading this, Thank You from ACVDN

Republicans Attempt Repeal of Health Care

A Republican drive to repeal the year-old health care law ended in party-line defeat in the Senate on Wednesday, leaving the Supreme Court to render a final, unpredictable verdict on an issue steeped in political and constitutional controversy.     The vote was 47-51.


Moments earlier, the Senate had agreed to make one relatively minor change in the law, voting to strip out a paperwork requirement for businesses.



President Barack Obama, who has vowed to veto any total repeal of his signature legislative accomplishment, has said he would accept the change.    It does not directly affect health care.

Republicans conceded in advance their attempt at total repeal would fall short.      But they also said they had accomplished an objective of forcing rank and file Democrats to take a position on an issue that reverberated in the 2010 campaign and may play a role in 2012.



Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said the vote marked an opportunity for Democrats who voted for the bill last year “to listen to those who have desperately been trying to get your attention.”


“To say, yes, maybe my vote for this bill was a mistake, and that we can do better,”  McConnell said.


Democrats worked to minimize any political repercussions, a concern for a party already acutely aware it must defend 23
seats – and its shrunken Senate majority – in the 2012 elections.

Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the Republican repeal movement would “take away a child’s right to get health insurance and instead give insurance companies the right to use asthma or diabetes as an excuse to take away that care.”

“It would kick kids off their parents’ health insurance,”  Reid said. “It would take away seniors’ rights to a free wellness check.”
Democrats also countered with the proposed repeal of the law’s requirement that businesses, charities, and state and local governments file income tax forms every time they purchase 0 or more in goods.


It was approved 81-17, after Republicans pointed out it had originally been their idea.

Across the street from the Capitol, Democrats convened a Judiciary Committee hearing to solicit testimony on the constitutionality of the law they passed and Obama signed months ago.



“Many who argue the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional are the same people who condemn judicial activism,” said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who presided.      “They are pushing the Supreme Court to strike down this law because they could not defeat it in Congress.”


Republicans were scathing in response.

“The sensible process would have been to have . held a hearing on the law’s constitutionality before the bill passed, not after,” said Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa.     “Like Alice in Wonderland, sentence first, verdict afterward.”


Two federal judges have ruled the law is unconstitutional, partially or in its entirety, citing a requirement for individuals to purchase coverage and pay a penalty in taxes if they fail to do so.     Two other judges have upheld the law.



The controversy has yet to reach the Supreme Court, but it is widely expected to, and Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., announced he would file legislation urging the justices to act quickly.


The maneuvering occurred around a law as ambitious as any in recent years, and as controversial.      According to the Congressional Budget Office, it would expand coverage to tens of millions who lack it, crack down on insurance industry abuses and cut federal budget deficits.     At its core, the bill would require most Americans to purchase insurance, a so-called individual mandate that has become one of the principal points of opposition among Republicans and the tea party activists who propelled them to gains last fall.
The bill’s critics argue the law gave government too large a role in the health care system, will harm Medicare and raises taxes and fees that will burden the economy.     They also sharply dispute the CBO estimate that deficits will fall once the bill takes effect, arguing that the forecasts rest on spending cuts to Medicare and other programs that will not materialize.


Either way, the day’s events shaped up as the latest maneuvering in a struggle that has spanned more than two years.



Republicans said a proposal by Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., to eliminate the reporting requirement to the Internal Revenue Service was legislative pilferage, noting that Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb., filed a bill to that effect last year.



The measure calls for billion in spending cuts to offset the revenue loss from the change, but unlike Johanns’ earlier measure, Stabenow’s specifies that none of the funds can come from Social Security.


Under federal law, Social Security benefits are generally guaranteed.     As a result, the provision Stabenow advanced
assures merely that no administrative costs can be cut at the agency.

No similar protection was included for the agency that oversees Medicare.

The House approved legislation repealing the health care law last month on a party-line vote, ignoring a veto threat from Obama and Reid’s blunt statement the bill would never see the light of day in the Senate.     McConnell responded quickly that he would look for an opportunity to force a vote.


All 47 Republicans voted to repeal the law, but no Democrat joined them.

At a news conference shortly after the vote, Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the chairman of the party’s campaign committee, said the vote marked the “first steps in a long road that will culminate in 2012 whereby we will expose the flaws and the weaknesses in this legislation.”

The law that passed a year ago had the support of 58 Democrats and two independents aligned with them.    All 40 Republicans voted against it.


Democratic ranks have been thinned since then, and their current majority is 53-47.


Of those 53 seats, 23 are on the ballot in 2012, including several that Republicans are targeting.     One on the list, Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska, said in advance he would oppose the Republican repeal proposal.



“There are a lot of good parts in the bill and some that I will work to improve,”  Nelson told reporters in his home state.     “The repealers already have health care.     But they’re ready, willing and eager to take it away from hundreds of thousands of Nebraskans.”

ACVDN Botom Line.     Now that Republicans have tried a repeal vote maby they can settle down and start working on Jobs-Jobs-Jobs and quit wasting time.      

                                                                         ACVDN

 

Amherst County Virginia Democratic News

Committee Meets Tuesday

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

The Committee will meet at CVCC AMHERST CENTER, Tuesday 11/9, 7PM.

To All Amherst County Democrats:

The Committee will meet at CVCC AMHERST CENTER, Tuesday 11/9, 7PM. Everyone is welcome.   It’s important that Precinct Reps attend.

Skipper Fitts, Vice Chair, will preside.

Amherst County Democratic Committee

Precinct Reps
101 – Wright Shop – Magnolia Braxton
102 – New Glasgow – Ned Kable, OPEN
103 – Coolwell – OPEN

201 – Court House – Mary Anne Hostetler, Alix Ingber, OPEN
202 – Temperance – Marvin Gilbert


301 – Monroe – OPEN
302 – Elon – Marita Taylor, Mary Truitt, OPEN
303 – Plsnt View – Curtis Johnson


401 – Amelon – Robert Perry, Jason Fleshman, OPEN
402 – Lonco – Francis Wayne


501 – Madison Hts – Jeff Price, Dan Hughes, Allen Freeman

See You There, Tuesday 11/9, 7PM.




Amherst County Virginia Democratic News