Posts Tagged ‘District’

Andy Schmookler, 6th District Congressional Candidate COMING TO AREA

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

Amherst County Democratic Committee
Welcomes Andy Schmookler to our neighborhood!

Andy Schmookler

On March 3, Andy Schmookler, Democratic candidate for the 6th Congressional District, which encompasses Amherst County, will be holding a Town Meeting in the Lynchburg Public Library Saturday,  March 3,  from 3 to 5:00 p.m. in the Main Library Auditorium (2315 Memorial Avenue).

Dr. Schmookler is an accomplished author, social thinker, commentator, consultant, speaker and professor.      Come
and here what this engaging personality has to say!

Ned Kable,  Secretary
Amherst County Democratic Committee

Ned Kable

WHAT ANDY STANDS FOR:
• Government for the People, Not Just the Powerful Few
 • Restoring Integrity to American Democracy
 • Opportunity for All to Fulfill their God-given Potential
 • “One Person, One Vote,” not “One Dollar, One Vote”
 • Passing on to Our Children a Nation and Planet as Healthy as Was Given to Us
 • Leadership that Brings Out the Best in the American People
 • Seeking and Speaking the Truth
 • Individual Liberty Combined with Wise and Constructive Government

Family Background -
Andy Schmookler was born in the spring of 1946 to parents who had grown up in poverty.

During the depression, Andy’s mother, Pauline, had to drop out of school at the age of 15 to support her ill mother and her two younger sisters.    Decades later, though she never graduated from high school, she got her college and two masters degrees and became a high school teacher of literature.

His father, Jacob was able to go to college thanks to his own mother’s working 14-hour days at a sewing machine to make it possible. After World War II, Andy’s father earned his doctorate in economics and began an academic career.

By the time Andy was 10, his family had a secure footing in the American middle class.

His parents raised him and his brother, Ed.    They taught their sons to have passion for justice, a deep commitment to honesty and integrity, and they instilled the value of hard work.    For Andy’s father, the honest pursuit of the truth was a paramount value.    He taught the discipline of reasoned inquiry.     And for his mother, a key value was that human worth does not lie in rank or wealth, but in beauty of soul, and that gems can be found in every group and at every stratum.

A Record of Accomplishment -
Equipped with these values, and with a love of learning:

 •Andy graduated Valedictorian in his high school class in the Twin Cities in Minnesota.


 •He graduated with highest honors in the field of Social Relations from Harvard University.

 •For his graduate studies he attended the University of Chicago in Social Thought and at Yale in American Studies.

 •Andy earned his doctorate from the University of California at Berkeley and the Graduate Theological Union in a program specially created to accommodate his original theory to explain the way that human civilization has developed.

His doctoral work was published The Parable of the Tribes (University of California Press, 1984;   second edition from SUNY Press, 1995), which was awarded the Erik H. Erikson prize by the International Society for Political Psychology.

This book led the way to a successful career as the author of many published books, most of them seeking to understand the forces that must be dealt with by our country, and by humankind generally, in order to create a good future for ourselves and for the generations to come.     The books are entitled:

•Out of Weakness:  Healing the Wounds that Drive Us to War (Bantam Books, 1988),

 •Sowings and Reapings:  The Cycling of Good and Evil in the Human System (Knowledge Systems, 1989).

 •The Illusion of Choice:  How the Market Economy Shapes        Our Destiny   (SUNY Press, 1993, with translationpublished subsequently in Japan and Korea)
 

•Fool’s Gold:  The Fate of Values in a World of Goods (Harper Collins, 1993).

 •Debating the Good Society:  A Quest to Bridge America’s Moral Divide (M.I.T. Press, 1999).

Dr. Schmookler is an accomplished author, social thinker, commentator, consultant, speaker and professor.    His career accomplishments include:

 •Serving as an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.    He helped with the
analysis of possible future challenges for American policy-makers.

 •Spearheading a project with the Public Agenda Foundation, in which he interviewed the best minds in the
country, in various related fields, on how the United States might best achieve security in an age of weapons of mass destruction.

 •Being hired, in the 1990s, by the United States Army to help    with a project on the prevention of biological terrorism.

•Teaching at both the college level (Prescott College, Georgetown University) and at the high school level (Albuquerque Academy).

•Speaking at forums across the country such as the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, the Washington Ethical Society, and as Presidential lecturer at the University of Montana.
 

•Publishing his commentaries in newspapers across the country for the past thirty-five years, and broadcasting them on radio stations nationwide.
 

•Serving as a consultant to one of America’s premier corporations.

A Sense of Calling -
But most of all, Andy Schmookler has followed a sense of calling. His first book was inspired by a visionary
experience that proved life-changing. It led him to choose a life dedicated to service.    For the great majority of the past forty years, Andy has done the work he senses he is supposed to do.    Making money and getting ahead
have not dictated his life’s course.

For almost twenty years, Andy appeared regularly on WSVA radio out of Harrisonburg, Virginia in an entirely uncompensated role.    He spoke with the people of the Shenandoah Valley about the issues of the day.    He discussed questions of meaning and value that we all face in our day to day lives.    Andy did this because he believes in the importance of meaningful dialogue in the search for truth and mutual understanding.

Beginning in 2004, Andy perceived something troubling about the dynamics operating within American politics.    Believing that the nation was being damaged by a failure to confront the truth about the forces at work before our eyes, Andy devoted himself full-time –again without pay—to investigating and discussing the
moral crisis emerging in American society.

It is this same sense of calling, this same dedication to service, and this same sense of America being imperiled, that has led to Andy’s running for Congress in Virginia’s 6th District. He wants to rally his fellow citizens to uphold the ideals of our American democracy.

Andy and April, wedding photo

Devotion to Family -
Andy is a devoted husband and father.
 

He’s married to April Moore, a writer and lover of the earth, and between them they have three children: 

Nathaniel, who just graduated from Harvard and wants to be a writer of fiction;   Terra who lives in California and is a licensed

clinical psychologist happily engaged to be married;   and Aaron, married and a teacher and creator of theater.

Andy is proud of his three children, all continuing the family tradition of working hard in service to the values they hold dear.

After twenty-five years of marriage to April, he is more in love with her than ever.

April and Andy, today

It is urgent that we put people back to work in America.

This high unemployment hurts the people who want jobs but can’t find them.    It hurts their families, trying to make ends meet, trying to hold onto their homes.    It hurts our communities.    It is holding our economy back from the strong recovery we need.    It is a major cause of our federal deficit.

Wise government policy CAN get us out of this ditch.

American corporations have hired lots of people since the recession bottomed out.     Unfortunately, they’ve done their hiring overseas.    With the right policies, the government can change the incentives for these corporations so that American companies provide jobs to American workers.

Our infrastructure is in bad shape.    A few years ago, our engineers gave it a grade of D.    Now is the perfect time for governments to spend the money to give us an infrastructure suitable for a great country in the 21st century.    The private sector is sitting on its capital and won’t be squeezed out of the credit markets by this investment in our infrastructure.    And this investment will put people back to work and help revive the larger economy.

America will pay a high cost, over the long term, for allowing this high unemployment to damage the life-prospects of our youth, who should now be finding their place in the American workplace. 

 Three generations ago, during the Great Depression, the government stepped in with jobs programs that helped the youth of that era develop good work habits and feel part of the larger American enterprise while also contributing to the nation.

We can do that again, until the private sector is ready to hire them.
These are but some of the available solutions.    But with our current politics, good ideas cannot get enacted.

The Republicans took over Congress in 2010 promising job creation.    But since they’ve been in power, they’ve blocked every measure that would put people to work.    Their ideology insists on the nonsensical notion that government cannot create jobs (though that’s who issues THEIR paychecks).

The American people have told pollsters that getting people back to work is their top priority, not the cuts that actually kill off more jobs.

America needs Democrats in Congress who will fight harder so that all Americans have the opportunity to fulfill their God-given potential and contribute their best to a prosperous American community.

I am running for Congress in Virginia’s 6th District to be one of those Democrats.

It’s time that the needs of the American people came first in the halls of Congress, not the wants of those who have the most.
 -By Andy Schmookler

HEALTH CARE AND MEDICAL CARE -
Our American health care system clearly has problems.   Americans pay almost twice as much for health care as
any other similar country, but the U.S. ranks only 37th in health care outcomes.  Every year, 45,000 people die from lack of health insurance.  Reform is clearly necessary.

But for decades, Republicans have disregarded these problems and obstructed every attempt to solve them.     And now, the GOP has voted to destroy Medicare, even though that system is more efficient than private insurance companies.    They claim it’s too expensive, but that’s only because costs in the entire health care system are out of control.     The Republican plan would increase costs, and shift them from government onto older Americans.

Rather than destroy Medicare, we would do better to extend to every American the opportunity to join in Medicare Plus—using the Medicare structure but, unlike seniors, paying their own way without government subsidy.     If private insurers really are superior, then they have nothing to be afraid of.      But if not, then we could gradually turn the public option into a single-payer system providing universal coverage to every American at lower costs.

The results are in: our health care system delivers less bang for more bucks.     It’s time for a new approach that provides quality service, saves money and saves lives.

DEBT AND DEFICIT: WHEN TO DEAL WITH IT-
 
Despite what we hear, now is not the time to be focused on the deficit.     Now is the time to be focusing on
putting people back to work, and reviving America’s economy.    Spending should be cut and revenues raised once the economy is strong again.

Here’s why the Republicans’ focus is dangerously counter productive:    it not only distracts us from the urgent
task at hand, which is to get Americans back to work, but it also threatens to make that problem worse by damaging our still-fragile recovery.

DEBT AND DEFICIT:  INCREASING REVENUES-
When the economy is healthy again, that will be the time to address the remaining deficit.     Restoring
prosperity is the crucial first stop toward closing the deficit.    Part of the rest of the task of closing the
deficit involves increasing federal revenues.    The Republican refusal to consider the revenue side of the equation has no justification, in view of the facts about how the American distribution of wealth and taxation has become unbalanced and unjust in favor of the richest.

Measures that should be taken include:   1) closing inappropriate tax loopholes for corporations;   2) raising taxes on the richest Americans back to the level in the prosperous 1990s;  and   3) creating various tiers for the richest Americans, so that billionaires are taxed at a higher marginal rate than a couple making 5,000.

 DEBT AND DEFICIT:  CUTTING SPENDING-
To the extent that spending cuts are needed in the coming years, we should focus on areas different from those the Republicans have been targeting.     Instead of gutting Social Security, Medicare, and other vital government programs, we can best reduce the deficit by bringing health care costs under control and by cutting our
excessive defense budget.     Fiscal discipline need not dismantle the programs and institutions that make America a great and humane society, or be achieved at the expense of our country’s most vulnerable citizens.

CLIMATE CHANGE-
97% of leading climate scientists agree that climate change is a serious, man-made problem that needs to be
addressed.     And yet, America is not taking action to deal with this challenge because one of our two major parties has embraced the skepticism of a tiny minority of scientists.     It is not coincidence that the only place where American policy is ignoring an overwhelming scientific consensus is one where our richest corporations have a vested interest in our ignoring the science.     And we cannot afford to gamble with the only planet we have, and with the future well-being of our children and grandchildren, because dishonesty has corrupted our discourse.     As a candidate for Congress, one of my priorities is to bring honesty and responsibility to the politics of climate change.

SOCIAL SECURITY-
There are problems that require urgent attention, but Social Security is not one of them.

The financing of Social Security needs only minor adjustments in the coming years.    Nonetheless, the same forces that opposed the creation of Social Security are now trying to use our country’s economic woes as an excuse to dismantle one of America’s most popular and successful programs.

Social Security is a central part of what makes ours a humane and caring nation, one providing a degree of dignity and security to many millions of Americans in their older years.    One of my priorities as a member of Congress will be to defend Social Security from those who cannot be trusted to deal with it honestly.

ACV Democratic News

Times Free Press: Democrats say Tennessee’s 3rd District congressional race winnable

Saturday, January 28th, 2012

Democrats say Tennessee's 3rd District congressional race winnable | timesfreepress.comGood write up in the Times Free Press:

In a brief interview after the meeting, Strong said Tennessee’s 3rd Congressional District race is within reach for a party that hasn’t tasted victory since 1992. Strong said the newly drawn congressional district, which includes parts or all of six fresh counties, could benefit Democratic hopefuls Mary Headrick, a physician from Union County, and Chattanooga businessman Bill Taylor, both of whom attended the meeting.

“We’re feeling good,” said Strong, an assistant district attorney for Hamilton County. “The new district gives the Republican [candidates] no better name recognition than our own people.”

Democrats say Tennessee’s 3rd District congressional race winnable | timesfreepress.com.

TNDP News

Eric Stewart Announces Run for Congress in Tennessee’s 4th District

Monday, November 21st, 2011

Will put small business and political experience to work creating jobs and balancing budgets

Winchester, TN – State Senator Eric Stewart announced today that he will run to represent Tennessee’s 4th district in the U.S. House of Representatives, pledging to put partisanship aside so we can protect our nation’s commitment to seniors, create jobs to revive our economy and reduce our massive deficit.

“Congress is broken and all we see is fighting, political posturing and gridlock from the folks we sent there to work on our behalf and solve the serious problems we face,” said Eric Stewart. “People are struggling.  Unemployment remains too high, and our economy is sluggish at best. Illegal drug problems continue to increase and many small businesses are hanging on by a thread, if at all.  All the while, Congress is only focused on slinging mud and pointing fingers instead of taking action to create jobs and reduce our debt.  I’m running for Congress to bring common sense back to Washington and put the needs of the people ahead of special interests, rigid ideology and petty partisanship.”

Born and raised in Franklin County, Stewart has owned a small business, ran his family’s business and served as s county commissioner and state Senator. In 2002 Stewart defeated a 12-year incumbent to win a seat on the Franklin County Commission and won a hotly contested seat for the State Senate in 2008.  That year, Stewart defeated a well-financed Republican in the General Election despite large Democratic losses in the district.

As a county commissioner, Eric Stewart pushed for budget cuts within county departments, pay cuts for county commissioners, and he supported tax relief for senior citizens.  In the State Senate, Stewart championed tax relief for small businesses that put Tennesseans back to work as well as breaks for military families.  He has supported measures to reduce and eventually eliminate the sales taxes on food.  Focused on cutting government waste, Stewart has only voted for balanced budgets.  Stewart is also a staunch supporter of public education in Tennessee.  He has worked diligently to improve the public education system in Tennessee and fought for the rights of teachers, students and parents.

“I come from a family of small business owners, educators and people who give back,” Stewart said.  “We need representatives in Washington who understand that the people of this district are struggling, and are willing to roll up their sleeves and find common ground to solve the problems our families, children and small businesses face.  My focus has always been on helping people, creating jobs and improving public education in a common sense, fiscally responsible way.  You can’t reach these goals when folks in Washington care more about toeing the party line and keeping their job than they do about helping folks back home.  I look forward to listening to the hopes and dreams of the voters in Tennessee’s 4th Congressional district, and taking their voice to Washington.”

For more information on the campaign or to sign up for the newsletter to receive regular updates, please visit the campaign website, www.votestewart.com.

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TN Democratic Party News

Meet Your Next Congressman From Virginia’s 6th District

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

Meet Dr. Andrew Bard Schmookler 

Candidate for Congress in Virginia’s 6th District
Tuesday – June 14th – Madison Heights Library – 7PM, doors open 6:30PM – Free Parking – Everyone Welcome

Bob Goodlatte is the present Congressman and he has sold you down the river in favor of tax breaks for the upper 2% and special breaks for Big Oil and Business.    You may be unaware that two-term Bob who is now serving his 10th term is unaccountable to you the voter in the 6th District. 

Goodlatte supports killing Medicare and Reducing Social Security and is wed to a far right wing extreme agenda that slants toward the wealthy and big business.    Bob got the two term nickname by promising to term limit himself to two terms if elected.    Bob got elected and his promise was completely forgotten.     Goodlatte also opposes support for early childhood learning and wants to end Women’s Health Care.

Goodlatte’s record on senior issues is so poor that he is rated at less than 10% in his support for issues important to older Americans. 

Goodlatte needs to be held accountable for his conduct and retired.     Dr Schmookler has taken up the mission of replacing Goodlatte with a Congressman who represents the people.    This
is your chance to meet and help Dr. Schmookler become the next Congressman from Virginia’s 6th District.   Your help is appreciated, please plan to attend.

There is much at stake in this election and if you continue to be distracted by the standard Republican smoke screens of God, Guns, Gays and Abortion we will all lose.     Think about the Pell Grants for Education that your children use to go to college, that Republicans want to end.     Think about all the programs that serve working people that Republicans want to trash to give a tax break to the wealthy.     Think about all the people who can’t find a job and how many jobs are lost each time the upper 2% get another tax break.      Think about your family and friends and vote your interest. 

SPECIAL MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN

David Burford, Amherst Co. Democratic Chair

Tuesday, June 14, 7:00 PM – Amherst County Democrats will welcome to the Madison Hts Library, our special guest, 
Dr. Andrew Schmookler, seeking the Democratic nomination for Congress in the 6th CD next year.

Dr. Schmookler has a powerful message that’s sure to get the attention of voters here in the heart of the Commonwealth – and nationally, as well.    He reminds us that progressive, liberal ideals and policies are indeed patriotic and moral.     He calls Republicans to task for the destructive party they have become, while citing
congressional Democrats’ failure to confront them.
 
You won’t want to miss this opportunity to meet Andy, hear what he has to say, and ask him the tough questions as
we look toward the 2012 elections.
 
Light refreshments will be served following the meeting.
 

Everyone is welcome to attend and we will be pleased to greet you.  



Award-winning author and blogger Andy Schmookler has thrown his hat into the ring for the Sixth District Democratic Party congressional nomination.

Schmookler, 64, said he wouldn’t be running for Congress   “if these were normal political times,”   but the Harvard and Cal-Berkeley grad and NPR and PBS commentator sees in the recent policy drift in Washington a disturbing trend that he feels he needs to bring attention to.

Increasing income inequality and the increasingly hollowed-out American middle class   “aren’t a function of how the 21st century economy works,”   Schmookler said.     Rather, the trends toward the rich getting richer and the poor and middle class struggling more and more are due to the   “nature of the policies that are getting implemented”   in Washington.

Draconian djustments to Medicare and Social Security being contemplated now on Capitol Hill are   “frauds”   to Schmookler. “Back when Reagan was president, we already knew that people who were born the year I was born were going to turn 65 this year. There’s nothing surprising about that,”   Schmookler said.

The focus of leaders in Washington should be on creating jobs and building on the country’s economic base, Schmookler said, not on budget cutting.

“What we need to close the budget isn’t cutting off programs like Head Start or heating help for the elderly that Republicans are going after.    We need to get the economy out of the hole,”   Schmookler said.

But  “we don’t talk about that.”

“We talk about cutting the budget.    We talk about cutting Social Security.     Now there are proposals that are essentially designed to eliminate Medicare as we know it.     We as an American society are moving toward taking away the protections for average people, the opportunities for average people, and hollowing out America,” Schmookler said.

Both major parties – Republican and Democrat – are part and parcel to the problem.    The GOP, to Schmookler, is a   “destructive force,”   while   “Democrats have let us down because they have been wimps in terms of standing up and defending.”
“My message is simply to try to tell the truth,”   said Schmookler, who concedes that the 2012 race will be an uphill battle, but says it’s  “not impossible”   for a Democrat to win in the Sixth District.

“The only way that today’s Republican Party can get any power at all is by deceiving people about the nature of what it is,”   said Schmookler, who hopes his campaign can play a role in   “awakening the American people”    to those realities.

Agusta Free Press
Story by Chris Graham.   Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

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Keep Your Eye On The Prize
The American Dream is fueled by Good Government.
Support and Vote for Bert Dodson.

Bert, I’m Ready to Help!!!

If you would like to Volunteer,   If you would like a Yard Sign or If you would like to Host an Event.

If you would like to Make a Donation of any size it will be appeciated and put to good use telling all the citizens of the 22nd District about Bert Dodson and our campaign.

Here’s the address:

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Bert Thanks You in advance for your generous help.     Lets Get to Work and Win This Thing.

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TRAINING Session Planned

The first-ever Virginia Summit, which will be held on July 15th-16th at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, will offer two days of intensive training, policy and message briefings, career advancement advice and fellowship with Democratic elected officials, candidates, professionals, and activists from every level.

The Virginia Summit will offer sessions for candidates, activists, professionals and aspiring political staff of all stripes on a wide range of important skills and topics.     We’ve got a host of informative and impactful sessions planned already, including:
 
Policy briefings on health care, education, national security, energy, and the environment 

Developing and communicating a powerful message Running an effective local Democratic committee

Recruiting and retaining political volunteers

Making the choice to run for office

Starting and advancing a career in politics
I am also happy to announce that Dr. Drew Westen, the renowned psychologist, Democratic messaging guru and author of the must read book The Political Brain, has agreed to share his expertise in two separate Virginia Summit sessions.    Dr. Westen has advised campaigns on every level on crafting and delivering an effective and emotionally resonant message.     He will deliver a great deal of value to attendees who want to communicate our Democratic
values in the most effective way possible.

I hope you will mark your calendars and make plans to join us in Richmond on July 15th-16th for the Virginia Summit. 

Sincerely,

Brian J. Moran

Chairman, Democratic Party of Virginia  

Amherst County Virginia Democratic News

Amherst County Virginia Democratic News

Democrats Score Big Win in New York’s 26 District

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

John Boehner is being done in by republicans dead set on looking out for the rich and big
business and killing medicare.  

Kathy Hochul

New York’s 26th District was so conservative and right wing that no Democrat has stood a chance there for over 40 years.    Democrat Kathy Hochul is their new Congressman.    The upper 2% may have all the money but the lower 90% have the votes.

In a victory certain to be read by many as a positive omen for House Democrats looking forward to the 2012 general elections and a warning for Republicans, Democrat Kathy Hochul won the closely watched special election to fill a vacant seat in a congressional district that until now has been reliably Republican.

Late in the evening, Hochul was beating Republican Jane Corwin by 6 percentage points, 48 percent versus 42 percent with 87 percent of the precincts reporting.   Tea Party movement candidate Jack Davis had 9 percent of the vote.

The race was seen as a referendum on the House Republican Kill Medicare plan associated with Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin that would privatize the popular entitlement program.      Republicans have proposed giving future seniors money to purchase health insurance from private insurers.

The proposed changes to the program have proved controversial, raising anxieties in many seniors and middle aged Americans, concerns Democrats have been quick to turn against Republicans.

Hochul was one of those Democrats, riding the Medicare issue all the way to Congress in a race in which she had initially trailed behind her Republican opponent.

Denise Jewell Gee of The Buffalo News reports that in her victory speech, Hochul acknowledged the importance of the Medicare issue.     “Yes, we are all future seniors, that’s for sure.     It’s the future seniors they were going after, and we didn’t like that did we?”

The vacancy in New York’s 26th Congressional District occurred after the former Republican congressman, Chris Lee, resigned after a woman claimed that after making contact with her through a Craig’s List personal, the married Lee had sent her photos of himself in which he was shirtless.      His misbehavior  was pretty tame for a Family Values Republican. 

The race took on far more importance than the typical congressional election in a single district.    Because it was seen to have become a proxy battle in the larger war over Medicare, both Republican and Democratic groups pumped money into the race to purchase time for TV commercials.

So important was the outcome seen to be that the White House issued a statement from President Obama who is out of the country in Europe:

I want to extend my congratulations to Congresswoman-elect Kathy Hochul for her victory in New York’s 26th Congressional District. Kathy and I both believe that we need to create jobs, grow our economy, and reduce the deficit in order to outcompete other nations and win the future.    Kathy has shown, through her victory and throughout her career, that she will fight for the families and businesses in western New York, and I look forward to working with her when she gets to Washington.

The victory was sure to give Democrats a much needed psychological boost after the pummeling they took in the
2010 mid-term elections because of the Affordable Care Act and the economy.

But because it was a three-way race Republicans argue that Medicare wasn’t the decisive factor in the outcome.    Instead they point to third-party candidate Davis, who took nearly a tenth of the vote, as a spoiler.

Nevertheless, the result is a repudiation of the Republican agenda.     The last Republican Congressman won with 74% of the vote and it was normal for Democrats to pull less than 30% of the vote in this district.     Something has changed and I like it.      There are 97 Republicans in Districts far more liberal than this one and their vote for and support of the Paul Ryan Kill Medicare Plan has put them on shakey ground with voters.

Amherst County Virginia Democratic News

New Republican Collin County District Clerk Plus Five Others Indicted For Organized Criminal Activity.

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

From the Dallas Morning News
by Ed Housewright:

July 31, 2010 – Patricia Crigger, the incoming Collin County district clerk, and five other office supervisors have been indicted on charges of engaging in organized criminal activity.

The indictments stem from a Texas Rangers investigation that alleges Crigger and the others pressured district clerk employees to work on Crigger’s spring campaign.

Crigger received about 54 percent of the April 13 Republican primary runoff election vote, defeating law office manager Alma Hays.

She faces no Democratic opposition on the November 2, 2010 election ballot and is therefore due to take office Jan. 1, replacing longtime District Clerk Hannah Kunkle, who is retiring.

The general election is Nov. 2. The deadline to remove a candidate’s name is Aug. 20, according to the Texas secretary of state’s office.

If Crigger withdraws her name before then, the local Republican Party executive committee can name a replacement to be on the ballot, said Ann McGeehan, elections director for the secretary of state.

The Democratic Party of Collin County Executive Committee also would be allowed to place a name on the ballot, even though the party had no candidate in the primary.

Anyone can file as a write-in candidate through Aug. 24, McGeehan said.

If Crigger doesn’t withdraw her name by Aug. 20, she will stay on the ballot. She would win the election if she receives the most votes.

If she is still under indictment, has not been convicted and decides not to take office Jan. 1, the county’s state district judges would name her replacement, McGeehan said. The replacement would serve until the November 2012 general election and could seek election for the remaining two years of the term.

A candidate becomes ineligible to serve upon final conviction, McGeehan said. So if Crigger were convicted but appealed her case, she could take office while the appeal is resolved.

The Collin County Commissioners Court sets the budget for the district clerk and other elected officials. But commissioners can’t fire an elected official or any of his or her staff.

County Judge Keith Self, who heads Commissioners Court, declined to comment on the indictments.

“Because it’s a legal issue, I need to be very careful to make no comment,” Self said.

Crigger and the other supervisors could not be reached for comment.

“It’s really sad it’s come to this,” said Fred Moses, chairman of the county Republican Party. “She’s worked hard for the party.”

A judge issued arrest warrants on Friday and set a ,000 personal recognizance bond for each. All six defendants appeared voluntarily at the Collin County Jail about 12:30 p.m. to be processed, said sheriff’s spokesman John Norton. They left about an hour later, he said.

Under state law, a person can hold office while under indictment but can be removed if convicted.

Engaging in organized criminal activity is a second-degree felony punishable by two to 20 years in prison and up to a ,000 fine.

The one-page indictments were returned Thursday against Crigger, Sherry Bell, Rebecca Littrell, Amy Mathis, Lorrie Robertson and Marcia Simpson.

The identical indictments say the women tampered with government records and committed theft by falsifying time and attendance records to show employees were working when they were not.

“This is a dark day for Collin County and its taxpayers,” Hays said in a statement Friday. “I hope the legal process reveals the truth and that the integrity of the district clerk’s office is restored. I am proud to say that I ran an honest campaign and that I had nothing to do with this investigation.”

The six women indicted are among nine supervisors in the district clerk’s office, which has 63 employees.

A search warrant affidavit from the Texas Rangers investigation says district clerk employees were asked to assist Crigger’s campaign in “various ways, such as walking neighborhoods and holding campaign signs at polling places.”

They were rewarded with paid time off, the document says.

It mentions five unnamed district clerk employees who talked with the Rangers during their investigation.

Armed with a search warrant, authorities seized computer hard drives, memory cards, Crigger campaign literature, calendars and other items on June 3.

At the time, Kunkle released a written statement on behalf of her and her office, which is responsible for keeping state district court records. She criticized the execution of the search warrant.

“If they would have come to me directly, I would have turned over anything they wanted and would not have had to close down the district clerk’s office, disrupt county business and cause inconvenience to the employees and citizens of Collin County,” the statement read.

Kunkle couldn’t be reached for comment Friday.

Moses said he hadn’t talked to Crigger since she was indicted. “We want to let the legal system take its course,” he said.

Moses said he would talk to state Republican Party officials and the Texas secretary of state’s office to determine how to pick Crigger’s replacement if she doesn’t take office.

“We need to see what our options are,” Moses said. “We want to do what’s in the best interests of the party.”

Six supervisors in the Collin County district clerk’s office each face two counts of engaging in organized criminal activity in identical indictments handed down Thursday.

Indicted: Patricia Crigger, Sherry Bell, Rebecca Littrell, Amy Mathis, Lorrie Robertson and Marcia Simpson

Count 1: Tampering with a governmental record by making false entries in time and attendance records

Count 2: Theft by obtaining money between ,500 and ,000 from Collin County by falsifying time and attendance records

Punishment if convicted: Two to 20 years in prison and up to a ,000 fine

Democratic Blog of Collin County – News

The Fifth Congressional District

Monday, September 28th, 2009

In case folks aren’t sure which district they’re in, 5th CD includes all or part of:

COUNTIES:   Greene, Campbell, Bedford, Albermarle, Nelson, Fluvanna, Buckingham, Cumberland, Appomattox, Prince Edward, Charlotte, Lunenburg, Franklin, Henry, Pittsylvania, Halifax, Mecklenberg, and Brunswick

CITIES:    Bedford, Charlottesville, Danville, and Martinsville

trivia: (it’s the largest district in VA – larger than New Jersey)

Who Represents This District?

Tom Perriello
There’s a crucial deadline approaching there.    You have just three days left to register to vote — your registration must be postmarked by this Tuesday, October 12th.    If there has been any change in your status or eligibility since the last election — did you move?  change your name?  turn 18? — you likely need to register in order to cast a ballot this fall.    We’ve got all the information you’ll need about how to register at our voting information site,

Don’t sit on the sidelines,  make sure you’re registered and follow thru by casting your vote to reelect Tom Perriello.

                      Vote Tom Perriello 
          


Amherst County Virginia Democratic News

Independent Jim Schneller jumps into the 7th Congressional District race in Pennsylvania

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Jim Schneller, an independent candidate for the U.S. Congress (PA-7) with support from the Tea Party turned in nearly 8,000 signatures just before the Pennsylvania deadline for independent and third party candidates to submit nomination papers. Schneller, a conservative from Wayne, PA. was required to submit 4,200 valid signatures. Schneller will take on Republican Patrick Meehan [...]
3rd Party – Independent Pulse

Rep. Kay Hatcher’s New District Office

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

State Representative Kay Hatcher has announced the opening of a second convenient office for 50th District residents.

The office will open Wednesday, August 5, in the Batavia City Hall at 100 North Island Avenue. District Director Tracy McDonnell will be available each Wednesday, 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. to aid constituents and coordinate one-on-one meetings with Hatcher.
“I’m pleased we are able to increase our District accessibility,” noted Hatcher. “The Fox Valley is a diverse region, and we’re constantly searching for new ways to connect with our residents. An important part of that initiative is to offer extended evening hours to make access easier for those with traditional work schedules.”

The 50th District includes twenty-one townships, fifteen villages and five cities. The Kane County portion includes Sugar Grove, Big Rock, Blackberry, Kaneville, Virgil and Campton townships, plus parts of Geneva, Batavia, Aurora, North Aurora and Montgomery. The District serves almost all of Kendall County, excluding the northeastern portion of Oswego. Northville, Mission and Miller townships in LaSalle County are also part of the 50th District.

For more information or to schedule appointments residents are encouraged to call 630-553-3223.

Kane County Republican News

Independent candidate for the PA 7th District US Congressional seat responds to accusations of collusion with Democrat party

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

P R E S S   R E L E A S E Thursday, August 5, 2010    Contact : Press office | 610-688-9471 | info@Jim4US.com JIM SCHNELLER NOTES : DEFAMATION TACTICS WERE OVERDUE FROM ANY PARTY – AND THE OTHER PARTY JIM FOR CONGRESS CAMPAIGN COUNTERS SIMPLIFIED DESCRIPTIONS OF HIS PLATFORM FOR THE PEOPLE CANDIDATE JIM [...]
3rd Party – Independent Pulse