Posts Tagged ‘Others’

RJ Harris internal poll of “likely delegates” shows Harris leading Wrights, others

Friday, November 4th, 2011

Following is a communication from the RJ Harris 2012 campaign:

November 2, 2011

With your help and support we are the definite front runner for the 2012 Libertarian Presidential Nomination. We continue to ask for your support in getting the word out. Recently, we won the Illinois Libertarian Convention Straw Poll. We have also been winning over massive support across the country along with Libertarian State Leadership.

Just in case the image with the recent poll up above did not get to you here are the results:

2012 LIbertarian Presidential Poll (October 31, 2011)
CANDIDATES:
Carl Person 2%
Roger Gary 7%
RJ Harris 32%
Lee Wrights 14%
Bill Still 2%
Undecided 43%

Polling Consisted of 240 Likely Delegates +-4% Error

The release does not say who conducted the poll, but the graphic on Harris’ website indicates that a firm called Polipolls conducted the survey. I am unfamiliar with this polling firm, but this Facebook page indicates that Polipolls has been used by at least one other Libertarian campaign in the past.

I e-mailed the Harris campaign with some followup questions concerning the methodology of the poll. I’ll post any response I receive as an update on this story.

[Update 1] Polipolls appears to be the polling arm of The Political Group, a campaign consulting firm that also designed Harris’ website.

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Independent Political Report

Kerry, Others Urge Leadership to Maintain Funding for LIHEAP

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011

The Obama Administration released their proposed 2012 Budget today, that would “trim or terminate more than 200 federal programs next year and make key investments in education, transportation and research.”

The plan is aimed at boosting the nation’s economy while reducing record budget deficits.

Among the targeted federal programs in the budget is Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), as I noted here a few days ago. Following up on my earlier post about the proposed cuts to LIHEAP is this from Senator Kerry’s office:

In a letter to Senate and House Leadership today, Massachusetts Congressional delegation member Senators John Kerry and Scott Brown, along with Representatives Edward Markey, Barney Frank, Richard E. Neal, John Olver, John Tierney, Jim McGovern, Michael Capuano, Stephen F. Lynch, Niki Tsongas, and William Keating asked that heating assistance funding for families and seniors be maintained in the FY 2012 federal budget.

“We all appreciate that difficult decisions have to be made this budget cycle to restore fiscal sanity and begin to tackle the debt,” the members wrote.  “However, this year Massachusetts, and many other parts of the country, have seen record breaking low temperatures and brutal storm conditions.  LIHEAP ensures that families can heat their homes, that senior citizens aren’t forced to choose between their next meal and staying warm, and helps those who live in the North East to cope with the winter despite record high home heating oil costs.” 

The full text of the letter is below:

February 14, 2011 

The Honorable Harry Reid                                      The Honorable Mitch McConnell
Majority Leader                                                          Minority Leader
United States Senate                                                  United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510                                          Washington, D.C. 20510

The Honorable John Boehner                                    The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
Speaker                                                                               Minority Leader
House of Representatives                                           House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20510                                             Washington, D.C. 20510 

Dear Majority Leader Reid, Minority Leader McConnell, Speaker Boehner and Minority Leader Pelosi, 

We are writing today in support of the Low Income Home Energy Heating Assistance Program (LIHEAP) and to express our hope that level funding can be maintained.  The budget proposal submitted by the administration today cuts the program to .57 billion which would be devastating for our constituents in Massachusetts.  We respectfully request that as you prepare the budget for Fiscal Year 2012 you maintain LIHEAP at its current level of .1 billion.      

We all appreciate that difficult decisions have to be made this budget cycle to restore fiscal sanity and begin to tackle the debt.  However, this year Massachusetts, and many other parts of the country, have seen record breaking low temperatures and brutal storm conditions.  LIHEAP ensures that families can heat their homes, that senior citizens aren’t forced to choose between their next meal and staying warm, and helps those who live in the North East to cope with the winter despite record high home heating oil costs.

By cutting LIHEAP at this critical time it is estimated that over 3 million American families that qualify for heating assistance would not receive it.  As it is LIHEAP is already underfunded.  We hear stories every winter from our constituents about the lack of assistance available and the difficulty they have heating their homes. 

We understand that increasing the LIHEAP program might not be possible this year because of the budget constraints but cutting the program in half would simply be devastating.   We hope to work with you to find a way to keep LIHEAP at level funding and to provide our country’s families with the assistance they need.

We again request that you maintain level funding at .1 billion for the LIHEAP program and provide vital heating assistance to those in Massachusetts and across the county.  Thank you for your consideration.       

Sincerely,

                                   
John F. Kerry                                                              Scott P. Brown
United States Senator                                              United States Senator 

Edward J. Markey                                                      Barney Frank                         
Member of Congress                                                 Member of Congress 

Richard E. Neal                                                          John W. Olver                        
Member of Congress                                                Member of Congress

John F. Tierney                                                           James P. McGovern               
Member of Congress                                                  Member of Congress
Michael Capuano                                                        Stephen F. Lynch
Member of Congress                                                 Member of Congress 

Niki Tsongas                                                               William R. Keating
Member of Congress                                               Member of Congress

Last thoughts on this for now

I am wondering what our President is thinking on this one, because it’s really, really cold out there this winter and lot’s of folks are still unemployed in this recession — cuts to LIHEAP is just so… so… so… the other side of the aisle.

The Democratic Daily

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