Archive for the ‘Democrat’ Category

In Georgia Special Election, Democrat Jon Ossoff Offers Message to the Middle – Newsweek

Democrat Jon Ossoff introduced himself to voters by asking them to help him Make Trump furious, a pitch thats drawn grassroots support from all over the country for his upstart bid to replace former Congressman Tom Price. But if Ossoff succeeds in winning a majority of votes in the first round of the special election on April 18, it wont be because of the liberal anti-Trump vote. It will because he was able to appeal to the right-of-center, educated white voters in this suburban Atlanta House district. Thats also a voting bloc Democrats, as a whole, are hoping to win over as they seek to claw back seats after a disastrous string of state and congressional losses. To that end, they may want to listen to Ossoffs message.

RELATED:How the #Resistance Is Tapping the Tea Party's Playbook

He actually sounds a little bitlike Donald Trump, thoughwithout the divisiveness or bluster. Ossoffs two top priorities, he tells Newsweek, are local economic development, i.e. jobs, and accountability in Washington. He may not use the words drain the swamp, as Trump did on the 2016 campaign trail, but Ossoff talks plenty about corruption, pointing back to his work over the last three years as CEO of the London-based investigative film production company, Insight TWI. Much of the companys recent work has focused on documentaries and series on corruption and conflict in Africa. Ossoff says he can apply those same skills in Washington. There is plenty of corruption, waste and fraud in the federal government and in federal contracting, he says, adding that hed set up a dedicated investigative unit in his office.

Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff greets supporters after the League of Women Voters' candidate forum for Georgia's 6th Congressional District special election to replace Tom Price, who is now the secretary of Health and Human Services, in Marietta, Georgia, U.S. April 3, 2017. Bita Honarvar/REUTERS

At the same time, Ossoff talks a lot about shared values and uniting people, a rebuff to the current president, even if he doesnt regularly call out Trump by name. He turned up at the Atlanta airport with his former boss, Democratic Rep. Hank Johnson and Congressman John Lewis, the civil rights legend, to protest Trumps travel ban in early February. Folks here recognize that extremism is bad for business, Ossoff says. Extremism anywhere in politics and gridlock in our nations capital.

Its hardly the impeach Trump talk that many on the progressive left are craving from Democrats right now. But Ossoffs anti-Washington rhetoric, as well as his focus on bread-and-butter economic issues, offers a way to walk thetightrope between the angry corps of #Resistance activists and moderate Republicans who may have voted for Trump in November, but now feel uneasy about his extreme stances and flailing administration. Its something plenty of other Democrats in swing districts and purple states will be trying to pull off a year-and-a-half from now.

The activists class, meanwhile, doesnt seem bothered by Ossoffs lack of fire-breathing rhetoric. Hes become a cause celebre in liberal circles in recent months, less for what he stands for than what kind of a message his victory in this traditionally Republican House seat would send. Price represented the 6th District for more than a decade before Trump tapped him to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. But despite Prices easy, 24-point-margin re-election in Novemberpart of a Republican winning streak in the district that dates back to the 70s Ossoff has a legitimate shot. Trump barely beat Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in the district, part of a gradual narrowing of the gap between Republican and Democrat presidential contenders here since 2000, as the Atlanta Journal-Constitution recently highlighted.

Ossoff also benefits mightily from a fragmented Republican field11 are running in the open primary, including at least four top-tier candidates. Four other Democrats are also running, although Ossoff is far and away the partys top choice. If any candidate, regardless of party, wins more than 50 percent of the vote in the first round, he or she wins the election. If not, the top two finishers advance to a runoff on June 20. The GOPs cannibalization gives Ossoff a chance of winning the seat outright next week (going up one-on-one against a sole Republican in the second round is a taller order). Coming on the heels of a near-miss in a special election in Kansas last week, where an underfunded Democrat lost by single digits in a heavily Republican district, progressives are eager to frame Ossoff's success as another warning shot against Republicans in Washington.

Thats drawn a host of support from the lefts netroots community. Websites like Daily Kos and groups like MoveOn.org have been cheering on the Ossoff campaign and helping channel donations since early in 2017. Thanks largely to those efforts, Ossoff, who started out with virtually no name recognition or any experience in elected office, has raised a staggering $8-plus million for the race, most of it online from small dollar, out-of-state donors.

Republicans are now pouring money into the race, as well, not behind any one particular candidate but to attack Ossoff and keep him from crossing the 50 percent vote tally. Since March, the Republican party and outside groups aligned with it have spent more than $5 million attacking Ossoff. Their top critiques: hes too inexperienced and hes a stooge of liberal donors, not someone who represents the district. A recent email from the Republican National Committee, signed by Team Trump, labeled Ossoff an out-of-state, Nancy Pelosi-backed candidate, a reference to House Democrats liberal leader from San Francisco.

Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff greets supporters after the League of Women Voters' candidate forum for Georgia's 6th Congressional District special election to replace Tom Price, who is now the secretary of Health and Human Services, in Marietta, Georgia, April 3. Bita Honarvar/Reuters

Should Ossoff win on Tuesdayor down the road in Junethe victory would be largely psychological for national Democrats. Flipping the seat from Republican hands would only make a tiny dent in the 40-plus seat deficit with the GOP in the House. And the unique dynamics of a special election, where turnout is typically low and organization is lacking, mean its unlikely to be a good bellwether for other races down the line, something The New Republic underscored this week.

The affluent suburbs north of Atlanta, meanwhile, present a whole different political environment than Rust Belt states where Democrats also need to win back white voters. With its rapidly growing tech sector, cities like Roswell and Alpharetta quickly bounced back after the last decades recession. More than half of residents in the district have a college degree. Thats a far cry from economically depressed regions of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Ohio, where a significant number of voters swung from Democrat Barack Obama to Trump in the 2016 presidential election.

Democrats are, however, gunning for plenty of Republican House seats that do have profiles relatively similar to Georgia 6relatively affluent suburban districts outside of major metropolises in states like New York, New Jersey, California and Virginia. Democrats vying for those seats will need to pull off the same sort of balancing act Ossoff is attempting, firing up the base while not alienating middle-of-the-road suburban voters. This special election offers a test of one such approach.

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In Georgia Special Election, Democrat Jon Ossoff Offers Message to the Middle - Newsweek

The Union Democrat – Sonora News

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Hank Kolpack and Hunter Hanson recorded the two best scores Wednesday to lead the Sonora Wildcat golfers past the Linden Lions 230-239 at Castle Oaks ...MORE

Nick Kristoff drained four birdies Tuesday to lead the Bret Harte Bullfrogs past the Linden Lions 224-260 at Greenhorn Creek Resort in Angels Camp. Kristoff ...MORE

Rita Austin resigned on Monday as the director of the Tuolumne County Behavioral Health Department, citing health issues. Next Tuesday, the Tuolumne County Board of Supervisors will consider appointing Steve Boyack as the acting director while a permanent replacement for Austin is recruited. Boyack serves ...MORE

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Chanel Mastropoalo-Mendez spent the better part of a month online looking for jobs in Tuolumne County, often entering her email address to receive updates from employment sites. When the 20-year-old Jamestown resident received a text message offering $450 a week to wrap her 2009 Hyundai ...MORE

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Preps roundup

Hank Kolpack and Hunter Hanson recorded the two best scores Wednesday to lead the Sonora Wildcat golfers past the Linden Lions 230-239 at Castle Oaks Golf Course in Ione. The match was made up from a rain out earlier this season. The Wildcats grabbed sole ...MORE

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Prep basketball

Sonora High School seniors Nate Patterson and Kaden Sparks-Davis will play Saturday in Columbia Colleges Madness in the Mother Lode all-star basketball game. The game features high school seniors that starred on their respective teams in the Sac-Joaquin Section. Patterson was a two-time All Mother Lode League first team member. He averaged 13 points and about six rebounds, five assists and almost three steals per ...MORE

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Deregulate health care To the Editor: I enjoy reading Paolo Maffels monthly column in Letters to the Editor. This month he suggests a solution to our government run health insurance/health care system. Predictably he calls for a socialistic, single-payer, system run by (you guessed it) ...MORE

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Froma Harrop

It was clearly a bad idea for United Airlines to drag a passenger kicking, screaming and bleeding out of a seat he had paid for. Many of the industry's critics are using this occasion to drive home their complaints of "class systems" whereby passengers in ...MORE

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This months Second Saturday Art Night features new venues hosting art exhibits and live music. Additionally, April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month so some musicians performing Saturday will have a single blue string on their instruments, which is being sponsored through the Center For A ...MORE

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The 36th annual Home and Garden Show presented by The Union Democrat and sponsored by Sonora and Calaveras Lumber will be held this weekend at the Mother Lode Fairgrounds in Sonora. We have many new exhibitors this year, bringing the total to over ...MORE

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The Union Democrat - Sonora News

Democrats Want Guarantee for Health Subsidies After Trump Threat – Bloomberg

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April 13, 2017, 4:55 PM EDT

Congressional Democrats are warning they will fight to prevent President Donald Trump from withholding payments used to subsidize insurance costs for poor Americansunder Obamacare, signalling the issue could become part of thedebate to avoid a government shutdown at the end of April.

Top House and Senate Democratic leaders are pushing to guarantee the so-called Cost Sharing Reduction subsidies as part of a spending bill that must be approved by April 28, the last day of government funding under current law, according to threeDemocratic aides.

Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, also signaled a tough stance Thursday, saying Democrats will not negotiate with hostage takers.

Trump told the Wall Street Journal Wednesday that he might withhold the CSR payments to force Democrats to negotiate changes to the existing health law, the Affordable Care Act, which Republicans have been seeking to repeal.

The three Democratic aides, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said both Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi agree that CSR payments must be included in the omnibus spending bill being negotiated as permanent, mandatory spending.

Those payments to lower-income people have been at the center of an almost three-year legal battle between Republicans and Democrats.

The Democratic aides made clear that the payments could become a potential shutdown issue, since Democratic votes will be needed to pass the bill in the Senate, and perhaps in the House.

Negotiations over that bill, which lawmakers will have only five days to pass when Congress reconvenes on April 24, are already increasingly complicated. Some Republicans are prepared to fight for Trumps request for funding to begin building a border wall, which Democrats have made clear they will oppose. Trump also is calling for a provision that blocks federal funding for sanctuary cities.

On the Cost Sharing Reduction payments, Democrats may find some Republican allies.

Representative Greg Walden, an Oregon Republican who chairs a key health committee, said in late March that his preference is to include the money in the spending bill, as well.

On Thursday, two former Senate Majority leaders, Republican Bill Frist of Tennessee and Democrat Tom Daschle of South Dakota, made a call on behalf of the Washington D.C.-based Bipartisan Policy Center, to extend the subsidy payments.

It is clear that the withdrawal of cost-sharing subsidies provided through the Affordable Care Act would destabilize this already fragile market, they said in a joint statement.

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Democrats Want Guarantee for Health Subsidies After Trump Threat - Bloomberg

Democrat accuses GOP candidate of ‘promoting hate’ with … – The State (blog)


The State (blog)
Democrat accuses GOP candidate of 'promoting hate' with ...
The State (blog)
A Democrat running in South Carolina's 5th District special election is accusing a Republican vying for the same seat with promoting hate in an ad that attacks ...

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Top Democrat: Syria strike doesn’t prove Trump is independent of Russia – Washington Examiner

President Trump's willingness to anger Russian President Vladimir Putin by striking Syria shouldn't ease doubts about his ties to Moscow, a top Democrat said on Thursday.

"Regardless of what the administration claims about its relationship with Russia, the only way to understand the true scope and ties between the Trump White House and the Kremlin is an independent, 9/11-style commission," said New York Rep. Eliot Engel, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Engel attempted to block Trump from "making decisions that played into Putin's hands" by helping introduce a resolution last week opposing policy changes pertaining to Russia, just in advance of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson's trip to Moscow. Within days, Trump ordered an attack on Assad, one of Russia's top allies in the Middle East. Republican lawmakers, in addition to supporting the Assad strike as a policy move, argued that Democrats such as Engel should feel reassured.

"For a lot of people, it will probably put to rest all this discussion about, oh, he and Putin are holding hands together," said Senate Intelligence Committee member James Risch, R-Idaho. "If that was the case on Wednesday, it wasn't the case by midnight on Thursday."

The cruise missile strike on the Syrian airfield that launched a chemical attack on civilians drew measured praise from Engel, who also acknowledged that it "increased tensions with Moscow," but he emphasized that it shouldn't drive away the specter of Trump colluding with Russia. "If the president and his administration have nothing to hide, then they should drop their opposition to such an inquiry, release his tax returns, and stop trying to use the recent military action as a defense," Engel said.

The New York Democrat has a reputation as one of the more bipartisan foreign policy leaders in the House, notably having broken with then-President Obama over the Iran nuclear agreement. He revived and tweaked George W. Bush's famous phrase recently to dub Russia and Iran "the axis of evil today."

Given Trump's stated interest in rapprochement with Russia, Tillerson's scheduled trip to Moscow suggested to Democrats that policy concessions would be in the offing, prompting Engel to make a preemptive attack on the Trump team's plans. "American policy needs to advance American interests, period," Engel said last week. "With this dark cloud hanging over the administration, we cannot know for sure what's motivating the president's decisions. Frankly, I think the president is far too cozy with Putin. I want to know why."

Trump's ensuing decision to attack Assad over the use of chemical weapons caused a round of sharp diplomatic clashes just as Tillerson arrived in Moscow, as the Russians suggested western forces staged the chemical weapons attack. "[Maybe] it was a staged provocation, a deliberate incident designed to create a pretext for increasing pressure on the legitimate Syrian authorities," Putin said. "That is all. But it must be investigated."

Trump praised Tillerson's performance in Russia, but remained agnostic about whether ties could be improved with Putin. "It'd be a fantastic thing if we got along with Putin and if we got along with Russia and that could happen and it may not happen," Trump said Wednesday. "It may be just the opposite. I can only tell you what I would like to do. I would love to get along with everybody."

Also from the Washington Examiner

"You heard of the #MOAB by now," the network tweeted.

04/14/17 11:09 AM

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Top Democrat: Syria strike doesn't prove Trump is independent of Russia - Washington Examiner