Archive for the ‘Democrat’ Category

Who is Jason Palmer, the Democrat who beat Biden in American Samoa’s caucuses? – The Washington Post

The campaign of a little-known presidential candidate named Jason Palmer organized multiple events in American Samoa in recent weeks, including a town hall and beach cleanup day.

And while Palmer only appeared virtually, the outreach appeared to pay off Tuesday: He won the territorys Democratic caucuses, handing a loss to President Biden as he otherwise romped in the Super Tuesday contests.

From what Im gathering from the community there, they just wanted to be heard, Palmers campaign manager, Mario Arias, told The Washington Post on Tuesday night.

Palmer got 51 votes to 40 for Biden, according to the Associated Press. Initially, the AP said Palmer had won four delegates to Bidens two but later changed the delegate totals to three apiece.

The island territory in the South Pacific Ocean is home to about 45,000 people and Biden also lost there in the 2020 primary. Mike Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York, defeated Biden in the only win of Bloombergs campaign.

Palmer is a Baltimore resident who describes himself on his campaign website as an entrepreneur, impact investor, and philanthropist. He lists Microsoft and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as places where he has worked.

In his campaign, Palmer has played up his age 52 claiming to be the youngest Democrat challenging Biden.

Young people dont feel like theyre being heard on the issues they care the most about, Palmer said in a November BBC interview, naming climate change as an example.

Campaign finance reports show Palmer has loaned himself over $500,000 and spent the money on several traditional campaign expenses, such as ad buys and ballot filing fees.

Palmer said Monday on X that Washington D.C. is long overdue for a president who will be an advocate for American Samoa, sharing photos of what he called a meet and greet in Malaeimi, a village in the territory.

His campaign manager said the campaign had a staffer on the ground who helped organize the events, which Palmer then addressed virtually. For example, the staffer rented out a restaurant where a few dozen people showed up for the town hall, Arias said.

Palmer told The Post early Wednesday that he sought to speak to the very specific needs of the people of American Samoa, like their desire for a second hospital in the territory.

Palmer said the next state he is focusing on is Arizona, which has a March 19 presidential primary. He plans to release a 12-page paper on immigration reform ahead of the contest.

Palmers victory in American Samoa caught the attention of another Biden primary challenger, Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.).

Congratulations to Joe Biden, Uncommitted, Marianne Williamson, and Nikki Haley for demonstrating more appeal to Democratic Party loyalists than me, Phillips said Tuesday night, adding, And, Jason Palmer.

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Who is Jason Palmer, the Democrat who beat Biden in American Samoa's caucuses? - The Washington Post

Heated North Carolina governor’s race ahead with Democrat Josh Stein vs. Republican Mark Robinson – Spectrum News

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) The Democratic attorney general and the Republican lieutenant governor won North Carolina's primaries for governor on Tuesday, setting the stage for what will be an expensive and high-stakes November contest in a state that the two parties see as a pivotal battleground.

What You Need To Know

Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein and Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson won North Carolina's primaries for governor

Their victories on Tuesday set the stage for what will be an expensive and high-stakes November contest in a state that the two parties see as a pivotal battleground

Stein is a longtime member of North Carolina's political scene who received the endorsement of term-limited Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and would be the state's first Jewish governor if elected

Robinson is a former factory worker who splashed into conservative circles after a 2018 viral speech to his hometown city council. He received former President Donald Trump's endorsement, and would be the state's first Black governor if elected

Josh Stein and Mark Robinson, each of whom turned back multiple party rivals, will present stark contrasts for voters in the ninth-largest state's fall elections. In separate election-night victory speeches, each candidate laid out policy and individual differences and said the other would harm the state's economy if he reached the governor's mansion.

Democratic North Carolina gubernatorial candidate Josh Stein, right, is introduced by North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper at a primary election night party in Raleigh, N.C., Tuesday, March 5, 2024. (AP Photo/Karl B DeBlaker)

Stein is a longtime member of North Carolina's political scene, a lawyer with the endorsement of term-limited Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and a long history of consumer advocacy before and during his time as AG.

"We must be clear-eyed about the stakes of this election," Stein told supporters in Raleigh. "We're at a crossroads and the choice before us: two competing visions for North Carolina."

Robinson, meanwhile, is a former factory worker who splashed into conservative circles after a 2018 viral speech to his hometown city council catapulted him to lieutenant governor in 2020 and the endorsement of former President Donald Trump.

"The differences could not be more clear," Robinson said at a Greensboro victory party. "I'm sure the people of North Carolina will make the right choice."

See the full results of North Carolina's Super Tuesday primary elections here

Both Robinson and Stein are prolific fundraisers, amassing a combined $30 million through their campaign committees since early 2021. Democratic and Republican groups already talking about the seat in November are likely to spend millions more.

Stein, who would be the state's first Jewish governor if elected, and Robinson North Carolina's first Black lieutenant governor and the state's first Black governor if successful in November won their primaries convincingly. Stein's top primary rival Tuesday was former state Supreme Court Associate Justice Mike Morgan, while Robinson's opponents were State Treasurer Dale Folwell and trial attorney Bill Graham.

The North Carolina governorship has been a rare success story for Democrats in a Southern state. While the GOP holds narrow veto-proof majorities in the legislature and controls the state Supreme Court, Democrats have lost only one gubernatorial race since 1992.

The party has scored presidential victories in North Carolina only twice over the past half-century, however, with Trump winning narrowly in both 2016 and 2020. Democratic President Joe Biden is weighing whether to invest heavily for its 16 electoral votes. Stein could be weighed down by Biden's low poll numbers.

On the other hand, Democrats could use a Trump-Robinson combination atop the GOP ticket to tap into ongoing controversies, especially Robinson's harsh comments about LGBTQ+ issues, women in Christian leadership and other topics that had his primary rivals questioning his electability. Trump also raised eyebrows when formally endorsing Robinson last weekend at a rally, calling him "Martin Luther King on steroids," comparing his speaking skills to those of the late civil rights leader.

Stein, a Harvard-educated attorney who managed John Edwards' successful U.S. Senate campaign in 1998, wants to push Democratic policy preferences that largely follow what was sought by Cooper, who preceded Stein as attorney general. They include more public education spending, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and blocking attempts by Republican legislators to push their rightward agenda.

For Robinson, who said he lost jobs to the North American Free Trade Agreement and entered personal bankruptcy, it was a four-minute speech defending guns rights and lamenting the "demonizing" of police officers before the Greensboro City Council that sparked his political career.

Robinson said if Stein was elected governor, the state would return to times during the Great Recession when Democrats were in charge, the state's economy was foundering and government workers furloughed. Robinson argued Tuesday that Stein couldn't relate to working people harmed by government policies.

"I have an opponent who doesn't understand what it's like to be at work, have the boss man come and take you to a room and sit you down and tell you, 'We're moving this plant to Mexico, and there's nothing you can do about it,'" Robinson said.

After being elected lieutenant governor, Robinson spearheaded a task force report alleging that some teachers had assigned young pupils inappropriate reading materials on racism and sexuality. In 2021, he criticized efforts to teach LGBTQ+ issues in sex education, associating gay and transgender people with "filth." His remarks led to calls for his resignation, but he defended his words, saying he was referring to sexually explicit books, not people.

Stein's time as attorney general has been marked by efforts to protect citizens from polluters, illegal drugs and high electric bills, and to process untested sexual assault kits. In court, he has opposed Republican efforts to draw redistricting lines favoring the GOP and to further restrict abortion.

The General Assembly last year overrode Cooper's veto of a bill that reduced the state's ban on most abortions from after 20 weeks of pregnancy to 12 weeks. Robinson supports an abortion ban after roughly six weeks of pregnancy, with some exceptions, his campaign has said. Many women don't even know they are pregnant at six weeks.

Stein said Robinson's vision of the state is "bleak and divisive, consumed by spite and hate." On abortion, Robinson "would insert himself into the doctor's office with women and dictate to them what they must do with their bodies," the Democratic nominee said.

"You better believe that Robinson's extreme views would scare away business and good paying jobs," he added.

Robinson has said making education leaders accountable, teaching students the basics and helping boost business in rural areas are among his policy goals if elected.

In other statewide primary races on Tuesday, U.S. Rep. Jeff Jackson won a three-way race for the Democratic nomination for attorney general. In November, he will take on Republican U.S. Rep. Dan Bishop, the unopposed GOP nominee. Both Bishop and Jackson wanted to succeed Stein instead of seeking reelection to Congress.

In the effort to succeed Robinson as lieutenant governor, Democratic state Sen. Rachel Hunt won the Democratic nomination. Her father, Jim Hunt, was lieutenant governor in the 1970s and later served a record four terms as governor.

Republican Superintendent of Public Instruction Catherine Truitt was in a tight race with Michele Morrow. GOP Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler and Insurance Commissioner Mike Causey won their primaries.

Supreme Court Associate Justice Allison Riggs won her Democratic primary, but Court of Appeals Judge Hunter Murphy lost to District Court Judge Chris Freeman in the Republican primary. Both Freeman and Riggs have general election opponents.

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Heated North Carolina governor's race ahead with Democrat Josh Stein vs. Republican Mark Robinson - Spectrum News

Dave Min will be Democrat battling to hold Katie Porter’s seat – Yahoo! Voices

LOS ANGELES State Sen. Dave Min, who withstood millions of dollars of attack ads in a bitter battle for Rep. Katie Porters Orange County House seat, will advance to the November general election after his Democratic opponent, Joanna Weiss, conceded Wednesday night.

Hell face off with Republican Scott Baugh, a longtime GOP official in the area who came close to beating Porter in the swing district two years ago.

Min said he was "deeply humbled and grateful for the support from voters" in his victory over Weiss, a political activist and first-time candidate.

"This victory is not just about winning an election, it is about the future we are collectively shaping. It's about reclaiming the House for Democrats and Orange County families. Its about rejecting the divisive, Trump-supporting MAGA politics that our opponent, Scott Baugh, represents," Min said in a statement.

Weiss, on social media, said she called Min "and pledged to do all I can to keep [California's 47th district] blue."

The two candidates offered competing visions on the path to victory in Orange County, the one-time conservative bastion that now teeters between red and blue. Min argued that as a Korean American candidate he was best positioned to appeal to Asian American voters, who make up 20 percent of the district, while Weiss said she would better mobilize suburban women who have been key to Democratic victories since the Trump presidency.

But the campaign largely turned on acrimonious personal attacks and a deluge of outside money. Weiss hammered Min on his drunk driving arrest last spring. Coming to her aid was EMILYs List, a group that backs women candidates who support abortion rights, as well as the American Israel Political Affairs Committee. The pro-Israel groups super PAC spent at least $4.7 million against Min for reasons that remain somewhat inscrutable, since Min was not a vocal critic of Israel in public.

Danni Wang, a spokesperson for EMILYs List, said the organization was "so proud of the race Joanna Weiss ran."

"Day in, day out, Joanna stressed the urgency of electing Democratic, pro-choice women to office at a time when Republicans are threatening all our freedoms. We join her in our shared commitment to flipping the House this November," Wang said.

Min, for his part, got outside help from SEIU California, a major labor power player, and won the endorsement of the state Democratic party. He was also backed by Porter, who beat him in a hard-fought primary in 2018.

The general election matchup between Min and Baugh is poised to be one of the marquee races in the country. It is one of the few contests in California where Democrats will be playing defense in a toss-up seat.

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Dave Min will be Democrat battling to hold Katie Porter's seat - Yahoo! Voices

Opinion | Why California Democrats Arent Voting for Rep. Barbara Lee – The New York Times

The perspective, the lens, the representation, the experience of a Black woman from California is badly needed.

Thats what Representative Barbara Lee a California Democrat vying for the Senate seat held for three decades by Dianne Feinstein told a television reporter last month about why people should vote for her in the race.

On Sunday, before a rally that evening outside a production studio in Los Angeles owned by the former N.B.A. all-star Baron Davis, I asked Lee what she meant by that, since Black people are only about 7 percent of the population of the state.

She replied in a way that was both shrewd and true to her career in politics: Ive taken everything I know about what it means to be Black in America or brown in America or low-income in America or a woman in America and tried to turn it into policies.

On paper, Lee strikes me as the perfect candidate. She has a decades-long record of standing up for progressive policies, she is a woman of color at a time when women of color are central to the success of the Democratic Party and she is a capable politician who has never lost an election.

But polls show her in fourth place going into Tuesdays primary. Under Californias open primary rules, the top two finishers will advance to the general election, regardless of party.

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Opinion | Why California Democrats Arent Voting for Rep. Barbara Lee - The New York Times

Jan. 6 anniversary points up division | Arkansas Democrat Gazette – Arkansas Online

WASHINGTON -- Former President Donald Trump will spend Saturday's third anniversary of the Capitol riot by holding two campaign rallies in leadoff-voting Iowa in his bid to win back the White House.

To mark the moment, President Joe Biden plans to visit a site near Valley Forge, Pa., today where George Washington and the struggling Continental Army endured a tough winter during the American Revolution. Biden's advisers say the stop in a critical swing state will highlight Trump's role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot and give the Democrat a chance to lay out the stakes of this year's election. Weather concerns led Biden to move up his appearance from Saturday.

With Biden and Trump now headed toward a potential 2020 rematch, both are talking about the same event in very different ways and offering framing they believe gives them an advantage. The dueling narratives reflect how an attack that disrupted the certification of the election is increasingly viewed differently along partisan lines -- and how Trump has bet that the riot won't hurt his candidacy.

Trump supporters rioted at the Capitol in an attempt to stop Congress from certifying Biden's victory, and they forced lawmakers and then-Vice President Mike Pence to flee for their lives. Many Trump loyalists walked to the Capitol after a rally outside the White House in which the Republican president exhorted the crowd to "fight like hell" or "you're not going to have a country anymore."

Prosecutors have called the riot inquiry the largest in the history of the Justice Department, and there is no doubt it is vast by any measure.

While some of the cases have attracted nationwide attention, particularly those involving far-right groups like the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers militia, most of the prosecutions have flown beneath the radar, unfolding in quiet hearings often attended only by the defendants and their families. These proceedings have helped to flesh out the story of how an angry crowd of Trump's supporters stopped the democratic process, if only for several hours.

Nine deaths were linked to the attack. The bulk of the riot cases, more than 710, were resolved without trial through guilty pleas. As of the Justice Department's latest update in December, about 170 people have gone to trial in U.S. District Court in Washington, in front of either a jury or just a judge, with a vast majority resulting in convictions.

As for punishment, more than 450 people have been sent to jail or prison, with the longest term so far being the 22-year sentence imposed on Enrique Tarrio, the former leader of the Proud Boys. Several people who were not associated with extremist groups but who assaulted the police in what officers have described as a "medieval" battle outside the Capitol have been sentenced to a decade or more behind bars.

Federal prosecutors in Washington have charged Trump in connection with the riot, citing his promotion of theories of election fraud and efforts to overturn the results. Trump has pleaded innocent.

Judges in multiple states dismissed state and federal lawsuits filed by Trump's legal team that alleged widespread voting improprieties in the 2020 election while federal and state election security experts found no credible evidence of computer fraud in the election. In early December 2020, former Attorney General William Barr said that the Justice Department did not uncover any evidence of widespread voter fraud.

Trump has built a commanding lead in the Republican primary, and his rivals largely refrain from criticizing him about Jan. 6. He has called it "a beautiful day" and described those imprisoned for the insurrection as "great, great patriots" and "hostages." At some campaign rallies, he has played a recording of "The Star-Spangled Banner" sung by jailed rioters -- the anthem interspersed with his recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance.

Republican strategist Alice Stewart said that "a lot of Republican voters don't love Jan. 6, but they're not obsessed about it either" and may support Trump because they oppose Biden's economic policies.

"Republican voters can hold two consecutive thoughts and say, 'Jan. 6, that wasn't great, but that doesn't affect my bottom line,'" she said.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, one of Trump's rivals for the Republican nomination, called Jan. 6 a "protest" that "ended up devolving," and has more recently said Trump "should have come out more forcefully" against the rioters. Another candidate, Trump's former U.N. ambassador, Nikki Haley, frequently tells crowds that Jan. 6 "was not a beautiful day, it was a terrible day."

But views overall of the attack have hardened along partisan lines.

In the days after the riot, 52% of U.S. adults said Trump bore a lot of responsibility for Jan. 6, according to the Pew Research Center. By early 2022, that had declined to 43%. The number of Americans who said Trump bore no responsibility also increased to 32% in 2022 compared with 24% in 2021.

A Washington Post-University of Maryland poll released this week found that about 7 in 10 Republicans say too much is being made of the riot. Just 18% of GOP supporters say that protesters who entered the Capitol were "mostly violent," down from 26% in 2021, while 77% of Democrats and 54% of independents say the protesters were mostly violent -- essentially unchanged from 2021.

A December poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, meanwhile, found that 87% of Democrats and 54% of independents believe a second Trump term would negatively affect U.S. democracy. Some 82% of Republicans believe democracy would be weakened by another Biden win, with 56% of independents agreeing.

Biden's campaign also announced an advertising push starting Saturday with a spot centering on the Capitol riot.

In the ad, Biden says, "There's something dangerous happening in America."

"There's an extremist movement that does not share the basic beliefs of our democracy," Biden says as images from the riot appear. "All of us are being asked right now, what will we do to maintain our democracy."

His campaign is spending $500,000 to run the 60-second ad on national television news and on local evening news in TV markets in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, as well as shorter versions on digital platforms.

It's a theme Biden has returned to repeatedly.

He marked the first anniversary of the riot in 2022 by standing inside the Capitol's National Statuary Hall -- which was flooded by pro-Trump rioters during the attack -- to suggest that his predecessor and his supporters had had "a dagger at the throat of America."

Ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, the president repeatedly characterized Trump as a threat to democracy. That included a speech at Philadelphia's Constitution Hall, where he said that the "extreme ideology" of Trump and his supporters "threatens the very foundation of our republic."

On the second anniversary of the attack in 2023, Biden awarded presidential medals to 14 people for their work protecting the Capitol during the riot and decried "a violent mob of insurrectionists." More recently, he said there was "no question" Trump supported an insurrection.

"Not even during the Civil War did insurrectionists breach our Capitol," said Julie Chavez Rodriguez, manager of Biden's reelection campaign, in a call with reporters this week. "But, at the urging of Donald Trump, insurrectionists on January 6, 2021, did."

Trump now counters that the federal charges he's facing related to Jan. 6 -- as well as authorities in Maine and Colorado trying to keep him off primary ballots on grounds that he incited an insurrection -- show that Democrats are the ones looking to undercut the nation's core values.

"Joe Biden and his allies are a real and compelling threat to our democracy," Trump senior campaign advisers Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles wrote in a memo this week.

Aside from the back and forth of politics, such arguments over who endangers America more could indicate a deeper problem.

"When each side starts talking about the other as a threat to democracy -- whatever the reality is -- that's a sign of a democracy that's deconsolidating," said Daniel Ziblatt, a government professor at Harvard University and co-author of the book "How Democracies Die."

Information for this article was contributed by Will Weissert and Linley Sanders of The Associated Press and Alan Feuer and Molly Cook Escobar of The New York Times.

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Jan. 6 anniversary points up division | Arkansas Democrat Gazette - Arkansas Online