Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Highland County more Republican in 2020 election – Hillsboro Times Gazette

Highland County voted 5.4 percent more Republican in the 2020 presidential election than it did in the 2016 election, according to The New York Times. The numbers are from what The Times calls An Extremely Detailed Map of the 2020 Election.

It shows multiple precincts and how they voted in the 2020 election, as well as comparing those results to the 2016 election.

In 2016, 75 percent of Highland County voters voted for Donald Trump, while 20 percent voted for Hillary Clinton. In 2020, 80 percent of Highland County voters voted for Trump and 19 percent voted for Joe Biden. That led to a 5.4 percent Republican increase in Highland County in 2020.

At the Brushcreek voting precinct, 78 percent for voted Trump and 19 percent for Clinton in 2016. In 2020, Trump got 87 percent of the vote and Biden got 13 percent.

In the Clay voting precinct, Trump got 81 percent in 2016 and Clinton got 16 percent, then in 2020 Trump got 83 percent and Biden 17 percent.

The Concord precinct gave Trump 84 percent of the vote in 2016 and Clinton 13 percent. Then last year Trump received 87 percent and Biden 12 percent.

The Dodson voting precinct gave 82 percent of the vote to Trump in 2016 while Clinton received 15 percent. In 2020, Trump received 84 percent and Biden 15 percent.

In the Fairfield voting precinct, Trump got 81 percent in 2016 to 17 percent for Clinton, and in 2020 Trump got 85 percent to 15 percent for Biden

The Greenfield voting precinct is split into two different areas, north and south.

In the northern area in 2016, Trump received 60 percent in 2020 and Clinton 36 percent, and in 2020 Trump received 67 percent to 32 percent for Biden.

In the southern area in 2016, Trump received 62 percent and Clinton 34 percent, and 2020 Trump got 70 percent and Biden 28 percent.

In the Hamer voting precinct, Trump received 80 percent in 2016 to 17 percent for Clinton, and in 2020 Trump received 83 percent to 15 percent for Biden.

In the Highland precinct, Trump got 84 percent of the vote in 2016 while Clinton got 12 percent, and in 2020 Trump got 84 percent and Biden 15 percent.

The Hillsboro area is split into five different voting precincts.

In the northeast portion, 66 percent voted for Trump in 2016 and 30 percent for Clinton, while in 2020, Trump got 70 percent and Biden 28 percent.

In the northwest portion, Trump received 67 percent in 2016 and Clinton 29, then in 2020, Trump got 68 percent and Biden 30 percent.

In the southwest portion, in 2106 Trump received 68 percent of the vote and Clinton 26 percent, then in 2020 Trump received 69 percent and Biden 28 percent.

In the middle of the Hillsboro area, Trump received 70 percent in 2016 and Clinton 24 percent, then in 2020 Trump received 73 percent and Biden 25 percent.

In the southeast section, Trump received 65 percent and Clinton 31 percent in 2016, while in 2020 Trump received 65 percent and Biden 33 percent.

In the Jackson precinct Trump received 77 percent of the votes and Clinton 19 percent in 2016, and in 2020 Trump received 77 percent and Biden 22 percent.

The Leesburg voting precinct gave Trump 76 percent and Clinton 21 percent in 2016. In 2020, Trump received 79 percent and Biden 21 percent.

Liberty Township has three precincts.

in 2016 the northeast section gave Trump 76 percent of the vote and Clinton received 22, and four years later Trump received 80 percent of the vote to 19 percent for Biden.

in the northwest section, Trump received 79 percent in 2016 and Clinton 17 percent, and in 2020 it was Trump 85 percent and Biden 14 percent.

In the southern portion of Liberty Township, Trump received 83 percent of the vote and Clinton 14 percent in 2016, then in 2020 Trump got 85 percent and Biden 15 percent.

In 2016, the Lynchburg voting precinct gave 79 percent of the vote to Trump and 16 percent to Clinton, and four years later it gave 85 percent to Trump and 14 percent to Biden.

In the Madison voting precinct, Trump got 71 percent in 2016 and Clinton 25 percent, then in 2020 Trump got 79 percent and Biden 21 percent.

In the Marshall precinct, Trump got 78 percent and Clinton 19 percent in 2016, and in 2020 Trump got 81 percent and Biden 18 percent.

In the New Market precinct, Trump received 82 percent and Clinton 15 percent in 2016. In 2020, Trump got 85 percent and Biden 15 percent.

The Paint Township voting precinct is also split into three areas.

In the northern section, Trump got 76 percent and Clinton 21 percent in 2016, and in 2020 Trump garnered 82 percent and Biden 17 percent.

The western section gave Trump 70 percent of the vote in 2019 and Clinton 26 percent, and in 2020 Trump received 78 percent and Biden21 percent.

In the southern portion, Trump got 66 and Clinton 29 percent in 2016, and in 2020 it was Trump 75 percent and Biden 24 percent.

The Penn precinct gave Trump 82 percent and Clinton 15 percent in 2016, and in 2020 it gave Trump 85 percent and Biden 15 percent.

In the Salem precinct in 2016, Trump received 77 percent of the vote and Clinton 17 percent, and our years later it was Trump 82 percent and Biden 17 percent.

In the Union precinct, Trump got 80 percent in 2016 and 86 percent in 2020, while Clinton got 16 percent and Biden 13 percent in 2020.

In the Washington precinct, Trump received 82 percent in 2016 and Clinton 14 percent, and in 2020 Trump got 83 percent and Biden 16 percent.

In the White Oak voting precinct, Trump got 80 percent and Clinton 17 percent in 2016, and in 2020 it was Trump 80o percent and Biden 19 percent.

Reach Jacob Clary at 937-402-2570.

This is a map of the voting precincts in Highland County.

Trump dominated county in last two elections

Visit link:
Highland County more Republican in 2020 election - Hillsboro Times Gazette

Regarding the results George Moyer | Letters To Editor | norfolkdailynews.com – Norfolk Daily News

MADISON A Stanton couple asked a burning question in the Dec. 26, 2020, Daily News. Basically it was how did Biden win? Heres how.

Former president Barack Obama regularly tells people, Democracy is hard work. Thats what Ben Franklin meant in 1781. He was leaving Independence Hall in Philadelphia when a woman asked him, Dr. Franklin, what have you given us? He replied, A republic, if you can keep it.

A candidate for president in this country has to have a ground game. Thats the hard work. Super Spreader rallies in the middle of the deadliest epidemic since 1918 look reckless and irresponsible. Furthermore, to suburban women in Detroit, Philadelphia and yes, Omaha, who have never quite forgiven Trump for the Access Hollywood tapes, they look dangerous. These women are mothers and grandmothers and woe betides anyone who looks like he is endangering children and fathers. These women are wonderful foot soldiers for a ground game. In this election cycle, the Democrats had a lot of them.

As for Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Georgia, the letter writers do not pause to explain why Republican election officials in all of these states would help Biden unless they were just conscientiously doing their duty.

Hillary Clinton won Nevada in 2016. Not a surprise that Biden won there again. Arizona, however, was a big get. Biden had no coat tails to speak of in down ballot contests for House and Senate but in Arizona, extremely popular former astronaut Mark Kelly, Gabby Giffords husband, was running for John McCains old Senate seat, which he won with roughly 3% more votes than Biden. Kelly, without a doubt, boosted Biden.

The letter writers fail to remember that the FBI and the Justice Department have a firm rule that investigations into candidates, their relatives and close friends are never made public during presidential campaigns. James Comey broke this rule in 2016, which cost Hillary Clinton the election. Despite the fact that the attorney general and the FBI director are both Trump appointees and Republicans, they had the integrity to follow the rule, which cost the attorney general his job.

The letter does not mention that Trump filed 62 lawsuits seeking to overturn election results in various states. Or that the State of Texas and, sadly, the State of Nebraska filed suit on Trumps behalf in the U.S. Supreme Court claiming election fraud. All the cases were dismissed because Trumps attorneys could not prove fraud!

The letter also repeats the report that 79% of Republican voters think the election was stolen. They say so because Trump says so. But its another lie by a serial liar. Sixty-two judges, many of whom Trump appointed, are not wrong!

The letter claims that fat cats like George Soros, Tom Steyer and Michael Bloomberg supported the Democrats. Does anybody think the Republicans didnt have fat cats of their own?

The letter claims everybody is against the Republicans. How did the Republicans gain nine seats in the House of Representatives if everybodys against them?

But the real problem with the letter is that it promotes the unfounded belief that the election was corrupted; that the duly constituted officials of six states were powerless to prevent it; that both federal and state courts were complicit. The letter undermines our faith in our institutions.

Remember Obama: Democracy is hard work. There is another election in four years. Pick a better candidate. Organize a better ground game. Never forget, its a republic if you can keep it.

I learned in high school that in a democracy, we have to trust each other, because we are the government. I learned that facts are stubborn things that do not yield to lies. I learned that an argument without facts to support it is a hollow argument.

In fact, Ill bet the author of the letter taught his classes that. Has he forgotten?

Visit link:
Regarding the results George Moyer | Letters To Editor | norfolkdailynews.com - Norfolk Daily News

Trump vetoed ads attacking Biden’s record on women to avoid can of worms report – The Guardian

Donald Trump vetoed a series of brutal attack ads in the 2020 election campaign, including one that targeted Joe Bidens behavior towards women, because he was afraid of opening his own can of worms.

Biden has been criticized for touching and hugging women in ways widely deemed inappropriate, behavior he has said was not meant to be disrespectful and complaints to which he said he would listen respectfully. In early 2020, he faced a claim that he sexually assaulted a former aide. He forcefully denied it.

Trump famously boasted he was allowed to grab women by the pussy. He has been accused of sexual harassment or assault by no fewer than 25 women. He forcefully denies all such claims. But some have landed him in court and his former attorney Michael Cohen was convicted of violations of campaign finance law over hush money payments made to women before the 2016 election.

The news site Axios reported on Monday night on campaign ads it said were considered by Trump but which proved so far-fetched even he vetoed them.

One, titled Predator, showed Kamala Harris, Bidens running mate who is now the first woman to be vice-president, saying: I know a predator when I see one.

The clip included quotes from Tara Reade, the former aide who accused Biden of assault, and Lucy Flores, a former Nevada state politician who in 2019 told CNN Bidens behaviour towards women including her was disqualifying.

But Trump never wanted to run the predator or womens-style ads against Biden, Axios reported an unnamed campaign source as saying, because he was afraid he was going to open up his own can of worms. Axios said a second unnamed source confirmed the story.

The ads finished with a logo for Parscale Strategy. Brad Parscale was eventually ousted as campaign manager. In a familiar development to those who follow Trumps business dealings, Axios said Trump did not pay for the ads he rejected. Axios also said Parscale attended the ad viewing sessions, often [sitting] so close it bothered the president.

Trump faces a defamation lawsuit from E Jean Carroll, a writer who says he raped her in a department store changing room in the 1990s. Stormy Daniels, an adult film star and director who says she had sex with Trump in Nevada in 2006, also sued for defamation. Trump denies both accusations but reimbursed Cohen for expenditure including a $130,000 payment to Daniels shortly before the 2016 election.

According to Axios, among other ads nixed by Trump were one focusing on Bidens health and one that mocked Don Lemon, a CNN anchor, over his coverage of protests against structural racism which gripped the US last summer.

Trump was reported to have said of the Lemon ad: God, thats brutal, but I dont know if we can put it up. Lemon is African American. The ad shows his face gradually whitening, as he becomes a clown.

Trump lost the election by 306-232 in the electoral college a result he called a landslide when it was in his favor over Hillary Clinton and by more than 7m ballots in the popular vote. He refused to concede defeat and pursued baseless claims of electoral fraud in court, losing almost all such cases.

Trump is now in Florida. In Washington on Tuesday, his second impeachment trial will begin. He is charged with inciting an insurrection, the 6 January attack on the US Capitol. Shortly before the deadly riot, at a rally near the White House, he told supporters to fight like hell to overturn his election defeat.

See original here:
Trump vetoed ads attacking Biden's record on women to avoid can of worms report - The Guardian

Out of many, one | News, Sports, Jobs – The Express – Lock Haven Express

Its with heavy hearts that we write this letter. We believe that all of us, no matter which side of the political spectrum we happen to be on, want a country where our children and loved ones can thrive.

We believe that, if we took the time to look closely, wed find that most of us have a great deal in common.

But we are currently living in a time when our very lives have been politicized to the point where the divisions between us sometimes seem unbridgeable and possibly beyond repair.

These differences become especially apparent when we try to talk across our divides about the recent election.

We know that facts these days after being called into question so often have lost some of their power to persuade, but unless we can agree on a certain set of reality-based assumptions, we will be lost to one another.

So in response to questions being raised about our current political climate, we would like to offer some facts.

Some folks are asking, for example, why it is OK for Hillary Clinton to say the 2016 election wasnt fair, while Donald Trump is criticized for saying the same thing about the 2020 election, with 75 million Americans to back him up.

Here are the facts:

Back in 2016, Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by nearly 2.9 million votes.

Nevertheless, she conceded the election to Donald Trump when he was declared the winner on Nov. 9 because by that date he had received the requisite number of electoral college votes (304).

In 2020, for a second time, Trump lost the popular vote. It is true that he earned the votes of 75 million Americans. But Joe Biden won over 81 million votes, the most of any presidential candidate in U.S. history. Biden then went on to earn the number of electoral college votes needed to win the election (306).

In spite of this, however, Trump has to this day refused to declare Biden the winner.

In addition, while Clinton honored the peaceful transition of power that stands as one of the benchmarks of a functioning democracy, Trump has insisted that the election was stolen and has used everything in his power to block that transition, including inciting his followers to raid the U.S. Capitol, a reckless insurrection that left 5 people dead and over 100 Capitol officers injured.

That assault was a wound to our national psyche that still festers weeks later and will (to say the least) prove challenging to heal.

Another question being raised has to do with impeachment. If Trump was not convicted after his first impeachment hearing, does this mean he was not impeached? The answer is no.

Here are the facts. The impeachment process has two parts. The House votes to impeach, after which the Senate conducts a trial and decides whether to convict.

This process was established by our Constitution as a way of providing checks and balances in the event of presidential overreach.

The House has now voted twice to bring articles of impeachment against Trump for high crimes and misdemeanors, specifically for abusing the powers of his office.

Regardless of whether the Senate votes to convict, those impeachment judgments will stand. Donald Trump will remain the only U.S. president who has been impeached twice, an indelible stain on his record and on his legacy.

A third question being raised concerns voter fraud. Perhaps, some suggest, the Capitol riots might not have happened if the courts had allowed voter fraud evidence to be heard.

This is possibly the point of greatest contention, the belief on the part of Trumps followers that the election was rife with voter fraud.

Again, here are the facts. William Barr, Trumps Attorney General, said in no uncertain terms that no evidence of widespread voter fraud was found in the 2020 election.

In multiple instances there were over 60 hearings across the country the former presidents lawyers brought cases to the courts claiming voter fraud, and one by one these cases were dismissed or found to be without merit due to lack of evidence.

Judges appointed by Trump dismissed these cases. The justices on the Supreme Court, three of whom were appointed by Trump himself, dismissed claims of fraud. The top election security official (a Republican) declared the election the most secure in American history. The truth is that no credible evidence of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election has ever been produced.

And here is the last, most important fact.

Joe Biden has been chosen in a fair election as our 46th president. Americas strength comes from our ability to work together to knit together a landscape of diverse people into one nation.

E pluribus unum: out of many, one.

The task is not easy, but its worth doing.

For all our sakes, we need to try.

Karen Elias, a Democrat, and Kathy Ebeling, a Republican, are both retired local educators who are eager to find ways, in this difficult time, to find common ground and work toward unity.

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

Read more:
Out of many, one | News, Sports, Jobs - The Express - Lock Haven Express

The Clintons Are Making a TV Show About Female Kurdish Fighters. That’s Absurd. – Jacobin magazine

Of the many battles in the decade-long Syrian civil war, few have captured international attention like the Battle of Koban. Fought between September 2014 and January 2015 for control of the predominately Kurdish town of Koban, the battle pitted the then-ascendant Islamic State against the Peoples Protection Units (YPG), a left-wing Kurdish militia that controlled several predominately Kurdish enclaves in northern Syria (known to Kurds as Rojava the west). The YPGs all-women wing, the Womens Protection Units (YPJ), featured prominently.

The image of young female fighters resisting the advance of ISIS, a group that enforced the most draconian forms of patriarchal rule and routinely used rape as a weapon of war, inspired many on the international left. Kurdish militias decimated ISISs ranks while building a radical enclave based on principles of direct democracy.

Yet the Kurds have also attracted some unlikely supporters namely, those who would rather focus on what theyve been against than what theyre fighting for.

The US military, hardly a fan of leftist revolutions, allied with the Kurds to counter ISIS after failing to come to an agreement with Turkey, a fellow NATO member. When President Trump pulled American forces from the Turkish border in the autumn of 2019, paving the way for an invasion by Turkish-backed Islamists, the national security establishment revolted, with Secretary of Defense James Mattis resigning. Israels right-wing prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has also expressed his solidarity with the gallant Kurdish people.

And earlier this week a day before the sixth anniversary of the YPGs victory over ISIS at Koban news broke that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her daughter, Chelsea, are developing a television series based on Gayle Tzemach Lemmons The Daughters of Kobani.

While information on the Clintons project is scant and The Daughters of Kobaniis yet to be released, Hollywood Reporter provided some details:

Daughters of Kobaniis based on hundreds of hours of interviews and on-the-ground reporting about the all-female Kurdish militia who took on ISIS in Northern Syria and won. Following the unlikely showdown emerged a fighting force who spread their own political vision and established gender equality in their corner of the Middle East and beyond. In the process, they earned the respect and significant military support of U.S. Special Operations Forces.

The Clintons are not the first to attempt to tell the story of the YPJ. In 2018 there was a release of Les filles du soleil, written and directed by French actress Eva Husson, which portrayed a French journalist and her interactions with an all-female battalion. Another French production, 2019s Surs darmes, written by French feminist and arch-secularist Caroline Fourest, focused on two young French women who traveled to Rojava to fight alongside the female militias. In 2020, yet another production on Rojava was released, Hulus No Mans Land, created by Ron Leshem, Maria Feldman, and Eitan Mansuri. This time the protagonist was a French man who journeys to Syria in search of his sister.

There are through lines in all these productions. First, they train their cameras on westerners, with the YPJ and the Syrian Civil War serving as romanticized backdrops. As one reviewer of No Mans Land noted, dont be fooled into thinking that No Mans Land is, on any level, the story of the YPJ, an elite unit of Kurdish freedom fighters, all women. Its barely, if at all, a story about the Syrian civil war.

Second, Kurdish involvement in these productions has been relatively limited. These are not Kurdish stories but stories about westerners interactions with the exotic. In the case of the two French productions, the stories seem to be more a thinly veiled salvo in their countrys cultural wars than an exploration of the Kurdish movement in Syria.

And, thirdly, they largely obscure the explicitly leftist politics of the Kurds in Syria. In its place we are presented with a generic, nonthreatening, and ultimately vacuous fight for freedom perhaps best summed up as western encounters with Jihadi-killing girl boss snipers.

So where does this leave us with The Daughters of Kobani? The author of the adapted book, journalist Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, is a close ally of Hillary Clinton and the epitome of elite girl boss feminism. An advocate of female empowerment through entrepreneurship, her literary debut, The Dressmaker of Khair Khana (2011), told the story of an Afghan businesswoman operating under the strictures of the Taliban.

In 2015, she published another tome on female emancipation, Ashleys War: The Untold Story of a Team of Women Soldiers on the Special Ops Battlefield an uplifting story of women deployed in combat roles in Afghanistan that earned endorsements and blurbs from such luminaries as Senator John McCain and Sheryl Sandberg.

The Daughters of Kobani, to be fair, wont be released until next month. However, one might be forgiven for suspecting that the anti-capitalistm of the YPG and YPJ which draws on the work of Brooklyn-born anarchist Murray Bookchin and the writings of Abdullah calan, the jailed leader of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), an organization that has waged war against Ankara since 1984 and that the United States sees as a terrorist organization will be omitted in favor of one that focuses on girls kicking ass.

The extensive role of female fighters in Koban wasnt some historical aberration, a curiosity brought about by the peculiarities of the Syrian civil war and discovered by Western elites. In the 1970s and 80s, several left-wing Kurdish political organizations maintained armed female units, most notably the Iranian-based group Komala. The female fighters of the YPJ can trace their historical lineage back to the PKK, which has a long tradition of female participation.

This brings us to the involvement of the Clintons and the historical irony it presents. During the 1990s, Bill Clintons administration sold and transferred vast amounts of weapons to Turkey, weapons that were primarily used in Ankaras fight against the PKK. American intelligence proved critical in the capture of Abdullah calan by Turkish special forces in 1999.

Of course, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton arent responsible for the actions of Bill Clinton. But it will be more than a little interesting to see how they tackle, for instance, the figure of calan someone venerated by the fighters of the YPJ yet reviled by the United States.

Many Kurds will be pleased at any mention of their community in western culture considering their all most complete absence. As Kurdish filmmaker Beri Shalmashi points out, Ten years ago we were pleased just to have the name Kurd mentioned. I can attest to this myself: I felt an almost irrational excitement when Cotyar Ghazi, a character in the popular Expanse series of novels, was revealed to be of Kurdish descent. There will also be some who feel a sense of satisfaction at the apoplectic rage that news of the production has triggered in the Turkish press.

Yet there is little reason to hope that a Clinton-led production based on a book by an establishment journalist will address the deficits found in earlier efforts to tell the story of Rojavas female fighters. More than likely, we will get a romantic fantasy of the Kurdish female fighter that obfuscates the real struggle in Syria and incorporates it into a broader war on terrorism that serves the interests of militarists like the Clintons.

And the vision of an egalitarian society for which the men and women of Koban have fought a vision that is antithetical to Clintonian liberalism will be hidden, once again, behind a veil of sanitized and exoticized cliches.

View original post here:
The Clintons Are Making a TV Show About Female Kurdish Fighters. That's Absurd. - Jacobin magazine