Archive for the ‘Republican’ Category

Democrat McCaffery, Republican Carluccio win primaries for … – The Associated Press

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) Democrat Dan McCaffery and Republican Carolyn Carluccio won their parties primaries for a vacant seat on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on Tuesday, setting up a fall contest to join a high court that is at the center of cases on guns, abortion and elections in a presidential battleground state.

Each nominee won a two-way primary race. McCaffery defeated Deborah Kunselman, a colleague on the Superior Court, and Carluccio defeated Patricia McCullough, a Commonwealth Court judge who lost a primary for a high court seat in 2021. Party allies reported spending nearly $1 million to help her beat McCullough.

On the campaign trail, McCullough repeatedly boasted of being the only judge in 2020 in the presidential election in the entire country to order a halt to her states election certification.

McCullough was ruling in a Republican-backed post-election legal challenge that sought to tilt victory to Donald Trump in the presidential battleground state. The states high court quickly overturned McCulloughs order.

Democrats currently hold a 4-2 majority on the court, which has an open seat following the death last fall of Chief Justice Max Baer, a Democrat.

The court has handled a number of hot-button issues over the past few years.

It is currently examining a challenge to a state law that restricts the use of public funds to help women get an abortion as well as Philadelphias challenge to a state law that bars it and other municipalities from restricting the sale and possession of guns.

In recent years, the justices rejected a request to invalidate the states death penalty law and upheld the constitutionality of the states expansive mail-in voting law. The court also turned away challenges to the 2020 election result from Republicans who wanted to keep Trump in power, and ruled on a variety of lawsuits over gray areas in the mail-in voting law.

In one 2020 election case, justices ordered counties to count mail-in ballots that arrived up to three days after polls closed, citing delays in mail service caused by disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic. The ruling spurred an outcry among Republicans, who challenged the decision in the U.S. Supreme Court.

The nations highest court ultimately declined to take the case. The ballots nearly 10,000 of them were never counted in any federal race, including for president, because the election was certified while their fate remained in legal limbo. State elections officials said the votes werent enough to change the results of a federal election.

In lower court races, Republican Megan Martin and Democrat Matt Wolf each won a two-way primary for an open seat on the Commonwealth Court while Democrats Jill Beck and Timika Lane captured the nomination in a three-way race for two open seats on the Superior Court, which hears appeals of civil and criminal cases from county courts.

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Follow Marc Levy on Twitter: http://twitter.com/timelywriter

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Democrat McCaffery, Republican Carluccio win primaries for ... - The Associated Press

Opinion | The Republican Embrace of Vigilantism Is No Accident – The New York Times

Although it is possible the jury made a mistake when it handed down a guilty verdict, neither Carlson nor Rittenhouse nor Abbott tried to argue the case on the merits. Instead, they made a simple assumption: that any violence against a left-wing protester is justified on its face. Perry had lived out the right-wing fantasy of lethal violence in defense of order. By their lights, he had done nothing wrong.

Prominent conservatives have taken the same view of Daniel Penny, the 24-year-old assailant in the killing of Jordan Neely in a New York City subway car this month. What we know is that Neely, who was homeless, was erratic and acting hostile toward other passengers. Witnesses said he had not attacked anyone. At some point, Penny, a former Marine, placed Neely in a chokehold, which killed him. Two other passengers restrained Neely while he struggled on the ground. Penny is now charged with second-degree manslaughter.

We dont know much, yet, about Pennys mind-set or motivation during his confrontation on the subway. But this has not stopped conservatives from valorizing him in the same way they valorized Rittenhouse and Perry. The Marine who stepped in to protect others is a hero, said Greene, now a congresswoman. The decision to charge Penny, said the Fox News host Greg Gutfeld, was pro-criminal and anti-hero.

In a testament to conservative enthusiasm for Penny, an online fund-raiser has raised more than $2 million for his legal defense. And DeSantis, now angling for the Republican presidential nomination, stepped in with a message of support. We must defeat the Soros-Funded DAs, stop the Lefts pro-criminal agenda, and take back the streets for law abiding citizens, he said on Twitter. We stand with Good Samaritans like Daniel Penny. Lets show this Marine Americas got his back.

Its the same language, the same tropes, the same ideas. In listening to conservative fans of Rittenhouse, Perry and Penny, you would never know that there were actual people on the other side of these confrontations. You would never know that those people were, in life, entitled to the protection of the law and that they are, in death, entitled to a full account of the last moments of their lives, with legal responsibility for the men who killed them, if thats what a jury decides.

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Opinion | The Republican Embrace of Vigilantism Is No Accident - The New York Times

Republican wins 108th House special election in central Pennsylvania; GOP 1 seat away from control – ABC27

Ariel shot of the Pennsylvania Capitol First as First Lady Lori Shapiro visits Fort Indiantown Gap to support the Pennsylvania National Guard and veterans, in Annville, PA on May 8, 2023.

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) Republican Michael Stender on Tuesday won a special election for a vacant central Pennsylvania seat in the state House of Representatives, a GOP hold that means majority control of the chamber will be decided by a second special election, in the Philadelphia suburbs.

Stender, a Shikellamy school board member, firefighter and former EMT, was endorsed by former Rep. Lynda Schlegel Culver, the Republican who represented the district before winning a state Senate special election earlier this year. Stender beat Democrat Trevor Finn, a Montour County commissioner. The district also includes part of Northumberland County.

Stenders win gives Republicans 101 seats, one less than the minimum needed to control the agenda in the 203-member House chamber. The Associated Press has not called the second special election, in Delaware County.

If Republicans retake the House, freshman Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro will have no chamber to aid his agenda going into the final month of budget negotiations. The state Senate is firmly in Republican control.

A Republican House could also vote to put a proposed constitutional amendment limiting abortion rights before voters as a referendum.

Republicans entered the 2022 election with a 113-90 advantage in the state House, but Democrats flipped a net of 12 seats in November, barely enough to claim majority status and elect one of their own as speaker. They held that majority by sweeping three special elections held in February.

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Associated Press writers Nicholas Riccardi in Denver and Marc Levy in Harrisburg contributed to this report.

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Republican wins 108th House special election in central Pennsylvania; GOP 1 seat away from control - ABC27

Republicans Step in to Fund PAC Attacking Philadelphia Mayoral … – The Intercept

Registered Republicans have stepped in to fund a little-known political action committee that has run ads attacking the leading progressive candidate in Philadelphias mayoral election, recent campaign disclosures show.

Since late April, the Coalition for Safety and Equitable Growth has run ads targeting former Philadelphia City Council member Helen Gym. Gym is one of five major candidates in Tuesdays Democratic primary for Philadelphia mayor. The winner will advance to the general election in November and is expected to win in the overwhelmingly blue city.

Gyms campaign has long suspected that the committee was funded by Republican megadonor Jeffrey Yass, but Yasss involvement was not confirmed until the group had to file a campaign finance report on May 5. Yass, a registered Libertarian, has so far contributed $1.1 million to the effort, records show. The Coalition for Safety and Equitable Growth was one of the first outside groups to run negative ads during the mayoral primary.

The group has received an additional $255,000 in donations from a variety of individual and organizational donors. Just over $50,000 of that money came from six registered Republicans and a company run by a registered Republican, according to The Intercepts review of the disclosures and the individuals voter registration files. One donor who gave $1,500 did not have a public voter registration record and contributed to Republican candidates in previous elections.

Democrats have chipped in too. At least four additional individuals were registered Democrats, while others had given to federal Democratic candidates in past elections. Two companies and one organization run by registered Democrats also contributed. The remaining donors listed in the groups campaign finance reports did not have public voter registration files, had no affiliation, or were independent.

Instances of Republicans working with Democrats to oppose progressive candidates have become more common in recent years. Major Republican donors have teamed up with Democrats to fund PACs and attack ads in competitive congressional primaries and local elections in states like Pennsylvania, New York, and Michigan.

Republicans are partnering with Jeffrey Yass to attack Helen Gym because they dont have a vision for Philadelphia, said Philadelphia City Council member at large Kendra Brooks. They dont have candidates they believe in. They have nothing to offer working families and are on the verge of extinction in city government. So instead, they carry water for a billionaire. Its cynical, but weve seen this before and more importantly weve beaten it before.

State Sen. Nikil Saval, who represents parts of Philadelphia, said he wasnt surprised that Republicans were spending in the Democratic primary. Republicans, Yass, and conservatives on both sides of the aisle are deeply hostile to public education, he said, which Gym has been an advocate for and made central to her campaign. These folks dont want that. They keep doing this and they keep losing, Saval said, referring to previous efforts by Republicans and Democrats to spend against progressive candidates. They lost in the courts, theyve lost in elections. Theyre just going to keep pouring money on because thats all they have. Its just a few of them. They have money and we have people.

Yass is the richest man in Pennsylvania, where he is a major player in state and local politics and the co-founder and managing director of a Philadelphia investment firm. In recent years, Yass has sought to extend his influence around the country; hes made headlines for being the sole funder of a new super PAC targeting progressives and funding a far-right Israeli think tank seeking to reshape the countrys judiciary system. He has meanwhile avoided at least $1 billion in taxes over six years, ProPublica reported.

A Greater Philadelphia, a group that ranads attackingseveral progressive state legislators last year and was funded by Yass, also contributed $17,000 to the coalition and provided it with public polling. Asked about the contribution, A Greater Philadelphia Chair Mark Gleason said, We support safety and equitable growth. He declined to say whether he opposed Gyms campaign and directed questions to the coalition.Gleason previously ran an education organization funded by Yass.

The Republican donors to the Coalition for Safety and Equitable Growth include investment manager Scott Jenkins, telecommunications executive Brook Lenfest, oncology consultant Robyn Morgan, contractor Paul Becker, real estate investment manager Daniel DiLella, and computing company executive Vince Trotta. Constructural Dynamics Inc., a company run by contractor John Silvi, also donated to the effort. Together, they contributed just over $51,300 to the group. Only one of the Republican donors listed an address in Philadelphia, and others listed various Philadelphia suburbs. Even if they lived in the city, they would not be able to vote in the Democratic primary, as Pennsylvania holds closed primary elections.

Morgan declined to comment. The other Republican donors did not respond to a request for comment.

Josh Kopelman, managing partner at a venture capital firm and the chair of the board for the Philadelphia Inquirer, gave $50,000 to the group in April. Kopelman was registered as a Democrat in 2022 and as a Republican in 2018. He did not respond to a request for comment.

The Coalition for Safety and Equitable Growths ads criticized Gym for voting against a 2019 pharmaceutical bill that came before the city council while her husband worked for AmerisourceBergen, a drug company sued by the federal government for its role in the opioid epidemic. Gyms campaign sent a cease-and-desist letter to local television stations saying the ad made false claims. Her campaign said she consulted the city ethics board prior to her vote and was told there was no conflict of interest. Gym did not disclose her husbands job at the time.

Gyms campaign has said the attacks funded by Yass are a direct response to Gyms work to fund public schools. This is plainly a false attack by a dark money PAC, Gyms campaign manager Brendan McPhillips said in a press release at the time. They want to tear Helen down because they know she stands up for public education, and for everyday people over their narrow and greedy special interests. Her campaign declined to comment for this article.

While around 15 percent of Philadelphia voters were undecided as of last week, Gyms campaign has pulled ahead in the most recent poll, which shows the next four candidates in a virtual tie. Gym held a rally with Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., on Sunday. Her campaign has been buoyed by their endorsements and others from leading progressives in Congress including Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y.; Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass.; and Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash.

Should Gym win on Tuesday, her campaign would be another marker of success for progressives running in liberal islands in otherwise conservative states on the heels of Brandon Johnsons win in Chicago last month. Her campaign has focused on creating opportunities for the citys youth, expanding affordable housing, investing in public education, removing illegal guns, and supporting victims of violence.

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Republicans Step in to Fund PAC Attacking Philadelphia Mayoral ... - The Intercept

The Access JournalismHouse Republican Mind Meld – The American Prospect

I remember Duncan Black (the blogger known as Atrios) remarking that Congress would be a more functional place if every House and Senate office turned off the cable news networks that buzzed all day long, generating artificial momentum around politics. Id like to add an additional observation: Congress would work better for the American people if House and Senate offices blocked the morning Beltway tipsheets from their in-boxes.

For years, political intelligence newsletters from Politico, Axios, and elsewhere have been a key part of the Washington ecosystem, as a sort of slightly more evolved form of horse-race journalism, where whos up and whos down is still completely divorced from the needs of the American people, but at least nominally focused on the policies that we all will eventually have to endure. What can be lost on the reader is the razor-thin dividing line in access journalism between reporting the news and creating it: the way in which the tipsheets launder the desires of powerful people and pressure their opponents to go along.

Thats precisely the dynamic were seeing from Punchbowl News, the two-year-old tipsheet that is rather obviously a direct window into the wishes of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in the debt ceiling drama. The closeness between Punchbowl and the Speakers office is one of the worst-kept secrets in Washington. McCarthy has called Punchbowl his first morning read.

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In this case, theres been almost no daylight between McCarthys debt ceiling demands and what Punchbowl has reported as the essential elements for a deal. Now, Democratic leaders dont have to mindlessly accept media narratives; they have agency. But pushing the GOP line through objective journalism gives it a momentum it wouldnt otherwise have.

My colleague Ryan Cooper has already explained how tipsheet culture has normalized the threat to default on government debt as just another political fight. Jake Sherman, the Punchbowl co-founder who is college pals with the leader of McCarthys super PAC, set off this part of the narrative on CNBC by nonchalantly stating that in modern times, the debt ceiling is raised with negotiations. This presumption helped push the White House to the bargaining table.

Sherman proceeded to tweet a short history of the debt ceiling that dismantled his own narrative. Of the 25 debt ceiling increases since 1993 that he listed, he conceded that nine were clean, and another eight were folded into bills that were passing anyway. Then the 2011 Obama-Boehner grand-bargain talks yielded the Budget Control Act, which led to the sequestration cuts. The eight subsequent increases of the debt ceiling were either clean or efforts to undo the damage that the Budget Control Act caused, with the debt ceiling increase folded in.

In other words, every increase of the debt ceiling over the past 30 years was not a hostage negotiation under threat of extinguishing the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, except one: the 2011 Obama-Boehner debacle. Out of that single instance, Sherman spun a narrative that was favorable to McCarthys line that his demands were routine.

On May 11, after the first staff-level negotiations to avoid default, Shermans Punchbowl morning tipsheet exulted that normal conversations over the debt limit have broken out. Thanks in no small part to his work, taking the governments ability to pay its bills hostage is now widely considered routine.

A review of the past two weeks of Punchbowl editions reveals similar dynamics. Punchbowl has been at the forefront of claiming that only one-on-one negotiations between Biden and McCarthy can resolve the situation. It was clear to several participants that any potential agreement would have to be cut between Biden and McCarthy, Punchbowl wrote on May 9. Aides on both sides of the aisle have complained that there are too many people involved in the talks for there to be a deal, at least right now, was in the May 12 edition. Weve never seen a fruitful negotiation with more than 10 people in the room, they added on May 16.

This was McCarthys key ask; he has wanted to shrink the table and get congressional Democrats out of the room. Biden succumbed to the twin pressures of McCarthy and the Punchbowl-set media narrative by agreeing to the demand, with OMB Director Shalanda Young, Biden consigliere Steve Ricchetti, and congressional liaison Louisa Terrell negotiating on the White House side.

It was something that a lot of people in the talks were hoping for, Sherman tweeted upon the announcement. The May 17 Punchbowl edition makes clear who those people were: Senior Republicans wanted McCarthy to nail down a deal with the White House first.

Another Punchbowl talking point is about how long it would take for McCarthy to pass a deal if he got it. Theyll need an agreement in principle by next week, Punchbowl wrote on May 10, based on a direct quote from McCarthy. It will probably take a week to get a bill through the House, it wrote May 12.

This ticking clock is based on the claim that McCarthy agreed when he took the gavel to give members 72 hours to review legislation. Left unsaid is the fact that McCarthy broke that promise for his own debt ceiling bill, the Limit, Save, Grow Act. There was no markup and the final bill did not have a 72-hour window. Whats more, there was no pushback, because of the time crunch.

In other words, this ticking-clock story is another fake narrative, and helpful only to one person in this negotiation: Kevin McCarthy, who wants to shorten the window as much as possible to force the White House to make a deal.

The latest talking point is around work requirements for benefit programs like SNAP, TANF (formerly known as welfare), and Medicaid. These are obviously just an obscure way to take benefits away from poor people, and Democrats are loudly rejecting them.

I think theres concern that work requirements become the last man in, something introduced late in the talks not as a real issue but to make one side angry, so when they are removed, it feels like a win to that side, and they overlook the other really bad elements of the outcome (like multiyear spending caps). If you read between the lines of Punchbowls reporting on work requirements, theyre kind of telegraphing that.

On May 12, Punchbowl wrote that rescinding COVID aid, spending caps, and permitting reform were the keystones of the deal, with work requirements far less likely to happen. On May 16, Punchbowl noted, There will be a lot of attention given to additional work requirements for SNAP and other social welfare programs, but thats a heavy lift. They acknowledged that McCarthy was pushing hard for work requirements on May 17, but that there was strong resistance among progressives, and that the issue will need to be finessed very delicately in order not to unravel the negotiations.

If you read that knowing that this is McCarthys house organ, you can see that theyre helping him normalize the idea that an economically ruinous multiyear spending cap is part of a relatively straightforward deal, and that work requirements are the last man in. This benefits what McCarthy is trying to accomplish.

Its becoming clear that the Democratic rank-and-file in both chambers may have to be prepared to accept spending cuts in order for this all to work, Punchbowl wrote on May 17. You can see the normalizing process at work, where Beltway pack journalism determines the boundaries of discussion. Punchbowl was not describing what Democrats will have to be prepared to do, it is trying to force them to do it. There are a whole lot of reasons why Democrats are at the point where their president is submitting to Republican austerity demands, but tipsheet culture is definitely playing a role.

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The Access JournalismHouse Republican Mind Meld - The American Prospect