Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

Here are the 4 Republicans who are seeking to unseat Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers in the 2022 election – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Four Republican candidates are vying to defeat Democratic incumbent Gov. Tony Evers, Wisconsin's first-term governor.

The winner of the Aug. 9 primary will face Evers in the general election Nov. 8.

Here are the four Republicans you'll see on the primary ballot:

Kleefisch, 46, is running for governor after serving eight years as lieutenant governor to former Republican Gov. Scott Walker. She survived a colon cancer diagnosis during her first campaign in 2010 and fended off a recall in 2012 over Walker's signature law known as Act 10, which effectively eliminated collective bargaining for most public employees.

Now, Kleefisch is running on a platform of abolishing the Wisconsin Elections Commission, expanding the state police force, breaking up the Milwaukee public school district, allowing firearms to be carried in a concealed manner without a license, and expanding private school vouchers in the state.

More: All 3 Republican candidates for Wisconsin governor would eliminate concealed firearm permits that require training

More: Wisconsin candidates for governor offer sharp differences on abortion as Supreme Court weighs the future of the procedure

Michels, 59, last ran statewide in 2004 for U.S. Senate when he was defeated by the then-incumbent Russ Feingold. Michels now seeks the governor's office after leading his family's construction business, Michels Corp., which is now the largest of its kind in the state.

He served 12 years in the U.S. Army as an Army Ranger. Michelshas said if elected he would sign bills that would ban election officials from using private funding, expand taxpayer-funded school vouchers to all students, andbarclassroom lessons on systemic racism.

Nicholson, 44, is a management consultant and U.S Marine veteran. He ran in the Republican primary for U.S. Senate in 2018, losing to then-state Sen. Leah Vukmir who ultimately lost the general election to U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin. Nicholson is running for governor as an anti-establishment candidate who has criticized Republican Party leaders and legislative leaders.

He supports banning classroom lessons on systemic racism, making abortion illegal in all cases, allowing the concealed carry of firearms without licenses, expanding private school vouchers and breaking up the Milwaukee public school district.

Ramthun, 65, is serving his second term in the state Assembly representing District 59 in eastern Wisconsin. He has worked as a consultant and is running for governor largely on the platform of overturning the results of the 2020 presidential election in Wisconsin.

Ramthun has called to decertify the results of the election, despite it being legally impossible. He also supports keeping abortion illegal in all cases, allowing concealed carry of firearms without licenses, overhauling election rules, and expanding school vouchers to all students.

More: Tommy Thompson won't launch a fifth campaign for Wisconsin governor

Contact Molly Beckat molly.beck@jrn.com. Follow her on Twitter at @MollyBeck.

Our subscribers make this reporting possible. Please consider supporting local journalism by subscribing to the Journal Sentinel at jsonline.com/deal.

Read the rest here:
Here are the 4 Republicans who are seeking to unseat Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers in the 2022 election - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Republicans and Democrats receptive to Biden’s $33 billion Ukraine aid package – CBS News

Republicans and Democrats are signaling they'll back President Biden's proposed $33 billion supplemental aid package for Ukraine's military, economic and humanitarian needs.

Asked if he would support the latest proposed infusion of funds to the war-torn country, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell responded Thursday, "Very likely, yes."

Senate Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Senator Bob Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, says he anticipates bipartisan support, although he added he hasn't yet spoken with Republicans about the package.

"I expected a robust one and we need a robust one to support Ukraine, so I assume that it will have bipartisan support," Menendez told reporters Thursday, adding that he thinks the vote "should be next week."

According to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, work on the measure should be starting shortly.

"We were ready with our Appropriations Committee to start writing as soon as we got the numbers from the Office of Management and Budget, and the president's announcement made public, and we hope to as soon as possible, pass that legislation," she said Thursday.

But the Ukraine funding bill may run into some bumps on its way to passage. Some Democrats want to link additional COVID-19 funding and Ukraine aid together, something some Republicans have opposed. Pelosi said she's "all for" linking the two issues into one piece of legislation.

"I'm all for that, I think it's very important," she said. "We have emergencies here. We need to have the COVID money, and we need time is of the essence because we need the Ukraine money. We need the COVID money. So I would hope that we can do that. That's this is called legislation and we're legislating and we'll have to come to terms on how we do that."

White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Thursday did not express a strong preference as to whether the two issues should be linked legislatively, saying they are both extremely important and need to materialize as soon as possible.

A House Democratic leadership aide told CBS News "there will be bicameral, bipartisan talks on the supplemental request."

"It is also unresolved which chamber will work to advance the supplemental first," the aide said. "This will not be an instant process."

Introducing his $33 billion request Thursday, the president said it's "critical" that Congress approve the funds "as quickly as possible." He said the drawdown funding authorized by Congress last month to boost Ukraine's military efforts is nearly depleted.

"The cost of this fight is not cheap, but caving to aggression is going to be more costly if we allow it to happen," the president said at the White House. "We either back the Ukrainian people as they defend their country, or we stand by as the Russians continue their atrocities and aggression in Ukraine."

The president's latest request from the White House is much higher than the $13.6 billion Congress included in a broader spending bill last month.

House Foreign Affairs Committee Ranking Member Mike McCaul said Thursday "time is of the essence" in providing more military aid to Ukraine.

"Every time I talked to the Ukrainians, and I talked to them a lot, it's always about weapons," McCaul said. "Zelenskyy, his biggest criticism is I could have used these weapons last October. I signed off on all the foreign military weapons sales, and this administration sat on these weapons until after the invasion. And now they're trying to play catch-up. So time is really of the essence to save lives and help the Ukrainians win the struggle that's quite frankly, the largest invasion in Europe since my father's war, World War II."

CBS News' Alan He, Rebecca Kaplan and Melissa Quinn contributed to this report.

Trending News

Kathryn Watson is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital based in Washington, D.C.

Read this article:
Republicans and Democrats receptive to Biden's $33 billion Ukraine aid package - CBS News

Calmes: The Republicans on the ballot this year don’t solve problems – Los Angeles Times

Its been striking in recent days just how the headlines have underscored that the Republican Partys leaders are, in fact, followers in thrall to a radicalized base. That base wants performance artists, not problem solvers.

If voters decide to empower these Republicans in this years midterm elections for Congress and state offices, theyll do so without exactly knowing how the party would (not) address issues like inflation, economic inequality, climate change, college costs, a drug epidemic, racial tensions, gun crime. Just as Donald Trumps party put forward no new platform in 2020, it has no official policy agenda for the 2022 midterm elections.

Asked in January what his party would do if it controlled Congress, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said, That is a very good question, and Ill let you know when we take it back. Not for nothing is a McConnell biography titled The Cynic.

Opinion Columnist

Jackie Calmes

Jackie Calmes brings a critical eye to the national political scene. She has decades of experience covering the White House and Congress.

While the partys politicians may not be telling us what they would do, they are showing us. Rather than fixing things in states where Republicans hold sway, they are breaking stuff election systems, public schools, border trade, constitutional rights as they wage a culture war against made-up problems. Leading the way are the governors of Florida and Texas, presidential wannabes Ron DeSantis and Greg Abbott.

And in Washington, the willingness of Congress Republican leaders McConnell, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and House Minority Whip Steve Scalise to put party and power over country, and enable the antidemocratic machinations of Trump and his allies, has been proved beyond doubt, thanks to reporting and audiotapes from the New York Times.

Start with Texas. Its record of breakage under Abbott and the Republican-controlled Legislature is quite something.

The states unconstitutional antiabortion law, which authorizes bounties to sue anyone who helps a woman at least six weeks pregnant get an abortion, has been a model for other red states, including Oklahoma on Thursday. Families seeking gender-affirming treatment for transgender minors are being investigated for child abuse. An estimated 13% of mail ballots were thrown out in Texas primary elections in March, thanks to a new law inspired as in other red states by Trumps voter fraud lies that restricts voting and imposes new ID requirements. In the 2020 election, the ballot rejection rate was under 1%.

Abbotts reelection-year effort to embarrass President Biden, by mounting a multibillion-dollar border crackdown of his own, has instead embarrassed Abbott. His order that state troopers inspect every commercial truck crossing from Mexico snarled traffic and trade, disrupted supply chains for U.S. businesses and caused produce to rot. Yet troopers found no drugs, weapons or human trafficking, according to reports of state data. Now Abbott is asking Texans to donate toward the cost of busing migrants to Washington. (For ease of photo-ops, these individuals are dropped off near Fox News.)

Not to be outdone, Floridas DeSantis in a single day last week signed into law: a bill restricting how schools and businesses can discuss race and gender; a gerrymandered congressional map that boosts Republicans edge while erasing a Black Democrats district; and two bills retaliating against Disney, the states largest employer, for opposing the new Dont Say Gay laws restrictions on speech about race and sexual identity.

DeSantis has created the states first-ever police unit devoted to virtually nonexistent voter fraud and is responsible for banning more than 50 math textbooks math! allegedly containing indoctrinating information on prohibited topics.

When it comes to breaking things, hes bested Abbott: The new law to dissolve the special state-created district that is home to Disney World in effect leaves Floridians in the two counties facing huge tax liabilities that had been paid by Disney.

The leaders in Washington have even more reason to be ashamed. For nearly 16 months since Trump supporters attack on the Capitol, they have opposed a congressional accounting for that crime against democracy. Worse, theyve knelt again to Trump and ignored the continued incitements by his congressional allies.

McConnell, McCarthy and Scalise were privately just as appalled as you and me by the attack. The newly disclosed tapes of the House Republicans, and contemporaneous interviews with McConnell, show it. McConnell told advisors that Democrats would take care of the son of a bitch for us. McCarthy told colleagues hed advise Trump to resign.

Trump hasnt (yet) signaled thumbs-down on My Kevin and McCarthys dream of being speaker if Republicans capture the House. But Fox News star Tucker Carlson has, damning McCarthy as a puppet of the Democrats who sounds like an MSNBC contributor.

Someone ought to keep McCarthy and his ilk out of power, but that job shouldnt fall to a Fox News pundit. Voters could be the ones to give a thumbs-down, and prevent a Republican takeover.

@jackiekcalmes

See the rest here:
Calmes: The Republicans on the ballot this year don't solve problems - Los Angeles Times

Are Texas Republicans on the Verge of Winning Hispanic Majorities? – Texas Monthly

On the first Tuesday in April, one month after cruising to the GOP nomination for his third term as governor, Greg Abbott made a bold prediction about Novembers general election. Every year that Ive run for governor, I got about forty-five percent of Hispanics. Thats good, hetold an upbeat crowdof about 150 at a Texas Latino Conservatives luncheon in San Antonio. But let me tell you whats going to happen this year: I will get more than half of the Hispanic vote.

Its not the first time that Abbott has made such boasts. When he officially launched his campaign for a third term in January, the governor picked a symbolically important setting: the Hispanic Leadership Summit in the border city of McAllen. After introducing his wife, Cecilia Phalen Abbott, as The first Hispanic first lady of Texas,Abbottproclaimed that Democrats dominance among Hispanic voters was near its end. Former president Donald Trumps surprisingsurge of supportin McAllen and across majority-Hispanic South Texas in 2020 had proven, Abbott said, that in the heart of Hispanics, they are really Republicans.Since then, Abbott has stayed on message. The majority of Hispanics in Texas truly embrace the values of faith, family, and freedom that are at the heart of the Republican Party, hetweeted in March.

The governor may be getting ahead of himself. One of the most in-depth polls of Tejano voters, released earlier this month by the Texas Hispanic Policy Foundation, paints a cloudier picture for Abbott. The TxHPF, a nonprofit affiliated with centrist Republicans, is the only polling and research organization focused specifically on Texan Hispanics. And its poll shows Abbott getting clobbered by Democratic challenger Beto ORourke among Hispanic likely voters by an eighteen-point margin, 54 percent to 36 percent.The governor has said its his mission to win a majority of Hispanics in Texas, said Jason Villalba, CEO of the group and a former Republican member of the Texas House. Were now, what, six months out from Election Day, and I think hes short. I dont think hes going to be able to overcome his deficit.

Even though Abbott has made dozens of visits to the Rio Grande Valley as governor (more than any previous Texas governor,he claims) and has actively courted Hispanic conservatives, Villalba thinks the governor has struggled to come across as substantive or tolerant. Governor Abbott is to be commended for...trying to appeal to Hispanics, Villalba told me. He does genuinely care. But...there are concerns about his authenticity. He talks a big game, and hes down in the Valley often, but what has he done for the Hispanic community there lately?

In his announcement speech, Abbott noted that during his time in office, the RGV had opened its first level I trauma center and a Texas A&M Higher Education Center in McAllen. However, the vast majority of Abbotts frequent trips to the Valley have focused on immigration and border enforcement; hehas spent billions in taxpayer moneyto arrest migrants who he says have invaded border residents property. While Villalba says that Hispanics in the Valley generally support strong immigration enforcement, he thinks Abbotts harsh messaging on the issue has alienated voters who might otherwise have supported him: Theres a way you approach those questions; theres a way you can talk about those issues that can be softer, Villalba said.

Despite media portrayals of Hispanics as single-issue voters, many polls have found that immigration, as an issue, ranks surprisingly low among Hispanics priorities, well behind the economy and health care. Abbotts focus has not necessarily been on those kitchen-table issues that drive Hispanics, Villalba said. Hes focused on those culture-war issues that drive Republican primary voters. Villalba also thinks that memories of Abbotts most recent border initiative will hurt him with Hispanic voters. The governors short-lived planfor state troopers to perform enhanced inspectionsunited South Texans in fury when truck lines backed up for as long as36 hours, clobbering a local economy that relies on cross-border traffic of everything from produce to components for Texas car and truck assembly plants.

But Abbotts chances of a Hispanic majority were already slim before trucks started backing up at the border. ADallas Morning News/UT-Tyler pollconducted in February found that only 36 percent of Hispanic voters said they would vote for Abbott, compared to ORourkes 45 percent. If Abbott cant do better than that among Hispanic voters in November, hell be merelymatchinghis performance from 2018, when he performed 9 points worse than his44 percent showing in his first run for governor in 2014.

Abbotts first term in office marked a steep rightward turn on immigration for Texas Republicans. His predecessors, Rick Perry and George W. Bush, each worked to sideline anti-immigration extremists during their time in office and offered messages of outreach and inclusion. That work paid off, at least for Bush. When he ran for reelection as president in 2004, hecollected 49 percent of the Hispanic votein Texas. Abbott, as state attorney general under Perry, alsoopposedfar-right legislation on immigration, claiming that enforcing immigration laws was not Texass job. However, upon entering the Governors Mansion, Abbott began courting the GOPs right wing and transformed into a border hawk. Despite the claim he made to the Texas Latino Conservatives, his portion of the Hispanic vote plunged to 35 percentnot about forty-fivewhen he ran for reelection in 2018.

Texas Republicans have been trumpeting their surge of Hispanic support since 2020. Following Trumps shocking performance in South Texas, where he improved his numbersin some counties by 40 percentage points or more over 2016, Abbott and his GOP compatriots have woven a story that 2020 was just the beginningthe first wave in a tidal surge of Hispanics shifting into the GOP. Democrats, they say, have alienated Hispanic voters with their positions on abortion rights, immigration, law enforcement, and the oil and gas industry, and the GOP is ready to accept them with open arms. Not only will I win [the] Hispanic vote in Texas, Republicans for the first time will win counties on the border; were going to win counties in the Rio Grande Valley. Were gonna win counties that have never been won before, Abbott proclaimed at the Texas Latino Conservatives luncheon. But, based on the data his group has collected, Villalba thinks Democrats will still comfortably carry the Hispanic vote this year, even if the trend line is heading rightward over time. One reason: President Bidens favorability ratings remain solid among registered voters in the Hispanic community statewide, 50 percent favorable versus 44 percent unfavorable. (Thats significantly better than Bidens40 percent favorabilityamong all registered voters in Texas.)

The largest portion of Hispanics in Texas, from the Rio Grande Valley to the Panhandle, from El Paso to Tyler, are going to favor the Democratic candidate, Villalba said. Polling indicates that 2020 might have been an anomaly, rather than part of a long-term trend of Hispanic Texans shifting Republican.

Two years ago, Villalba says, Democrats in Texas faced a perfect storm. In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the party almost entirely abandoned door knocking and other in-person campaigning. Republicans enthusiastically filled the gap, canvassing thousands of South Texas homes and holding cookouts andTrump Train events. Republican attack ads also proved brutally effective. Many South Texans work in law enforcement and in the oil and gas industry. During a year rocked by the George Floyd protests, the GOP convinced many that Democrats wanted to defund the police (a position Biden specifically disavowed). They also succeeded at painting Biden, who has spoken about combating the climate crisis (but recently signed new drilling leases), as a threat to fossil-fuel jobs. After a year of mass layoffs during the early stages of the pandemic, many in South Texas worried that Democrats might threaten their livelihoods.

And there was another confounding variable in 2020. Most importantly, Villalba told me, you had a once-in-a-lifetime candidate like Donald Trump. Trumps iconoclasm and performative machismo appear to have been especially appealing to some Hispanic men. Indeed, while Trump scored significant gains, down-ballot Republican candidates in South Texas saw far more moderate improvements.

Does this mean that Abbott and other Republicans are celebrating too early? Maybe not. Even if ORourke wins Hispanics by a large margin, its unlikely to derail Abbotts reelection. The Republican party doesnt need Hispanic majorities to win statewide offices. Democrats, on the other hand, very muchdoneed to win the vast majority of Hispanic voters if they ever hope to win another statewide election after 27 years in the political wilderness.

Regardless of the percentage of Hispanic votes they win, Republicans might have something fresh to boast about after November: one or two members of Congress representing South Texas, for the first time in history. Monica De La Cruz, an insurance agent who came within three points of unseating a veteran Democratic congressman in 2020,is running againin a district that tilts more to the GOP after last years redistricting. And the recent retirement of Filemon Vega, Brownsvilles Democratic congressman, createdan opening for a right-wing Latina Republican upstart, Mayra Flores, to win his seatin a special election.

In that context, the optimistic rhetoric from Abbott and other Texas Republicans serves a tangible political purpose: it might spur turnout from conservative Hispanic voters, whove historically had little to vote for in the solidly Democratic region. Ultimately, Abbott has every reason to overstate how well he thinks hell do. Hes not making predictions; hes rallying the troops.

See the original post:
Are Texas Republicans on the Verge of Winning Hispanic Majorities? - Texas Monthly

Yes, it’s true cannabis reform supported in Wisconsin, including by Republicans – PolitiFact

The effort to make marijuana legal at the federal level gained ground as the U.S. House passed a measure April 1, 2022 that would eliminate criminal penalties for anyone who manufactures, distributes or possesses the substance.

The proposal faces an uncertain future in the U.S. Senate, but a Wisconsin state senator who has advocated for similar reforms in the state argues the time is right for such a move.

"The people of Wisconsin are ready for cannabis reform," state Sen. Melissa Agard, D-Madison, said in an April 11, 2022 tweet. "It is supported by the majority of the residents of our state, including a majority of Republicans."

The last part of the tweet caught our attention. There have long been differing views on permitting marijuana for medicinal uses, when compared to outright legalization.

Has the needle on legalization really moved that far?

Poll results

When asked to provide backup for her claim, Agards office cited a Marquette Law School poll of 802 registered Wisconsin voters taken from Feb. 22 to 27, 2022. It has a margin of error of 3.8 percentage points for the full sample.

A summary of the poll noted that "support for legalization of marijuana has grown since the question was first asked in 2013, with 61% now in favor of legalization and 31% now opposed." It also noted that support has grown in each partisan group since that time, with a slim majority of Republicans now supporting legalization.

According to the poll, 51% of those who identified as Republican supported legalization, while 42% were opposed and 7% undecided. (In 2013, the situation was the virtual opposite 43% support, 51% opposed).

In the new poll, among Democrats, 75% supported legalization, with 19% opposed. Another 5% said they didnt know.

Charles Franklin, director of the Marquette Law School Poll, said Agards statement "is basically right, but depends on whether Republican includes those who say they are independent but lean Republican or not."

Franklin said that for many purposes the MU poll includes leaners with partisans, but "for other analysis we keep them separate."

In this case, the 51% figure included independents who lean Republican.

Indeed, those who say they are "Republican" are still just slightly more opposed to legalization, by 0.6 percentage points. The "leaners" are much more likely to support legalization, which dramatically shifts the over picture.

Party Legal Illegal Dont know

1 Rep 46.5 47.1 6.43

2 Lean Rep 59.2 33.6 7.20

3 Ind 60.2 27.6 11.5

4 Lean Dem 79.6 16.9 3.52

5 Dem 71.5 20.8 6.51

Barry Burden, director of the Elections Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, in an email to PolitiFact Wisconsin, noted cannabis reform can mean many different things including changing regulations about buying, selling, and using marijuana for either medicinal or recreational purposes.

"What share of Wisconsinites support changing laws surely depends on exactly what kind of reform is being proposed," Burden said.

"It appears that Democrats and Independents in Wisconsin are generally supportive of legalization but that Republicans' opinions probably depend more on the kind of reform being considered."

National poll

The results of the Wisconsin poll are on par with residents across the United States.

A CBS News poll released April 20, 2022, found that two-thirds of Americans want recreational marijuana use to be legal under federal law and in their own state. And most people said they wouldn't mind if a licensed marijuana business opened in their neighborhood.

Most Democrats, liberals, independents and moderates favor legalization under federal law, the poll found, but Republicans and conservatives are split on the issue, mainly based on age.

In terms of supporting legalization, 79% of Democrats, 67% of independents and 49% of Republicans were in favor. Opposed were 21% of Democrats, 33% of independents and 51% of Republicans.

The picture changes when age is added to the equation for Republicans.

When looking just at Republicans under age 45, some 59% said it should be legal and 41% opposed legalization. For Republicans over age 45, some 44% said it should be legal, and 56% said it should not be legal.

Our ruling

Agard claimed cannabis reform "is supported by the majority of the residents of our state, including a majority of Republicans."

Recent polling of Wisconsin residents found 61% in favor of legalization and 31% opposed. Among Republicans, 51% supported legalization, while 42% were opposed.

But that comes with a footnote: To reach the 51% level, one has to include those who identify as Republican, as well as those who lean Republican. This is often done in polling, so its not surprising here. But it is worth noting.

We rate the claim True.

Continue reading here:
Yes, it's true cannabis reform supported in Wisconsin, including by Republicans - PolitiFact