“Kemp Primary Commercial”
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“Kemp Primary Commercial” First, here’s the video report from Dale Russell of Fox 5 Atlanta that aired last night: Apparently it is even easier to steal a business in Georgia than it is to steal an identity – which is already easy enough – and you have the last three Secretaries of State – Cathy Cox (D), Karen Handel (R), and Brian Kemp (R) – to thank for that. Due to being both a techie and a politically-oriented person, I was asked to comment on this story, and I shall, after the jump… Last Saturday, the 2nd Congressional District GOP got together for a BBQ and Congressional Debate at Lee County High School. I’m trying to adopt a general policy that if it is a political event in Lee County, I intend to be there with my video camera, so I was there. Heck, I even voted in the straw poll! While there, I had a chance to meet with a few of the candidates that were present. Maria Sheffield was the late arrival, but she was also the most engaging with this political blogger. Seth Harp, one of her competitors who has sponsored at least one thing in the State Senate I am strongly in favor of (local referendums on Sunday alcohol sales), was rather dismissive. I also had a chance to speak with Gary Black for a few moments, as well as Mike Keown, Rick Allen, and Lee Ferrell. Harold Logsdon was there, but unfortunately I didn’t get a chance to speak with him. Overall, the event went well. Quite a few people there were in campaign t-shirts of various campaigns, but Lee Ferrell was the only one I noted with any real “contingent” of what appeared to be staffers. The others had brought along a staffer/area volunteer or two, with the rest of the t-shirts for their campaign appearing to be simply supporters from the area. I did not personally witness any mass vote buying, nor did I hear any rumors of it. It appears that this was a genuine one person/one vote straw poll, so take that for what it is worth. (Still not very much, but relatively better than polls with mass vote buying.) Anyway, here’s the videos: Last week, State Senator David Shafer (R-Duluth) introduced a bill he calls the Voter Choice and Ballot Access Act, which is officially known as SB 359. Equal ballot access is the number one issue on SWGAPolitics.com’s 2010 Legislative Agenda, and this bill is a solid step in that direction. The bill basically says that once a political organization has met the required hurdles to gain state wide ballot access, it would also be able to run candidates in all partisan races in this State – not just state wide. Currently, the Libertarian Party of Georgia is the only “third” party to do this, which means that under this bill Tom, Tim, myself, or any other Libertarian in the area could run for County Commission or even State Rep, if we so desired. Under current law, we could not without getting petition signatures from 5% of the registered voters in our district – and in one local election recently, the winner of the election only got 4.8% of the registered voters in the district to vote for him! This bill also allows for a form of electoral fusion, whereby a political body (such as the Libertarian Party) could co-nominate candidates for offices along with an official “party” (such as the Democrats and Republicans). In other words, the Libertarian Party could co-nominate a candidate for State Rep with either the Democratic Party or the Republican Party, if such candidate was acceptable to the LP. The final thing this bill does is change the wording on the POTUS requirements for official “party” status to allow for 20% of the voters in the State of Georgia to satisfy this requirement. Under current law, even if the Libertarian Party’s Presidential nominee got 100% of the vote in Georgia, if that nominee only came out with 19.5% of the vote nationally, the Libertarian Party of Georgia would not have met the 20% requirement to attain full “party” status. This bill does almost nothing for independent candidates, as their signature requirements are not touched in any way. Because of this, the bill is not perfect. With that said, however, this bill IS a solid step in the right direction, and at this point we need a victory to start some momentum going in the right direction. Going over to my football analogy again, I agree that we don’t score on this play. But this play is absolutely one that at a bare minimum will get us the three yards we need, may even get us a first down on this play, and could potentially open up the opposing defense so that the next play is far larger. Because of this, it is absolutely the right play to call at the moment. The General Assembly needs to pass this bill to allow fairer ballot access in this State. I fully endorse it, and I urge Secretary of State Brian Kemp and all of his potential opponents this November to endorse this proposal as well. I also urge each and every candidate in every statewide race to endorse this bill as a signal to the General Assembly, the Governor, and the Secretary of State that this is absolutely something we are all concerned about. Democratic Party of Georgia State Committee member Andre Walker has already endorsed this bill, as has Jason Pye. As usual, if we get a press release on a recent issue, we will post it… This one is from Democratic candidate for Secretary of State Michael Mills. Secretary of State Appointment Places Politics Before Georgia Citizens Poll-after-poll and trend-after-trend shows Georgians are increasingly cynical about politics and resentful of government. The latest partisan power grab that was the appointment of a new Georgia Secretary of State will only reinforce these disturbing trends. Citizens must take the power back and make their voices heard – at the ballot box in 2010 and every day in-between. While an abdication of her sworn responsibility, Secretary of State Karen Handel’s decision to resign to better serve the office being vacated and her campaign for governor seemed innocent enough. At face-value, we could support the decision because it ensured Georgians had someone in the Secretary of State’s office fighting for their rights instead of advancing personal and partisan agendas. But scratch the surface, and it smacks of politics. The following statement was issued by Gary Horlacher in response to Governor Perdue’s announcement today that he was appointing Brian Kemp to be the interim Secretary of State. If any candidate has a press release about any issue, make sure it gets in my hands and I’ll get it up here. Here we go again! Karen Handel backs out of the remainder of her term-of-office as Secretary of State, so that she can focus on her race for Governor, continue raising money, and oh yea, not inject partisan politics into a race that she is involved in, while she is conducting the fundamental role of the Secretary’s office, fair and nonpartisan election oversight. But do Governor Perdue and Brian Kemp agree with her. Clearly NO! With the resignation of Secretary of State Karen Handel, someone’s got to do the job. So, it goes to… Brian Kemp, who’s running for the Secretary of State job. The press release: Continue reading I guess we know who Sonny’s pulling for You see, she seems to think that a process that is so faulty that 60% of those it labels as “non-citizens” are in fact citizens is a good thing! I wrote a decent amount on this topic in June, when it was first breaking. Back then, I used the actual DOJ and court documents to show exactly where MS. Handel erred in this situation, and those posts can be found here, here, here, and here for more details on the particulars of the issue. The basics are this: Ms. Handel has claimed that this is an issue with the “Obama Department of Justice”, yet it was a Bush Administration court that gave the initial order 9 days before the November 2008 elections and nearly three full months before Barack Obama was sworn in as President – and even longer before he actually had placed anyone in the Department of Justice or Court system. This “common sense” program Ms. Handel created has been shown to be so flawed that 60% of the people it labeled as “non-citizens” were, in fact, citizens. Regarding the “petition” itself, it is nothing more than a campaign ploy. A valid petition would have an actual petition statement available for you to read before signing, all Ms. Handel’s “petition” has is a place for your name and email information. It is designed to build her campaign database and NOTHING more. Here is the email Karen Handel sent out Friday: Looking over Brian Kemp’s financial disclosure statement, he has some contributions that while apparently technically legal, stink. Former State Senator Brian Kemp, a GOP candidate for Secretary of State, released his campaign’s fundraising numbers for the first half of 2009 along with 161 endorsements. The overall number for his fundraising efforts, per this press release, was $267,170 from “over 425 donors”, or an average donation of roughly $625 per donor.* |
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