Archive for July, 2017

Four Texas Republicans in Congress were just outraised by Democratic challengers – Texas Tribune

WASHINGTON There areearly signs of Democratic enthusiasmin Texasin the latest round of federal campaign finance report filings over the weekend, but whether that fundraising support will translate into trouble for Republicans remains to be seen.

Four GOP incumbents from Texas U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, and U.S. Reps. John Culberson of Houston, Ted Poe of Humble and Lamar Smith of San Antonio found in recent days that theirDemocratic challengers hadposted better fundraising hauls than they hadin the second quarter of this year.

"It's happening in other places as well," said Achim Bergmann, a Democratic consultant who has clients across the country including one challenging Culberson. "It's particularly surprising and encouraging in a place like Texas, and it might be an indication of where Republicans are taking things for granted and are going to be sorry."

This sort of scenario is the first sign of incumbent danger in political circles, but most of these incumbents already have hefty war chests from previous campaigns.

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"Comparing a quarter's worth of fundraising is like declaring victory after one inning of a baseball game," cautioned Nathan Gonzales, a political analyst at Inside Campaigns, a political newsletter.

The most recent fundraising stretch early April through the end of June marked a time when dozens of Democratic challengers declared their campaigns for office around the state. The Democrats highlighted below either out-paced or nearly out-paced their Republican rivals in the second quarter.

U.S. Senate

U.S. House races:

Whileads fromsuper PACshave oftendominatedthe television airwavesahead of elections in recent years, candidate fundraising still matters because it illustrates enthusiasm and candidatesare able tobook TV ads at a lower price than outside groups.

Bragging rights are due for any challenger who raises more than an incumbent many donors refuse to give to challengers.But the first quarter is often among a candidate's strongest; it's the low-hanging fruit and easiest ask.

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Additionally, some of this money will be spent by Democrats to survive their own primaries.The Houston-based Democratic primary for Culberson's seathas the potential to turn into a financial arms race, with Democratic candidates spending hundreds of thousands to make it through both a primary election and expected runoff.

While some GOP incumbents may have posted comparatively weak second quarters, months and years of previous fundraising keep them on strong footing going forward.

"These Democrats are off to a great start, but this is a long game, and most of them will have to do even better," said Gonzales.

Other noteworthy fundraising:

Disclosure: Joseph Kopser has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune. A complete list of Tribune donors and sponsors can be viewedhere.

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U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz is pushing legislation to rename the street outside the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., after pro-democracy dissidentLiu Xiaobo, a Nobel Peace Prize winner who died in Chinese custody on Thursday. [link]

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Four Texas Republicans in Congress were just outraised by Democratic challengers - Texas Tribune

Immigration Hard-Liners Blast Trump Guest Worker Expansion – LifeZette

Immigration hard-liners on Monday blasted Homeland Security Secretary John Kellys decision to admit 15,000 additional low-skill guest workers under authority granted by Congress earlier this year.

The decision is a win for the business lobby, which had argued that the increase was needed to fill a labor shortage in industries such aslandscaping and tourism. But organizations favoring tighter restriction on immigration argued the companies should be turning to Americans and legal permanent residents.

Its a complete sellout of the people who voted for President [Donald] Trump, said Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform. One of his core promises was that he was going to protect the most vulnerable Americans.

The H-2B visa program allows foreigners to work temporarily in America in low-skilled, non-agricultural occupations. The one-year visas can be extended for up to three years; visa holders then must return home for at least three months before coming back to the United States.

The law caps the number of visas each year at 66,000, although Congress in previous years had exempted returning workers from the cap. The spending bill passed in May eliminated the requirement that exempt workers must previously have worked under the visa. The Department of Homeland Security received authorization to grant additional visas equal to the year with the highest number of returning workers.

For the first time, the government is adding a requirement that employers demonstrate they would suffer irreparable harm if they cannot hire the guest workers.

"It's not just the number, it's a lot of the qualifications and a lot that goes through to ensure that we are hiring and bringing in the people" that are needed, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Monday.

The left-leaning Economic Policy Institute released a study Monday indicating there is little evidence in wage data to support the contention of a labor shortage. All but one of the 10 most popular H-2B job categories saw wage growth that was slower than the overall growth from 2004 to 2016. In some cases, wages actually declined.

"Expanding the H-2B program without reforming it to improve protections and increase wages for migrant workers will essentially allow unscrupulous employers to carve out an even larger rights-free zone in the low-wage labor market," study author Daniel Costa said in a prepared statement.

Roy Beck, president of NumbersUSA, said in a statement that Kelly's decision threatens to disincentivize companies from working harder to recruit Americans.

"Congress gave Kelly the authority to put around 70,000 more of those jobs out of the reach of Americans; at least Kelly limited the damage to keeping just 15,000 more Americans out of the labor market," he stated. "Nonetheless, this is yet another example of the administration and Congress failing to keep the Trump campaign promise of putting American workers first."

Kelly's decision comes on the heels of a study by the Washington-based Center for Immigration Studies that shows the average hourly pay of H-2B visa holders last year was $12.31. Those higher-than-minimum-wage jobs should go to Americans, Beck argued.

H-2B Visas

Source: State Department

Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, said 15,000 new workers is a big increase for the rest of the fiscal year. Under ordinary rules, the 66,000-visa limit is divided, with half awarded in the first half of the year and half in the second.

"That's a very substantial increase. It's a 45 percent increase," she said. "This is a program that's already controversial. According to our research, these are workers that for the most part don't have any skills or education. And there are hundreds of thousands of American workers who can do those jobs."

In addition to the impact on the labor market, Vaughan said, it also is a source of illegal immigration. She pointed to statistics from the Department of Homeland Security that 33,000 people who entered through guest worker visas of various types remained in the country illegally after those visas expired.

Vaughan said it also is unclear how the government will determine if businesses will be irreparably harmed.

"We don't know to what extent these are needed workers, as opposed to wanted workers," she said.

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Immigration Hard-Liners Blast Trump Guest Worker Expansion - LifeZette

Judge Allows First Amendment Trial – New Haven Independent

A federal judge has ruled that a local anti-police-brutality activist has a legitimate free-speech argument to present to a jury about why a former top cop barred her from a weekly CompStat data-sharing meeting.

U.S. District Court Judge Stefan R. Underhill, a Clinton appointee, agreed in a decision released last week that activist Barbara Fairs First Amendment rights might have been infringed and the case should proceed. The city had sought to have the case dismissed.

Underhill ruled that Fair may proceed to seek changes in policy through her suit, but not any money.

The alleged violation stems from a spat two years ago, when the former police chief, Dean Esserman, temporarily shut community members out of the weekly CompStat meetings, after cops complained that Fair used them as a venue to protest the departments treatment of minority communities. Fair contended that Esserman was trying to bar her from meetings until controversy blew over. The day Esserman barred the public from the meeting spurred on by discomfort of some of his officers with the presence of a vocal anti-police-brutality activist he also allowed another member of the community, preacher pal Rev. Boise Kimber, to come upstairs and attend.

In his ruling, Underhill squelched Fairs pursuit of damages, but he agreed to hear her case on injunctive relief. To win the case, the longtime activist must prove that Esserman disliked the content of her speech, rather than the manner in which she gave it, and that he intended to cut off public participation until activists lost interest in using the meeting to speak out.

Fair has continued to speak out publicly against police misbehavior and clash with the department. The police arrested her July 8 for allegedly refusing an order to keep her distance when they were arresting her nephew at a counterdemonstration against a white nationalist recruiting event on the Green. (She denied the allegation.)

And Compstat meetings, less elaborate affairs since Esserman departed the department, are open to the public again.

Fairs attorney, Norm Pattis, called the judges green-lighting of a trial an early win.

Any time that a jury can can [evaluate the conduct of a police officer], thats good to do for the republic, he said. We hope that never again will [the police] decide that some members of the public arent entitled to attend a meeting, when they have invited the public in general. When the community is given a chance to speak, the police department cant put stoppers on it based on the content of what its hearing.

As part of his community policing push, Esserman had opened up these weekly reviews of crime statistics and major cases, known as CompStat, to the public. (The name comes from comparative statistics.) The meetings revolve around reports from policing districts about crimes over the past week and plans for the upcoming week. Under Esserman, they expanded to include reports to and sometimes from the community, with dozens of local people joining the cops at headquarters on Thursday mornings to listen in on the departments crime-fighting strategies. (The department brass review pending investigations in greater detail at daily intelligence briefings, which are closed to the public.)

It was not, however, a forum for discussion, Esserman stated in his deposition. It was to let people see how the police department worked in a transparent way, and if people had presentations they wanted to make we would try to schedule them in.

Fair sought to make it a forum. In March 2015, after video of a black 15-year-olds takedown during an arrest emerged, Fair joined a protest in front of City Hall. There, she allegedly overheard cops and counter-protestors making racially charged remarks. Shortly after, Fair went to a CompStat meeting to speak up.

At the meetings end, she asked the assistant chief for permission to speak. (Esserman was absent.) Unrelated to any of the discussion that morning, she proceeded to criticize the department and called out the foul-mouthed officers. Fair said that one cop looked upset by her comments, but another officer told him to let Fair voice her concerns. I know I ruffled some feathers, she admitted in a follow-up email to the assistant chief. Still, no one present reprimanded her, asked her to sit down or escorted her out of the room.

News later reached Esserman, though, that Fair had been disruptive, loud, and argumentative. When she returned to Union Avenue for Compstat the following week, Esserman asked Fair to leave, saying she had made people very uncomfortable. After an exchange, Fair said, As long as its a public meeting, Im going to sit here. Esserman decided to close it all off.

Same thing the following week: Fair and State Sen. Gary Winfield couldnt even get past the front desk to the meeting. (Rev. Kimber, on the other hand, a friend of the chief, was buzzed in and went upstairs to attend the meeting.) Esserman maintained in his response to the suit there was no ban on Fairs attendance; she didnt subsequently try to go back.

In his initial analysis of the evidence, in which he tried to give Fairs arguments the best light possible, as a jury might similarly do, Judge Underhill explained that, to prove a First Amendment violation, the plaintiff must show (1) that her speech was protected by the Constitution, (2) that the forum was public and (3) that the justifications for excluding her speech werent up to snuff.

Fairs speech, addressing racist strains in the police department, is clearly protected speech, Underhill wrote, referencing an established right to complain to public officials.

Likewise, Essermans admittedly deliberate choice to open prior CompStat meetings made them limited public forums, Underhill added. Thats true even though observers generally didnt speak, he said. The judge cited a 1991 ruling about ACT UPs intent to hold a silent protest in a state legislatures gallery: [T]he elected officials receive the message, by the very presence of citizens in the gallery, that they are being watched, that their decisions are being scrutinized, and that they may not act with impunity outside the watchful eyes of their constituents, that precedent said.

Esserman argued that, since he opened the meetings, he could have closed them at any time.

Sure, Underhill wrote, thats true of any public forum. [H]owever, as long as the forum remains open, government regulations of speech within it must meet the standards of a public forum.

What are those standards? Underhill said speech may be limited only by content-neutral regulations time, manner, place unless theres a compelling state interest. In fact, he noted, Esserman might have been on surer footing if he had shut down the public participation entirely. But because the break was only temporary, it implied that the chief didnt like what Fair had to say on a current event, the judge noted. He referenced several rulings that arbitrariness and unpredictability about when a forum is open to the public can easily cover up censorship, as in choosing to shut down a park on the day a particular person is scheduled to speak.

It seems clear that a temporary shutdown intended to stifle discussion on a particular topic, with plans to reopen the forum after controversy surrounding that topic had been suppressed constitutes impermissible censorship under any First Amendment analysis, Underhill wrote.

Esserman argued that the case is mooted, to some extent, because hes no longer on the job. Indeed, at this past Thursdays CompStat meeting, the new chief, Anthony Campbell, said the meetings are open to the public. The only restriction might be if journalists are asked not to publish information about an imminent apprehension, he said.

Pattis responded that the First Amendment rights at issue could crop up with any police chief, not just the last one. Whats important is that the department realize that it has enduring obligations to the community, and that those do have the force of law behind them, he said. This will make sure Campbell isnt tempted to do the same.

A trial will likely be scheduled for sometime in the fall, Pattis said.

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Judge Allows First Amendment Trial - New Haven Independent

Campers take up defending our First Amendment rights – TWC News

HAMBURG, N.Y. -- Aspiring journalists are telling their own stories this week at Hilbert College. While they're learning everything from writing a catchy headline to how to frame an interview, there's a deeper truth here that these 12- to 18-year-olds are uncovering.

With President Donald Trump accusing the media of reporting fake news and making up sources, the students are getting an important lesson on the foundation of journalism. The hope is the junior high and high-schoolers understand the meaning behind the First Amendment and the duty they could one day have to protect the freedoms that go along with it.

"It's about wanting to do it, to be passion it about doing it, and also about defending our rights as citizens; freedom of speech, freedom of the press, it's really only the job that's protected in the constitution," Chris Gallant, associate professor of Digital Media and Communication said.

Camp may be fun and filled with field trips to the federal courthouse for example, but just two days in and Hope Artis and the others have already grasped something we strive to prove in the stories we share with you every day.

"We need to know and understand people," Artis said. "That's what news in its heart is all about."

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Campers take up defending our First Amendment rights - TWC News

Recording police is protected under the First Amendment – Buffalo … – Buffalo Business First


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Recording police is protected under the First Amendment - Buffalo ...
Buffalo Business First
The Third District Court of Appeals in Philadelphia ruled in favor of the right to record police activities, affirming the activity is protected under the First ...
Whitehead: First Amendment won in courtOneNewsNow

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Recording police is protected under the First Amendment - Buffalo ... - Buffalo Business First