Archive for November, 2020

Wild wins reelection: Lehigh Valley congressional race called for Democrat over GOPs Scheller – lehighvalleylive.com

Freshman Democrat U.S. Rep. Susan Wild defended her Lehigh Valley seat against Republican nominee Lisa Scheller, a former Lehigh County commissioner who started a pigment manufacturer for paints, coatings and inks and touted her background as someone recovered from addiction who advocates for people in recovery.

Wild, a prominent lawyer in Allentown, scored a 10-percentage-point thumping of her Republican opponent in 2018s campaign for what was an open seat in Pennsylvanias 7th Congressional District.

Wild declared victory Thursday evening before The Associated Press called the race around midday Friday.

Pennsylvanias 7th includes all of Lehigh and Northampton counties and part of Monroe County. The district is daunting for a Republican. Democrats have a 60,000-voter registration advantage. Schellers fundraising picked up and closed a big campaign cash advantage that Wild had held going into July.

Scheller had led by as much as 27,000 votes late on election night, when day-of votes were counted but many mail-in ballots were yet to be included in these preliminary results. Her lead dwindled to fewer than 5,000 votes by noon on Thursday, and was erased completely that evening, after which Wild quickly claimed victory.

In a live event streamed on social media, the congresswoman thanked those who took the time to vote despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, and who put the 2020 election on pace to see the highest voter turnout in the nations history.

Wild anticipated her lead would only grow as more votes were counted, and pledged to represent everyone within the district.

Whether you voted for me or you didnt, I will keep working as hard as I possibly can for you and your family, and I will keep my focus squarely on getting our entire community through this public health and economic crisis, Wild said before laying out a vision for her second term.

Republican Lisa Scheller, candidate for Pennsylvania's 7th Congressional District, takes the stage to speak in September at a Women for Trump event with Kimberly Guilfoyle in the Lehigh Valley.Saed Hindash | For lehighvalleylive.com

Schellers campaign issued a statement Friday calling on voters to reject socialism and west coast values":

"Pennsylvanias Seventh Congressional District does not belong to a party, it belongs to the hard-working people who call this beautiful district home. While we wait for all of the remaining ballots to be counted, one thing is clear: every legal vote matters, and every legal vote must be verified.

"I have learned one main thing during this journey, Pennsylvanians reject socialism and they reject west coast values being brought to our great district. Susan Wild must be held accountable for how she votes in Congress. I look forward to being a large part of that conversation.

This fight to defend the American Dream, our fight, my fight is not over, it has only just begun.

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Wild wins reelection: Lehigh Valley congressional race called for Democrat over GOPs Scheller - lehighvalleylive.com

Democrats call on Twitter to suspend Trump as election results file in – The Verge

Democrats are calling on Twitter to suspend President Donald Trumps Twitter account until the election is decided.

Right now, the Presidents Twitter account is posting lies and misinformation at a breathtaking clip, Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) tweeted Wednesday. It is a threat to our democracy and should be suspended until all the votes are counted.

Suspend his account, @Twitter. This is pure disinformation, Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) tweeted Wednesday as well. Valid votes are being counted. This is America, not Russia.

Other Democrats like Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM) and Rep. Nanette Diaz Barragn (D-CA) havent gone as far as requesting a suspension, but have criticized the president for spreading election misinformation online.

Counting votes is not finding votes, Barragn tweeted at the president Wednesday. Maybe you should learn how the election system works instead of lying/misleading by tweet all the time.

Twitter has struggled to contain the presidents efforts to discredit mail-in voting, particularly in the wake of an intense press conference late Tuesday night. Since the press conference, the president has tweeted eight times, and seen four of the tweets restricted by Twitter for violating the civic integrity policy. The labeled tweets make false claims suggesting that Democrats were fixing the election in favor of a Joe Biden win.

Last night I was leading, often solidly, in many key States, in almost all instances Democrat run & controlled. Then, one by one, they started to magically disappear as surprise ballot dumps were counted. VERY STRANGE, and the pollsters got it completely & historically wrong! Trump falsely claimed in one of the labeled tweets.

A Twitter spokesperson told The Verge that the company placed a warning on this Trump tweet for making a potentially misleading claim about an election. This decision also restricts engagement with the tweet.

Suspending Trump would be a dramatic move from Twitter as the platform has never taken such a strong action against the presidents account. Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Verge regarding the Democrats requests that it suspend Trump.

On Monday, Twitter announced that it would stick labels on tweets making claims about election results until at least two preapproved news outlets declared winners. These outlets include ABC News, the Associated Press, CNN, Decision Desk HQ, Fox News, and NBC News. None have declared a presidential election winner as of publication time.

As polls began to close Tuesday night, Twitter started placing labels on tweets that made misleading or premature claims about the elections results. This included notices on tweets from both Democratic and Republican leaders. On Wednesday, Twitter applied a label to a tweet from Ben Wikler, chair of Wisconsins Democratic Party, claiming that Biden won Wisconsin. Twitter also labeled a tweet from Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) claiming victory in his reelection campaign.

Last night, we took quick action to limit engagement on a number of Tweets that may have needed more context or violated the Twitter Rules, a Twitter spokesperson said on Wednesday. Our teams continue to monitor Tweets that attempt to spread misleading information about voting, accounts engaged in spammy behavior, and Tweets that make premature or inaccurate claims about election results.

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Democrats call on Twitter to suspend Trump as election results file in - The Verge

Biden may win Pennsylvania, but Democrats fell in races across the state and the infighting has begun – Spotlight PA

Spotlight PA is an independent, nonpartisan newsroom powered by The Philadelphia Inquirer in partnership with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and WITF Public Media. Sign up for our free newsletters.

HARRISBURG It was supposed to be a historic year for Pennsylvania Democrats.

Riding the blue wave of 2018 and further gains in local elections the next year, the party hoped it would deliver the state to former Vice President Joe Biden, sweep the three statewide row offices, and flip the GOP-controlled legislature. Democratic groups from inside and outside the state spent hundreds of millions of dollars to make it happen.

By Friday, those dreams had evaporated.

While it looked increasingly likely the state would break for Biden though the race hadnt yet been called there wasnt a lot of other good news for Democrats. Republicans had not only held the majority in the state House and Senate, but were poised to possibly gain seats.

For the first time since 2008, Republicans claimed a row office through an election, with Republican Tim DeFoor winning the auditor general race. And the GOP also held onto congressional seats in the Philadelphia and Harrisburg suburbs Democrats had considered to be within reach.

These results are clearly disappointing for any Democrat here in Pennsylvania, said Mike Mikus, a Democratic strategist in Pittsburgh.

So why didnt Bidens apparent success in the state have coattails for state candidates? While political strategists and candidates warned it was still too early to assess the full extent of the damage, and uncounted ballots could change the picture, they offered a number of theories for why Democrats came up short from ticket-splitting to a backlash against coronavirus restrictions, to Trump over-performing his turnout expectations.

Matthew J. Brouillette, a prominent conservative linked to political action committees that spent millions boosting GOP candidates, said the results were a complete repudiation" of Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and his COVID-19 lockdowns and policies.

Wolf and the legislature have clashed frequently this year, after Wolf in the spring ordered the temporary closure of businesses to slow the spread of the coronavirus. Fights over limits on bars and restaurants, high school sporting events, and crowd sizes continued into the fall, with some Democratic lawmakers breaking with the governor.

But public health experts widely credit Wolfs moves for slowing the spread of the virus this summer and reducing hospitalization rates and the number of deaths.

J.J. Abbott, a former press secretary to the governor, said he didnt think the results represented unhappiness with Wolf, but rather district maps that favored Republicans. Flipping the chambers required historic voter turnout in favor of Democrats and significant grassroots organization.

Abbott thinks Democrats got the latter, but not the former. Biden got more votes than Hillary Clinton did in 2016, but Trump also bested his vote totals from four years ago, as turnout surged across the board.

Its clear that folks underestimated the level of turnout that the president would generate this time, said Abbott, now the executive director of the progressive advocacy group Commonwealth Communications. And he was able to build an even bigger coalition of voters than in 2016.

This was also the first presidential election in Pennsylvania without a straight-ticket voting option, which lawmakers eliminated as part of the 2019 election law that also greatly expanded mail voting.

Ticket-splitting when voters pick a candidate from one party at the top of the ballot but candidates from the other party in down-ballot races was also a factor, both Mikus and Brouillette said. Statewide, Biden had received about 3.3 million votes as of Friday, about 300,000 more than Nina Ahmad, the losing Democratic auditor general candidate.

Republicans in the Philadelphia suburbs appeared to benefit from this, Brouillette said, but so did Democratic incumbents in Trump-friendly districts, like Rep. Frank Burns of Cambria County.

I think it likely cut both ways, Brouillette said.

G. Terry Madonna, a pollster at Franklin & Marshall College, was not surprised by the results for two reasons: Elections tend to favor incumbents, and its not unusual for row office candidates to garner less support than presidential hopefuls at the top of the ticket (although Democrat Josh Shapiro outperformed Clinton when he was first elected state attorney general in 2016).

In many ways, it was sort of status quo, Madonna said.

Shapiro defeated Republican challenger Heather Heidelbaugh to win reelection, according to the Associated Press. The AP late Friday had yet to declare a winner in the race for state treasurer, in which incumbent Democrat Joe Torsella trailed Republican challenger Stacy Garrity.

The AP had also called 17 of 18 congressional races in Pennsylvania for the incumbent. In the remaining race, Democratic Rep. Conor Lamb, in the Pittsburgh suburbs, was leading.

In the legislature, Republicans in both the House and Senate were poised to keep their majorities, based on races called by the AP. Democrats flipped one seat, as Sen. Tom Killion, a moderate Republican from Delaware and Chester Counties, lost to Democrat John Kane. But Republicans were up in one other closely watched Senate race and scored a victory in another Friday evening.

Of the House races not called by 5 p.m. Friday, six were Republican-held seats in the Philadelphia suburbs. Democrats failed to flip any of the seats they had targeted in Allegheny County, according to AP projections.

Tension over down-ballot Democratic failures went public Thursday. Emily Skopov, who lost her campaign for an open Republican-held state House seat in the Pittsburgh suburbs, while responding to a tweet that accused progressive lawmakers of tone-deaf messaging, described herself as a casualty/collateral damage of this offensively poor messaging. Skopov later apologized for her offensively poor choice of words.

State Rep. Summer Lee (D., Allegheny) said white Democrats shouldnt blame Black organizers and activists for their losses.

You did NOT lose in your suburbs where youve allowed racism to fester because defund police or progressive messaging, she wrote on Twitter. You lost because the Democratic Party has no down-ballot strategy, no message that resonates w/the masses, no field strategy, no vision.

Mikus, the Democratic strategist in Pittsburgh, said the law enforcement issue and accusations of wanting to defund the police was a common attack from Republicans this year. He said Biden, as a presidential candidate, was in a better position to push back on those kinds of attacks than low-profile legislative candidates.

Joe Biden was able to wade through some of the trickier national issues, Mikus said.

In a few of the races still not called, Democratic incumbents trailed, including House Minority Leader Frank Dermody, who represents parts of Allegheny and Westmoreland Counties.

State Rep. Leanne Krueger (D., Delaware), the chair of the political arm for House Democrats, acknowledged that Republicans appeared likely to keep their majority. She pointed to many provisional ballots still uncounted that could potentially turn the tide in some races. Democrats havent conceded in some of the races that were called against them.

But, no matter what, she thought Democrats deserved credit for helping at the top of the ticket.

I absolutely believe that our candidates contributed to putting Joe Biden over the top, Krueger said. Aggressive races at the bottom of the ballot drive turnout up to the top of the ticket like nothing else does.

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Biden may win Pennsylvania, but Democrats fell in races across the state and the infighting has begun - Spotlight PA

Stop the Steal spreads across the internet after infecting Facebook – The Verge

In the wake of a Facebook ban and dimming electoral hopes for President Trump, the Stop the Steal movement is finding a home on smaller platforms and in-person rallies. A movement supporting Trumps false claims of election fraud and hoping to halt the ongoing vote-certification process, Stop the Steal groups are currently promoting pro-Trump rallies in Arizona, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Georgia, and organizing through platforms like Parler and Discord.

President Trump has the votes, wrote Marjorie Taylor Greene, a QAnon supporter newly elected to Congress, on Parler. But the Democrats, Big Tech, and the Fake News Media are trying to STEAL this election. You and I cannot let that happen! This is the biggest VOTER FRAUD operation in American history...STOP THE STEAL. Greene has 16,000 followers on the app.

The Stop the Steal Facebook group, which launched on Wednesday, was filled with similar election misinformation about Democrats rigging the vote. It was organized by Republican operatives and had ties to the tea party, according to Mother Jones. The group grew to over 300,000 members in less than 48 hours only to be banned by Facebook once moderators caught on. Over that short period, the group became a central hub for election misinformation, leaving users to look for new places to organize in the wake of the ban.

Facebook and TikTok have also moved to block hashtags that were used to spread election conspiracy theories on Thursday, like #StoptheSteal. Twitter told The Verge that it was proactively monitoring them. Big Techs efforts to curb voting misinformation have led users to organize on different platforms. On YouTube, One American News Network (OANN) posted videos declaring that Trump won the election, which YouTube limited somewhat but did not block outright.

Organizers have found the most success on Parler, a social network designed for conservatives put off by moderation practices of the major platforms. On Thursday, there were 8,697 posts on Parler with the #StopTheSteal hashtag. Many of these posts also mentioned without evidence the silencing of conservatives on Facebook and Twitter. Videos of Stop the Steal protests got upwards of 2,000 votes (Parlers version of likes). The hashtag #VoterFraud had 18,426 posts, much of it focused on unfounded rumors regarding Democrats tampering with the vote.

The lax moderation standards have proved attractive for conservatives like Sens. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Rand Paul (R-KY) as well as former congressional candidate and right-wing conspiracist Laura Loomer who was previously banned on Twitter. The app, which launched in 2018, has added 4 million users this year, growing by 1 million in the past six weeks alone.

Parler differentiates itself from Facebook and Twitter in its refusal to moderate content the big tech platforms have banned, including hate speech and misinformation. The apps community guidelines prohibit unlawful acts but little else. A spokesperson for the app told The Verge that he believes users spreading misinformation will only damage their own reputation and does not believe in content moderation rules even for extreme content like Holocaust denial. I trust the system, he told The Verge, and dont worry about the outliers.

On Parler, the person with the handle @StopTheSteal shared unfounded rumors about voter fraud and urged followers to show up at Stop the Steal rallies across the United States. He also set up a Discord where users ranted about censorship on the big tech platforms, which does not actually exist, and promoted stop the count protests in Los Angeles and Norwalk, California.

At a rally at the capitol building in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Trump supporters carried signs reading Stop the Steal and waved American flags. Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA) joined the event, telling supporters, We want the ballots and the votes that are counted to be legal, to be valid. The comments insinuate this isnt the case although theres no evidence to support that viewpoint.

Some affiliated groups have been stoked by seasoned political operatives, although most have few firm ties to the Republican Party. Right Wing Watch reported this week that some Stop the Steal events trace back to a Roger Stone associate named Ali Alexander, who launched a similar but less successful campaign in 2018. Alexander said in a Periscope stream on Wednesday that he was organizing thousands and thousands and thousands of people to attend rallies in contested districts across the country.

Progressive groups seeking to encourage the continued counting of votes have also started to organize over social media. Count Every Vote rallies have been held in states like New York and Pennsylvania over the last few days. Larger coalitions, like Protect the Results, have not activated their over 150 groups into mobilization but said on Thursday that it remains vigilant.

As millions of votes are counted and with Joe Bidens lead in several key states growing, the Protect the Results coalition is announcing that it will not be activating the entire national mobilization network [Thursday], but remains ready to activate if necessary, the organization said in a statement on Thursday. While the coalition will not be activating its national network, some local organizers may still hold Count Every Vote events in their community.

The app has become particularly active during the week of the 2020 election, when Facebook and Twitter went to greater lengths to stamp out misinformation about the vote. SoCal Trump Train Events & Rallies, a Facebook group with 12,100 members, urged people to join them on Parler on Thursday in anticipation of getting shut down.

In a statement emailed to The Verge, a spokesperson for Discord said: We are aware of the server referenced. At this stage, it has not broken any of our community guidelines. More broadly, Discord is proactively monitoring our entire service for election mis- and dis-information that may lead to real-world harm. We take swift action when we become aware of these issues including banning users, servers, and when appropriate, contacting the proper authorities.

Update November 6th, 8:57PM ET: Article updated with statement from Discord.

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Stop the Steal spreads across the internet after infecting Facebook - The Verge

Term Limits Tidal Wave as Record Number of Pledge Signers Elected to Congress – U.S. Term Limits

For immediate release

November 6, 2020Contact: U.S. Term LimitsPhone: (321) 428-4235Press@termlimits.com

Term Limits Tidal Wave as Record Number of Pledge Signers Elected to Congress

Washington, D.C. Even as ballot counting continues, a record number of term limits supporters have been elected to the U.S. Congress. U.S. Term Limits is proud to announce that at least 93 members of the incoming 117th Congress have taken the pledge to support a resolution to place term limits on Congress. With more votes still being counted and a few special elections on the horizon, that number is likely to increase.

Its a big deal. Nearly one hundred incoming Congress members have signed our term limits pledge promising to term limit Congress, says Stacey Selleck, Digital Director at U.S. Term Limits. Were optimistic about having bipartisan support on an amendment that focuses on the desperately needed election reform that term limits bring, Selleck added.

Lawmakers who signed the pledge were elected from nearly every state including many new signers in Michigan, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, and Tennessee. The states with the largest count of pledge signers are Florida, Texas, Pennsylvania and New York. Incumbent senators who support the term limits resolution include Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Pat Toomey, Dan Crenshaw, Rand Paul and incoming senator Tommy Tuberville.

The U.S. Term Limits congressional pledge is provided to every announced candidate for federal office. It reads, I pledge that as a member of Congress, I will cosponsor and vote for the U.S. Term Limits amendment of three (3) House terms and two (2) Senate terms and no longer limit. The U.S. Term Limits constitutional amendment has been introduced in both the U.S. Senate by Senator Ted Cruz (SJR1) and the U.S. House by Representative Francis Rooney (HJR20).

Having Congress propose the amendment is just one path to a term limits victory. U.S. Term Limits is also working towards getting the state legislatures to propose the amendment. Once proposed, regardless of method, it must be ratified by 38 states in order to become the next amendment to the Constitution.

Our goal is to fix a broken seniority system by invigorating Congress with a diversity of experiences, says Selleck. This is a sharp contrast to the current Congress that has expertise being adept at political shenanigans depriving the country of true representation, Selleck concluded.

According toa 2018 nationwide poll on term limits conducted by McLaughlin & Associates, term limits enjoy wide bipartisan support. McLaughlins analysis states, Support for term limits is broad and strong across all political, geographic and demographic groups. An overwhelming 82% of voters approve of a constitutional amendment that will place term limits on members of Congress.

To see a list of the incoming Congressional pledge signers, visit https://www.termlimits.com/117thCongressPledgeSigners.pdf.

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______________________U.S. Term Limits is the largest grassroots term limits advocacy group in the country. We connect term limits supporters with their legislators and work to pass term limits on all elected officials, particularly on the U.S. Congress. Find out more attermlimits.org.

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Term Limits Tidal Wave as Record Number of Pledge Signers Elected to Congress - U.S. Term Limits