Archive for the ‘Democrat’ Category

As others mull options, local Democrat launches campaign for Howard County Council’s 2018 race – Baltimore Sun

In a little less than two years, the make up of the Howard County Council will change as at least four term-limited legislators leave the legislative body, a turnover that has local Democrats and Republicans preparing for competitive races throughout the Democrat-majority county.

As rumor mills churn with dozens of candidates mulling the possibility of vying for vacant seats, only one candidate has officially launched his campaign ahead of the February filing deadline next year. ElkridgeDemocrat Opel Jones is running for the District 2 seat, an area that covers east Columbia and parts of Jessup, Elkridge and Ellicott City. The seat has been held by current Councilman Calvin Ball, a Columbia Democrat, since 2006.

For Jones, who has a background in academic and math and is involved in the local political scene as second vice president of the Howard County Democratic Central Committee, the launch of his campaign is hardly early.

At a private launch party intentionally timed with former President Barack Obama's last day in office, Jones, an African American and lifetime member of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, said he wanted to put rumors to rest.

"I want people to know that not only am I running, but that this is serious. We're not just going to talk about this and have rumors float for about a year," Jones, 39, said.

Vernon Gray, a Democratic community fixture who became the first African American to serve on the Howard County Council in 1982, called Jones "the man of the hour" at Jones's launch party last week. "Opel is the change that we seek," Gray said.

Jones is pursuing a doctorate in math at Howard University after receiving bachelor's and master's degrees in the same subject. After being appointed by former Howard County Executive Ken Ulman, Jones serves on the county's Human Rights Commission, an 11-member body established in 1969 to review human rights issues and file complaints concerning patterns of discrimination.

His campaign is staked on three broad principles: education, public safety and community vibrancy. The Democrat said he is committed to ensuring village centers in Columbia like Long Reach, which is struggling with low vacancy rates, are revitalized. Howard County Executive Allan Kittleman, a Republican, is courting development plans from developers for the blighted village center.

"Many people in District 2 feel the areas close to Route 1 are like the dumping ground for the county. Some people are also concerned about public safety around the village centers and being able to go out at night," Jones said. "This is all based on word-of-mouth and I look forward to finding out more of the issues from the people."

Jones said Democrats must be more aggressive in campaigning to get the community engaged locally.

"In a very blue county, sometimes we rest on our laurels, knowing that unless it's a very red district, that we'll be ok," he said.

No other candidates have publicly launched their campaigns, but plenty are considering running. The silence is unusual ahead of the local race, said David Yungmann, a local county Republican who is seriously considering a run for District 5, a seat held by current Councilman Greg Fox, also a Republican.

"You'd think people would have come forward officially by now. Names are circulating, but no one is out campaigning," Yungmann said.

In a politician environment where local candidates must gin up campaign dollars and endorsements far ahead of filing deadlines, the 2018 race is either a world away or happened yesterday.

Byron Macfarlane, the county's Register of Wills, a local elected office, says he's seriously considering a run for District 4, an area that covers west Columbia and has been represented by current Councilwoman Mary Kay Sigaty, a Democrat, since 2006. McFarlane expects to announce his decision next month.

"After losing the presidential election, local Democrats are looking for an outlet for our energy, and naturally, that's going to lead us to start looking forward to 2018," McFarlane said. "It's not too early."

Christiana Rigby, a Columbia Democrat who served on the Oakland Mills Village Board and is co-founder of a local club for Democratic women, is also weighing her options for District 3, which covers parts of Columbia, North Laurel, Savage and Jessup and has been represented by Democrat Councilwoman Jen Terrasa..

Like other local legislators, Fox hasn't made a decision about his political future.

"I'll be prepared for whatever the future has to hold, but it doesn't necessary have to involve me being in elected office," Fox said.

Terrasa, who is also bowing out of the council because of term limits, also said "it's too early" to make a decision but she has political ambitions, including but not limited to a seat in the General Assembly.

Similarly, Howard County Council Chairman Jon Weinstein, a Democrat who narrowly won a contentious race in 2014, said he hasn't finalized if he'll run again for council in 2018.

But the Ellicott City businessman, who in 2014 received 51 percent of the vote against Republican Kevin Schmidt, said he hopes to be on the ballot "in some form or another." Weinstein serves in District 1, which covers parts of Ellicott City and Elkridge and is one of the only true swing councilmanic districts.

In 2006, Courtney Watson, Terrasa, Fox and Sigaty were part of a new crop of local legislators who took office without having served on the council before. Council members are limited to three terms, a limit voters approved in 1992.

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As others mull options, local Democrat launches campaign for Howard County Council's 2018 race - Baltimore Sun

Donald Trump Never Gave Business Documents To Ethics Office, Democrat Says – Huffington Post

WASHINGTON Before he was sworn in, President Donald Trump disappointed ethics experts by refusing to sell his business empire. Instead, he presented stacks of manila folders that supposedlycontainedsome of the many documents hed signed to give control of his companies to his adult sons.

Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

Reporters werent allowed to see those documents. And according to Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.), the Office of Government Ethics hasnt seen them, either.

Cummings met on Monday with Walter Shaub, director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, along with Rep. Jason Chaffetz, the Utah Republican who chairs the House Oversight and Government Reform committee, and other committee Democrats to discuss OGE operations and other issues.

Reports suggest that the meeting was amicable. But Shaub also told committee members that the OGE never received copies of the documents that then-President-Elect Trump brought to his press conference regarding his conflicts of interest, according to a Monday press release from Cummings office. The Office of Government Ethics has received no new information since this press conference.

Shaub nonetheless remained willing and ready to help Trump address his business conflicts, Cummings office noted. The OGE chief did not respond to a request for comment.

Norman Eisen, who served as the chief White House ethics lawyer under former President Barack Obama, told The Huffington Post that the president is subject to disclosure rules under federal law that are within OGEs jurisdiction. According to Eisen, ethics lawyers for president-elects and presidents have always worked closely with OGE on their finances during transitions and after assuming the presidency which includes sharing documents. That does not seem to have happened here, he said.

The Trump transition team did not respond to requests for comment.

Trump is the first president in the modern era to refuse to divest or separate himself from business holdings that may pose conflicts of interest. The Trump Organization released a letter on Monday dated the day before inauguration that said hed resigned from hundreds of corporate entities. But ethics experts sayTrumps move to stop managing his companies fails to alleviate problems that may stem from his continued ownership of his business empire.

For months, Shaub sought to connect with the Trump transition team. OGE even resorted to getting Trumps attentionover Twitter:Brilliant! Divestiture is good for you, good for America! the office wrote ina series of seemingly sarcastic tweets.

After Trump failed to divest, Shaub went public with his concerns. This is not a blind trust, its not even close, he said at the Brookings Institution on Jan. 11. His comments, as well as his offices tweets, prompted Republicans to go after OGE.

Chaffetz accused Shaub of refusing to come in and meet with his staff, going so far as to threaten a subpoena. But it was Chaffetz who missed a previously discussed meeting in early December, according to Office of Government Ethics emails The Huffington Post obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request. Cummings said that based on the HuffPost report, it seemed that Chaffetz owed Shaub an apology for these inaccurate public attacks against him.

Although lawmakers reportedly scolded Shaub on Monday about his offices tweets, the meeting which was closed to the public appears to have eased some of the tension. Chaffetz indicated that it went well. I think we understand each other better, he told reporters. His office did not respond to a request for comment.

Still,Cummings said the meeting left him more concerned than ever about President Trumps refusal to follow the advice of Republican and Democratic ethics experts.

How will Trumps first 100 days impact you?Sign upfor our weekly newsletter and get breaking updates on Trumps presidency by messaging us here.

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Donald Trump Never Gave Business Documents To Ethics Office, Democrat Says - Huffington Post

Democrats put aside decorum to immediately resist Donald Trump – Washington Times

Eight years after President Obamas rise inspired his party to dream of decades of Democratic control in Washington, his party looked on Friday as President Trump put the final nail in those hopes.

A sizable chunk of Democrats didnt even show, saying they couldnt stomach and in some cases refused to accept Mr. Trumps victory.

Those who did attend flashed a mix of glum, dejected or stoic expressions, as they wondered what to expect from the enigmatic new president.

Usually when a candidate comes in, they come from a Democratic perspective or a Republican perspective so you kind of know whether they will go and what they are about, said Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr., Pennsylvania Democrat. But there is an uncertainty about where the president will be on an issue or in terms of his focus on an issue on a particular day or week. I hope we can [get a] better sense of that in short order.

Usually members of the party that lost the White House set aside the first day for celebrating democracy, and while there was some of that, overall Democrats said they see their role as intense resistance.

Nowhere was that more clear than on immigration, where Democrats held a press conference to demand Mr. Trump soften his stand on an issue that helped carry him to victory.

Donald Trump has coldly said people like my parents and those of us gathered here today have got to go, said Rep. Linda T. Sanchez, California Democrat. Well, Mr. President, I am American, and I am a member of the United States Congress, and I am here to tell you I am not going anywhere. Get used to seeing our faces.

Little was out of bounds for criticism.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said Mr. Trumps inaugural address detailing a still-struggling economy and out-of-touch politicians sounded like a campaign speech and ignores eight years of economic growth under President Obama.

One Democrat who did seem to be enjoying the inauguration was Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, who snapped with his GOP colleagues on the Capitol steps.

Im excited to be with my colleagues & fellow Americans as we watch @realDonaldTrump be sworn in as our 45th President, Mr. Manchin said on Twitter.

He later issued a statement saying he looked forward to continuing to build our relationship with Mr. Trump.

Hillary Clinton powered through the event in a staid manner, months after coming out on the losing end of a showdown with Mr. Trump.

Im here today to honor our democracy & its enduring values. I will never stop believing in our country & its future, she said on Twitter.

Michelle Obama, meanwhile, wore her disappointment on her face sparking a blizzard of posts on social media featuring photos and videos of the steely eyed former first lady and quips about her lack of a poker face.

Gearing up for a fight over Obamacare, a number of Democrats wore #ProtectOurCare buttons.

Mrs. Pelosi said she was glad Mr. Trump didnt mention the health law in his inaugural address.

Liberal groups said theyll lead the resistance.

This president clearly has no mandate, said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club. If and when he and his administration try to undermine climate action, assault our democracy or attack the people and places we love, he will face a wall of organized people who will fight him in the courts, in Congress, in the marketplace, in the states and in the streets.

The first chances for Democrats will come on Mr. Trumps nominees.

Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, New York Democrat, said he wont allow them to speed through the chamber.

Over the last several weeks, Republicans have made a mockery of the Cabinet hearing process trying to ham through nominees in truncated hearings, nominees with serious conflicts of interest and ethical issues unresolved, Mr. Schumer said on the Senate floor. The president-elects cabinet is a swamp cabinet full of billionaires and bankers loaded with conflicts of interest and ethical lapses as far as the eye can see.

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Democrats put aside decorum to immediately resist Donald Trump - Washington Times

LETTERS, Jan. 23: Party is over for Democrat – StarNewsOnline.com

Stop the whining

In all my years as an active participant in the political arena, I have never witnessed so many government leaders acting like spoiled children on a school playground, whining that they did not get their way, regarding the outcome of the 2016 presidential election.

In 1972, when Sen. George McGovern lost in a landslide to Richard Nixon, I was very devastated and disappointed, but I accepted the results and moved on. In 2000, when I cast my vote for Al Gore only to see him win the popular vote but lose the electoral vote and then in the Supreme Court, I accepted it and moved on. I did not boycott the inauguration.

In 2008, I did not support Obama, but I supported the results and moved on. I did not boycott his inauguration. In 2016, I did not vote Democratic or Republican in the presidential election, although I did vote for Bernie Sanders in the primary. But I accepted the results and moved on.

That is our American way. Regardless of who won, the election is over and we as Americans do not boycott a presidential inauguration that has been a part of American tradition for over 200 years, regardless of political affiliation.

After being a registered Democrat for 45 years, its time for me to switch to a third party.

Michael John Kelly, Harrells

Untimely death

I was saddened today to read of the cruel and untimely death of The Buzz. And even more distressed to hear that it is to be replaced by what I am calling Short Little Notes to the Editor.

Anonymity is what has made The Buzz so popular. A great many people (business owners and professionals) would be reluctant to make a public stand on a subject that may be somewhat divisive. It is the same reason you would not put a political sign in a store window.

Sadly, I predict that any wit and much wisdom that saw the light of day in The Buzz will no longer be shared. RIP Buzz! Your days here were too few!

Robert Barham, Wilmington

Celias sufferings

Celia Rivenbark is a talented journalist/columnist who became caught up in the group think of the progressive movement (bless her heart). I have been a fan of hers and a loyal reader for many years. I am also a conservative who is extremely pleased with the results of the recent elections, especially the election of Donald Trump.

It is not charitable to find joy in another persons angst, but Celias political rants since the election have been pure icing on the cake.

Bob Clark, Wilmington

Likes StarNews

I had to smile reading two letters recently complaining about the political left and one insinuating the StarNews was biased in its reporting. Since you chose to publish the letter, I doubt that you are at all.

Certainly, in my opinion as a liberal Democrat, I am often tempted to write and complain that too many conservative commentators/reporters are in the StarNews. But then the next day, I read something else that delights me.

I find the StarNews fair and balanced and just quickly pass over the conservative opinions Im not interested in. I am a faithful subscriber and will continue to be. I still love the feel of the black and white in my hands; dont even mind ink stains. Keep up the good work, StarNews. Kudos to the editors and staff.

M.Y. Dawson, Wilmington

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LETTERS, Jan. 23: Party is over for Democrat - StarNewsOnline.com

How Will Congress Cope With Trump? – The Atlantic

What can the American people expect from the 115th Congress? Sounds like a trick question, rightor the start of a bad political joke? I mean, what have the American people come to expect from every Congress: dysfunction, partisanship, hypocrisy, opportunism, chaos Down, down, down the list spirals.

Donald Trump's Eternal Campaign

For all his Whos-your-daddy swagger and drain-the-swamp chatter, Donald Trump is unlikely to make much of a dent in this dynamic. (Some cultures are simply beyond help.) But that doesnt mean Capitol Hill isnt braced for upheaval. Every election, particularly one involving a presidential transition, reshuffles legislative priorities and power dynamics. Toss in an erratic, ideologically fuzzy commander-in-chief who stumped hard against both congressional teams, and things could go topsy-turvy pretty quickly.

Democrat or Republican, uncertainty is the name of the game for lawmakers. Yes, the GOP majority has legislative plans that it aims to pursue at top speed. Battle lines are being drawn over issues ranging from tax reform to infrastructure spending to the state of the Supreme Court. The Obamacare cage match is already raging. But where Trump will come down on, and the degree to which he will meddle in, these and other fights remains a sizable X factor. (Even before taking office he was throwing shade at pieces of the GOP tax package, as well as any talk of axing Obamacare before a replacement was ready for prime time.)

Indeed, pretty much everything about Trumps handling of his new gig has lawmakers speculating, in part because he is the first president with no record of public service. Its a totally unique situation in American history, said senior House Republican Tom Cole. With Obama, you at least had a clue, said Cole. But Trump? We dont really know how hes going to react.

A House Democratic aide (who, like most people I spoke with, wished to remain nameless on the topic of Congresss navigating the Trump era) put it less charitably: Its uncharted territory with a madman at the helm.

Amidst the ambiguity, however, there are Big-Picture adjustments that Hill folks acknowledge need to be madeby both teamssome of which go to the heart of how Congress has functioned (or not) in recent years.

For triumphant Republicans, the central challenge extends beyond the strategic into the existential: They must learn to function stripped of their unifying identity as anti-Obama warriors. Democrats, meanwhile, will be attempting a precarious balancing act of disagreeing, strongly and often, yet without being so disagreeable that they brass off the white-working-class Trump voters they are so desperate to win back.

This is a tougher transformation than you might think. For the past eight years, whether in the majority or minority, the House or the Senate, GOP lawmakers have rallied their conference, and their voters, around a single, straightforward mission: to make life as difficult as possible for the 44th president.

This was especially true in the House, where the bulk of Republicans were expressly elected to fight Obama. Less than a third of the conference has served under any other president. For the rest, a life of stalwart opposition is all they have ever known. And as frustrating as it may have been at times, the goal of stopping Obama at all costs stood clear and constantcomfortable even.

That all ended Friday.

Back in 2009, then-House minority leader John Boehner shared with me (with excruciating prescience) how much easier it is to be in the minority than to run things. One of the great shocks of 1994 was--we had won the majority, and no one in our caucus had ever been in the majority--no one realized how much more work it is. Stopping the other team from scoring is relatively simple, he said. But when youre in charge? You hand the football off to a fullback, and hes gotta run with it.

With Trump in the White House, Republicans face a similarly seismic shift. Whatever does (or does not) come out of Washington going forward, the GOP owns it. (As Cole has been joking of late, You cant blame it on somebody else now.)

Most practically, Republican lawmakers must pivot from blocking someone elses agenda to crafting legislation that can garner at least a smidge of bipartisan support. (The GOPs Senate majority, you will recall, shrank this election, and Democrats are not in a conciliatory mood.) They can no longer just hate on government. Theyve got to figure out how to make it better.

Along the way, GOP lawmakers will be working to manage expectations and reactions from all sides. Among conservative voters and interest groups, excitementand impatienceare running high. (On K Street, defense contractors and Wall Street types are among those eyeing the Trump era with great expectations.) Disappointments are bound to occur. Its the nature of politics, said Cole. Managing those will be thornier without the all-purpose Obama card to play.

On the flip side, members and staff are discussing how to mollify constituents who may not like some of what Congress does accomplish. (Already, some lawmakers have encountered pushback from folks at home upset over the prospect of losing their Obamacare.)

Republicans also will need a vastly subtler approach to disagreeing with their new president. They cannot simply vilify Trump as they did Obama without risking his voters turning on them. Trickier still, Trump does not take even gentle criticism well. With apologies to Michelle Obama: When they go low, he does not go high.

This will be a brave new world in particular for the House Freedom Caucus, whose entire two-year existence has revolved around attacking Republicans deemed insufficiently adversarial toward Obama. Trump poses a more fraught target and denies Freedom Caucusers some of their flashier tactics. Lots of tools they used to use arent going to be very helpful, said Cole. For instance: Shutting down the government with a Republican administration is pretty much off the table.

Well aware of this, Freedom Caucusers have been hard at work fashioning a new identity and purpose: less bomb throwing and ideological purity policing; more policy promotion.

Through all the ups, downs, and reinventions, Republicans will need to police themselves against overreach. Fat chance, predicts a Senate GOP staffer. With all that testosterone flowing, there are going to be some bad decisions made. Exhibit A: House Republicans ill-fated move to neuter the Office of Congressional Ethics, blithely attempted on the first day of the new Congress. The Senate staffer fears a similar PR disaster looming with earmarks, which the House was raring to vote on in November. The House GOP is itching to bring back earmarks. Ryan will have to grease some wheels somehow, the staffer observed. The whole reason Ryan had to stop the vote is because he did not have the votes to stop it!

So what will Democrats be up to while Republicans are test-driving a new raison detre? Working on their role as a strongbut not nihilistically obstructionist!bulwark against the GOP juggernaut.

Oh, sure, some Democrats, like former Senate leadership aide Jim Manley, would like to see the team stick it to Republicans for their Obama-era policy of total gridlock. (Republican leader Mitch McConnells nine months of stonewalling Obamas Supreme Court nominee is an especially sore spot.) The only thing to do is steal a play from McConnells playbook and try to burn the whole place down, grumped Manley.

But for now at least, this is not the plan. That makes it too easy to pin us as obstructionist, a senior Senate Democratic aide told me. And besides, a former House leadership staffer said of his party, its not in our Democratic DNA. (The blue team, he said, is too invested in the notion that government should work to play that level of hardball.)

Instead, Democrats are prepping a divide-and-conquer strategy: foot-drag and (yes) gridlock on policies favored by congressional Republicans (like killing Obamacare and unraveling Wall Street reforms) but extend a hand to Trump on campaign promises he made that mesh with their values. (Think: infrastructure investment and trade.)

We are presenting a choice to the president, said the senior Senate aide. If he pursues issues that align with Democratic priorities, he will find Democrats eager to work with him. This will, however, require Trump to buck the Republicans in Congress, stressed the aide. Democrats selective cooperation is not aimed at finding middle ground with GOP members, the aide clarified, but about Trumps upending decades of Republican orthodoxy and going around congressional Republicans on particular issues. The goal: deny the majority legislative wins while positioning Democrats as the party that can work with Trump to get stuff done.

Not that Democrats really expect Trump to follow through on his progressive promises. They tend to see those as just another piece of the massive con job he perpetrated on the electorate, and exposing the con is central to rallying public sentiment against the president, they say. We have to confront him on substantive issues in surgical ways: Show reporters and constituents exactly how hes not living up to his impossible promises, said the House Democratic aide.

Operationally, this will mean getting better at the granular stuff, like coordinating news releases, said the House aide. Have every House Dem send something to their local press list and post on social media at the same time. You may have noticed, House Democrats arent very good at this currently. And all seem to agree that it does not pay to go tweet-to-tweet with Trump. That way lies madness.

There will, of course, be issues on which individual Democratic members need to break ranks in order to keep constituents back home happy. This is as it ever was. Thus, especially on environmental and energy issues, look for Senate Democratic chief Chuck Schumer to allow his troops (especially those up for reelection in 2018 in states won by Trump) occasional voting flexibility--so long as the overall count denies Republicans a filibuster-proof supermajority.

(At some point, look for restive House Republicans, and perhaps even Trump, to pressure McConnell to go nuclear and do away with the filibuster. But McConnell is an institutionalist, and Senators on both sides of the aisle tend to be wary of tinkering with the chambers prerogatives. Certainly, many Democrats now regret the 2013 move by then-Majority Leader Harry Reid to end the filibustering of presidential appointees below the Supreme Court level.)

Then there is the oh-so-delicate crusade upon which both parties will be embarking: wooing--or at least not alienating--the white working-class voters who put Trump in office. This demographic has issues with both congressional teams, and both acknowledge that the cohort must be handled with care.

Democrats say they are upping their game on outreach and messaging. Thus, their willingness to work with Trump on more populist issues favored by this block. The prevailing narrative about the partys need to choose between the Obama coalition and the white working class presents a false choice, said the senior Senate aide. If we have a sharp, bold economic message backed up by policies that dont just nibble around the edges, the aide insisted, we can keep our base motivated and activated and still reach and empower those voters that we lost.

For their part, Republicans will be working to embrace their new voters without allowing them to fundamentally alter the party. The white working class tends to be not only less conservative on social issues than the GOPs evangelical base but also significantly less hostile to Big Government.

These voters are more accepting of federal government spending and power, said the Senate Republican aide. How will the GOP accommodate these new members of their governing coalition? Will the theater of Trump be enough, or will policy concessions need to be made to make them show up in November 2018 as well? Keeping Trumpkins in the fold without diluting core conservative values will be a juggling act for the entire conference.

So while Congress may not become significantly more functionalor less maddening--in the coming session, it will at least get shaken up a bit as exotic new challenges are layered atop deeply entrenched ones. In the Trump era, the rule of thumb on Capitol Hill is the same as everywhere else: expect the unexpected.

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How Will Congress Cope With Trump? - The Atlantic