Archive for the ‘Republican’ Category

Gov. Evers: Reacts to Republican rejection of historic investment in … – WisPolitics.com

MADISON Gov. Tony Evers today released a statement after Republicans on the State Building Commission (SBC) deadlocked the Commission on a 4-4 vote on every motion that included projects in the governors capital budget recommendations, rejecting the governors proposed nearly $3.8 billion in investments in state infrastructure. Gov. Evers plan, releasedlast month, represented one of the strongest investments to date for Wisconsins facility infrastructure and included major projects in both Republican and Democratic legislative districts in 28 counties across the state. Additionally, the governors recommendations were expected to provide approximately 45,000 family-supporting jobs and an estimated $6.8 billion in economic impact.

Our capital budget addressed critical infrastructure needs across our state in a way that kept borrowing low, saved the taxpayers money in the long run, and created critical local jobs and economic development, said Gov. Evers. While Republican leaders claim to support these goals, their action today shows that they would simply rather play politics than have a meaningful discussion about how these projects would serve the needs of the folks they represent. Despite todays unfortunate outcome, we willcontinue to fight for these projects as we work to invest in and build 21st centuryinfrastructure in communities across our state.

Republicans rejected important projects such as:Continued investments in correctional facilities to further work towards closing Lincoln Hills and Copper Lake as juvenile facilitiesbycompletingthe Milwaukee Type 1 facilityand anew Type 1 facility on Department of Corrections-owned property in Oregon, the expansion of the Grow Academy in Oregon,and astudy and plan for a third Type 1 facility in the Northeastern region;Significant investment of approximately $1.8 billion for capital improvement projects through the University of Wisconsin (UW) System at campuses across the state. These projectsincludethe Engineeringreplacementbuilding at UW-Madison, theEauClaire Science/Health Science Building phase II, and the Camp Randall Sports Center replacement at UW-Madison. In addition, numerous critical maintenance and repair projects at Central Utility Plants, replacement of deteriorating facilities such as the Humanities building and Music Hall at UW-Madison, and important renovation work to address deferred maintenance at key campus buildings atUW-Oshkosh and UW-Stevens Point, and many more;Upgrades to the Wisconsin Veterans Home at King and purchasing the Wisconsin Veterans Museum location for future upgrades;Investments in state parksandforests and upgrades to Fire Response RangerStations;Investmentsin health services facilities, including utility infrastructure, support services, and patient care;Projects withfederal support for Wisconsin National Guardfacilities;Additional investmentto complete thenew Wisconsin History Museum; andAddressing the states backlog of deferred maintenance by providing the largest investment to date for all state agencies, including the UW System, for small to mid-sized capital maintenance and repair projects across the state in theAll AgencyProgram.This action is a repeat of the same obstruction by Republican SBC members during the 2019-21 Capital Budget and the 2021-23 Capital Budget by abandoning the decades-old institutional tradition of recommending project requests with bipartisan support. Todays decision by Republicans on theCommission marksthethird time in SBC records the Commission has failed to collaborate on a State Building Program. This action is contrary to the regular meetings when SBC memberscome together multiple times throughout the year toagreetoprovideauthority to construct projectsin the State Building Program.

The complete 2023-25 Capital Budget agency requests and the governors recommendations can be foundhere.The SBC is chaired by Gov.Eversand made up of the following members:Sen. RobertWirch;Sen. JoanBallweg;Sen.AndrJacque;Rep. Jill Billings;Rep. Rob Swearingen;Rep. RobertWittke; andBarb Worcester, citizen member. An online version of this release is availablehere.

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Gov. Evers: Reacts to Republican rejection of historic investment in ... - WisPolitics.com

Is the Republican Primary Already Over? – Puck

Last August, as F.B.I. agents hauled boxes of classified documents out of Mar-a-Lago, I surveyed a few Republican and MAGA operatives about how this latest legal woe might impact Donald Trumps political future. For a brief moment, the former presidents opponents entertained the notion that surely this would be the scandal that broke his hold over the Republican Party. Wasnt Trump actively endangering national security by leaving sensitive nuclear secrets in his desk?

But Trumps allies were almost giddy about the optics, correctly recognizing the F.B.I. raid as an opportunity to galvanize the base, raise more money, and temporarily paralyze the 2024 field. Nobody is worried, one G.O.P. insider told me at the time, relaying the sentiment around Mar-a-Lago. And worry they did not: Days after an underwhelming midterm performance in which Trumps highest-profile endorsees crashed and burned, and Ron DeSantis cruised to a resounding re-election victory, Trump announced that he was running for president. Eight months later, Trump has only gained strength in G.O.P. polls, with DeSantis and Nikki Haley, his two closest rivals, trailing by double digits. (Mike Pence, Glenn Youngkin, Mike Pompeo, Tim Scott, and other would-be challengers barely register.)

Over the past few days, of course, its been dj vu all over again as Trump rages on Truth Social about his looming indictment and arrest over his 2016 hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels. So far, theres been no arrestin fact, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg told the grand jury to stay home on Wednesday, and to remain on standbybut that has not stopped Trump from whipping the media into a frenzy, and urging his supporters to protest in the streets, Jan. 6 style, if he is arraigned. As the Times reports, Trump has been fixated on the optics of a potential perp walk, unlikely as that is to happen, and the ensuing spectacle. His campaign has already raised more than $1.5 million on the news.

I asked a number of Republicans close to the top candidates to predict how an indictment would affect Trumps campaign, and whether it would boost his standing in the G.O.P. presidential primary. The overwhelming consensus was succinctly captured by Alex Bruesewitz, C.E.O. of the MAGA-focused consulting firm X Strategies: Trump wins.

This assessment doesnt come only from MAGA-blinded Trump allies, either: Republicans across the spectrum, from DeSantis fans to Never Trumpers, echoed Bruesewitzs conclusion. The indictments only strengthen Trumps grip on [the party], Reed Galen, the co-founder of the anti-MAGA Lincoln Project, told me. The base is all he needs, but the electeds and Fox [viewers] are already behind him. Sure, rallying the base around the former presidents infidelity might create a liability down the road, especially with women, moderates, and independents who are fatigued or turned off by the behavior. But winning a general election is a problem for the future, as several consultants noted, and Trump has more than a year to worry about it.

Republican leaders arent outwardly hand-wringing over the electability issue either. In the short term, its good politics calling for an investigation into Bragg. And as one G.O.P. insider observed, the prospect of the partys potential standard-bearer standing trial isnt consuming much headspaceespecially when it distracts the electorate from debates over Social Security or the looming debt ceiling fight. Folks arent paying attention [to the arrest], honestly, this insider told me.

Still, Trumps escalating legal woeshe is also facing dual federal investigations from the D.O.J., plus a state investigation in Georgiaappears to have created an opening for his rivals. While nearly every potential 24 candidate has made noises about prosecutorial overreach, its notable that DeSantis chose this week to begin publicly testing various counter-punches at Trump. In a preview of his interview with Fox Nations Piers Morgan (the full video will air on Thursday), DeSantis takes shots at Trumps character and leadership style, boasts that hed run the government with no daily drama, suggests that he would have fired Dr. Fauci, and extols the Founding Fathers for putting the Republic over [their] own personal interestas opposed to people who would, for instance, pay hush money to porn stars.

In reality, theres a little less here than meets the eye, despite Morgans bombastic attempt to hype the interview in the New York Post. A person familiar with the full interview described the blistering attack as mostly restrained responses to Morgans provocations, not direct assaults on his potential rival. Its not like he kicked a door down to start attacking Trump, this person said. He answered questions asked of himand showed that the bullying tactics dont work on him. Hes his own man. The loose-but-guarded style of DeSantiss interview with Morgan is likely indicative of how he will approach Trump in a presidential face-offavoiding direct contrasts unless asked, rather than initiating fights, and brushing off Trumps insults with a little bit of eye-rolling, self-deprecating humor. (I dont know how to spell [DeSanctimonious], said DeSantis, a Yale and Harvard grad. I dont really know what it means, but I kinda like it, its long, its got a lot of vowels.)

Ignoring Trump is a strategy DeSantis has used to great effect over the past two years as a way to raise his profile without alienating the base. There is also a hope, in some corners of Florida, that it will essentially elevate DeSantis above Trumps mudslinging. And on some level, it seems to be workingfew people in the mainstream conservative media have entertained Trumps lurid, totally unsubstantiated insinuations that DeSantis groomed underage girls or is secretly gay. But when I ran this theory by a well-placed G.O.P. comms officiala DeSantis fan, mind youhe fully disagreed with the governors approach, calling it consultant stuff that sends all the wrong signals to a base craving authenticity and strength.

Its one thing to say Im not gonna get in the mud with the former president, said the comms official, who advises Republican campaigns. [But] if DeSantis thinks this is gonna get any easier, hes wrong. Its gonna get a lot harder. And he has to understand what hes up against. Hes up against a pitbull. And you cannot handle a pitbull by acting like its not there. Its just gonna bite you and maim you.

The question, as always in presidential politics, comes down to the game theory of optimizing your message to win a primary or to win a general election. In his Fox Nation interview, DeSantis presented himself as a strong challenger to Biden, not Trump. But winning over more hardcore primary voters comes first, chronologically speaking, and the possibility of Trump becoming a MAGA martyr has clearly thrown a wrench into the mixespecially if there are calls for DeSantis to use his powers as governor to interfere with an extradition request from New York. (If I were governor of Florida, I would not allow any Floridian to be hauled before a Soros-backed prosecutor in a blue city over politics, Matt Gaetz told NewsNation on Wednesday.) Legally, DeSantis cannot stop a valid extradition request, but he might be able to slow it down. And if Jan. 6 has taught us anything, its that the U.S. Criminal Code and Supreme Court precedent have never stopped the MAGA tendency for wishful constitutional thinkingor calls for retribution against people who dont fulfill their legal fantasies.

At the moment, DeSantis has exhibited a not-my-problem approach to the Trump-Bragg ordeal, telling reporters on Monday that his office was not involved in any way, while shrugging that he personally didnt know what goes into paying hush money to a porn star to secure silence over some type of alleged affair. For a general election, this might play well to a Trump-fatigued electorate, but in the eyes of the G.O.P. comms official, DeSantis has already made a critical mistake that could tank his standing with the MAGA basenot just in this election cycle, but in 2028 and beyond.

This is a former president getting politically targeted by an obviously politicized judicial system, he observed. Its just wrong on its face, and we wanted him to stand up for that principle. Instead, you saw his personal dynamic and rivalry with the former president cloud his response and that hurt him massively. His prediction: the next round of Republican presidential polling will see DeSantis drop by double digits. It was all baked into the cake with the audience, with the base voters, and he just whiffed on it. He just misread it.

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Is the Republican Primary Already Over? - Puck

The Hempstead County Republican Committee started the new year … – SWARK Today

Back row: Mark Ross, Sheila Bruce, Brandon Barrington. Front row: Drury Hoover, Mary Ann Lewis, Steve Atchley, Karen Smith, Debbie Marsh, Mary Ann Lerew, John Hicks.

Chairman: Steve Atchley

1st Vice Chairman: Mark Ross

2nd Vice Chairman: Karen Smith

Secretary: Mary Ann Lerew

Treasurer: Debbie Marsh

State Committee Man: Mark Ross

State Committee Woman: Drury Hoover

District Committee Man: John Hicks

District Committee Woman: Debbie Marsh

Election Commissioners: Debbie Marsh & Brandon Barrington

Activity Coordinators: Mary Ann Lewis, Barbara Cox, & Sarah Darling

Young Republicans: Debbie Marsh, Debbie Martin, & Daniel Thompson

Membership & PR: Sheila Bruce, Karen Smith, & Mark Ross

Several activities and fundraisers are planned, including a trip to the Capital in Little Rock in March, an information booth and membership drive at the Train Day / Trade Day Festival in May, and a Mothers Day bake sale. They are also starting a group for Young Republicans to encourage participation and education in government processes.

The HCRC has monthly meetings on the 3rd Thursday every month at the Amigo Juan banquet room that are open to the public. If you would like more information or would like to become a member, please contact Steve Atchley 870.703.8753 or Sheila Bruce 870-703-5072.

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The Hempstead County Republican Committee started the new year ... - SWARK Today

Biden issues 1st veto of his presidency, taking on new Republican Congress – PBS NewsHour

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on the economy from an auditorium on the White House campus in Washington, U.S. January 12, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

WASHINGTON (AP) President Joe Biden issued the first veto of his presidency Monday in an early sign of shifting White House relations with the new Congress since Republicans took control in January. He's seeking to kill a Republican measure that bans the government from consideringenvironmental impactsor potential lawsuits when making investment decisions for Americans' retirement plans.

It's just the latest manifestation of the new relationship, and Biden is gearing up for even bigger fights with Republicans on government spending and raising the nation's debt limit in the next few months.

The measure vetoed by Biden ended a Trump-era ban on federal managers of retirement plans considering factors such as climate change, social impacts or pending lawsuits when making investment choices. Because suits and climate change have financial repercussions, administration officials argue that the investment limits are courting possible disaster.

WATCH: Biden says he's focused 'intensely' on lowering health care and drug costs

Critics say environmental, social and governance (ESG) investments allocate money based on political agendas, such as a drive against climate change, rather than on earning the best returns for savers. Republicans in Congress who pushed the measure to overturn the Labor Department's action argue ESG is just the latest example of the world trying to get "woke."

Biden, in a video released by the White House, said he vetoed the measure because it "put at risk the retirement savings of individuals across the country."

Only two Democrats in the Senate voted for the investment limits, making it unlikely that backers of a potential veto-override effort in Congress could reach the two-thirds majority required in each chamber.

Left: U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on the economy from an auditorium on the White House campus in Washington, U.S. January 12, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

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Biden issues 1st veto of his presidency, taking on new Republican Congress - PBS NewsHour

North Carolina’s Republican Legislature Overwhelmingly Approves Medicaid Expansion – Yahoo News

The North Carolina state House of Representatives on Thursday morning overwhelmingly approved an expansion of the states Medicaid program that would make health insurance available to roughly 600,000 additional low-income residents.

The 87-to-24 vote by the Republican-majority chamber comes a week after the state Senate, also under GOP control, voted for the bill by an even wider margin. Now it heads to Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat who has championed Medicaid expansion since first running for office in 2016.

North Carolina would be the 40th state, in addition to the District of Columbia, to expand Medicaid using authority and financing available through the Affordable Care Act.

That laws architects had once hoped all states would take that step, pushing income eligibility limits to above the poverty line so that millions more nationally would qualify for the program. But a 2012 Supreme Court decision made it easier for states to refuse, and most states where Republican officials had sway over state government did just that, citing their opposition to so-called Obamacare.

In the years since, Medicaid expansion has come to more of those states, either through ballot initiatives or a change of heart by some of those Republican officials. Thats what happened in North Carolina, where key GOP leaders eventually endorsed the idea as good for the state economy and struggling rural hospitals, as well as helpful to working people without access to affordable coverage.

Coopers signature wouldnt be the final step in expansion. The proposal cannot take effect until and unless the governor and legislature agree on the next budget. Recent history includes some lengthy standoffs, pitting the two against each other.

But the large voting margins and shared commitment to expansion from both GOP legislative leaders and Cooper make it more likely they will find a way to agree on a budget, lest expansion fall apart after so much effort to pass it.

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North Carolina's Republican Legislature Overwhelmingly Approves Medicaid Expansion - Yahoo News