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ReCenter Indiana billboard urging Democrats to vote in the Republican primary – WRTV Indianapolis

INDIANAPOLIS Early voting is underway, and ReCenter Indiana is encouraging more Democrats to vote in the Republican primary. Their goal? To get more moderate candidates in office.

"We do find that most of our elected officials are really out of touch with where their common every day Hoosiers is, Adrianne Slash, President of ReCenter Indiana PAC, said.

WRTV

That's why ReCenter Indiana says they put up billboards encouraging Democrats to vote in the Republican primary. They say they believe a Democrat's vote would go further by voting in the Republican primary.

WRTV

"We actually have a six-way race for Governor and on that side of the ballot, you truly can make a difference, Slash said. Every single vote casted by a Hoosier in the Republican primary will matter."

It works the other way, too. No matter your party affiliation in Indiana, you can vote whichever way you please because Indiana has what is called a semi-open primary.

"You don't have to be registered with one party, Laura Wilson, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Indianapolis, said. When you take a party ballot, it can be seen as a registration but basically, you can go on Primary Day to the election site and say 'I would like the Democrat ballot or Republican ballot.' So, voters have some flexibility there."

WRTV spoke with one Democrat voter and one Republican voter. Neither of them say they are keen on the idea of people voting outside of their party lines.

wrtv

"If you are a Democrat and you come over and vote Republican, that's not right, Larry Bilbee, a Republican voter, said.

"It feels like dirty pool. It feels like something that is slightly underhanded, Kate Wolff, a Democratic voter, said. I do believe that parties should have the ability to make their own choices."

ReCenter Indiana says they are aiming to get more people to the polls that typically don't vote.

"We are talking to the voter that needs a reason to go, Slash said. They are probably annoyed and upset with both parties. They likely don't see themselves fitting, they could be homeless when it comes to party selection."

Primary Election Day is May 7.

If you do vote outside of your designated party, the only downfall in Indiana is you can't run for office.

You must vote for the same party in the Primary for two consecutive elections to run for office.

For more information about ReCenter Indiana, clickhere.

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ReCenter Indiana billboard urging Democrats to vote in the Republican primary - WRTV Indianapolis

5-star lists Arkansas basketball as top option | Arkansas Democrat Gazette – Arkansas Online

Will Riley, a 5-star prospect in the class of 2025, has narrowed his list to five options, according to Joe Tipton of On3.com.

Riley, 6-8, 180 pounds, of The Phelps School in Malvern, Penn., will look at Arkansas, Alabama, Arizona and Kentucky for his college options and will also consider the National Basketball League.

He previously listed Duke, Michigan, UCLA and Villanova as his top schools but didn't include them in his latest cut, Tipton said.

Tipton reports Riley, a Canada native, is planning to visit Alabama and Kentucky in the near future.

Playing for UPLAY Canada during the two Nike EYBL April sessions of last year, Riley averaged about 21.5 points per game.

On3.com rates him the No. 2 small forward and the No. 9 overall recruit in the nation in his class. He is rated a 4-star recruit by the three other recruiting services.

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5-star lists Arkansas basketball as top option | Arkansas Democrat Gazette - Arkansas Online

In low-turnout Pa. primary, location and luck may have mattered more than policy – The Morning Call

Spotlight PA is an independent, nonpartisan, and nonprofit newsroom producing investigative and public-service journalism that holds power to account and drives positive change in Pennsylvania. Sign up for our free newsletters.

HARRISBURG Location, reputation, demographics and pure luck may have mattered more than policy differences in Pennsylvanias row office primary elections this week.

Tuesday saw a major upset in the Democratic race for state treasurer and a decisive win in a crowded Democratic attorney general field by a candidate who brought statewide name recognition but not much cash to the race.

With the fields settled for Novembers marquee presidential and U.S. Senate races, turnout for the Democratic and Republican primaries was low, according to election administrators. The voters who did show up often said they felt unprepared and uninspired.

Susan Moore, a 79-year-old Democratic voter in Coatesville, told Spotlight PA she tries to vote every year but almost forgot about it this time.

She said voting rights, womens rights including abortion access, keeping Medicare and Social Security intact, and health care are her top priorities. Leaving the polls Tuesday, Moore named two local lawmakers she likes: state Rep. Dan Williams and U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, who both had uncontested primaries. But she didnt recall who she had cast a vote for in the contested attorney generals race.

Usually I try to know a little bit more, she said.

In such a low-information environment, unexpected things happen, political observers told Spotlight PA. That includes the nights biggest surprise: the upset win by Erin McClelland, a small businessperson and former project manager for the Allegheny County Department of Human Services, over party-endorsed state Rep. Ryan Bizzarro of Erie County for the Democratic nomination for treasurer.

The margin of victory 54% to 46%, according to unofficial election returns was even somewhat shocking to McClelland herself.

The stars couldnt have aligned more perfectly, she said Wednesday in an interview with Spotlight PA.

A low-key election allows another old-school factor to influence Pennsylvanias results, said Ben Forstate, an Allegheny County-based Democratic political operative: regionalism.

In low-information primaries in Pennsylvania, geography is still supreme, Forstate told Spotlight PA.

Pennsylvanians ballots include a candidates home county, and the result of this quirk can be seen throughout each major partys contested row office races. All but one candidate won their home county.

That helps explain why, in the crowded five-way Democratic primary for attorney general, the win went to the candidate who recently had the least cash on hand: former Auditor General Eugene DePasquale of Allegheny County.

He received nearly 36% of the statewide vote, according to unofficial returns, with his next-closest opponent, Delaware County District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer, capturing just over 20%.

DePasquale was the sole candidate who had previously won statewide office he did so twice and benefited from being the only contender who was not based in southeastern Pennsylvania.

The former auditor general won much of central and western Pennsylvania, Mustafa Rashed, a Philadelphia-based Democratic political operative, told Spotlight PA. Its fascinating he had all that territory to himself.

The outcome of the Democratic race for auditor general was less surprising, with party-endorsed state Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta of Philadelphia easily beating Lehigh County Controller Mark Pinsley by a margin of 64% to 36%, according to unofficial results.

The Republican row office races were less contentious. The races for treasurer and auditor general both featured uncontested GOP incumbents seeking reelection: Stacy Garrity and Tim DeFoor, respectively.

Unofficial results show that in the contested GOP primary for attorney general, party-backed candidate Dave Sunday, the York County district attorney, easily dispatched state Rep. Craig Williams 70% to 30%. Williams carried only his native Delaware County.

Having support from different parts of the party, different areas of the party, different regions is just a wonderful thing, said Sunday, whose campaign was financially supported by many GOP power players.

The establishment support appeared to matter as voters made decisions in the low-information race.

Joanne Dissinger, an 84-year-old voter in Lancaster County, said she voted for Sunday after she received a mailer advising her to vote for him and her local state representative, Bryan Cutler.

The mail led her to believe Cutler, whom she supports, endorsed Sunday. However, Cutler endorsed Williams, which surprised her.

Sarah Martin, a registered Republican and self-described libertarian conservative in Coatesville, said she felt unprepared and found it hard to find information on the candidates.

However, she voted for Sunday after taking advice from friends whose opinion mattered.

From the start, McClelland was running from behind.

Bizzarros list of endorsements, displayed prominently on his campaign website, was a whos who of state Democratic politics. He also snagged the state Democratic Partys endorsement late last year, setting the stage for him to be the front-runner in the primary.

He also raised almost five times as much money as McClelland: just shy of $500,000 to her $107,133, as of April 8 with $100,000 of that being money she lent to her campaign.

It was virtually impossible to raise money, she said Wednesday, noting that she relied on a loyal army of volunteers rather than paid staff to help her campaign.

Bizzarro had far more cash in the bank to get his message out to voters, outspending McClelland almost 15:1 since the start of the year, according to campaign finance reports.

Still, despite his day job as a member of the General Assembly, Bizzarro, like McClelland, did not have statewide name recognition. McClelland argues that ended up working in her favor.

Both her gender and her Irish last name, she said, likely also helped her with voters who knew little about the race, the office, or the candidates.

When a person who knows nothing about this race, hasnt heard much about him or me, goes in to vote and sees those two names, what is their visceral reaction going to be? McClelland said.

Part of McClellands strategy, which she believes ended up paying off, was prodding Bizzarro on social media, where his at times mercurial posts were a frequent topic of conversation within her campaign.

When you have two degrees in psychology, game theory comes into play, said McClelland, referencing the practice of analyzing conflicting interests to gain an advantage.

Bizzarro did not respond to a request for comment. In an email, campaign spokesperson Bud Jackson said the representative was leaving post-campaign analysis to the pundits. In an election night statement, Bizzarro simply congratulated all of tonights winners and thanked his supporters.

While the results were not what I expected or hoped for, I respect the voters choice, he added.

Mike Mikus, a Democratic strategist who wasnt involved in the race, said he thought gender and geography were the biggest factors in McClellands win. Since around the time former President Donald Trump became a major figure in politics, he said, Democratic voters are enthusiastic about voting for a woman.

Plus, he added, in low-information races voters tend to look for other factors, and having the county next to your name on the ballot is a big advantage. If youre from a larger county and your opponents from a smaller county, I think that probably had the most to do with what happened.

In the end, McClelland garnered more votes than Bizzarro in 53 out of 67 counties, according to unofficial results, faring particularly well in her home district of Allegheny County, as well as its neighbors. She also won in the states northeastern counties, an advantage that helped her overcome Bizzarros resounding wins in Erie County and in Philadelphia and most of its suburbs.

Chuck Pascal, who chaired McClellands campaign and considers her a friend, said she worked hard for the win.

She went everywhere, he said of her work ethic and campaign style. She traveled all over the state.

Voters tend to focus more on up-ballot contests such as those for president and Congress, rather than for state treasurer. This years race between Bizzarro and McClelland, despite the surprising outcome, was no exception.

Jennie Sweet-Cushman, a political science professor at Chatham University who studies women in politics, told Spotlight PA that all things equal, voters particularly Democrats increasingly will back a female candidate over a male candidate when they know little about either.

The same dynamic may have helped incumbent GOP state Treasurer Garritys upset win in 2020 over Democratic incumbent Joe Torsella, Sweet-Cushman added.

But McClelland also barnstormed the state her campaign expenses are mostly gas station receipts and small dollar donations to local political committees with a message focused on the office rather than national politics.

In a late digital campaign ad, McClelland highlighted cybersecurity and Republicans declaring war on public pensions and workers. She also campaigned on prioritizing domestic over foreign investments.

In a race where nobody knows what the treasurer does nobody knows how important that may or may not be she made it salient to what was going on in the world, Sweet-Cushman said, and probably in some sense, people got invested in her by doing so.

In contrast, Bizzarro focused on Garritys opposition to abortion and criticized her for attending a pro-Trump rally at the state Capitol the day before the Jan. 6 insurrection. He also attacked McClelland for mistakes in her campaign finance filings, and a handful of previous unsuccessful runs for other elected offices.

Garritys campaign picked up on the latter talking point in a statement Tuesday night, saying McClelland is a perennial candidate in search of a spot on the public payroll with proposals that are weird at best.

From the start of 2023 until April 8 of this year, DePasquale spent the second-least out of the five-person Democratic field, at almost $460,000. Only former Philadelphia chief public defender Keir Bradford-Grey spent less.

Meanwhile, the top spender state Rep. Jared Solomon of Philadelphia poured $1.4 million into the race, including $964,000 on TV ads. He still finished last, earning 13% of the vote statewide according to unofficial results.

What it tells me is that Eugene started off with a massive advantage, Democratic strategist Mikus said. Even though the other candidates were able to raise a decent amount of money and were able to get on television, they werent able to communicate at the levels needed to dramatically alter the race.

Its expensive to communicate across a state as big as Pennsylvania, he added: Youre talking a million dollars a week.

Speaking to Spotlight PA reporters, voters confirmed that familiarity was a factor.

Outside the Fox Chase Library in northeast Philadelphia, Michael Hannum, a Democrat and lawyer, said he thinks DePasquale has a proven track record of standing up against corruption and calling out people in positions of power.

He liked Solomon too, but added, This is kind of one of those weird situations where its like, I kind of want you to stay where youre at as a state representative.

As auditor general, DePasquale held frequent news conferences and made a point of undertaking special investigations, often on politically potent matters.

Over the years, these included reviews of state contractors use of Medicaid dollars, an audit of an anti-abortion group that received state money, a report on the revenue Pennsylvania could generate by legalizing recreational marijuana, and an audit that touched off a long-term effort to cut down on a backlog of untested rape kits.

Carver Murphy, DePasquales campaign manager, said he also thought this history gave voters positive associations that carried the candidates strong performance outside of Philadelphia and its suburbs.

When people are reminded that Eugenes in the race they remember they like Eugene and they want to vote for him, Murphy told Spotlight PA.

The Pennsylvania Department of State had not released turnout estimates as of Thursday, but both major parties have acknowledged it was low, an observation echoed by unofficial analysis. Insiders and experts say they expect interest will pick up with the presidency on the line in November.

Meanwhile, the candidates are already previewing their messaging for the general election.

This November is going to be, at pretty much every level, about protecting our democracy, protecting womens right to choose, Murphy told Spotlight PA, and the attorney generals office is front and center in that battle.

Republican Sunday said his focus heading into the general election is to campaign on his record in York County, including reducing gun violence and addressing the opioid crisis while providing second chances.

I think that our job is to get people excited, to get them fired up and get them out to the polls, Sunday told Spotlight PA. Our democracy functions when people go out to vote, and thats what we have to do.

Spotlight PAs Kate Huangpu contributed reporting.

BEFORE YOU GO If you learned something from this article, pay it forward and contribute to Spotlight PA at spotlightpa.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability journalism that gets results.

Original post:
In low-turnout Pa. primary, location and luck may have mattered more than policy - The Morning Call

Court revives fired Whole Foods worker’s lawsuit over Black Lives Matter masks – New York Post

A US appeals court revived a lawsuit accusing Whole Foods of illegally firing a worker who refused to remove her Black Lives Matter facemask and complained about racism at the upscale grocery chain.

In a 3-0 decision released on Wednesday, the 1st US Circuit Court of Appeals said the firing of Savannah Kinzer, an outspoken critic who worked in a Cambridge, Mass., store, arguably deviated from Whole Foods disciplinary process.

The Boston-based panel also upheld the dismissal of similar claims by two other workers, Haley Evans and Christopher Michno, finding no proof that Whole Foods discipline of them was unusual. Whole Foods is owned by Amazon.

Neither Whole Foods nor its lawyers immediately responded to requests for comment. A lawyer for the plaintiffs did not immediately respond to similar requests.

The lawsuit is one of many arising from protests that followed the May 2020 killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer.

It began as aproposed class actionover a Whole Foods dress code that barred workers from wearing Black Lives Matter attire.

Whole Foods has long maintained that its dress code, which also covered visible slogans, logos and ads, was meant to foster a welcoming, safe and inclusive shopping environment. The appeals courtdismissedthe class action claims in 2022.

Kinzer said she was fired in retaliation for protected conduct including protesting outside her store, rejecting demands to stop wearing a mask, talking to the press, and filing a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Whole Foods said Kinzers poor attendance, including attendance points for wearing a mask, justified her firing.

Circuit Judge Kermit Lipez, however, said it was unclear whether Whole Foods imposed a final, decisive attendance point against Kinzer through a normal application of its time and attendance policy, or because of her protected conduct.

It is the province of a jury to decide such a dispute, he wrote.

The appeals court returned Kinzers case to US District Judge Allison Burroughs in Boston, who dismissed all of the plaintiffs claims in January 2023.

Whole Foods employed Evans in Marlton, NJ, and Michno in Berkeley, Calif.

The case is Kinzer et al v Whole Foods Market Inc, 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Nos. 22-1064, 23-1100.

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Court revives fired Whole Foods worker's lawsuit over Black Lives Matter masks - New York Post

BLM Protests: Black Women Police Chiefs Led To More Peace – NewsOne

Source: Andrew Burton / Getty

Black Lives Matter protests in cities with Black women police chiefs experienced significantly lower levels of violence from both police and protesters than cities with police chiefs of other racial backgrounds and gender, according to our newly published paper.

After George Floyds death at the hands of Minneapolis police on May 25, 2020, the Black Lives Matter movement surged. Advocating for social justice, the movement galvanized over 11,000 protest events across thousands of cities in all 50 states. Most demonstrations were peaceful, but others were not, and city police chiefs had the job of dealing with street violence. In some communities, they engaged in dialogue with protesters; in others, they responded with force.

Our research included analyzing 11,540 protests that occurred between May 25 and Aug. 29, 2020, in 3,338 cities, spanning 1,481 counties and all 50 states. To ensure robustness and eliminate bias, we measured violence based on an independent categorization of violence, protest event descriptions, numbers of arrests and severity of the charges. We also researched the gender and racial background of the local police chief.

Our analysis, published in the Journal of Management, found that protests in cities with police departments led by Black women tended to be relatively peaceful.

Consider, for instance, Black female Chief Catrina Thompson in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, who chose dialogue over force. She conveyed solidarity with the Black Lives Matter cause and affirmed that peaceful protests could spur change without destroying the city.

By contrast, a protest in Lincoln, Nebraska, in late May 2020 saw a group of protesters break store windows and threaten police officers, which resulted in police officers in a department led by white male Chief Jeff Bliemeister firing pepper spray, tear gas and rubber bullets.

This and other research has found that through their personal and professional experience as they rise through the ranks of a traditionally male, white profession, Black women tend to develop a strong understanding of racial dynamics and use their knowledge to devise flexible strategies.

Of course, not all Black women lead in exactly the same ways, but they tend to share similar experiences that can help foster peaceful outcomes in times of social unrest.

Amid a backdrop of widespread protests and calls for social justice, public safety depends on peaceful interactions between police and demonstrators.

The study highlights the significance of having diverse leadership voices and the importance of recognizing and elevating individual identities. Despite a rise in the appointment of Black police chiefs over the past decade, Black women continue to be underrepresented in law enforcement leadership positions. This research highlights the value to society of including diverse perspectives and leadership approaches informed by the intersections of peoples identities.

Despite these insights, several questions remain unanswered. We do not yet know the specific way in which the leadership of Black women police chiefs translates into lower violence levels. We suggest the mechanism is a complex result of their communication strategies, community engagement practices and decision-making processes but we do not know which has the most influence.

Our study also raises questions about how these findings about Black women at a time of Black protest might be applied to other civic leaders handling of demonstrations from different types of social movements.

The study paves the way for more in-depth research into how intersecting identities such as gender and race affect leadership approaches and outcomes across various professions, not just law enforcement.

Ongoing research efforts our own and others are directed at better understanding how peoples identities inform their leadership styles and how they handle conflict. Future studies are also needed to explore how organizations and communities can better support Black women and promote them into leadership roles, ensuring their perspectives and skills benefit society as a whole.

The Research Brief is a short take on interesting academic work.

Kayla Stajkovic, Lecturer at the Graduate School of Management, University of California, Davis, University of California, Davis and Alex Stajkovic, Associate Professor of Management and Human Resources, University of Wisconsin-Madison

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

SEE ALSO:

2 Atlanta Cops Reinstated After Violent Arrest Of HBCU Students During Black Lives Matter Protest

Grand Jury Indicts St. Louis Couple Who Brandished Weapons At Peaceful Protesters

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BLM Protests: Black Women Police Chiefs Led To More Peace - NewsOne