Media Search:



Poll shows 10% undecided in Illinois governor’s race focused on inflation, crime – Heartlander News

(The Center Square) Recent polling highlights where potential voters stand when looking ahead to the gubernatorial election and whether or not voters would support a J.B. Pritzker presidential campaign.

The poll consisted of over 1,200 registered voters in Illinois and was done by Victory Research. The polling shows Pritzker with a 10-point lead over state Sen. Darren Bailey, R-Xenia, with the incumbent Democratic governor garnering 48.9% of the vote. Bailey got 39%. The Libertarian candidate got 2%.

Rod McCulloch, the owner of Victory Research, told The Center Square that while Pritzker is in the lead currently, past elections could tell a different story.

Illinois has a well-deserved reputation of being a blue state, but it does not always act that way in off-year elections, McCulloch said. In the last two off-year elections in which a Democrat was in the White House, 2014 and 2010, the Republicans did very well.

Pritzker has seen a boost in the national spotlight due in part to his stance on abortion and his handling of the July 4th mass shooting in Highland Park.

Out of the 1,200 voters, nearly 10% are undecided. McCulloch said many Democrats had supported Pritzkers views on those issues, but the undecided voters have placed their importance on other issues.

Among those undecided voters, and there was 10.1 percent undecided, very few of them chose either abortion or guns as their many issues, McCulloch said. They were much more focused on inflation, energy prices, and crime.

The poll also highlighted a potential presidential campaign by Pritzker if he is re-elected and current President Joe Biden decides not to seek another term in 2024.

Research shows that 77% of Illinois Democrats would support a national campaign by the Illinois governor.

More than 76% of voters in heavily Democratic Chicago want the now first-term governor to run for president. In addition, 70.4% of Illinois African-American voters favor a Pritzker presidential candidacy, and 55.4% of Illinois Hispanic voters favor a potential Pritzker campaign for president.

McCulloch suggested there are things that the governor could potentially base a campaign off of.

He could campaign on all the things that the Democrats talk about nationally as far as their agenda goes, McCulloch told The Center Square. He has accomplished all those on a state level, for better or worse. So that is what he would run on.

Nearly 90% of Republican voters do not support a presidential campaign from Pritzker. Of the nearly 10% that do, McCulloch said they want him out of the governors office in any way possible.

It turns out that most republican voters are united about one thing, and that is that they want to get rid of Governor Pritzker.

Read more from the original source:
Poll shows 10% undecided in Illinois governor's race focused on inflation, crime - Heartlander News

Know the Candidates: August 2 Primary Election – KRSL

Local

Written By: David Elliott Published Date: 07-25-2022

There are three locally contested races in the August 2 Primary Election in Russell County.

Incumbent Republican Troy Waymaster will face Republican Noah Erichsen for the Kansas House of Representatives District 109 seat, which includes Russell County. There is no Democrat in the race, but Libertarian Peter Solie is running in the November General Election.

Republican Aaron Steinert will face Republican Crystal Miner for District Magistrate Judge District 20 Position 3. The position is currently held by Democrat Andrea Cross. She is running for reelection and unopposed in the Primary.

And incumbent Republican Steve Reinhardt will face Republican Dean Haselhorst for Russell County Commissioner District 1. There is no Democrat running, so the winner of the Primary will be unopposed in November's General Election.

KRSL News reached out to each of the candidates in these contested races and requested they each fill out a questionnaire with responses to basic questions about them, why they're running and their goals if elected.

Read their responses below:

Kansas House of Representatives District 109:

District Magistrate Judge District 20 Position 3:

Russell County Commissioner District 1:

Go here to see the original:
Know the Candidates: August 2 Primary Election - KRSL

Opinion: Why One OMP Resident Will Be Voting No on the PDR Renewal – Old Mission Gazette

(Editors Note: Lou Santucci says he will not be voting for the renewal of the PDR program on the August 2 ballot. Read on for his reasons why, and click here for a primer on the program what it is, how it works, how it began, and its impact on OMP farmers and residents. -jb)

The PDR program is up for renewal, and I will vote not to renew it.

The first reason is I am against any new tax on my property. The PDR program will assess every property owner at two dollars per thousand dollars of valuation. Thanks to the Michigan limit on increases in real estate values from year to year, my property valuation is currently under $200,000. I have calculated that I would pay about an additional $250 a year until 2041 if the program is adopted. Thats $5000 in additional taxes.

Everyone should take out their tax bill and calculate what additional taxes you will pay each year until 2041.Some of the yes vote material is misleading in that it talks about only a few dollars a month in additional taxes. You need to know that is over what you were paying under the old program. Its more than a few dollars.

I would hazard a guess that you will be surprised when you calculate it, especially if you bought a house in the last couple of years. That is on top of what you have paid over the years. For those who support this program, I suggest that the program should be voluntary and if you want to contribute to it, fine, do so. But I do not like the idea that other people will vote to tax me. It goes against my libertarian political nature.

Another reason I am against it is because it contains a slush fund provision, and frankly, I do not trust the Township officials with a slush fund. Will they use it for defending other lawsuits? Will they use it to vote themselves raises like they recently did? Who knows its there to play with.

Currently the PDR ordinance allows a person selling their development rights to then sell the property for agricultural uses. Will that always be the case? Who knows? Will the Township put further restrictions on what they consider agricultural uses? If not, why didnt they put a provision in there to say no further restrictions will be enacted during the life of the program?

Also, there has been talk of allowing public access to your land if you sell your development rights. Again, why wasnt a provision added to ensure that never happens?

Plenty of land has already been protected using our money to do so. Do we need more? I would like to see some modest expansion of available commercial space out here and allowance for multi-family and low- to middle-income housing. Why shouldnt we have a diversified housing base out here? Why shouldnt our fire personnel and other workers have affordable housing offerings here?

The PDR program takes away such possibilities. Must we perpetuate a community of mostly well off wealthy people? Lets open those invisible gates to others.

Vote No on the upcoming PDR renewal vote.

Also Read

Old Mission Gazette is a reader-supported newspaper, and we need your ongoing support to keep delivering OMP news, history, photos, events and more. Owners Tim and Jane Boursaw are devoted to the Old Mission Peninsula community, and every contribution, big or small, is valuable. Click HERE to support Old Mission Gazette. Thank you!

Originally posted here:
Opinion: Why One OMP Resident Will Be Voting No on the PDR Renewal - Old Mission Gazette

As war rages in Ukraine and China challenges democracy, where is liberalism and what does it stand for? – ABC News

The brave defenders of Ukraine are hailed as fighting not just for their homeland but for a way of life. It is a fight, we are told, for us.

In this telling Ukraine is ground zero in the battle for the 21st century. What US President Joe Bidenhas framed as a contest between autocracy and democracy.

It begs the question then: just what is this fight for?

Democracy? Russia is a democracy. Unpalatable as it is, the media shackled, opposition silenced or jailed. Vladimir Putin has been described as a new tsar. But elected, he is.

The US is hardly a bastion of democracy itself. The last election descended into lies and conspiracy. Rather than a peaceful handover of power, supporters of Donald Trump ransacked the Capitol building the very seat of American democracy.

Elsewhere democracy has fallen prey to political strongmen, populists and demagogues. They have taken power at the ballot box on a platform of divide and rule.

Democracy globally has been in free fall for more than a decade. Each year there are fewer and fewer free, democratic states.

Rather than a fight between democracy and autocracy, autocracy itself thrives within democracy.

What defenders of democracy are more accurately talking about is liberalism. An animating idea of democracy that claims individualism, freedom, human rights, and rule of law as chief virtues.

Nice in theory, but they have not always been delivered nor proven strong enough against assault.

Liberalism is sometimes cast as a fighting faith, but it is just as easily often derided for its timidity even complicity when confronted by tyranny.

To its critics, liberalism is a question without an answer a torrent of words with no meaning.

The German jurist and one-time NaziCarl Schmittmocked liberalism as an "endless conversation". Marxist revolutionaryLeon Trotsky called it a "debating society". Friedrich Nietzsche said it made people "cowardly".

Liberalism's fondness for tolerance has been seen as a weakness.

As the poetRobert Frostfamously wrote:"A liberal is a man too broadminded to take his own side in a quarrel."

In the 21st century, liberalism like democracy is in crisis. Just what does it stand for?

This has been liberalism's fate, to lurch from crisis to triumph to crisis again.

Liberalism was a response to the terror of the French Revolution. In the first decades of the 20th century, it was assailed by war, revolution, communism, and fascism.

Then as now, liberals asked what it meant to be a liberal. Could liberalism resist violent challenge without itself becoming violent?

Isaiah Berlin called it the "liberal predicament" to remain faithful to liberalism may be to fail liberalism.

Political scientist Joshua Cherniss picks up where Berlin left off in his new book, Liberalism in Dark Times.

He identifies the core of this predicament: liberals confront uncertainty while authoritarians harbour no doubts. To quote William Butler Yeats:

"The best lack all conviction while the worst are full of passionate intensity."

The "worst" believe history bends to their will. Historicism, as it is called, posits that humanity is set on a course and atrocities are excused in order to deliver us to this fate. It can be an apocalyptic vision.

The father of historicism, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, said: "History is a slaughter-bench" upon which we are each sacrificed.

As Cherniss says:"History came to be identified with a story of purifying moral transformation between the children of light and the children of darkness."

Liberalism has been found wanting, holding onto virtues of a humane society while,as Chernisswrites, failing to "recognise the reality of politics".

As he damningly says: "While liberals cherished dreams of civility and innocence, the masses groaned and the world burned."

Cherniss writes not to bury liberalism but to redeem it. What does history teach us?

He identifies several figures who, in dark times, spoke to a different liberalism. These philosophers and writers who identified the liberal predicament.

They saw the weakness of liberalism but also the dangers of liberals staining their own hands in blood, fighting authoritarianism by becoming authoritarians themselves.

Cherniss says these thinkers offered a "tempered liberalism"; "an awareness of liberalism's drawbacks and defects".

Tempered liberals embraced uncertainty, eschewed simple answers, yet remained firm in what they stood for.

As Cherniss says, they approached politics with an "ethos". The antidote to ruthlessness, Cherniss says, "is to be found in the cultivation of a particular ethos".

It is a way of being, informed by values yet not fixed or permanent. Cherniss says these thinkers sought "disagreement and ambivalence".

Cherniss quotes Bertrand Russell defining tempered liberalism as "not in what opinions are held, but how they are held".

Another was the French writer Albert Camus who saw the quality and style of public debate as essential to successful liberalism. Camus' liberalism is "marked by modesty", balancing "demands and extremes".

Camus famously wrote his novel, The Plague a pandemic lays waste to a town, as people are shut down as an allegory of authoritarianism.

He appropriated the myth of Sisyphus, condemned to forever roll a boulder up a hill only for it to return again to the bottom, as a way of speaking back to the certainty of historicism.

Camus saw danger in certainty. "We suffocate among people who believe they are absolutely right," he wrote.

He had flirted with Marxism, but eventually rejected its idea of "finality". Camus was ultimately expelled from the Communist Party in France.

Cherniss concedes Camus does not sit easily within ideas of liberalism, but he offered a moderation that eschewed absolutism or fanaticism.

It was not, though, a moderation that seeks to find balance or resolution it was not a liberalism for "tepid souls" but "burning hearts". "Modest but not mild", a liberalism that stands up to extremists and sets limits.

The likes of Camus were forged in the fire of revolution, war, and persecution. They sought to find light in dark times.

In the second half of the 20th century, liberalism often became the preserve of the comfortable, captured by elites.

It morphed into neoliberalism and the dominance of markets over society. After the end of the Cold War, liberalism fell prey to hubris and triumphalism.

The political scientist Francis Fukuyama, channelling Hegel's historicism, declared the "end of history" that liberal democracy was the final destination for all humanity.

Fukuyama now wrestles with the latest crisis of liberalism. In his latest book Liberalism and its Discontents,he concedes Liberalism is assailed from the political left and right.

Liberalism, he says, can appear to some as "an old and worn out ideology that fails to answer the challenges of our times".

Fukuyama though is still a believer. It is less liberalism that has failed than liberals themselves. We need more and better liberalism, not less.

Others, like the philosopher Judith Shklar, warned in the 1950s that liberalism had lost its moral centre. It was used by the powerful against the powerless.

This was Shklar's "liberalism of fear" the wilful "inflicting pain ... in order to cause anguish". Shklar adopted a scepticism that didn't reject liberalism, but wanted to open it to voices too long silenced.

As war rages in Ukraine and China's authoritarianism challenges democracy, where is liberalism?

Do the voices of the 1930s and '40s the voices of tempered liberalism speak to us?

Joshua Cherniss says it is "fashionable to cheer the 'shipwreck' of liberalism and profitable to join in looting the wreckage".

He says we are again suffocated by those "who believe they are absolutely right; we again stand by as humanity is outraged".

The West is less sure of itself, and common ground is harder to find. Authoritarians present themselves with certainty.

That is the appeal, Chermiss says, of the "political strongmen speaking the language of greatness."

There is a need, he says, for ethical resistance and resilience. We need to embrace"heroic ambitions", as Judith Shklar says, "not the courage of the armed, but that of their likely victims".

In Ukraine, we are seeing courage. Ukrainians may well have their minds just on survival, not the task of saving liberalism for us all.

But when the guns eventually fall silent, Ukrainians like the rest of us will be wondering just what is this liberalism we are fighting for?

Stan Grant is the ABC's international affairs analyst and presents China Tonight on Monday at 9:35pm on ABC TV, and Tuesday at 8pm on the ABC News Channel, anda co-presenter of Q+A on Thursday at 8.30pm.

Link:
As war rages in Ukraine and China challenges democracy, where is liberalism and what does it stand for? - ABC News

NSW Liberals’ increased strike fines a sign of weakness Solidarity Online – Solidarity

The NSW Liberals have ramped up their attacks on public sector workers with a plan to increase fines for striking.

The Perrottet government is facing a wave of strikes from nurses, teachers, rail workers and others.

The government has relied on the bosses tribunal, the Industrial Relations Commission (IRC), to rule the strikes illegal so it can then go on a media offensive.

However, so far the union leaderships have defied these orders and called members out on strike anyway. This defiance has been spurred by pressure from rank and file members, such as in the nurses union where members are fed up with conditions in hospitals.

The Liberals want to increase the fines on unions for going ahead with strikes that defy IRC orders from $10,000 for the first day and $5000 a day after that, up to $55,000 for the first day and $27,500 a day after that.

The Liberals want to scare workers into backing down and silently accepting the cuts to real wages and further erosion of conditions.

But even with the increase, these fines are paltry in comparison to the funds that large unions like the teachers and nurses have accumulated over decades. Just one dollar collected from each member of the teachers union would cover a fine from the last strike. And individual members cannot be fined under the NSW industrial laws.

In the federal industrial system, the Fair Work Act allows for much more severe fines on unions, and in extreme cases individual union members can be fined.

In 2017, the construction union was fined $2.4 million over industrial action at Barangaroo. Yet even despite this, the union continues to take unprotected action successfully to win disputes.

Perrottets fine increases should not be feared. They are a sign that his government is on the back foot. Further strikes uniting all public sector workers, in defiance of the IRCs fines, can topple his rotten government.

By Miro Sandev

See the original post:
NSW Liberals' increased strike fines a sign of weakness Solidarity Online - Solidarity