PENNSYLVANIA GOP: DID YOU SEE THE HEADLINES?

Did you see the

headlines

?!!  Republicans swept three special elections for the Pennsylvania House!

The March 17 Special Elections weren’t victories won by the luck of the Irish.  They were won by

Gloucestercitynews.net files

great candidates with strong messages and great turnout. We had a lot working against us: Democrats out spending us,

a last minute lawsuit to delay the election

, and the COVID-19 virus.

Politics PA

wrote:

“Although each district was previously represented by a Republican prior to the vacancy, not all of the races were viewed as clear Republican holds.”

The Pennsylvania Capital-Star

observed:

“The wins came across the commonwealth, from suburban Philadelphia to old milltowns south of Pittsburgh to a rural district in western Pennsylvania, and left the GOP confident for the rest of 2020 — including up to November’s critical presidential election…Two looked in play for Democrats, but the party did not draw out enough former Blue Dogs in southwestern Pennsylvania or Trump-skeptical suburbanites outside Philadelphia to flip a district.”

The Bucks County Courier-Times

noted an important fact as well:

“The Republican Party noted the Democrats spent more than $900,000 but lost the three races in the special election.”

PA Post

added:

“Tuesday’s turnout met or slightly exceeded election directors’ expectations of between 10 and 15 percent (turnout is typically quite low for special elections).

Turnout in the 8th District was in that range in its Butler County section (11 percent) and higher in the Mercer County part (17 percent). In Westmoreland County, the 58th saw a 20 percent turnout, up from 17 percent for its last special four years ago for the adjacent state House district.

Turnout was 20 percent in 18th District, which lies entirely in Bensalem Township (Bucks County), versus 12 percent at the county’s last special in 2009, according to elections director Thomas Freitag.”

Even RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel celebrated our victories:

Our message is reaching across party lines and pulling in unlikely voters, but we’re not sitting back! The April 28th Primary Election will be here quick, and we want to encourage you, your friends and your neighbors to register Republican! Click

here

to learn more on how you can register online, and

here

to apply for a new Mail-in ballot.

Working together we’ll re-elect President Trump, win the statewide row offices, turn Congress Red, and expand our state legislative majorities.

Onward to Victory!

Chairman Lawrence Tabas

Republican Party of Pennsylvania

Anti-Hunger Advocates Call for U.S. Senate to Immediately Pass House COVID-19 Relief Bill

“Massive Increase in Pre-Existing Hunger Crisis Demands Massive, Highly-Coordinated Response by the Federal, State, and the City Governments, and Corporations, Nonprofit Groups, and Philanthropies”

Hunger-Relief Provisions of the House Bill Detailed Below

In 2018, when the economy was still strong, 37 million Americans, including 11 million U.S. children, lived in food insecure households, unable to afford an adequate supply of food.

In the last few days, tens of millions of low-income students have lost access to school lunches, breakfasts, and after-school snacks and suppers due to school closures. Large numbers of older Americans have lost meals due to senior center shutdowns. In addition, millions of Americans who previously worked for modest wages and/or depended on tips to survive have suddenly lost jobs and/or have suffered from dramatic reductions in incomes.

The economic relief bill pushed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, which passed the House of Representatives early Saturday morning, would significantly lessen the hunger crisis, not only providing more funds to make it easier for schools, senior programs, and food charities to provide alternative meals, but, most significantly, creating a vast new, federally-funded program to give extra food purchasing dollars to all families with children in closed schools on ATM-like cards. The bill also includes paid sick leave and expanded unemployment compensation funding, which will more broadly aid struggling working families, maintaining some of their food purchasing power.

On Saturday, President Donald Trump strongly endorsed the bill. Yet Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has yet to schedule a Senate vote on the bill, reportedly because some conservative senators object to the paid sick leave provisions.

Joel Berg, CEO of Hunger Free America, a nationwide direct service and advocacy organization, released this statement in response:

“The instantaneous loss of tens of millions of school meals and tens of thousands of senior meals each day – combined with the rapid reduction in income for numerous low-income workers – has greatly worsened the country’s pre-existing hunger crisis. This is the first time in modern U.S. history that we have seen a nationwide natural disaster combined with an economic collapse, so we can’t even begin to imagine the long-term devastation for the nation, particularly for the vast number of people struggling.

It is distressing, to say the least, that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has yet to schedule a Senate vote on the bill, reportedly because some conservative senators object to the paid sick leave provisions.

The Senate should immediately pass, and the President should immediately sign, this emergency bill into law.

This massive increase in the pre-existing hunger crisis demands a massive, highly-coordinated response by federal, state, and city government agencies, as well as corporations, nonprofit groups, and philanthropies. If the House bill is passed by the Senate and becomes law, one top priority for such joint efforts should be helping eligible families up enroll in the new government food benefits available. The other key priority should be dramatically ramping-up the home delivery of meals to older Americans, children, and families who lost income; this should be done using a combination of government and nonprofit staff, National Guard members, AmeriCorps national service participants, U.S. Census workers, and community volunteers (all of whom should be given adequate safety training and equipment). The time is now for all hands on deck to jointly combat this grave threat to the city and nation. Hunger Free America stands ready to help any way we can.

Crises such as Katrina, Sandy, and the coronavirus pandemic rip the bandages off society’s most gaping wounds, forcing the nation to confront the reality of how each crisis greatly worsened the pre-existing maladies of hunger, poverty, and inequality. I hope that, after the immediate pandemic subsides, this prompts the nation to launch broader efforts to solve these long-term crises.”

DETAILS OF ANTI-HUNGER PROVISIONS OF HOUSE ECONOMIC RELIEF BILL

The bill states: “The supplemental appropriations provided by the bill are designated as emergency spending, which is exempt from discretionary spending limit.” What that means is that – unlike normal bills, which require other programs to be cut or taxes to be raised to pay for any new spending under so-called PAYGO provisions — this bill is not subject to PAYGO and therefore does not require spending reduction or tax increases to pay for it. Rather, the spending for this bill increased the federal budget deficit, as do tax cuts for which offsets are not found.

All funding through the bill is supposed to expire at the end of this federal fiscal year, which ends September 30, 2020, and is supposed to be used for emergency purposes only related to COVID-19.

Nutrition Assistance Grants for U.S. Territories

The bill provides $100 million to the Secretary of Agriculture to provide grants to the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and American Samoa for nutrition assistance. This is particularly important since Puerto Rico’s main federal food aid program, the Nutrition Assistance Program, was chronically under-funded even before Hurricane Maria. Since the hurricane, Puerto Rico has faced a serious food crisis. Puerto Rico now has such a high poverty rate that, as of November 2019, 1,298,518 (41 percent) island residents received food aid through the Nutrition Assistance Program.

Because the combined population of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa are about 110,000 people (about 1/29

th

of the population of Puerto Rico), if 95 percent of the $100 million in this new funding went to Puerto Rico, that would equal $95 million, which would equal only an extra $73 dollars between now and September for each of the participants in Puerto Rico’s Nutrition Assistance Program.

The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)

The federal Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, better known as WIC, provides nutritional supplements to pregnant women and children under five. This bill provides an additional $500 million to the program. The bill also authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to waive administrative requirements for WIC participation, including the requirement for a participant to have a physical presence in a WIC clinic to assess their nutritional risk.

The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP)

The bill provides an addition $400 million (of which up to $100 million can be used for distribution costs) to increase the availability of commodities (mostly canned and boxed foods) given out by food banks, soup kitchens, and food pantries nationwide.

Food Programs for Older Americans

The bill appropriates $160 million for home-delivered nutrition programs such as Meals on Wheels and $10 million for nutrition services for Native Americans. The bill also allots $80 million for congregate nutrition services, meaning meals delivered to older Americans at senior centers, religious institutions, schools, and other community spaces serving meals through the congregate meals program established by the federal Older Americans Act.

The bill also provides states with more flexibility on how they can enable their older residents to access such meals.

School Meals Programs

Under pre-existing federal law, all school lunches and breakfasts must be served in the school buildings, and variation in the way any meals are served by school districts must not cost the federal government any additional money. The bill allows states and school districts to temporarily use alternative methods of food distribution (such as giving children meals to take home from school distribution sites) and allows states and school districts to spend more federal funds to do so.

The bill also allows additional flexibility in the federally-funded Child And Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), which funds meals at eligible afterschool programs, child care centers, homeless shelters, day care homes, and adult day care centers.

Hunger Free America points out both the benefits and drawbacks of schools allowing students to show up at schools and/or other mass distributions to bring meals home. While it it makes sense that many schools that have closed due to the Coronavirus are allowing children to show up at school to obtain food to take home, this approach is problematic for a number of reasons:

•           If schools and workplaces are closed specifically to prevent people from congregating, then giving out food to large numbers of children congregating together could be counter-productive.

•           If their parents are still working during the day, it may be more difficult/dangerous for the kids to get meals.

•           Some schools have limited such pick-ups to families with cars; many of the lowest-income families don’t own cars or the parents in such families must use their car to get to work.

•           Many children live long distances from their schools, and travelling to food pick-up locations could expose them to more disease risks, as well as cost them additional money for travel.

•           To date, USDA has only given waiver approval to this alternative meal delivery method to schools in which 50% or more of their students are eligible for free or reduced-price school meals. Yet there are still many low-income children in schools – particularly in suburban and rural areas – that do not qualify for this waiver. If such schools are closed, the low-income students in these schools would miss out on school meals entirely.

While we have not seen data yet on the effectiveness of such alternative food distribution efforts by schools, it is highly likely that they will serve far fewer children than normal school meals programs on regular school days.

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) – Formerly Known as the Food Stamp Program

The most impactful part of the bill in terms of reducing hunger is the creation of a vast new, federally-funded program to give extra food purchasing dollars to all families with children in closed schools on ATM-like cards. Some are calling this a Pandemic EBT program.

To be precise, the bill authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to approve state agency plans to provide Pandemic EBT benefits to households with children who would receive free or reduced-price school lunches if not for the closure of their schools due to the pandemic emergency.

Under the bill, the Secretary of Agriculture may approve state plans to provide Pandemic EBT benefits to eligible households with children who may or may not already be participating in SNAP. Eligible children must be receiving free or reduced-price school meals and be enrolled at a school that is closed for no less than 5 consecutive days due to the pandemic emergency based on an outbreak of Coronavirus. Benefits provided to approved households can be no less than the value of school meals at the federal free rate over the course of five school days for each eligible child in the household.

The bill also temporary waives the requirement that would ordinarily remove abled-bodied adults without dependents (ABAWDs) who are unemployed from the SNAP program if they are unable to find work.

While the bill does not explicitly address the pre-existing USDA Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (D-SNAP), which gives food assistance to low-income households with food loss or damage caused by a natural disaster, we believe — now that the President has declared a national emergency — USDA can use this authority to make SNAP more widely available in areas particularly hard hit by the pandemic and/or job losses.

Other Economic Aid

The House bill also includes paid sick leave and expanded unemployment compensation funding, which will more broadly aid struggling working families, maintaining some of their food purchasing power.

Specifically, the bill established a federal emergency paid leave benefits program to provide payments to employees taking unpaid leave due to the coronavirus outbreak.

It expands the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) to require businesses with fewer than 500 employees to provide paid leave for all employees (employed for 30 days) for a qualifying need related to a public health emergency related to the Coronavirus declared by a federal, state, or local authority.

The employee must be compensated for this leave at a level that is at least two-thirds of an employee’s regular rate of pay. The first 14 days for which an employee takes FMLA leave under Division C may consist of unpaid leave. However, an employee may elect to substitute any accrued vacation leave, personal leave, or medical or sick leave provided by the employer in lieu of unpaid leave.

The bill outlines specific levels of reimbursement to covered employers and certain individuals in the form of payroll credits and tax credits for the leave payments required by the legislation. The bill also expands unemployment benefits and provides grants to states for processing and paying claims.

Cancelling County Committee Elections Doesn’t Make Sense

Ambrosino: “

Democrat or Republican county committee members are the backbone of county parties.

HADDON HEIGHTS – After learning of

a report

that state election officials are considering cancelling county committee elections and extending terms for a year Camden County Republican Chairman Rich

Gloucestercitynews.net graphic files

Ambrosino said that was a bad idea that risks disenfranchising voters who also happen to be among the most active members of their local communities.

“The coronavirus has caused some very real public safety concerns and while government is doing its best to keep us all safe some ideas are better than others,” Rich Ambrosino said. “For example, conducting this year’s primary election using only mail-in ballots is sensible, delaying the primary election and extending the deadline to file nominating petitions make sense.”

“Cancelling county committee elections doesn’t make sense and risks alienating the most active members of our communities.” Ambrosino explained, “Democrat or Republican county committee members are the backbone of county parties. The folks who place their names on the primary election ballot to run for county committee are the most local of local activists, they represent our parties at the neighborhood level. These are the people who donate their time and talent to the electoral process.”

“While we all continue to work to keep people safe during this time of crisis it is vitally important we do not alienate any group of voters, especially the most active group of voters” Ambrosino said. “While I am hopeful officials delay the primary election and extend the deadline to file nominating petitions to allow candidates to safely collect additional signatures, I am equally hopeful that officials do not disenfranchise those who want to take an active role in the electoral process by cancelling elections for county committee.”

HARRISON REACTS TO CASINO CLOSURES

CALLS FOR

NEEDED AID FOR NEW JERSEY’S CASINO INDUSTRY

[March 16, 2020 – Longport, New Jersey] Today, Governor Phil Murphy announced that all casinos in New Jersey would close on Monday at 8 pm.

To address the devastating economic effects of this announcement Brigid Callahan Harrison, Democratic candidate for Congress (NJ-02) issued this afternoon a series of additional policy suggestions focused specifically to assist New Jersey’s casino and hospitality industry.

Today’s announcement adds to a series of COVID-19 policy proposals outlined last week by the Harrison campaign, which included federally-guaranteed paid sick leave for those affected by the coronavirus, extended family medical leave for caregivers; increased and expedited unemployment benefits; expanded supplemental nutrition programs including WIC and food stamps; and housing assistance packages.

The following is a statement from Brigid Callahan Harrison, Democratic candidate for Congress (NJ-02):

“Ensuring the health and safety of our families, friends, co-workers, and employees must be our primary responsibility in these unprecedented times.  In these unchartered waters, we must also recognize that this public health crisis is now becoming a long-term economic crisis for New Jersey.  The economic impact of the COVID-19 is already being felt and will be far more significant as our casinos follow the new requirements outlined today by the Governor.  As we address the immediate needs for what will hopefully be a short-term health crisis, we must plan for long-term effects that will be felt by our casino and hospitality employees.

“Our community has tens of thousands of hourly workers who are not only in need of addressing potential health risks but also require guaranteed support for their economic livelihood.

“Moving forward, our national, statewide, and community leaders must work hand in hand with casino and hospitality employers to do everything possible to adequately and consistently address the economic crisis, while understanding that for hourly and tip workers this pandemic presents not just a public health threat but also could have long-term devastating financial implications.

“I am calling for the federal government to specifically craft an aid response that will assist the residents of the second district and others whose regional economies are dependent on the travel and tourism industries and we begin this process by having the federal government ensure that emergency unemployment benefits are available immediately”

“People within our community have already seen work hours reduced, and there is fear of how they will be able to pay their mortgages, rent, and grocery bills.  As the casinos close, economic uncertainty looms. Therefore, I am also calling on Congress to pass a federally-subsidized bridge loan program, enabling both large and small businesses in the travel and tourism sectors to remain afloat.  We must do far more as hotels see single-digit occupancy rates, projected casino revenue evaporates, and demand abruptly halts for all of the connected industries, including food and beverage providers, linen suppliers, amusement parks, entertainers.  This loan program should be made available for 12 months so that businesses are cushioned against the potentially devastating economic effects of this crisis.

“I am also advocating for policy that will extend corporate tax payments and temporary tax relief for those affected by our casino closing. Different industries have varying cash reserves, and that means that we need to target customized relief to each specific sector and industry.

“Most of all, we must be diligent.  Our health and economic issues will not be addressed between now and either a primary or general election.  At the root of addressing this issue will be leadership.  We do not have the luxury of waiting to do what is right.  And there is no time for on the job training.  As a candidate for Congress, my focus will continue to develop and showcase realistic ideas, based on the people’s needs.  I am fully committed to bringing all areas of our community together to develop these ideas and ensure our voice is heard in Washington.”

David Richter: Send Me To Congress So I Can Help Trump

President Trump is Keeping America Great. He is putting Americans over the political elites.

Meanwhile, the radical left has been:

Wasting MILLIONS trying to overturn a fairly won election.

Trying to pass socialist policies like the Green New Deal and Medicare for All.

Trying to take our Second Amendment Rights.

Proposing open borders and free college for illegal immigrants.

… And so much more. These radical and socialist policies have absolutely no place in our American democracy.

The left is too afraid to face the facts – America is thriving under President Trump\’s leadership and I am proud to be a day one supporter of President Trump.

Now, they are working overtime to defeat him.

<<< SIGN THE PETITION: STAND WITH TRUMP >>>

Under President Trump\’s leadership, America is WINNING once again. But if we let the Democrats keep the majority in the House then nothing is ever going to get accomplished.

Congress is supposed to serve the people, and all they are doing right now is serving themselves and their own agenda.

They don\’t care that the President is delivering real results, they only care about advancing their own radical agenda.

<<< ADD YOUR NAME: SEND A MESSAGE TO RADICAL LEFT >>>

I proudly stand with President Trump, which is why I decided to run for Congress. Like President Trump, I am not a politician. I am a businessman and a proven job creator. That\’s what we need more of in Congress – those who are more interested in working for the American people, rather than furthering their own career.

Send me to Congress so I can help him finish this work he has started. Together, we win.

Despite Primary Victories, Women Unlikely to Make Gains in  Mississippi

Congressional Delegation

Congressional primaries were held on Tuesday in Mississippi. Full results on women candidates in yesterday\’s contests from the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University are available on our

Election Analysis page

. Complete context about women in the 2020 elections, including candidate lists, summaries, and historical

comparisons, is available via

CAWP\’s Election Watch

. Find results from previous primaries on CAWP\’s

Election Analysis page

.

Among the most notable results for women:

Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith (R), the first woman elected to Congress from Mississippi, is likely to win re-election to a full term in the U.S. Senate this year.

While 2 (2D) women won major-party nominations in U.S. House contests, they are running as challengers in districts where their incumbent opponents are strongly favored to win. If that happens, Mississippi will remain a state that has never sent a woman to the U.S. House.

For more information, see the full analysis of how women fared in yesterday\’s contests on our

Election Analysis page

. Complete context about women in the 2020 elections can be found on

CAWP\’s Election Watch

.

About CAWP

The

Center for American Women and Politics

(CAWP), a unit of the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers-New Brunswick, is nationally recognized as the leading source of scholarly research and current data about American women\’s political participation. Its mission is to promote greater knowledge and understanding about women\’s participation in politics and government and to enhance women\’s influence and leadership in public life. CAWP\’s education and outreach programs translate research findings into action, addressing women\’s under-representation in political leadership with effective, intersectional, and imaginative programs serving a variety of audiences. As the world has watched Americans considering female candidates for the nation\’s highest offices, CAWP\’s nearly five decades of analyzing and interpreting women\’s participation in American politics have provided the foundation and context for the discussion.

Biden Receives Support of South Jersey Democrats

Joining the South Jersey Democrats\’ united message,

Congressman Donald Norcross

said, \”America needs a president with the integrity, experience and

strength to unite our diverse nation while fighting for progressive Democratic priorities. Former Vice President Joe Biden exemplifies those values, and he’s always stood up for working families in New Jersey and across the country. I am proud to call Joe a friend, and I can’t wait to call him President of the United States.”

In addition,

State Senate President Steve Sweeney

stated, \”There\’s only one person in this race who can unite the party and help us win Democratic races around the country, and that\’s Joe Biden. He has the ability and the character to defeat Donald Trump in November. As a labor leader, I can say that Vice-President Biden has always stood by the working men and women of our nation and I look forward to calling him the next President of the United States of America.\”

State Legislators

Assemblyman Vince Mazzeo (LD2)

Assemblyman John Armato (LD2)

Assemblyman John J. Burzichelli (LD3)

Assemblyman Adam Taliaferro (LD3)

State Senator Fred Madden (LD4)

Assemblyman Paul Moriarty (LD4)

Assemblywoman Gabriela Mosquera (LD4)

State Senator Nilsa Cruz Perez (LD5)

Assemblyman Bill Moen (LD5)

Assemblyman William Spearman (LD5)

State Senator James Beach (LD6)

Assemblywoman Pamela Lampitt (LD6)

Assemblyman Louis Greenwald (LD6)

State Senator Troy Singleton (LD7)

Assemblywoman Carol Murphy (LD7)

Assemblyman Herb Conaway (LD7)

State Senator Dawn Addiego (LD8)

Atlantic County

Atlantic County Chair Michael Suleiman

Atlantic County Freeholder Ernest Coursey

Galloway Mayor Jim Gorman

Burlington County

Burlington County Democratic Committee Chair Joseph Andl

Burlington County Democratic Committee Vice Chair Martin Nock

Burlington County Democratic Committee Treasurer Brent Lee

Burlington County Democratic Committee Corresponding Secretary Andrea Katz

Burlington County Freeholder Director Felicia Hopson

Burlington County Freeholder Balvir Singh

Burlington County Freeholder Daniel O\’Connor

Burlington County Freeholder Linda Hynes

Burlington County Sheriff  Anthony Basantis

Burlington County Clerk Joanne Shwartz

Camden County

Camden County Freeholder Director Louis Cappelli Jr

Camden County Deputy Freeholder Director Ed McDonnell

Camden County Freeholder  Jeff Nash

Camden County Freeholder Carmen Rodriguez

Camden County Freeholder Jon Young

Camden County Freeholder Melinda Kane

Camden County Freeholder Barbara Holcomb

Camden County Sheriff Whip Wilson

Camden County Clerk Joe Ripa

Camden City Mayor Frank Moran

Cherry Hill Mayor Susan Shin Angulo

Voorhees Mayor Michael Mignogna

Gloucester Township Mayor David Mayer

Winslow Mayor Barry Wright

State Committeeman Steve Ayscue

State Committeeman Ian Mosley

State Committeewoman Barbara Pine

State Committeewoman Dana Redd

State Committeewoman Meryl Greene

State Committeeman Harry Platt

Cape May County

Cape May County Regular Democratic Chairman Brendan Sciarra

Cape May County Regular Democratic Vice Chair Kathleen Gorman

Sergeant at Arms Norman Matz

Recording Secretary Kenneth Merson

Corresponding Secretary Barbara Wilson

Treasurer for Cape May County Regular Democrats Edward Michael Kaczmarski

Wildwood Mayor Pete Byron

Former Mayor of Middle Township Michael Clark

Wildwood Crest Commissioner Joyce Gould

State Committee Elizabeth Casey

Former Mayor of Middle Township Nate Doherty

Former Mayor of Middle Township Susan Delanzo

Former Mayor/Deputy mayor/Committeeman of Middle Township Chuck Leusner

Former Committeeman of Middle Township Steve Barry

West Cape May Mayor Carol Sabo

West Cape May Deputy Mayor Peter Burke

Former Ocean City President Frank McCall

Former Commissioner Jim Iannone

Sea Isle Council President John Feeley

Former Deputy Mayor of Middle Township Jeffrey DeVico

Cape May County Democratic Whip William Causey

Cumberland County

Cumberland County Chair Steve Errickson

Cumberland Sheriff Albert Austino

Cumberland Clerk Celeste Riley

Cumberland County Freeholder Director Joe Derella

Cumberland County Freeholder Jim Quinn

Millville Mayor Mike Santiago

Vineland Mayor Albert Kelly

Gloucester County

Gloucester County Freeholder Robert Damminger

Gloucester County Freeholder Deputy Director  Frank DiMarco

Gloucester County Freeholder Heather Simmons

Gloucester County Freeholder Lyman Barnes

Gloucester County Freeholder Jim Jefferson

Gloucester County Freeholder James Lavender

Gloucester County Sheriff  Carmel Morina

Gloucester County Clerk James Hogan

Clayton Mayor & Municipal Chair Tom Bianco

Deptford Township Mayor Paul Medany

Deptford Township Municipal Chair John Vinci

Franklin Township Municipal Chair Mario Christina

East Greenwich Township Municipal Co-Chair John Pyne

Elk Township Municipal Chair Donna Ragonese

Glassboro Mayor John Wallace III

Glassboro Councilwoman & Municipal Chair Daniele Brida-Spence

Mantua Township Mayor Pete Scirrotto

Pitman Councilwoman & Municipal Chair Vanessa James

South Harrison Township Municipal Chair  Wilma Nagtegaal

Swedesboro Mayor & Municipal Chair Tom Fromm

Washington Township Mayor Joann Gattinelli

Washington Township Municipal Chair Frank Cianci

Washington Township Municipal Co-Chair Laurie Burns

Wenonah Council President & Municipal Chair Dan Cox

West Deptford Township Mayor Denice DiCarlo

West Deptford Township Municipal Chair Tom Sullivan

Westville Mayor Russell Welsh

Westville Councilman & Municipal Chair Chuck Murtaugh

Woodbury Mayor Jessica Floyd

Woodbury Municipal Chair Chuck Rose

Woodbury Heights Mayor William C. Packer

Woodbury Heights Municipal Chair Harry Elton

Woolwich Township Mayor Vernon Marino

Woolwich Township Committeewoman & Municipal Chair Gina Marie Santore

Gloucester County Democratic Committee Chair & State Senator Fred Madden

Gloucester County Democratic Committee Vice Chair & Greenwich Municipal Chair Vicki Antonini

Gloucester County Democratic Committee Secretary & East Greenwich Township Municipal Co-Chair Michelle Shirey

Gloucester County Democratic Committee Treasurer Ted Bamford

Gloucester County Democratic Committee Sergeant-at-Arms Charles Fentress

Gloucester County Democratic Committee Counsel John Alice

Gloucester County Democratic Committee Parliamentarian Eric Campo

Gloucester County Democratic Committee Executive Director Justin Kolman

Salem County

Salem County Chairman Steve Caltabiano

Bernie Sanders Receives Endorsement from Working Families

The Working Families Party today announced its endorsement of U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in the Democratic primary for President of the United States and pledged to marshall its membership and grassroots power to help Sanders win the primary and defeat Donald Trump. The WFP had previously backed U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) in the Democratic primary, and was among her most significant backers.

The WFP will work to show voters who backed Warren why supporting Sanders is their best choice to advance the big structural change that Warren fought for. The WFP is planning an organizing call tonight at  8 p.m. ET for Warren supporters to speak to each other about their experiences on the campaign and next steps for progressives in 2020. Joining the call will be elected officials who had endorsed Warren but will now back Sanders for the nomination. WFP also announced plans to organize community meetings around the country to reach out to voters who were inspired by Warren’s run.

The WFP will mobilize members and supporters to vote for Bernie in upcoming primary states, including key contests tomorrow, as well as in primaries to come in states with strong WFP chapters, like Wisconsin, New York, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut.

“Bernie Sanders will fight for a Green New Deal, universal health care and a living wage for every worker. Organized capital won’t rest and neither will we,” said Maurice Mitchell, Working Families Party National Director. “We said from the very beginning that there were two progressive champions in this race, and that our North Star was to elect one of them as president. Now, the Working Families Party will marshall its grassroots supporters and staff to help Senator Sanders win the nomination and defeat Donald Trump.”

The WFP conducted an endorsement process last September using a ranked-choice voting system. While Warren came in first, Sanders finished a strong second, and the vast majority of members who supported Warren listed Sanders as their second choice. With Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s exit from the field, the WFP’s choice is clear. With so much at stake in the Democratic primary and the general election in November, WFP refuses to remain on the sidelines.

During Sanders’ Live Q&A with WFP in South Carolina last year, he vowed to break up big banks that contributed to the housing crash that saw working families lose their homes. Sanders also pledged to invest heavily in affordable housing, strengthen the power of unions and fight for a Green New Deal in his first term. In the 2016 Presidential election, the Working Families Party was one of Bernie Sanders’ earliest and most enthusiastic backers.

“We were lucky to have two strong progressives in this race who changed the conversation and shifted the limits of the possible,” said Working Families Party Director of Strategy and Partnerships Nelini Stamp. “There is no waiting for next time, because working class families and marginalized people can’t wait for next time. Climate change won’t wait, spiraling inequality won’t wait, and white supremacy won’t wait. Bernie Sanders is our best chance of making this a country that works for the many, not the few.”

The differences between Sen. Sanders and Vice President Biden are stark. The vice president’s past positions like the ‘94 crime bill, support for the Iraq war and support for the bankruptcy “reform” bill are at direct odds with the values and policies many WFP members and leaders fight for. For them, Biden represents a return to a time that disrupted families and upended lives.

“We must beat Donald Trump, but beating Donald Trump isn’t enough to win the world working families need and deserve,” said Andrea Serrano, Executive Director of OLÉ, New Mexico Working Families Party Co-Chair. “Bernie Sanders has been a life-long champion for working people, and he is our best chance to make the plans that Elizabeth Warren championed in her run a reality. But we won’t stop there. In addition to electing Senator Sanders, we are committed to fighting the misogyny we saw on display in the 2020 election, starting by electing a wave of progressive women up and down the ballot this year.”

The Working Families Party is a grassroots progressive political party that fights to make our country work for the many, not just the few. WFP recruits, trains, and elects the next generation of progressive leaders to office. The WFP has state chapters or local branches in seventeen states, and membership in every part of the country.

Last year the WFP drove a

progressive wave

in local elections across America. WFP member

Kendra Brooks

, won a citywide council seat to become Philadelphia’s first-ever third-party city councilor. WFP also helped to elect longtime tenants organizer and progressive champion Jumaane Williams as Public Advocate in

New York City

, swelled the ranks of

Chicago

city council progressive caucus, put public education champions on the school board in

Milwaukee

, helped make Stephen Mason the first Black mayor of

Cedar Hill

, Texas, helped insurgent Latinx LGBTQ activist Candi CdeBaca oust a longtime incumbent on the

Denver City Council

, and elected other council members from

Morgantown

, W.Va., to Phoenix, Ariz.

Federal Court Orders Deposition of Hillary Clinton on Emails and Benghazi

Court: ‘It is Time to Hear Directly from Secretary Clinton’

(Washington, DC) March 2, 2020–

Judicial Watch today announced that U.S. District Court Judge Royce C. Lamberth

granted

Judicial Watch’s request to depose former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about her emails and Benghazi attack documents. The court

also ordered the deposition of Clinton’s former Chief of Staff, Cheryl Mills and two other State Department officials.

Additionally, the court granted Judicial Watch’s request to subpoena Google for relevant documents and records associated with Clinton’s emails during her tenure at the State Department.

The ruling comes in Judicial Watch’s

lawsuit

that seeks records concerning “talking points or updates on the Benghazi attack” (

Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of State

(No. 1:14-cv-01242)). Judicial Watch famously uncovered in 2014 that the “talking points” that provided the basis for Susan Rice’s false statements were

created by

the Obama White House. This Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit

led directly

to the disclosure of the Clinton email system in 2015.

In December 2018, Judge Lamberth first

ordered discovery

into whether Secretary Clinton’s use of a private email server was intended to stymie FOIA; whether the State Department’s intent to settle this case in late 2014 and early 2015 amounted to bad faith; and whether the State Department has adequately searched for records responsive to Judicial Watch’s request. The court also authorized discovery into whether the Benghazi controversy motivated the cover-up of Clinton’s email. The court

ruled

that the Clinton email system was “one of the gravest modern offenses to government transparency.” The State and Justice Departments continued to defend Clinton’s and the agency’s email conduct.

Judge Lamberth today overruled Clinton’s and the State and Justice Department’s objections to limited additional discovery by first noting:

Discovery up until this point has brought to light a noteworthy amount of relevant information, but Judicial Watch requests an additional round of discovery, and understandably so. With each passing round of discovery, the Court is left with more questions than answers.

Additionally, Judge Lamberth said that he is troubled by the fact that both the State Department and Department of Justice want to close discovery in this case:

[T]here is still more to learn. Even though many important questions remain unanswered, the Justice Department inexplicably still takes the position that the court should close discovery and rule on dispositive motions. The Court is especially troubled by this. To argue that the Court now has enough information to determine whether State conducted an adequate search is preposterous, especially when considering State’s deficient representations regarding the existence of additional Clinton emails. Instead, the Court will authorize a new round of discovery …

With respect to Clinton, the court found that her prior testimony, mostly through written sworn answers, was not sufficient:

The Court has considered the numerous times in which Secretary Clinton said she could not recall or remember certain details in her prior interrogatory answers. In a deposition, it is more likely that plaintiff’s counsel could use documents and other testimony to attempt to refresh her recollection. And so, to avoid the unsatisfying and inefficient outcome of multiple rounds of fruitless interrogatories and move this almost six-year-old case closer to its conclusion, Judicial Watch will be permitted to clarify and further explore Secretary Clinton\’s answers in person and immediately after she gives them. The Court agrees with Judicial Watch – it is time to hear directly from Secretary Clinton.

“Judicial Watch uncovered the Clinton email scandal and we’re pleased that the court authorized us to depose Mrs. Clinton directly on her email conduct and how it impacted the people’s ‘right to know’ under FOIA,” stated Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton.

Pelosi & Murphy\’s Political Event Raises $1.75 Million for Congressman Norcross

By

Nikita Biryukov

,

February 29 2020

4:06 pm

A fundraiser for Rep. Donald Norcross headlined by U.S. Senator Cory Booker, Gov.

Phil Murphy

, former Gov. Jim Florio and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi brought in roughly $1.75 million, according to a campaign staff source.

The $2,800-a-head event was followed by a rally featuring the big-ticket Democrats.

“When I need help on the other side of the capitol for raising the minimum wage, for protecting retirement security, for making sure that working conditions are not so perverse that sexual harassment reigns in the workplace like we see in corporations like the McDonald’s, the champion of workers’ rights in the House that I turn to is Donald Norcross.” Booker said.

President Donald Trump’s name frequently came up during the rally, which lasted for roughly an hour.

Booker, Norcross and Murphy each attacked Trump and members of his administration, with Booker lending specific focus to Attorney General William Barr and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos.

“Nothing compares to this. When we say god bless America, what are we talking about in America? we’re talking about America, our constitution, our rights, our liberties, our republic, our separation of power,” Pelosi told the crowd of about 900. “They are dishonoring our constitution.”

Read the full article here