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RandySF

RandySF's Journal
RandySF's Journal
June 27, 2020

Washington state pauses reopening over rise in coronavirus case

Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee (D) announced Saturday he is pausing his state’s reopening amid a rise in coronavirus cases.

Washington’s Department of Health said that eight counties that were eligible to move to Phase 4 of the reopening process will not move on with their plan as the state tries to grapple with the surge in cases.

"Phase 4 would mean a return to normal activity and we can’t do that now due to the continued rise in cases across the state," Inslee said. "We all want to get back to doing all the things we love in Washington during the summer, and fully open our economy, but we aren’t there yet. This is an evolving situation and we will continue to make decisions based on the data."

"The best thing Washingtonians can do to slow the spread of the virus and save lives is to wear facial coverings, continue to maintain physical distancing and good hygiene practices," added state Health Secretary John Wiesman. "Now that testing supplies are available, it is critical to get a test if you have any symptoms suggestive of COVID-19 or have been in close contact with someone who has COVID-19."



https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/504867-washington-state-pauses-reopening-over-rise-in-coronavirus-case?__twitter_impression=true

June 27, 2020

Mississippi state senate votes by a razor thin margin to suspend rules and take up Flag bill.

https://twitter.com/GeraldHarrisTV/status/1276985775062646784?s=20


Gerald Harris
@GeraldHarrisTV
BREAKING: Mississippi state senate votes by a razor thin margin to suspend rules and take up Flag bill. @WJTV
June 27, 2020

Trump Staff Removed Social Distancing Stickers Removed from Tulsa Arena

In the hours before his rally in Tulsa, President Trump’s campaign directed the removal of thousands of ‘Do Not Sit Here, Please!’ stickers from seats in the arena that were intended to establish social distance between rallygoers, according to video and photos obtained by the Washington Post.


https://politicalwire.com/2020/06/27/trump-staff-removed-social-distancing-stickers/

June 27, 2020

Texas Republicans move forward with plans for an indoor convention in Houston, the state's biggest c

As the coronavirus pandemic engulfs Texas’ metropolitan areas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has left the door open for massive indoor gatherings. And organizers are moving forward with some big ones, including the Texas Republican party’s upcoming convention in Houston.

Harris County, where Houston is located, has the highest number of coronavirus cases and deaths in the state, but the Texas GOP plans to press forward with plans to hold an in-person convention from July 16-18 in the city’s George R. Brown Convention Center.

"All systems are go, folks. This is happening," Kyle Whatley, the party’s executive director, said Tuesday during a tele-town hall, noting the convention program is already being printed.
On Tuesday, Abbott granted local officials the power to restrict outdoor gatherings of more than 100 people, but made no mention of indoor gatherings. The Texas GOP convention is expected to draw about 6,000 attendees, roughly half of what it would expect for such a convention in normal times, according to Whatley. The party’s website brands its annual convention as the “largest political gathering in the free world.”





https://www.texastribune.org/2020/06/27/texas-republican-party-convention-coronavirus-houston/

June 27, 2020

GA-07: Republican nominee doubles down on the crazy.

It’s been two weeks since Rich McCormick was declared the Republican standard-bearer in Georgia’s toss-up 7th Congressional District where the GOP’s brand is “in free fall,” and things have gone from bad to worse.

First, McCormick kicked off his general election campaign by doubling down on his support for the dangerous drug hydroxychloroquine.

On the same day the FDA revoked the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat coronavirus, McCormick’s campaign defended his recommendation and told the Atlanta Journal Constitution his medical advice should not be questioned.

Then, McCormick twisted himself into knots to stay silent and avoid criticizing a fellow Georgia Republican espousing racist, bigoted and conspiratorial views – even after Republicans and Democrats condemned her.

The DCCC called on McCormick to condemn Marjorie Taylor Greene on June 12. Even after Washington Republicans finally broke their silence on June 17, McCormick refused to say a negative word about Greene. Only after a new DCCC ad dubbed him “Silent Rich” did McCormick respond – and oh how he did.

In a statement, McCormick shockingly claimed “both parties” were somehow to blame for the racism of a QAnon and Klan-linked Georgia Republican, once again refusing to condemn Marjorie Taylor Greene or even say her name.

Finally, McCormick was accused of anti-Semitism by his “chief rival” from the Republican primary, who is Jewish, and responded by attacking her in the press and dredging up her 2004 divorce.

All the while, McCormick’s well-documented history of snowflake-like sensitivity on social media has been on full display.

After McCormick blocked a Republican opponent in the primary, he’s taken to Twitter to defend his record of pushing snake oil and record a selfie tantrum over his refusal to condemn fellow Georgia Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene’s racist bigotry and conspiracy theories.





https://dccc.org/mccormick-melting-ga-07/

June 27, 2020

Georgia Lawmakers Advance Bid to Ban Automatic Absentee Ballot Mailings

ATLANTA (CN) — Georgia lawmakers advanced legislation Wednesday which would ban election officials from mailing absentee ballot request forms unless a voter requests one.

The measure is part of Senate Bill 463, which also loosens restrictions on ballot signature-matching requirements and provides for the division of large precincts under certain conditions.

The bill could receive a vote in the Georgia House before the Legislature ends its current session Friday. If the measure passes and is signed by Republican Governor Brian Kemp, it could take effect before the November general election.

If passed, the bill would prevent Georgia election officials from repeating a large-scale absentee voting effort undertaken by Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger prior to the primary election.

Raffensperger mailed ballot request forms to 6.9 million registered voters ahead of the primary to encourage voting by mail in light of the coronavirus pandemic.



https://www.courthousenews.com/georgia-lawmakers-advance-bid-to-ban-automatic-absentee-ballot-mailings/

June 27, 2020

10 Races that Could Totally Change Courts, Cops and Drug Law in 2020

1. GEORGIA :‘ Abolish the Police’ will be put to voters

In response to both the controversial killing and corruption more broadly, Republican state Senator Bill Ligon introduced a bill that will put a nonbinding question to residents of Glynn County in November: “Shall the Glynn County Board of Commissioners retain the Glynn County Police Department and make necessary reforms to answer the concerns of the Glynn County grand jury or shall the Glynn County Board of Commissioners abolish the Glynn County Police Department and allow the Glynn County Sheriff's Department to be the sole local law enforcement in the county?” That bill—as well as a companion bill asking voters if they want the question’s results to be binding—just passed in the state Legislature and now needs only the governor’s signature to be put on the ballot.


2. ARIZONA: An ex-con former sheriff—and Trump ally—wants his job back

In 2016, the county—which includes the heavily Latino and liberal Phoenix, and whose more moderate suburban population is growing more Democratic—finally voted him out, replacing him with Paul Penzone, a Democrat who promised less drama and more accountability. The next year, Arpaio was convicted of criminal contempt for refusing for years to abide by a court order to stop racially profiling Latinos. But having been one of the first public officials to endorse Donald Trump in early 2016 (and a fellow “birther” conspiracy theorist), he was quickly pardoned by the president. Trump called Arpaio “a patriot” who was “protecting the public from the scourges of crime and illegal immigration.”

Now, the 88-year-old has thrown his hat in the ring for sheriff again, hoping that Phoenix voters are worried enough about immigration and crime that they want him back. It might not be such a long shot, either: His comeback campaign has already out-fundraised his opponents, though it has relied heavily on out-of-state donors. And Arpaio did have high approval ratings for much of his early career as sheriff. But Arizona is changing, with the presidential election and a U.S. Senate race in a once reliably red state appearing increasingly competitive for Democrats. Arpaio faces off against his former second-in-command, Jerry Sheridan, in the Republican primary in August, and if he wins that, he’ll compete in November against Penzone—a race that will measure just how willing voters are to turn their backs on the crime rhetoric of the past few decades.


3. KANSAS: Democrats try to break a decade-old supermajority

For eight straight years after 2010, the Kansas GOP had a trifecta of power over the state capitol—a Republican governor as well as Republican supermajorities in the Senate and House. Over that time, the prison population kept rising, and even Republicans have grown concerned with overcrowding.

Then, in 2018, minority whip of the state Senate Laura Kelly defeated Kansas’ immigration hawk secretary of state Kris Kobach to become the first Democratic governor in nearly a decade. Now, in 2020, Kansas Democrats hope they can finally break the Republican Party’s supermajority grip over both chambers of the Legislature. They only need to pick up one seat in the House and three in the Senate. And if they do, criminal justice is likely to be one of the big changes afoot: Polls show a majority of Kansas voters of both parties want changes to the criminal justice system and would especially like to see the state reduce its imprisonment rates. And the Floyd protests that have spread to even rural Kansas have brought only more attention and urgency to the issue of policing reform.

Without the power to override a veto, Republican lawmakers would have to come to the table with Democrats. The state’s GOP has not been outright opposed to criminal justice reform—former Gov. Sam Brownback supported programs to reduce recidivism, and the current Legislature approved a bill to create a bipartisan commission that will review sentencing guidelines as well as all other matters it determines “are appropriate and necessary to complete a thorough review of the criminal justice system.” But these efforts have not done enough, say Democrats—and bills to do more have failed. A bill on diversion and treatment programs recommended by the bipartisan commission in December died in committee this May. As did another bill—introduced by a Democratic state representative and sparked by the police shooting of a 17-year-old in 2018—that would have required outside investigations of officer-involved deaths and greater transparency around investigations that don’t end in officer prosecutions. A few Democratic down-ballot wins this November might finally give the party the leverage to push through some previously elusive reforms.

4. NEBRASKA, UTAH AND MAYBE MINNESOTA: Some states may amend their constitutions—to ban ‘slavery’

Amending constitutions to abolish slavery altogether is not without its critics. Many prison activists say banning unpaid labor is not enough of a reform, since most prison workers are exploited with meager wages, which the anti-slavery amendments do nothing to fix. And in Colorado, where voters amended their constitution to ban slavery in 2018, some were worried the change would also effectively ban community service as a sentence, pushing more people behind bars. But in states where all forms of slavery are banned, including Colorado now, community service is still allowed, as those programs are considered voluntary alternatives to incarceration.


5. CALIFORNIA: The Golden State rethinks bail reform

Cash bail has quickly become one of the biggest targets of justice reformers, who argue that the American pretrial detention system is unfair and deeply damaging: It fills jails with poor people who haven’t been convicted, often keeping them out of work and away from their families for months, simply because they can’t afford to front enough money to walk free before their court date, while letting potentially dangerous but wealthy suspects buy their release.

But the road to change has been halting, at best. A New York bail reform law got caught up in finger-pointing politics over its impact on crime rates and is now being rethought. In California, then-Gov. Jerry Brown signed Senate Bill 10 in August 2018, to make America’s largest state the first to completely abolish the use of cash bail—but in a sign of how quickly the criminal justice debate can move, the law immediately came under fire from both sides and has never actually been implemented.

By the time it was signed, many onetime supporters had already turned on the reform, arguing that its replacement for bail—a system in which judges and risk assessment tools determine whether an arrestee is too dangerous to be let go before trial—might actually be quite susceptible to racial bias. Meanwhile, bail bond companies, which had been fighting the proposal from the start, launched a petition to put SB10 up for a direct ballot referendum. Before the law went into effect last year, that petition met the signature threshold to qualify for this year’s ballot, and the law was put on hold until voters could weigh in. Now, Californians will have to decide for themselves whether they want cash bail kept or abolished in their state.


6. MISSISSIPPI, NEW JERSEY, SOUTH DAKOTA—AND MAYBE OTHERS: Several states look to legalize cannabis—though Covid-19 is getting in the way

Now, however, several of those state campaigns have been put on hold because it’s become harder, if not impossible, to safely gather signatures during a pandemic. A few measures are still awaiting signature verification, and only three are certain to be taken up this November: Mississippi’s measure to legalize marijuana for medical use, New Jersey’s question of whether to legalize recreational use, and South Dakota’s separate measures asking voters to decide on both medical and recreational use.


7. OREGON AND MAYBE D.C: A new campaign to decriminalize mushrooms—and possibly more

Last year, Denver and Oakland became the first jurisdictions in the United States to decriminalize natural psychedelics, including what are commonly known as “magic mushrooms,” as well as other plant-based hallucinogens like peyote and ayahuasca. Similar efforts toward decriminalization of these substances, which advocates point out are non-addictive and research suggests may even have therapeutic benefits, are underway in dozens of cities. The first statewide statute could be adopted in Oregon this November.

Last month, the proponents of IP34, a ballot initiative that would allow the “manufacture, delivery, administration of psilocybin [the chemical compound in “magic mushrooms”] at supervised, licensed facilities,” turned in more than the necessary petition signatures to get on the ballot, but those signatures are pending verification this summer by the Oregon secretary of state’s office.


8. KENTUCKY: Voters get a second bite at a victims’ rights amendment

One particular victims’ rights law, Marsy’s Law, has been so popular that voters in more than a dozen states have amended their constitutions to adopt it over the past decade, thanks in large part to the relentless campaigning and bankrolling of its namesake’s brother, an eccentric billionaire former tech CEO. Marsy’s Law has critics from the civil rights sphere, who say the provisions in the amendment, while well intentioned, threaten to increase prison populations and undermine due process. Among other things, the amendment requires victims’ families to be notified and allows their concerns to be considered during bail, sentencing and parole hearings. But it has also faced legal challenges in Pennsylvania and was overturned in Montana and Kentucky on technicalities over how state constitutions can be amended.

In November, Kentucky voters will get a second bite of the apple; Marsy’s Law is on the ballot again, after the amendment was approved by 63 percent of voters in 2018 but blocked by state courts for the ballot language being insufficiently descriptive of its substance. This year, the full text of the proposal will be on the ballot.


9. Oklahoma: Sooners might get to vote on a mass incarceration measure

This specific proposal to restrict sentence enhancements has been taken up in the Legislature before. “The policy was introduced in 2017, 2018 and 2019,” Kris Steele, executive director of Oklahomans for Criminal Justice Reform and a former state speaker of the House, told Tulsa World. “Ultimately, the policy failed to gain traction.” So now proponents are hoping to take it directly to voters with a ballot initiative.


10. CALIFORNIA: A progressive prosecutor takes on the Black incumbent in charge of law and order in L.A.

Gascón opposes the death penalty, and much of Lacey’s agenda. He started his career in the Los Angeles Police Department in 1978, rising from patrol officer to assistant chief, then moving to become police chief of Mesa, Arizona, in 2006. Three years later, he moved back to California, succeeding Kamala Harris as San Francisco’s district attorney, where he became a full-throated advocate of a more progressive approach to justice. He advocated for the end of cash bail and supported independent investigations of police officers for shootings or excessive use of force. He resigned in 2018 to take care of his elderly mother, who died last September.

The race is also a referendum on just how quickly the summer protests are challenging the status quo. Lacey entered as a strong favorite, backed by heavy police-union spending, and nearly reached the 50 percent threshold in the March primary to avoid a runoff in November entirely. But the ground has been shifting since then: Gascón was recently endorsed by the Los Angeles Times, and Lacey’s near-unanimous support among establishment Democrats has begun peeling away.



https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/06/25/criminal-justice-prison-conditions-on-the-2020-ballot-315460
June 27, 2020

PA-10: DePasquale Poll: Perry Leads 50-47

A new internal poll shows a tight race in Pennsylvania’s 10th Congressional District.

The survey commissioned by Dem hopeful Eugene DePasquale’s campaign and conducted by GBAO shows Rep. Scott Perry (R-York) by 3 points, 50% to 47%. That is within the poll’s margin of error. It interviewed 600 likely voters from May 28-31, a few days before the state’s primary, and has a ± 4% margin of error. The poll was first reported by the National Journal.
FiveThirtyEight doesn’t rate polling from GBAO, but the firm’s client page shows that they have represented a few other Democrats in Pennsylvania in the past, including DePasquale, Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, and Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Philadelphia).

As with any internal poll, the results should be taken with a grain of salt. It is almost a month old, and its release coincides with the end of the second quarter fundraising period. Releasing polling numbers is a common fundraising tactic.
The DePasquale campaign says the results are proof that his message will resonate in the district.

“Eugene has spent his career fighting for Pennsylvania families, while Congressman Scott Perry has prioritized his special interest campaign contributors in DC,” said campaign manager Rachele Fortier. “When people learn about Eugene’s story they understand why the issues South Central Pennsylvanians are facing are so personal to him – from combating opioid abuse to lowering the cost of health care.”

Perry’s campaign said DePasquale’s closer-than-expected victory over Tom Brier in the Democratic primary showed his weakness.



https://www.politicspa.com/depasquale-poll-perry-leads-50-47/94895/

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Gender: Male
Hometown: Detroit Area, MI
Home country: USA
Current location: San Francisco, CA
Member since: Wed Oct 29, 2008, 02:53 PM
Number of posts: 59,263

About RandySF

Partner, father and liberal Democrat. I am a native Michigander living in San Francisco who is a citizen of the world.
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