GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

1
Perdue traded hundreds of thousands worth of bank stocks while on Senate Banking Committee

David Perdue, one of two multimillionaire Georgia Republican senators facing insider-trading scrutiny ahead of runoff elections in January, traded hundreds of thousands of dollars in bank stock while passing pro-bank legislation on the Senate Banking Committee, financial disclosures show.
Between 2017 and 2020, while on the committee, Perdue co-sponsored 14 bills that benefited the financial industry, including through deregulation and extended liability protection. In that time he also accepted more than $1 million in political contributions from financial interests, federal filings show.

This spring Perdue, one of the most active traders in Congress, pushed back against allegations of insider trading in advance of the coronavirus, claiming that outside advisers made the calls without his input.

A bombshell New York Times report on Wednesday has made clear that was a lie: This summer, Justice Department investigators found that Perdue had instructed one of his brokers to offload more than $1 million in a company after the CEO tipped off the senator in a personal email.


This news comes as Perdue faces a Jan. 5 runoff against Democratic rival Jon Ossoff, who battered Perdue on the insider-trading allegations throughout the year. The runoff, along with Georgia Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler’s runoff election held on the same day — Loeffler faces the Rev. Raphael Warnock, a Democrat — will determine which party controls the Senate.

The latest stock news also creates a new context for assessing Perdue’s personal involvement in prior trades, such as millions of dollars in transactions while he served on the Banking Committee.

Perdue, one of the wealthiest members of Congress, built his fortune in the style of Mitt Romney — “a turnaround specialist who helps revive brands and reap rewards for investors,” as the Atlanta Journal-Constitution put it in a review of his business record.

The AJC ruled that his record was “mixed,” in part because of a buyout Perdue helped structure as the CEO of Dollar General, which landed him a $42 million windfall when he stepped down in 2008. The next year, the company had to pay that same amount to settle shareholder claims that Perdue and other execs had shortchanged them in the deal.

Perdue, who was elected to the Senate in 2014, has invested millions. A portion of it rests in a Wells Fargo brokerage account and a Georgia holding company called DBP Enterprises, where Perdue has held an ownership stake since 2011.

That DBP stake comprises 130 assets valued anywhere between $12 million and $29 million, according to 2018 Senate financial disclosures. His Wells Fargo account lists 60 assets valued at up to $1.2 million.

Disclosures only provide ranges of value, so we cannot know precisely how much money Perdue has moved in stock trades, or the extent of his profits. But the forms do show that between 2017 and 2020, while he sat on the Banking Committee, Perdue traded at a minimum hundreds of thousands of dollars, possibly millions.

According to the disclosures, Perdue held up to $910,000 in bank stocks alone from 2017 to 2019, through DBP and Wells Fargo. The shares earned him up to $204,000 in capital gains and dividends payouts.

But Perdue does not let his stocks sit idle. Between 2017 and 2018, disclosures show, the senator not only sold as much as $135,000 in bank stock, but scooped up as much as $600,000. Over the next two years he cranked up the volume, unloading as much as $1,110,000 in banking shares and buying as much as $480,000.

In April of this year, Perdue was swept up in the same insider trading scandal that has also damaged Loeffler, when it was revealed that earlier in the year he had bought and sold shares in several companies that were eventually directly affected by the coronavirus pandemic. The scandal, which included Senate veterans Richard Burr, R-N.C., and Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., shook public confidence, raising concerns that elected officials had abused their access to privileged information in order to capitalize personally on the spread of the disease.

The next month, under scrutiny from the public and government investigators, and with the election on the horizon, Perdue pledged to stop trading individual stocks.

In September he announced that the Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Senate Ethics Committee had all cleared him of wrongdoing. He marked the occasion with a new campaign ad, which accused Ossoff of lying to voters about Perdue’s involvement.

The Times gave the lie to that defense on Wednesday, indicating that Perdue had acted on a personal tip. The report recalls a moment from an October 2017 hearing, where senators on the Banking Committee grilled Wells Fargo CEO Tim Sloan about the account fraud scandal that had wracked the bank the year before.

The scandal earned the bank a $150 million fine from the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau, an agency Perdue had sought to defang earlier that same year with a bill that the American Bankers Association called “an effective check and balance on the Bureau’s authority.”

Perdue, whose Wells Fargo account at the time held up to $1.2 million, teed Sloan up to defend his company, but Sloan, contrite in the face of multiple bareknuckled government investigations, repeatedly declined the exit ramp. Perdue then let slip a reference to a private conversation, before reluctantly admitting that the decade-long scandal — which resulted in a $3 billion federal fine — was a “serious issue.”

“I think you would agree, we in a private conversation — there is no way to sugarcoat this as a serious issue, and I appreciate your handling it the way that you are,” Perdue said.

Over the next three years, Perdue continued to throw softballs to big banks. As he was slinging stock, he cosponsored 14 bills that benefited the financial industry, the majority earning the blessing of the ABA. Five of them were lobbied on by financial institutions where Perdue held hundreds of thousands in stock, including Regions Financial, US Bancorp and JP Morgan.

For instance, in 2017, Perdue cosponsored a bill called the Systemic Risk Designation Improvement Act, which was geared to loosen Dodd-Frank regulations on mid-sized banks. The bill never made it out of committee, but Regional Financial and US Bancorp, where Perdue had stashed $300,000, both lobbied heavily on it.

Perdue went after Dodd-Frank again that year, cosponsoring the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief and Consumer Protection Act, which the New York Times reported “frees banks from a variety of regulations that were imposed after the financial crisis of 2008,” including “innovative measures” that targeted large institutions. That bill never made it out of committee, but was lobbied on by banks where Perdue held up to $465,000 of stock at the time, including Wells Fargo.

In two instances, Perdue received tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from financial institutions on the same day he introduced legislation.

On May 21, 2019, Perdue signed on as an original co-sponsor of a bill that postponed compliance with a new accounting standard that some in the financial industry believed would impede lending during an economic downturn. FEC records show that in the days before Perdue co-sponsored the bill and the two weeks immediately afterward, he received nearly $50,000 from employees at the Capital Group, a financial services company, including $5,400 from the CEO.

In October 2017, a few weeks after Sloan’s testimony, Perdue co-sponsored legislation that eased regulations on mortgage transfers that cross state lines. That bill was first introduced in August, and in the month before Perdue added his name on Oct. 25, his campaign received $24,000 from employees of the wealth management company SEI Investments, according to FEC filings.

Fourteen of those SEI employees gave $1,000 on Oct. 19, but only one employee donated the same day that Perdue committed to the bill: a maximum donation of $5,400, from CEO Alfred West.

This September, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy was hit with FEC criminal complaints for an alleged “straw donor” scheme, in which he reimbursed employees for political donations to his favored candidates.

Over the course of his career, Perdue has accepted more than $2 million in donations from the investment and securities industry, and half a million from commercial banks. But considering that so few of those bills made it past the committee, and only two became law, it is not clear who got the most out of their investment.
https://www.rawstory.com/2020/11/busted ... committee/

Perdue is definitely a good Reptilian, lines his pockets first no matter what happens, and believes in the pay to play rule. You pay and he plays.
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.-Huxley
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis Brandeis,

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

2
Georgia’s Raffensperger up to illegal Repug schemes to disenfranchise poor voters before the runoff. (In the name of preventing voter fraud which he himself just said did not exist.)
CHAPTER 183-1 GEORGIA ELECTION CODE SUBJECT 183-1-6 VOTER REGISTRATION TABLE OF CONTENTS
183-1-6-__.07 Determination of Residency
RULE 183-1-6-__-07 Determination of Residency
When reviewing an application for voter registration, the board of registrars shall determine an applicant’s residency in Georgia, using the criteria set forth in O.C.G.A. § 21-2-217. In determining an applicant’s residency, the registrar shall review all available evidence, including whether the applicant registered through the Department of Driver Services, whether the applicant included a Georgia driver’s license or state identification number on his or her application, whether that number matched with records on file at the Department of Driver Services, the applicant’s listed address, and any identifying documents submitted with the application. If the registrar determines that additional evidence is needed to determine residency, the registrar may utilize his or her statutory authority in O.C.G.A. § 21-2-228 to further evaluate the applicant’s residency status using the criteria set forth in O.C.G.A. § 21-2-217, as well as other related statutes. If the registrar cannot determine to his or her satisfaction that the applicant properly resides in Georgia, the registrar shall process the application, mark the applicant as “Challenged” in the voter registration system, and initiate a hearing as set forth in O.C.G.A. § 21-2-228.
In determining residency, the registrar shall consider the criteria set forth in O.C.G.A. § 21-2-217 to determine whether the applicant has established a permanent place of abode in this state. The registrar may also consider whether the applicant has a valid Georgia driver’s license or state identification card, whether the applicant has a motor vehicle registered in this state, whether the applicant has paid the required title ad valorem tax on such vehicle as required upon moving to Georgia, and any other relevant evidence in the discretion of the registrar. Authority: O.C.G.A. §§ 21-2-31, 21-2-217, 21-228
So no vehicle, no vote. Welcome to Georgia.
"It is better to be violent, if there is violence in our hearts, than to put on the cloak of non-violence to cover impotence. There is hope for a violent man to become non-violent. There is no such hope for the impotent." -Gandhi

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

3
Well if they don’t have a car then they can’t get to the polls to vote anyway. Don’t expect mailing ballots that causes voter fraud, if they vote for the Democrats. Will they only have one polling place in certain areas that is accessible only by car and early voting in that area will be from 10 am to 11:30 AM on the odd number days Monday through Thursday? Those certain areas will be in the heavy blue and especially in minority areas.
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.-Huxley
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis Brandeis,

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

4
I lived/worked temporarily in Atlanta during the 2008 election and was actively supporting the Kucinich campaign in the primaries along with Universal Healthcare in general. But when it came down to the actual election (because I was still an out of state voter) I decided to put my little Toyota toaster-van to work and drove several families to the polling stations near me. I was a free Uber for a day. Coming from the West Coast the level of poverty I experienced in the South was shocking. Disheartening really, being the center of the historic Civil Rights Movement. I was glad to play my small part in a historic election that year.

Much like this year it seems.

Anyway, that’s why Ratfinks dirty trick hit me so hard today. There are lots and lots of poor voters without cars in Georgia.
"It is better to be violent, if there is violence in our hearts, than to put on the cloak of non-violence to cover impotence. There is hope for a violent man to become non-violent. There is no such hope for the impotent." -Gandhi

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

6
What is needed to get a State of Georgia ID card:
What do you need to get an ID in Georgia?
Most residents will need a Secure ID, Georgia’s REAL ID-compliant option. As such, the documents needed for state ID include any one of the following forms of primary identification:

A U.S. passport or passport card (valid or expired less than 10 years)
An original or certified copy of a U.S. birth certificate or a Consular Report of Birth Abroad
A DHS Certificate of Naturalization (form N-550 or N-570)
A DHS Certificate of Citizenship (form N-560 or N-561)
SSA Numident Records or Original US Military Discharge Papers (applies only to applicants born before January 1, 1940)

DMV state ID applicants will need to prove they hold a valid Social Security Number. They can do so by providing a/an:

Social Security card.
W-2 form.
SSA-1099 form or Non-SSA 1099 form.
Paystub with their full names and SSNs.
SSN Denial or Refusal Letter.
SSA print-out bearing office stamp and an SSA employee signature, alongside the applicant’s name and SSN.
Federal or state tax return with the applicant’s name and SSN.
Medicare or Medicaid card with the applicant’s name and SSN.
Social Security Annual Statement.
Selective Service Notice with the applicant’s name and SSN.

Documents required for state ID applications to prove residency include two documents, each from different sources, showing applicants’ full names and physical addresses. Documents can include:

Utility bills.
Bank statements.
An unexpired Georgia drivers license showing current address.
Tax returns.
A recent health insurance statement.
A Social Security Annual Statement or a check issued within the last two years.
Public assistance program statements.
School transcripts.
Insurance policies.
Signed mortgage, rental or lease agreements or statements.
A Georgia voter registration card issued within the last two years.
A vehicle registration.
Unexpired Firearms or Merchant Marine Licenses.
A 1-797A or C.
Other government-issued documents.
A Georgia Department of Corrections Residency Verification Form (DS-752).
Recent, postmarked mail showing the applicant’s name and physical address.
It took almost a month to get a certified copy of my Birth Certificate.
To be vintage it must be older than me!
The next gun I buy will be the next to last gun I ever buy. PROMISE!
jim

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

7
You think that's tough?
You should have seen the documents we had to get to adopt internationally.
Certified copies (multiple) of our birth certs.
Same of our marriage license.
Fingerprinted multiple times.
Not only did reams of documents have to be notarized, I had to get the notarization certified.
Multiple home inspections
Social worker visits
Letters of recommendations
Proof of employment, income, and financial resources
Police reports
Medical reports
Various filings for an IR3 visa--which requires at least one visit without bring the child back to the US.
Documents translated into and from Spanish by an authorized legal translator.
Some documents even had to wait to be bound into a special catalog in the other nation...which waited on the one book binder to do it!

Two years of paperwork, and we had to make sure EVERY SINGLE i was dotted and t was crossed or it would be delayed even further.

Even acting as the Administrator of my mom's estate took less paperwork!
"Even if the bee could explain to the fly why pollen is better than shit, the fly could never understand."

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

8
YankeeTarheel wrote: Sun Nov 29, 2020 9:24 pm You think that's tough?
You should have seen the documents we had to get to adopt internationally.
Certified copies (multiple) of our birth certs.
Same of our marriage license.
Fingerprinted multiple times.
Not only did reams of documents have to be notarized, I had to get the notarization certified.
Multiple home inspections
Social worker visits
Letters of recommendations
Proof of employment, income, and financial resources
Police reports
Medical reports
Various filings for an IR3 visa--which requires at least one visit without bring the child back to the US.
Documents translated into and from Spanish by an authorized legal translator.
Some documents even had to wait to be bound into a special catalog in the other nation...which waited on the one book binder to do it!

Two years of paperwork, and we had to make sure EVERY SINGLE i was dotted and t was crossed or it would be delayed even further.

Even acting as the Administrator of my mom's estate took less paperwork!
Hopefully you were finally allowed, as a citizen of the State of Georgia, to vote in the State of Georgia after going through all of that. /s

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

11
rockhound wrote: Sun Nov 29, 2020 10:42 pm
YankeeTarheel wrote: Sun Nov 29, 2020 9:24 pm You think that's tough?
You should have seen the documents we had to get to adopt internationally.
Certified copies (multiple) of our birth certs.
Same of our marriage license.
Fingerprinted multiple times.
Not only did reams of documents have to be notarized, I had to get the notarization certified.
Multiple home inspections
Social worker visits
Letters of recommendations
Proof of employment, income, and financial resources
Police reports
Medical reports
Various filings for an IR3 visa--which requires at least one visit without bring the child back to the US.
Documents translated into and from Spanish by an authorized legal translator.
Some documents even had to wait to be bound into a special catalog in the other nation...which waited on the one book binder to do it!

Two years of paperwork, and we had to make sure EVERY SINGLE i was dotted and t was crossed or it would be delayed even further.

Even acting as the Administrator of my mom's estate took less paperwork!
Hopefully you were finally allowed, as a citizen of the State of Georgia, to vote in the State of Georgia after going through all of that. /s
I cannot vote in Georgia--as we live in NJ. But my wife's brother and mother can, as he's been at Ga Tech for years, running a research institute, and we moved her down there 5 or 6 years ago for the milder climate and to be closer to him and his kids, who, at 16, are still too young to vote.
"Even if the bee could explain to the fly why pollen is better than shit, the fly could never understand."

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

13
sikacz wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2020 8:56 am Unfortunate the two dems are bought by bloomie.
Still better than the alternative. I can't vote in GA., but if I could I vote for whomever the Dem was over the rep regardless of whom has their support financially or otherwise. We need the senate - at least long enough that McConnell is no longer a threat - he's slier than a coyote - and I ain't talkin' about Wile !
"Being Republican is more than a difference of opinion - it's a character flaw." "COVID can fix STUPID!"
The greatest, most aggrieved mistake EVER made by USA was electing DJT as POTUS - TWICE!!!!!

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

14
There used to something in the South called a "yeller dawg Dem'crat" namely they'd vote for a "yeller dawg" if it ran as a Democrat (yellow dogs seen as the most contemptible and least desirable dogs). These days, all across the nation an awful lot of us, facing the frankly fascist totalitarian ReThugs, have become Yellow Dog Democrats.

BTW, Trump HATES dogs, especially, but all pets! The only animals I've ever seen him pet are the turkeys he's "pardoned". NEVER trust any man who hates dogs!
I don't know if there was a President before Trump that had NO pets whatsoever.
"Even if the bee could explain to the fly why pollen is better than shit, the fly could never understand."

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

15
Wino wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2020 9:20 am
sikacz wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2020 8:56 am Unfortunate the two dems are bought by bloomie.
Still better than the alternative. I can't vote in GA., but if I could I vote for whomever the Dem was over the rep regardless of whom has their support financially or otherwise. We need the senate - at least long enough that McConnell is no longer a threat - he's slier than a coyote - and I ain't talkin' about Wile !
I’m sure I could or some can dig up more than bloomie on these two dem candidates. Don’t run on BS and the dems could have had the senate without any issues. It’s not going to be my vote, but if it was I’d go vote null on all.
Last edited by sikacz on Mon Nov 30, 2020 9:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
Image
Image

"Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated!" Loquacious of many. Texas Chapter Chief Cat Herder.

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

16
YankeeTarheel wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2020 9:27 am There used to something in the South called a "yeller dawg Dem'crat" namely they'd vote for a "yeller dawg" if it ran as a Democrat (yellow dogs seen as the most contemptible and least desirable dogs). These days, all across the nation an awful lot of us, facing the frankly fascist totalitarian ReThugs, have become Yellow Dog Democrats.

BTW, Trump HATES dogs, especially, but all pets! The only animals I've ever seen him pet are the turkeys he's "pardoned". NEVER trust any man who hates dogs!
I don't know if there was a President before Trump that had NO pets whatsoever.
Who says I trust any of these assholes. I can give my vote to someone, it doesn’t mean I trust them.
Image
Image

"Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated!" Loquacious of many. Texas Chapter Chief Cat Herder.

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

17
YT - Don't forget the Eagle he petted - that was one funny video. Shame the eagle didn't get lose in the Oval Office. That would have been a sight to behold. I know what it's like trying to get a sparrow out of the house - would be an awesome task with an eagle !! LOL
"Being Republican is more than a difference of opinion - it's a character flaw." "COVID can fix STUPID!"
The greatest, most aggrieved mistake EVER made by USA was electing DJT as POTUS - TWICE!!!!!

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

18
I hope Democrats can pull it off, it's a very long shot. Trump will be going down there to campaign for Perdue and Loeffler and the RNC chair is pushing Republicans to vote. But Trump goes there as not only the loser of the presidential election but he lost red/purple GA. Democrats should be yelling, "LOSER" at his rallies.
"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

19
Because he followed the law and didn't rollover and play dead for tRump.
Georgia Republicans turn on Gov. Brian Kemp: He ‘will be primaried’

Georgia Republicans were already unhappy with Gov. Brian Kemp, and his refusal to interfere in President Donald Trump’s election loss may have been the last straw.

Trump claims credit for Kemp’s election win two years ago, but he and other Republicans have withdrawn their support after the governor has declined to get involved in the president’s efforts to overturn his loss to Joe Biden in Georgia and other states, reported The Daily Beast.

“[Kemp] will be primaried,” said Kay Godwin, the chair of the Pierce County GOP. “Just hoping and praying we get the right one this time.”

Some Republicans in the state remain irked that Kemp appointed Kelly Loeffler to an open Senate seat last year instead of Rep. Doug Collins (R-GA), and the dual runoff elections Jan. 4 to decide both of the state’s Senate seats has inflamed intra-party tensions.

“You should have done something,” said former state GOP chair Rusty Paul. “That’s the mindset people have right now, that [Kemp] should have been more engaged. That’s a tough position to be in. That’s the same tough position that [Sen. David] Perdue and Loeffler find themselves in.”

“Georgia is such a competitive state right now that simply winning the primary isn’t enough anymore,” Paul added. “You’ve got to have your eyes focused on the general election. You can’t go out and primary the governor and take him down, or the secretary of state or another incumbent, and just assume … that you’re going to be successful in the general election.”

Trump supporters in Georgia believe Kemp should have called a special legislative session to make changes to absentee voting, or somehow deny certification of Biden’s win, and there’s a movement afoot to remove him from office before 2022.

“We are committed to his removal,” says one anti-Kemp website that does not reveal its funder. “Recall? Impeachment? Primarying him?”

Many Georgia Republicans buy into the president’s baseless fraud allegations, and they’re waiting for Kemp to validate them.

“I will have to wait and see how all this plays out,” said Scott Jay, chair of the Newton County GOP. “I’ll vote based upon actions, upon results. He can show me solid results in a conservative manner moving forward, he may regain my vote.”
https://www.rawstory.com/2020/11/georgi ... primaried/
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.-Huxley
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis Brandeis,

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

20
The list of documents required for REAL ID is set by DHS going back to the Obama and W administrations. CA misinterpreted the second form of ID for residence address, so I had to go back to DMV. Due to COVID, the deadline for getting REAL ID to fly and gain access to some federal facilities, was extended to October 1, 2021. REAL ID does not replace a passport for international flights.
"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

21
TrueTexan wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2020 11:57 am Because he followed the law and didn't rollover and play dead for tRump.
Georgia Republicans turn on Gov. Brian Kemp: He ‘will be primaried’

Georgia Republicans were already unhappy with Gov. Brian Kemp, and his refusal to interfere in President Donald Trump’s election loss may have been the last straw.

Trump claims credit for Kemp’s election win two years ago, but he and other Republicans have withdrawn their support after the governor has declined to get involved in the president’s efforts to overturn his loss to Joe Biden in Georgia and other states, reported The Daily Beast.

“[Kemp] will be primaried,” said Kay Godwin, the chair of the Pierce County GOP. “Just hoping and praying we get the right one this time.”

Some Republicans in the state remain irked that Kemp appointed Kelly Loeffler to an open Senate seat last year instead of Rep. Doug Collins (R-GA), and the dual runoff elections Jan. 4 to decide both of the state’s Senate seats has inflamed intra-party tensions.

“You should have done something,” said former state GOP chair Rusty Paul. “That’s the mindset people have right now, that [Kemp] should have been more engaged. That’s a tough position to be in. That’s the same tough position that [Sen. David] Perdue and Loeffler find themselves in.”

“Georgia is such a competitive state right now that simply winning the primary isn’t enough anymore,” Paul added. “You’ve got to have your eyes focused on the general election. You can’t go out and primary the governor and take him down, or the secretary of state or another incumbent, and just assume … that you’re going to be successful in the general election.”

Trump supporters in Georgia believe Kemp should have called a special legislative session to make changes to absentee voting, or somehow deny certification of Biden’s win, and there’s a movement afoot to remove him from office before 2022.

“We are committed to his removal,” says one anti-Kemp website that does not reveal its funder. “Recall? Impeachment? Primarying him?”

Many Georgia Republicans buy into the president’s baseless fraud allegations, and they’re waiting for Kemp to validate them.

“I will have to wait and see how all this plays out,” said Scott Jay, chair of the Newton County GOP. “I’ll vote based upon actions, upon results. He can show me solid results in a conservative manner moving forward, he may regain my vote.”
https://www.rawstory.com/2020/11/georgi ... primaried/
Too many White Southernors believe in White Fascism, have always believed in White Fascism, going back to the 1600's. Only briefly have there been enough patriots who actually BELIEVE in the American ideal to create the window where people like Carter, Clinton, Bumpers, Jim Hunt, et al created the "New South"--but that's mostly dead. There's Andy Beshear and Roy Cooper, but that's all and they are exceptions. Cooper DID get re-elected. Stacy Abrams only lost 2 years ago because Kemp flushed something like 1.5 million voters out of the system. She got 800,000 registered in time for this year, and that turned the tide. If more can get registered in time for Jan 5, she could WELL elect 2 senators and set herself up to unseat Kemp.

It's unclear if Raffensperger will pull the same stunt Kemp did, because he's shown a much greater adherence to the law, and we KNOW he feels totally betrayed by Trump and the GOP, writing that he and his family were "thrown under the bus" in the WaPo.

But the Southern White Fascists do not change, never change, will never change. They should have been CRUSHED after 1865, hanged as traitors unless they swore allegiance to the Constitution...and the Federal troops should never have been withdrawn. The Germans CRUSHED the Nazis after WWII and it has benefited.
"Even if the bee could explain to the fly why pollen is better than shit, the fly could never understand."

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

22
Even in Germany we are seeing a resurgence of the Neonazi right wing. It never totally died it was absorbed into the East German police state. The Zebra just flipped its stripes and continued onward.
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.-Huxley
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis Brandeis,

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

24
YankeeTarheel wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2020 3:28 pm The Federal Republic purged the nazis but the DDR didn't. I don't know why not.
Because they took off the Nazi armbands and replaced them with the hammer & sickle. Many of the captured Gestapo higher up leaders went to work for the KGB. An authoritarian police state is the same no matter which end of the political spectrum they are on.
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.-Huxley
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis Brandeis,

Re: GA run off Senate Races. All the Dirt.

25
Trump Headed To Georgia As Turnout Driver, But Also A Threat

ATLANTA (AP) — Some establishment Republicans are sounding alarms that President Donald Trump’s conspiratorial denials of his own defeat could threaten the party’s ability to win a Senate majority and counter President-elect Joe Biden’s administration.

The concerns come ahead of Trump’s planned Saturday visit to Georgia to campaign alongside Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, who face strong Democratic challengers in Jan. 5 runoffs that will determine which party controls the Senate at the outset of Biden’s presidency.

Republicans acknowledge Trump as the GOP’s biggest turnout driver, including in Georgia, where Biden won by fewer than 13,000 votes out of about 5 million cast. That means every bit of enthusiasm from one of Trump’s signature rallies could matter. But some Republicans worry Trump will use the platform to amplify his baseless allegations of widespread voter fraud — arguments roundly rejected in state and federal courts across the country. That could make it harder for Perdue and Loeffler to keep a clear focus on the stakes in January and could even discourage Republicans from voting.

“The president has basically taken hostage this race,” said Brendan Buck, once a top adviser to former House Speaker Paul Ryan.

Especially fraught are Trump’s continued attacks on Georgia’s Republican state officials and the state’s election system, potentially taking away from his public praise of Loeffler and Perdue.

“Trump’s comments are damaging the Republican brand,” argued Republican donor Dan Eberhart, who added that the president is “acting in bad sportsmanship and bad faith” instead of emphasizing Republicans’ need to maintain Senate control.

The GOP needs one more seat for a majority. Democrats need Jon Ossoff to defeat Perdue and Raphael Warnock to defeat Loeffler to force a 50-50 Senate, positioning Vice President-elect Kamala Harris as the tie-breaking majority vote.

Trump on Monday blasted Gov. Brian Kemp as “hapless” for not intervening to “overrule” Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s certification of Biden’s win. A day earlier, Trump told Fox News he was “ashamed” he’d endorsed Kemp in his 2018 GOP primary for governor. Kemp’s office noted in response that state law gives Kemp no authority to overturn election results, despite Trump’s contention that Kemp could “easily” invoke “emergency powers.” Meanwhile, Raffensperger, a Trump supporter like Kemp, has accused the president of throwing him “under the bus” for doing his job.

Perdue and Loeffler have attempted to stay above the fray.

They’ve long aligned themselves with Trump and even echoed some of his general criticisms of the fall elections, jointly demanding Raffensperger’s resignation. But the crux of their runoff argument — that Republicans must prevent Democrats from controlling Capitol Hill and the White House — is itself a tacit admission that Biden, not Trump, will be inaugurated Jan. 20. And at one recent campaign stop, Perdue heard from vocal Trump supporters who demanded that he do more to help Trump somehow claim Georgia’s 16 electoral votes.

Republicans see three potential negative outcomes to Trump fanning the flames.

Some GOP voters could be dissuaded from voting again if they accept Trump’s claims that the system is hopelessly corrupted. Among Republicans more loyal to Trump than to the party, some could skip the runoff altogether out of anger at a party establishment the president continues to assail. Lastly, at the other end of the GOP spectrum are the moderate Republicans who already crossed over to help Biden win Georgia and could be further alienated if the runoff becomes another referendum on Trump.

Josh Holmes, a top adviser to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, said Republicans “haven’t seen any evidence of lack of enthusiasm in the Senate races.”

But none of those potential bad effects would have to be sweeping to tilt the runoffs if they end up as close as the presidential contest in Georgia.

“We’ll see how it plays out. It changes day by day and week by week. But so far, so good,” Holmes said.

In Georgia, any Republican concerns are more circumspect.

Brian Robinson, a former adviser to Kemp’s Republican predecessor as governor, said Trump should “drive a strong, forward-looking message” about what’s at stake for a Republican base that “is fervently devoted to him.”

“The best thing he can do for the party,” Robinson said, “is to talk about the importance of having a Republican Senate majority to project his policy legacy and to make sure the Democrats can’t reverse a lot of what he has put in place that Republicans support.”

Asked what Trump should avoid, Robinson circled back to what he believes the president should say.

Former U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston, a Trump ally, downplayed the potential for GOP splintering, framing an “inner-family squabble” as a sideshow to the “incredible” consequences that define the runoffs.

“Followers of Trump will follow Trump, but they’re not blind to the huge stakes. And neither is he,” Kingston said. “He knows to keep his legacy. He’s got to get these people reelected.” Trump, Kingston argued, is “keeping the base interested,” a necessary component of any successful runoff campaign since second rounds of elections often see a drop-off in voter participation.

Robinson added that Democrats face their own challenge in replicating record turnout for Biden.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-ge ... b88c69f79b

Somebody needs to get tRump to say how he respects the memory of that great Confederate General Sherman, and wherever he shows up to play Marching Through Georgia since it is the state song. Also that he supports the republican candidates for the senate because they will do as much to protect the values of Georgia as Sherman did.

The orange turd would go for it.
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.-Huxley
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis Brandeis,

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest