1. Religious Education
2. Capitalism
3. The Tax Bill (the part congress played in it)
4. Healthcare
5. SNAP
6. Government Assistance (Other)
7. Veteran Wave
8. Where Democrats Stand
2. Capitalism
3. The Tax Bill (the part congress played in it)
4. Healthcare
5. SNAP
6. Government Assistance (Other)
7. Veteran Wave
8. Where Democrats Stand
9. Candidates
10. GOTV and Nancy
10. GOTV and Nancy
I have been collecting these articles throughout the year. The part in green is a direct quote from the article in the link before or after it. I also very specifically stuck to reliable news sources. Actual fact based news sources like Politico, CBS News, The Washington Post, The New York Times, The LA Times and others.
Veteran Wave:
Conor Lamb is
only part of a new type of democratic wave. Veterans are running as democrats.
This part took me off guard this year. In the past, it seemed like every
veteran I talked to was a republican. I never understood why. But, that seemed
to be how it went. But, these are veterans that have the leadership background
to make a difference in what gets passed.
The biggest thing
that congress lost on 2010 was the ability to compromise. The tea partiers in
the “freedom caucus” have ironically held the country prisoner. They continue
to refuse to negotiate on anything even the basic bills. These are bills that
previously were always easy to pass before they came along.
Veterans have
been talking more and more about the importance of negotiating. One thing they
all hold on to fiercely is a desire to do what is best for their country. That
requires negotiations. They understand the power of negotiations and compromise
better than most. If you haven’t
considered democrats in the past, it’s worth giving this group and second look.
Rose, a 5-foot-6 power pack with an
upbeat, shoulders-back gait, is near the forefront of a surge of a certain sort
of candidate in the 2018 election cycle. Veterans who are Democrats are vying
for Congress in numbers not seen in decades. With Honor, a “cross-partisan” organization that aims to “help elect principled
next-generation veterans in order to solve our biggest problems and fix a
Congress that is dysfunctional,” counts approximately 300 veterans who have run
for Congress during this cycle—roughly half of whom chose to serve after, and
in many cases because of, September 11, 2001. Although specific numbers are
hard to come by, the spike is stark—“a substantial increase,” With Honor
co-founder and CEO Rye Barcott told me, “from any prior cycle” in modern
memory. While the perception might exist that most veterans lean Republican,
some 51 percent of the veterans who are or have been 2018 candidates, based on
With Honor’s tally, are actually Democrats. And some are proving to be
competitive in places once considered safe GOP districts. Witness Conor Lamb’s win in western Pennsylvania earlier this
month. Polling suggests former Army Ranger Jason Crow could
do the same in Colorado’s 6th District in the suburbs of Denver. Backed by
members of Congress like Representative Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) and organizations like VoteVets and New Politics, this roster of aspirants is a key to Democrats
reclaiming control of the House of Representatives in November’s midterms,
party strategists believe.
It
is not a coincidence that this wave of veterans is hitting at a moment when a five-time
draft-deferring president
occupies the White House and toxic partisanship has ground Capitol Hill to a
virtual halt. The candidates are presenting themselves both as a moral rebuke
to what they see as Donald Trump’s self-promoting divisiveness and also as a
practical solution to the failure of the nation’s highest legislative body to
get anything done. In short, the reputation of the national institution with by
far the highest approval rating, the military, is being offered as an antidote
to the woes of a schismatic president and a Congress whose approval ratings
have never been worse.
“They’re
all people who served the country without worrying about who’s a Democrat and
who’s a Republican—let’s just get the damn thing done,” longtime
national Democratic strategist Joe Trippi said in an interview. “In this
Washington, in this divisive, chaotic cycle, you have these people who’ve
proven they can rise above party and actually accomplish a mission.”
Feehan,
a veteran who served two tours in Iraq, has worn a memorial bracelet in honor
of Drew R. Pearson for nine years, a tribute to a mentor who served with Feehan
in Iraq before he was killed in action in 2008. For the first-time candidate,
the metallic bracelet is a constant reminder of why he is running and what he
hopes to achieve.
"(I
am) grounded in the understanding that every form of policy is in some way a
matter of life or death," he said. "I literally carry it with me
every day."
Feehan,
one of dozens of military veterans the Democratic Party has turned to ahead of
November's midterms, is far from alone, either.
Democrats
have recruited, nurtured and funded dozens of veterans aiming to unseat
Republicans in November. The strategy cuts against the common Republican attack
that most of the military leans red and Democrats want a less robust military,
a refrain repeatedly pushed by President Donald Trump.
MJ Hegar does not hold back. "I'm an ass kicking,
motorcycle-riding, Texas Democrat. That's who I am!"
She
says that emphatically, unblinkingly and unapologetically to a constituent at a
political meet-and-greet in a suburban Austin, Texas, home. And she is talking
to someone she needs to win over.
"I'm
a Republican," the woman says to Hegar. "I'd like to know, in a
county that is predominantly Republican, what makes you different from our
current congressman?"
That
question hits on the central challenge facing Hegar who, in order to defeat
incumbent Republican Rep. John Carter in November, will have to win over
GOP-leaning voters. Hegar's response -- "I'm an American. I'm a veteran.
I'm fighting for this country." -- is how she hopes to do it.
Running as a democrat in a NJ congressional district is another candidate who is a Veteran. She has a strong chance to change this red district blue. That is something that makes a difference. She will be one of the candidates I talk about in the "Candidates" blog post. Mikie Sherrill is another example of a strong democratic veteran who wants to repair the damage done within the walls of congress.
For some voters, that record of military service matters. These candidates are proud to have served. Like John McCain, their call to serve continues beyond their time in uniform. I am happy to see so many of them are democrats.
Me too! It's really hard for Republicans to criticize people who have served their country - especially since so many of the current Republican politicians have not.
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