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How Pence’s Office Meddled in Foreign Aid to Reroute Money to Favored Christian Groups
Officials at USAID warned that favoring Christian groups in Iraq could be unconstitutional and inflame religious tensions. When one colleague lost her job, they said she had been “Penced.”
 

Trump Should Be Very Worried About What Just Went Down In The PA Suburbs

While the headlines from Tuesday night were largely gobbled up by the Kentucky gubernatorial upset and Democrats’ clinching of the General Assembly in Virginia, a blue tsunami also splashed across the Philadelphia suburbs in a telling trend.



The erosion of Republican dominance in places like Delaware County was stark. There, Democrats swept the county council, spurred on by a historic gain of two seats in 2017. Per the Philadelphia Inquirer, this is the first time Democrats have won all the seats on the council since before the Civil War.

The county Republican wipeout didn’t end there: all four GOP candidates for Common Pleas Court judgeships went down, as did the incumbent Republican district attorney.

Over in Bucks County, Democrats seem to have eked out two of three county commissioner board seats, taking control for the first time in decades.

And in Philadelphia proper, Working Families Party candidate Kendra Brooks became the first person from outside either major party to win a city council seat in over a century. She won one of the two at-large seats, a ding to Republicans who have held those two spots for 70 years.

Local Democratic triumphs like these may dim in the face of the flashy gubernatorial upset in Kentucky, but these races are likely the most important result from Tuesday’s election.

Per the Inquirer, turnout in Delaware County was up a whopping 25 percent from 2017, the year when complacent Democrats roused themselves to finally wrench two county council seats away from Republicans, a record victory in and of itself.

Tuesday night was a massive repudiation of decades of Republican control of these suburbs, and it was fueled by organization and mobilization of Democrats more motivated by their opposition to President Trump and his party than they ever have been before.

This trend was on clear display in the 2018 midterms, with a shellacking that won federal-level Democrats the House of Representatives for the first time since 2011. That win was largely attributed to distaste of Trump so permeating the suburban sprawl that liberals there got active, bucking the common knowledge that Democrats never show up in off-presidential election years.

In Pennsylvania that year, Sen. Bob Casey (D-PA) and Gov. Tom Wolf (D) cruisedto reelection and Democrats flipped four House seats to Republicans’ one.

In 2016, Trump won Pennsylvania and its 20 electoral votes by just 44,292 ballots, a minuscule .72 percent win over Hillary Clinton. If Keystone State Democrats maintain their energy and mobility, which the past three years suggest they will, he will likely have to carve out a very different path to reelection.
 

GOP Official Already Floating Delegitimizing Beshear’s Win In Kentucky

Before state Attorney General Andy Beshear (D) took the stage to thank his supporters and celebrate his razor-thin victory in Tuesday’s Kentucky governor’s race, the incumbent was sounding the clarion call of how Republicans would respond to the loss.



“We know for a fact that there have been more than a few irregularities, they are very well corroborated, and that’s alright,” Gov. Matt Bevin (R) said, without naming specifics. “What they are exactly, how many, which ones and what effect, if any, they have, will be determined according to law that’s well established.”

“The process will be followed,” he continued. “And in the end, we will have the governor that was chosen by the people of Kentucky, and that’s the way the process should work.”

His Republican lackeys lost no time in scrambling to find a way around the unwelcome reality of Beshear’s win. State Senate Majority Leader Robert Stivers (R) floated just hours after the election results were tallied the option of a contest proceeding, or formally contesting the results of the election.

Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes (D) explained the “antiquated” procedure, found in the state’s constitution, to TPM.

“It hasn’t been used in a governor or lieutenant governor’s race in over 100 years,” she said. “What happens is an 11-member board comprised of members of the Senate and House are able to make an inquiry based on a specific statement made by a candidate pointing out errors in the election. In terms of what they could ultimately do, they could issue a new election.”

She said that the members of the board — eight from the House, three from the Senate — are “randomly selected” by House and Senate leadership. She pointed out that both chambers are currently run by a Republican majority.

“In 100 years, it has never been used to alter the will of the commonwealth of Kentucky’s voters as relates to the governor or lieutenant governor,” she added of the procedure. “And as Kentucky’s chief elections official, I am not aware of any irregularities that would swing a 5,000-vote margin.”

She noted that the other procedure available to Bevin is to ask for a re-canvass. She said that it’s much more common than the contest proceeding, and that she’s seen it carried out more than 20 times in her career. One of those instances was actually Bevin’s own primary in 2015, when he was separated by his opponent by just 83 votes. She added that she’s never seen the re-canvass process alter an election’s outcome.

A formal request for a re-canvass procedure would have to be submitted by Tuesday and the process conducted by Thursday. To contest the election, the request must be made 30 days after the state board of elections certifies the race.

There is no provision in state law for the offices of governor or lieutenant governor to request a recount.

Sam Marcosson, professor of constitutional law at the University of Louisville law school, pointed out the dangers of contesting the election, though he admitted that it may be the more attractive option to the Bevin camp, as a re-canvass is very unlikely to bridge a 5,000 vote gap.

“It certainly runs a huge risk of stripping voters of the right to make the choice. In theory, they have the possibility of using any pretext they wanted and overturn the election,” he told TPM. “Overturning a valid election brings up concerns about disenfranchisement and the legitimacy of the election itself.”

He added that an extreme move like that may be in violation of the federal Constitution, and its provisions of the right to vote and to a republican form of government.

“The federal Constitution would trump — no pun intended — anything in Kentucky, and that may put some real limits on anything that the General Assembly may try,” he added.

In short, attempting a maneuver as extreme as contesting the election, which Stivers floated, is a big risk for the assembly to take.

Stivers in particular has a personal connection to Bevin, as his wife is the governor’s deputy secretary of the Tourism, Arts and Heritage Cabinet. The Senate leader has said before that he would recuse himself from any decisions presenting a conflict of interest.

But, even setting Stivers’ situation aside, many Republicans in the General Assembly flat-out don’t like Bevin.

He has a famously bombastic temperament, and as Marcosson pointed out, has been on the receiving end of vetoes and attacks from his own party before.

No doubt that Kentucky Republicans are licking their wounds after Tuesday’s stinging loss, but time will tell if they ultimately consider Bevin worth upending the election and potentially getting into hot water with the U.S. Constitution.
 

Conservatives Twist Themselves Into Knots To Spin KY Gov Defeat Into Good News For Trump

After Kentucky’s Democratic gubernatorial candidate Andy Beshear pulled off an upset victory over Trump-endorsed Gov. Matt Bevin (R) on Tuesday night, President Donald Trump and his conservative allies performed Olympic-level verbal gymnastics to argue that Bevin’s defeat actually proved Trump’s “political star power.”

On the eve of Kentucky’s statewide elections, Trump flew down to Bevin’s campaign rally in Lexington in an effort to rescue the deeply unpopular governor in the toss-up race, where the President warned supporters that Bevin’s loss would send “a really bad message.”

“You can’t let that happen to me!” cried Trump, who won Kentucky by over 30 points in 2016.

But it did happen to him, and now Trump and other conservatives are desperately spinning Bevin’s loss as a win for Trump, claiming that the President’s appearance helped tighten the margin in the race, even if Bevin ultimately lost.

Trump baselessly claimed Bevin was eating Beshear’s dust in the polls before the President showed up at Bevin’s rally and magically boosted him to a paper-thin loss margin of 48.8 percent to Beshear’s 49.2 percent.

“Our big Kentucky Rally on Monday night had a massive impact on all of the races,” Trump tweeted at midnight on Tuesday. “The increase in Governors race was at least 15 points, and maybe 20!”

Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel gave an even more generous figure, claiming that Bevin was down 17 points.

“No one energizes our base like @realDonaldTrump,” she gushed.

Fox News personality Laura Ingraham heaped praise upon Trump for supposedly making the race “as competitive as you can possibly make it.”

“That is the power of Donald Trump,” she declared.

John Cardillo, a host for conservative outlet Newsmax TV, regurgitated other conservatives’ claim that Trump had saved Bevin from crushing defeat with his “political star power.”

Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale had a more creative take: Beshear’s victory isn’t even really a win for Democrats because he “acts like a Republican” (despite the governor-elect’s promises to gut Bevin’s Medicaid work requirements and raise Kentucky teachers’ pay, along with his refusal to defend the state’s anti-abortion laws as Kentucky’s attorney general).

“Talk about Kentucky when an actual Democrat runs,” Parscale complained.

 
Smh. The fact that they can say anything to their base and they'll believe it is sad.

BUT if you think about it...apparently their base in KY are the reason for turning KY blue. So maybe they're fed up wit THEM.
 
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