Today is Friday, 20th September 2024

AR: Democrat House Speaker Says he Can’t be Taxed for State SUV use

From ArkansasBusiness.com:

Arkansas House Speaker Robbie Wills is the only elected official with a state vehicle who said he’s exempt from paying income tax on the vehicle’s use, according to a newspaper report.

The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported Monday (sub. req’d) that Wills, D-Conway, said his business use of his state-owned Chevrolet Tahoe is not a taxable benefit.

“I have not used the state vehicle for personal use,” Wills said. “I’ve used the vehicle for travel to and from meetings and other events when attending in my official capacity as speaker. I have my own vehicle for personal use.”

Other elected officials have said they’ll start paying taxes on their use of state vehicles after the newspaper questioned whether the benefit was tax-free. Lt. Gov. Bill Halter said he’s paid taxes for use of his state vehicle since he took office in 2007, while Attorney General Dustin McDaniel turned in his state vehicle and reimbursed the state about $2,900 f or his past use.

Read the Rest…

Arizona AG Race too close to call

from azcentral.com:

In a surprising reversal, Tom Horne came from behind late Tuesday to take the lead against Andrew Thomas in the race to become Republican nominee for attorney general.

Horne, the superintendent of public instruction, came from behind after being down some 9,000 votes earlier on Tuesday evening. But as votes were counted in Maricopa and Pima counties, he slowly erased Thomas’ lead.

Thomas, the former Maricopa County attorney, had spent the primary season painting Horne as an untrustworthy liberal. Horne, the superintendent of public instruction, said Thomas was an out-of-control prosecutor and a threat to citizens’ constitutional rights.

In the end, a slight majority of voters appeared to have chosen Horne as their standard-bearer.

In the Democratic race, Felecia Rotellini was holding on to a narrow lead over David Lujan.

Thomas, 43, ran as a proven crime fighter, saying crime had dropped by 19 percent during his time as county attorney. He said that he best represented Republican values in the race, taking strong positions against illegal immigration and abortion.

“It’s a barn-burner in the attorney-general races in both parties, but I’m very confident we’ll ultimately win,” he said on Tuesday evening at Republican headquarters in Phoenix, while he was still in the lead.

Read the Rest…

Florida AG Race is Wide Open

From the Palm Beach Post:

Florida’s next attorney general will take the lead on Gulf oil damage claims and a pending lawsuit over the federal health care program, but many voters were still undecided between three Republican and two Democratic candidates as Tuesday’s primary election approached.

The Republicans — Lt. Gov. Jeff Kottkamp, former Charlie Crist aide Holly Benson and former prosecutor Pam Bondi — have all promised to support Florida’s legal effort to block the federal health care program and support Arizona’s immigration law. The two Democrats, state senators Dave Aronberg and Dan Gelber, are focused on rooting out public corruption and Medicare fraud.

A few high-profile endorsements for the Republican nominees have invigorated the bland race which has been overshadowed by mudslinging in the U.S. Senate and governor’s race.

Read the Rest…

KS: Former Rival Back Republican’s AG Race

From hutchnews.com:

Republican Derek Schmidt has received a former GOP rival’s endorsement in the Kansas attorney general’s race.

Junction City prosecutor Ralph DeZago (duh-ZAY’-goh) says he and Schmidt, the Kansas Senate majority leader, share similar philosophies.

Schmidt, of Independence, beat DeZago in this month’s two-way primary with 76 percent of the vote. In the general election he’ll face incumbent Democrat Steve Six, a former district judge from Lawrence who was appointed attorney general in January 2008.

Read the Rest…

RSLC REDMAP Rundown – August 24th, 2010

REDMAP

Welcome to this week’s edition of REDMAP Rundown, a synopsis of redistricting news brought to you by the RSLC’s REDistricting MAjority Project (REDMAP).  This weekly update gives you the latest on what those in the Beltway, and across the country, are saying about the impending reapportionment and redistricting process.

In this week’s REDMAP Rundown: Democrat darkness, Alabama’s handshake and the state legislative coattails of Obama and Blago.

Politics Daily’s Lou Cannon kicks off, writing, “Republicans are … optimistic about gaining seats in the 88 legislative chambers (of a total of 99) for which there are elections this year. These legislative elections will determine which party holds the upper hand in the 2011 congressional and legislative reapportionments that will be based on the 2010 census. Several legislative bodies are closely balanced, among them the Texas House, which Republicans control by a two-seat margin. Texas is the largest prize in the redistricting sweepstakes; it will gain four additional House seats (for a total of 36) because of population increases.  Republicans are favored to hold the Texas House and are in no apparent danger of losing any other legislative body they now control. Democrats, in contrast, are playing defense in attempting to hold onto at least a dozen chambers. ‘It looks dark for the Democrats,’ says Tim Storey, a political analyst for the National Council of State Legislatures (NCSL). … Now, with the pendulum swinging back, Republicans stand to gain some 500 legislative seats.

“Republican candidates hoping to end Democratic dominance of the Alabama Legislature unveiled an agenda Monday,” according to The Associated Press. “House Minority Leader Mike Hubbard, who’s also chairman of the Alabama Republican Party, said all Republican candidates for the Legislature are supporting the ‘2010 Republican Handshake with Alabama,’ and its passage depends on Republicans taking control of the Legislature for the first time in 136 years. To try to accomplish that, GOP candidates are doing more than saying what they will do. Hubbard said they are tying Alabama Democrats to Washington to capitalize on voters’ uneasiness with the national economy and dislike of some new federal policies, particularly health care. ‘The Democrats in Alabama are no different than the Democrats in Washington. They have the same philosophy,’ said state Sen. Del Marsh, R-Anniston. Marsh, the GOP’s state finance chairman, was one of 17 legislative candidates who joined Hubbard to unveil the legislative agenda.”

“With less than three months until Election Day 2010, Republicans celebrated one of the most hard fought special elections – at any level – with the victory of Sam Blakeslee for California’s 15th Senate District. Blakeslee’s marks the 62nd state legislative special election victory for Republicans, nationwide, since President Barack Obama was elected. While Democrats hold a six-point voter registration advantage in the 15th District, Blakeslee topped Democrat John Laird 48 percent to 44 percent.  The race, which was the determining factor in whether Democrats would be one step closer to achieving a super-majority in the senate, became a preview of Democrat efforts, drawing millions of dollars spent by liberal interests and heavy involvement from President Barack Obama.”  Hotline On Call noted, “Here’s the rub: Dems outnumber Republicans 41% to 34% in the district and the Dem in the race – former Assemblyman John Laird – was backed by…wait for it..Pres. Obama. Blakeslee was backed by GOP Gov. nominee Meg Whitman.”

In Illinois, The Associated Press repots, “The unfinished business of the Blagojevich trial poses a major new hurdle for Illinois Democrats, who already are facing a difficult election season. After hoping Blagojevich’s trial would wrap up well before the November vote, a retrial could begin in the final weeks of campaigning. … Republicans are counting on voters to be angry about Blagojevich. The GOP says it won’t have to keep harping on him because voters will have plenty of reminders. ‘I think maybe in their minds they can say, I’ll send my own guilty verdict so to speak and my own message by voting for Republicans in the fall,’ said Illinois House Republican leader Tom Cross. ‘I don’t know that we need to say that. It’s not like Rod Blagojevich is going to be hiding in the back room over the next two months.’”

The RSLC is the only national organization whose mission is to elect down ballot state-level Republican office-holders. To sign up for the REDMAP Rundown, or for more information or media inquiries, please contact Adam Temple at 571.480.4891.

NY: Democrat Rips another Democrat in AG Race

From New York Post:

Attorney-general hopeful Kathleen Rice unloaded both barrels yesterday on fellow Democratic contender Eric Schneiderman, saying it would be “dangerous” to trust the longtime state senator with policing public corruption.

Rice said Schneiderman (D-Manhattan) has missed “125 opportunities” to call on scandal-scarred Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. (D-Bronx) to step down as Senate majority leader in the wake of civil charges.

Rice, the two-term Nassau County district attorney, called Schneiderman’s endorsement of Espada’s primary opponent, Gustavo Rivera, “too little, too late.”

Read the Rest…

AZ: Democrats fight for Secretary of State Nod

From azdailysun.com:

A freshman lawmaker and a former Arizona real estate commissioner are vying for the Democratic nod to become the state’s next chief elections officer and second in line to the governor.

The secretary of state’s race drew few candidates this year, and the only contest in Tuesday’s primary is between Democrats Chris Deschene of LeChee on the Navajo Nation and Sam Wercinski of Phoenix.

Wercinski has outspent Deschene by more than $30,000 in his first run at political office. The 48-year-old veteran who served two years as state real estate commissioner, touts his experience in the private sector. He said he has a proven record of fixing broken state government and values that resonate with Arizonans.

Deschene, a 39-year-old veteran, has experience in the legal and engineering fields. He was elected to the state Legislature in 2008 and said has worked on bills that directly affect the voting rights of state residents. He says his diverse background makes him best suited for the job.

Read the Rest…

MI: Secretary of State Endorses Republican State Senator as her Successor

From freep.com:

Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land today endorsed Republican state Sen. Cameron Brown as her successor.

That could give Brown, from Sturgis, a leg up against four rivals in securing the nomination at Saturday’s Republican Party state convention in East Lansing. Land, a former Kent County clerk, has been long active in GOP politics and was the running mate of Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard in his unsuccessful run for the Republican gubernatorial nomination.

In a statement, Land, who cannot run for re-election under term limits, called Brown a strong voice for conservative principles who would bring dignity and respect to the secretary of state office.

Read the Rest…

Tennessee Democrats think they have chance to retake House

From Tennessean.com:

With Republicans nationwide riding a wave of voter discontent and with the state Senate securely under GOP control, Democrats in Tennessee have set their sights on winning back control of the House of Representatives. Their chances hinge on a handful of open Republican seats and whether voters will rally around candidates such as LaRoche.

The Murfreesboro native, whose wife is expecting their first child in the fall, has received strong support from the Democratic Party, raising nearly $48,000 for his bid to represent the 48th House District. The money has put him on roughly equal footing with the incumbent, Rep. Joe Carr, a Lascassas Republican who won the seat two years ago.

LaRoche has also set a goal of knocking on 10,000 doors before Election Day, a plan that will put him before countless swing voters like Clew. His pitch — that they should ignore the social and political issues that favor Republicans, at least in this one race.

“For me, it’s all about Rutherford County,” he said. “I’m not going to waste time on cable-news topics that maybe get people riled up on either side of the issue.”

Read the Rest…

RSLC Chairman Ed Gillespie on the Kilmeade & Friends Radio Show

Click on the play button to hear the entire interview


 

Share this website with your friends

Facebook

 

 

About the Republican State Leadership Committee



twitter

 

Get Daily SNS Updates

Email Address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

RSLC Elected Officials on Twitter

Contact Us

tips@statenewsshot.com

Support the RSLC & America’s Future Leaders:

Support America's Future Leaders; Donate Today

Brought to you by: Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC)

Archives

Main Menu

Top