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Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Another Election, Another Controversy. Can't Americans Run Fair Elections Anymore?

 

Vote count controversy shakes up New York election

The Democratic primary for mayor of New York City was thrown into a state of confusion Tuesday when election officials retracted their latest report on the vote count after realizing it had been corrupted by test data never cleared from a computer system.

The bungle was a black mark on New York City’s first major foray into ranked-choice voting and seemed to confirm worries that the city’s Board of Elections, which is jointly run by Democrats and Republicans, was unprepared to implement the new system.

The disarray began as evening fell, when the board abruptly withdrew data it had released earlier in the day purporting to be a first round of results from the ranked choice system.

That data had indicated that Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, a former police captain who would be the city’s second Black mayor, had lost much of his lead and was ahead of former sanitation commissioner Kathryn Garcia by fewer than 16,000 votes.

Then the Board of Elections tweeted that it was aware of “a discrepancy” in its report on ranked-choice voting results. It didn’t initially explain what that discrepancy was, even as it pulled the data from its website.

Just before 10:30 p.m. it released a statement saying that 135,000 ballot images it had put into its computer system for testing purposes had never been cleared.

“The Board apologizes for the error and has taken immediate measures to ensure the most accurate up-to-date results are reported,” it said in a statement.

The results initially released Tuesday, and then withdrawn, were incomplete to begin with because they didn’t include any of the nearly 125,000 absentee ballots cast in the Democratic primary.

The Associated Press removed Tuesday’s vote update from its published vote count after the board pulled the results.

Adams’ campaign, which had publicly pointed out the vote discrepancy shortly after the faulty count was released, said in a statement that it remained confident he would ultimately prevail.


The publicized vote totals had included an unexpected jump in the number of ballots counted Tuesday compared to the number counted on the day of the primary.

Garcia said in a late afternoon news conference, before the numbers were withdrawn, that she was confident she had a path to victory, but wasn’t “counting any chickens before they’ve hatched.”

Later, her campaign issued a statement saying “The BOE’s release of incorrect ranked-choice votes is deeply troubling and requires a much more transparent and complete explanation. Every ranked-choice and absentee vote must be counted accurately so that all New Yorkers have faith in our democracy and our government.”

Elections officials had planned on conducting another round of ranked-choice analysis on July 6 that would include absentee ballots. A note posted on the Board of Elections website indicated it would try posting accurate results without absentee ballots Wednesday.

New York City’s primary went into a state of suspended animation a week ago while officials prepared to give the public its first look at results from the city’s new ranked-choice voting system.

Under the system, voters could rank up to five candidates in order of preference.

Since no candidate was the first choice of more than 50% of voters, a computer on Tuesday tabulated ballots in a series of rounds that worked like instant run-offs.

In each round, the candidate in last place was eliminated. Votes cast for that person were then redistributed to the surviving candidates, based on whoever voters put next on their ranking list. That process repeated until only two candidates were left.


Besides Adams and Garcia, civil rights lawyer Maya Wiley was also still within striking distance of victory.

When voting ended on June 22, elections officials only released results showing who voters put down as their first choice for the job. In that count, Adams had a lead of around 75,000 votes over Wiley with Garcia close behind in third.

Wiley was critical of the BOE, saying the chaos Tuesday “is not just failure to count votes properly today, it is the result of generations of failures that have gone unaddressed.”

New York City’s Board of Elections, which operates independently from City Hall, has long had a reputation for mistakes and mismanagement.

Ahead of the 2016 election, it mistakenly purged tens of thousands of voters from voting rolls. In 2018, voters had to wait in line for several hours at some polling places over equipment issues.

In 2020, it struggled to process applications for absentee ballots and initially sent many voters ballots with return envelopes printed with the wrong people’s names on them.

The Democratic primary winner will be the prohibitive favorite in the general election against Curtis Sliwa, the Republican founder of the Guardian Angels.


Either Adams or Wiley would be the second Black mayor of New York City, and either Garcia or Wiley would be the first woman mayor.

Adams, 60, is a moderate Democrat who opposed the “defund the police” movement and said that under his leadership, the city could find a way to fight crime while also combating a legacy of racial injustice in policing.

He was previously a state senator before becoming Brooklyn’s borough president, a job in which he lacks lawmaking power, but handles some constituent services and discretionary city spending.

Garcia, 51, is a city government veteran who ran as a nonideological crisis manager well-suited to guiding New York out of a once-in-a-century pandemic.

Garcia ran the department of sanitation from 2014 until leaving last September to explore a run for mayor. De Blasio also tapped Garcia to run an emergency food distribution program during the coronavirus pandemic after earlier appointing her interim chair of the city’s embattled public housing system.

She earlier served as chief operating officer of the city’s department of environmental protection, responsible for water and sewer systems.

Wiley, 57, served as counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio and previously chaired a civilian panel that investigates complaints of police misconduct. A former legal analyst for MSNBC, she ran as a progressive who would cut $1 billion from the police budget and divert it to other city agencies.

The Associated Press contributed to this article

Monday, June 28, 2021

Its All About Congressmen Not Regulation

 


The First Step

 


The Difference Between A President And A Pretender

 


Teddy Roosevelt Must Be Turning Over In His Grave

 

Idiots Remove Teddy Roosevelt Statue

Jon Bowne
Ironically, Roosevelt founded the progressive party, vigorously defended women's rights, and civil rights and equality for black and Native Americans during the early 20th century.
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In one of the best examples of how far and twisted the left’s manic loathing for America has gone, the 26th U.S. President Teddy Roosevelt will be canceled.

Roosevelt ushered in the 20th Century as one of America’s most energetic and greatest contributors to the success, and preservation of the United States. He is generally regarded as one of the United States five best Presidents.

This is no small-fry Confederate General or Freemasonic Klansman statue we are talking about.

The decision has been made for TR to be canceled as his embattled statue representing the preservation and exploration of the American frontier as it entered the 20th Century is set to be removed, for reasons imagined by the Marxist leanings of the race-obsessed left.

The New York Times reported, “The New York City Public Design Commission voted unanimously…to relocate the bronze effigy of the nation’s 26th president that has stood at the Upper West Side institution since 1940.”

The victim culture’s crazed vague interpretation of the monument depicts Theodore Roosevelt on horseback with an African man and a Native American man moving forward with him as supposedly glorifying white supremacy, colonialism and racism. Because it would be impossible for the braindead woke mob to see it for the symbolism that it really is.

Teddy Roosevelt, who founded the progressive party, was an outspoken defender of women’s rights, an early champion of civil rights and equality for black and Native Americans during the early 20th century; his personal relationship with Booker T. Washington and his appointment of Minnie Cox as the first black regional postmaster in the United States backs that up. 

But that won’t stop the cancer eating away at the American Identity, assuming that all white men are greedy evil racist bastards and deserve to have any monument of themselves torn down, regardless of their contributions to human kind during a completely separate period in history.

James Earle Fraser, the sculptor of the statue, stated, “The two figures at [Roosevelt’s] side are guides symbolizing the continents of Africa and America, and if you choose may stand for Roosevelt’s friendliness to all races.”A sentiment intensely evident when TR said  “To divide along the lines of section or caste or creed is un-American.

But try and tell that to the woke offspring of Teddy Roosevelt, who agree that the statue should be removed. Either they are incapable of understanding their great grandfather’s legacy or they are too cowardly to defend it, and it deserves defending.

Teddy Roosevelt broke up the Railroad and Beef trusts, met the Coal Strike of 1902 head on, reinvented foreign policy. He was the first American to receive the Nobel Peace Prize after negotiating peace between Russia and Japan. He reinvented Football. He set aside more Federal land for national parks and nature preserves than all of his predecessors combined.

He established the US Forest Service, signed into law the creation of 5 National Parks and established the first 51 Bird Reserves and 150 National Forests. And he was wise enough to foresee the ungluing of America much like the founding father’s did saying, “The one absolute certain way to bring this nation to ruin … would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities.

Teddy Roosevelt was the youngest President in U.S. history and under the nose of the oldest President in U.S. history: the bumbling, groping, do-nothing foreign shill and 40-year career politician Joe Biden, nothing will be done to protect TR’s legacy, a legacy all Americans need to understand.

In fact, Teddy’s words loom over the Biden administration like a spectre when he said, “That no man is above the law and no man below it.”

It isn’t merely a statue that will be moved to another home. The attack on the vital American spirit that Teddy Roosevelt represents is the ultimate price we will pay for our subjugation to apathy.

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