Saturday, June 13, 2026
Home Blog Page 784

Trump announces, the media pounces

The ink wasn’t dried on the midterm elections when former President Donald Trump announced his intention to run for president again in 2024, setting himself up as the first major announced candidate for a presidential election that will take place in two years.

Trump officially launched his 2024 presidential campaign at his Mar-a-Lago resort. He highlighted accomplishments of his first term, talked about inflation, the problem at the border, and the soaring cost of gas prices.

“I am officially running for president of the United States, and we are going to make our country great again,” Trump said.

“Our country needs a truly great leader, and we need a truly great leader now. We need a leader that wrote ‘The Art of the Deal.’ We need a leader that can bring back our jobs, can bring back our manufacturing, can bring back our military, take care of our vets. Our vets have been abandoned!” he said. “Your country is being destroyed before your eyes. America’s comeback starts right now.”

His announcement came as no surprise, as it had been scheduled for days. He also filed his candidacy with the Federal Elections Commission.

NPR reported it with a slant against the former president, signaling its intentions to report it from a certain angle: “Donald Trump, who tried to overthrow the results of the 2020 presidential election and inspired a deadly riot at the Capitol in a desperate attempt to keep himself in power, has filed to run for president again in 2024,” the news organization wrote, inaccurately.

NBC reported in its headline, “Trump, whose lies about the 2020 election inspired an insurrection, announces third White House bid. Trump has continued to falsely assert that he won the 2020 election but that he was denied office by rampant fraud.”

NBC continued, “Donald Trump, the only president impeached twice, launched a campaign to reclaim the Oval Office on Tuesday, two years after voters ousted him and a week after they rejected his hand-picked candidates in several pivotal Senate races.” NBC neglected to point out that four of Trump’s endorsed gubernatorial candidates won, out of nine he endorsed. Nine out of 17 of his endorsed House candidates won, and six out of 11 of his endorsed Senate candidates won.

The Washington Post reported, “Trump, who as president fomented an insurrection, says he is running again. Donald Trump, 76, refused to admit defeat in the 2020 election, was impeached twice and is the subject of multiple criminal investigations. His entry shifts the dynamics of the GOP field while increasing the likelihood that President Biden runs for reelection.”

The New York Times wrote, “Trump Announces 2024 Run, Repeating Lies and Exaggerating Record. In a rambling speech, former President Donald J. Trump said he would seek another term, ignoring Republicans’ concerns that he was to blame for the party’s weak midterm showing.”

MSNBC wrote, “Trump’s secret 2024 weapon? He’s ready to burn it all down. Republicans say they’re done with Trump. But Trump is running for president again — and he definitely isn’t done with them.”

In the Los Angeles Times, editorial writers opined, “Don’t misunderstand what Donald Trump means when he says he’s running for president again, as he did Tuesday evening. He doesn’t mean that he will present his case to the American people in 2024 in the expectation that a majority of them will choose him, as they have never done before — not in 2016, when he lost the popular vote but won the electoral college, nor in 2020, when he lost both.

“He doesn’t mean that he puts his faith in American democracy, election integrity, the laws of presidential succession or any other institution that is coterminous with the nation itself. He doesn’t mean he plans to abide by any of those things.

“The ex-president has demonstrated unmistakably that he intends to take the office by hook or by crook, by denying the validity of any vote against him, by lying to his armed and angry rabble, by pressuring state election officials, state legislatures and federal courts to lie, cheat and otherwise betray the American people and their democracy.”

President Joe Biden agreed with the mainstream media and said Trump had the worst record of any president as his campaign account took to Twitter to bash his predecessor:

Update: Gov. Dunleavy holding at over 51% of the vote, remains top vote-getter in 2022 election

More ballots have been counted by the Division of Elections on Tuesday, including many from the Fairbanks region.

Some 3,789 ballots were counted in the latest release of data. More early and absentee results are expected later today from Region 2, Anchorage and possibly elsewhere around the state.

There are 245,013 votes counted so far in the Nov. 8 election.

These results were updated after 6 pm.

Senate race:

  • Kelly Tshibaka: 103,972, 43.34%. On election night she was at 44.84%
  • Lisa Murkowski: 103,407, 41.11%. On election night she was at 42.13%
  • Pat Chesbro: 24,013, 10.01%. On election night she was at 9.67%
  • Buzz Kelley: 6,880, 2.87%. On election night, he was at 2.88%

In the Senate race, it becomes increasingly clear that a majority of registered Democrats voted for Sen. Lisa Murkowski first. There are but 77,000 registered Democrats in the state, and with a current turnout in this election of 36.83%, only 20,864 Democrats voted for the Democrat candidate.

Congressional race:

  • Mary Peltola: 116,322, 47.40%. On election night she was at 48.13%
  • Sarah Palin: 63,025, 26.08%. On election night she was at 26.77%
  • Nick Begich: 57,437, 23.76%. On election night he was at 24.56%
  • Chris Bye: 4,114, 1.70%. On election night he was at 1.75%

It is possible that Peltola will reach the 50%+1 threshold to avoid the ranked-choice reshuffle of votes, and if every Begich voter marked Palin second, it is also possible for her to reach 50%+1.

It’s increasingly clear that in addition to Democrat votes, Peltola swept up the nonpartisan and undeclared votes, and may have even gotten some Republican voters to mark her first.

Governors race:

  • Dunleavy/Dahlstrom: 123,479, 51.04%. On election night, they were at 51.73%
  • Gara/Cook: 57,609, 23.81%. On election night they were at 23.34%
  • Walker/Drygas: 49,398, 20.42%. On election night they were at 20.18%
  • Pierce/Grunwald: 10,789, 4.46%. On election night they were at 4.54%

Gov. Dunleavy and Nancy Dahlstrom are reigning as the top vote-getters in this election, and at 123,479 has almost 6% more votes received than the next candidate, which was Congresswoman Mary Peltola, who received 116,322 votes (so far).

In 2018, Dunleavy won with 51.4% of the vote, and he is holding slightly below that number this time, and may avoid going through the ranked choice system.

In Senate Seat P, Sen. Scott Kawasaki has made it past the 50%+1 threshold and now has 50.87%. If it holds, he will not have to go through the ranked-choice process.

Kevin McCarthy nominated House Republican leader, but will GOP members unify behind him?

In a secret ballot among Republican U.S. House members, Rep. Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfield, Calif. has overwhelmingly won the Republican nomination for speaker, according to those who were in the room and spoke anonymously. But he was not without challenges from the right wing of the Republican Party and he has yet to secure the speaker’s job; that vote will be taken in January on the floor of the House.

McCarthy, a fourth-generation resident of Kern County and son of a firefighter, won 188-31 against a challenge from Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona. When the House gavels in in January, McCarthy will need almost all Republican votes to become speaker, and it’s unclear if the right wing Freedom Caucus members will cooperate, or hand the gavel back to Rep. Nancy Pelosi.

Biggs, a former chair of the House Freedom Caucus, said on Monday that he would run against McCarthy, but admitted his chances of winning were “tough.” And even some Freedom Caucus members recognized the danger of splintering.

“If we don’t unify behind Kevin McCarthy, we’re opening up the door for the Democrats to be able to recruit some of our Republicans,” Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene told reporters.

Other House Republican roles that were voted on include Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, who was elected without opposition to become House majority leader. Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota beat two challengers to be the House majority whip.

With several races around the country still uncalled, Republicans are on the verge of taking 218 seats. Democrats have 205 seats, and about 12 are still not called, including Alaska’s House seat, which appears to be going to the Democrats and will likely be in the minority for the next two years.

In the Senate, Alaska will also be in the minority due to the 51 seats won by Democrats this cycle.

Republicans will have to count on no defections to the Democrat caucus and no splintering by the Freedom Caucus in order to keep the House.

Scott Myers files for Chugiak Eagle River seat on Assembly, Chris Constant files for his seat downtown

A realtor from Eagle River has filed a letter of intent with Alaska Public Offices Commission to run for the seat being vacated by Anchorage Assemblywoman Jamie Allard, who has won her election to the legislature by a landslide.

In 2015, Myers (pictured above) was named 30 Under 30 by REALTOR® Magazine and in 2016 he was featured on the cover of Top Agent Magazine. He’s the president of the South Fork Community Council, and the Board of Equalization, and the Zoning Examiner Board of Appeals. He is a former board member for the Eagle River Chamber of Commerce, and was president of the Anchorage Board of Realtors and Realtor of the year in 2018.

Allard’s is one of six seats that will be on the March-April ballot.

Also filing a letter of intent for the coming cycle is Assemblyman Chris Constant, who represents the downtown area of Anchorage. Constant is currently the vice chair of the Anchorage Assembly.

Dayton Ikaika Keliikipi Jr. has filed a letter of intent for the District 4 seat on the Assembly. It’s now represented by Felix Rivera, who has also filed for reelection after surviving a recall attempt in 2021. If elected, Keliikipi, who has lived in Anchorage since 2000 and is a military veteran, would be the first Native Hawaiian elected to the Anchorage Assembly.

Also on the ballot this coming March-April is the seat being vacated by Assemblyman Forrest Dunbar, who is going to the Alaska Senate after winning on Nov. 8. Pete Peterson’s seat representing East Anchorage is up as well, as he is term-limited.

Assemblywoman Austin Quinn-Davidson, who serves for west Anchorage, has said she will not run for reelection.

The Anchorage municipal elections begin March 14, with the filing period at the Clerk’s office opens Jan. 13, and closes Jan. 27. Anchorage has all-mail elections and ballots must be postmarked no later than Tuesday, April 4, 2023.

Canadian teacher will be allowed to continue wear oversized prosthetic breasts with big nipples to school

57

A high school teacher in an Ontario, Canada suburb will be allowed to continue wearing large prosthetic breasts to Oakville Trafalgar High School, where the transgender male to female teaches shop class. The large plastic breasts have nipples that protrude through the man teacher’s thin shirts, and have brought the school district unwanted international attention.

The Halton District School Board conducted a review of a proposed dress code at the request of concerned citizens and has determined that implementing any dress code would bring legal problems to the district.

The teacher at Trafalgar High School walks to school in his fetish attire.

“While the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal has acknowledged the ability of an employer to establish dress and grooming standards for the purposes of professional business, and health and safety reasons, the Tribunal has likewise acknowledged that an employer cannot establish standards which, in their application or administration, result in differential treatment on the basis of a protected ground,” Superintendent Sari Taha and Director of Education Curtis Ennis wrote. They said a dress code could be interpreted as discriminatory.

“The Board has requested that the Director of Education provide information on the potential implications which may arise from a decision to implement a staff dress code. It is clear from the above analysis that the implementation of a formal staff dress code or grooming standards would likely expose the board to considerable liability.”

“Similarly, it is important to recognize the impact that dress code policies can have on members of the transgender community,” the administrators wrote, indicating that there is some separate community for transgenders that others don’t have membership in. “Most notably, it is important for employers to make allowances to ensure that these employees are able to express themselves in accordance with their lived gender.”

The teacher’s choice of provocative clothing came to light only after students started posting pictures of the teacher on social media. Those photos went viral on Twitter.

NEA teachers union says on Twitter: ‘Educators love their students and know better than anyone what they need…’

39

The National Education Association wrote this weekend that teachers know better any anyone what students need.

“Educators love their students and know better than anyone what they need to learn and to thrive,” read the message from the official Twitter account of the NEA.

There were over 5,000 comments responding to that tweet. Most of them were not playing along with the NEA.

Libs of TikTok, an account that makes fun of liberals, wrote, “Is this an ad for school choice?”

“Nope. Get your kids out of government schools ASAP,” wrote one account.

“‘Better than anyone’? That’s rich,” said another.

“Increasingly educators seem to know better than no one,” wrote yet another. 

“Then why haven’t they been thriving in the last 25 years? Because we’re always at the bottom of the barrel world wide yet we spend millions and millions of $. I think parents need to start following the $$$,” a parent commented.

Some teachers defended the comment and said teachers really do know best.

“Professional educators have done the studying. We’ve done the research, and continue to do so, and as a result we have the subject-matter expertise. Thank you for your support. It *is* a rich skill set, and far too few respect how valuable it is,” wrote one math teacher, who has his pronouns in his Twitter bio.

But others told the NEA it was way out of its lane.

They included former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, who chimed in: “You misspelled parents.”

Others dropped some expletives on the teachers union. There were lots of F-bombs by the end of the weekend.

“So gross. You’re with my kid for one year. I’m with him from the day he is born until the day I die. Stop trying to do my job. Start doing yours,” a parent responded, echoing the sentiments of evidently thousands.

NEA-Alaska has 12,000 members in 213 of Alaska’s 229 communities, and is one of the most powerful political forces in the Alaska, where students are performing at the bottom of the pack nationwide.

Glenda Ledford files for reelection as Wasilla mayor

0

Wasilla Mayor Glenda Ledford will run for reelection in 2023. She filed her letter of intent with the Alaska Public Offices Commission last week, allowing her to begin organizing, setting up a bank account for her campaign, and raising money for ads, signs, and mailers.

Ledford moved to Alaska in 1986, and soon began her life of civic service, serving on the City of Wasilla Planning Commission for six years and as a Wasilla council member from 2017 through 2020.

During her time on the City Council, Ledford served as deputy mayor from July 2019 to October 2020.

Ledford served for eight years on the State Board of Barbers and Hairdressers. She is a small business owner and managing cosmetologist for over 34 years, and is the owner of Glenda’s Salon and Training Center, where she trains professionals in the hairdressing field. She has also been active in Republican Party politics in past years and was one of 11 delegates to the Republican National Convention in 2016 who were pledged to support Donald Trump for president.

As of this writing, no one else has filed to run for the office of mayor for the city of 9,456 residents. The Wasilla City elections will be held Oct. 3, 2023. Candidate filing at the city clerk’s office begins July 18.

Austin Quinn-Davidson says she ‘saved many lives,’ but won’t run for reelection to Anchorage Assembly

A leftist lawyer who represents West Anchorage on the Anchorage Assembly is calling it quits. She will not run for reelection, Austin Quinn-Davidson said in a news release today. There was no announcement of who might run in her place, but Democrats often line up such decisions in advance.

The next Anchorage municipal election starts in March, with people able to vote as early as March 14. Filing for office opens Jan. 13, and closes Jan. 27 at the close of business. Anchorage has all-mail elections and ballots must be postmarked no later than Tuesday, April 4, 2023.

“After more than four years of elected service to the Anchorage community, including eight months serving as the Acting Mayor of the Municipality, Austin Quinn-Davidson has announced that she will not run for re-election in 2023,” her news release said.

She and her wife have a five-month-old son, “and I want to spend more time with him and my wife at such a special time for our family.”

AQD, as she is sometimes called, said she is proud of her service and how she stepped up to serve as mayor. She was vice chair of the Assembly when former Mayor Ethan Berkowitz resigned in disgrace after being caught having an inappropriate relationship. Quinn-Davidson and her colleagues on the Assembly reshuffled the officers so she could become chair, and then become acting mayor, while Assemblyman Felix Rivera stepped back from becoming mayor, out of a lack of support from the Assembly. AQD continued the shutdown and masking policies begun by former Mayor Berkowitz.

She said, “I literally saved many lives by making difficult decisions — decisions that were not always politically popular. We were called to demonstrate true leadership and we met that challenge.”

She also took credit for a drop in crime in Anchorage, enacting an alcohol tax to fund programs intended to prevent domestic violence, sexual assault, and child abuse.

Breaking: Kari Lake loses to Katie Hobbs in Arizona governor’s race

Katie Hobbs is the governor-elect of Arizona after winning a close race against Kari Lake, a former television news broadcaster who was widely considered to be a win for the Trump side of the Republican Party and a possible running mate for Trump in 2024.

The loss of Lake means Arizona’s governorship has gone from the Republicans to the Democrats for the first time since Gov. Janet Napolitano served from 2003-2009. Current Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, has reached the end of his second term, which ends Jan. 1, 2023.

Hobbs is a technocrat, former legislator, and serves as the current secretary of state. She is a Democrat who was a social worker before going into politics, and whose style is in stark contrast to Lake, the firebrand and electrifying communicator who was unafraid to take the biased media on toe to toe.

Hobbs, in her role as secretary of state, oversees elections, and she has been widely criticized for not stepping down, but maintaining a clear conflict of interest. Hobbs has spent the past two years fighting claims that the 2020 election was stolen in Arizona. She also refused to debate Lake, who called her a “chicken” and a “coward.” Hobbs said she did not want to dignify an election denier.

The loss for Lake was not unexpected inside her campaign, as her team had gathered over the weekend in Scottsdale to prepare the fiery candidate for the likelihood that Hobbs would squeak by her. Hobbs won 50.4% to 49.6%, with about a 20,000 vote advantage out of the 2,510,181 million votes cast in the race.

Kari Lake

Like Sarah Palin in Alaska, Kari Lake enjoyed the support and endorsement of Trump. Unlike Palin, Lake has not run for office before, and in her first run has lost by only a tiny fraction of votes. Like Palin, Lake has a broadcast media background, is good on camera, and pushed back against the news media and the establishment Republicans. The two both had the support of Steve Bannon, a former Trump adviser, and other right-side luminaries.

Unlike Palin, who was the running mate for John McCain in 2008 for president, Lake attacked McCain earlier this year, ordering anyone who supported McCain to leave her rally.