July 2018 Newsletter

Primary Run-Off Election July 24th

State-Wide Candidates- Governor, L.S. “Casey” Cagle and Brian Kemp*
Lieutenant Governor: Geoff Duncan and David Shafer*
Secretary of State: David Belle Isle* and Brad Raffensperger
*My picks

Why I Can’t Vote for Raffensperger

H.B. 33, introduced in 2017 by Representative Raffensperger, prompted two critical questions:
Will someone who is not a U.S. citizen be allowed to govern in Georgia?
Should U.S. citizens or Georgia citizens be governed by someone who is not a U.S. citizen?
The answer to the first question above would have been “yes” if H.B. 33 had passed, because it (a) added a new section to three Georgia Codes – Titles 36, 45, 50 – to (b) allow non-citizens to hold public office in counties, municipal corporations and other governmental entities that make policy, spend public money, levy taxes, or assess, impose, or collect fees or charges.

H.B. 33 would have allowed non-citizens to serve in local government authorities, school districts, commissions, councils and boards. Such non-citizens are (a) U.S. nationals (b) lawful permanent residents, (c) aliens with lawful status in the U.S., (d) legal residents of Georgia, (e) active members of the U.S. military, and (f) members of the soldier’s immediate family.

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May 2018 Newsletter

“Dis-invitations” to Speak on Campus

“Protesters at the University of California, Berkeley caused over $100,000 in damage and several injuries while violently protesting an appearance … causing the event to be canceled. Only three arrests were made by police…. Students at Middlebury College in Vermont disrupted an event … forcing the event to be relocated and live-streamed from a private, remote location. Protesters became aware of the new location and attacked [a professor and the speaker], sending [the speaker] to the emergency room.”
– Greg Lukianoff, FIRE President and CEO,
Testimony to U.S. House Subcommittee on the Constitution and Civil Justice

Dis-invitation is the increased demand by college students and faculty that speakers with whom they disagree must not be allowed to speak on campus. Activists first targeted speakers at commencements, but, now, 80 percent of the protests are on college campuses, where administrators often defy the Constitution and revoke or withdraw the speaker’s invitation.

Offenses against the Elderly Become Felonies

H.B. 803 passed the Senate unanimously, with only one dissenting vote in the House. When Governor Deal signed it May 7th; it became Act 419, which takes effect July 1st.
H.B. 803 classifies as crimes coercion, misuse of controlled substances, deception, isolation or exploitation, if they are perpetrated against disabled adults or the elderly or any resident. The bill defines each offense as a felony, punishable by one-to-20 years in prison and a $100,000 fine. Each violation will be judged as a separate offense.

A 2017 report by the MetLife Mature Market Institute, estimated that victims of elder financial abuse and exploitation lose over $2.9 billion per year. When another study added fraud to that, the loss increased to $36.5 billion annually. Elders report financial exploitation much more often than they report abuse or neglect. Of the 39 states and D.C. that addressed the issue last year, 24 passed laws or resolutions to protect the elderly and vulnerable adults.

To avoid becoming victims, elders are encouraged to personally control, post and open their own mail, refuse to give personal information over the phone, communicate with others on their own phone, and learn what rights they have when dealing with their professional or family caregivers. A call to 911 or police is suggested as a way to clarify situations. Although the many forms of elder abuse result in a 300 percent higher risk of death, the passage of H.B. 803 should improve the situation for Georgia elders.

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A Guide to the Georgia General Primary/Nonpartisan Election – May 22, 2018

There will be three types of ballots:
a. Republican and Nonpartisan Primary Ballot.
b. Democratic and Nonpartisan Primary Ballot.
c. Nonpartisan Primary Ballot – does not contain Gubernatorial, U.S. Congress or State Legislative candidates.

Asking for a Republican or Democratic ballot does not indicate you are a card-carrying member of either party. The Republican and Democratic ballots both contain the Nonpartisan candidates. The type of ballot you select May 22nd or earlier if you advanced vote will determine the type of ballot you must use in the event of a runoff on July 24th. For example, if you use a Democratic ballot on May 22nd then you cannot use a Republican ballot to vote in the Republican runoff, if there is one. If you select a Nonpartisan ballot on May 22nd or did not vote on May 22nd then you are free to vote in the runoff and select Republican or Democratic ballot.

Click here to view Georgia Insight’s list of candidates.  It is worth the read!

April 2018 Newsletter

Bills: Some Lived, Some Died, Some Were Gutted

While death-by-committee is the fate of most legislation, it is, simultaneously, good or bad depending on what the bill was introduced to do. Based on their subject, bills and resolutions are assigned to committees to accelerate their disposition. Meanwhile, legislators convene for a fraction of each of 40 days to handle on-the-floor responsibilities. Then, they attend committee meetings before and after the floor sessions to decide which bills and resolutions are favorably reported out of committee onto the Senate floor or House floor, where they pass or die. Bills left in committee die, also.

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