Archive for the 'News' Category

Friday

There’s something about Friday that is so much better than all the other days of the week even though most of us have to work. There’s something about just knowing that you have a few days off that puts you in a better mood. With my new life I tend to work on Saturdays doing events or speaking, but it still feels like a freebee. Friday night, even before a working Saturday seems so much better.
My favorite part of Friday is when you walk out the door. You know, the second you step outside because at that second your weekend is the longest. The minute you start your car to head home the time in your weekend hourglass begins to sift downward.
So, here’s to Friday Night. Go home, watch a movie, go out for pizza, put on your comfortable clothes, stay up late, what ever does it for you. The weekend is here.

Show I.D. to Vote

Did you see this article? It was on the wires yesterday (4/28)
What do you think?

By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press Writer
Mon Apr 28, 6:09 PM ET
WASHINGTON - States can require voters to produce photo identification, the Supreme Court ruled Monday, upholding a Republican-inspired law that Democrats say will keep some poor, older and minority voters from casting ballots

Twenty-five states require some form of ID, and the court’s 6-3 decision rejecting a challenge to Indiana’s strict voter ID law could encourage others to adopt their own measures. Oklahoma legislators said the decision should help them get a version approved.

The ruling means the ID requirement will be in effect for next week’s presidential primary in Indiana, where a significant number of new voters are expected to turn out for the Democratic contest between Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama.

The results could say something about the effect of the law, either because a large number of voters will lack identification and be forced to cast provisional ballots or because the number turns out to be small.

Supporters of the law say it’s all about preventing fraud.

Indiana has a “valid interest in protecting ‘the integrity and reliability of the electoral process,’” said Justice John Paul Stevens in an opinion that was joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Anthony Kennedy.

Stevens said that Indiana’s desire to prevent fraud and to inspire voter confidence in the election system are important even though there have been no reports of the kind of fraud the law was designed to combat. Evidence of voters being inconvenienced by the law’s requirements also is scant. For the overwhelming majority of voters, an Indiana driver’s license serves as the identification.

The law does not apply to absentee balloting, where election experts agree the threat of fraud is higher.

The Indiana law was passed in 2005. Democrats and civil rights groups opposed it as unconstitutional and called it a thinly veiled effort to discourage groups of voters who tend to prefer Democrats.

It was in effect during the 2006 elections when Democrats picked up three congressional seats in Indiana and won control of the state House of Representatives.

Justices Samuel Alito, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas agreed with the outcome Monday, but wrote separately in favor of a broader defense of voter ID laws.

“The universally applicable requirements of Indiana’s voter-identification law are eminently reasonable. The burden of acquiring, possessing and showing a free photo identification is simply not severe, because it does not ‘even represent a significant increase over the usual burdens of voting,’” Scalia said.

Justices Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and David Souter dissented.

Indiana’s voter ID law “threatens to impose nontrivial burdens on the voting rights of tens of thousands of the state’s citizens,” Souter said.

The targets of the law, he said, are “voters who are poor and old.”

Yet Stevens wrote that the law does not single out groups of voters for different treatment. “We cannot conclude that the statute imposes ‘excessively burdensome requirements’ on any class of voters,” he said. That opinion suggested the outcome could be different in a state where voters could provide evidence that their rights had been impaired.

Indiana provides IDs free of charge to people without driver’s licenses. It also allows voters who lack photo ID’s to cast a provisional ballot and then show up within 10 days at their county courthouse to produce identification or otherwise attest to their identity.

Stevens said these provisions also help reduce the burden on people who lack driver’s licenses.

Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita, a Republican, praised the decision. “This says to the voter you can have confidence again in the elections because we’re doing some of the things the guy at the video store does when you go and rent a video,” Rokita said.

Ken Falk, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, said the court was willing to burden “tens of thousands of eligible voters who lack a government-issued identification while accepting at face value Indiana’s unsubstantiated claim of voter fraud.” The ACLU brought the case on behalf of Indiana voters.

The proliferation of voter ID laws followed the enactment in 2002 of the federal Help America Vote Act. The law was designed in response to the disputed 2000 presidential election. The law’s voter ID provisions apply to first-time voters and do not mandate photo identification.

Many Democrats criticized the ruling Monday. It places “an unnecessary burden on elderly and low-income voters, not to mention other voters of disparate racial and ethnic backgrounds,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.

Mary Wilson, president of the League of Women Voters, said her group has never found a problem with in-person voter fraud. “We’d be the first ones out there to prevent voter fraud, if there really was a problem,” she said.

Several critics pointed to a footnote in Stevens’ opinion to show how far back he went — 140 years — to describe the corrosive effects of widespread fraud at polling places, a reference to Boss Tweed’s influence in New York’s municipal elections in 1868.

Republicans, meanwhile, praised the decision for recognizing the threat of voter fraud. “Today’s ruling rightfully allows states to safeguard against such destructive abuse,” said House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio.

In Oklahoma, Republican legislators said the ruling should help them pass a less-stringent voter ID bill. The Oklahoma House has approved legislation to require voters to present some form of identification — including a utility bill or bank statement. The measure faces a final vote by the state Senate.

Monday’s case was the court’s first significant foray into election law since the Bush v. Gore dispute that sealed the 2000 election for George W. Bush. The voter ID ruling, with no majority opinion and four of the nine justices writing, lacked the conservative-liberal split that marked the 2000 case.

The consolidated cases are Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, 07-21, and Indiana Democratic Party v. Rokita, 07-25.

Donations Online are coming

In a few weeks we’ll know who my opponent will be in the General Election. We are working hard to raise money because to win means we must bring in voters in Portland. I’ve been to Portland many times and will continue to speak there. But I can’t shake the hands of 2-million voters.(smile) I would if I could. We will need television and radio time and that costs money. If you would like to help us financially, every little bit helps. Go to our contact page and find out what to do. Again, we’ll have online donations by the end of the week.(fingers crossed)

April 29th, Last Day to Register For May Primary

If you are not registered to vote, you need to get that done today or you won’t be voting in the May Primary. You can pick up registration cards at the Elections office or at the post office. I doesn’t take long to fill out the forms.

Remember if you want to vote Republican, you must register Republican. If you want to vote Democrat, register as a Democrat.

In the General Election (nov) it won’t matter.

Too Common….No such thing.

I ran across this great quote in a new book I’m reading called “Three Cups of Tea”. The book is amazing. The man’s story is unbelievable. But this is not my attempt at a book review.
Here’s the quote: Greatness is always built on this foundation: The ability to appear, speak and act, as the most common man.
(Shams-ud-din Muhammed Hafiz)

I read that quote and actually stopped what I was doing at that moment. I read it again. There is so much truth in that little statement. In today’s world it seems we are sold the idea that greatness is built on a foundation of wealth, power and status. We turn on the television and are bombarded with all the things we need to make us great.
The entertainment shows, parade the latest fashions before our noses and say this is what you need to be someone. We are lead to believe, he or she who regurgitates the most facts is the smartest and fairest of them all. If you live in the right house, on the right block, near the right people, you are all right?
Why do we buy into this stuff? Who made up the rules? I think they’re wrong. I don’t think that’s what builds greatness at all. Sure, there are great people, in big and small houses. There are movie stars who are great and smart people who do great things.
But common is just so…..real. I almost said common is just so common but then you’d say, Rick, come…on.(smile)
I read a story where Abraham Lincoln heard some people at a party talking about how common he looked. He said something like; He thinks God really likes common people, which is why He made so many of them.