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Maine gov debate: Mills, LePage trade jabs over economy and vaccines

Incumbent Democrat Maine Gov. Janet Mills went head-to-head with her GOP challenger, former Gov. Paul LePage, on a number of issues Thursday night, including the economy and vaccines.

Incumbent Democratic Maine Gov. Janet Mills went head-to-head with her Republican challenger, former Gov. Paul LePage, in their fourth debate of the election, challenging one another on several topics, including the economy, the coronavirus pandemic, and education.

In opening the debate, LePage said he believes the number one issue facing the residents of Maine is inflation, while Mills, who listed a number of issues, focused on “leadership” and challenged those in attendance to look at the records of both candidates in the race to better understand which one will be able to address the needs of voters in the state.

At different points during the debate, Mills was forced to defend actions she took as governor on numerous issues, most prominently the economy and the coronavirus pandemic.

LePage, who served as Maine’s governor from 2011 until 2019, said he believes the problem with inflation began in Maine and “crept down to Washington,” noting that it “started long before the Ukraine war.”

Incumbent Democratic Maine Gov. Janet Mills, left, and former GOP Maine Gov. Paul LePage, right, will face off in the state’s gubernatorial election on November 8.

Defending her record as governor throughout the coronavirus pandemic, Mills insisted that she led one of the “best recoveries” and that her administration has done a “pretty damn good job, too” as they have faced “challenges.”

Mills, who pledged “not to increase taxes” if she is re-elected in the state’s November 8 election, said that “economists, the experts, have said very recently that Maine’s budget is sustainable and robust and in good shape – that we are in good shape to pay our bills and to withstand a recession if there is one in the next few months or few years.”

In response, LePage accused Mills of offering “a lot of talk, no action.”

“In 2011, I became your governor,” he said. “I had a $1.3 billion short fall, I had another $750 million off-balance debt sheet to the hospitals, I had an unemployment rate of 8.2%.”

LePage said he left the “state in the best shape” it had been in years when he left office in 2019 after serving two consecutive terms at the helm of the state. “I have been there. I’ve done it once, I can do it again. I am the guy that’s got a business background.”

“In the private sector, when you spend more money and get less results, you get fired, governor,” LePage said as he looked at Mills.

Mills returned fire as she continued to defend the state’s current economic situation from LePage’s “accusations.”

“Let me be real clear: Maine’s unemployment rate is down to 3.3. It was just 2.8 just a couple months ago. We have recovered all the jobs we have lost since the pandemic, during the pandemic,” she said. “The state’s economic growth has been the 11th best in the country, that’s what the experts say. Under Mr. LePage’s tenure, we were always toward the bottom and one year we were 49th in the country from the last recession.”

Gov. Janet Mills speaks during the Democratic State Convention at the Cross Insurance Center in Bangor.

LePage insisted it’s time for people to get back to work and become more engaged with efforts to boost Maine’s economy and concluded that Mills’ policies are deterring that.

The pair of candidates were also asked about vaccines in questions that were fielded from voters in the state, including one from a registered nurse who was fired for rejecting the vaccine in 2021.

“Anybody that has to go into a nursing home or healthcare facility, a hospital, wherever, you deserve to be cared for by a person who has been fully protected themselves against contagious diseases,” Mills said. “In the beginning of the pandemic, we found people catching the virus in the hospitals, some of them getting very, very ill from that and some of them dying.”

“Based on the best science, the best medical advice possible, and based on the request of hospitals and medical facilities, we did impose a work requirement that anybody working in certain healthcare professions be fully vaccinated as they already are from other contagious diseases.”

LePage disagreed with the firing of those who did not want to take the vaccine, saying

“Our healthcare workers were heroes in 2020, but they became zeroes in 2021,” he said. “I do not agree that the current science says that the vaccines prevent transmission. I think we know that it affects people with compromised immunities and different types of vulnerable groups – those I believe we need to concentrate and protect, but I don’t believe there was any compassion in October of 2021 when healthcare workers and first responders were fired because they wouldn’t get the vaccine just before Thanksgiving and Christmas.”

“They were not allowed to take unemployment. That to me is not only cruel, it’s inhumane,” he added.

The two candidates also said they would not favor requiring students to be vaccinated to go to school, with LePage saying “absoultey not.”

Former Maine governor Paul LePage speaks during a grand opening held by the Maine Republican Party for the new MEGOP Multi-Cultural Center in Portland on Tuesday, April 5, 2022.

Mills also said she wouldn’t support a vaccine requirement for school students because it’s “still in emergency use authorization” and was “recommended by the national association of CDC directors to recommend to pediatricians that they speak with parents about getting the vaccine for their child…”

Mills and LePage also offered challenges to one another’s position when it came to Maine’s education system and certain books that many parents say contain explicit material being welcomed into several of the state’s school systems.

Mills insisted that the state’s education system is holding strong and that the state’s recent test scores “are higher than a lot of red states” and noted that “a lot of students suffered during the pandemic.”

“I wanna invest in them to bring them back up to speed – after school programs and summer programs,” she said. Pointing to other states who had lower test scores than Maine, Mills insisted that “it’s not my fault in particular.”

LePage, asked if he were governor during the pandemic, said he would have been “a lot more careful about going to Zoom education” and insisted it had a negative impact on the learning capabilities of the state’s students.

Asked about certain books that contain explicit images and were reportedly found to be in some of the state’s schools, as well as recommended by the Maine Department of Education, LePage and Mills were at odds.

Mills insisted it’s up to school board members in districts across the state to regulate what materials are welcomed into classrooms and that she doesn’t have a role in that. LePage, however, insisted that parents aren’t notified about the books or given the option to argue their point that the materials should not be in schools. LePage said several parents he has spoken with have been unable to get a list of the materials found in their student’s educational library.

The debate, which was moderated by News Center Maine’s Pat Callahan, was held at the Holiday Inn Portland-by the Bay.

Mills and LePage will face off in the Maine gubernatorial election on November 8.

 

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‘One Nation, One Solution’, Get Rid of BJP Misrule in 2024: Kharge on Simultaneous Polls Panel

In his post, Kharge said, “This gimmick of forming a committee on ‘One Nation, One Election’ is a subterfuge for dismantling the Federal Structure of India.” “Drastic actions like ‘One Nation, One Election’ would sabotage our Democracy, Constitution and evolved-time-tested procedures. What can be accomplished by simple electoral reforms would prove to be a disaster, like other disruptive ideas of PM Modi,” he said

 

Amid the government’s push for simultaneous elections in the country, Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge on Sunday said the people of India have “one nation, one solution” for 2024 and that is to get rid of the BJP’s “misrule”.

In a post on X, Kharge termed the high-level committee constituted by the Centre to examine the feasibility of ‘One Nation, One Election’ a “gimmick” and alleged the Modi government wants to slowly replace democracy in India with dictatorship.

The government on Saturday notified an eight-member high-level committee, which will be headed by former president Ram Nath Kovind, to examine and make recommendations for holding simultaneous elections to Lok Sabha, state assemblies, municipalities and panchayats.

Hours later, Congress leader in Lok Sabha Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, the lone opposition leader in the panel, wrote to Union Home Minister Amit Shah declining to be a part of the committee, saying its “terms of reference have been prepared in a manner to guarantee its conclusions”.

In his post, Kharge said, “This gimmick of forming a committee on ‘One Nation, One Election’ is a subterfuge for dismantling the Federal Structure of India.” “Drastic actions like ‘One Nation, One Election’ would sabotage our Democracy, Constitution and evolved-time-tested procedures. What can be accomplished by simple electoral reforms would prove to be a disaster, like other disruptive ideas of PM Modi,” he said.

Till 1967, the Congress president said, neither did India have so many states nor did it have 30.45 lakh elected representatives in panchayats.

Noting that India is the world’s largest democracy, Kharge said, “We have lakhs of elected representatives, and their future cannot be determined in one go, now.” “For 2024, people of India only have ‘ONE NATION, ONE SOLUTION’ – To get rid of BJP misrule,” he said.

Kharge said at least five amendments to the Constitution and a massive change in the Representation of the People Act, 1951 would be required to hold simultaneous elections in the country.

The constitutional amendments shall be required to truncate the terms of the elected Lok Sabha and state assemblies, as also at the level of local bodies so that they can be synchronised, he said.

“Essential questions:- Without undermining the wisdom of any individual, is the proposed committee best suited to deliberate and decide on perhaps the most drastic disruption in Indian electoral process? “Should this huge exercise unilaterally be undertaken without consulting the political parties at the National level and at the State level,” asked Kharge, who is also the leader of opposition in Rajya Sabha.

He further asked if this exercise should take place without bringing the states and their elected governments on board.

“This idea has been extensively rejected by three Committees in the past. It remains to be seen whether the Fourth one has been constituted with a pre-decided outcome in mind,” he said.

He also expressed surprise that the committee does not include a representative of the Election Commission (EC).

Kharge claimed the EC incurred an expenditure of around Rs 5,500 crore on elections between 2014-19 (including the 2019 Lok Sabha polls) and it is only a fraction of the government’s expenditure budget. This makes the cost-saving logic “penny wise, pound foolish”, he said.

“Similarly, if the Model Code of Conduct is a problem, it can be changed either by shortening the length of the moratorium or by relaxing the kinds of developmental activities permitted during the election season. All political parties can reach a wider consensus in this regard,” he said.

“The BJP has a habit of overthrowing elected governments by disregarding the mandate of the people, which has added considerably to the total number of 436 by-elections since 2014 for parliamentary and assembly constituencies alone,” the Congress president said.

“This inherent greed for power in the BJP has already vitiated our politics and has rendered the anti-defection law toothless,” Kharge said.

Besides, Congress’ Chowdhury, the government named Home Minister Amit Shah, former leader of the opposition in Rajya Sabha Ghulam Nabi Azad, former Finance Commission chairman N K Singh, former Lok Sabha secretary general Subhash C Kashyap, senior advocate Harish Salve and former chief vigilance commissioner Sanjay Kothari as members of the high-level committee.

Law Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal will attend the meetings of the committee as a special invitee, while Law Secretary Niten Chandra will be the secretary to the panel.

(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed – PTI

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‘Squad’ Dem faces backlash for smearing Israel as ‘racist state’: ‘Truly disgusting’

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., was blasted on social media Saturday after she told a protester that Israel is a “racist state” and called for a two-state solution.

 

A member of the “Squad” of far-left House Democrats received backlash over the weekend on social media after she accused Israel of being a “racist state.”

The condemnation of Israel from Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., who heads the Congressional Progressive Caucus, came in response to outbursts from pro-Palestinian protesters who interrupted a panel she spoke on.

“As somebody who’s been in the streets and participated in a lot of demonstrations, I want you to know that we have been fighting to make it clear that Israel is a racist state, that the Palestinian people deserve self-determination and autonomy, that the dream of a two-state solution is slipping away from us, that it does not even feel possible,” Jayapal said at the far-left Netroots Nation Conference in Chicago.

“It is people that are literally trying to make sure that we do not take the positions we take, that the rest of the progressive caucus has been pushing and pushing,” she added.

 

HOUSE DEM JAYAPAL GRILLS FBI’S WRAY ON COLLECTING AMERICANS’ DATA, WARNS OF ‘DIFFICULT’ FISA REAUTHORIZATION

The video of the exchange quickly went viral, with a wide variety of criticism toward Jayapal.

“A disgraceful statement that’s particularly tone deaf when thousands of Israelis are in the streets protesting to protect their democracy,” Jason Brodsky, the policy director at United Against Nuclear Iran, tweeted. “#Israel’s previous government included Ra’am in the coalition. That’s not what a racist state does.”

“You can never be extreme enough for these people,” Miranda Devine, a New York Post columnist and Fox News contributor, tweeted.

“[Rep. Jayapal], you are despicable,” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., tweeted. “This is truly disgusting, especially coming from a member of Congress.”

Several members of the “Squad” have announced they will boycott Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s address to Congress this week. Jayapal has repeatedly called for a two-state solution in the region.

“There is no way in hell I am attending the joint session address from a President whose country has banned me and denied [U.S. Rep. from Michigan] Rashida Tlaib the ability to see her grandma,” Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., said in a series of tweets. She also said the U.S. government should not have invited him to speak in the first place.

“Pramila Jayapal is on stage, slandering Israel, and by extension the Jewish people’s right to freedom and self-determination as ‘racist.’ This is anti-Semitism,” tweeted Caroline Glick, a senior contributing editor at the Jewish News Syndicate.

REP JAYAPAL CLASHES WITH CNN HOST OVER AMERICANS SUPPORTING SPENDING CUTS AS PART OF DEBT LIMIT DEAL

 

“Calling the only nation state of the Jews ‘racists’ when offers all its citizens, including Arabs & Muslims equality rights, is something I would expect to hear from the Ayatollahs in Iran or members of the mullah regime “parliament”, NOT a member of Congress! FOR SHAME JAYAPAL!” Karmel Melamed, a journalist, tweeted.

ILHAN OMAR SAYS ‘NO WAY IN HELL’ SHE’S ATTENDING ISRAELI PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS TO CONGRESS NEXT WEEK

 

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Jayapal released a long statement on Twitter and on her office’s website Sunday afternoon in an attempt to clarify her comments on Israel, saying she does not “believe the idea of Israel as a nation is racist.” However, she accused the “extreme right-wing government” of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of pushing “outright racist policies.”

“I have always worked toward a two-state solution that allows both Israelis and Palestinians to live freely, safely, and with self-determination alongside each other and that is still what I am absolutely committed to,” Jayapal said. “I also know that the many policies of the current Israeli government, including rampant settlement expansion, make it extremely difficult for Palestinians who simply want the same rights as their Israeli neighbors to believe such a solution is possible.”

 

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‘Thank You, Kharge Ji…’ Delhi CM Expresses Gratitude to Congress for Support on Ordinance Issue

The Delhi CM left for Bengaluru earlier today to attend the second mega meeting of the opposition parties to be held on July 17-18 to chalk out a strategy to take on the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls

 

Arvind Kejriwal on Monday thanked Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge for standing with the people of Delhi(File Image/PTI)

The Delhi CM left for Bengaluru earlier today to attend the second mega meeting of the opposition parties to be held on July 17-18 to chalk out a strategy to take on the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls

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Delhi CM and AAP National Convenor, Arvind Kejriwal on Monday thanked Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge for “standing with the people of Delhi” over the ordinance issue.

“Thank u Kharge ji for standing with the people of Delhi. This ordinance is anti-India and anti-national and ought to be fought tooth and nail,” Kejriwal said in a tweet. The Delhi CM has left for Bengaluru to attend the second mega meeting of the opposition parties to be held on July 17-18 to chalk out a strategy to take on the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls.

On asked about the Congress party’s stand on AAP in Delhi and Punjab, Kharge said, “This is not about just one person. If the democracy and Constitution of the country suffer a blow, it becomes our responsibility to unite and work together to save democracy & Constitution. No individual is bigger than the country.”

Following a meeting of the AAP’s political affairs committee (PAC) at Kejriwal’s residence, party leader and Rajya Sabha MP Raghav Chadha welcomed the Congress’s decision to oppose the Centre’s ordinance on the control of administrative services in Delhi.

“The Aam Aadmi Party’s political affairs committee met today and held an extensive discussion. On the party national convenor Arvind Kejriwal’s call, TMC, RJD, JD(U), DMK, BRS, NCP, SP, Shiv Sena (UBT), CPI, CPI(M), JMM – all these parties raised their voice against the black ordinance and assured of their support in defeating (the bill on it) in Parliament,” he said.

Congress extended its support to the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) over the Delhi ordinance issue a day before the big opposition meeting.

“I think they (AAP) are going to join the meeting tomorrow. As for the ordinance (on control of services in Delhi), our stand is very clear. We are not going to support it,” Congress general secretary KC Venugopal said on Sunday.

The Congress party’s stand on the Delhi ordinance issue was a major point of contention in the first opposition meeting held in Patna on June 23. The AAP had criticized the Grand Old Party for not supporting the Delhi government over the ordinance issue.

 

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BJP’s Review Meet After Bengal Panchayat Poll Seeks to Corner TMC on Violence; Shah’s Visit to Bolster Efforts

Party sources said all leaders and cadre have been asked to focus on the 2024 Lok Sabha polls now. The BJP has also planned a mega rally on July 19 with people who were forced to flee their house due to poll-related violence

 

BJP will felicitate the winning candidates to increase their confidence. (Shutterstock)

Party sources said all leaders and cadre have been asked to focus on the 2024 Lok Sabha polls now. The BJP has also planned a mega rally on July 19 with people who were forced to flee their house due to poll-related violence

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The BJP launched into introspective mode on Sunday as top state leaders reviewed the party’s performance in the West Bengal panchayat elections. BJP won 22 per cent votes in the polls, which is less than what it won in Lok Sabha elections but more than the 2018 vote share.

The meeting, which had four important aspects and included leaders such as Mangal Pandey and Sunil Bansal, also discussed the alleged violence during the elections as is set to raise the issue as a national campaign.

Amit Shah to Visit in August

Party sources said all leaders and cadre have been asked to focus on the 2024 Lok Sabha polls now. Union Home Minister Amit Shah is likely to visit Bengal in August. Sukanto Majumdar, BJP’s state president, earlier met Shah in Delhi and submitted his report on the poll performance.

Support Post-Poll Violence Victims

In 2021, BJP went to court and ensured a CBI investigation into the post-poll violence. However, there were allegations that party leaders did not stand by victims and hence, this time sources say most of the top brass is travelling to meet and understand the grievances of the people.

Felicitating Winning Candidate

Party sources said it was not easy to win any seat in panchayat polls, given the TMC’s “manipulation”. The leaders therefore feel the winning candidates must be felicitated to increase their confidence. Candidates who lost polls will also be recognised for their efforts.

Protest Against Violence

Sources say BJP has planned a mega rally on July 19 with people who were forced to flee their house due to violence during the polls and after the results.

The party has also increased its organisational districts from 42 to 43, with Jadavpur area — which used to fall under south Kolkata — now being considered a separate district.

BJP leaders will keep up the pressure on the state government, stating that law and order is in a bad shape and the Centre’s intervention is required.

After BJP leaders Shantanu Thakur and Sukanto Majumdar hinted that the Bengal government might fall, the TMC reacted strongly and tweeted: “Today, @DrSukantaBJP made suggestive remarks implying that the Government of West Bengal could collapse at any time, and MLAs might consider supporting someone else. His comments reek of a nefarious plot to topple the state government and serves as another indictment of the worrying trend under the BJP regime, that thrives on engineering defections.

“It is now a well-established fact that @BJP4India’s pan-India growth has come on the back of defections and central agencies. A 2020 report by ADR found that since 2014, 405 MLAs defected from their parties, 182 (44.9%) of whom joined BJP. Recently, nine NCP MLAs joined the Eknath Shinde-led Maharashtra government, which was hardly surprising given that @AjitPawarSpeaks, @ChhaganCBhujbal, @praful_patel and @mrhasanmushrif all face money laundering charges and are under the @dir_ed lens. It appears from Sukanta Majumdar’s comments that the BJP is hatching a similarly sinister plan in Bengal.

“The shame and guilt of losing in his own backyard, Dakshin Dinajpur, must be a bitter pill for Sukanta Majumdar to swallow! Facing a humiliating defeat in the Panchayat election, their hateful and divisive politics rejected by the people, the @BJP4Bengal karyakartas have dropped all pretense and are now making no attempts to even conceal their sinister agendas.”

The BJP for now seems to be in election mode and Shah’s visit in August is likely to bolster the morale of the workers further.

 

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OBC Leader and Ex-Samajwadi Party MLA Dara Singh Chauhan Joins BJP

Previously, Chauhan was the minister for forest and environment under the Yogi Adityanath govt before resigning from the Council of Ministers in January 2022

 

Ex-Samajwadi Party, now BJP Leader Dara Singh Chauhan. (FIle: News18)

Previously, Chauhan was the minister for forest and environment under the Yogi Adityanath govt before resigning from the Council of Ministers in January 2022

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OBC leader and former Samajwadi Party MLA Dara Singh Chauhan on Monday joined the BJP at the party office in Lucknow.

Chauhan joined the saffron party in the presence of Deputy Chief Ministers Keshav Prasad Maurya and Brajesh Pathak, Uttar Pradesh BJP chief Bhupendra Singh Chaudhary and ministers Girish Yadav and Baldev Singh Aulakh.

Earlier in the day, Chauhan met Speaker of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly Satish Mahana at the latter’s office and handed over him his resignation letter. On Saturday, Chauhan, who was the MLA from Ghosi in Mau district, had tendered his resignation from the UP Legislative Assembly.

An Other Backward Classes (OBC) leader, Chauhan was the minister for forests and environment in the previous BJP government headed by Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath. He resigned from the Council of Ministers on January 12, 2022.

Chauhan represented the Madhuban Assembly constituency in Mau district from 2017 to 2022. He also represented the Ghosi seat in the 15th Lok Sabha for the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP). In the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, he was defeated by BJP candidate Harinarayan Rajbhar by more than 1.4 lakh votes.

Chauhan had joined the BJP in 2015 and was appointed the party’s OBC Morcha president and fielded from the Madhuban Assembly constituency.

(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed – PTI)

 

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