Monday, May 23, 2022

WHO DESTROYED GEORGIA? - Primary Races Foreshadow Blockbuster November in Georgia

 

Primary Races Foreshadow Blockbuster November in Georgia

Brian Kemp, Stacey Abrams, David Perdue
Ethan Miller, Alberto Rodriguez, Kevin Cox/Getty
14:37

The primary battles that have been playing out across Georgia have been some of the most watched in the country, and they are likely only a preview of what is to come in the Peach State’s general elections.

The Republican primaries, specifically, have garnered national attention largely because former President Donald Trump is pursuing what many have described as a “vendetta” against Gov. Brian Kemp and Kemp’s allies over 2020.

Trump weighed in on not just the top races but also multiple down-ballot races that people typically tend to overlook.

He initially endorsed seven candidates — most of whom aligned with his anti-Kemp mission — and has since added a slate of incumbents to that number, making it 13 candidates total who now have the former president’s blessing heading into Tuesday.

While Trump is well-liked by Republicans in Georgia, some of the candidates he backed early on have been caught up in heated races and are facing mixed prospects in their primaries.

Georgia requires candidates to obtain more than 50 percent of the vote to win their races outright, and in part because of how contested these races have become, some are also likely to necessitate runoffs.

Meanwhile on the other side of the aisle, Democrats have seen a relatively low-action primary season.

The most prominent Democrats on the ballot, Sen. Raphael Warnock and Stacey Abrams, will cruise through their primaries with little or no opposition and boatloads of campaign cash saved up for the general.

Democrats’ sleepiness is also apparent in the numbers as more than 480,000 have voted in the Republican primary, while about 370,000 have voted in the Democrat primary, according to Georgia Votes.

The overall early voting number, driven by Republican turnout, has been record-breaking in Georgia, as more than 859,000 have already voted, mostly in person but some by absentee ballot.

Republicans appear fired up ahead of what is expected to be a red wave year while Democrats rule Washington and President Joe Biden’s approval hovers at rock bottom. In Georgia, they are seeking redemption for races lost in 2020, they have a state celebrity on the ballot in Herschel Walker, and many of the primaries are highly competitive and elevated by Trump’s intervention.

Below are the races to watch for on Tuesday.

GOP GOVERNOR’S RACE

The gubernatorial showdown between Kemp and former Sen. David Perdue is the top race to watch Tuesday night.

All signs point to Perdue losing badly to Kemp. Most polls have Perdue trailing Kemp by wide margins and the former senator has raised only a fraction of what Kemp has during the course of the race. Aiming to force Kemp into a runoff could be Perdue’s best shot at unseating the governor.

A recent Fox News poll showed Kemp up 30 points over Perdue, 60 percent to 28 percent, while a newly released Fox 5 Atlanta poll indicated a bit of a tighter race and Kemp a little closer to runoff territory. That poll had Kemp at 52 percent compared to Perdue’s 38 percent.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, left, shakes hands with former Sen. David Perdue at a Republican gubernatorial debate, Sunday, April 24, 2022, in Atlanta. (Miguel Martinez/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, Pool)

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp shakes hands with former Sen. David Perdue at a Republican gubernatorial debate, April 24, 2022, in Atlanta. (Miguel Martinez/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, Pool)

Perdue contends that polls are wrong, laying out his argument on Breitbart News Saturday this past weekend that they are not capturing new voters, who are “MAGA voters.”

The number of Republicans who have so far voted is “four times the number that voted [early] in ’18, the last time we had a nonpresidential primary,” Perdue said, adding that “the big news” is that half of them “did not vote in ’18. We believe these are MAGA voters.”

Perdue added, “By definition, when pollsters are talking to Republican primary voters, they qualify someone to say if you haven’t voted in each of the last three primaries, we can’t talk to you. They’re only talking to people who voted in the last three primaries. So they’re, by definition, not talking to half the people who have voted so far in Georgia.”

Trump, Perdue’s premiere supporter, is betting big on the race.

The former president held an expensive Mar-a-Lago fundraiser with Perdue, rallied with him in Georgia, and his hosting a tele-rally for him Monday night. Federal filings show Trump’s Save America PAC has invested more in Perdue than any other candidate, pouring more than $2.5 million into anti-Kemp groups.

FILE - Former Sen. David Perdue of Georgia, speaks as President Donald Trump looks on, at a campaign rally at Valdosta Regional Airport, Dec. 5, 2020, in Valdosta, Ga. Perdue is building his campaign around Donald Trump and veering to the right as he tries to unseat Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in a May 24 GOP primary. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

Former Sen. David Perdue of Georgia speaks as President Donald Trump looks on at a campaign rally, December 5, 2020, in Valdosta, Georgia. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

The president emphasized in a statement Friday that he is not backing down despite Perdue’s lagging poll numbers.

“The Kemp Campaign, together with Fake News NBC has put out a phony narrative that I have given up on David Perdue in Georgia,” Trump wrote. “That is completely FALSE! I am with David all the way because Brian Kemp was the WORST Governor in the Country on Election Integrity!”

Perdue zeroed in on election integrity from the outset of his campaign, and Trump’s endorsement has been a defining feature of his candidacy. Perdue’s opening television ad of the cycle was a direct to camera appeal from Trump to vote for Perdue and not Kemp, who Trump repeatedly denounces as a “RINO.”

Kemp now dominates the airwaves, while Perdue has gone dark on advertising.

Kemp also has the benefit of incumbency. The governor was able to spend much of the primary touting passage of conservative legislation like constitutional carry and eliminating race-focused teaching in the classroom.

WATKINSVILLE, GEORGIA - MAY 21: Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp greets people as he campaigns during a Get Out the Vote cookout at the Hadden Estate at DGD Farms on May 21, 2022 in Watkinsville, Georgia. Gov. Kemp is facing off against David Perdue in the Georgia Republican gubernatorial primary. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp greets people as he campaigns during a Get Out the Vote cookout at DGD Farms on May 21, 2022, in Watkinsville, Georgia. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

He raised teachers’ pay this year and temporarily suspended the state’s gas tax, while celebrating two giant electric vehicle plant deals — with Rivian and Hyandai — that are set to bring thousands of jobs to the Peach State.

Kemp is taking nothing, including the polls, for granted, however. A spokesperson for Kemp told Breitbart News the campaign is “encouraged about where they are but intends to run a full-court press until polls close on election day.”

Whoever wins will face Abrams, a daunting opponent who amassed $11.7 million in the last reporting period and has worked to capitalize on the GOP infighting as she coasts through her primary unopposed.

GOP SENATE RACE

Every public poll in this race has shown Walker, a former football star, miles ahead of his closest challenger, Agriculture Commissioner Gary Black, leaving little chance that Walker won’t breeze past 50 percent and win Tuesday night.

Walker is somewhat of a household name in Georgia, having won the Heisman Trophy playing as a University of Georgia running back and then going on to play in both the NFL and the Olympics. In addition to his fame, Walker also has no shortage of funding, banking $16 million through May 4, according to Open Secrets.

Unlike several of his other endorsements, Trump’s endorsement of Walker is uncontroversial. The former president publicly encouraged Walker to run early in 2021 and may have helped solidify Walker’s bid, which came in late August after months of anticipation.

Walker, for his part, has sought to be a unifier in the race, refusing to take sides in the hostile gubernatorial primary and preemptively asking his opponents to join him in a “unity celebration” on election day.

ATHENS, GA - SEPTEMBER 11: Former running back Herschel Walker for the Georgia Bulldogs on the sidelines against the UAB Blazers in the first half at Sanford Stadium on September 11, 2021 in Athens, Georgia. (Photo by Brett Davis/Getty Images)

Former running back Herschel Walker for the Georgia Bulldogs on the sidelines at Sanford Stadium on September 11, 2021, in Athens, Georgia. (Brett Davis/Getty Images)

The approach comes as Walker is gearing up for a general election matchup against Warnock, who is one of the most well-funded Democrats in the country and is currently sitting atop a $23 million mountain of cash on hand.

Democrats will seek to protect Warnock at all costs in the general election, while Republicans will aggressively pursue his seat as a key pickup opportunities in their quest to take the U.S. Senate majority.

TENTH DISTRICT GOP RACE

The already-packed primary in the Tenth Congressional District was jolted in February when former gubernatorial candidate Vernon Jones, a former state representative, jumped into the race.

Trump had urged Jones, an avid Trump supporter who has referred to himself as a “black Donald Trump,” to drop out of the gubernatorial primary with the incentive of an endorsement promise for his congressional bid. Jones had been polling well behind Perdue and Kemp, and Perdue was expected to annex much of Jones’s support upon his exit from the race.

PERRY, GA - SEPTEMBER 25: Vernon Jones, Georgia gubernatorial candidate, speaks to a crowd at a rally featuring former US President Donald Trump on September 25, 2021 in Perry, Georgia. Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker, Georgia Secretary of State candidate Rep. Jody Hice (R-GA), and Georgia Lieutenant Gubernatorial candidate State Sen. Burt Jones (R-GA) also appeared as guests at the rally. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

Vernon Jones speaks at a rally featuring former President Donald Trump on September 25, 2021, in Perry, Georgia. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

Jones, who became a Republican in 2021, now has the challenge of overcoming his reputation as a longtime Dekalb County Democrat as he pursues office in the solid red Tenth District.

An internal poll Jones provided to Breitbart News in April found Jones with a slight four-point edge over trucking company owner Mike Collins.

Collins has reported raising the most money in the race, but other candidates have their own benefits. Paul Broun, for instance, has name recognition after having previously represented the district for eight years, while current Tenth District congressman Rep. Jody Hice has endorsed state Rep. Tim Barr to succeed him.

SIXTH DISTRICT GOP RACE

This race is also host to several primary contenders. The district, currently represented by Rep. Lucy McBath (D-GA), reddened significantly during Georgia’s redistricting process, which forced McBath to run in a different district while opening her seat up as prime real estate for Republicans.

Attorney Jake Evans and physician and military veteran Rich McCormick appear to be two of the top contenders who could flip the seat red in the general election.

The two have raised a combined $4 million and both carry hefty endorsements.

Evans, whose legal work centered largely around election integrity in the leadup to 2020, garnered Trump’s endorsement in May. Evans told Breitbart News Trump’s late backing was “game-changing” for him. The political newcomer has also been supported from the get-go by former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who used to represent the Sixth District.

McCormick, however, has the experience and name ID from previously challenging Democrat Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux and boasts support from the conservative Club for Growth, a group with deep pockets that backs candidates who promote limited government.

SEVENTH DISTRICT DEMOCRAT RACE

This race stands out as it pits two Democrat incumbents, McBath and Bourdeaux, against each other. McBath was forced out of the Sixth District and into Bourdeaux’s district after the congressional lines drew the Sixth District to lean more favorably toward Republicans.

Several big names have swooped in to support McBath, including former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

Democrat billionaire Michael Bloomberg’s PAC stepped into the scene as well, donating a million dollars to a late ad campaign on behalf of McBath, according to Politico. The pair have a shared interest in gun control, a passion of McBath’s after her son was murdered in 2012.

WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 11: One day after passing $1.9 trillion COVID-related stimulus package, Rep. Lucy McBath (D-GA) joins a news conference with Democrats from the House and Senate to discuss proposed gun violence prevention legislation at the U.S. Capitol Visitors Center on March 11, 2021 in Washington, DC. Democrats are introducing the Bipartisan Background Checks Act and the Enhanced Background Checks Act as part of their aggressive legislative agenda that also includes voting rights and immigration reform. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Rep. Lucy McBath joins a news conference with fellow Democrats to discuss proposed gun violence prevention legislation at the U.S. Capitol on March 11, 2021. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Bourdeaux, however, told the New York Times her local bona fides are her advantage in the race.

“If you look at who I’m endorsed by, it is the people in the community,” Bourdeaux said. “It really is very much this very local race.”

SECOND DISTRICT GOP RACE

The Second District has not attracted quite as much attention as the others, but Republican operatives in the state view it as a potential pickup opportunity in the general election.

The district is currently represented by Democrat Rep. Sanford Bishop, who has served there for nearly three decades. Bishop appears to have become a touch more vulnerable after redistricting as FiveThiryEight shifted his district from D+6 to D+4.

There are several names in the running, but attacks have surfaced against former Army Captain Jeremy Hunt, a frontrunner who is endorsed by former Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley. The attacks, summarized in an anonymous website realjeremyhunt.com, frame Hunt as an establishment candidate and “carpetbagger.”

Other candidates hoping to unseat Bishop include Chris West, an Air Force officer and real estate attorney, as well as businessman Wayne Johnson.

SECRETARY OF STATE RACE

Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger would seemingly be in hot water after Trump directed much of his wrath about the 2020 election at Georgia and repeatedly identified Raffensperger as just as blameworthy as Kemp for Republicans’ stunning losses that year.

Rep. Jody Hice, a fervent supporter of Trump, has forgone his congressional seat in an attempt to unseat Raffensperger, and earned the enthusiastic support of Trump early on.

Georgia Secretary of State candidate Rep. Jody Hice speaks during a rally as former President Donald Trump watches on September 25, 2021, in Perry, Georgia. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

“Wow, just heard the good news. One of our most outstanding Congressmen, Jody Hice, has announced he is running for Secretary of State in the Great State of Georgia,” Trump wrote in his endorsement announcement in March 2021.

“Unlike the current Georgia Secretary of State, Jody leads out front with integrity,” Trump continued. “I have 100% confidence in Jody to fight for Free, Fair, and Secure Elections in Georgia, in line with our beloved U.S. Constitution. Jody will stop the Fraud and get honesty into our Elections!”

Hice and Raffensperger have been highly active as the primary nears, as Hice campaigns around the state and Raffensperger heavily promotes news of his activities in office, such as investigations he is pursuing and the high early voting participation in this year’s elections.

ATLANTA, GA - NOVEMBER 06: Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger holds a press conference on the status of ballot counting on November 6, 2020 in Atlanta, Georgia. The 2020 presidential race between incumbent U.S. President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden is still too close to call with outstanding ballots in a number of states including Georgia. (Photo by Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger holds a press conference on the status of ballot counting on November 6, 2020, in Atlanta, Georgia. (Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)

A recent SurveyUSA poll found that the pair could be headed for a runoff, an ominous prospect for any incumbent.

Hice trailed Raffensperger by 11 points in the poll, but the secretary of state only hit 31 percent and a plurality of respondents, 40 percent, said they were undecided.

LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR’S RACE

Another race to keep eyes on is the lieutenant governor faceoff between state Sen. Burt Jones and Senate President Pro Tempore Butch Miller.

Both appear well-liked among their peers but have become caught up in a costly battle to replace current Lt. Gov. Geoff Miller, who has scoffed at grassroots pursuits like the Buckhead cityhood initiative and is widely seen as an establishment figure in the state.

The same SurveyUSA poll that found Raffensperger ahead of Hice also found Jones and Miller in a dead heat with nearly 60 percent of respondents undecided.

Some other earlier polling has shown Jones with an advantage over Miller, though Miller has been circulating a well-received ad in the final weeks of the race that promotes his crafting of a bill to protect women’s sports from men’s participation.

Trump’s endorsement is also a factor in this race, as he not only backs Jones but also lumped Miller in with Kemp and other Georgia politicians in February, describing them as “RINOs” who “always talk a big game” but “don’t deliver.”

Write to Ashley Oliver at aoliver@breitbart.com. Follow her on Twitter at @asholiver.

 Every year, the U.S. admits about 1.2 million legal immigrants on green cards to permanently resettle in the country. In addition, another 1.4 million foreign workers are admitted every year to take American jobs. Often, Americans are fired and replaced by foreign visa workers. Many are forced to train their foreign replacements.


BLOG EDITOR: WAGES ARE ON DECLINE BECAUSE THE STATE IS FLOODED WITH 'CHEAP' LABOR ILLEGALS!!!

“Let me contextualize. When you’re No. 48 for mental health, when we’re No. 1 for maternal mortality, when you have an incarceration rate that is on the rise and wages are on the decline, then you are not the No. 1 place to live.”

A July 2018 report by the left-wing Georgia Budget and Policy Institute said the roughly one-third of all immigrants in the state are  “unauthorized immigrants.” The estimated population of 377,000 illegals outnumbered the resident population of 260,000 green card holders and was close to the population of 427,000 immigrant citizens.

The population of illegals nudges up crime rates, pushes down Americans’ wages, and boosts housing prices. But business groups welcome the extra population because it provides more workers, customers, and renters to businesses.

And more government is what Abrams plans if she gets into office. She promised attendees that, if she wins, she’ll expand Medicaid and increase college access for illegal aliens. The Gwinnett Daily Report writes delicately that Abrams plans to pass “new laws pertaining to how teachers can discuss racial issues with students and what books can be put in school libraries.”

GA Forcing Migrant Workers into “Modern-Day Slavery”

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-CctfxCzRY


PARTY OF CORRUPTION: GET RICH QUICK DEMOCRAT STACEY ABRAMS

 

https://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2022/05/party-of-corruption-and-money-just-kept.html

 

Elected Democrats now have no interest in the average voter because that's not whom they work for.  It's the big money foundations and the armies of their paid activists.  They are the ones doing the all the ballot-harvesting that is finally being exposed in the 2000 Mules documentary.  They are the ones who can hand a presidential nomination to an Obama, a mansion to a BLM leader, or make a failure like Stacey Abrams very rich.


 Are We There Yet?

  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwocE3lvhkY

 

Stacey Abrams certainly has a creative approach to running for governor

In 2018, Stacey Abrams ran as the Democrat candidate for governor in Georgia and lost. She’s spent the four years since then claiming that she was robbed and that she is Georgia’s real governor. (As Trump and his supporters have discovered, only Democrat women are allowed to challenge election results.) Abrams has once again thrown her hat in the ring but she’s choosing a strange way of doing it because she’s insisting that George is the worst state in the union.

When last we caught up with Stacey Abrams, the Star Trek franchise had designated her as president of United Earth. Thanks to this laughable bit of wishful thinking, we were able to learn that Abrams isn’t just a bad writer of junk romances (there are, believe it or not, well-written junk romances), she’s also a bad actress, appearing both smug and wooden, while clearly signaling her future intention to hand America over to the UN:

But like a Ginsu knife commercial, one must say, “Wait! There’s more.”

In this case, the more is Abrams’s bizarre approach to running for governor in 2022. In a speech at a Georgia Democrat Party gala on Saturday night, the Gwinnett Daily Post reports that Abrams let the attendees know how she really feels about the state she seeks to lead:

“I am tired of hearing about how we’re the best state in the country to do business when we are the worst state in the country to live," said Abrams before she acknowledged Republicans would attack her for the later part of that statement.

Well, she got the point about attacking her right. A sound byte of a candidate despising the state she seeks to lead is too good to resist.

Having said that, there is context. The lead-in to that statement was the fact that Republicans like to point to Georgia’s status as the Number One American state within which to do business. Abrams doesn’t want to hear that. It’s still hell on earth to be in Georgia:

“Let me contextualize. When you’re No. 48 for mental health, when we’re No. 1 for maternal mortality, when you have an incarceration rate that is on the rise and wages are on the decline, then you are not the No. 1 place to live.”

Of course, none of the metrics Abrams cites change the fact that Georgia is a business-friendly state that brings in money for its residents. That’s a good thing. Well, it’s a good thing if you believe in opportunities for people, rather than just more government.

And more government is what Abrams plans if she gets into office. She promised attendees that, if she wins, she’ll expand Medicaid and increase college access for illegal aliens. The Gwinnett Daily Report writes delicately that Abrams plans to pass “new laws pertaining to how teachers can discuss racial issues with students and what books can be put in school libraries.”

Translated, that means Abrams wants to bring Critical Race Theory into Georgia classrooms and graphic books about LGBTQ+++ sexuality into Georgia school libraries. Regarding the effect of CRT on America to date, Thomas Lifson has pointed to an absolutely horrific poll showing that three-quarters of Black Americans now fear Whites, and 70% believe most Whites “hold white supremacist beliefs.” That the facts belie this is irrelevant. They believe the bill of goods Democrats are selling them.

In addition to those plans, Stacey Abrams told an interviewer that she’s all in on abortion, seemingly without limitations (she opposes “forced pregnancy”), and supports the police when it comes to depriving people of their Second Amendment rights (or, as she calls it, “criminal carry”).

In other words, aside from hating the state she plans to lead, none of Abrams’s promises will make the state better. The state has already passed a big mental health budget, so that won’t really change. But she will ensure that it has more illegal aliens, more debt, more race hatred, more crime, and more transgenderism. Once she’s finished with Georgia, it won’t just be Stacey Abrams who hates it. Everyone will.

Image: Stacy Abrams. YouTube screen grab.




Georgia GOP Urges for Full Immigration Moratorium with Millions Jobless

David Goldman/AP Photo

JOHN BINDER

16 Jun 2020118

3:36

The Georgia Republican Party is set to pass a resolution asking President Trump to impose a full immigration moratorium while about 30 million Americans remain jobless due to the Chinese coronavirus crisis.

In April, Trump signed an executive order pausing employment-based green cards — a narrow portion of overall immigration that accounts for less than ten percent. Since then, grassroots activists with American worker advocates and college student groups have urged Trump to halt the inflow of H-1B visas, H-2B visas, OPT visas, L-1 visas, and the J-1 visa program.

Those visa categories represent millions of U.S. jobs that are outsourced every year to imported foreign workers in the STEM fields, the nonagricultural industry, white-collar industries, and summer work programs that would otherwise go to America’s working and middle class.

Now, the Georgia GOP is set to be the first state party to support a full immigration moratorium. Currently, Georgia has an unemployment rate of nearly 12 percent — only slightly lower than the national average.

The resolution states:

A RESOLUTION SUPPORTING PRESIDENT TRUMP’S EXECUTIVE ORDER TO PROTECT AMERICAN JOBS

WHEREAS, President Donald J. Trump has issued an executive order limiting immigration into our country during the present health and economic crisis; [Emphasis added]

NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Georgia Republican Party commends and supports President Donald J. Trump’s leadership in protecting American jobs during the pandemic by restricting immigration during the present health and economic crisis. [Emphasis added]

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Georgia Republican Party urges President Trump to issue a second executive order that removes the various special interest exceptions to the first executive order and shall strictly limit new immigration visas until the economy reaches its pre-pandemic unemployment rate of no greater than 3.5 percent. [Emphasis added]

Set to be passed this week, the urge for an immigration moratorium has overwhelming support, about 93 percent, from members who responded to a poll of party delegates.

The resolution is the first time in recent memory that a state Republican Party has joined the overwhelming majority of the GOP electorate in supporting reductions and a halt on immigration.

For years, Republican voters have told pollsters that they support major reductions to immigration and, at times of high unemployment, support no net immigration. Young Republicans tend to be the most skeptical of immigration.

Conversely, the donor class and big business lobby have asked Trump not only to continue the visa pipeline but expand legal immigration, claiming there is a labor shortage.

As Breitbart News has chronicled, the nation’s mass importation of foreign visa workers helps redistribute and shift hundreds of billions in wealth to blue states, already prosperous metropolises, and the richest of Americans.

BLOG EDITOR: EVERY YEAR THERE ARE 1.5 MILLION ILLEGALS JUMP OUR BORDERS WAVING THEIR MEXICAN FLAGS. THERE ARE ALSO 1.5 MILLION AMERICANS WHO FALL INTO POVERTY. CAN'T DO THE MATH ON THAT???

Every year, the U.S. admits about 1.2 million legal immigrants on green cards to permanently resettle in the country. In addition, another 1.4 million foreign workers are admitted every year to take American jobs. Often, Americans are fired and replaced by foreign visa workers. Many are forced to train their foreign replacements.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder.

 

 GOP Rep. Pushes Anti-Sanctuary Cities Bill in Georgia

AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu, File

NEIL MUNRO

24 Feb 20207

5:06

A GOP legislator and 19 co-sponsors are pushing legislation to bar sanctuary cities in Georgia.

“I’m very hopeful,” said state Rep. Philip Singleton, who flew AH-64 attack helicopters in Afghanistan and Iraq. He continued

This legislation is directly in line with President Donald Trump’s agenda and the agenda that Governor Brian Kemp ran on, and the Republicans across the state have talked about for years.  I’m very hopeful that they will decide to legislate the way that they campaigned.

This is extremely important for Georgia, not only for the safety of the immigrant community but also for the safety of every Georgian. And it’s important, especially in a major election year, that the voters see that the conservatives that they’ve elected will actually get legislation improving their lives like the [candidates] promised.

A July 2018 report by the left-wing Georgia Budget and Policy Institute said the roughly one-third of all immigrants in the state are  “unauthorized immigrants.” The estimated population of 377,000 illegals outnumbered the resident population of 260,000 green card holders and was close to the population of 427,000 immigrant citizens.

The population of illegals nudges up crime rates, pushes down Americans’ wages, and boosts housing prices. But business groups welcome the extra population because it provides more workers, customers, and renters to businesses.

 

The “Georgia Anti-Sanctuary Act” is being co-sponsored by GOP Reps. Steve Tarvin, Scot Turner, Ken Pullin, Kevin Cook, Michael Caldwell, and Sheri Gilligan. They are backed up by additional sponsors, including Marc Morris, Mitchell Scoggins, Mathew Gambill, Steven Sainz, Emory Dunahoo, Joseph Gullett, Jeff Jones, David Clark, Rick Williams, and Danny Mathis, said D.A. King, a pro-American immigration-reform activist in the state, and the founder of the Dustin Inman Society.

Their HB 915 bill would require the state to support federal immigration enforcement efforts and prevent any local obstruction. A statement at InsiderAdvantage.com from Singleton said:

State entities and agencies would be required to comply with federal immigration detainers and would be prohibited from withholding information or records from federal immigration enforcement efforts regarding an immigrant’s status. Additionally, the bill would encourage a seamless transfer process regarding illegal aliens who are held in a state’s correctional facility to be transferred into federal custody. Under this bill, it would also be illegal for state or local law enforcement officers who have custody of an illegal to deny or knowingly fail to comply with an alien’s detainer’s requests.

My bill is carefully modeled from the 2017 Texas SB-4 and 2019 Florida SB-168 bills. They have both been signed into law in their respective states and have both been upheld in federal court rulings.

However, Singleton and the cosponsors need the support of top GOP leaders for the bill to become law, said King.

“What’s required for this bill to pass is [first] a hearing in a subcommittee, then a full committee hearing at the Judiciary Committee, and then it has to go from [the] judiciary [committee] to [the] rules [committee], and then from rules to the House floor before legislative day 30,” he said.

The bill needs a hearing in Rep. Barry Fleming’s judiciary committee.

“Nothing happens in the House without [Speaker David] Ralston’s approval — I mean nothing … [and so far], there’s no public support from any part of leadership in the House.”

GOP Gov. Brian Kemp will likely sign the bill if it reaches his desk, said King. “He has not spoken up on the topic yet.”

Singleton’s bill is likely to be opposed by business groups that gain from the increased population, but also by various left-wing and progressive groups which favor the increased movement of Democratic-leaning migrants into the state.

 

Neil Munro

@NeilMunroDC

 

 

Mark Zuckerberg & his investor friends get together to lobby for more cheap labor & imported consumers in Georgia. But the state media prefers to view this $$ lobbying as a racial issue. http://bit.ly/2z351Qi 

 

Mark Zuckerberg's Group Lobbies Georgia GOP for More Low-Wage Labor

Mark Zuckerberg's group of West Coast investors is working with Latino political groups to protect the flow of cheap labor into Georgia.

breitbart.com

 

22

3:14 PM - Aug 17, 2019

Twitter Ads info and privacy

18 people are talking about this

 

Singleton told Breitbart News:

The goal was to just get 15 [signatures] to file it, so we got more than we thought we would need to file it. But you know, I think the goal should probably be 40 [signatures out of 104 GOP legislators] to try to help give a little bit more pressure on the leadership. Really, we just want the leadership to support the agenda that they talked about on the campaign trail.
Se we really want to get it through committee and vote it through on the floor before Crossover Day [around February 28]. We want to try to get it done in the next two weeks. [and] we’re waiting to know when it’s going to go before the committee

“I ran for office because, you know, I felt like we needed more people in office that would do what they said they do,” Singleton told Breitbart News.

 

Neil Munro

@NeilMunroDC

 

 

http://FWD.us  funded a study to block @GovRonDeSantis' push for a @EVerify law excluding illegals from jobs.
Yet study admitted CEOs will have to hire Americans at higher wages: It is "unlikely .. [open jobs] would be filled at current wages.”http://bit.ly/2vC1avi 

 

Investors' Report Admits Florida E-Verify Prods Employers to Raise Wages

Florida's E-Verify bill will bar 140,000 illegals and make it difficult to hire workers at current wages, says an investors' study.

breitbart.com

 

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12:59 PM - Feb 14, 2020

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