Why Senators Would Rather Stick To The Status Quo Than Move On From The McConnell Era
Will a change in personnel actually lead to a change in how the Senate operates?
The Legislature of Guam, comprising 15 senators of whom nine are presently Democrats and six are Republicans, has been under Democratic control since March 2008 — but will be no longer.
According to the unofficial results released Tuesday and finalized early Wednesday by the Guam Election Commission, Republicans will control the legislature come January.
The Pacific Daily News noted that while Democrats clinched three of the top five spots in the race for the legislature, Republicans ultimately secured a majority with all precincts counted, such that in January, the territory's Senate will be flipped 9-6 in their favor.
Extra to flipping the legislature, Republican James Moylan, a member of Congress representing Guam's at-large congressional district, defeated his Democratic challenger, Ginger Cruz, 52.69% to 46.81%.
'The winds of change are blowing.'
While the residents of Guam cannot vote in American presidential elections, they nevertheless conduct a straw poll. In the 2020 presidential election, Joe Biden beat President Donald Trump in the straw poll 55.38% to 41.91%. This time around, Trump nearly closed the gap. Kamala Harris beat him in the straw poll Tuesday 49.56% to 46.22%.
Former CNN contributor Ryan Girdusky suggested that a "political realignment" appears to be under way, highlighting that in 2012, Barack Obama beat Mitt Romney in the straw poll by roughly 46 percentage points. In 2016, Hillary Clinton beat Trump in the poll by 47 points. In this election, the Republican candidate was within three points.
Conservative filmmaker Robby Starbuck appeared to agree, writing, "While meaningless for electoral votes, the winds of change are blowing."
Republican gains in the Pacific are not limited to Guam. Kimberlyn King-Hinds appears to have successfully beat Democrat Edwin Propst to represent Northern Mariana Islands' at-large congressional district.
According to the Saipan Tribune, Propst conceded the race early on Wednesday and congratulated King-Hinds, writing, "I wish you the very best."
At the time of publication, King-Hinds had secured 40.34% of the vote, whereas Probst netted only 33.27%.
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The Maine House of Representatives' Judiciary Committee was poised Thursday to advance a bill that threatened to allow the state to seize custody of children whose parents refused them sex-change mutilations and other irreversible medical interventions. It was evidently not meant to be.
Following some Republican backlash and a successful pressure campaign led by the parental rights advocacy group Courage Is a Habit, the committee voted 12-0 on the motion that LD 1735 — dubbed the "transgender trafficking bill" by critics — "ought not to pass."
Courage Is a Habit said the victory demonstrated "what happens when you stop letting the Transgender cult emotionally blackmail you. The every-day-American Patriot is not helpless."
The so-called "Act to Safeguard Gender-affirming Health Care" was the handiwork of Democratic state Rep. Laurie Osher, leader of the Legislature's LGBTQ+ Equality Caucus.
The bill would have:
Republican state Rep. Rachel Henderson warned, "This gives the state jurisdiction to effectively come into your home and take your kids based on a medical decision you made for the well-being and mental well-being of your child."
Courage Is a Habit president Alvin Lui stressed to Blaze News that LD 1735 was a "sex trafficker's dream come true."
Lui previously indicated that an early death for LD 1735 was critical, as the Democrat-controlled state House and Senate would likely pass the bill if given the chance. That opportunity was wrested away from them Thursday.
State Rep. Katrina Smith, a Republican on the judiciary committee who has been critical of the bill, confirmed the result of the successful 12-0 vote, telling the Daily Signal, "Today we won a victory for our children who have been fooled into thinking they are not perfect the way God made them."
"With the death of LD 1735 we have proven that when evil is brought out of the darkness and exposed in the light, it can be vanquished. The people spoke loudly and it mattered," added Smith.
Shawn McBreairty, a parental rights activist who campaigned against the bill, said its defeat was a "massive win for parental rights all over our nation."
"This is not Tennessee or Indiana or Oklahoma," Lui stressed. "This was 12-0 in Maine."
Lui highlighted that even Democrats who have supported other radical legislation — legalizing abortion at nine months and sex-change surgeries for minors without parental consent — were not able to bring themselves to vote in favor of LD 1735. The parental rights advocate does not credit the bill's fate to a change of heart on the part of the committee members, but rather to their inability to pass it on the sly.
Despite having previously supported the bill, Democrats on the committee retroactively claimed its language was flawed, reported WGME-TV.
While her bill was thwarted Thursday, Osher threatened to keep trying.
"We will make sure that people are protected, that our care providers are protected," Osher told WGME. "Today was a moment where we're not getting that done, but we will get that done."
"The national significance of [the bill's failure] is twofold. First, it's one less state where children who have been lured into the Transgender Cult can go to and risk being trafficked," Lui told Blaze News. "Second, it sends a national message that the emotional blackmail hold the Transgender Cult has over parents is breaking."
Lui, who credited the hard work of his co-founder Jennifer McWilliams, indicated the fight is not over.
"Currently there are 15 states with a Transgender Trafficking Bill (12 legislative bills and 3 by executive order)," said Lui. He indicated his group will now work to "ensure not another state passes a Transgender Trafficking Bill."
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Another Democratic transvestite pursuing political office has been caught flouting Ohio law. He has, however, found a champion in the state's nominally Republican governor, Mike Dewine.
The Democrat in question, a man originally from from Virginia who changed his name to Arienne Christina Childrey in 2020, seeks to unseat state Rep. Angela King (R) in Ohio District 84. Childrey, an Auglaize County resident, has largely campaigned on his antipathy for King over her House Bill 245, which would ban sexual and obscene cabaret performances such as drag shows in front of children and in locations other than adult cabarets.
Childrey is the founder of a radical transvestite activist group called Northwest Ohio Trans Advocacy. He was previously an assistant manager at Kohl's and a manager at Big Lots.
Much like Jeremy Michael Adams — now Vanessa Joy — in Stark County, Childrey's campaign might be dead in the water, for he too failed to disclose his previous name on his petition paperwork, reported the Associated Press.
Ohio law states that "if any person desiring to become a candidate for public office has had a change of name within five years immediately preceding the filing of his statement of candidacy, both his statement of candidacy and nominating petition must contain, immediately following the person's present name, the person's former names."
While Childrey was initially certified on Dec. 21, Mercer County GOP Chairman Robert Hibner wrote to the local election board, asking the board to reject Childrey's campaign petition on account of its apparent illegitimacy, according to the Mercer County Outlook.
The Mercer County Board of Elections is set to vote Thursday on whether the Democrat's contravention of the law is disqualifying.
The Mercer County Democratic Party passed a resolution objecting "to Republican Chair Bob Hibner's protest of our Democratic Candidate's right to run for office."
The county's Democratic Vice-Chair Don Holtvoigt stated, "Mr. Hibner's protest is nothing but a hateful attempt to further discriminate against a community not meeting the GOP definition of 'normal.' A radical approach to alienate qualified candidates and stifle the will of the voters. There is no acceptable explanation to pursue this challenge when no guidance to candidates has been provided."
Gov. DeWine swooped in to defend the transvestites contravening state law on Tuesday, suggesting the Democrats should not be disqualified on account of their ignorance, reported Cleveland.com.
"We shouldn't be denying ballot access for that reason," said DeWine. "It certainly should be fixed."
Childrey has parroted Joy's ignorance defense, claiming the candidacy guide provided to prospective candidates does not provide explicit instructions concerning the provision of past legal names.
"I would note that the name change provision is not included in the Candidate Guide issued by Secretary of State Frank LaRose's office, nor any of the other paperwork or forms," Childrey noted on his campaign site. "In fact, had I known of this provision and tried to comply - which I certainly would've, my legal name and deadname simply could not have fit in the space provided on the candidacy documents."
Melanie Amato, a spokeswoman for the Ohio secretary of state, stressed the guide "does not include every statute pertaining to candidates — in fact the first paragraph offers that disclaimer and urges candidates to consult with their legal counsel."
Amato added, "The law applies to everyone."
State Rep. Brian Stewart (R) underscored on X, "There's nothing uneven about the application of the law. There's no evidence in these stories that the law has been disregarded for other candidates. If you change your name you have to disclose it. It's been that way for decades."
Past names may be of great interest to potential voters, as they correspond with histories candidates might otherwise want to preclude the public from looking into. For instance, under his previous name, Joy recently filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Investigative journalist Andy Ngô highlighted that Joy also failed to mention his side hustle as a pornographer. As recently as November 2023, he was sharing images of himself masturbating to photographs of women to his OnlyFans page under the handle "Vanesstradiol."
Joy reportedly also fathered a child who he indicated in an Oct. 25 social media post had — at on at least one occasion — sat with him while he kept his post-op pelvic wound open with a dilator.
Joy's effort to appeal his disqualification proved unsuccessful last week. He has since threatened to sue Stark County for discrimination.
Senate President Matt Huffman and Ohio Senate GOP spokesman John Fortney indicated that if people are looking for someone to blame, they could start with the Ohio House Democrats' campaign staff," reported the Plain Dealer Cleveland.
"There should be a Democratic House organization that ... [will] say 'Hey, we're going to make sure, we're going to have somebody review your petitions [and] make sure this is all right, and do whatever special things have to be done on any particular day," said Huffman.
State Sen. Kristina Roegner (R) similarly suggested, "It would seem to me that, in these cases, that the Democratic Party failed these candidates."
"You could always have someone else check your work. You can go down to the local board of elections," added Roegner.
Childrey, who may yet remain certified, told the Guardian that "regardless of what happens in this hearing, if they boot me off the ballot, I have every intention to refile."
"And in that next election, on that form, I'll put my current name, I'll put my deadname, I'll put the age I was potty-trained, whatever details they need."
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Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) told Virginians in a closing ad released by his PAC, "Elect a Republican team to back me up, and I promise, we'll deliver." With most localities now reporting the results of the 2023 November general and special elections, it is apparent that Youngkin won't have the backup he desired for the remainder of his term.
While Democratic pornographer Susanna Gibson failed to beat Republican David Owen for a seat in the Virginia House of Delegates, Democrats still managed to seize control of the state legislature and maintain their majority in the state Senate.
GOP Sen. Siobhan Dunnavant lost her 16th District seat by nearly nine points. Former CIA officer Russet Perry prevented Republican newcomer Juan Pablo Segura from taking the Virginia state Senate's 31st District. In the House of Delegates, Dels. Lee Peters and Karen Greenhalgh lost their seats by roughly five and four points, respectively.
The likely one-seat majorities in both the House and Senate mean the state GOP's promised 15-week abortion ban and tax cuts are unlikely to materialize.
Senior Youngkin adviser Dave Rexrode wrote late on election night, "We had hoped for a stronger outcome this evening but are proud of the effort all of our candidates put in to these extremely competitive districts."
There are strong indications that just as Republicans' pro-life agenda reportedly served to blunt the anticipated GOP red wave last year, it amounted to a millstone around their political ambitions in this election. It was, after all, a featured focus in Democratic campaigns across the state and regarded as a top drivers for voters.
The Times indicated that abortion was understood to be so great a motivating factor for turning out progressive votes that Michael Bloomberg's gun control organization Everytown promoted abortion entitlements before even mentioning gun violence in Virginia TV ads.
President Joe Biden also leaned on the matter of abortion in the state, suggesting in a fundraising email circulated by the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, "Folks, in Virginia, the stakes have never been higher."
"Governor Glenn Youngkin and extreme Republicans have made it clear that they're trying to take our country back on issues like choice," added the formerly pro-life Democrat.
"Virginians understood the extremism of Youngkin's abortion ban and the threats to democracy posed by MAGA Republicans," Dan Helmer, a Democratic House delegate in Virginia, told the New York Times. "That's why they turned out to vote."
"It's official: There will be absolutely no abortion ban legislation sent to Glenn Youngkin's desk for the duration of his term in office, period," said state Sen. Mamie Locke, chair of the Senate Democratic Caucus, reported Axios.
While Democrats can ensure Youngkin's pro-life efforts won't make it out of harbor, they similarly won't be able to advance their policy agenda without bipartisan support or fear of gubernatorial vetoes, meaning potential legislative gridlock for years.
Beyond seeing his agenda kneecapped at home, this outcome might also throw cold water on the governor's possible national aspirations, at least in the short term.
"The only justification for running next year would be if Republicans took over both houses," Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics, told the Times. "Without that, he's got a problem of having been elected to one public office and only being halfway through that single term."
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Democratic Rep. Zooey Zephyr has been booted out of the Montana legislature for the remainder of the 2023 season. While the transvestite lawmaker will be able to vote remotely, he will not be able to engage in person with those to whom he has refused to apologize.
Zephyr could have resolved the matter with an apology prior to his supporters storming the Capitol Monday, but has indicated that is outside the realm of possibility.
Last week, Zephyr, born Zachary Raasch, lashed out at his Republican colleagues during a debate over amendments to Senate Bill 99, the "Youth Health Protection Act" — already passed by the state House and Senate.
Zephyr said, "The only thing I will say is if you vote yes on this bill and yes on these amendments, I hope the next time there’s an invocation when you bow your heads in prayer, you see the blood on your hands."
Following the remarks, made less than a month after a transgender extremist shot up a Christian school, Majority Leader Sue Vinton (R) stated, “I will note this is entirely inappropriate, disrespectful, and uncalled for. We can debate matters civilly and with respect for each other.”
In response to Zephyr's hateful ant-Christian comments directed at Republicans, the House voted on April 20 in favor of censure.
Montana House Speaker Matt Regier indicated that Zephyr would need to apologize before once again being recognized on the floor.
Zephyr stressed that he had no intention of apologizing.
Prior to the riot on April 24, Zephyr doubled down, once again accusing Republican lawmakers of causing deaths with their bills protecting children. He underscored, "We will not be complicit in our eradication."
\u201c"Its not enough for them to get the harmful bills through. When someone stands up and calls out their bills for the harm they cause, for the deaths they cause, they want silence. And we will not be complicit in our eradication."\n\nRep. Zephyr responds.\n\nhttps://t.co/cdpsKkfi45\u201d— Erin Reed (@Erin Reed) 1682384348
TheBlaze previously reported that on Monday, LGBT extremists stormed the Montana Capitol in support of Zephyr.
They besieged the House doors, crowded the House gallery, and hurled obscenities at the Republican lawmakers below, who were instructed to clear the floor out of concern for their safety.
Meanwhile, Zephyr remained on the floor, holding up a microphone while his supporters swarmed the House gallery.
\u201cBREAKING: The Montana House of Reps has been shut down by left-wing protesters who are there protesting the censure of transgender Democrat Rep. Zooey Zephyr, that was led by the @MTFreedomCaucus, for telling his Republican colleagues they have "blood on their hands" for passing\u2026\u201d— Greg Price (@Greg Price) 1682374006
Montana Highway Patrol, the Helena Police Department, and officers from the Lewis and Clark County Sheriff's Office ultimately restored order, carting away several individuals who were charged for criminal trespassing.
Republican Rep. David Bedey said that the LGBT activists had mounted "an assault on our representative democracy," reported the New York Post.
The Montana Freedom Caucus issued a statement after the incident, condemning "the actions of the violent protestors in the capitol building today."
"Representative Zephyr encouraged these actions by standing in the middle of the floor encouraging an insurrection after all members were told to move to the sides and clear the House gallery to remain in a safe location," said the Freedom Caucus. "Due to Zephyr's actions, the Montana Freedom Caucus is calling for immediate disciplinary action against Democrat Representative Zooey Zephyr of Missoula."
The Republican leadership notified the legislature Tuesday evening that at 1 p.m. the following day, "a motion to act with respect to the conduct of Representative Zephyr will be made on the House floor" to determine whether Zephyr had on April 24 "violated the rules, collective rights, safety, dignity, integrity, or decorum of the House of Representatives, and if so, whether to impose disciplinary consequences for those actions."
Lawmakers determined that Zephyr was indeed in violation, voting along party lines to ban the Democratic lawmaker from the House floor.
"Currently all Representatives in the Montana House are free to participate in debate while following House rules. The choice to not follow House rules is one that Rep. Zephyr has made," Regier said in a statement. "The only person silencing Rep. Zephyr is Rep. Zephyr. The Montana House will not be bullied. All 100 Representatives will be treated the same.
Zephyr continued to displace blame and remained resolute in his decision not to apologize, noting in a statement, "I stood unwaveringly in defense of my constituents, my community, and democracy itself."
Although the Democratic lawmaker can still vote remotely, he suggested that Republicans were "effectively stripping me of the ability to represent my 11,000 constituents in debate."
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How To Make Legislatures Stop Working For Special Interests And Start Working For The People