The Reason, and the Passion, of the Tea Party | James Pat Guerréro


American Eagle with Ensign
American Eagle with Ensign

American Eagle Tea Party PAC[1]

These are the principles of the new conservative PAC, as referenced.[2].[3]

 

 

 

  1. A return to a more limited, more constitutional form of government.

  2. A return to the right to “turn back the clock” in reference to progressive liberalism which does not allow turning back the liberal order.

  3. A return to working out the meaning of a constitutional government by strategy and tactics.

  4. A return to freedom from government control and needless, harmful regulations.

  5. A return to enact free-market health care reforms that would lower the cost of coverage and to repeal Obamacare.

  6. A return to a free market system based on the rule of law versus a corporate welfare system.

  7. A return to a foreign policy protecting Israel from terrorism and terroristic organizations.

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Please remember to donate to my law school fundraiser https://www.giveforward.com/f/kwj4/1.  If you would like to join my law school fundraiser as a team member or recommend a willing team member, just send me your email address.  I would be honored for your assistance.

 

[1] Conservative PAC by James Pat Guerréro, Chairman/CEO.

[2] Kesler, Charles R., (2014). The Tea Party, Conservatism, and the Constitution. Imprimis, 43, 1.

[3] http://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/file/2014_01_Imprimis.pdf

Vote for Paige Kreegel Florida’s 19th Congressional District Special Election 2014 | James Pat Guerréro


Paige Kreegel
Paige Kreegel

The Florida Republican Party has selected its candidate, senate majority leader Lizbeth Benacquisto, for the reason of staying in power. Simple. Citizens would dare to vote for someone else trying to get elected on the ballot.

The political contribution funds will be pouring into Benacquisto’s congressional campaign treasure chest, although they aren’t visible yet with the U.S. Federal Elections Commission.  And Curt Clawson has his own campaigning money.  He’s wealthy.  Digitally streamed political ads fire hungry games – Lizbeth Benacquisto the Bow & Quiver versus Curt Clawson the Basketball.

Intelligence surmises it takes a diligent research to dissect the positions on issues Benacquisto holds.  Whether the research in effort and time is worth it matters little!  It matters a lot to be voted into office like the political machine of Tammany Hall insured the vote.  Get out the vote! is what only matters.

Its disappointing having to go through the drill of learning what candidates’ stand on the issues.  When a candidate is preferred and supported by the Republican Establishment, what stance on issues matters?  Every other candidate has a minimal chance of winning in the primary.  The primary election will be held on April 22, 2014.

Vote for Paige Kreegel because it makes for common sense:  he hasn’t been a career politician, he hasn’t been chosen, and he wasn’t part of a bankrupt and bailed out automotive industry global company.  He’s dutifully qualified because three facts make common sense:  (1) he almost beat Trey Radel in the last election, (2) he has health professional experience in serving people, and (3) he is a professional physician who can understand and stand against The Affordable Care Act (Obamacare).

The Florida Republican Party lost the first time when it voted in Trey Radel at a cost of his voting absence, his voter misrepresentation, and the Florida taxpayers’ $500,000+ cost for this new special election.  Common sense makes it necessary correcting the Republican Party’s mistake on Trey Radel – one chance, one loss – zero percent effectiveness.  Suffrage and Republican voters shouldn’t let it happen again.  Vote for Paige Kreegel!

FEC Orders Edwards to Pay Back $2.3 Million : Roll Call News


The Federal Election Commission ruled that former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) will have to pay the government almost $2.3 million following an audit of his 2008 presidential bid.

The payments are mostly a result of Edwards’ acceptance of federal matching funds beyond the limits that he was entitled to and not connected to allegations that he used campaign funds to cover up an extramarital affair.

By a unanimous vote, agency leaders ruled that the Edwards campaign has to pay back the government more than $2.1 million in primary matching funds that were “in excess of the candidate’s entitlement.” The FEC also said the campaign may have to pay $142,000 to the Treasury Department for 128 stale-dated checks.

The agency’s decision may deplete most of the remaining $2.6 million that John Edwards for President reported having in cash on hand at the end of June.

“This is a perfectly ordinary event in the lives of publicly funded campaigns,” Democratic FEC Commissioner Ellen Weintraub said. “If you are going to take taxpayer money, then you have to subject yourself to an audit to make sure that taxpayer money was appropriately spent.”

In addition to these issues, the audit also found that the campaign misstated financial activity on reports and failed to itemize more than $4.4 million in loan payments.

Republican FEC Commissioner Donald McGahn, who has criticized the agency’s audit division in the past, voted in favor of the recommendations, saying “sitting here today it seems as though the auditors have done what they are supposed to do.”

McGahn also addressed “the pink elephant in the room,” which is how he referred to the technical reporting issues that relate to Edwards’ extramarital affair, his alleged payments to cover it up and the resulting federal investigation.

The 2004 Democratic vice presidential nominee has been indicted and a criminal trial is expected to begin in October over accusations of campaign finance violations in relation to an affair that he had with Rielle Hunter, who briefly served as the campaign’s videographer. The indictment states that Edwards used campaign cash to funnel almost $1 million to Hunter in order to conceal their extramarital affair. Edwards later admitted to the affair and said he fathered a daughter outside his marriage.

“The allegation, for our purposes, is that money was paid and the theory is that it somehow benefited the candidate,” McGahn said about the large in-kind contribution from a wealthy donor that was used to hide Edwards’ affair. “Let’s assume that legal theory is correct and let’s assume the jury agrees. Would they have to then amend [campaign filings] and show all of that?”

Commissioners also questioned the rules concerning more than $800,000 that the Edwards campaign has paid in legal fees since the election, including some that may have gone toward defending the former North Carolina Senator from federal allegations. The commission took no action regarding these funds.

The FEC’s audit of Edwards recent campaign is the sixth such routine investigation of 2008 presidential candidates by the agency so far. Other released audits have included those for Democrat Joseph Biden, Libertarian Mike Gravel and Republican Duncan Hunter.

The commission has yet to release its audits of Democratic candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, Republican nominee John McCain or President Barack Obama. Roll Call first reported this spring that the FEC is also conducting an audit of Obama’s campaign even though it did not accept the federal funds that would legally trigger such an audit.

AlexKnott@rollcall.com | @tweetalexknott

via FEC Orders Edwards to Pay Back $2.3 Million : Roll Call News.