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GOP sees chance to pick up Senate seat in Nebraska

May 15th, 2012 admin No comments

With their eyes on winning control of the U.S. Senate in November, Republicans will be looking Tuesday to the primary for Nebraska’s open seat, where the yet-to-be-decided Republican candidate is already favored over the former senator expected to win the Democratic nod.

Sen. Ben Nelson, a Democrat, is retiring, leaving an open race rated by two prominent independent political handicappers as “likely Republican” and “Republican favored.”

The likely Democratic candidate, former Sen. Bob Kerrey, did not seek a third term in the 2000 election, and is expected to face either state Attorney General and frontrunner John Bruning, state legislator Deb Fischer, or state treasurer Don Stenberg.

Voters in Idaho and Oregon will also cast ballots for U.S. House and state-level races.

Rep. Suzanne Bonamici is the only Democrat on the ballot in Oregon’s first district, a seat she assumed in February after Rep. David Wu resigned amid an ethics investigation involving an allegation of a sexual encounter with the daughter of a donor to his campaign.

The Nebraska primary has drawn in national figures such as former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who endorsed Fischer a week ago, and the tea party group FreedomWorks, which in September said it would back Stenbebrrg.

All three are backed by anti-abortion organizations and tout their Second Amendment credentials.

Bruning touts his support for and action on a lawsuit against the health reform law, as well as his opposition to abortion and current levels of federal spending.

“The federal government spends too much, taxes too much, regulates too much, and listens too little,” his campaign website reads.

His prominent endorsements include Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and the Tea Party Express.

Bruning has outraised his GOP rivals, raking in nearly $2.9 million this cycle.

Stenberg won his party’s nomination once before, when he faced Nelson for the open seat in 2000, and also ran in 1996 and 2006.

In addition to the backing of FreedomWorks, Sen. Jim DeMint’s Senate Conservative Fund has aired television spots for Stenberg which criticize his rival Bruning, who Stenberg says is not a genuine conservative.

He has been endorsed by the Family Research Council PAC, the Club for Growth, conservative talk show host Mark Levin, conservative blogger and CNN Political Contributor Eric Erickson, and several potential future senate colleagues, including Rand Paul and Mike Lee.

Despite the endorsements he has raised approximately $680,000.

Fischer points to her experience as a state legislator, where she and her colleagues have balanced the state budget while providing tax relief.

Her five step plan for federal government reform includes a balanced budget amendment to the U.S. Constitution and repeal of the health reform law, the Dodd-Frank banking law, and the No Child Left Behind education statute.

She also proposes greater Congressional oversight, an audit of the Federal Reserve, and downsizing or elimination of some government agencies.

While reliable polling in the state has been scarce, two independent political analysis show Nebraska switching hands from Democrats to Republicans.

The Cook Political Report lists the race as “likely” a Republican pickup — which falls between “solid” and “lean” — while the Rothenberg Political Report calls it “Republican favored,” one step below a safe seat but three steps above a toss-up.

Democrats are defending or facing a retirement in 23 of the 33 Senate seats up for election this year. Of the 10 open seats, seven are held by Democrats and three by Republicans.

The GOP would need to pick up four seats to gain a simple majority in the body.

While the GOP candidates have exchanged elbows through a series of television advertisements, they have found time to beat up on Kerrey and have been joined by national operations, such as the American Crossroads committee founded by Karl Rove.

Within days of Kerrey’s decision to enter the race — he initially said he would not run, then two weeks later, announced he would — Bruning was on the air with an ad questioning the former senator’s residency. After stepping down from the Senate in 2001, Kerrey lived and worked in New York.

Kerrey is a “New York liberal,” Bruning’s ad went, while American Crossroads said, “A decade in Greenwich Village changed Bob Kerrey.”

The group also seized on his reluctance to enter the race, claiming in a radio ad that Kerry “cut his own secret deal with Democratic leaders in Washington, a deal so secret Kerrey won’t talk about what promises were made.”

The state Republican Party even filed an official challenge of his residency with the Secretary of State’s office.

His campaign manager, Paul Johnson, told CNN in March that the residency attacks were “insulting to Nebraskans” and that Bob is “a fiscal conservative” concerned with national debt and budget deficit.

Other attacks have sought to tie Kerrey to outgoing Nelson — who provided the 60th vote for Democrats to pass the health care overhaul.

He agreed to support the bill after negotiating a compromise, which came to be known as the “Cornhusker Kickback,” which would have modified federal abortion funding regulations and saved the state approximately $100 million on Medicare costs over a decade.

But after Republican protests at home and nationwide, he had the provision removed.

Like others in the upper chamber who are retiring willingly or unwillingly this year, Nelson is known for crossing the aisle.

While this open seat has taken a backseat in prominence to the race for others — such as last week’s primary defeat of Republican incumbent Sen. Richard Lugar in Indiana — this state has a front seat to an issue splitting the two parties this year.

The controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline, generally favored by Republicans and opposed by Democrats, was to stretch from Canadian oil sands to the Gulf Coast, bisecting Nebraska. But environmentalists worried about polluting the Ogallala Aquifer, which supplies most of the state with drinking water.

Nelson easily won a second term in 2006, but as it became clear that Republicans considered his seat in play this cycle, Nelson made a December announcement that he would not seek a third term.

“Simply put: It is time to move on,” Nelson said at the time.

Nebraska is expected to be anything but tranquil as the race heats up this summer.

Don Walton, a political writer with the Lincoln Journal Star, had a simple warning in his pre-election Sunday column: “buckle up.”

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Influential Impacts Of 2011: The Expression and Activism Of Lady Gaga

December 28th, 2011 admin No comments

Her music and artistic expression continues to fill many radio stations and nightclubs throughout the world in 2011.  A multiplatinum singer, Grammy winner and activist, Lady Gaga made her impact this year by continuing to speak out against bullying and discrimination.  Her single “Born This Way” became the anthem of promise and self-confidence amongst many youth growing up in a society that has seen a rise in teen suicide and acts of violence towards members of the GLBT communities across the nation.  Her influence has been impactful and her voice has not only contributed to the anti-bullying movement but has also become a vocal instrument paving a path towards freedom of expression and social equality.  With an extremely huge online following which includes over 15 million Twitter followers and 44 million Facebook fans, Gaga has the presence to extend messages and she is taking advantage of this presence by announcing recently the launching of the “Born This Way Foundation”, a nonprofit organization focusing on youth empowerment and anti-bullying.  The foundation is striving to instill efforts of “Bravery and Kindness, as well as a community worldwide that protects and nurtures others in the face of bullying and abandonment,” she said in a statement.  This alone makes Lady Gaga one of the influential impacts in the GLBT community of 2011.

In an interview with Mtv Gaga says “I find it so important now to be a role model and a figure.  And I know that may sound strange to some people, but most important is my connection with my fans and the connection that they breed with one another”.  To 14-year old Jamey Rodemeyer, a bisexual teen who took his life in September of 2011, Lady Gaga was a role model and figure he looked up to.   He extended his voice and experience to other youth facing bullying and harassment by posting a video on the It Gets Better project in which he encourages youths that they are not alone and to never give up being whom they are.  He thanked Lady Gaga for instilling in him a form of self-love and individualism.  But for Jamey the harassment and bullying became too much and in his name Gaga has dedicated many concerts in the name of Jamey and has extended her efforts in support of anti-bullying laws.

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The “Born This Way Foundation” will be launched in early 2012 but Gaga has already set forth a movement celebrating individuality and the embracing of self through community contributions and through the social awareness of her music.  The inspiration of the Grammy winner is echoing in many youth struggling with identity.  In 2011, Gaga has sent the message that expression is the key weapon towards harassment and discrimination.  Embrace who you are and celebrate every aspect of what you are because you were “born this way”.

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