Showing posts with label election. Show all posts
Showing posts with label election. Show all posts

Monday, January 19, 2015

Jailed Virginia lawmaker regains seat in special election

virginialawmakerinternal.jpg Jan. 11, 2015: Candidates Joe Morrissey and Matt Walton appear during the Richmond Crusade for Voters, Inc. 74th District forum at Hobson Lodge in Richmond, Va. (AP Photo/Richmond Times-Dispatch, Mark Gormus)

RICHMOND, Va. –  A state lawmaker who resigned his seat following a sex scandal involving a teenage employee won it back during a special election Tuesday.

Apparently the majority of voters in Joseph D. Morrissey’s Richmond-area House of Delegates conviction were OK with his conviction in the scandal involving his 17-year-old secretary, whose nude photo was found on his cellphone and allegedly shared with a friend. Morrissey has repeatedly denied the allegations, saying his phone was hacked. The young woman, who denies they had sex, is now pregnant.

In unofficial returns, Morrissey defeated Democrat Kevin J. Sullivan and Republican Matt D. Walton by a comfortable margin. Morrissey won 42 percent of the vote, compared to 33 percent for Sullivan and 24 percent for Walton.

Morrissey’s victory was not unprecedented: Through four previous elections, most voters overlooked or even embraced the lawmaker’s flamboyant history of fistfights, contempt-of-court citations and disbarment. The 57-year-old bachelor, who fathered three children out of wedlock with three different women, repeatedly won at least 70 percent of the vote as a Democrat.

Morrissey said in a telephone interview that the results show people aren’t interested in the drama that landed him in jail.

“They’re interested in my body of work in the General Assembly,” Morrissey said. “Nobody works harder for their constituents than I do.”

He also said Sullivan’s ads focusing on his latest scrape with the law backfired.

“People hate negative campaigns,” Morrissey said.

The lawmaker has made a career of never backing down. He hung boxing gloves in his office and promised “Joe will fight for you” in campaign ads on city buses. At one point, he waved an assault rifle inside the House chamber while arguing for gun control.

He resigned his seat — effective Tuesday, the day of this special election — after he was convicted last month of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. His agreement to serve six months in jail for the misdemeanor avoided a felony trial that could have barred him from office and put him in prison for years.

But Morrissey wouldn’t give up — he promptly quit his party to run as an independent for his seat, sleeping in jail and wearing an electronic monitoring device as he campaigned during the day.

Legislators from both parties denounced him as unfit to serve and began studying how to expel him if he won.

“Mr. Morrissey’s election tonight does not change the fact that his actions fall grievously short of the standards of a public servant in the House of Delegates,” House Speaker William J. Howell, a Republican, said in a statement.

House Democratic Minority Leader David J. Toscano and party caucus chairman Scott Surovell said in a joint statement that Morrissey’s “conviction and actions over the past two months were reprehensible, and we will be exploring every avenue in regard to his status as a member of the House of Delegates.”

According to House Clerk G. Paul Nardo said it takes two-thirds of the 100-member House to expel a member, which hasn’t happened since 1876. The Virginia Constitution says a legislator can be kicked out for disorderly behavior, but does not define it.

But Morrissey says the people, not politicians, should decide who represents them — and vowed a voting rights battle if they try to remove him.

His latest troubles began when Coleman Pride told authorities that the lawmaker was preying on his daughter when she worked at his law office in 2013 — allegations he repeated in campaign ads last week for Morrissey’s Democratic opponent.

But Morrissey’s staunchest defender is Myrna Pride, now 18, who went public this month with her side of the story.

The Associated Press does not usually identify victims of sex crimes, but Myrna Pride’s name has become well known in the district since she was named in Morrissey’s criminal case. She denies they had sex — while declining to identify the father of her unborn baby — and she publicly defended Morrissey on Monday in a radio interview.

Richmond radio host Jack Gravely was interviewing Coleman Pride on WLEE about his daughter’s relationship with Morrissey when the lawmaker called in to defend himself. Myrna Pride then showed up in person, accusing her father and others of manufacturing the entire scandal to get back at Morrissey for his help in a dispute over her father’s child support.

It was Morrissey’s role in the family’s dispute that reportedly prompted police to serve a search warrant of his office Monday afternoon, with only hours to go before the voting started. Morrissey called that a political dirty trick.

“The only person that has shown any respect or kindness, or been there for me, is Mr. Morrissey,” Myrna Pride told a WTVR reporter on Monday. “Right now it’s a friendship. I don’t speak with him often. I call here and there to check on him. I want to see how his spirits are going.”

Morrissey supported her in turn.

“She is a very smart young lady,” he told the radio host. “She is kind, she is considerate. She will go on to do very well.”


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Jailed Virginia lawmaker regains seat in special election

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Morales set for Bolivia election win

13 October 2014 Last updated at 01:25 Bolivian President Evo Morales voting in Chapare region, 12 October 2014 Opinion polls suggest a first round victory for Evo Morales, seen here voting in Chapare region Exit polls in Bolivia’s presidential elections indicate that the incumbent, Evo Morales, has won a third consecutive term in office.

Mr Morales, Bolivia’s first indigenous leader, won more than 60% of the vote, according to the unofficial exit polls.

Votes are still being counted across the country. Six million people were eligible to vote in Bolivia and abroad.

Mr Morales has overseen strong economic growth since taking office in 2006 and has been widely tipped to win.

He has presided over a a period of economic growth and reduced poverty, using Bolivia’s commodity wealth to reduce poverty levels.

But he has been criticised for failing to halt corruption.

Mr Morales’s party, the Movement Toward Socialism, is also expected to make gains and win a strong majority in Congress.

The poll passed without major incident, according to the electoral authorities and foreign observers.

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Analysis: Ignacio de los Reyes, BBC News

The La Paz cable car, file pic The La Paz cable car – one of Mr Morales’s projects

Evo Morales became the first indigenous president in 2006 and is even more popular now, and not only among his Aymara ethnic group.

He won the trust of many thanks to Bolivia’s good economic performance. Supermarkets, cinemas and restaurants are popping up everywhere.

The new cable car in La Paz is perhaps the best example of the changing times in Bolivia, which remains one of the poorest countries in the region.

It connects La Paz with the satellite city of El Alto, home to thousands of migrants. There, a monument to Che Guevara sits next to a brand new shopping centre, surrounded by thousands of poorly built stalls selling counterfeit products.

A giant campaign poster of “Evo” overlooks the scene. His face is likely to stay there for five more years if, as predicted, he wins a landslide victory on Sunday.

line Economic growth

Since 2006, Mr Morales’s government has focused on education subsidies, increased pensions and spending on public works.

He has been boosted by a boom in commodities prices that has helped boost export revenues nine-fold.

The revenue has helped fund policies that have created an average annual economic growth of 5%, well above the regional average.

It has also funded public works projects, including a cable car system for the capital, La Paz.

Samuel Doria Medina addresses supporters in Santa Cruz, 8 Oct Samuel Doria Medina addresses supporters in Santa Cruz

Some 500,000 people have been taken out of poverty.

The oil, gas, mining, telecommunications and water sectors have all been nationalised.

Mr Morales’s critics say he has introduced anti-environment measures and presided over a corrupt administration.

He is also accused of using millions of dollars in government cash to fund his re-election campaign and that this has helped create a fractured opposition.

Although there are four challengers in the election, opinion polls suggest Mr Morales is 40 points ahead of his nearest rival, Samuel Doria Medina.

Mr Doria Medina has vowed to clean up the judiciary if elected.

To avoid a run-off, Mr Morales must win 50% of valid votes, or 40% if that includes a 10-point lead over his nearest rival.

Mr Morales will want to maintain his two-thirds control of Bolivia’s Senate and assembly, which are also holding elections.

This could allow him to alter the constitution to permit a fourth term in office.

Mr Morales has already benefited from a court ruling that permitted him to run for a third term.


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Morales set for Bolivia election win

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Antigua government denies purchasing new fleet of vehicles following election victory

anu-licenceST. JOHN’S, Antigua, Friday Jul 4, 2014, CMC – The Antigua and Barbuda government Thursday denied a media report that said the fleet of vehicles used by the newly elected Prime Minister Gaston Browne was being replaced.

In a brief statement, the Office of the Permanent Secretary within the Office of the Prime Minister said it had been made aware of the incorrect report carried on a radio station here and that it wanted “to place on record that this assertion is incorrect and can only be viewed as an effort to mislead the public.

It said that following the June 12 general election, “as is customary and in accordance with internationally accepted protocols, in the interest of the Prime Minister’s health and safety, an assessment was made of the current fleet of vehicles available for his use.

“A number of the vehicles were discovered to be defective with inoperable windows, air conditioning, steering, shocks and suspension systems and infested with pests including ants and cockroaches.”

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The statement said that preparations were put in place to have the defective vehicles replaced with vehicles already in use by the Transport Board, which would not have incurred any additional expenditure by the government, insisting “no new vehicles would have been acquired”

The statement noted that Prime Minister Browne after he was informed of the issues with the vehicles “instructed the Permanent Secretary that it is his desire not to have the defective vehicles replaced, therefore reducing the fleet of vehicles used by the former prime minister from six to three vehicles.

“The decision of Prime Minister Browne to decrease his fleet of vehicles is in keeping with his administration’s policy of reducing the excesses of government including the use of police officers as personal aides of ministers including the Prime Minister.”

The statement said that it is “unfortunate” that the media house “did not seek clarification from the Office of the Permanent Secretary in the Prime Minister’s Office on the matter before conveying inaccurate information to the public.

“This is not only irresponsible journalism …but also places the Prime Minister and his protective team’s security at risk,” the statement added.


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Antigua government denies purchasing new fleet of vehicles following election victory

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Outcome of JTA presidential election not yet clear

There’s uncertainty about the outcome of the hotly contested election for President of the Jamaica Teachers Association (JTA) for the 2015/2016 administrative year, after the initial announcement of the results was recalled.

A preliminary count of  the votes and a subsequent release from the Association’s Public Relations Officer has been recalled and withdrawn by the President.
A statement issued on Tuesday night by Leon Nash, JTA Public Relations Officer, said following a preliminary count, Georgia Waugh Richards, Principal of Harmon’s Primary School, had  received 6079 votes in last month’s election, beating Norman Allen, Principal of  Four Paths Primary and Junior High, into second place with 5,996 votes.   
But, in a swift response, JTA President Dr Mark Nicely told RJR News states that the results were not final, so the contents of the release should be disregarded.

“By virtue of the closeness of the result, we have received indications from one candidate already that that candidate will be requesting at least a recount, and might also take other action,” he said.

Accordingly, he advised, the press release should not be regarded as an official announcement of the election result. It was a “premature and unauthorised” press release, he asserted, which “is not really to be regarded as the result.”

The process of determining the result was still underway, Dr. Nicely added. He said that because of the closeness of the margin of victory, determined by the preliminary count, there will have to be a recount of the votes.

The president-elect will initially succeed Doran Dixon in that capacity next month when he takes up duties as President of the JTA. Similarly, at the end of Mr. Dixon’s one-year presidency in 2015, the incoming president-elect will become the new president.


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Outcome of JTA presidential election not yet clear

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Quarrel breaks out over voters list for PNM election

Trinidad & Tobago’s Express newspaper reported on Friday that an imminent legal battle could result in the People’s National Movement (PNM) having to postpone its internal elections, set for May 18.

According to the newspaper, the team representing aspiring PNM leader Pennelope Beckles Robinson argued on Thursday that the election process was being manipulated to the benefit of incumbent leader Dr Keith Rowley and was far from being free and fair.

Member of Parliament for Laventille West Nileung Hypolite, the logis­tics co-ordinator for the Beck­les Robinson team, reportedly told the Express Beck­les Robinson’s team would not stand by and watch the democratic process thwarted, “in the interest of a few, self-serving persons.”

In an interview at a private residence in Valsayn yesterday, Hypolite produced several documents, purporting to show how the process was being influenced unfairly.

He reportedly claimed that approximately 7,000 applicants for the right to vote in the internal election, signed on during a registration drive were rejected because they were perceived to be supporters of Beckles Robinson, their names were rejected.

“The PNM cannot be seen as an all-inclusive party when they are rejecting 7,000 persons,” said Hypolite.

Hypolite said he and the team will be encouraging the 7,000-plus members to write to the elections committee, querying their rejection.

He said an official letter from the Beckles Robinson team will be dispatched, on behalf of the applicants they had received money from and submitted forms.

Referring to an injunction filed on Thursday, which stopped the elections for the Medical Practitioners Association of Trinidad and Tobago (MPATT), Hypolite said “that may very well be the way we will be heading”.


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Quarrel breaks out over voters list for PNM election

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Guyana ruling party ready for general election

donald-ramotar Guyana president, Donald Ramotar (Credit: caricom.org)

GEORGETOWN, Guyana, Friday June 27, 2014, CMC – President Donald Ramotar Wednesday signalled that his People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) is prepared for a general election if the opposition goes ahead with its threat to move a motion of no-confidence in his administration.

The PPP/C does not hold a majority in the 65-member national assembly with the opposition parties – A Partnership for National unity (APNU) and the Alliance for Change (AFC) – holding one seat majority.

AFC Vice Chairman Moses Nagamootoo told the privately-owned Stabroek Newspaper that a no-confidence vote by the opposition could come before the Parliament soon.

He said one of the reasons for considering a no-confidence motion was the fact that government has already spent GUY$4.5 billion (one Guyana dollar =US$0.004 cents) of the GUY$37.4 billion which had been cut from the GUY$220 billion budget for the fiscal year 2014-15.

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But as he addressed the Annual General Meeting of the Private Sector Commission (PSC), Ramotar said that his administration was not afraid of facing the electorate. The last election was held here on November 28, 2011.

“We do not take threats. If the opposition wants to pass a no-confidence bill, let them pass it and we will be ready to deal with the consequences of that,” he said, adding “when I say I am going to do it, I am going to do it. I wouldn’t even say it.”

In his address, President Ramotar also responded to a call for a date to be named for the long overdue local government elections.

United States Ambassador to Guyana Brent Hardt has dismissed government’s latest excuse for not holding local government elections saying it was time Guyanese directly elect their representatives at the local level.

“To my mind, it’s a constitutional requirement, it’s a legislative requirement and there is at this point no obstacle to the holding of local government elections so I would just urge government to set a date, move forward as soon as possible and give people that ability to have effective local governance and start to transform the country,” he told the Guyana-based Demerara Waves Online News.

But President Ramotar, in an apparent reference to United States practice of listening to the phone calls of people worldwide, said such actions were undermining democracy.

“What undermines democracy is when you listen to everybody’s telephone calls and read their emails and ban them from having collective bargaining in their own country in different parts of North America and Europe,” he told the business community.

Ramotar said that while he was eager for local government elections there were some uncertainties in the body politic reiterating that the lack of local government elections meant that his administration was undermining democracy.

The last Local Government elections were held on August 8, 1994 with the ruling PPP-C winning 80 percent of the Councils.

But for various reasons, the Local Government elections planned for 1997 did not materialise and the National Assembly deferred the 1997 elections to one year later. Since then, numerous obstacles have impeded Local Government elections even though the government in 2004 had named the month of October as the month for the polls.

In January 2013, a joint statement issued by the United States Ambassador D Brent Hardt, the United Kingdom High Commissioner Andrew Ayre, his Canadian counterpart David Devine and Robert Kopecky, the European Union diplomat here, recalled that during the 2011 national elections “one issue on which all political parties were in full agreement was the need to hold local government elections.”


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Guyana ruling party ready for general election

Thursday, August 29, 2013

UN hears rising concerns on Haiti’s election delay

Latest News

Wednesday, August 28, 2013 | 2:50 PM

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The UN Security Council heard Wednesday about rising discord in Haiti over long-delayed national elections, which were expected in 2011 but may not take place even this year.Political infighting among the government’s branches has held up the vote. An electoral council responsible for overseeing the elections wasn’t formed until April, and it still needs to approve a calendar for voting that will be largely financed by foreign governments.“These delays have led a number of political and civil society actors to express skepticism concerning the likelihood that elections will be held in 2013,” the UN special representative for Haiti, Sandra Honore, told the council.The election is needed to fill one-third of Haiti’s 30-member Senate and dozens of local posts. In the absence of a vote, some 130 elected municipal officials have been replaced with appointees chosen by President Michel Martelly.Honore said delays in submission of a draft electoral law “have fueled speculation among the legislators that the executive was intentionally delaying the process to ensure that Parliament becomes non-functional.”A group of the main opposition parties has been calling on Martelly “to uphold the constitutional requirement of timely elections, or else resign,” she said.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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UN hears rising concerns on Haiti’s election delay

Monday, July 29, 2013

Kuwait"s conservative tribes make election gains

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait (AP) — Kuwait’s conservative Sunni tribes made gains in parliamentary elections while liberals reclaimed a foothold in the Gulf region’s most politically powerful elected body, according to results yesterday after voting forced by the ongoing political upheavals in the oil-rich nation.

The outcome from Saturday’s election still leaves the 50-seat parliament in the hands of lawmakers friendly to Kuwait’s pro-Western ruling family.But the boost for the tribal bloc, which took at least 10 seats, suggest possible alliances with Islamists and other opposition groups angered over crackdowns on dissent that have targeted prominent government critics and online activists.Kuwait, one of OPEC’s top producers, has been battered by political unrest for the past two years. A variety of groups inspired by the Arab Spring have stepped up pressure on the ruling Al Sabah family, led by the 84-year-old emir, over alleged fiscal mismanagement, corruption, and efforts to police social media.Some Islamist-led groups boycotted the election — Kuwait’s third in the past 17 months — but reported turnout of more than 52 per cent indicated that few others heeded their call. In last December’s election, liberals and others snubbed the voting and participation was about 40 per cent.Liberal lawmakers seeking greater social and political freedoms gained at least six seats, the results showed. The biggest blow came to Shiite candidates who benefited from last December’s boycott, dropping from 17 seats to eight.Two women, one Shiite and one with the liberal camp, were elected.The election — a rarity during the holy month of Ramadan and its dawn-to-dusk fasting — was called after a court invalidated the chamber elected in December. The court found technical flaws in the election, but let stand new voting rules ordered by Kuwait’s ruler that brought one-vote per person.The former system allowed four votes per person, which could be spread among various candidates. Critics say it encouraged vote buying and pressures by tribal leaders to keep the votes within their clan.Kuwait’s parliament has by far the strongest powers of any elected body among the Gulf Arab states, allowing lawmakers to directly challenge the government and demand questioning of top government officials.Other Gulf Arab countries are closely watching the moves by Kuwait’s Islamists, considered by the United Arab Emirates and others as part of wider networks ideologically linked to Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood and seeking to bring down the Gulf’s pro-Western fraternity of rulers.Washington, too, is deeply vested in Kuwait’s stability as a critical link in the Pentagon’s military array against nearby Iran. Kuwait hosts thousands of US soldiers in the largest deployment of American ground forces in the region.A caretaker government is expected to be named later today. The new Cabinet will be named in coming weeks by the emir.A Kuwaiti woman cast her vote at a polling station in Salwa, Kuwait. (PHOTO: AP)

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Kuwait"s conservative tribes make election gains