COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN’S STATEMENT ON RECENT VIOLENCE AGAINST FEMALE ELECTED OFFICIAL

Commissioner of Public Advocacy & Executive Director of the Erie County Commission on the Status of Women, Karen King has issued the following statement on the importance of female representation in local government and participation in the elective office process:

“The Erie County Commission on the Status of Women denounces the act of violence committed against Melissa Hartman, the current Eden Town Supervisor and a candidate for Erie County Clerk. We support the rights of all women to fully participate in the democratic process, which includes the right to run for elected office. 

On March 28, 2022 a partial pipe bomb was thrown into Eden Town Supervisor Melissa Hartman’s home while she and her family slept. The device had multiple threats written on it, including a message that stated unless she dropped out of the race for Erie County Clerk, the next pipe bomb would be live. This act of violence against Supervisor Hartman and her family is unacceptable.

The incident is currently being investigated by the Town of Eden Police Department, the Erie County Sheriff’s Office and the Erie County District Attorney’s Office. While Supervisor Hartman has vowed not to be intimidated by this act of violence and will not withdraw from her candidacy for Erie County Clerk, it is important to note that the current political landscape has a long way to go toward achieving gender parity. This most recent act of violence cannot be allowed to stop the progress women have made, nor inhibit the choice of future women candidates to run for any office they choose. Representation matters!

Current statistics on women serving in elected office:

  • U.S. Congress: 27.1 percent of the 535 seats
  • Statewide elective executive: 30.6 percent of the 310 seats
  • Municipal office holders in cities with a population of 10, 000 or more: 30.5 percent
  • Municipal office holders in New York State: 31.4 percent

We share these statistics on women in elected office from the Center for American Women and Politics (*) to illustrate the point that women are still woefully underrepresented in elected office nationally, statewide and locally. It is through this lens that we must recognize the full impact of the recent attack on Melissa Hartman and her family.

When a woman decides to run for elected office she knows that she will be facing an uphill battle. She will face scrutiny based on archaic ideas about gender roles, endure sexist and misogynist remarks and be asked to answer questions about her qualifications and capacity to lead.

 

When a woman decides to run for elected office it is not a decision she makes lightly. It is a thoughtful decision that requires courage and commitment to public service. When a woman decides to run she knows that she is standing on the shoulders of her foremothers and sisters who fought valiantly and for many at an incalculable cost, for passage of the 19th Amendment, securing a women’s right to vote and to participate in the democratic process. 

When a woman decides to run for elected office she knows that she is part of this legacy, and wants to ensure that the next generation of women who decide to run will not have to tolerate threats and acts of violence aimed at them for exercising their right to run. She will not be silenced or retreat from threats and acts of violence.  She will not be deterred. She will persist!”

 

For more information about the Erie County Commission on the Status of Women, visit the ECCSW website at: https://www3.erie.gov/csw/

 

*Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP). 2022. “2022 Women in Municipal Office.” New Brunswick, NJ: Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University-New Brunswick. https://cawp.rutgers.edu/2022-women-municipal-office (Accessed April 8, 2022)

Related articles

Latest Research on Obesity & Cancer from Roswell Park at AACR 2024

Featured contributions include insights to be shared in major...

Pro-Trump media landscape ‘utterly collapsing’ compared to last election cycle: report



In the run-up to the 2016 presidential election, a slew of far-right websites popped up and cashed in on content propping up then-candidate Donald Trump. And those sites continued to rake in millions of dollars during Trump's time in the White House. But since 2020, the right-wing media cash spigot has effectively slowed to a trickle.

A new report in the Atlantic found that since the 2020 election cycle, the most prominent pro-Trump websites have seen their once robust traffic dry up. Writer Paul Farhi analyzed data from media analysis website The Righting, which focuses on conservative publishers, and reported that of the 10 most popular right-wing websites, traffic was down by an average of roughly 40%.

"The flow of traffic to Donald Trump’s most loyal digital-media boosters isn’t just slowing, as in the rest of the industry; it’s utterly collapsing," Farhi wrote. "Some of the bigger names in the field have been pummeled the hardest: The Daily Caller lost 57 percent of its audience; Drudge Report, the granddaddy of conservative aggregation, was down 81 percent; and The Federalist, founded just over a decade ago, lost a staggering 91 percent."

ALSO READ: A neuroscientist explains how Trump is using existential fear to win the election

"FoxNews.com, by far the most popular conservative-news site, has fared better, losing 'only' 22 percent of traffic, which translates to 23 million fewer monthly site visitors compared with four years ago," he added.

According to Farhi's research, the primary reason for the precipitous drop in clicks for far-right websites is ultimately due to Facebook. Conservative publishers were for years dependent on Facebook engagement as a primary source of traffic. The social media platform's algorithm (the complex code that determines what content shows up in a user's feed) had predominantly favored outrage, as content that provokes a negative reaction is more likely to get a user to click, like, comment or share a post.

In 2020, Vox reported that the Facebook algorithm was overwhelmingly favorable to conservatives, with far-right pundits like Ben Shapiro and Dan Bongino bringing in tens of millions of clicks per month from Facebook engagement. Progressive media analysis group Media Matter for America found that anti-transgender content in particular generated a disproportionate amount of clicks for conservative websites. New York Times columnist Kevin Roose found that "conservative pages were beating out liberals’ [pages] in making it into the day’s top 10 Facebook posts with links in the United States, based on engagement, like the number of reactions, comments, and shares the posts receive."

Amid a wave of criticism from Congress and international bodies over Facebook being exploited by bad actors to influence elections, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced changes to the algorithm in 2018 aimed at promoting content from friends and family over news publishers. He further tweaked it in 2021 to further deprioritize content from publishers, which has, over time, resulted in far fewer clicks for the conservative publishers that used to dominate the platform.

"All of this monkeying with the internet’s plumbing drastically reduced the referral traffic flowing to news and commentary sites," Farhi wrote. "The changes have affected everyone involved in digital media, including some liberal-leaning sites—such as Slate (which saw a 42 percent traffic drop), the Daily Beast (41 percent), and Vox (62 percent, after losing its two most prominent writers)—but the impact appears to have been the worst, on average, for conservative media."

According to Farhi, conservatives are now retreating from websites depending on clicks to other forms of media entirely, like podcasts, Substack newsletters, YouTube channels and videos on the far-right broadcasting platform Rumble.

"There’s a lot of choice," said The Righting owner Howard Polskin. "Even if [the big] sites went out of business tomorrow, there are a lot of voices still out there."

Click here to read Farhi's Atlantic article in full.

‘An environment of distrust’: How Elon Musk amplifies falsehoods about immigration, 2024 voting

Elon Musk has flooded X with false or misleading posts about immigrants voting illegally. His frequent warnings ignore safeguards to prevent fraudulent voting.

‘Lost $4 billion’: Maria Bartiromo grills Devin Nunes on Truth Social sell-off



Fox News host Maria Bartiromo highlighted revenue losses suffered by Donald Trump's Truth Social platform.

During a Sunday interview with Truth Social CEO Devin Nunes, Bartiromo reviewed the company's financial condition.

"President Trump's media company has had a volatile two weeks," she noted. "The stock finished down about 30% this week. The company, which operates Trump's Truth Social platform, lost $4 billion in market value after gaining six billion in value during its debut on the Nasdaq two weeks ago."

"For 2023, Trump media posted a loss of $58 million on revenue and $4.1 million [profit] in a regulatory filing," she continued. "The company also disclosed that its auditor had raised concerns about its ability to continue operating before its recent merger and IPO."

The Fox News host then welcomed Nunes.

"I was looking at the filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the loss," Bartiromo said. "When would you expect this company to turn profitable?"

ALSO READ: A criminologist explains why keeping Trump from the White House is all that matters

Nunes blamed the losses on overregulation.

"So even if you take the ridiculous cost that it took us to get to this point, we are well positioned," he said. "Because we have no debt. We're coming out of this with no debt, a platform that works really, really well, that communicates to millions of people. And then we have $200 million in the bank."

"There's never been a company like this," he added. "And we're really the only game in town that can accomplish this."

"Those are all the issues that we're that we're focused on and including, you know, making sure that we're dealing with like a three-year plan here where we can go out and put this whole company together where we're not relying on big tech."

Watch the video below from Fox News or at the link..