Interesting times in the Republican Party; the Bills at the bye bye week

So it’s over.  Two demographically unrepresentative states that will not be in play in November have spoken – well at least the relatively few voters who participated in those states have spoken.  Trump is the presumptive presidential nominee of the Republican Party.  Republicans in the other 48 states can rest up.

None of that is a surprise.  Trump’s takeover of the Republican Party has sucked all the oxygen out the party.  His grievance laden campaign is about the past – mostly his past – and his future outlook is focused on his legal problems.  Issues will be mostly irrelevant in 2024 or simply used for bumper-sticker slogans and stump speeches.  His recent efforts to stymie potential bi-partisan immigration reform legislation demonstrates his cynicism about actually getting anything positive done about this critical matter.

His presence at the head of the Republican ticket will cast a shadow on every other candidate of the party on the national, state, and local levels.  While they cannot escape that shadow, some candidates might not enjoy or benefit from it.

On the local front there are some interesting fights brewing among Republicans: 

  • In Assembly District 142, represented by Democrat Pat Burke, the Republican Party leadership has endorsed Marc Priore, an employee in the Sheriff’s Department.  A party rookie, Joe Flatley, is promising a primary challenge.  He is supported by Carl Paladino.  Flatley has alleged that the party executive committee ran a “Soviet-style internal policing” operation at the meeting that allowed him to speak for only 30 seconds while Priore and other candidate spoke and answered questions extensively for attendees.
  • Assembly District 147  is currently represented by Republican David DiPietro, who has held the position since 2013.  Legislating is not his thing.  Mitch Martin, a member of Sheriff John Garcia’s administrative staff, is planning to take on DiPietro.  The end result of this upcoming primary will not affect the makeup of the Assembly but it will be interesting to watch.  The party leadership is deferring to committee members of the district to choose an endorsee, but that does not seem likely to end the possibility of a primary fight.
  • At the same party meeting that endorsed Priore and an opponent for Democratic Assemblywoman Monica Wallace, Senator Pat Gallivan was also endorsed.  But the interesting news out of that meeting is that the party did not select its candidate for Erie County District Attorney.  The only identified possible candidate is James Gardner, an attorney presently employed by County Judge Kenneth Case.  Gardner is reportedly telling party leaders that he is prepared to spend $500,000 of his own money on the race.  In addition, Gardner has indicated that he intends to hire Chris Grant’s Big Dog Strategies to assist in the campaign.  Word on the street is that the employment of Grant did not sit well with some party leaders, who reportedly suggested that Gardner should instead use a different consulting firm.  Gardner, the story goes, met with that consultant and decided that the firm would not be helpful enough for him.  Thus, for the moment at least, there will be a short delay in the party endorsement for DA while folks sort out which consultant will make a bundle of money on the race.
  • You cannot discuss the Republican turmoil in Erie County without noting the role of their regular partners, the Conservative Party.  Gardner is a registered Conservative.  Would the Conservatives jump the endorsement gun and try to prompt action by the Republicans?  Would it matter?  Are there still hard feelings left over from last year’s fight for the seat in County Legislature’s 10th District?

One side note to the above observations:  two Assembly candidates in the expected primaries are employees of Sheriff Garcia.  While perhaps they might take a leave of absence to run their campaigns, it appears that the Sheriff has in one way or another taken an interest in Republican Party politics that extends beyond his own office.  Garcia, as reported in a previous post, has amassed a campaign treasury of $233,862, having raised $194,354 in 2023.  Something going on there?

Fighting among the Republicans, be it nationally or locally, leaves less time for what comes next.  Democrats on all levels, of course, have had fights over the years.  In my decades-long participation and observation of such things, however, there has rarely been a period in time when the Erie County Democratic Party was more united than they are now.  Nationally there are challenges for the Democratic ticket.  There is also, however, an uncurrent of resistance demonstrated by the someone-other-than-Trump Republicans.  Fasten your seat belts for a rocky 2024

The Bills at the bye bye week

So another season ends with a knockout by the Kansas City Chiefs.  One more that could have gone either way if just a play or two or three went differently.

The Bills are still loaded with talent but the age, big contracts, and in some cases, lack of achievements of some team members during the 2023 season means that there will be many new faces in 2024.  The team is considerably over the salary cap which will limit its ability to re-sign unrestricted free agents as well as any available new talent.  Drafting late in each round of the 2024 draft also creates challenges.

And what about the coaching staff?  Sean McDermott’s judgment has rightly been questioned on many occasions, but there will not be a change in who the Head Coach is.  Joe Brady is officially the offensive coordinator.  Whether he is really better than Ken Dorsey remains to be seen.  Relieving McDermott of the defensive coordinator responsibilities seems likely.

Peyton Manning did not win a Super Bowl until he was nearly 31, several years older than Josh Allen is now.  Other star quarterbacks got there even later than Manning.  The window of Super Bowl opportunities for the Bills isn’t closing yet, perhaps not for many years, but that doesn’t make the loss to the Chiefs any less disappointing.

A Bills-Lions Super Bowl would have been fun.

Twitter @kenkruly

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Speculation grows over who ICE hired to build ‘Trump’s army’: ‘That’s why they’re masked’



Speculation is growing in the wake of another fatal shooting in Minnesota that the Department of Homeland Security is hiring pardoned Jan. 6 rioters as immigration agents.

Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino confirmed that the two agents who shot 37-year-old Alex Pretti were already back on duty, but not in Minneapolis, and has refused to identify them. Journalists who have covered pro-Donald Trump militant groups suspect some of the agents involved in immigration crackdowns are drawn from those extremist ranks.

"Because I filmed the Proud Boys for years, because I was in Charlottesville and at the January 6 riot, and spent five months filming the ICE agents in Federal Plaza I’m convinced they are the same people," said independent visual journalist Sandi Bachom. "It’s impossible to find a whole new army of aggressive, violent, immature, Call to Duty Trump sycophants. That’s why they’re masked. People are gonna start figuring it out. That’s why he pardoned them all."

"I remember thinking when I got back from January 6, well Hitler had an army and Trump doesn’t," Bachom added. "He does now."

Trump pardoned about 1,500 defendants for Jan. 6-related offenses in one of his first official acts upon returning to the White House, and Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) two weeks ago – following the shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good by a veteran immigration agent – asked administration officials whether the Department of Homeland Security was actively recruiting pro-Trump extremists.

"The American people deserve to know how many of these violent insurrectionists have been given guns and badges by this Administration," Raskin wrote in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. "Who is hiding behind these masks? How many of them were among the violent rioters who attacked the Capitol on January 6th and were convicted of their offenses?"

Senate Democrats have threatened to withhold funding for DHS without major reforms to ICE, including a possible ban on masking, and state legislatures are advancing bills to ban federal agents from obscuring their identities while on duty, and the secrecy surrounding Pretti's killers has set off alarms about their actual identities.

"There is another, more disturbing prospect: Are ICE agents actual bad dudes the administration hired rapidly with no background checks — possibly criminal (maybe pardoned J6ers?) — and the administration doesn’t want that information getting out?" wondered journalist Robert A. George. "IOW, the masks represent a LITERAL coverup. Now, we know this isn’t universally the case: Jonathan Ross who shot Renee Good is an ICE veteran. But the spiriting out of Minneapolis the agents who killed Alex Pretti is certainly…curious."

"This is purely speculation on my part, but hey, I didn’t call them domestic terrorists or anything," George added.

Their suspicions seemed to be shared by many others.

"Anyone else notice how the Proud Boys, Three Percenters, Oath Keepers, Patriot Front, etc. were always out there marching to support and protect law enforcement...until recently?" asked University of Washington biologist Carl T. Bergstrom. "They're never out there supporting ICE. It's so odd, like Superman and Clark Kent."

The Atlantic's Robert F. Worth spoke to an activist on the ground in Minneapolis who agreed.

"It became clear very quickly that ICE is the Proud Boys, the Boogaloo boys," said Dan, who trained as a legal observer but asked to keep his last name shielded. "They’ve given them uniforms and let them run wild."