Statement on Erie County Comptroller Stefan Mychajliw’s Fake Allegations

Erie County Comptroller continues to lob false defamatory allegations against small businesses.

Community calls for his immediate resignation.

 

My former colleague, friend, and political client Stefan Mychajliw should get his facts straight before falsely making such ridiculous public accusations.

 

WNYmedia Network is an online media/video production company. For the last 16 years, we have worked with elected officials from all parties, small businesses, and dozens of organizations across WNY in all different media and marketing capacities.

While I always take full responsibility for the content published on this website and our connected social media pages, they are not my business. 

Similar to Stefan, blogging is a tool.  A website is a tool. Social media is a tool.

“Blogging” is not, never has, nor ever will be my profession.

Like every business owner across the country, I’ve been hit with devastating losses over the last 9 months.

Most of the events, concerts, music festivals, and other projects we had planned in 2020 were either canceled or have been postponed indefinitely. I’ve been forced to pivot and adjust my business just like everyone else.

It was mentioned numerous time’s in the application process and the press leading up to it that those who received PPP money were not a top priority for this grant. 

I never applied for PPP and after speaking with my financial advisors who determined I was eligible to apply for the Erie County grant, I filled out the application.

Just like everyone else.

I have absolutely no influence or connections to 43North.

I’m sorry that not everyone who applied for the grant was able to receive money. If businesses like Mychajliw mentioned in his attacks weren’t given top priority for this particular grant program, that is not my problem.

I followed the rules.

I feel bad that Major Tom’s Drop Zone and its owners are getting dragged into this because of a desperate, petty elected official trying to frantically salvage what little is left of his dumpster fire of a political career. What type of responsible elected official tries to pit one business against another to try and score a few extra political points with his base?

It’s outright shameful.

Next time I am in Hamburg, I will be sure to order take out from your fine establishment. 

Stefan Mychaljliw has his facts completely wrong.

While I did receive money from the Erie County grant program:

  •  I was never awarded the full $10,000 amount as the Comptroller claims.  I have the check to prove it.
  • I am not nor ever been on anyone’s payroll. That’s a claim Erie County Republicans have been making about me since I worked at WGRZ-TV.

Shortly after WNYmedia Network helped launch Stefan Mychajliw’s now floundering political career back in 2012, I made a philosophical decision to only work in the political arena with democratic candidates going forward. My business. My decision.

Erie County Executive Mark Polonzcarz, Erie County Democratic Chairman Jeremy Zellner, and a long list of state, county, and local elected officials over the last 16 years (including Stefan) have been clients of the video, web, and marketing work I do.

  • I’m proud to be an Erie County Democrat and I will never apologize for that.

As an elected official, Mychajliw has crossed a legal and ethical line by targeting a business that doesn’t agree with him politically and attempting to make an example of us.

Stefan and his patronage sidekick Lynne Dixon were quick to jump on the photo op when they dropped off the check to 43North back in October.

Despite only being the delivery boy, Mychajliw tried to take credit for the program while urging “decision makers to help as many businesses as possible”.

I guess the part where he said “only businesses who agree with him politically were eligible” didn’t fit into Twitter’s word limitations.

Bottom line is I did absolutely nothing wrong in applying for the grant and I’m thankful to 43North and whoever else was part of the awarding process. However, this desperate attack by a duly elected official who swore an oath crosses the line.

Mychajliw’s vile, unethical behavior over the course of his recent Congressional campaign and this deadly COVID pandemic is derelict of the oath he took as an elected official.

This attack on me is just another attempt to further Stefan’s far-fetched political aspirations while pandering to his base of hateful, violent, white nationalist groups to which he proudly associates.  Hate groups like the NY Watchmen, Free NYS, Open NY, the 1791 Society, Rolling Patriots, and others, who regularly try to silence their most outspoken critics.

It will never happen. 

As the Buffalo News Editorial Board recently made clear, Stefan Mychajliw continues to disgrace the office of Erie County Comptroller.

He should resign immediately.

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Trump Supreme Court battle could be dismantled by Congress members’ own history



New evidence is emerging that could deal a major blow to President Donald Trump's case for stripping birthright citizenship to the children of immigrants.

The president has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to restore “the original meaning” of the 14th Amendment, which his lawyers argued in a brief meant that “children of temporary visitors and illegal aliens are not U.S. citizens by birth," but new research raises questions about what lawmakers intended the amendment to do, reported the New York Times.

"One important tool has been overlooked in determining the meaning of this amendment: the actions that were taken — and not taken — to challenge the qualifications of members of Congress, who must be citizens, around the time the amendment was ratified," wrote Times correspondent Adam Liptak.

A new study will be published next month in The Georgetown Law Journal Online examining the backgrounds of the 584 members who served in Congress from 1865 to 1871. That research found more than a dozen of them might not have been citizens under Trump’s interpretation of the 14th Amendment, but no one challenged their qualifications.

"That is, said Amanda Frost, a law professor at the University of Virginia and an author of the study, the constitutional equivalent of the dog that did not bark, which provided a crucial clue in a Sherlock Holmes story," Liptak wrote.

The 14th Amendment states that "all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside," while the Constitution requires members of the House of Representatives to have been citizens for at least seven years, and senators for at least nine.

“If there had been an original understanding that tracked the Trump administration’s executive order,” Frost told Liptak, “at least some of these people would have been challenged.”

Only one of the nine challenges filed against a senator's qualifications in the period around the 14th Amendment's ratification involved the citizenship issue related to Trump's interpretation of birthright citizenship, and that case doesn't support his position.

"Several Democratic senators claimed in 1870 that their new colleague from Mississippi, Hiram Rhodes Revels, the first Black man to serve in Congress, had not been a citizen for the required nine years," Liptak wrote. "They reasoned that the 14th Amendment had overturned Dred Scott, the 1857 Supreme Court decision that denied citizenship to the descendants of enslaved African Americans, just two years earlier and that therefore he would not be eligible for another seven."

"That argument failed," the correspondent added. "No one thought to challenge any other members on the ground that they were born to parents who were not citizens and who had not, under the law in place at the time, filed a declaration of intent to be naturalized."

"The consensus on the 14th Amendment’s citizenship clause has long been that everyone born in the United States automatically becomes a citizen with exceptions for those not subject to its jurisdiction, like diplomats and enemy troops," Liptak added.

Frost's research found there were many members of Congress around the time of the ratification of the 14th Amendment who wouldn't have met Trump's definition of a citizen, and she said that fact undercuts the president's arguments.

“If the executive order reflected the original public meaning, which is what the originalists say is relevant,” Frost said, “then somebody — a member of Congress, the opposing party, the losing candidate, a member of the public who had just listened to the ratification debates on the 14th Amendment, somebody — would have raised this.”

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