Wednesday, May 5, 2021

MASS GOP is promoting corruption and idiocy! PLEASE MAKE INFORMED VOTES!

WHY IS THE MASSGOP PROMOTING SOMEONE SURROUNDED BY SCANDALS?


In the 2020 election, the MASS GOP supported unqualified, inexperienced and incompetent candidates including 2 QANON idiots.

DO YOUR HOMEWORK before voting for candidates and INFORM YOURSELVES.

Promoting VERNON JONES?


POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook offered this:
MASSGOP HAS GEORGIA ON ITS MIND — What better way to recruit new members to the Massachusetts GOP than by bringing in a nationally known Democrat-turned-Republican for a fundraiser?

That’s the logic, so says Chairman Jim Lyons, behind the MassGOP’s upcoming gathering featuring Georgia gubernatorial candidate Vernon Jones.

Jones made waves nationally last year when the Black, then-Democratic state representative endorsed Donald Trump’s re-election bid and followed it up with a speech at the Republican National Convention. Jones, who flouted Covid protocols by crowdsurfing at a Trump rally in Georgia last fall, switched party affiliations in January, and is now challenging Trump-maligned Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in the 2022 GOP primary.

Jones travels with some political baggage , per the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. But Lyons told me he’s a “great fit for what we’re trying to do here in Massachusetts” — growing the GOP’s ranks by appealing to the unenrolled voters who make up 57% of the state’s electorate, and, yes, to Democrats.

All about Vernon Jones
State Rep. Vernon Jones has had one of the more checkered political careers in Georgia in the past few decades.

Jones’ career has been filled with major scandals, big ideas, petty squabbles, charges that haven’t stuck, wins, losses, and always a flair for self-promotion.

The Democrat recently made waves for endorsing Republican President Donald Trump’s bid for re-election and drew talk of political payback against Jones from his own party. He spoke at the 2020 Republican National Convention and is set to challenge Gov. Brian Kemp in the 2022 GOP primary.

Here’s a look at Jones’ career.

Scandals

After Jones won re-election in 2004 as DeKalb County CEO, the headlines began to pile up.

He was accused of rape that he said was a consensual act between three partners. No charges were filed.

Four DeKalb workers filed a lawsuit that claimed Jones worked to replace white managers in the Parks Department with African Americans.

The lawsuit said Jones and other county officials said they wanted a "darker administration" to reflect "the new DeKalb County."

Six years later, a federal court jury awarded two of those employees $185,000 in damages.

The wife of a DeKalb County police officer assigned to guard Jones said the CEO urged her not to report a 2004 incident in which her husband threatened her and a male companion.

The DeKalb County Development Authority funded a $3,500 trip to the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece, for Jones. Jones said the trip was to attract Olympic-related business to DeKalb.

By 2007, state lawmakers had taken notice of Jones and started to introduce bills that would limit the DeKalb CEO’s power.

He was term-limited out of the CEO job in 2008.

A special grand jury recommended an investigation into allegations of bid-rigging and theft by Jones when he was CEO. The district attorney, however, said he lacked evidence to show any crimes had occurred.

Politics

Jones has run as a Democrat but does not march to the beat of a political party.

In 2000, he endorsed Democrat Howard Dean’s presidential bid but voted for Republican George W. Bush.

In 2007, he said he backed the idea of a “fair tax,” which is a flat tax proposal that has some support in conservative and libertarian circles.

During the 2008 campaign, Barack Obama called out Jones for sending a mailer with a manipulated photo that showed the two on the same stage.

"I do not endorse him; I have not endorsed him," Obama said in an interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "He put my picture on his literature without asking me.

"I think he may have come to an event of ours a while back. The reason I think I may have met him is I know somebody told me as I was shaking his hand that he had taken pride in voting for George Bush twice."

Jones supports the National Rifle Association and received a campaign donation from the gun rights group in 2016.

Before Trump spoke at the 2017 NRA annual meeting in Atlanta, Jones wrote an editorial in the AJC calling it a “tremendous honor for Atlanta to welcome Donald Trump to our city.”

But Jones also gave a strong warning to Republicans in 2019 as they were considering one of the strictest anti-abortion bills in the country, which later passed.

"If your members vote for this bill in 2020, your party loses," Jones said. "There's going to be a new speaker of the House here. If there's a new speaker, many in your party will lose power, all of you will lose your chairmanships."

History

Jones got his start in politics in 1990 running for the state House. He lost. But the then-manager for BellSouth Mobility won two years later in House District 57.

As his first legislative session began, Jones filed a bill that would remove the Confederate battle emblem from the background of the state flag.

This bill did not advance, and the flag would not change until about a decade later.

In 1998, he filed a bill that would outlaw selling music with explicit lyrics to minors. During the debate on the House floor, Jones was blocked from playing some songs. Instead, Jones read choice lyrics out loud, self-editing wherever necessary. The bill did not pass.

‘I'm 24-7’


Jones supports the National Rifle Association and received a campaign donation from the gun rights group in 2016.

Before Trump spoke at the 2017 NRA annual meeting in Atlanta, Jones wrote an editorial in the AJC calling it a “tremendous honor for Atlanta to welcome Donald Trump to our city.”

But Jones also gave a strong warning to Republicans in 2019 as they were considering one of the strictest anti-abortion bills in the country, which later passed.

"If your members vote for this bill in 2020, your party loses," Jones said. "There's going to be a new speaker of the House here. If there's a new speaker, many in your party will lose power, all of you will lose your chairmanships."

History

Jones got his start in politics in 1990 running for the state House. He lost. But the then-manager for BellSouth Mobility won two years later in House District 57.

As his first legislative session began, Jones filed a bill that would remove the Confederate battle emblem from the background of the state flag.

This bill did not advance, and the flag would not change until about a decade later.

In 1998, he filed a bill that would outlaw selling music with explicit lyrics to minors. During the debate on the House floor, Jones was blocked from playing some songs. Instead, Jones read choice lyrics out loud, self-editing wherever necessary. The bill did not pass.

‘I'm 24-7’
Jones is often described as well-dressed and favors designer clothing. He spent well on himself and sometimes sought public money to do so.

He won the DeKalb County CEO race in 2000 and found controversy before he took office. He asked the outgoing CEO for $25,000 to $50,000 to pay for a secretary and other expenses before he took office. That amount approached what Gov. Roy Barnes got a year before. The request was rejected.

A year later, Jones implemented a dress code for employees and asked a shoeshine man to set up shop in the DeKalb County office building.

In 2003, the AJC reported DeKalb spent $630,000 for Jones’ security detail, far surpassing other county officials.

"I'm 24-7," Jones said at the time. "There's no off time for the CEO of DeKalb County. The feathers come with the chicken."

A grand jury examined the issue and found “high-handed behavior" by Jones and recommended curbing his power.

Governing

His administration shepherded rapid development and more than $350 million worth of funding for parks and infrastructure.

He cited as accomplishments the hiring of more police officers, improving the county’s 911 system and launching a curbside recycling program.

In 2006, Jones was ahead of the curve on distracted driving. He pitched a measure to fine drivers $100 if they caused a wreck while talking on a cellphone. The commission upped it to $500.

Return to Capitol
Jones never stopped running for office. In 2010, he unsuccessfully challenged U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson in the 4th Congressional District. In 2014, Jones lost an election for DeKalb sheriff.

Two years later, he returned to the state Capitol with a victory in House District 91.

Back in the Capitol, he has regularly partnered with Republican lawmakers. He co-sponsored a bill to crack down on unauthorized immigrants. And his social media posts crackle with positive messages about Trump.

He’s also drawn the ire of Democrats. He’s called a fellow Democratic lawmaker a “chicken (expletive)” and was accused of making transphobic comments to a Doraville City Council member who Jones said tried to draw a comparison between being black and being gay.

In April 2020, Jones announced he was resigning his State House seat, but walked that back the next day. Instead he withdrew his candidacy before the Georgia primary and will leave office at the end of 2020. In a video posted on Twitter at the time, not long after his endorsement of Trump, Jones said he received an “overwhelming amount of support” from his constituents after announcing his plan to resign.







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