HAPPENINGS AT THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY GOP

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GOP ELEPHANT
Central Committee:
     Wayne Parke, Chairman
     Mary Jo Kaiser, Political Director
     Dottie Thomas, Vice Chairman
     Lon Walters, Secretary
     Farley Smith, Treasurer
News and Upcoming Events for January 5, 2021

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VCRP Central Committee Meeting – TBA
                                    Location: GOP Headquarters, 815 John Street, Evansville
 

                                    Meetings are open to all Vanderburgh County Precinct Committeemen.

Contact Office at 812-425-8207 if you have any questions.

Have You Made Your New Year’s Resolutions?
Goal: The County Committee as a whole, and each member thereof, shall use his or her best efforts to engage with all voters of each precinct within the county to assist in the election of Republican candidates in general elections. To reach this goal:
*     Our county party has a written plan of organization outlining the duties and responsibilities of Officers and Precinct Committee persons.
*     Our county party has adopted a set of Resolutions covering important issues, e.g., Caucus Rules for Party and Public caucuses, Meeting Procedures, Financial and Property concerns, R License Plates, State Convention Delegates, etc. (and filed a copy with the Secretary of the State Party.)
*     Our county party has a set of Goals for the year adopted by the County Committee.
*     Our county party has a Budget and Finance Plan adopted by the Central Committee.
*     Our county party has a website, Facebook page, regular printed or electronic
Newsletter, Phone Tree and/or Mail List for regular communications with the Central Committee, contributors, and volunteers.
*     Our county party has a Calendar of Activities (party and community) that is available to interested Republicans.
*     Our county party has a written Campaign Plan for election years.
*     Our county party supports Republican candidates (after the Primary) financially and with technical support. We are a TEAM.
*     Our county party recruits, trains and rewards volunteers.
*     Our county party develops leaders by supporting party auxiliary organizations and party and/or community leadership programs.
*     Our county party has a public relations program designed to shed a positive light on the Republican Party and its candidates and officeholders.
*     Our county party maintains regular contact with Republican officeholders at the local, State and National levels.
*     Our county party is regularly involved in community events (parades, forums, festivals, etc.).
*     Our county party is involved in charitable activities and supports programs for different age groups.
*     Our county party promotes the republican form of government and American values.

Contact: Erin Houchin erin@contendcommunications.com (812) 896-4193
 
ATTORNEY GENERAL-ELECT ROKITA ANNOUNCES TORRES AS CHIEF DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL
Indianapolis, Indiana (December 30, 2020) – Indiana Attorney General-Elect Todd Rokita has selected Lori Torres to serve as Chief Deputy Attorney General and Chief of Staff in his new administration beginning January 11, 2021. Torres is the current Inspector General for Indiana, appointed to that post in 2017 by Governor Eric Holcomb.
  “I am thrilled to have Inspector General Lori Torres joining our Administration as Chief Deputy and Chief of Staff. She is a skilled lawyer of the highest integrity and exactly the type of leader we need to take action for the citizens of our great state on day one,” said Attorney General-Elect Rokita.
Torres is a veteran public servant, having served as the Indiana Commissioner of Labor under Governor Mitch Daniels and as the former General Counsel and Deputy Commissioner for the Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT). During her time at INDOT, she led a team of 100 people and consistently delivered results that were on time and on budget. She has practiced law for more than thirty years, including in private practice at Smart, Kessler & Torres in Johnson County for fifteen years and more recently at Ice Miller in Indianapolis.
As the Inspector General, Torres is charged with addressing fraud, waste, abuse, mismanagement, and wrongdoing in state government, experience she believes will be an asset in the Attorney General’s Office. “In the Inspector General’s office, we fostered a culture of integrity that contributed to public confidence in state government, a value I know is shared by Attorney General-Elect Rokita. The Office of the Attorney General plays an important role in protecting our freedoms and holding those that would do harm to Hoosiers accountable, and I am excited to help lead the team,” said Torres.
In addition to her new role in the administration as Chief Deputy Attorney General, Torres will serve as the Chief of Staff. She has also joined the transition team for Attorney General-Elect Todd Rokita as co-chair.
“Having served in leadership positions in three agencies, Lori understands how operations, policy, and the law intersect. I am grateful for her service as the Inspector General for Indiana and her continued service in this new role. With her, we gain the highest level of ethics, integrity, expertise and leadership, which will be a great benefit to the office and to the State of Indiana,” said Rokita.
Ms. Torres graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Indiana University Bloomington and received her law degree cum laude from the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law. She is a graduate of Indiana University in Bloomington and the IU McKinney School of Law in Indianapolis. She lives with her family in Johnson County.

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Thinking back to my days playing college basketball, I always wanted to defy expectations. Even when facing our toughest competition, with our only hope being to keep the score close enough to win on a buzzer-beating shot, I wanted to win and to win big. The success of Indiana’s Republican Party is built on a similar approach.

We don’t want to win; we want to run up the score and continually defy expectations.

And through the tireless efforts of our volunteers, the constant generosity of our donors and the relentless pursuit of governing excellence by our elected officials, we’ve put in place a model of success that can - and should – be replicated by Republicans nationwide.

We invest in the fundamentals of grassroots politics, we draw up policy game plans that notch wins for Hoosiers, and we always have an eye on making our team bigger, stronger, and better in the long run.

From the time I became chairman, we immediately put an emphasis on data, including hiring two full-time staffers to procure and analyze data that could be utilized to connect with voters. Over the past two election cycles, that investment has yielded over 8.5 million voter contacts, 1.5 million at doors, 4.5 million over the phone and 2.5 million by text message.

To fuel Republican efforts up and down the ticket, State Party and Governor Holcomb’s campaign combined forces on fundraising. With the added strength of this first-of-its-kind joint-fundraising effort, over $25 million was raised over the four-year cycle breaking records for both entities. The real-world impact is seen when the two entities were able to invest $400,000 in the Attorney General and Statehouse races over the last three weeks of the campaign.

After a strong showing for Indiana Republicans in 2016, many thought the party had reached its apex. But we doubled down and targeted more wins. And they came.Knocking off an incumbent in the top targeted U.S. Senate race in 2018. Setting a new all-time high for mayors by winning 71 in 2019. And in 2020 we set a new high mark for votes for Governor Holcomb and we won the second most competitive U.S. House race in 2020.

And we are not done. On November 4th, we started planning for more wins in 2022.

There is still room to grow. We have long been a leader in promoting women and have four female statewide elected officials and two members of Congress – but we need more. And our party has initiated a first of its kind diversity program to help establish better trust and connection between Black and Latino Hoosiers and Indiana’s Republican Party.

I’ve told my team on more than one occasion that winning the first championship is easy. But winning year after year requires four or five times the effort than the first. It means staying true to core beliefs and values. It means fighting for economic opportunity for every American. It means showing compassion to all and including everyone in the conversation. It means going to places where we haven’t been welcomed before. It means thinking big and offering bold solutions to our nation’s challenges.

That’s the Indiana model of politics and policy and why our campaign theme this year was One Indiana – For All. It’s a model that continues to defy expectations. I wish you all a happy New Year, with an even brighter 2021 to come.

Happy New Year,

Kyle Hupfer
Chairman, Indiana Republican Party

Note from Senator Braun

I will not be voting to certify the election results. Read more below about our important effort to investigate unprecedented allegations of voter fraud and illegal conduct in the 2020 election.
– Sen. Mike Braun
The senators and senators-elect are calling for Congress to appoint a commission to conduct a 10-day emergency audit of the election returns in states where the results are disputed. https://t.co/8FlrpgIYoa
A coalition of GOP senators and senators-elect, led by Sen. Ted Cruz, will object to the Jan. 6 certification of the presidential election results when a joint session of Congress meets next week unless there is an emergency 10-day audit of the results by an electoral commission.
Cruz — along with Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis.; James Lankford, R-Okla.; Steve Daines, R-Mont.; John Kennedy, R-La.; Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Mike Braun, R-Ind.; as well as Sens.-elect Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo.; Roger Marshall, R-Kansas; Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., and Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala. — say that the election “featured unprecedented allegations of voter fraud and illegal conduct.”
Their effort is separate from one announced by Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who said this week that he would object to what he said was the failure of some states — most notably Pennsylvania — to follow their own election laws.
 “Voter fraud has posed a persistent challenge in our elections, although its breadth and scope are disputed.  By any measure, the allegations of fraud and irregularities in the 2020 election exceed any in our lifetimes,” the lawmakers say in a statement.
A source familiar with the effort told Fox News that it was Cruz who orchestrated the effort, working with other senators to organize the push against the certification and call for the electoral commission with just days to go before the joint session of Congress.
The lawmakers say there is a precedent of Democrats objecting to election results in 1969, 2001, 2005 and 2019: “And, in both 1969 and 2005, a Democratic Senator joined with a Democratic House Member in forcing votes in both houses on whether to accept the presidential electors being challenged,” they say.

Cruz: I agreed to argue Pa. election case because US needs ‘resolution’. The senators and senators-elect are calling for Congress to appoint an Electoral Commission to conduct a 10-day emergency audit of the election returns in states where the results are disputed. They cite as precedent the 1877 between Samuel Hayes and Rutherford Hayes, where there were allegations of fraud in multiple states.

“In 1877, Congress did not ignore those allegations, nor did the media simply dismiss those raising them as radicals trying to undermine democracy,” the lawmakers say. “Instead, Congress appointed an Electoral Commission — consisting of five Senators, five House Members, and five Supreme Court Justices — to consider and resolve the disputed returns.”

“We should follow that precedent.  To wit, Congress should immediately appoint an Electoral Commission, with full investigatory and fact-finding authority, to conduct an emergency 10-day audit of the election returns in the disputed states. Once completed, individual states would evaluate the Commission’s findings and could convene a special legislative session to certify a change in their vote, if needed,” they say.
Without that, they will vote against the certification.
“Accordingly, we intend to vote on January 6 to reject the electors from disputed states as not ‘regularly given’ and ‘lawfully certified’ (the statutory requisite), unless and until that emergency 10-day audit is completed,” they say in the statement.
It is unclear whether they will rally more Republicans to their cause, and the lawmakers note that most Democrats and some Republicans will vote to certify the results, but say that an audit would increase the public’s faith in the process.
“These are matters worthy of the Congress, and entrusted to us to defend.  We do not take this action lightly.  We are acting not to thwart the democratic process, but rather to protect it,” they say. “And every one of us should act together to ensure that the election was lawfully conducted under the Constitution and to do everything we can to restore faith in our Democracy.”
The new effort by the senators marks a major win for President Trump’s efforts to challenge the results of the election. Trump has repeatedly claimed he beat Biden, who flipped a number of red states including Georgia and Arizona to get over the 270 Electoral College votes needed to secure the White House.
Trump’s campaign has launched a number of legal challenges, while Trump himself has urged states with Republican governors and legislatures to overturn Biden’s victories — as he alleges widespread voter fraud tilted the scales to Biden.
Senate GOP leaders are against efforts to challenge Biden’s win, with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell recognizing the former vice president’s victory, and behind closed doors urging Senate Republicans not to contest the election results.
But if the GOP senators object, with a similar effort by House Republicans, the joint session of Congress would be dissolved and the House and Senate would then meet separately for two hours to debate a contested state’s electoral vote.
Each body would then vote whether to accept or reject that state’s slate of electoral votes. Then the House and Senate reconvene in the joint session.
In the House, at least 10 incoming House GOP freshmen will back Rep. Mo Brooks’ effort to object to the certification of the presidential election results on Jan. 6.
The last time this happened (and only the second time in U.S. history) was in January 2005, following President’ George W. Bush’s narrow reelection victory over Democratic challenger Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts. One Senate Democrat – Sen. Barbara Boxer of California – and one House Democrat – Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones – objected. In 2017, a handful of House Democrats objected to Trump’s victory over Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, but no Senate Democrats joined them.
A state’s slate of electoral votes would only be thrown out if both the House and Senate vote to do so — something that is unlikely given the Democratic majority in the House, and the push by GOP Senate leaders to certify.

Visit the Vanderburgh GOP 

page for daily updates.

  Mark Your calendar                CLICK on event for more information
  January 13
Chamber Lunch with Mayor – ONEP – 11:30
Postponed until further notice
GOP Breakfast – C K Newsome Community Center
  February 12
Lincoln Day Dinner – Evansville Country Club.
If you have or know about event Please contact me at lonw@elwalters.com

  Make sure you add
vandygop@gmail.com to your address book so we’ll be sure to land in your inbox!
If you know someone that would like to receive our email blast please have them sign up at: http://vanderburghgop.com/e-mail-sign-up/

If you have any questions, contact Mary Jo Kaiser, VCRP Political Director, at

or (812) 425-8207.
for more info. Thank you.
Contact Us
Vanderburgh GOP
Vanderburgh County GOP
812-425-8207