|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
ADOPT A PET
Ricki Lake is a 1 ½-yr-old female brown tabby! She is the mom of the “talk show host†kittens (Maury, Jerry Springer, etc.) most of whom have already been adopted. She was a great momma and now deserves a home of her own. Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Get details on adoption at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt!
HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS
|
|
“IS IT TRUE” NOVEMBER 16, 2020
IS IT TRUE that the Jehovah’s Witnesses have canceled their 2021 convention in Evansville? Â …that the Jehovah’s Witness convention is one of the largest group meetings that has taken place annually in Evansville the past few years? Â
IS IT TRUE that both County Councilman Joe Kiefer (R) and Mayor Lloyd Winnecke (R) showed class and integrity by both congratulating County Commissioner Ben Shoulders (D) on his re-election victory over challenger Zac Rascher (R) last week?
Steve Hammer will not be a Candidate for Vanderburgh County GOP Party Chairmen
Dear City- County Observer Readers
I’ve got some news regarding the Vanderburgh County Republican Party Central Committee elections this coming Spring. Â My Dad has decided this week to retire from the work world. At 84, he’s developed some recent health issues.
He’s just tired of dealing with it all. I’m taking over all of his business interests and real estate holdings effectively immediately.
In light of that, I’ve decided not to run for Vanderburgh County Republican Party Chairman this Spring. I was 90% sure I was going to run for Vanderburgh County GOP Chairman until this last week.
I’m going to maintain my part-time position with Senator Braun but that’s really all I’m capable of handling at this time.
I appreciate all of your support and encouragement and I’m sorry to let you down but I just can’t spread myself too thin.
With Warm Regards,
STEVE HAMMER
Commentary: Mike Braun, Curtis Hill, And Unintended Comedy
Commentary: Mike Braun, Curtis Hill, And Unintended Comedy
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – Maybe U.S. Sen. Mike Braun and his fellow Republican, outgoing state Attorney General Curtis Hill, have a plan.


Perhaps their goal is to turn Indiana into the laughingstock of the free world.
If so, Braun and Hill are well on their way to making their dream a reality.
Both men, in different ways, have been supporting actors in President Donald Trump’s attempt to turn the presidential election of 2020 into a surreal farce. Denying both reality and simple mathematics, Braun and Hill have lent support to the president’s petulant contention that he didn’t really lose the election.
It’s hard to tell which of the two Hoosiers had the more absurd moment in propping up Trump’s whiny fantasy.
Let’s consider Braun first.
In defending Trump’s refusal to do what every other president since John Adams has done – act like an adult, acknowledge the results and congratulate the winner – Braun offered this odd justification.
“When you look at how close the election was, basically a tie vote in the popular vote if you take out the margin of difference in California,†Braun said.
Braun was trying to play to conservatives’ longstanding complaint – actually, prejudice – that California somehow isn’t fully American.
Just how excluding California from the United States might benefit Americans, Braun and his fellow deep thinkers never explain.
California, after all, would be the fifth-largest economy in the world if it were a freestanding nation – ranking ahead of India and just behind Germany.
Saying farewell to California also would mean losing the state’s tax revenues. That would not be a good thing for most of America. It certainly wouldn’t be a good thing for Indiana.
For decades, California was a so-called “donor state.†That meant its citizens paid more in federal taxes than they received in federal government services. Former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger once complained that Californians only received 78 cents in federal services for every dollar they spent on supporting the U.S. government.
This meant, of course, that California was subsidizing services in other states – such as Indiana – that receive more in federal government support than they pay in federal taxes.
This disparity is not quite what it once was – in large part because of the budget-busting tax cut Republicans pushed through at the beginning of the Trump presidency.
Nonetheless, California ranks 41st on the list of states most dependent on federal government support. Indiana occupies the 8th spot.
If conservatives such as Braun get their way and read California out of the American experience and the United States, we Hoosiers can expect hefty tax increases to compensate for the loss.
And we’ll have guys like Mike Braun to thank for it.
Hill’s contribution to this low-rent tragicomedy was no less ludicrous.
Hill added Indiana to the list of states asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review how mail-in ballots were handled during the just-concluded election.
In 2020 alone, Hill has been suspended from the practice of law for a month by the state disciplinary commission and the Indiana Supreme Court for ethical transgressions and repudiated by his own party when he sought renomination. He is the lamest of lame ducks.
Just why Hill thought the world was waiting for an attorney who had been disciplined by the judicial branch and rejected by his own party to opine on best practices anywhere or on anything is a good question.
Just how Hill thought he had the moral and political standing to do so for this state is an even better one.
But, beyond that, Hill, like Braun, seems not to have thought at all about the implications of what he’s doing.
To weigh in on how other states conduct their elections is to invite other states to do the same with ours.
Doubtless, we Hoosiers will be just thrilled when our neighbors in Illinois start telling us how to police polling places and count ballots.
We can thank departing attorney general for his foresight at that moment.
Until then, let’s encourage Mike Braun and Curtis Hill to take bows.
If they wanted to make themselves and Indiana look foolish, they can rest easy.
Mission accomplished.
FOOTNOTE: John Krull is the director for Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
AG Curtis Hill: From Indiana to Pennsylvania, we must defend the U.S. Constitution in matters of election law
Attorney General Curtis Hill released the following statement in response to recent erroneous assertions made by partisans regarding an amicus brief Indiana recently joined in the U.S. Supreme Court:
“Under the U.S. Constitution, state legislatures — not state courts — are charged with enacting the laws that govern federal election processes in their respective jurisdictions. That’s why we and other states have challenged a Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision that rewrote a Pennsylvania law setting the deadline by which absentee ballots had to be received in order to be tallied.
“Indiana’s involvement in this case began well before Election Day. We first joined a brief opposing the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision on Oct. 5. Then, on Nov. 9, Indiana joined five other states in filing another brief with the U.S. Supreme Court. Ten other states, incidentally, filed a separate brief with the court challenging that same Pennsylvania decision.
“Since we filed our briefs, critics have alleged that our legal efforts are intended to serve purely political interests to benefit one candidate or one party. To the contrary, our work to ensure that the U.S. Constitution is followed in election proceedings serves a far nobler purpose.
“Our ultimate aim is to preserve the constitutionally mandated allocation of authority in state legislatures to establish federal election rules so fundamental to the proper function of our democratic republic. Further, we are carrying out a responsibility that falls squarely within the domain of state attorneys general — the obligation to defend the rule of law within our own states and in matters nationwide affecting our constituents.
“It’s obvious that those who have mischaracterized our purpose have either not actually read our briefs or are unconcerned with the truth. The U.S. Supreme Court has correctly stated previously that courts should not attempt to usurp the authority of state legislatures in matters related to election law. We have simply asked the court to continue to uphold this basic principle.â€
YESTERYEAR: Masonic Temple
YESTERYEAR: Masonic Temple
BY PAT SIDES
Masonic Temple
The first couple of decades in the twentieth century witnessed a building boom in Evansville. Of the many structures from this era that still stand, one is the Masonic Temple at Third and Chestnut streets.
On November 30, 1913, the headlines of the Evansville Journal-News touted the opening of the stately Temple, built at a cost of $100,000. Festivities lasted a week, beginning with the laying of the cornerstone in a ceremony attended by nearly a thousand people, as well as Masons who gathered from around the state and other parts of the country.
The Masonic Temple was designed by Clifford Shopbell, perhaps the most productive architect in Evansville at that time. In addition to private residences, Shopbell’s creations included the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Coliseum, the Municipal Market, Reitz High School, the Hadi Shrine Temple, banks, churches, schools, courthouses, libraries, and other buildings.Â
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|