Gov. Kemp should veto anti-enforcement legislation
Written by D.A. King
In Georgia, the Secretary of State Office administers professional licenses.
Conservative voters should be asking why Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office joined in a recommendation that at least three anti-enforcement bills “pass as written.”
In a recent essay, we asked if Gov. Brian Kemp will sign several GOP bills that dismantle the system in place to verify the ‘lawful presence’ of foreign nationals who apply for professional licenses. We now have more information.
Tom Homan, Former Acting Director of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) urges Georgians to contact Gov. Brian Kemp, Feb, 2020.
Georgia Sec of State office recommended passage of bills to dismantle legal immigration verification
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Religious Leaders Hold Home Depot Hostage Unless Company Meets Demands Over Election Reform
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(AP Photo/Chuck Burton, File)
The largest company headquartered in Georgia, Home Depot, is being told that if it fails to publicly denounce the state’s voting law reform legislation, it will be boycotted. This isn’t coming from Black Lives Matter, per se. The corporation is being held hostage by religious leaders who demand specific talking points be delivered … or else.
Corporations, especially those headquartered in Georgia, have come out against the legislation signed by Governor Kemp. Republicans describe the bill as one that addresses election integrity while Democrats call it a voter suppression law – “Jim Crow 2.0”. Coca-Cola and Delta were among the first to make a point to virtue-signal after the governor signed the bill, only to be exposed as taking part in the process and giving input into the legislation. Both were fine with the law until the governor signed it and grievance activists did their thing. Coke soon discovered that not all of its consumers think
Inside the GOP s tense fallout with the big business lobby CNN 2 hrs ago By Michael Warren, Manu Raju and Alex Rogers, CNN © Ken Cedeno/Pool/Getty Images Rep. Claudia Tenney speaks during a hearing at the House Committee on Foreign Affairs in March 2021.
What started as a polite discussion about small business soon turned into a heated confrontation between unusual opponents Republican members of the House and their party s old friends at the US Chamber of Commerce.
Republican lawmakers were blunt with the Chamber s lobbyist, Tom Sullivan, calling him on the carpet about the organization s decision to endorse so many Democrats in the 2020 election, including 23 House freshmen in competitive districts. Rep. Claudia Tenney, a Republican from New York, was particularly upset the Chamber backed a Democrat against her.