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Vermont s chief trial judge to retire, replacement named
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Vermont s chief trial judge to retire, replacement named
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Man appeals detention without bail, questions if police arrested the right person
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The rift has been evident for decades. Former Republican governor
Jim Douglas traces the split all the way back to the fight between the conservative Proctor wing of the party and the moderate Gibson-Aiken faction, in the days when Vermont Democrats were so scarce that GOP politics were just about the only politics around. In the 1946 primary, moderate
Ernest W. Gibson Jr. beat incumbent Republican governor
Mortimer Proctor in a hard-fought race then went on to beat the Democrat with 80 percent of the vote. Vermont Republicans have had a successful history, especially since the rise of a strong Democratic opposition in the 1960s, of papering over these divisions, which perhaps gives evidence they could do so again.
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MONTPELIER â What the swearing in of Gov. Phil Scott, Lt. Governor Molly Gray and other statewide officials lacked in crowds or celebratory mood, it more than made up for in Vermont resolve.
The oaths of office were administered with condemnations of Wednesdayâs mob violence at the U.S. Capitol, and reminders that state government faces a daunting task in restoring the stateâs economy from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Statehouse was strangely empty for the occasion, thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, and well-guarded by Vermont State Police and Capitol Police. Most members of the state Senate and House of Representatives watched over online video.