September, 18 2020, 12:00am EDT
Common Cause Targeted--Democracy Attacked
WASHINGTON
Common Cause North Carolina and three of our allies there were targeted by a fake donor who attempted to get people on the record talking about ways to break election laws registering people not eligible to vote. He also attempted to introduce a fake volunteer to embed a spy in our midst. Once the groups in North Carolina understood they were dealing with a fraud, they reported the incident to law enforcement. An open and ongoing investigation is active in the Wake County District Attorney's office. Two teams of investigative reporters released results of major investigations today in the Raleigh News & Observer and North Carolina Policy Watch. Common Cause will continue to cooperate with authorities and comment on what we learn as we can.
STATEMENT OF COMMON CAUSE PRESIDENT KAREN HOBERT FLYNN:
Sometimes when people hear 'Common Cause is the target of a sting operation' the assumption is we've done something wrong. In fact, today, not one, but two teams of investigative journalists released major stories with some big political news--and it isn't Common Cause or our allies who they investigated. Add to that the District Attorney in Wake County, North Carolina, who has opened an active and ongoing investigation into the same subject and it is clear: no one affiliated with Common Cause or our allies have done anything wrong.
But politics is different. At Common Cause we believe in the separation of politics and government as much as church and state. We're strictly nonpartisan and as advocates for good government, we've challenged both major parties with our innovative democracy reforms that shift power from wealthy special interests to the people. In our quest for better politics, we stand rock solid on the side of the people. We'll call out bad actors as we do here, so some will hear this as partisan, but for us it isn't. Our detractors on the left think we've sold out to the establishment and are ineffective and our detractors on the right try to undermine our hard-earned nonpartisan credentials by labeling us as 'liberal' to undermine our effectiveness.
Our only agenda is to strengthen the people's voice in our democracy.
Common Cause may be the target, but the attack is on our democracy and on the right of every eligible voter to have a say in the future for our families, communities, and country.
Voters have a clear moral choice before them as early voting begins in many states. Do you believe every eligible person should have a vote, or do you believe only certain people should vote?
Too often people confuse politics with governing, so another way of framing the moral choice is to ask candidates for every office, in all parties, if they believe people should be encouraged to vote or discouraged to vote as a matter of public policy.
Given the number of voter suppression tactics that are currently masquerading as legitimate laws and the number of court cases challenging people's right to vote by limiting hours or purging roles, it is clear as a matter of policy the opponents of democracy believe in vote suppression. Common Cause prefers to urge everyone to vote, but if you miss one election you shouldn't lose your right or be forced to re-register.
Voting is a sacred right, cherished by people from every background and life experience in the USA. Common Cause will never be intimidated or stop our work to make elections about voters and improving the voting experience, as opposed to making elections about politicians. Elections are for the people to decide.
Common Cause is a nonpartisan, grassroots organization dedicated to upholding the core values of American democracy. We work to create open, honest, and accountable government that serves the public interest; promote equal rights, opportunity, and representation for all; and empower all people to make their voices heard in the political process.
(202) 833-1200LATEST NEWS
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A large and diverse coalition of broad coalition of rights organizations on Monday sent a letter to U.S. President Biden Monday, urging him to commute the sentences of all 40 individuals who are on federal death row.
The letter adds to a chorus of voices—including prosecutors and law enforcement officials—advocating for Biden to use his clemency powers to issue such commutations before he departs office.
The calls for Biden to issue pardons and commutations have only grown since the president issued a pardon for his son, clearing Hunter Biden of wrongdoing in any federal crimes he committed or may have committed in the last 11 years.
The joint letter to Biden was backed by over 130 organizations, including the ACLU, Brennan Center for Justice, and The Sentencing Project, commends his administration's "actions to repudiate capital punishment, including imposing a moratorium on executions for those sentenced to death, and for publicly calling for an end to the use of the death penalty during your 2020 campaign. In the face of a second Trump administration, more is necessary."
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The letter cites additional reasons that Biden ought to commute the sentences, including that the death penalty "has been rooted in slavery, lynchings, and white vigilantism."
A separate letter to Biden—sent in November by group of attorneys general, law enforcement officials, and others—argues that "condemning people to death by the state does not advance public safety. The death penalty fails as an effective deterrent and does not reduce crime. As an outdated, error-riddled, and racially-biased practice, its continued use—and the potential for its abuse—erodes public trust in the criminal legal system and undermines the legitimacy of the entire criminal legal system."
Matt Bruenig, president of the People's Policy Project think tank, directly tied Biden's inaction on this issue to the pardon he issued for his son in a blog post last week, writing that "if Biden does not act, there is little doubt that Trump will aggressively schedule executions in his next term. Their blood will primarily be on Trump's hands, but, if Biden does not act to prevent it, his hands will be bloody too."
The call for commutations for death row prisoners aligns with a wider push for the President to use his clemency powers before he leaves office.
Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), who has been particularly vocal on this issue, said Sunday on social media that President Biden "must use his clemency power to change lives for the better. And we have some ideas on who he can target: Folks in custody with unjustified sentencing disparities, the elderly and chronically ill, people on death row, women punished for crimes of their abusers, and more."
Pressley was one of over 60 members of Congress who sent a letter to Biden last month, encouraging Biden to intervene to help these groups.
Several lawmakers have specific pardons or commutations in mind, according to Axios. For example, Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) has urged Biden to pardon Julian Assange of WikiLeaks, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) has called for a pardon of Indigenous activist Leonard Peltier, per Axios.
So far, Biden has granted far fewer clemency petitions (161 total) than former President Barrack Obama, according to the Department of Justice's Office of the Pardon Attorney, and a few dozen less than President-elect Trump did during his entire first presidency. However, in 2022, Biden did grant full and unconditional pardons to all U.S. citizens convicted of simple federal marijuana possession—a move that was cheered by advocates.
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On Monday, just hours before a suspect in the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was arrested by police, a new Gallup poll found a 62% majority in the U.S. believe the government should ensure all Americans have healthcare coverage—the highest percentage in more than a decade.
Just 42% of people in 2013 believed it was the government's responsibility to make sure everyone in the country had health coverage—a low since the beginning of this century.
The poll found that a majority of Republicans still believe ensuring health coverage is not the government's job, but the majority has shrunk since 2020.
That year, only 22% of Republican voters believed the government should ensure everyone in the country has healthcare, but that number has now grown to 32%.
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President-elect Donald Trump and other Republicans, who are set to control both chambers of Congress starting in January, have indicated that they would go in the opposite direction, working to weaken the popular, government-run Medicare program by promoting Medicare Advantage, which is administered by for-profit companies like United and is already used by half of Medicare beneficiaries.
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This is a breaking news story... Please check back later for possible updates.
Luigi Mangione—the 26-year-old man arrested in Pennsylvania Monday on gun charges and suspected of last week's assassination of UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson—was carrying a manifesto condemning insurance industry greed, police said after his apprehension.
Mangione, a Maryland native who according to his social media profiles has a master's degree in engineering from the University of Pennsylvania, was apprehended after being recognized in a McDonald's in Altoona,
The New York Timesreported.
New York Police Department (NYPD) Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said Mangione was in possession of a 9mm handgun—possibly a ghost gun made with numerous parts or a 3D printer—the type used to kill Thompson, as well as a silencer and what he described as an anti-corporate manifesto.
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NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch claimed that Mangione was also carrying a fake New Jersey ID matching the one the suspecter killer used to check into a New York City hostel 10 days before Thompson was gunned down in broad daylight in Manhattan with a silencer-equipped gun firing 9mm bullets.
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