Bill Foster Explains Candidacy

Bill Foster Explains Candidacy

By Bob Small

After the most recent redistricting our 165th Pa house District went from being represented by Leanne Kruger to Jennifer O’Mara, basically an exchange of one Democrat for another.  Then a blank GOP line was seized by Nichole Missino.

 Then retired Swarthmore scientist Bill Foster decided that he would run and realizing the other two party lines were taken over, decided to create his own party.

He gathered enough signatures to acquire ballot status, and thus we have three Candidates running for one seat.  But then the weekly Swarthmorean came out on Thursday.   The letter from former Swarthmore Borough Council member Lauren McKinney began “Will someone explain why we need an independent “middle of the road” candidate to run against incumbent Jenn O’Mara for the 165th District?”

Bill  Foster explains his candidacy on his website: https://www.fosteringourvote.com/

Bill Foster Explains Candidacy
Bill Foster

The party system attacks our ability to choose a candidate that will represent most of us, he says.  He feels the major parties “value campaign donation and election victories more than our welfare”.

Bill promises that he will “work for legislation that requires committees to create their agendas in public well before their meetings”. 

The Swarthmore Borough Councol and Committees now have their agendas available online at least 24 hours before the meeting. He is also a proponent of ranked-choice voting.

He believes  “Harrisburg has put so much work onto school boards and their central office administrators that they have become overwhelmed, unresponsive, and inaccessible”.

“We can fix county systems so child abuse information is shared and children are not left in danger,” he says. 

Part of his extensive resume includes a stint with the Peace Corps, five years as a volunteer with the Council Rock School Board (Pa’s 12th largest).  Other volunteer stints include working with Swarthmore Borough, Swarthmore Boy Scouts, and the Delaware County Citizen Corps, and others.

To return to the beginning, why do we need yet another term of Jenn O’Mara as opposed to one of the other candidates, who have never had the chance to change things.

Independent Candidates In Pennsylvania

Independent Candidates In Pennsylvania

By Bob Small

There are two independent candidates on Pennsylvania’s 2022 ballot.

James Love Jackson and Rob Ronky are challengers in State House races, running against candidates endorsed by the major parties.

Rob Ronky is running in the 29th District against Tim Brennan (D) and Diane Smith (GOP).

The 29th District is in Bucks County and includes Buckingham, Doylestown, Solebury, Chalfont, New Britain and New Hope.

Independent Candidates In Pennsylvania
Rob Ronky

Republican incumbent Meghan Schroeder decided not to seek re-election in February.

Rob’s career includes stints with Dream with Ukraine.

“I would support open primaries where people can vote across party registration and I would support a national primary,” he says.

He says he wants more money spent on infrastructure including bike lanes and sidewalks.

He wants “kids to be taught a second language earlier than 8th grade” though he doesn’t advocate for a specific language,

He cites him mother and his wife as his role models.

Much the way Dr. Oz has advocated he says “we need officials that can come up with a compromise”.

The other independent candidate is James Love Jackson from the 190th Pa House District. He seems to be running a stealth campaign as there is very little information on him in the internet, besides his name.

Independent Candidates In Pennsylvania

Daniel Wassmer Is Keystone Party Senate Candidate

Daniel Wassmer Is Keystone Party Senate Candidate

By Bob Small

Daniel Wassmer is the US Senate candidate in Pennsylvania for the new Keystone Party

“The fact that two parties control all of the dialogue in the US creates a fundamentally flawed system in which ordinary people are left out of the process and the entire political environment becomes a supercharged example of partisanship,” Wassmer said in an Oct. 22 email interview.

He expressed concern about misuse of the legal system especially with regard to appeals and voting.

Daniel Wassmer Is Keystone Party Senate Candidate
Daniel Wassmer

“Evidence of this manipulation is the perpetual lawsuits followed by both political parties to exclude voters,”  he said.

He said this is often used to exclude third parties.

“People need to understand how corrupt our system has become and who created that atmosphere,” he said.  “Continuing to vote for corruption is not addressing these concerns but merely perpetuating it!”

In a discussion with GoErie.com he made these points:

“Abortions are a medical decision to be made solely by a woman and her doctor.”.

“May I also point out that supposedly hyper environmentalist Jimmy Carter is largely  responsible for freeing gas production in shale deposits here, (regarding fracking)”

“I would prefer to see Coca-Cola and Pepsi banned since we lose more people every morning to diabetes related comorbidity (regarding gun control)”

He sees himself as “an adult in a playground of chaos who will speak the truth..”

Wassmer received a J.D. from New York Law School in 1989, after degrees from Adelphi and Utah State Universities, etc.  He states he has worked as an adjunct professor, artist, and scuba diving instructor. 

On his Facebook page he said that “Also for the record I had reached out to the Oz campaign to debate him in the event that Fetterman was unable.”

For further information about his candidacy:

https://www.facebook.com  ›  Wassmer4USSenate

Daniel Wassmer for US Senate – Facebook

Www.Wassmer4PA.com

Morning Reflections On Fetterman Performance

Morning Reflections On Fetterman Performance — I was rather cruel to John Fetterman, yesterday, when comparing him to a “short bus” passenger. On the other hand, I pat myself on the back for refraining from voicing my initial impression which was an accomplished doctor debating the kid from Deliverance.

This morning I felt empathetic pity for Fetterman. I decided that if I owned a small shop that I would hire him to sweep out the back room or help load the van, albeit under supervision.

I don’t want him writing any laws, however.

And I give the D senate candidate grudging respect for appearing despite his stroke considering his stable-mate, hot-shot lawyer Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania’s attorney general, is ducking a gubernatorial debate with Republican Doug Mastriano. This is one of those things that make you go hmmm as Shapiro has been painting Mastriano as a rube. What is Shapiro afraid of?

For those considering voting for ether Democrat my view remains that you belong on the short bus.

Morning Reflections On Fetterman Performance
Dueling Banjo Debater
Morning Reflections On Fetterman Performance

Overview Of Alternative Party Candidates In Pennsylvania

Overview Of Alternative Party Candidates In Pennsylvania

By Bob Small

The Pennsylvania Department of State’s website has a way to search by political party and election. Also you can search by position like state sSenate candidates.  One can als search by district.

So I searched for “alternative parties.”

Parties that have at least onecandidate on the ballot in Pennsylvania’s 2022 general election, Nov. 8, are:

Libertarian17
Green5
Keystone5
Independent2
Fostering the Vote1
SWP (Socialist Workers Party)1

There are 31 candidates who are not major party. Most are running to spread their ideas and don’t really expect to get elected.

There are non-listed candidates running, some with party support, most without. Ron Johnson, for instance has the support of the Pa. Constitution Party, but was unable to obtain enough signatures to attain ballot status.  Then there were other candidates, mostly Libertarian and SWP candidates, who had enough signatures until the state. decided, with less than a week to go, that they needed more signatures.  See this video for details.

Imagine, if you will, that the Houston Astros were allowed four outs per inning but the Phillies only were allowed three. That’s how it is between Dems and GOP and the alternative parties.

I only know about Fostering the Vote, because I live in the 165th District and can vote for Bill Foster, which will be a future post. There are more candidates, I’m sure, running  on a very local basis as purely write-ins. Unless they can provide a strong internet basis, as an Everett Stern manages, we probably won’t ever hear of them. 

As of my last count, The Libertarians have 179 Elected Officials, and the Greens 20 in Pennsylvania.

In a better future society we need these candidates running with a more realistic chance of getting elected, though I’m not sure how, and if, this ever happens.

Please update me if I have missed any parties and/or candidates in Pennsylvania.

Overview Of Alternative Party Candidates In Pennsylvania
Overview Of Alternative Party Candidates In Pennsylvania

Stan Casacio Hosts Debate Party

Stan Casacio Hosts Debate Party — Stan Casacio hosted a debate watch party tonight, Oct. 25, at his Montco abode to see Democrat John Fetterman take on Republican Mehmet Oz in a head-to-head battle as to who would best represent Pennsylvania in the U.S. Senate.

Among those making appearances was the legendary Dom Giordano of WPHT and Republican lieutenant governor candidate Carrie DelRosso.

Olivia Braccio was the event photographer.

Who won the debate? I give Fetterman a precious pumpkin smiley he can show his wife after his trip home on the short bus. In fact, the only bus that would be shorter than Fetterman’s is the one the people who vote for him ride.

Stan Casacio Hosts Debate Party
Not the winner
Stan Casacio Hosts Debate Party

Delco To Notify And Cure Mail-in Ballots

Delco To Notify And Cure Mail-in Ballots — The Delaware County (Pa) Board of Elections, this morning, Oct. 25, unanimously approved to inform voters of problems with their mail-in or dropped off ballots and allow them to be fixed.

They described this as “notify and cure”.

Sounds reasonable but maybe this wasn’t the year to do it, considering the reputation the county got two years ago.

Delco To Notify And Curate Mail-in Ballots

Also Director of Election Operation James P. Allen said the solar powered cameras monitoring the county’s 40 or so dropboxes work all night. He said there have been power failures at some locations but they have been quickly fixed. In some cases, the solar power was replaced with hardwire.

Among the citizens speaking were whistleblowers Leah Hoopes and Gregory Stenstrom, the authors of The Parallel Election, which describes some of what occurred in the county in November 2020.

They said they still have two court cases pending regarding election issues and that due to their whistleblowing they have been subject to smears and lies.

And they were.

Colleen Vogel (phonetic spelling) who has a back ground in computer tech said (30:20 mark in video) that when she observed the logic and accuracy testing of the machines, the procedure was improperly followed according to the guidelines for the testing. She asked the board to address this twice but never got an answer.

She also said that according to guidelines the machines’ software and firmware needed to have been updated. She asked if they had the maintenance certificates for patching the many machines, and asked that, if so, it be publicized as the certificates are the first step in developing trust in information technology.

Allen said they didn’t do updates because the machines are on closed networks and nobody ever made any requests.

Can’t say that was the most comforting answer.

Ms. Vogel was rather quickly cut off when she pressed things (33:40)

In other matters, it was revealed that 60,000 mail-in ballots were sent out in Delaware County and about 30 percent have been returned. Also mandatory retraining for Judges of Election was approved if the judges had not been retrained since 2020.

The meeting can be watched below.

Delco To Notify And Cure Mail-in Ballots

Lesser Of Evils Discussed On Carmela

Lesser Of Evils Discussed On Carmela — Carmela Ciliberti’s latest podcast concerns the lesser of two evils as it relates to the Nov. 8 election.

She will be voting straight Republican including for John Lawrence for the 13th District State House seat whom she constantly eviscerated in her primary battle with him.

Frankly, she eviscerated him in her podcast as well but she’s still voting for him as all sane people should considering his opponent.

Only fools say choosing the lesser of two evils is still evil at least with regard to elections. What’s evil is failing to mitigate evil.

Here is Carmela’s podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2038515/11548533

Lesser Of Evils Discussed On Carmela

Erik Gerhardt Wants More Liberty And Less Government

Erik Gerhardt Wants More Liberty And Less Government

By Bob Small

Erik Gerhardt clearly states his manifesto on his campaign website: The Constitution was written to control the power of the Government, not to constrict the Liberties of its people.

Gerhardt, 37 of Pennsburg, is the Libertarian candidate for US Senator in Pennsylvania.

“We can promote the independence our founding fathers intended by eliminating property taxes,” he said. “Most taxes are nothing short of theft”.

Erik Gerhardt Wants More Liberty
Erik Gerhardt

He also stated the “non-aggression principle” (NAP) his party embraces, namely there is no right to use force except in retaliation.  

With regard to abortion, Gerhardt defends the Dodd decision but wants the issue decided in Pennsylvania via referendum. He says he’d like the morning-after pill to be readily available.

“The court’s decision was the right one and the states and their people should have a constitutional question added to the ballot to have the people decide on the issue,” he said.

Gerhardt began working in construction at the age of 16 and started his own business ECG Carpentry, in 2015.

Gerhardt says se need better education for our children, less and fewer taxes and sustainable business plans to not steal from our citizens. 

In this GoErie.co interview, Gerhardt describes his three step plan to assist small business, which include triple deductions for businesses with four employees or less, another health care deduction when they break that threshold and health care not being bound by state lines.

His plan for police reform, as described in this Williamsport Sun-Gazette article, includes jujitsu training for recruits.

Hopefully, this 37 year old from Pennsburg can bring many of his ideas to the public during this election cycle. 

Erik Gerhardt Wants More Liberty And Less Government