Politics and Current
LG Austin Davis of Pennsylvania says Democrats need to ‘listen’ before writing ‘policy prescription for anything’

Pennsylvania Lieutenant Governor Austin Davis, who was elected Tuesday as the brand new president of the Pennsylvania Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association (DLGA), believes the Democratic Party could learn loads from other lieutenant governors across the country.
“We need a Democratic Party and a national party that is focused on winning and organizing everywhere, building the field from the ground up,” said Davis, 35. “I think that’s one of the things Republicans do so well; they start at the local, municipal level and go up.”
He continued: “We need to make sure we support candidates from the state legislature to lieutenant governor and in all positions.”
As the newly elected president of the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association, Davis hopes to provide Democratic local officials with assist in addressing the electoral challenges evidenced within the 2024 elections, including declining support from working-class voters.
“The first thing we have to do is not try to solve the problem. We need to really get to know these communities deeply and listen to what they have to say; listen to the policies that they expect from their leaders,” said Davis, who noted that Democrats “haven’t understood the economic pain that people are feeling and really haven’t put forward a plan that addresses people’s concerns about it.”
He said of Democrats: “I think sometimes we try to write a political prescription for everything. One thing I’ve learned as an elected official is that I can’t be a good leader if I don’t listen to the people I’m supposed to represent. And I think that’s what we really need to do as a party right now.”
Davis said that for future elections, Democrats need to take into consideration running candidates who’ve “real, lived experience,” like many Democratic local governments across the country.

“We are at a crossroads as a party and we have a tremendous opportunity to invest in and build the next generation of leaders in our party,” said Davis, who noted that the Democratic Party’s lieutenant governors’ caucus is “extremely diverse,” which incorporates some of the nation’s first Black local governments resembling Garlin Gilchrist of Michigan, Sabina Matos of Rhode Island and several other other Black and brown lieutenant governors.
Davis emphasized that the range of DLGA members, which represent greater than half of the U.S. population, goes beyond race and gender – additionally they differ in terms of their general backgrounds.
He continued: “They can engage with voters in other ways. “It’s going to be important for us to make progress, not only to bring new people into the Democratic Party tent, but also to continue to make sure that the people who have been with us have traditionally felt like they had a home in the Democratic Party.”
But as Democrats work to repair their relationship with working-class voters, it is also necessary that they do not alienate their base: Black and brown voters.

“When I was growing up, my dad used to say, ‘You don’t get rid of old friends by making new ones,’” Davis said, adding: “We need to make sure the Democratic Party is a place where everyone feels heard, seen and supported.”
LG Davis said the DLGA is especially focused on potential future electoral success in moving Virginia’s lieutenant governor’s office – currently held by Virginia’s first black LG, Republican Winsome Sears – from red to blue and retaining the New Jersey LG office, which is held by Democrat Tahesha Way. He said the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association will even address key policy issues resembling gun violence prevention, Black maternal health and overall health care quality.
“What you’re really going to see as a result of, frankly, a lot of the dysfunction that’s going to come out of Washington is … lieutenant governors leading in their states,” Davis said.
He added: “As Democrats, we may have lost the election, but we have not lost our values and we will continue to stand up and fight for true freedom in our states and to make sure we are there fighting for working families.”
Politics and Current
Metro Atlanta City of Decatur to start the compensation task group

The city of Decatur in Metro Atlanta unanimously approved the creation of a compensation task group.
According to Decatur City Commission adopted a resolution On May 5, the 11-person task group will publish a report in three years, including recommendations regarding policy for black city residents.
The message appears a yr after the city leaders signed a contract with Beacon Hill Black Alliance for Human Rights to “discover the heritage of racial damage” in Decatur. The alliance managed research work in the field of compensation, organizing community meetings and listening sessions about how racial injustice has financially and systematically hurt these residents.
Their research described the role of decatur in slavery and segregation, in addition to red and real estate against the black community. Decatur also showed many monuments of the confederation, especially one earlier in the court of Dekalb.
The city not only recognized its oppressive tactics towards its black inhabitants, but additionally apologized for the actions that suppressed their progress.
“The city of Decatur formally recognizes its earlier role in the systemic oppression of people of African origin through enslavement, trafficking in human beings, conviction, discriminatory zones and development, underestimation in African -American communities, school segregation, racist police operation, destruction of African American estate, business and institutions and erosion and erosion and erosion and erosion, population, population population, population, population, population, population and culture – we read in resolution.
The city goals to designate 11 members, with the help of Beacon Hill Black Alliance, in the next 60 days. They will bring a various specialist knowledge group, and members consist of historians, legal experts and youth supporters. Over the next three years, the Task group will develop records regarding the loss of black land and real estate, being attentive to economic resettlement, while interviewing the descendants of those to which these oppressive tactics affected.
City officials added: “The city is expanding the full and public apology to the black residents of Decatur – Past and Present – and their descendants for its role in consolidating discrimination, pressure, subordination and the resulting damage, drawing on the principles rooted in the white supremacy system.”
The Compensation Task Group may even propose the commemorative projects sponsored by the city, economic tools and other investment strategies and community initiatives to treatment its racist past. This move will happen from other communities, even in the Atlanta Metro, which introduced initiatives regarding the repair of black residents. In the neighboring Fulton, his task group will resume the meeting this yr.
While the plan appears amongst the domestic shuffle of anti-dei attributable to the Trump administration, local leaders remain involved in the same efforts of the judiciary that began before taking office by Trump.
(Tagstranslate) compensation Task group
Politics and Current
Social media reacts to a series of funny faces of George W. Bush during the inauguration of Trump, when Barack Obama jokes that “he could barely behave

Former President Barack Obama jokingly told the reporter that former President George W. Bush “barely” behaved during the inauguration of President Donald Trump on Monday.
When there have been presidents and other noteworthy VIP guests waited for the USA ceremony to sit in the US Capitol, a member of the staff asked 78-year-old Bush if he “behaved” and 63-year-old Obama at the back to answer on behalf of Bush with “No”.

A brief, viral clip shows briefly looking around the Capitol and smiling at the members of the audience during the inauguration, which the viewers considered funny.
When Obama left the American Capitol Rotunda after the ceremony, the same post reporter quickly asked Obama if Bush behaved and Obama replied: “barely” during a smile.
The viewers had a day in the field with many Bush faces. One person joked: “Bro was beyond his mind”
The secular behavior of former presidents was, unlike incorrect boos imposed on Obama by Trump’s supporters watching the ceremony from the rally at the Capital One Arena in the center of Washington. Bill and Hillary Clinton and former Vice President Trump Mike Pence was also not spared heavy Boos.
The first lady Michelle Obama was noticeably missing amongst the chosen group of former residents of the White House, who confirmed that she wouldn’t participate on the days before the inauguration.
About her absence, unidentified source he said People: “There is no exaggeration of her feelings about (Trump). She is not one of the plasters on a pleasant face and she pretended that the Michelle protocol does nothing, because she is expected, protocol or its tradition.”
The source said that Michelle “no longer feels the need to be public” and added that the verbal attacks of Trump on Obama and his offensive rhetoric addressed to colourful people could even be a factor wherein she decided to skip.
In addition to Michelle, every living former president and the first lady was present, including former President Joe Biden and his wife Dr. Jill Biden, George W. Bush and Laura Bush, in addition to Bill and Hillary Clinton.
Trump’s swearing in the US Capitol for the first time in 40 years, the presidential inauguration took place, ignoring the customary configuration outside the Capitol, wherein 1000’s normally observe from the national shopping mall.
Officials stated that the polar vortex, which brought dangerously low temperatures to the part of the eastern coast, was the most important reason why the ceremony was moved inside.
The last time the inauguration was moved in the room, when former President Ronald Reagan was sworn in for his second term in 1985.
(Tagstranslate) Barack Obama
Politics and Current
Governor Illinois Governor Julian Stratton will make us official in the Senate, slammed Trump “Crisis and Chaos” in the video start – Essence

Photo: Cook County Demes
Lieutenant Governor Illinois Juliana Stratton Movement for the next office. On Thursday, she announced her offer to the US Senate, only at some point after the Dick Durbin Senator for a few years – which he had been in this place for nearly three many years – he presented that he wouldn’t search for re -election in 2026.
“I am Juliana Stratton and I run for the United States Senate,” she said in a two -minute film published on social media.
On Friday morning she received serious support from the Governor Illinois JB Pritzker.
“At this dangerous moment in Washington, the spirit of Juliana’s struggle and commitment to improving life are exactly a kind of Illinoisans representation and I am proud that I support her for the United States Senate,” said Pritzker in an announcement by Stratton’s campaign, Reports.
In her starter, Stratton didn’t waste time on applying rates. She formulated her candidacy as a direct response to former President Donald Trump and GOP emphasis on deep cuts of expenses and economic policy, which, he claims, will not be in contact with on a regular basis Americans.
“I am applying for the Senate, because the only way out of this mess is to introduce new energy, new voices and new leaders who understand the lives of working people,” said Stratton. “Join our campaign and together we can stop Trump and stand up for Illinois.”
Stratton didn’t mention the words about “chaos”, which she sees in Washington.
“Since Donald Trump took power, they were non-stop messages, non-stop chaos and non-stop crisis is not accidental,” she said. She also called on former president and billionaire Elon Musk for working on “distracted” American public opinion and “creating such a mess that we don’t even know where to start.” In her opinion, “the old textbook does not work”.
Instead, she pointed to her recorder’s recorder’s record, emphasizing her partnership with Pritzker as evidence of what effective leadership could appear like.
“While Trump and the Republicans in DC proposed a limitation of almost billions of dollars in healthcare in Illinois, we removed the medical debt. While their reckless tariffs make the prices increase rapidly, we eliminated the food tax for families in Illinois,” she said.
Stratton also shared her personal journey – developing on the southern side of Chicago as a navy teacher and veteran, raising 4 children and taking care of the mother after the diagnosis of Alzheimer.
“My story is not a typical senator. On the other hand, typical is not what we need now,” she said. “My journey to public service was inspired by the function of my mother’s main guardian when she was diagnosed with Alzheimer.”
She said that her decision to make a policy was called by the then Gova. Bruce Rauner’s attempts limit health look after seniors like her mother.
“So I decided to apply for a representative of the state and won,” said Stratton. “I took the votes of working families with me.”
She also distinguished key achievements during her office – from increasing the minimum wage to USD 15 per hour and creating jobs through serious investments in infrastructure, to adopting provisions regarding the safety of weapons and rights to abortion.
While Stratton has long been seen as a probable claimant to take a seat Durbine, he’s now officially the first one who jumped into the race. Her candidacy is historical: if she is elected, she could join the Lisa Blunt Rochester Senators from Delaware and Angel Alsobrooks from Maryland – and mark three black women in the Senate at the same time.
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