[Lnc-business] I hope this article is wrong and our candidate didn't say this...
Caryn Ann Harlos
caryn.ann.harlos at lp.org
Sun Jan 21 17:55:38 EST 2018
Thank you Alison that is why I wanted to hear directly from you.
Now go knock them dead. Figuratively of course.
-Caryn Ann
On Sun, Jan 21, 2018 at 3:27 PM Alison Foxall <alison at foxallforflorida.com>
wrote:
> To whom this may concern:
>
> "Legislation that would punish local governments that don’t fully
> cooperate with federal immigration authorities drew support from
> Libertarian Alison Foxall and criticism from Democrat Margaret Good..."
>
> I never said I supported legislation to punish local governments. Further,
> "drew support....and criticism" never happened because the audience didn't
> clap for either candidate. The journalist, Zac Anderson, definitely got
> those points wrong. He never directly quoted me except when I said it was a
> hot-button issue and I don't know why (continue reading to see why I said
> that).
>
> I oppose the top-down approach from the state of FL forcing local
> governments to enforce federal immigration laws. The GOP continues to push
> this. Something to note: our local law enforcement and the majority of our
> constituents here in Sarasota support *legal* immigration and do not want
> their city or county turned into a haven for "undocumented" peoples, so
> they have chosen to enforce federal laws.
>
> As a candidate for FL state house representative, in my opinion, it is
> wise to have a working relationship with existing local elected officials
> and despite what happens in different areas of the country, our Sherrif
> here in Sarasota is well-liked and supports the second amendment and an
> armed citizenry. I support the Sherrif and the City Council– and ultimately
> the rest of the community's decision to enforce the law. It is, after all,
> what the constituency wants and why the Sherrif has been at his station,
> continuously elected for the last 10 years.
>
> A question that often comes up, much more so than talking about the
> issues, is "how will you work with the old guard in Tallahassee [the
> Capital]?". Voters are legitimately considering how a Libertarian
> Representative would work within the Republican majority and Democratic
> minority. Voters are curious if I will be able to form alliances or
> alienate myself in the House. Something they clearly don't want is
> alienation.
>
> Even though I support the decisions of my constituents and their own local
> governance, I under *no circumstance* would vote at the state level to
> make counties or cities enforce federal immigration laws. That is up to
> local governments. In Florida, we have "home rule" laws and the state
> should not be imposing their will onto local municipalities. It is written
> in our state constitution. I would have very little to do when it comes to
> immigration issues which is why it is not present on my website. I've
> knocked on thousands of doors and out of all those people I have spoken to,
> none have ever brought up immigration. None. Sarasota does not face an
> "illegal" immigration "problem".
>
> So, why was it asked at a League of Women voters event? Because the GOP
> sent scare tactic mailers to almost all voters in the district in late
> December to drum up voter turnout in a special election to vote *against*
> the Democrat. They employed the same tactic early last year in a city
> council election. The GOP lost. Badly. Since December when that first
> mailer went out, immigration questions have only come up twice in public
> appearances. The Democrats in Sarasota on the city council have no interest
> in ceasing to enforce federal immigration laws, but the GOP is blowing the
> issue out of proportion as if it's something they want.
>
> Personally, I am not enthusiastic about the issue (neither are the DEM's
> here) and it's not something I go around talking about to solicit votes. My
> platform is largely economic and energy based, with highlights about
> restoring rights to felons that have finished their sentences and ending
> the drug war to help end the opioid crisis in our area, as well as
> jumpstart a hemp industry in our state.
>
> Sarasota is not like most places. 62% of its income comes from dividends,
> interest, and social security payouts. That will tip you off to the
> demographics here: older retirees. And when I say older, I mean really
> older, from the Silent Generation. We have more deaths in Sarasota than we
> do births. At least 10% of people here remember growing up during the great
> depression. A third of the population grew up and lived through WWII.
> Nearly everyone remembers the start of the Cold War, the wonders of the new
> space program, and Kennedy's assassination. People talk about some of these
> events as if they happened just a few years ago. The things they care about
> are what I care about. I'm trying to become *their* representative, after
> all.
>
> The libertarian facebook firing squad is a distraction from our goal of
> reducing government. We are nowhere near even my stepping stone dream of
> very limited government. Immigration laws need massive reform at the
> federal level and how we get there is not through me or the seat I'm trying
> to win. I became a Libertarian in 2014 when Adrian Wyllie made the call to
> change my party registration. At the time I was non-partisan and a
> self-described anarcho-capitalist (hence the strong platform about economic
> freedom). I believed that political parties were a big part of the problems
> our country is facing and resisted joining for some time. But after seeing
> the injustice of debate exclusion that Wyllie faced in Florida, and the
> possibility of the Libertarian Party becoming a major party by reaching 5%
> threshold of registered voters, I took a leap of faith and joined "the
> collective" of big-L Libertarians in Florida and I haven't looked back
> since. I figured I might as well be a part of the change, instead of not
> participating at all.
>
> Our campaign has received a ridiculous amount of mainstream media
> attention locally. TV and printed news is the preferred news consumption
> platform for our audience, and we've gotten a lot of it. Yesterday, the
> local news station came out to our canvassing assembly before we hit the
> streets. I am meeting with TV, radio, and news journalists every day this
> week. January 30th we will be in the televised debates and it is
> anticipated to be one of the most watched things on local television this
> year. I've attached some coverage that ran in this mornings paper. My photo
> is front and center. The article mentions we are a *big* wild card,
> campaigning *aggressively*, and could draw *significant support*. These
> are the kindest things a news journalist have said about a Libertarian
> campaign I've ever read about in Florida. This is our chance to win.
>
> I implore you all to help drum up support to win this seat instead of
> hampering it. We have huge momentum here on the ground, and we've already
> broken fundraising records for a FL Libertarian State House campaign in a
> special election, and are about $1,800 away from breaking the overall
> amount raised in *any* FL Libertarian State House campaign. We are making
> history and smashing through records from nearly 15 years ago. Libertarians
> in Florida are on the rise.
>
> As this email took an absorbent amount of time to write, if you have
> follow-up questions, please give me a call: 941-840-0369. My time needs to
> be spent very wisely from now until election day on February 13th. This is
> the home stretch, the culmination of months and thousands of hours of work.
> I'm running to advance our movement, to grow our party, and most of all to
> have Libertarian representation in our state. The opportunity to win is
> dangling in front of us, ripe, and ready for the taking. The question is:
> do you really want it as much as I do?
>
> Thank you,
>
> *Alison Foxall *
> Libertarian Candidate for FL House District 72
> *Special Election, February 13th, 2018*
> Volunteer Today: foxallforflorida.com/volunteer
>
> On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 2:01 AM, Caryn Ann Harlos <caryn.ann.harlos at lp.org
> > wrote:
>
>> I would like to hear Alison's view.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 12:06 AM, Starchild <starchild at lp.org> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> > SARASOTA — Legislation that would punish local governments that don’t
>>> fully cooperate with federal immigration authorities drew support from
>>> Libertarian Alison Foxall and criticism from Democrat Margaret Good during
>>> a candidate forum for the state House District 72 race Tuesday.
>>> > Foxall, a Sarasota marketing company owner, noted that the so-called
>>> sanctuary cities bill — which cleared the Florida House last week — has
>>> become “a very hot button issue.”
>>> >
>>> > “I don’t understand why,” Foxall said in arguing that undocumented
>>> immigrants present potential health and public safety problems.
>>>
>>> (From
>>> http://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20180116/sarasota-state-house-candidates-debate-immigration-guns-abortion-at-forum
>>> )
>>>
>>> I can't find anything on Alison Foxall's website about
>>> immigration one way or the other, and want to give her the benefit of the
>>> doubt that the paper got it wrong. I've copied the candidate, who is also a
>>> member of the Social Media Process Review Committee, on this message so she
>>> can address what her local paper reported.
>>>
>>> Hopefully we are not too preoccupied with policing intemperate
>>> posts on Facebook to be concerned if a Libertarian candidate is taking
>>> actual anti-libertarian positions at a public campaign event covered by the
>>> media. Allison's campaign is currently being touted in an ad on the front
>>> page of LP.org.
>>>
>>> Love & Liberty,
>>>
>>> ((( starchild )))
>>> At-Large Representative, Libertarian National Committee
>>> starchild at lp.org
>>> (415) 625-FREE
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Lnc-business mailing list
>>> Lnc-business at hq.lp.org
>>> http://hq.lp.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lnc-business
>>>
>>
>>
>
-------------- next part --------------
Thank you Alison that is why I wanted to hear directly from you.
Now go knock them dead. Figuratively of course.
-Caryn Ann
On Sun, Jan 21, 2018 at 3:27 PM Alison Foxall
<[1]alison at foxallforflorida.com> wrote:
To whom this may concern:
"Legislation that would punish local governments that don’t fully
cooperate with federal immigration authorities drew support from
Libertarian Alison Foxall and criticism from Democrat Margaret Good..."
I never said I supported legislation to punish local governments.
Further, "drew support....and criticism" never happened because the
audience didn't clap for either candidate. The journalist, Zac
Anderson, definitely got those points wrong. He never directly quoted
me except when I said it was a hot-button issue and I don't know why
(continue reading to see why I said that).
I oppose the top-down approach from the state of FL forcing local
governments to enforce federal immigration laws. The GOP continues to
push this. Something to note: our local law enforcement and the
majority of our constituents here in Sarasota support legal immigration
and do not want their city or county turned into a haven for
"undocumented" peoples, so they have chosen to enforce federal laws.
As a candidate for FL state house representative, in my opinion, it is
wise to have a working relationship with existing local elected
officials and despite what happens in different areas of the country,
our Sherrif here in Sarasota is well-liked and supports the second
amendment and an armed citizenry. I support the Sherrif and the City
Council– and ultimately the rest of the community's decision to enforce
the law. It is, after all, what the constituency wants and why the
Sherrif has been at his station, continuously elected for the last 10
years.
A question that often comes up, much more so than talking about the
issues, is "how will you work with the old guard in Tallahassee [the
Capital]?". Voters are legitimately considering how a Libertarian
Representative would work within the Republican majority and Democratic
minority. Voters are curious if I will be able to form alliances or
alienate myself in the House. Something they clearly don't want is
alienation.
Even though I support the decisions of my constituents and their own
local governance, I under no circumstance would vote at the state level
to make counties or cities enforce federal immigration laws. That is up
to local governments. In Florida, we have "home rule" laws and the
state should not be imposing their will onto local municipalities. It
is written in our state constitution. I would have very little to do
when it comes to immigration issues which is why it is not present on
my website. I've knocked on thousands of doors and out of all those
people I have spoken to, none have ever brought up immigration. None.
Sarasota does not face an "illegal" immigration "problem".
So, why was it asked at a League of Women voters event? Because the GOP
sent scare tactic mailers to almost all voters in the district in late
December to drum up voter turnout in a special election to vote against
the Democrat. They employed the same tactic early last year in a city
council election. The GOP lost. Badly. Since December when that first
mailer went out, immigration questions have only come up twice in
public appearances. The Democrats in Sarasota on the city council have
no interest in ceasing to enforce federal immigration laws, but the GOP
is blowing the issue out of proportion as if it's something they want.
Personally, I am not enthusiastic about the issue (neither are the
DEM's here) and it's not something I go around talking about to solicit
votes. My platform is largely economic and energy based, with
highlights about restoring rights to felons that have finished their
sentences and ending the drug war to help end the opioid crisis in our
area, as well as jumpstart a hemp industry in our state.
Sarasota is not like most places. 62% of its income comes from
dividends, interest, and social security payouts. That will tip you off
to the demographics here: older retirees. And when I say older, I mean
really older, from the Silent Generation. We have more deaths in
Sarasota than we do births. At least 10% of people here remember
growing up during the great depression. A third of the population grew
up and lived through WWII. Nearly everyone remembers the start of the
Cold War, the wonders of the new space program, and Kennedy's
assassination. People talk about some of these events as if they
happened just a few years ago. The things they care about are what I
care about. I'm trying to become their representative, after all.
The libertarian facebook firing squad is a distraction from our goal of
reducing government. We are nowhere near even my stepping stone dream
of very limited government. Immigration laws need massive reform at the
federal level and how we get there is not through me or the seat I'm
trying to win. I became a Libertarian in 2014 when Adrian Wyllie made
the call to change my party registration. At the time I was
non-partisan and a self-described anarcho-capitalist (hence the strong
platform about economic freedom). I believed that political parties
were a big part of the problems our country is facing and resisted
joining for some time. But after seeing the injustice of debate
exclusion that Wyllie faced in Florida, and the possibility of the
Libertarian Party becoming a major party by reaching 5% threshold of
registered voters, I took a leap of faith and joined "the collective"
of big-L Libertarians in Florida and I haven't looked back since. I
figured I might as well be a part of the change, instead of not
participating at all.
Our campaign has received a ridiculous amount of mainstream media
attention locally. TV and printed news is the preferred news
consumption platform for our audience, and we've gotten a lot of it.
Yesterday, the local news station came out to our canvassing assembly
before we hit the streets. I am meeting with TV, radio, and news
journalists every day this week. January 30th we will be in the
televised debates and it is anticipated to be one of the most watched
things on local television this year. I've attached some coverage that
ran in this mornings paper. My photo is front and center. The article
mentions we are a big wild card, campaigning aggressively, and could
draw significant support. These are the kindest things a news
journalist have said about a Libertarian campaign I've ever read about
in Florida. This is our chance to win.
I implore you all to help drum up support to win this seat instead of
hampering it. We have huge momentum here on the ground, and we've
already broken fundraising records for a FL Libertarian State House
campaign in a special election, and are about $1,800 away from breaking
the overall amount raised in any FL Libertarian State House campaign.
We are making history and smashing through records from nearly 15 years
ago. Libertarians in Florida are on the rise.
As this email took an absorbent amount of time to write, if you have
follow-up questions, please give me a call: 941-840-0369. My time needs
to be spent very wisely from now until election day on February 13th.
This is the home stretch, the culmination of months and thousands of
hours of work. I'm running to advance our movement, to grow our party,
and most of all to have Libertarian representation in our state. The
opportunity to win is dangling in front of us, ripe, and ready for the
taking. The question is: do you really want it as much as I do?
[f18dQhb0S7ks8dDMPbW2n0x6l2B9gXrN7sKj6v4dZ0vW4WJ4Tb3MPpWYN65jGX-d3_yKW9
jlCX31k1H6H0?si=4861442635857920&pi=0300150b-276f-4cc8-b606-39637f4
6a075&ti=undefined]
Thank you,
Alison Foxall
Libertarian Candidate for FL House District 72
Special Election, February 13th, 2018
Volunteer Today: [2]foxallforflorida.com/volunteer
On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 2:01 AM, Caryn Ann Harlos
<[3]caryn.ann.harlos at lp.org> wrote:
I would like to hear Alison's view.
On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 12:06 AM, Starchild <[4]starchild at lp.org>
wrote:
> SARASOTA — Legislation that would punish local governments that don’t
fully cooperate with federal immigration authorities drew support from
Libertarian Alison Foxall and criticism from Democrat Margaret Good
during a candidate forum for the state House District 72 race Tuesday.
> Foxall, a Sarasota marketing company owner, noted that the so-called
sanctuary cities bill — which cleared the Florida House last week — has
become “a very hot button issue.”
>
> “I don’t understand why,” Foxall said in arguing that undocumented
immigrants present potential health and public safety problems.
(From
[5]http://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20180116/sarasota-state-house-cand
idates-debate-immigration-guns-abortion-at-forum)
I can't find anything on Alison Foxall's website about
immigration one way or the other, and want to give her the benefit of
the doubt that the paper got it wrong. I've copied the candidate, who
is also a member of the Social Media Process Review Committee, on this
message so she can address what her local paper reported.
Hopefully we are not too preoccupied with policing intemperate
posts on Facebook to be concerned if a Libertarian candidate is taking
actual anti-libertarian positions at a public campaign event covered by
the media. Allison's campaign is currently being touted in an ad on the
front page of LP.org.
Love & Liberty,
((( starchild )))
At-Large Representative, Libertarian National Committee
[6]starchild at lp.org
(415) 625-FREE
_______________________________________________
Lnc-business mailing list
[7]Lnc-business at hq.lp.org
[8]http://hq.lp.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lnc-business
References
1. mailto:alison at foxallforflorida.com
2. http://foxallforflorida.com/volunteer
3. mailto:caryn.ann.harlos at lp.org
4. mailto:starchild at lp.org
5. http://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20180116/sarasota-state-house-candidates-debate-immigration-guns-abortion-at-forum
6. mailto:starchild at lp.org
7. mailto:Lnc-business at hq.lp.org
8. http://hq.lp.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lnc-business
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