Showing posts with label Congressman Mike McIntyre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Congressman Mike McIntyre. Show all posts

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Why is Ilario Pantano our best hope for defeating Mike McIntyre and Barack Obama?




Friend,

We figured we could give you all of our policy positions and white papers and articles, but you have read or seen most of them already.  Because with me, what you see is what you get.  If you send me to Washington, I will do exactly what I have promised you I would:  keep America strong, secure and prosperous. 

We've seen a lot of mudslinging in this race, and as we approach primary day, it's only going to get worse.  I'm writing today to remind you that this is it.  Everything we've worked so hard for over the last 2 years will soon be decided.

So who do you want to stand up to Obama and the tax-and-spend liberals for you?

Mothers, fathers, veterans, lawyers, cops, teachers, doctors, and small business owners have something to say about my candidacy, and they want you to hear them. Please click on the image below or follow the link to hear for yourself.  Then, please commit to either voting for Ilario, sharing this email with friends or making a contribution to his campaign so he can win?



Click on the image or click on this link to hear from Pantano supporters on why they support Ilario: http://www.youtube.com/user/FriendsofPantano?feature=watch

I'm counting on your support, so please act today.
 

Thanks,
Ilario Pantano

P.S.  Go here to learn your early voting location: http://www.pantanoforcongress.com/posts/find-your-early-voting-location-here


Friday, December 23, 2011

Poverty scandal -- NC 10th poorest state. Robeson poorest county in state. This is McIntyre country.

Verne Strickland Blogmaster / December 23, 2011

STARTLING STATS: NC 1Oth POOREST STATE, ROBESON POOREST COUNTY. MIKE WORKS FOR YOU.

First Posted: 9/15/11 02:24 PM ET   Updated: 9/15/11 02:47 PM ET

The national poverty rate last year was 15.1%. That is up from 11.3% in 2000 and is the highest it has been since 1993. Over 46 million people lived below the poverty line in 2010. The cut-off for that line is households of four people who made under $22,314.

The other troubling news was that median income per household nationwide was an inflation-adjusted $49,445. This is about the same as in 1989 and down 2.3% from 2009. Economists fear that Americans are not consumers. It is easy to tell why when their real income has been frozen in place for more than two decades.

The problems of poverty and low income are as much local as national. The poverty rate is 21% in Mississippi. The state also has the lowest median income at $36,850. Mississippi is among the states with the worst education systems, highest obesity levels, highest unemployment, and lowest rates of health insurance coverage.

The state is an economic black hole, and it shows in the way people suffer there. And, as is true with black holes, it is nearly impossible for the residents of Mississippi to escape their difficult financial situations. There is a dearth of federal programs that target specific states and cities based on local economic need.

24/7 Wall St. reviewed census data from all 50 states on median income, poverty rates, unemployment, and lack of health insurance. We then identified the ten states that have the lowest median income. We also looked at why low-income households are concentrated in these states and what, in some cases, has been done to reverse the difficult situations.

These are the poorest states in America, according to 24/7 Wall St.:


10. North Carolina in Top Ten -- in poverty! Are we proud or what?
Median income: $43,275
Poverty rate: 16.1% (tied for 9th highest)
Without health insurance: 16.7% (13th highest)
Unemployment: 10.1% (9th highest)

North Carolina has one of the lowest median incomes in the country. It does not perform much better on other metrics related to poverty. There have been a number of programs implemented to help combat poverty in the state recently. One example is the No Kid Hungry program which aims to end childhood hunger in North Carolina by 2015. According to information from the program, "more than 1 in 4 children in North Carolina do not get sufficient food."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/15/americas-poorest-states-_n_964058.html?icid=maing-grid7|maing6|dl1|sec1_lnk3|96106 

Answer:
The five poorest counties in North Carolina are (by poverty rate):
  1. Robeson (23.8%)
  2. Tyrrell (23.5%)
  3. Halifax (23.2%)
  4. Warren (21.8%)
  5. Edgecombe (21.5%)
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_the_5_poorest_counties_in_North_Carolina

BROKE? HUNGRY? JOBLESS? WONDERING WHERE TO TURN? GO HERE FIRST:
 
 www.MikeWorksforMe.com

And as your Seventh District NC Congressman, he has been working for you since 1997, give or take a few evictions, foreclosures, crop failures, and trips to the local soup kitchen. Do you hope the day will come soon when he's not working for you anymore?

        Mike McIntyre

              From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mike McIntyre
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from North Carolina's 7th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 3, 1997


Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Mike McIntyre blasted in NRCC robocalls on tax vote. He sure needs the publicity.

Posted: Dec 21, 2011 9:03 AM EST Updated: Dec 21, 2011 9:03 AM EST



WASHINGTON, D.C. (WECT) - Politico is reporting Wednesday morning that Congressman Mike McIntyre (D-NC) is one of thirteen Democratic incumbents being criticized in robocalls from the National Republican Congressional Committee over his vote on the payroll tax.

McIntyre sent out a statement Tuesday, explaining why he voted in support of the plan to extend the tax breaks two months.  House Republicans were in the majority in rejecting the proposal.  They want the cuts to extend for a full year.

"Raising taxes on American families is simply the wrong thing to do," the extremely incumbent Democrat said. "That's why I voted for the bi-partisan bill which has already passed the Senate with 89% of the vote.  This bill will extend the payroll tax cut to help working families, ensure Medicare patients can still see their doctor, help those who are unemployed, protect our hospitals, and provide a quick decision on the Keystone pipeline that will help with energy independence and job creation.

"This is a bill that is fully paid for, and will not add to the deficit.  It is time for the bickering and finger pointing to stop – the American people are demanding it and our nation needs it," Congressman Mike McIntyre said in an emailed statement."

Politico reports that McIntyre, along with Jason Altmire (PA-4), Lois Capps (CA-24), Ben Chandler (KY-6), Jim Costa (CA-21), Mark Critz (PA-12), John Garamendi (CA-3), Larry Kissell (NC-8), Jerry McNerney (CA-9), Brad Miller (NC-13), Collin Peterson (MN-7), Heath Shuler (NC-11) and Betty Sutton (OH-13), will be the subject of targeted messages to voters.

This is the proposed script released to Politico:

"Hello, I'm calling from the National Republican Congressional Committee with an important alert. If you're as fed up with Congress as everyone else is, wait til you hear what your (Congressman's name) did. Not only did (Congressman's name) vote last week pave the way for a tax increase for you and every other American middle class family, but he/she is now stubbornly standing by his/her position that could raise your taxes by over a thousand dollars starting on January 1st

Even House Republicans and President Obama agree that we should find an immediate long-term solution for middle class Americans. Why doesn't (Congressman's name) want to give American families the same stability over the holidays? 

Call (Congressman's name) at (office number). Ask him/her to stop being the typical Washington politician and for once, try to work in a bipartisan manner to help lower taxes for middle class families struggling with a harsh economy."

Copyright 2011 WECT.  All rights reserved.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

CAN MIKE McINTYRE BE CONVINCED THAT THE NC SEVENTH DISTRICT DOESN'T NEED HIM ANYMORE?


Duplin Expo
Mike appears to be telling this crowd to stop chanting
Republican slogans. Sorry the photo is a bit blurred.
It was free. You get what you pay for.

By Verne Strickland / December 14, 2011

One of my most adorable (I did not say ‘adoring) fans told me in an email recently that I am “terminally partisan” or something like that. I can’t remember the exact words. I did not see that as an insult, but as a badge of honor.


This gentleman, who claims he’s one of the two people who regularly read my vapid drivel (my words) says I should just leave Mike McIntyre alone.


But why? Mike is such a natural foil and fop – before an election, during a campaign, and even after an improbable win – that I, an inveterate conservative punster and renegade, cannot resist poking sport at the guy.


I ask again – why? Because, since my political schooling at the knee of Jesse Helms, one of my greatest pleasures in life has been skewering liberals, atheists, effete poseurs, cynics, Mormons with more than six wives, and most of all – phony politicians. 


Mike may fit into one or more of those categories, although I wouldn’t want to fathom a guess as to which ones might apply. I am fairly certain about at least one of them.


I used to also delight in trashing communists and communism, although I’ve become less fascinated by them since the rise of the upwardly mobile and infinitely more threatening radical Muslim hordes of the world, who have proven their affinity for insufferable arrogance, ignorance, ambition, deceit, killing, persecution of women and Christians, and world domination. 


Some things do change, don’t they? But not Mike. We’ll soon get to see the Robeson County flash – now an excessively incumbent insider Democrat – as he limbers up for another go at it. 


He’ll be back with the same old schtick – talking like Jesse Helms when he’s in the district, but acting like Nancy Pelosi’s lapdog when he’s on the Hill.


Can Mike be convinced that the Seventh doesn’t need his “service” anymore? 


Conservative GOP candidate Ilario Pantano, gearing up for a return match with the Mikemeister, will have plenty to say about that. And, after almost taking McIntyre down for the count in 2010, he looms as an even more formidable challenger when the starting gun sounds for 2012.


It promises be the shot heard from Leland to Lumberton. Can't wait.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Pantano gets a 2-to-1 win over Rouzer in NCGOP Hall of Fame Straw Poll

                                       
By Wes King / Port City Conservatives /  November 20, 2011

Watch Pantano's riveting

The North Carolina Republican Party Saturday night, November 19, held the NCGOP Hall of Fame event. In addition to Hall of Fame inductions, the event also included a straw poll for primary candidates for the 2012 elections.
                                                                         
 Ilario Pantano, candidate for the 7th district Republican nod for the congressional primary, won the straw poll by a margin of nearly 2-to-1 over David Rouzer.


The North Carolina Hall of Fame dinner is one of the primary fundraisers for the party during the year, giving a boost in preparation for the upcoming elections.  The cost of the event was $125.

The event was held at the Embassy Suites in Cary, NC and hosted events throughout the day including Central Committee and Executive Committee meetings as well as seminars.  A dinner was held during the induction with a speech being given by Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli of Virginia who is leading the charge against Obamacare.

The ballot for the event held the primaries for all of the contested congressional districts as well other notable offices, including Lt. Governor and United States President.  Other notable winners of the night include Dan Forest for Lt. Governor and Newt Gingrich for President. 

Pantano was celebrating the 236th birthday of the United States Marine Corps at the Marine Corps Ball in SouthEastern NC at the University of North Carolina Wilmington Warwick Center, an event hosted by the Marine Corps League Detachment 1070 and was unable to attend the Hall of Fame event.

This victory is being considered a significant victory for the Pantano campaign, especially given the location and attendees of the event.  Notable lobbyists, party insiders, and Raleigh powerbrokers were present at the event and were expected to sway the vote.

Voters in the event knew both candidates well, given the relationships championed by Rouzer and the prominence that Pantano has developed after the previous run against incumbent Congressman Mike McIntyre.

As the primary campaigns begin to enter the holiday season, the importance of this segment of the campaign is obvious.  Maintaining and developing momentum for the campaign is going to be important as the campaign continues to push in fundraising efforts and to continue to motivate the grassroots efforts.

Pantano has scheduled a book signing for the re-release of his book Warlord: Broken by War, Saved by Grace at Barnes and Noble in the Mayfair Town Center in Wilmington NC on Thursday December 8th at 6:30 PM.

He is doing a second signing at the Fayetteville NC Barnes and Noble at the Glensford Commons on Saturday December 17th at 4:00 PM.

http://www.portcityconservatives.com/2011/11/20/pantano-rouzer-ncgop-hall-of-fame-straw-poll-wilmington-new-hanover-county-nc-north-carolina-7th-district/

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

GOP launches TV campaign to expose Mike McIntyre for backing federal stimulus, and pondering if he will support Obama's latest jobs plan.

Verne Strickland Blogmaster / November 2, 2011

TV ADS CRITICAL OF McINTYRE RECORD HITTING THE AIR -- ABOUT TIME?

By Pat Gannon / StarNews Online


The television advertisements have begun in the 2012 election for North Carolina’s 7th Congressional District.

Beginning Wednesday, the National Republican Congressional Committee is running ads on Wilmington and Raleigh-area cable networks criticizing Rep. Mike McIntyre’s past votes in favor of federal stimulus packages and questioning whether the incumbent congressman will support President Obama’s latest jobs plan.

The ads, expected to run for two weeks, cost the NRCC $20,720, a spokeswoman said. The NRCC has already conducted a series of robocalls against McIntyre, criticizing him in areas such as federal stimulus spending and Medicare.

McIntyre, a Lumberton Democrat, plans to run for re-election in 2012. Republicans David Rouzer of Johnston County and Ilario Pantano of Wilmington plan to run for the GOP nomination to challenge McIntyre a year from now.

Watch the ad here.

Here is the full text of the ad, released by the NRCC.

Script: You know the old saying….fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice shame on me. Will Mike McIntyre fool you again? Last time President Obama pushed a wasteful stimulus plan, Mike McIntyre went along with it – and we got burned. The economy got worse. Now President Obama is pushing more wasteful stimulus spending. What will Mike McIntyre do? Tell Mike McIntyre: don’t burn us again. 

DISCLAIMER: The National Republican Congressional Committee is responsible for the content of this advertising.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Rouzer's contribution list packed with lobbyists, big ag power players.

Verne Strickland Blogmaster / October 25, 2011

234.jpg
 NC Senator David Rouzer 
Posted by Kirk Ross on Sun, Oct 23, 2011 at 1:25 PM
Johnston County State Senator David Rouzer is running for congress in NC-7 and hopes to unseat Democratic incumbent Mike McIntyre in a district redrawn to be a little more GOP friendly. 

Since he's running for congress Rouzer is allowed to raise money for his federal campaign in ways not allowed a sitting North Carolina legislator.

State legislators are forbidden to take contributions when the General Assembly is in session and are barred from ever receiving contributions from lobbyists. Rouzer's congressional campaign was able to do both and his first official federal campaign report shows a huge take in the first six weeks of his campaign.
Report main page
List of contributions

The report details 205,491 in contributions most of which came in September via more than 188,000 in individual contributions. So, who were those individuals?

The list in Rouzer's filing, which covers contributions through September 30, is a who's who in big ag in eastern NC. Hog producers like Wendell H. Murphy, tobacco farmers like Benson's Lee family and the leadership of the Goldsboro Milling Company are among the farm interests on the list. 

Also on the list are several lobbyists, mostly representing ag industries like the NC Pork Council's Angela Meier and Tommy Stevens. Oh, and Rufus, too, wherever he fits in.

Although the individual contributions outpaced Rouzer's take from PACs, there are still plenty of familiar names who jumped into with both feet, including the aforementioned NC Pork Council, NC Farm Bureau PAC, Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina and trial attorney PAC Ward & Smith.

Rouzer is co-chair of the NC Senate's Agriculture, Environment and Natural Resources committee.

http://www.indyweek.com/triangulator/archives/2011/10/23/rouzers-contribution-list-packed-with-ag-interests-lobbyists

Further reading:
Indyweek — Campaign contributions, influence and the N.C. Legislature
Crossposted from the Exile on Jones Street blog




Sunday, October 9, 2011

Pantano hosts friends and supporters at Riverfest event on banks of the Cape Fear

PANTANO FAITHFUL CHEER ON THEIR FAVORITE IN NC/7 CONGRESSIONAL RACE

Conservative GOP congressional candidate Ilario Pantano with guests

By Verne Strickland / October 9, 2012

 The invitation read: 

Come out to Mike McCarley's beautiful riverside garden in Historic Downtown Wilmington to view the Invasion of the Pirates Flotilla and Fireworks on the Saturday night of Riverfest and get 'fired' up for Pantano for Congress.


The event lived up to its billing -- and then some. An estimated 125 guests turned up to cheer on their hero and favorite in what is certain to be a long and arduous struggle for the Seventh District seat in Congress -- a contest that won't be settled until November 2012.

Pantano led the group in prayer, then launched into a patriotic stump speech that pounced on liberal Democrats far and wide, promising that GOP stalwarts in North Carolina would be in the front ranks to rout them from their cushy incumbent lethargy.

A pulse-quickening display of fireworks flared brilliant against the night sky. The "Pirate Flotilla" arrived to the thunder of booming cannon. When the echoes faded, one person onshore --doubtless a Republican --  was heard to inquire: "Is Obama the captain of this boat? He's a pirate isn't he?"

Then it was down to business. I interviewed candidate Ilario Pantano about his campaign and the Riverfest GOP spin-off:

VS: It's a beautiful night, and your supporters are obviously fired up. What is this event all about?

It’s a celebration, and our chance to thank our growing ranks of supporters for all their hard work at the grassroots level. As I said, we’ve been building for seven months, and we have seven months to go. The heavy lifting starts now, and I say it matters. It matters more than ever. And I have a sense they all agree.

VS: Where are you now in your campaign?

We’re actually at the halfway point in this drive for a primary victory. We started this campaign back in February, and we’ve been running hard for seven months. We now have seven months to go before the primary, and we’re focused on that primary.

VS: You've always depended on strength and energy at the grassroots and precinct level. How is this ramping up?

What I will tell you is the support and the excitement in every county in this district is huge. And you know we have twelve counties in the Seventh now, and some of them are new. Even in these new counties, new friends are joining our cause, and are excited about what we represent. Because we are not the establishment, we’re not business as usual. We are just somebody who loves their country, and have sacrificed for it time and time again, who understand how the economy works and how to create jobs. That combination is pretty important right now.

VS: Many in the political game just talk the talk. But you claim to walk the walk. What does that mean actually?

A lot of people can quote the policy all day long, but when you look to their life experience and understand their true motivations, and understand that their heart isn’t a service heart, and what sacrifice really means, you have to wonder – do they know John 15:13? Do they really know? I am insistent on living out my faith, and this keeps me in a positive state of mind. I am really bullish on this country. What I see happening with this Occupy Wall Street movement is they want to replicate this right now.  And this very desperate president wants to foment unrest throughout the country to shore up his chances in 2012. His game plan is a strategy of destruction. It is not in the best interest of the country. It’s not good for my children or yours. I going to fight it and fight it hard.

Joe Agovino of Southport, long-time GOP leader in Brunswick County, was on hand at the GOP Riverfest celebration. He said conservative candidate Pantano has learned much from his experience in the political arena since his challenge to incumbent Mike McIntyre in the last congressional election.

VS: So you feel he has only gained strength and wisdom from being in the political arena?

That's right. I think Ilario has grown a great deal in the last year and a half. He’s even more committed to serving his country. He has also learned a great deal about internal politics. I’ve been close to Ilario through the  last campaign, and now this one. His commitment is genuine, and his loyalty is to his country, which he has served unselfishly.. In so doing, he has faced daunting challenges, but he has risen above all this, and has distinguished himself in many ways. So, today, I think he stands a better chance to win this primary because his supporters and the general public are comfortable with him and are really behind him. 

VS: Ilario will face off in the GOP primary against State Senator David Rouzer of Johnston County. What do you expect from him as a candidate?  

This race is a struggle between the old guard of the Republican Party and the newer members who are committed Constitutionalists and want to take our country back to work for the general well-being of the people. Mr. Rouzer is a bright young man, but is basically a Washington insider, and also a product of the system for a number of years. My personal opinion is that David Rouzer getting into this race will be good for Ilario, because of  the stark contrast between the politician, David Rouzer, and the patriot, Ilario Pantano.

VS: You hang your hat in Brunswick County. How do you size up the conservative Republican base there?


In our county -- Brunswick -- we’re seeing growth and strength at the precinct levels. That will be vital as Obama’s paid volunteers flood into North Carolina with their liberal agenda. We intend to be ready.
What I’m seeing is more cohesiveness in the organization, and more motivation. I’ve been involved in politics for many years, and this is the earliest I’ve seen our Republican Party become involved in statewide or presidential elections in an off-election year. That’s a tremendous plus. Our leadership is proactive and aggressive.We're putting the lessons we've learned to work for us on the road to 2012.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Frank Williams interviewed at Pantano for Congress event: 'Voters want a new congressman'.

By Verne Strickland / August 15, 2011


Frank Williams, retiring chairman of the NCGOP Seventh District, was on hand at the Pantano for Congress office grand opening this past week-end, joining over 300 energized conservatives on hand for the event. 

We interviewed him at the gathering for USA DOT COM:

"I think there was a great crowd, and it shows that people are interested in making a change next year by putting a new congressman in. There were people from as far away as Fayetteville here today, which I think is impressive. 

You know, our conservatives didn’t give up when we didn’t prevail in 2010, and we put the district on the map in that campaign in a race no one thought was winnable at the beginning of the year. We started the job, but it’s not done yet. 

VS: With reconfigured congressional districts, what is Ilario going to face?

He does have a primary, and certainly David Rouzer is a formidable candidate. I’ve known David since college, and I think we have two candidates from different ends of the district with different backgrounds. I think either one of them would make a better congressman than the Democrat.

VS: You have announced that you will not run again for District Seven GOP Chair, and will be spending more time with your Pioneer Strategies business. How is that going?

That’s going well, thanks, and I’ll also be spending plenty of time running for Brunswick County commissioner. 

The Pantano for Congress Volunteer Office is situated at 8207 Market Street in the Porters Neck Shopping Center. Office hours are weekdays from 12-6 pm.


                                                                    ***********

McIntyre against Brunswick County deep water port. 

Proponents see profit in big storage facility in Robeson. 
 


















Editorial in robesonian.com  8 days ago.

Robeson County and Lumberton are among more than a dozen local governments in Southeastern North Carolina that are pushing for a state study to determine the pluses and minuses of a deep-water port in Brunswick County.

But this cash-strapped state has not provided the funding for such as study, which has given opponents, including our U.S. representative, an excuse to withhold support.

Economic development officials in this part of the state, including Robeson County’s top guy, Greg Cummings, see a deep-water port delivering thousands of jobs where they are needed, and as far inland as this county, which has land and highway that could do more than hold the Earth together.

Cummings says Robeson County is ideal for large storage facilities where imported goods could be held in preparation for distribution.

But U.S. Rep. Mike McIntyre, whose District 7 includes Robeson and Brunswick counties, is not a fan of the port. He says the General Assembly’s decision last year to withhold funding for the study amounts to a death knell for the project by making it impossible to secure the required billions of dollars in federal funds. But McIntrye’s own comments betray his true position."

The congressman said: “Several concerns have been raised which have not been fully answered about the location and cost of the proposed terminal, the harm it could pose to our national security interests near our country’s major munitions terminal at Sunny Point and beside a nuclear plant, the lack of necessary infrastructure with roads and rails, and the potential for irreparable harm to the local communities and environment — all of this at a cost to taxpayers of several billion dollars."


All those points are potentially valid, but they only point to a need for the study, and not a scrapping of the project. This nation’s future is increasingly at the mercy of the growing global economy, and economically distressed Southeastern North Carolina needs to scratch for every crumb on the plate. A deep-water port in Brunswick County potentially could lead a renaissance of this region’s economy.

We understand the difficulties of this state’s economy, which led to some hard and unpopular cuts, particularly to education, when the General Assembly crafted the current budget. But we also know that those who don’t carefully plot an economic future will soon enough be living in the past.

There are plenty of questions about the potential of a deep-water port in Brunswick County. Not answering them only ensures they will keep getting asked.









Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Postcards from the Edge -- McIntyre can't take a joke. And won't own up to abusing taxpayers' hard-earned dollars.




CAPE FEAR BLUE DAWGS

McIntyre staffer responds to Pantano’s postcards

by Pat Gannon  StarNewsOnline
August 1, 2011  10:16 am

Dean Mitchell, the chief of staff for U.S. Rep. Mike McIntyre, blasted Ilario Pantano’s sending of prank postcards poking fun at McIntyre’s recent taxpayer-funded trip to Europe.

WELL, THANKS FOR SPELLING IT OUT -- THIS IS THE ISSUE, ISN'T IT? A TAXPAYER-FUNDED HONEYMOON WITH THE WIFE -- ON THEIR ANNIVERSARY, NO LESS -- TO EXOTIC DESTINATIONS? DURING THE MIDST OF THE WORST FINANCIAL CRISIS THAT NORTH CAROLINA AND THE U.S. HAVE HAD SINCE THE GREAT DEPRESSION? GOODNESS, MIKE, WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE?


 Read about the postcards here. (StarNews intro to giddy 'postcard' story)

“All he does is distort, denigrate and distract from the fact that he had an abysmal second quarter of little fundraising, and he now has his hands full with a primary opponent,” Mitchell said in a statement. “The folks of Southeastern North Carolina have rejected his tactics once before, and they will reject it again.”

Mitchell said McIntyre’s trip focused on economic and national security. Read about the trip here.
“The congressman will continue to do his work in a bi-partisan manner, while Mr. Pantano continues his silly antics,” Mitchell said.

Pantano is running for the Republican nomination for U.S. House in the 7th Congressional District. State Sen. David Rouzer of Johnston County recently announced he would also run for the GOP nod.
McIntyre easily raised more money than Pantano in the second quarter of this year.

 LINK TO THE STARNEWS STORY: http://watchdogs.blogs.starnewsonline.com/17768/mcintyre-staffer-responds-to-pantanos-postcards/

***********


CORRECT ME IF I'M WRONG, MR. GANNON, BUT WHILE YOUR CATCHY INTRO SUGGESTED "READ ABOUT THE POSTCARDS HERE", I DIDN'T SEE ANY MENTION OF THE POSTCARDS AT ALL -- JUST THE EXPECTED DRIVEL ABOUT MR. CLEAN'S PURPORTED HEAVY LIFTING FOR THE STATE WHILE ON A FOUR-STAR VACATION. MR. MITCHELL IS GOING TO USE YOU IF YOU GIVE HIM THE CHANCE, PAT.

BUT THE DODGE WON'T WORK. REP. McMUFFIN DONE WRONG. SORT OF A HAND IN THE COOKIE JAR KIND OF A THING, IF YOU KNOW WHAT I MEAN. OBVIOUS ENOUGH. HE'S OFF TO A GOOD START AGAIN, ISN'T HE?

HERE'S A FEATURE-LENGTH REPORT ON THE JUNKET, FILED BY HUFFINGTON POST ON JUNE 24, 2011. THERE ARE ENOUGH DETAILS HERE ON THE LAVISH TRIP TO MAKE YOU WANT TO DONATE TO ILARIO PANTANO'S 2012 CAMPAIGN. SO PLEASE DO.

andrea.stone@huffingtonpost.com 

Members Of Congress On Rome Junket Funded By Taxpayers

First Posted: 06/24/11 12:02 PM ET Updated: 06/24/11 12:10 PM ET

Rome
WASHINGTON -- Summer is upon us and that means only one thing in the nation's capital: time for Congress to take a holiday at government expense.
Friday evening, a government jet carrying six House members, four of their wives, three congressional staffers and five members of the military, including an Army doctor in case anyone gets sick along the way, will taxi down the runway at Andrews Air Force Base. Over the next 10 days, the group, led by Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Europe and Eurasia subcommittee, will visit five capital cities: Rome; Tbilisi, Georgia; Vilnius, Lithuania; Moscow and Lisbon.
Despite a debt crisis at home and an economy that will see many private citizens take 'staycations' this summer, this bipartisan congressional delegation, or CODEL, is hardly unusual. In May, Burton led a CODEL to Dublin, Vienna and Prague.
On board for this European trip are two Republicans and four Democrats -- including the non-voting delegate from Guam: Reps.Tom Marino (R-Penn.), Mike McIntyre (D-N.C.),Theodore Deutch (D-Fla.), Ruben Hinojosa (D-Texas) and Madeleine Bordallo (D-Guam).
Also along for the ride are the wives of Burton, Deutch, Hinojosa and McIntrye. According to the itinerary, Dee and Mike McIntyre will celebrate their 29th wedding anniversary in Rome.
Burton's latest junket, like all official government trips, has been planned in excruciating detail by military and diplomatic staff, the latter of whom are in the midst of a two-year pay freeze.
While the purpose of the trip is reportedly to "examine the European financial crisis" and the "foreign operations of the U.S. government," a minute-by-minute itinerary of the Rome leg obtained by The Huffington Post makes clear there will be plenty of time for fun this weekend.
Burton's office did not return a request for comment.
After flying overnight to Rome, the coterie will check in Saturday for two nights at a 5-star hotel on the famous and expensive Via Veneto. Lunch follows at a quiet restaurant near the Vatican before the group heads off for a tour. Then it's "evening at leisure."
Sunday begins with breakfast followed by a Latin High Mass at St. Peter's Basilica. An afternoon "cultural tour of Rome" will cost "approx $35/person" so delegation members will need to carry some cash. More personal time follows. The schedule notes: "See Welcome packages for suggested venues."
Monday morning the business begins. The congressmen will have a half-hour meeting with U.S. Ambassador to Italy David Thorne. Then it's off to the Bank of Italy to discuss, presumably, the European debt crisis that, so far, the government in Rome has managed to stave off.
Then it's off to the airport and wheels-up to Tbilisi at noon..
A U.S. government official familiar with the planning for the Rome leg said the weekend alone will cost taxpayers about $70,000. He noted that figure includes extra security, drivers and overtime for embassy staff, including a cashier and two guards for a delegation courtesy room at the hotel where guests can exchange their dollars for Euros, instead of heading to the nearest ATM.
The itinerary offers other delectable details such as:
  • Luggage call. Members of Congress need only set their bags outside their hotel room door and the bags will magically make their way to the airport.
  • Meals included. Airline customers may have to bring their own food on cross-country flights in the U.S., but not government officials. Dinner Friday night will be "Pork tenderloin, roasted potatoes, steamed vegetables, side salad, dinner roll and dessert (*Vegetarian meals will be provided for Rep. and Mrs. Deutch at all meals)." Lunch en route to Georgia: "Pesto Marinated Salmon, Rice Pilaf, Mixed Vegetables, & Dessert."
  • Per Diems. Those get distributed to the group Saturday morning, according to the printed schedule.
  • Sartorial advice. For the Vatican, the group is told the attire is "Business Dress (Dark colors please. No white suits/dresses)." At other times, "flat shoes" are recommended, presumably for all the sightseeing the delegation plans to do.
Details were still being finalized late Thursday evening, according to an all-caps footnote in the itinerary addressed to what appears to be an embassy staffer.
"THERE IS A CHARGE FOR COFFEE/TEA SERVICE IN DEL [delegation] ROOM SINCE HOTEL EXPECTS GUESTS TO HAVE BREAKFAST IN THE DINING ROOM. PLEASE ADVISE IF YOU WANT TO PAY FOR COFFEE/TEA SERVICE."


I AM YOUR HUMBLE SERVANT, VERNE.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

NC lawmakers like three sets of redistricting maps. Final passage may come Thursday.

Verne Strickland Blogmaster  July 26, 2011


By GARY D. ROBERTSON
Associated Press / July 25, 2011 / 9:39 PM


The General Assembly completed most of its work Monday on proposed district maps for its own seats and for North Carolina's congressional delegation, but Democrats predicted Republicans would have to redraw them later because they'll be labeled illegal in litigation.
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Republicans leading the once-a-decade redistricting process brushed aside the Democratic admonishments and substitute maps and approved the boundaries the GOP calls lawful following hours of debate. The Senate gave its approval to a map for the chamber's 50 seats and passed proposed boundaries for 13 congressional seats. The House also approved a plan for its 120 seats.

The largely party-line votes set the stage for final passage of the maps by Thursday, but they will still have to be signed off on by a federal court or U.S. Justice Department attorneys to ensure compliance with the Voting Rights Act before they can be used for the 2012 elections. Other litigation also is likely as Democrats continued to disagree with Republicans over how the GOP apportioned black voters in all three maps.

Democrats predicted the GOP-penned maps would never be implemented because they violated federal and state laws and court rulings. They said the boundaries weaken the political influence of black voters by lumping them in certain districts to isolate them and make surrounding districts more white and Republican. Sen. Dan Blue, D-Wake, who is black, said the GOP produced "ghettoized" districts.

"The judges will see the maps for what they are, and what they are is an attempt to disenfranchise African Americans by segregating them and diminishing their voting rights and the influence of women in North Carolina," said Rep. Deborah Ross, D-Wake, as the House debated proposed House districts. "Those two groups were not listened to in the process."

Republicans disagreed and spent most of Monday defending the maps. They cite legal rulings and the federal Voting Rights Act in arguing they're required to create majority-black districts - of which they drew more than 30 - where the population allows it and to protect the state from outside lawsuits.

The map "produced fair, legal and competitive districts that will allow any candidate to run in these districts with the opportunity to win," said Sen. Bob Rucho, R-Mecklenburg, the Senate Redistricting Committee chairman as the congressional maps were debated.

Districts are redrawn every 10 years to reflect population growth reported by the U.S. Census. With Republicans holding a majority in both chambers for the first time in 140 years, GOP lawmakers are seeking to put their imprint on boundaries to extend their control of the General Assembly and boost their representation on Capitol Hill.

The congressional plan approved by the Senate would increase Republican voter registration in four districts currently held by Democrats and place two pairs of incumbents - Democrats Larry Kissell and Mike McIntyre as well as David Price and Brad Miller - in the same districts.

The plan was approved after the GOP majority in the chamber rejected several Democratic amendments. One would have reworked all 13 districts, while two others would have adjusted districts in the mountains and the Triangle region.

Elections data project that Republicans could win as many as 10 of the state's 13 U.S. House seats in the new plan. Democrats currently have a 7-6 advantage. The Democrats' alternative statewide map would have given Republicans an 8-5 advantage instead, based on how many districts in which John McCain would have defeated Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential race.

The Democratic map also would have kept all of Asheville and Buncombe County in the 11th Congressional District represented by Democrat Heath Shuler and all of Robeson County in the 7th District represented by McIntyre.

Democrats also offered alternative plans that would retain so-called "influence districts" in current boundaries that have at least a 40 percent black voting-age population. Democrats argue such districts comply with the Voting Rights Act by still effectively allowing black voters to elect candidates of their choice and preserving their overall political power.

The GOP plans "were drawn specifically to dump African American voters," charged Rep. William Wainwright, D-Craven, who is black.

Democrats said their alternative plans also were better than the Republican proposals because they crossed fewer county lines and the districts were generally more compact.

Republican mapmakers say Democrats failed to offer legal evidence that "packing" exists or timely fixes to perceived problems. Rep. David Lewis, R-Harnett, the House redistricting chairman, complained that Democrats offered substitute maps on the day of the floor debate after months of redistricting discussions.

The plan "is nothing more than a strategy that once again sandbags the people of North Carolina by letting something arrive on our desks right off the press," Lewis told colleagues.

Legislative maps would draw 20 pairs of lawmakers into the same district, forcing them to run against each other if they aimed to remain in the Legislature in 2013. Twenty-one are Republicans and 19 are Democrats.

Two Democrats - Reps. Dewey Hill of Columbus County and Bill Brisson of Bladen County - voted with Republicans in passing the House plan 68-50. GOP Rep. Glen Bradley of Franklin County, drawn into the same district with Nash County Republican Jeff Collins, voted against the map.

The congressional plan still must be approved by the House. The House and Senate also must take up the districts for each other's chamber, but historically each chamber has avoided changing the other's boundaries without permission. Redistricting plans don't go to Gov. Beverly Perdue's desk, becoming law immediately without her consideration.

http://www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110725/APN/1107250581

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Democrats -- and GOP candidate Ilario Pantano -- criticize NC redistricting plans.

Verne Strickland Blogmaster
Published: 07:58 AM, Thu Jul 21, 2011
By Paul Woolverton
The newest proposed revisions for North Carolina's congressional districts are drawing criticism from the Democrats and from a Republican congressional candidate.

"Whole counties, cities and towns are shredded by this approach," said N.C. Democratic Party Chairman David Parker in a statement.

The new maps wrongly divide up communities of interest in the Wilmington area, said a spokesman for 7th District Congressional candidate Ilario Pantano, who last year lost a close election against incumbent Democrat Mike McIntyre of Lumberton.

The maps are being redrawn to account for shifts and growth in North Carolina's population. The mapmaking also gives the political party in power - this time the Republicans - a chance to devise districts that favor its candidates.

The latest revision to the 7th District draws McIntyre's home out of the district. He and most of his Robeson County base would be put into the 8th. The new map also removes Fayetteville, Fort Bragg and most of the rest of Cumberland County from the 7th. It would keep the rural southeast corner.

The map adds Republican-friendly Johnston County, parts of which have become suburbs of Raleigh.
Raleigh suburbs have little to do with coastal southeast North Carolina, and vice versa, said Pantano spokesman Andy Yates.

A better-drawn map likely would put more Democrats into the 7th District, Pantano said in a statement, making it harder for a Republican to win, but "I know that truly selfless service means doing the right thing, even when it hurts you politically."

The new 7th District has also drawn a primary opponent for Pantano. Republican State Sen. David Rouzer of Benson announced on Wednesday that he will run for the 7th District seat. In his announcement, he said he has received numerous endorsements from prominent Republicans.

Even though McIntyre would no longer live in the 7th District, he still plans to run for re-election. Congressmen are not required to live in their districts. But he still thinks the maps are bad.

"They've taken southeastern North Carolina and sliced it and diced it into five separate congressional districts with no regard for its communities of interest, its people, and their needs," McIntyre's campaign committee said in a statement.

Democrats stand to lose the most under the Republican-drawn maps. Based on previous voting patterns, the new maps favor Republican candidates more than a previous proposal, said Jonathan Kappler of the N.C. FreeEnterprise Foundation, a political research organization in Raleigh.

Out of the 13 North Carolina congressional districts, Republicans would be favored to win 10 seats, he said, and Democrats three. The existing districts are held by seven Democrats and six Republicans.

Under the latest maps, Cumberland County would be split among the 7th, 2nd and 4th Districts. Under the old maps, it is split between the 7th, 2nd and 8th.

Democrat Larry Kissell of Montgomery County, serving the 8th, will have a hard time winning the new 8th even though it picks up Democrat-friendly Robeson County, Kappler said. The rest of the district favors Republican candidates, he said. Despite the challenges, Kissell this month announced his re-election campaign.

Two Republicans are already looking at challenging him. According to WRAL, state Rep. Justin Burr of Stanly County and state Rep. Jerry Dockham of Davidson County said they are seriously considering runs for the 8th District.

Ten years ago, when the Democrats controlled the legislature and the mapmaking, they tried to make the 8th District a Democrat-friendly territory to defeat Republican Robin Hayes. Kissell defeated Hayes in 2008.

The 2nd District, served by freshman Republican Renee Ellmers of Harnett County, changes significantly, shifting to new territory to the west to Randolph County, home of the North Carolina Zoo.

It takes up much of Cumberland County and Fayetteville, plus all of Republican-friendly Moore County.
Overall, it's more solidly Republican, Kappler said.

"She's the Republican that's most helped by the congressional redistricting, which is important for her because she won in a great Republican year," Kappler said.

Fayetteville would also be added to a new 4th District that includes parts of Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill. Fayetteville native Brad Miller, a Democrat currently serving the 13th District, lives in Raleigh in the new 4th District. The 4th is served by Democrat David Price of Chapel Hill.

Staff writer Paul Woolverton can be reached at woolvertonp@fayobserver.com or (910) 486-3512.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

McIntyre and Lumberton separated on map. Nothing to write home about.

Verne Strickland Blogmaster   July 20, 2011

Excessively incumbent Democrat wants to get Robeson and Fort Bragg back in his grasp.


StarNews File Photo

Last Modified: Tuesday, July 19, 2011 at 6:43 p.m.
U.S. Rep. Mike Mcintyre said Tuesday that he plans to run for re-election in a newly redrawn 7th Congressional District even though the latet proposal puts his Lumberton home in an adjacent district.

Meanwhile, New Hanover and Pender counties would both be split between two congressional districts under the new map released Tuesday afternoon by the Republican-controlled General Assembly. The district boundaries are substantially different than the first draft released early this month, which didn't divide the counties.

Under the latest proposal, the new 7th Congressional District would include about three-fourths of New Hanover County voters, leaving out the downtown Wilmington area. It would also contain eastern Pender, all of Brunswick, Columbus, Bladen, Duplin, Johnston and Sampson counties, as well as parts of Cumberland, Hoke, Lenoir and Robeson counties.

But McIntyre's house in Robeson County isn't in the proposed 7th District. Instead, it is in the adjacent 8th District, along with fellow Democratic Rep. Larry Kissell. That means McIntyre would have to choose between facing Kissell in a Democratic primary or running in the new Republican-leaning 7th District, as members of Congress don't have to live in the area they represent.

In a statement Tuesday condemning the new map, the Mike McIntyre for Congress Campaign Committee said McIntyre planned to try to retain his seat in the 7th District. He also plans to try to get Robeson and Fort Bragg restored to the district.


Meanwhile, New Hanover and Pender counties would both be split between two congressional districts under the new map released Tuesday afternoon by the Republican-controlled General Assembly. The district boundaries are substantially different than the first draft released early this month, which didn't divide the counties.
Under the latest proposal, the new 7th Congressional District would include about three-fourths of New Hanover County voters, leaving out the downtown Wilmington area. It would also contain eastern Pender, all of Brunswick, Columbus, Bladen, Duplin, Johnston and Sampson counties, as well as parts of Cumberland, Hoke, Lenoir and Robeson counties.But McIntyre's house in Robeson County isn't in the proposed 7th District. Instead, it is in the adjacent 8th District, along with fellow Democratic Rep. Larry Kissell.

That means McIntyre would have to choose between facing Kissell in a Democratic primary or running in the new Republican-leaning 7th District, as members of Congress don't have to live in the area they represent.
In a statement Tuesday condemning the new map, the Mike McIntyre for Congress Campaign Committee said McIntyre planned to try to retain his seat in the 7th District.

He also plans to try to get Robeson and Fort Bragg restored to the district."Congressman McIntyre has accomplished much for the 7th District and Southeastern North Carolina for the past 15 years, and he will work to continue to represent it in the next Congress and for the foreseeable future," the committee's statement said.
His committee condemned the revised map as "a blatant and brazen political attack on Southeastern North Carolina's communities and counties."

The committee noted the new map divides five southeastern counties: Robeson, Pender, New Hanover, Cumberland and Hoke. 

"They've taken Southeastern North Carolina and sliced it and diced it into five separate congressional districts with no regard for its communities of interest, its people and their needs," the committee said.

Leaning to GOP

Voters in the proposed 7th District chose Republican John McCain over Democrat Barack Obama for president in 2008 by a margin of 58 percent to 42 percent, an indication of the conservative tendencies of voters in the proposed district. About 52 percent of voters in McIntyre's current district voted for McCain.

"He's just really in a difficult position with the new maps if indeed this is what the new districts will look like," said Jonathan Kappler, research director for the N.C. FreeEnterprise Foundation and a close observer of state politics.

Republican Ilario Pantano, a former Marine who lives in New Hanover County and lost to McIntyre in last year's election, said he lives in and would plan to run for election from the new 7th District.

"Ilario made the decision to run for Congress earlier this year without knowing what the district lines might be, because he knew from listening to the people of Southeastern North Carolina that they were ready to have a congressman who would fight for their conservative principles," Pantano's campaign said in a prepared statement. 

The statement also said that the campaign believed it would be unfair to the people of the district to have a representative – obviously a reference to McIntyre – who doesn't live in the district.

The 3rd Congressional District, meanwhile, would include all or parts of 22 counties in eastern North Carolina, including the downtown Wilmington area and central and western Pender County. The incumbent in that district would be Rep. Walter Jones, a Republican from Farmville in Pitt County.

Boundaries for the state's 13 congressional districts are updated once a decade to account for population shifts identified by the U.S. Census. Typically a controversial and partisan process, this year is no different. Republicans in the state legislature control the process because they hold majorities in both the state House and Senate.

State committees will begin discussing the congressional district maps on Thursday morning in Raleigh. The full General Assembly still must approve them. The maps will first be used for the 2012 elections.

McIntyre and Kissell wouldn't be the only Democrats put into the same district by the new plan.
The residences of Reps. David Price and Brad Miller would be placed in the same Piedmont district, said state Rep. David Lewis, R-Harnett, the state House's chief mapmaker. 

While a North Carolina resident can run for any congressional seat in the state, it's tough to run outside your home district.

Friday, July 15, 2011

McIntyre deliberately misleads on fundraising numbers. It just don't add up!

Verne Strickland Blogmaster


 July 15, 2011
Contact:
Andy Yates
704-467-0795
andy@pantanoforcongress.com


 

Wilmington, NC:  Pantano for Congress spokesman Andy Yates released the following statement today calling out Congressman McIntyre and his campaign for deliberately misleading the public on the sources of their campaign contributions:

 “Yesterday morning Congressman Mike McIntyre and his campaign released a statement on his second quarter fundraising numbers claiming, without offering any proof, that during the second quarter that ‘nearly 70% of the (McIntyre’s) contributions came from individual contributors.’  However, when McIntyre filed his campaign finance report with the FEC, this claim turned out to be blatantly false.

“McIntyre’s own FEC report shows on line 6 (a) that during the 2nd quarter of 2011 he raised $286,126.93, on line 11 (a) (iii) $148,140.14 came from individual contributors, on line 11 (b) that $811.43 came from Political Party Committees, and on line 11(c) $137,175.36 came from ‘Other Political Committees (Such As PACs).’  These numbers taken directly from McIntyre’s FEC report (available at http://query.nictusa.com/cgi-bin/dcdev/forms/C00306829/734980/) clearly show that McIntyre did not raise ‘nearly 70%’ of his contributions from individuals.  In reality he raised 48% of his money from PACs and special interest groups and only 52% from individual contributors.

“Congressman McIntyre and his campaign made an intentional choice to put out a press release announcing their bogus claim before filing their actual report. The media and the public took the Congressman at his word, but when the actual report was filed late yesterday it showed a different story entirely.  
"The Congressman should immediately apologize to the media and the people of the 7th District for deliberately misleading them about the sources of his campaign contributions."


###

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Congressman McIntyre takes heat over lavish taxpayer-funded junket to Europe.

Verne Strickland Blogmaster / July 3, 2011
Published: Sunday, July 3, 2011 at 4:55 p.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, July 3, 2011 at 4:55 p.m.
U.S. Rep. Mike McIntyre was criticized last week for a 10-day trip to Europe at taxpayer expense, but the Democrat from Lumberton said the trip was about "economic and military security."

The trip wasn't about celebrating his 29th anniversary with his wife, Dee, McIntyre said in a phone interview from Lithuania on Wednesday night. His wife made the trip with the congressman, but McIntyre has said he was covering her expenses.
A recent article in "The Huffington Post" was critical of the trip, highlighting a blurb about the McIntyres' wedding anniversary that appeared on the trip itinerary. McIntyre said it was a coincidence that his anniversary fell during the trip and said the mention of the anniversary was just a "courtesy notation" on the schedule.
"That had nothing to do with it, and that's being entirely misconstrued," McIntyre said.
McIntyre said he was invited on the trip by the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Europe and Eurasia, Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind. He said he was asked because of his dual roles as senior member of the House Armed Services Committee and as a commissioner on the U.S. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, also known as the U.S. Helsinki Commission.
McIntyre was one of six House members, four of their wives and others on the 10-day trip, which took them to Rome; Tbilisi, Georgia; Vilnius, Lithuania; Moscow and Lisbon.
The first stop was Rome, where McIntyre said the visit was centered around the fact that Italy is implementing policies to help stabilize the European financial markets in light of financial problems in Greece, Portugal, Ireland and elsewhere.

"We live in a global economy. What is happening in the European financial markets will affect American businesses, American jobs and our neighborhood banks," he said.

The other reason behind the trip was from an armed services perspective, McIntyre said. Italy is a key American ally in Europe, he said, and U.S. military presence on five bases in Italy allows power projection through Europe, the Mediterranean, Africa and the Middle East. Italy has also increased its police and military trainers in Afghanistan and has helped address the Libyan conflict, the congressman said.

Georgia, McIntyre said, recently doubled its troops in Afghanistan, and has become a "shining example of democracy and free enterprise."

Lithuania, where McIntyre was when he called, has special forces operating along the Pakistani border and is working closely with U.S. Special Forces.

Also in Lithuania, McIntyre was to speak at the Community of Democracies' Parliamentary Forum for Democracy.

"From Bosnia and Kosovo to the recent events in North Africa and the Middle East, there is a sweeping popular demand for democratic rule," McIntyre said. "When nations embrace democratic rule, it is one of our best weapons against tyranny and terrorism."

McIntyre then spent time in Moscow and Lisbon and was set to return over the weekend to attend Fourth of July events in the 7th Congressional District.

http://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20110703/ARTICLES/110709909?p=2&tc=pg