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In Debate, Governor Will Answer To Constituents For Plans To Make Wyoming ‘Carbon Negative’

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Wyoming Republican Gov. Mark Gordon has agreed to debate his critics over his plans to turn a state reliant on fossil fuels “carbon negative.”

On Friday, 30 state lawmakers joined Secretary of State Chuck Gray to call on the two-term governor to debate the merits of the “carbon negative” policy he recently promoted in a speech at Harvard University.

“It is clear that we have a warming climate,” Gordon said at an event with the Harvard Kennedy School’s Institute of Politics. “It is clear that carbon dioxide is a major contributor to that change. There is an urgency to addressing this issue and it isn’t only going to be solved by turning off fossil fuels.”

The Wyoming governor, who presides over the nation’s leading coal producer, boasted that “we are the first state that has said we are going to be carbon negative.”

“You can’t really do that without direct air capture or somehow doing carbon capture and sequestration,” Gordon continued.

The governor’s comments drew a swift rebuke from members of the state’s Freedom Caucus in the legislature and a vote of “no confidence” from the Wyoming Republican Party.

“As far as we know, the state of Wyoming has not unilaterally decided to wholly abandon our legacy industries, and this is not a decision that the governor can make- our state’s economy is not controlled by any elected official,” read a statement from the Wyoming Freedom Caucus.

“The governor is not capable of defining what ‘carbon negative’

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Democrats’ Vision Of Democracy Means Fewer Choices For Voters

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Long before you mark your ballot, Democrats are scheming to limit your candidate choices by booting competitors off the ballot.

That is what Democrats are trying to do to presidential candidates Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a former Democrat, Jill Stein of the Green Party, and Cornel West, a former Green Party candidate. All are collecting signatures and trying to get on the presidential ballot in each state; Democrats are fighting them on technicalities.

After all, they can’t let voters decide; these candidates are likely to pull votes away from the Democrat ticket.  

Instead of campaigning in front of voters, Kennedy and West spend a lot of time and money traveling to courthouses around the country defending against an onslaught of legal cases that could prevent voters from ever having them as a ballot choice.

“They’re suing me all over the country. They’re trying to keep me off the ballot,” Kennedy said in a social media post Tuesday, while standing in front of a courthouse in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Kennedy left the campaign trail for a court hearing challenging his spot on the ballot, but his plane was delayed and he arrived two hours late. Commonwealth Court Judge Lori Dumas would not allow him to testify.   

My father and my uncle were members of a Democratic Party that was at the forefront of making sure that every American could vote for the candidate they wanted to.

Today’s Democratic Party is doing the opposite. pic.twitter.com/6K3XZ7bXsj

— Robert F. Kennedy Jr (@RobertKennedyJr)

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New York Judge Upholds No-Excuse Mail Voting Scheme 3 Years After Voters Rejected The Idea

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New Yorkers overwhelmingly rejected a proposal in 2021 that expanded no-excuse absentee voting. But on Tuesday, the state’s highest court upheld a law passed and signed in 2023 by the state’s Democrat majority that effectively expands no-excuse mail-in voting anyway.

Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul signed the “Early Mail Voter Act” into law in 2023. The law allows anyone to receive an early mail-in ballot with no excuse necessary. Only five Democrats in the state legislature opposed the legislation, alongside the entire Republican delegation.

New Yorkers must provide an excuse in order to receive an absentee ballot according to the state’s constitution. Members of the state’s Democrat-led legislature acknowledged this in their proposal to amend this section of state law, clarifying that the state constitution “only allows absentee voting if a person expects to be absent from the county in which they live … or because of illness for physical disability.” A ballot summary cited on Ballotpedia for the proposed constitutional amendment said the amendment would “eliminate the requirement that a voter provide a reason for voting by absentee ballot.”

But when voters had the chance to vote on the proposed amendment to permit no-excuse absentee voting in 2021, New Yorkers rejected the proposal by a 55-44 margin.

Having not gotten their way, the Democrat-led state legislature usurped the will of their constituents and passed a law in 2023 that expanded “early voting by mail,” which, effectively achieved the same end result of the amendment resoundingly rejected by New Yorkers two

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Oops: Biden Admin Admits 800,000 Jobs It Took Credit For Don’t Exist

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The Biden-Harris administration admitted on Wednesday that more than 800,000 of the jobs it claimed to have created last year don’t exist.

An annual revision by the Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed that the U.S. economy added 818,000 fewer jobs from March 2023 to March 2024 than originally reported. According to CNBC, “the actual job growth was nearly 30% less than the initially reported 2.9 million from April 2023 through March of this year.”

“The revision to the total payrolls level of -0.5% is the largest since 2009,” the report reads.

This review of Wednesday’s figures found that “[a]t the sector level, the biggest downward revision” came in “professional and business service,” in which “job growth was 358,000 less than initially reported.” The manufacturing; trade (including retail positions), transportation and utilities; and leisure and hospitality sectors also saw downward revisions.

[RELATED: How Kamala’s Economic Plans Would Send ‘Bidenflation’ Into Overdrive]

Wednesday’s revisions are not an anomaly, however. The Biden-Harris administration has regularly overestimated job growth in recent years, only to later revise those totals downward in the months that followed.

Last year, for example, “the government … overestimated the job growth for the 12-month period ending March 2023 by 306,000,” according to Forbes. A December 2022 analysis by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia estimated that the administration overstated the number of jobs created during that year’s second quarter by more than one million, The National Desk reported.

Meanwhile, the feds “underestimated job growth [in August 2019] for

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