Senate candidate Colonel Pamela Stevenson visits Owensboro for town hall event
Colonel Pamela Stevenson currently serves as Kentucky's House Minority Leader and is running for Republican Mitch McConnell's seat.
'People are hungry to have someone that serves them…the energy was incredible,' Stevenson says.
Hosted by Indivisible Owensboro, the town hall allowed constituents to ask elected officials about hot-button issues. Several elected officials were invited to attend, including Stevenson, Senator Rand Paul, Representative Brett Guthrie, and Senator Mitch McConnell. Stevenson was the only one who showed up.
Over 20 people attended, including Donna Haynes.
'This started out to try to get some answers. We wanted it to be a peaceful discussion with our elected officials about what they did, why they did it, and how it affects us,' Haynes says.
Constituents asked questions about several issues, including healthcare. One person asked, 'What are your thoughts about Trump's repeated statements to repeal or replace the Affordable Care Act?'
'As far as I can tell, if you are human, you need health care. They {the audience} want to make sure the elderly are taken care of, they want to have access to health care, and they want to make sure kids eat,' Stevenson says.
Constituents also asked questions about Job Corps. The second largest one in the country is located in Morganfield. The U.S Department of Labor announced plans to eliminate Job Corps Centers nationwide last week due to proposed budget cuts by the Trump Administration.
'We have to do a better job building up rural counties. No matter where you live in Kentucky, you have to have access to health care and a good job to take care of your family. We have to make sure that that happens,' Stevenson says.
A federal judge filed a motion for a temporary restraining order in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York today to block the closures today.
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