logo
#

Latest news with #RINO

Long Island incumbents hang on in chaotic GOP primary plagued by scandals and infighting
Long Island incumbents hang on in chaotic GOP primary plagued by scandals and infighting

New York Post

time25-06-2025

  • Politics
  • New York Post

Long Island incumbents hang on in chaotic GOP primary plagued by scandals and infighting

Two top Suffolk County Republicans fended off primary challengers Tuesday night — including one town leader who dodged a growing controversy with a major boost from local police unions. Smithtown Supervisor Ed Wehrheim appeared to have narrowly held onto his seat after a vicious GOP primary against Suffolk County Legislator Rob Trotta with a 700-vote lead, according to unofficial county Board of Elections tallies on Wednesday. The adult boyfriend of Wehrheim's daughter had been arrested for stalking Trotta just two days before the election but any bad press was countered by strong backing from the Suffolk County Police Benevolent Association in favor of the seven-year incumbent. Advertisement 3 Smithtown Supervisor Ed Wehrheim narrowly survived holding onto his seat in the GOP primary against Suffolk County Legislator Rob Trotta. Smithtown Supervisor Ed Wehrheim/Facebook 'Last night, the people of Smithtown made their voices heard loud and clear,' Wehrheim told The Post on Wednesday. Some 400 PBA officers were said to have campaigned door-to-door for Wehrheim or worked phone banks Advertisement 'Ed Wehrheim and Smithtown are the embodiment of the Back The Blue movement,' PBA President Lou Civello said in an interview. Civello said the union would never support Trotta, who he called a 'RINO,' or 'Republican in name only,' and said his Zohran Mamdani-aligned stance on deferring some responsibility from cops over to mental health professionals and social workers makes him a 'traitor to the party' and inspired the PBA's mobilization efforts. Trotta, a 25-year Suffolk police veteran and the department's 2001 detective of the year, told The Post he believes the real reason behind the PBA's efforts is because of the role he played in helping lock up former police commissioner James Burke — who served 40 months for beating a handcuffed inmate with a group of officers and covering it up. Meanwhile, Huntington Supervisor Ed Smyth crushed challenger Brooke Lupinacci with 61% of the vote, also securing the top spot on the ballot for the Conservative party as well as the Republican nomination in the deep red district. Advertisement Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here! Huntington's primary was centered on disagreements over visions of what future development for the town should look like. 'I knew I was right on the issues, I knew I would never get outworked on the campaign trail and I know that the residents of Huntington focus on the issues,' Smythe told the crowd after his win at the American Legion Hall in Halesite Tuesday. On the other side of the aisle, Maria Delgado easily defeated Cooper Macco in a Working Families Party primary for Huntington supervisor, while Chris Haines beat Vincent Colavita for the town's highway superintendent. Advertisement 3 Huntington Supervisor Ed Smyth easily won his contest against Brooke Lupinacci, receiving 61% of the total vote. Ed Smyth / Facebook Two GOP primaries were also held for the open seats on the Suffolk County Legislature where the incumbents — including Trotta — hit their term limits. Lindenhurst Deputy Mayor Richard Renna defeated Brightwaters prosecutor Shawn Cullinane with 67% of the vote, and retired NYPD detective Sal Formica topped Huntington building supervisor Frank Black with 59%. In town board races, Smithtown Republican incumbents Thomas McCarthy and Lynne Nowick won with about 29% each. 3 Smyth's victory granted him the top spot in Huntington's primary for the Republican nomination. Ed Smyth / Facebook In Huntington, incumbent David Bennardo took the win while his ally, Gregory Grizopoulous, both Republicans, will be at the top of the ticket for the seat that Councilman Sal Ferro will vacate. Despite the record-setting temperatures, voter turn-out was on par with previous years at about 12%, according to election Commissioner Betty Manzella. The results set the stage for a high-stakes general election this fall, and with primaries now behind them, candidates are turning their focus to the general election on Tuesday, Nov. 4.

Eric Trump on father's legacy: He's ‘killed every RINO' in Washington
Eric Trump on father's legacy: He's ‘killed every RINO' in Washington

The Hill

time16-06-2025

  • Politics
  • The Hill

Eric Trump on father's legacy: He's ‘killed every RINO' in Washington

Eric Trump credited his father Monday with toppling the GOP establishment and changing both political parties for generations on the 10th anniversary of President Trump's 'golden escalator' launch of his first successful White House campaign. 'He has killed every RINO there was in Washington, D.C.,' Eric Trump said in an interview on Fox Business Network's 'Mornings with Maria,' using a pejorative that refers to people deemed Republicans in name only. 'Now all of a sudden, you have a Republican Party that's united.' President Trump has often blasted his critics and other Republicans who stray from his positions as RINOs. Eric Trump, who is executive vice president of the Trump Organization, was speaking to host Maria Bartiromo on Monday about the company's new Trump Mobile cell service, but he deviated to reflect on his father's legacy following President Trump's return to the White House this year after losing a reelection bid four years earlier. 'There is no question that he has changed the trajectory of the political parties indefinitely but it's going to last,' the younger Trump said. 'This isn't a one cycle, two cycle.' 'It's going to last, literally, I believe, generations,' he added. The president's eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., marked Monday's anniversary of the president's 2016 campaign launch with a social media post similarly highlighting its impact. '10 years ago today one outsider, sick of the bs and failure in Washington D.C. decided to get in the game and change the course of history!!!!' Trump Jr. wrote on X. Eric Trump, who has two young children, also said he believes that President Trump has helped spark political interest in younger people. 'My father has made politics fun again, right?' he said. 'It's cool again to be involved in politics.'

Kinzinger talks Trump and his own future in Chicago speech
Kinzinger talks Trump and his own future in Chicago speech

Yahoo

time29-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Kinzinger talks Trump and his own future in Chicago speech

CHICAGO (WGN) — Adam Kinzinger has been out of Congress for two years now, but his final term continues to define him and his mission. 'This is not normal,' Kinzinger said of President Donald Trump's first four months back in the White House. 'Regardless of your opinion of him, people can obviously look at this and say: This isn't how politics used to be. This kind of anger, this division is not sustainable.' Kinzinger spoke with WGN ahead of a speech Wednesday evening in Chicago. Since leaving office, he has traveled the nation for his 'Country First' political action committee, telling the story of being one of only two republicans to serve on the Jan. 6 Committee. Despite having a conservative voting record, Trump supporters branded him a 'RINO,' which stands for 'Republican In Name Only.' GOP's Kinzinger explains his appearance at Democratic National Convention 'Democracy is still worth preserving,' Kinzinger said. Kinzinger encouraged Republicans and Democrats not to tune out the daily drumbeat of headlines. 'You have the daily clown show or the daily controversies. Some of it is so outrageous, you have to pay attention. Some of it is corruption,' Kinzinger said. 'In the meantime, the stuff that really matters – did DOGE save $160 billion? It did not. By the way, they promised $2 trillion. The 'Big Beautiful Bill' will actually cut Medicare and Medicaid and explode the debt. So people are talking about that, and then we hear about the Qatar jet. So, how do you kind of juggle all those balls and stay engaged? That's the big key.' Kinzinger doesn't sound like a man content to stay on the sidelines of government, but he has yet to announce his next move. In the meantime, he'll continue to try to reach new audiences through social media, a regular column on Substack, YouTube videos, and commentary on CNN. 'I want the younger generation to recognize: This doesn't have to be this way,' Kinzinger said. In 2022, WGN profiled Kinzinger as a politician without a party. WGN Investigates: Investigating public corruption, crime & fraud In 2024, Republican Kinzinger accepted a prime-time speaking role at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. 'I look at the Democrats and say, sure, there's a lot I disagree with, but there's actually a lot I agree with that my party has abandoned, like foreign policy. I mean, standing with Ukraine in a fight against Russia, if you had told me 10 years ago that my party would've abandoned that fight, I wouldn't have believed you,' Kinzinger told WGN at the time. 'When they call me a RINO, there's not much about me that's changed from what I used to be. The whole Republican party has changed.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of ‘funding the left'
Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of ‘funding the left'

Yahoo

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of ‘funding the left'

Sen. John Cornyn's (R-Texas) campaign is rolling out four new ads attacking Texas Attorney General and Senate candidate Ken Paxton (R) for money his office gave to several Texas entities, accusing Paxton of 'funding the left.' The ads, roughly 30 seconds each and shared first with The Hill, criticize Paxton for issuing grant money to Legal Aid of NorthWest Texas, the Tahirih Justice Center, the Montrose Center , and Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, insinuating that the organizations run counter to Republicans on issues related to immigration and gender. For example, a narrator in one of the ads accuses the Montrose Center of offering 'gender programs for children as young as seven,' noting that they have hosted 'child-accessible drag shows.' The Montrose Center, a group serving the LGBTQIA+ Houston community, offers various services, including case management and counseling. The group has previously hosted events that have included drag shows – events that have nationally drawn scorn and scrutiny from some Republicans. The ad is also likely referencing the center's Hatch Youth, which the center describes as 'Houston's oldest, currently active social group dedicated to empowering LGBTQIA+ youth and young adults between the ages of 7 and 24.' Cornyn's team told The Hill that the ads are part of a five-figure digital buy. Cornyn campaign senior adviser Matt Mackowiak alleged that the grants had cost millions of taxpayer dollars 'approved that went to radical left organizations that do not share our conservative Texas values,' describing Paxton as 'crooked' and suggesting that 'Texans cannot trust Ken Paxton.' Paxton's campaign did not respond to a request for comment when contacted by The Hill regarding the ads. The different groups mentioned in the Cornyn campaign ads were approved for different types of grants in the past, largely under the 'other victim assistance grant,' whose service areas include direct victim services, victim services training, outreach and education, victim assistance coordinator and crime victim liaison. That hasn't stopped some of those groups from receiving scrutiny, however. Paxton investigated the Tahirih Justice Center, a recipient of Texas Bar Foundation funding, in 2022 to see 'whether these funds are being used to exacerbate the current crisis at the border and to thwart the efforts of federal and state law enforcement to secure the border.' Republicans are bracing for a bitter primary between Cornyn and Paxton as Cornyn vies for a fifth term in the Senate. Paxton has described Cornyn as a 'RINO' or 'Republican in name only' while Cornyn's campaign has called Paxton a 'fraud.' The primary is already laying bare divisions within the Texas GOP and could threaten Republicans' chances of holding the seat. A poll commissioned by the Senate Leadership Fund, released this month, found Paxton leading Cornyn 56 percent to 40 percent. When Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) is added into the mix, the polling finds 44 percent behind Paxton, 34 percent behind Cornyn and 19 percent behind Hunt. But the polling also showed that Cornyn did the best among the three Republicans in a hypothetical matchup against former Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas), who could launch a second Senate campaign. President Trump has notably not weighed in on the Texas Senate GOP primary. 'They're both friends of mine. They're both good men. And I don't know. We don't know who else is running, but these two— Ken, John —they're both friends of mine. So I'll make a determination at the right time,' the president said on Air Force One last month. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of ‘funding the left'
Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of ‘funding the left'

The Hill

time28-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Hill

Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of ‘funding the left'

Sen. John Cornyn's (R-Texas) campaign is rolling out four new ads attacking Texas Attorney General and Senate candidate Ken Paxton (R) for money his office gave to several Texas entities, accusing Paxton of 'funding the left.' The ads, roughly 30 seconds each and shared first with The Hill, criticize Paxton for issuing grant money to Legal Aid of NorthWest Texas, the Tahirih Justice Center, the Montrose Center , and Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, insinuating that the organizations run counter to Republicans on issues related to immigration and gender. For example, a narrator in one of the ads accuses the Montrose Center of offering 'gender programs for children as young as seven,' noting that they have hosted 'child-accessible drag shows.' The Montrose Center, a group serving the LGBTQIA+ Houston community, offers various services, including case management and counseling. The group has previously hosted events that have included drag shows – events that have nationally drawn scorn and scrutiny from some Republicans. The ad is also likely referencing the center's Hatch Youth, which the center describes as 'Houston's oldest, currently active social group dedicated to empowering LGBTQIA+ youth and young adults between the ages of 7 and 24.' Cornyn's team told The Hill that the ads are part of a five-figure digital buy. Cornyn campaign senior adviser Matt Mackowiak alleged that the grants had cost millions of taxpayer dollars 'approved that went to radical left organizations that do not share our conservative Texas values,' describing Paxton as 'crooked' and suggesting that 'Texans cannot trust Ken Paxton.' Paxton's campaign did not respond to a request for comment when contacted by The Hill regarding the ads. The different groups mentioned in the Cornyn campaign ads were approved for different types of grants in the past, largely under the 'other victim assistance grant,' whose service areas include direct victim services, victim services training, outreach and education, victim assistance coordinator and crime victim liaison. That hasn't stopped some of those groups from receiving scrutiny, however. Paxton investigated the Tahirih Justice Center, a recipient of Texas Bar Foundation funding, in 2022 to see 'whether these funds are being used to exacerbate the current crisis at the border and to thwart the efforts of federal and state law enforcement to secure the border.' Republicans are bracing for a bitter primary between Cornyn and Paxton as Cornyn vies for a fifth term in the Senate. Paxton has described Cornyn as a 'RINO' or 'Republican in name only' while Cornyn's campaign has called Paxton a 'fraud.' The primary is already laying bare divisions within the Texas GOP and could threaten Republicans' chances of holding the seat. A poll commissioned by the Senate Leadership Fund, released this month, found Paxton leading Cornyn 56 percent to 40 percent. When Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) is added into the mix, the polling finds 44 percent behind Paxton, 34 percent behind Cornyn and 19 percent behind Hunt. But the polling also showed that Cornyn did the best among the three Republicans in a hypothetical matchup against former Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas), who could launch a second Senate campaign. President Trump has notably not weighed in on the Texas Senate GOP primary. 'They're both friends of mine. They're both good men. And I don't know. We don't know who else is running, but these two— Ken, John —they're both friends of mine. So I'll make a determination at the right time,' the president said on Air Force One last month.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store