US "The Squad" Megathread - Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Talib Derangement Syndrome

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I honestly only know about American politics from what I read on the Internet but since we all love shitting on leftists I figured we'd get a kick out of this. Also it's trending on Twitter so you know it's important.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...irect=on&noredirect=on&utm_term=.960552c9ba53

NEW YORK — Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-year-old political novice running on a low budget and an unabashedly liberal platform, upset longtime U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley on Tuesday in the Democratic congressional primary in New York.

The surprise victory by the community organizer in a district that includes parts of the Bronx and Queens came after an energetic, grassroots campaign that mustered more than enough support in a low-turnout race that many had expected to be an easy win for Crowley, a member of the Democratic House leadership.

“The community is ready for a movement of economic and social justice. That is what we tried to deliver,” said Ocasio-Cortez, who has never held elected office and whose candidacy attracted only modest media attention.

She told The Associated Press after her victory that she didn’t have enough money to do polling in the race, but felt in her gut that her message had a chance to connect.

“I live in this community. I organized in this community. I felt the absence of the incumbent. I knew he didn’t have a strong presence,” she said.

Crowley has been in Congress since 1999 and hadn’t faced an opponent in a primary election since 2004, when Ocasio-Cortez was just a teenager. He was considered a candidate to become the next House speaker if Democrats win the majority.

“It’s not about me,” Crowley, 56, told his supporters at a campaign party following his loss. “It’s about America. I want nothing but the best for Ms. Ocasio-Cortez. I want her to be victorious.”

He later played guitar with a band at the election night gathering, and dedicated the first song, Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run,” to Ocasio-Cortez.

Crowley represents New York’s 14th Congressional District, where he is also the leader of the Queens Democratic party.

Ocasio-Cortez was outspent by an 18-1 margin during her race but won the endorsement of some influential groups on the party’s far left, including MoveOn, as well as the actress Cynthia Nixon, who is running for governor. She defeated Crowley by 15 percentage points.

Born in the Bronx to a mother from Puerto Rico and a father who died in 2008, Ocasio-Cortez said she decided to challenge Crowley to push a more progressive stance on economic and other issues.

She attended Boston University, where she earned degrees in economics and international relations, and also spent time working in the office of the late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy.

After graduating, she returned to the Bronx where she became a community organizer. In the 2016 presidential campaign she worked for U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Among her issues is expanding the Medicare program to people of all ages and abolishing Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. She recently went to Tornillo, Texas, to protest against policies that have separated parents from their children at the southern U.S. border.

Ocasio-Cortez gained some internet attention for a campaign video called “The Courage to Change,” a two-minute spot for which she wrote the script and featured footage from her own home.

Crowley is chair of the House Democratic Caucus, the fourth-highest ranking position in Democratic leadership in that chamber of Congress.

His loss drew the attention of President Donald Trump.

“Wow! Big Trump Hater Congressman Joe Crowley, who many expected was going to take Nancy Pelosi’s place, just LOST his primary election. In other words, he’s out! That is a big one that nobody saw happening. Perhaps he should have been nicer, and more respectful, to his President!” he tweeted.

The Republican candidate for the office, Anthony Pappas, is running unopposed and had no primary. Pappas teaches economics at St. John’s University.

She was a Bernie campaigner, is supported by BLM, and wants to abolish Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. Also this was in a solid-blue Congressional District so you know she's a shoo-in for next Congress.

But hey, we did get to see Trump laugh at Crowley on Twitter.
 
The Squad Meets the Freedom Fries, Err, Force :roll:
PSA: I seem to be able get around the WSJ paywall with Bypass Paywalls installed on Firefox. For now, at least. And I'm close to a computer illiterate, so it ain't hard to do. Sorry for janky formatting, but I'm too lazy to fix it.


‘The Squad’ Faces a ‘Freedom Force’ (probably paywalled WSJ)
Trump lost badly in New York and California, but Republican candidates picked up House seats in both states. Here’s how two of them did

A quarter-century apart in age, Nicole Malliotakis and Michelle Steel are classmates. They’re both freshmen, Republicans who’ve won election to the House of Representatives for the first time. Each ousted an incumbent Democrat in a resolutely blue state—New York and California, respectively—where Joe Biden romped home in November. And each woman has a scathing view of the politics of the other’s state as well as of her own. They’re ready to scorn Govs. Andrew Cuomo and Gavin Newsom. As for Mayor Bill de Blasio, Ms. Malliotakis, a state assemblywoman from New York City, practically combusts at the mention of his name.


“I think our leaderships are competing with each other to be the most radical. They keep getting bad ideas from each other,” says Ms. Malliotakis, 40, who will represent New York’s 11th Congressional District, comprised of the borough of Staten Island and parts of Brooklyn.

“The leadership is trying to make these states into Third World countries,” Ms. Steel, 65, responds. She is a member of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, a local legislative body, and representative-elect from California’s 48th District, a beachy slice of the county. In Washington for a freshman orientation, including a lottery for office space, the two talk to me by Zoom from their hotel rooms near the Capitol.

Both are robust proponents of low taxes and limited government. “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” Ms. Malliotakis says: “The government should provide an environment for that—and then get out of the way.” Ms. Steel—who was born in South Korea and came to the U.S. at 19—confesses to drawing her earliest political beliefs from her mother’s experience as a clothing-store owner in Los Angeles. “I saw that my mom was harassed—really harassed—by a tax agency, the State Board of Equalization,” she says. “And you know what? I decided that the Republican Party’s ideology is much better for small-business owners. They need less regulation and smaller taxes.” Her first foray into elective politics was a successful run for the Board of Equalization in 2007.




Not long into our conversation, however, a difference emerges. Asked what role President Trump played in her race, Ms. Steel says that he was “not really a factor.” Hers was a very local race: “For an 18-month period, it was just Rouda vs. Steel.” (Rep. Harley Rouda won election in 2018, unseating 15-term Republican Dana Rohrabacher.) The voters in her district, she says, “were more concerned about their businesses”—hit hard by the pandemic—and with state and local taxes.


Only when she knocked on the doors of Vietnamese-American families would people mention Mr. Trump. “They always ask, ‘So, are you going to vote for Trump?’ They’re very pro-Trump.” Ms. Steel describes them as a “small, close-knit community who came here for freedom.” Her district is nearly 70% white, and she “didn’t hear much about Trump vs. Biden from the mainstream. They wanted to know, ‘When will our businesses open?’ ‘What about public safety?’ ‘What about crime?’ ” Orange County is traditionally Republican but trending Democratic; Hillary Clinton was the first Democratic presidential candidate to receive a plurality there since 1936, and Joe Biden managed a majority.


By contrast, Ms. Malliotakis is eager to emphasize Mr. Trump’s impact. “The president was helpful,” she says. “It’s a district that he won in 2016, and he won again this time.” Ms. Malliotakis and Mr. Trump did a “tele-town hall” together. “People very much appreciate the work that he has done,” she says, “and he is loved on Staten Island.” Although Mr. Trump won only a little over a third of the vote statewide, he got 61% in Staten Island.


Explaining the president’s appeal to her “hardworking, middle-class” voters, she says: “I represent a community made up largely of civil servants, police officers, firefighters, teachers,” all of whom respect the military and “our law enforcement.” The “straight talking” president, a native of the borough of Queens, appeals to them. “He had roots in Staten Island, in the sense that his father owned apartment buildings there, and he, as a young boy, used to go and collect the rents.”


Local issues also played a part in her win, especially the unpopularity of Mayor de Blasio, against whom she ran unsuccessfully as the 2017 Republican nominee. The incumbent, Rep. Max Rose—who like Mr. Rouda unseated a Republican in 2018—ran a 15-second campaign ad in which he stands on a city street and declares: “Bill de Blasio is the worst mayor in the history of New York City.” He pauses for five seconds before adding: “That’s it, guys. Seriously, that’s the whole ad.”



Ms. Malliotakis says she was a more credible bearer of that message: “I’ve been an opponent of this mayor for years, and I ran against him because I wanted to bring attention to the plight that my community was experiencing under his mismanagement.” She describes Mr. Rose’s self-distancing from Mr. de Blasio as “expediency, and not sincere”—a response to a poll “showing that the mayor was very unpopular, so he decided 55 days before the election to run that antimayor commercial.”


Ms. Steel has a similarly withering view of Mr. Rouda, and she laughs as she describes his hypercautious re-election campaign. “I knocked on over 110,000 doors,” she says. “There was not even a single complaint. We knocked with masks on, and people were really happy to see us, glad that someone was talking to them because they’ve been locked down such a long time.” Mr. Rouda “didn’t really come out because of the pandemic. He stayed at home.” He didn’t even go to Washington in July to vote on the relief bill styled the Cares Act; he cast a “yes” vote by proxy. When I ask if that stay-at-home decision hurt Mr. Rouda, Ms. Steel tells me to do the math. “I went to 110,000 homes,” she says. “And I won by 8,000 votes.”


But according to numbers supplied by Ms. Steel’s office, she outperformed Mr. Trump by nearly 3 points in her district, where Mr. Biden led Mr. Trump by 1.48%. She says she was helped by the unpopularity of Proposition 16, the Democratic Legislature’s ballot referendum that would have repealed California’s prohibition on racial preferences in public employment, contracting and college admissions. “They lost badly,” she says, “and I was one of those leading against the proposition.” Repeal was especially unpopular among Asian-Americans, but 57% of Californians voted against it. “The Democrats tried to be so divisive. We have to be inclusive.” Ms. Steel also suggests she was helped by her opponent’s presence at a rally to defund the police in Huntington Beach.


Ms. Malliotakis voices indignation over a similar episode in Staten Island. Unlike Orange County, New York City saw numerous riots in the weeks after George Floyd’s killing by Minneapolis police. The city’s residents were disconcerted by images of brazen looting in Midtown Manhattan and other parts of the city that had never seen such breakdowns in public order.


“My opponent,” Ms. Malliotakis fumes, “participated in one of the marches in which they were calling for defunding the police.” A few weeks later, she says, “the mayor listened. He cut a billion dollars” from the New York City Police Department, one-sixth of the NYPD budget. Constituents were “extremely upset” that their congressman was at “one of these rallies.” Mr. Rose, in her telling, “tried to backtrack,” but the rally was “pivotal” in her victory.



“One of the obstacles, just politically,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “was the amount of money that was thrown at us in these races.” Both women were outspent 2 to 1. Ms. Steel says that she had $8.7 million to spend against an opponent with a war-chest of $19 million. “Of that, Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic Party put in $14 million—just against me. The other Republican candidates have to thank me, because she was just attacking me in Southern California!”


Both say the Democratic Party made a special effort to hobble Republican candidates who were women or minorities. “Speaking with some of the other new members of the House,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “I think Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats really, really went after us. They didn’t want the Republicans to have representation.” They wanted, she says, “to monopolize women and minorities.” Ms. Steel recounts that her opponent insinuated—“because I have an accent”—that she was “a communist agent related to China.” Suppressing a giggle, she notes that her parents fled communist North Korea to the south during the Korean War. “I don’t even speak Chinese,” she adds. “I speak Japanese and Korean.”


Ms. Malliotakis’s mother also fled communism—Cuba in 1959, when she was 16. After a brief spell in Spain, she came to the U.S., where she met and married a man who ran a Greek restaurant in Manhattan. This imprint of her mother’s flight is part of the reason she is a “passionate opponent” of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a fellow outer-borough New Yorker and self-described socialist. In opposition to “the Squad”—the nom de guerre of Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s far-left cohort—Ms. Malliotakis started her own small group of congressional freshmen, the “Freedom Force.”


‘There’s four of us,” she says, “who on the first day bonded very quickly because we shared very similar circumstances.” She names the others: Carlos Gimenez, Cuban-born, and Maria Salazar, the daughter of Cuban-refugee parents, both from Florida; and Victoria Spartz from Indiana, born in Ukraine, who came to the U.S. at 22. “I guess you could say,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “that we’re the founding members.” But she’s certain that “others within the freshman class who are supportive of freedoms and liberties” will join them.


Ms. Steel adds promptly that she’s “going to work with them.” The Squad, Ms. Steel says, “including AOC, are totally out of line. I want to conserve what we have in this country for future generations. I have a grandson who is 15 months old.”


Ms. Malliotakis concurs. “For me, socialism is personal. We’re going to fight back vehemently when we see policies being proposed that will fundamentally change our nation.” She adds that Mrs. Pelosi faces a choice: “Is she going to work with us in a bipartisan way, to accomplish things? Or will she empower the socialist Squad and kowtow to them?”
 
The Squad Meets the Freedom Fries, Err, Force :roll:
PSA: I seem to be able get around the WSJ paywall with Bypass Paywalls installed on Firefox. For now, at least. And I'm close to a computer illiterate, so it ain't hard to do. Sorry for janky formatting, but I'm too lazy to fix it.


‘The Squad’ Faces a ‘Freedom Force’ (probably paywalled WSJ)
Trump lost badly in New York and California, but Republican candidates picked up House seats in both states. Here’s how two of them did

A quarter-century apart in age, Nicole Malliotakis and Michelle Steel are classmates. They’re both freshmen, Republicans who’ve won election to the House of Representatives for the first time. Each ousted an incumbent Democrat in a resolutely blue state—New York and California, respectively—where Joe Biden romped home in November. And each woman has a scathing view of the politics of the other’s state as well as of her own. They’re ready to scorn Govs. Andrew Cuomo and Gavin Newsom. As for Mayor Bill de Blasio, Ms. Malliotakis, a state assemblywoman from New York City, practically combusts at the mention of his name.


“I think our leaderships are competing with each other to be the most radical. They keep getting bad ideas from each other,” says Ms. Malliotakis, 40, who will represent New York’s 11th Congressional District, comprised of the borough of Staten Island and parts of Brooklyn.

“The leadership is trying to make these states into Third World countries,” Ms. Steel, 65, responds. She is a member of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, a local legislative body, and representative-elect from California’s 48th District, a beachy slice of the county. In Washington for a freshman orientation, including a lottery for office space, the two talk to me by Zoom from their hotel rooms near the Capitol.

Both are robust proponents of low taxes and limited government. “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” Ms. Malliotakis says: “The government should provide an environment for that—and then get out of the way.” Ms. Steel—who was born in South Korea and came to the U.S. at 19—confesses to drawing her earliest political beliefs from her mother’s experience as a clothing-store owner in Los Angeles. “I saw that my mom was harassed—really harassed—by a tax agency, the State Board of Equalization,” she says. “And you know what? I decided that the Republican Party’s ideology is much better for small-business owners. They need less regulation and smaller taxes.” Her first foray into elective politics was a successful run for the Board of Equalization in 2007.




Not long into our conversation, however, a difference emerges. Asked what role President Trump played in her race, Ms. Steel says that he was “not really a factor.” Hers was a very local race: “For an 18-month period, it was just Rouda vs. Steel.” (Rep. Harley Rouda won election in 2018, unseating 15-term Republican Dana Rohrabacher.) The voters in her district, she says, “were more concerned about their businesses”—hit hard by the pandemic—and with state and local taxes.


Only when she knocked on the doors of Vietnamese-American families would people mention Mr. Trump. “They always ask, ‘So, are you going to vote for Trump?’ They’re very pro-Trump.” Ms. Steel describes them as a “small, close-knit community who came here for freedom.” Her district is nearly 70% white, and she “didn’t hear much about Trump vs. Biden from the mainstream. They wanted to know, ‘When will our businesses open?’ ‘What about public safety?’ ‘What about crime?’ ” Orange County is traditionally Republican but trending Democratic; Hillary Clinton was the first Democratic presidential candidate to receive a plurality there since 1936, and Joe Biden managed a majority.


By contrast, Ms. Malliotakis is eager to emphasize Mr. Trump’s impact. “The president was helpful,” she says. “It’s a district that he won in 2016, and he won again this time.” Ms. Malliotakis and Mr. Trump did a “tele-town hall” together. “People very much appreciate the work that he has done,” she says, “and he is loved on Staten Island.” Although Mr. Trump won only a little over a third of the vote statewide, he got 61% in Staten Island.


Explaining the president’s appeal to her “hardworking, middle-class” voters, she says: “I represent a community made up largely of civil servants, police officers, firefighters, teachers,” all of whom respect the military and “our law enforcement.” The “straight talking” president, a native of the borough of Queens, appeals to them. “He had roots in Staten Island, in the sense that his father owned apartment buildings there, and he, as a young boy, used to go and collect the rents.”


Local issues also played a part in her win, especially the unpopularity of Mayor de Blasio, against whom she ran unsuccessfully as the 2017 Republican nominee. The incumbent, Rep. Max Rose—who like Mr. Rouda unseated a Republican in 2018—ran a 15-second campaign ad in which he stands on a city street and declares: “Bill de Blasio is the worst mayor in the history of New York City.” He pauses for five seconds before adding: “That’s it, guys. Seriously, that’s the whole ad.”



Ms. Malliotakis says she was a more credible bearer of that message: “I’ve been an opponent of this mayor for years, and I ran against him because I wanted to bring attention to the plight that my community was experiencing under his mismanagement.” She describes Mr. Rose’s self-distancing from Mr. de Blasio as “expediency, and not sincere”—a response to a poll “showing that the mayor was very unpopular, so he decided 55 days before the election to run that antimayor commercial.”


Ms. Steel has a similarly withering view of Mr. Rouda, and she laughs as she describes his hypercautious re-election campaign. “I knocked on over 110,000 doors,” she says. “There was not even a single complaint. We knocked with masks on, and people were really happy to see us, glad that someone was talking to them because they’ve been locked down such a long time.” Mr. Rouda “didn’t really come out because of the pandemic. He stayed at home.” He didn’t even go to Washington in July to vote on the relief bill styled the Cares Act; he cast a “yes” vote by proxy. When I ask if that stay-at-home decision hurt Mr. Rouda, Ms. Steel tells me to do the math. “I went to 110,000 homes,” she says. “And I won by 8,000 votes.”


But according to numbers supplied by Ms. Steel’s office, she outperformed Mr. Trump by nearly 3 points in her district, where Mr. Biden led Mr. Trump by 1.48%. She says she was helped by the unpopularity of Proposition 16, the Democratic Legislature’s ballot referendum that would have repealed California’s prohibition on racial preferences in public employment, contracting and college admissions. “They lost badly,” she says, “and I was one of those leading against the proposition.” Repeal was especially unpopular among Asian-Americans, but 57% of Californians voted against it. “The Democrats tried to be so divisive. We have to be inclusive.” Ms. Steel also suggests she was helped by her opponent’s presence at a rally to defund the police in Huntington Beach.


Ms. Malliotakis voices indignation over a similar episode in Staten Island. Unlike Orange County, New York City saw numerous riots in the weeks after George Floyd’s killing by Minneapolis police. The city’s residents were disconcerted by images of brazen looting in Midtown Manhattan and other parts of the city that had never seen such breakdowns in public order.


“My opponent,” Ms. Malliotakis fumes, “participated in one of the marches in which they were calling for defunding the police.” A few weeks later, she says, “the mayor listened. He cut a billion dollars” from the New York City Police Department, one-sixth of the NYPD budget. Constituents were “extremely upset” that their congressman was at “one of these rallies.” Mr. Rose, in her telling, “tried to backtrack,” but the rally was “pivotal” in her victory.



“One of the obstacles, just politically,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “was the amount of money that was thrown at us in these races.” Both women were outspent 2 to 1. Ms. Steel says that she had $8.7 million to spend against an opponent with a war-chest of $19 million. “Of that, Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic Party put in $14 million—just against me. The other Republican candidates have to thank me, because she was just attacking me in Southern California!”


Both say the Democratic Party made a special effort to hobble Republican candidates who were women or minorities. “Speaking with some of the other new members of the House,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “I think Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats really, really went after us. They didn’t want the Republicans to have representation.” They wanted, she says, “to monopolize women and minorities.” Ms. Steel recounts that her opponent insinuated—“because I have an accent”—that she was “a communist agent related to China.” Suppressing a giggle, she notes that her parents fled communist North Korea to the south during the Korean War. “I don’t even speak Chinese,” she adds. “I speak Japanese and Korean.”


Ms. Malliotakis’s mother also fled communism—Cuba in 1959, when she was 16. After a brief spell in Spain, she came to the U.S., where she met and married a man who ran a Greek restaurant in Manhattan. This imprint of her mother’s flight is part of the reason she is a “passionate opponent” of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a fellow outer-borough New Yorker and self-described socialist. In opposition to “the Squad”—the nom de guerre of Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s far-left cohort—Ms. Malliotakis started her own small group of congressional freshmen, the “Freedom Force.”


‘There’s four of us,” she says, “who on the first day bonded very quickly because we shared very similar circumstances.” She names the others: Carlos Gimenez, Cuban-born, and Maria Salazar, the daughter of Cuban-refugee parents, both from Florida; and Victoria Spartz from Indiana, born in Ukraine, who came to the U.S. at 22. “I guess you could say,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “that we’re the founding members.” But she’s certain that “others within the freshman class who are supportive of freedoms and liberties” will join them.


Ms. Steel adds promptly that she’s “going to work with them.” The Squad, Ms. Steel says, “including AOC, are totally out of line. I want to conserve what we have in this country for future generations. I have a grandson who is 15 months old.”


Ms. Malliotakis concurs. “For me, socialism is personal. We’re going to fight back vehemently when we see policies being proposed that will fundamentally change our nation.” She adds that Mrs. Pelosi faces a choice: “Is she going to work with us in a bipartisan way, to accomplish things? Or will she empower the socialist Squad and kowtow to them?”
With the CA Rep I wonder if this is an anomaly in the face of inevitable demographic change or a sign that the GOP isn't done yet as far as Orange County goes. The blue wave there in 2018 had a lot of Dems gloating that the land of Nixon had irrevocably flipped blue. So I wonder if Steel winning was just a fluke against an opponent that thought he could pull a Biden and spend his campaign in his basement hoping to coast by on Orange Man Bad or if the GOP can still push back.
 
Fuckin' LOL. I guess i'm going to make something with Goya black beans for dinner tonight. Semper Fi, Mr. Unanue:


Goya Foods CEO: AOC Called For Boycott. Our Sales Jumped, So We Named Her Employee Of The Month​

AOC joined calls for boycott after Goya CEO praised Trump
By Hank Berrien
Dec 7, 2020 DailyWire.com

Bob Unanue, president of Goya Foods Inc., speaks at the official ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Goya Foods Inc. corporate headquarters in Jersey City, New Jersey, U.S.
Ron Antonelli/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Goya Foods and president CEO Bob Unanue revealed that after Rep. Alexandria Cortez (D-NY) echoed a call for a boycott of Goya products back in July because Unanue supported President Trump, his company named her “Employee of the Month” because sales rose so dramatically.

Unanue had visited the White House, where he stated, “We’re all truly blessed at the same time to have a leader like President Trump, who is a builder.”

That prompted Julian Castro, former Housing and Urban Development secretary in the Obama administration, to tweet that Goya Foods “has been a staple of so many Latino households for generations. Now their CEO, Bob Unanue, is praising a president who villainizes and maliciously attacks Latinos for political gain. Americans should think twice before buying their products.”

Ocasio-Cortez chimed in, “Oh look, it’s the sound of me Googling ‘how to make your own Adobo.'”

Unanue was interviewed on The Michael Berry Show, where Berry commented:
When you see the radical plans like the Green New Deal, when you hear politicians like AOC spouting these things off, agriculture is a major employer in this country but it’s also a major consumer of energy, as you noted earlier. It’s an intensive process for labor and energy. And they are talking about things that would drive the cost of energy through the roof in some cases making it prohibitive for marginal players. How much does that concern you and how much do you feel the need to step up and say, “Hey, guys, you want me to lay off these thousands of employees because that’s what would have to happen?”
Unanue replied:
You know, communism works until you run out of other people’s money to spend. We’re not going to be able to do that. It’s interesting that AOC was one of the first people to step in line to boycott Goya; go against her own people, as supposedly a Puerto Rican woman, to go against people of her own Latin culture. She’s naïve. To some extent I can understand AOC; she’s young; she’s naïve; she doesn’t get it. But you’ve got someone like (Bernie) Sanders, who’s older than us, older than me, and he still doesn’t get it.
“We still have to chat with AOC; I love her,” Unanue continued. “She was actually our Employee of the Month; I don’t know if you know about this, but when she boycotted us, our sales actually increased 1,000%. So we gave her an honorary — we never were able to hand it to her but she got Employee of the Month for bringing attention to GOYA and our adobo. Actually our sales of adobo did very well after she said ‘Make your own Adobo.’”

Berry wondered, “Was it P.T. Barnum who said, ‘Say what you want just spell my name right. All publicity is good publicity.”

Unanue replied, “She’s our hero. She helped boost sales tremendously.”

Berry asked, “I don’t know, I’m sure you know your demographics better than anyone, but I would be interested to know how many samplers you achieved after that because I suspect a lot of people went to the grocery store and said for the very first time, ‘Can you tell me where I can find a can of Goya?’ and bought a cart full of ’em that had never bought your products and some of that residual stays?”
Unanue answered, “What happened was we reached so many new people at the same time we maintained our base…”
 
With the CA Rep I wonder if this is an anomaly in the face of inevitable demographic change or a sign that the GOP isn't done yet as far as Orange County goes. The blue wave there in 2018 had a lot of Dems gloating that the land of Nixon had irrevocably flipped blue. So I wonder if Steel winning was just a fluke against an opponent that thought he could pull a Biden and spend his campaign in his basement hoping to coast by on Orange Man Bad or if the GOP can still push back.
Trump was not on the ticket in 2018. Also cheating.
 
Trump was not on the ticket in 2018. Also cheating.
Traditionally Democrats don't go to the polls in anywhere near the numbers they do in off years as they do in presidential election years. This metric may no longer apply in places like California where the Democrats seem to have forsaken the working class, but you would typically look for Republican gains in off years in the past whoever was president.
 
Fuckin' LOL. I guess i'm going to make something with Goya black beans for dinner tonight. Semper Fi, Mr. Unanue:


Goya Foods CEO: AOC Called For Boycott. Our Sales Jumped, So We Named Her Employee Of The Month​

AOC joined calls for boycott after Goya CEO praised Trump
By Hank Berrien
Dec 7, 2020 DailyWire.com

Bob Unanue, president of Goya Foods Inc., speaks at the official ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Goya Foods Inc. corporate headquarters in Jersey City, New Jersey, U.S.
Ron Antonelli/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Goya Foods and president CEO Bob Unanue revealed that after Rep. Alexandria Cortez (D-NY) echoed a call for a boycott of Goya products back in July because Unanue supported President Trump, his company named her “Employee of the Month” because sales rose so dramatically.

Unanue had visited the White House, where he stated, “We’re all truly blessed at the same time to have a leader like President Trump, who is a builder.”

That prompted Julian Castro, former Housing and Urban Development secretary in the Obama administration, to tweet that Goya Foods “has been a staple of so many Latino households for generations. Now their CEO, Bob Unanue, is praising a president who villainizes and maliciously attacks Latinos for political gain. Americans should think twice before buying their products.”

Ocasio-Cortez chimed in, “Oh look, it’s the sound of me Googling ‘how to make your own Adobo.'”

Unanue was interviewed on The Michael Berry Show, where Berry commented:

Unanue replied:

“We still have to chat with AOC; I love her,” Unanue continued. “She was actually our Employee of the Month; I don’t know if you know about this, but when she boycotted us, our sales actually increased 1,000%. So we gave her an honorary — we never were able to hand it to her but she got Employee of the Month for bringing attention to GOYA and our adobo. Actually our sales of adobo did very well after she said ‘Make your own Adobo.’”

Berry wondered, “Was it P.T. Barnum who said, ‘Say what you want just spell my name right. All publicity is good publicity.”

Unanue replied, “She’s our hero. She helped boost sales tremendously.”

Berry asked, “I don’t know, I’m sure you know your demographics better than anyone, but I would be interested to know how many samplers you achieved after that because I suspect a lot of people went to the grocery store and said for the very first time, ‘Can you tell me where I can find a can of Goya?’ and bought a cart full of ’em that had never bought your products and some of that residual stays?”
Unanue answered, “What happened was we reached so many new people at the same time we maintained our base…”
It turns out that Goya Foods was the "Based Department", after all.
 
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I like how this woman worked for a single year as a bartender in New York and she acts like she spent a lifetime slaving away in the chup mines. I'm sorry, but what exactly is "physically difficult" about being a bartender? Of all the professions in the world that I would describe as "physically difficult", bartending would not even break my top 100.
As someone who has worked in service jobs for most of my adult life, including waiting tables at events for hundreds of people when I was younger, yeah food service is a shitty job that's emotionally draining, but physically demanding? Not how I would describe it. How the hell does she think most Republicans pay the bills? Does she really believe that 73 million+ people have never worked a service job and have spent their whole lives in cushy jobs trading stocks and giving orders to their poor Democrat underlings? How delusional and wrapped up in her bubble is she?
 
As someone who has worked in service jobs for most of my adult life, including waiting tables at events for hundreds of people when I was younger, yeah food service is a shitty job that's emotionally draining, but physically demanding? Not how I would describe it. How the hell does she think most Republicans pay the bills? Does she really believe that 73 million+ people have never worked a service job and have spent their whole lives in cushy jobs trading stocks and giving orders to their poor Democrat underlings? How delusional and wrapped up in her bubble is she?
I imagine they view most of them as the real welfare queens, living off the largesse of hardworking POCs.
 
I imagine they view most of them as the real welfare queens, living off the largesse of hardworking POCs.
Ah yes, the old, phony "red state welfare" talking point. AKA-social security and medicare for elderly retirees, and military spending, which are the overwhelming majority of red state spending, not welfare. And of course, state deficits don't even divide along party lines in the way they pretend they do. The 9 states with deficits include blue New York and New Jersey while conservative Alaska produced the largest surplus.
 
The Squad Meets the Freedom Fries, Err, Force :roll:
PSA: I seem to be able get around the WSJ paywall with Bypass Paywalls installed on Firefox. For now, at least. And I'm close to a computer illiterate, so it ain't hard to do. Sorry for janky formatting, but I'm too lazy to fix it.


‘The Squad’ Faces a ‘Freedom Force’ (probably paywalled WSJ)
Trump lost badly in New York and California, but Republican candidates picked up House seats in both states. Here’s how two of them did

A quarter-century apart in age, Nicole Malliotakis and Michelle Steel are classmates. They’re both freshmen, Republicans who’ve won election to the House of Representatives for the first time. Each ousted an incumbent Democrat in a resolutely blue state—New York and California, respectively—where Joe Biden romped home in November. And each woman has a scathing view of the politics of the other’s state as well as of her own. They’re ready to scorn Govs. Andrew Cuomo and Gavin Newsom. As for Mayor Bill de Blasio, Ms. Malliotakis, a state assemblywoman from New York City, practically combusts at the mention of his name.


“I think our leaderships are competing with each other to be the most radical. They keep getting bad ideas from each other,” says Ms. Malliotakis, 40, who will represent New York’s 11th Congressional District, comprised of the borough of Staten Island and parts of Brooklyn.

“The leadership is trying to make these states into Third World countries,” Ms. Steel, 65, responds. She is a member of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, a local legislative body, and representative-elect from California’s 48th District, a beachy slice of the county. In Washington for a freshman orientation, including a lottery for office space, the two talk to me by Zoom from their hotel rooms near the Capitol.

Both are robust proponents of low taxes and limited government. “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” Ms. Malliotakis says: “The government should provide an environment for that—and then get out of the way.” Ms. Steel—who was born in South Korea and came to the U.S. at 19—confesses to drawing her earliest political beliefs from her mother’s experience as a clothing-store owner in Los Angeles. “I saw that my mom was harassed—really harassed—by a tax agency, the State Board of Equalization,” she says. “And you know what? I decided that the Republican Party’s ideology is much better for small-business owners. They need less regulation and smaller taxes.” Her first foray into elective politics was a successful run for the Board of Equalization in 2007.




Not long into our conversation, however, a difference emerges. Asked what role President Trump played in her race, Ms. Steel says that he was “not really a factor.” Hers was a very local race: “For an 18-month period, it was just Rouda vs. Steel.” (Rep. Harley Rouda won election in 2018, unseating 15-term Republican Dana Rohrabacher.) The voters in her district, she says, “were more concerned about their businesses”—hit hard by the pandemic—and with state and local taxes.


Only when she knocked on the doors of Vietnamese-American families would people mention Mr. Trump. “They always ask, ‘So, are you going to vote for Trump?’ They’re very pro-Trump.” Ms. Steel describes them as a “small, close-knit community who came here for freedom.” Her district is nearly 70% white, and she “didn’t hear much about Trump vs. Biden from the mainstream. They wanted to know, ‘When will our businesses open?’ ‘What about public safety?’ ‘What about crime?’ ” Orange County is traditionally Republican but trending Democratic; Hillary Clinton was the first Democratic presidential candidate to receive a plurality there since 1936, and Joe Biden managed a majority.


By contrast, Ms. Malliotakis is eager to emphasize Mr. Trump’s impact. “The president was helpful,” she says. “It’s a district that he won in 2016, and he won again this time.” Ms. Malliotakis and Mr. Trump did a “tele-town hall” together. “People very much appreciate the work that he has done,” she says, “and he is loved on Staten Island.” Although Mr. Trump won only a little over a third of the vote statewide, he got 61% in Staten Island.


Explaining the president’s appeal to her “hardworking, middle-class” voters, she says: “I represent a community made up largely of civil servants, police officers, firefighters, teachers,” all of whom respect the military and “our law enforcement.” The “straight talking” president, a native of the borough of Queens, appeals to them. “He had roots in Staten Island, in the sense that his father owned apartment buildings there, and he, as a young boy, used to go and collect the rents.”


Local issues also played a part in her win, especially the unpopularity of Mayor de Blasio, against whom she ran unsuccessfully as the 2017 Republican nominee. The incumbent, Rep. Max Rose—who like Mr. Rouda unseated a Republican in 2018—ran a 15-second campaign ad in which he stands on a city street and declares: “Bill de Blasio is the worst mayor in the history of New York City.” He pauses for five seconds before adding: “That’s it, guys. Seriously, that’s the whole ad.”



Ms. Malliotakis says she was a more credible bearer of that message: “I’ve been an opponent of this mayor for years, and I ran against him because I wanted to bring attention to the plight that my community was experiencing under his mismanagement.” She describes Mr. Rose’s self-distancing from Mr. de Blasio as “expediency, and not sincere”—a response to a poll “showing that the mayor was very unpopular, so he decided 55 days before the election to run that antimayor commercial.”


Ms. Steel has a similarly withering view of Mr. Rouda, and she laughs as she describes his hypercautious re-election campaign. “I knocked on over 110,000 doors,” she says. “There was not even a single complaint. We knocked with masks on, and people were really happy to see us, glad that someone was talking to them because they’ve been locked down such a long time.” Mr. Rouda “didn’t really come out because of the pandemic. He stayed at home.” He didn’t even go to Washington in July to vote on the relief bill styled the Cares Act; he cast a “yes” vote by proxy. When I ask if that stay-at-home decision hurt Mr. Rouda, Ms. Steel tells me to do the math. “I went to 110,000 homes,” she says. “And I won by 8,000 votes.”


But according to numbers supplied by Ms. Steel’s office, she outperformed Mr. Trump by nearly 3 points in her district, where Mr. Biden led Mr. Trump by 1.48%. She says she was helped by the unpopularity of Proposition 16, the Democratic Legislature’s ballot referendum that would have repealed California’s prohibition on racial preferences in public employment, contracting and college admissions. “They lost badly,” she says, “and I was one of those leading against the proposition.” Repeal was especially unpopular among Asian-Americans, but 57% of Californians voted against it. “The Democrats tried to be so divisive. We have to be inclusive.” Ms. Steel also suggests she was helped by her opponent’s presence at a rally to defund the police in Huntington Beach.


Ms. Malliotakis voices indignation over a similar episode in Staten Island. Unlike Orange County, New York City saw numerous riots in the weeks after George Floyd’s killing by Minneapolis police. The city’s residents were disconcerted by images of brazen looting in Midtown Manhattan and other parts of the city that had never seen such breakdowns in public order.


“My opponent,” Ms. Malliotakis fumes, “participated in one of the marches in which they were calling for defunding the police.” A few weeks later, she says, “the mayor listened. He cut a billion dollars” from the New York City Police Department, one-sixth of the NYPD budget. Constituents were “extremely upset” that their congressman was at “one of these rallies.” Mr. Rose, in her telling, “tried to backtrack,” but the rally was “pivotal” in her victory.



“One of the obstacles, just politically,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “was the amount of money that was thrown at us in these races.” Both women were outspent 2 to 1. Ms. Steel says that she had $8.7 million to spend against an opponent with a war-chest of $19 million. “Of that, Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic Party put in $14 million—just against me. The other Republican candidates have to thank me, because she was just attacking me in Southern California!”


Both say the Democratic Party made a special effort to hobble Republican candidates who were women or minorities. “Speaking with some of the other new members of the House,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “I think Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats really, really went after us. They didn’t want the Republicans to have representation.” They wanted, she says, “to monopolize women and minorities.” Ms. Steel recounts that her opponent insinuated—“because I have an accent”—that she was “a communist agent related to China.” Suppressing a giggle, she notes that her parents fled communist North Korea to the south during the Korean War. “I don’t even speak Chinese,” she adds. “I speak Japanese and Korean.”


Ms. Malliotakis’s mother also fled communism—Cuba in 1959, when she was 16. After a brief spell in Spain, she came to the U.S., where she met and married a man who ran a Greek restaurant in Manhattan. This imprint of her mother’s flight is part of the reason she is a “passionate opponent” of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a fellow outer-borough New Yorker and self-described socialist. In opposition to “the Squad”—the nom de guerre of Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s far-left cohort—Ms. Malliotakis started her own small group of congressional freshmen, the “Freedom Force.”


‘There’s four of us,” she says, “who on the first day bonded very quickly because we shared very similar circumstances.” She names the others: Carlos Gimenez, Cuban-born, and Maria Salazar, the daughter of Cuban-refugee parents, both from Florida; and Victoria Spartz from Indiana, born in Ukraine, who came to the U.S. at 22. “I guess you could say,” Ms. Malliotakis says, “that we’re the founding members.” But she’s certain that “others within the freshman class who are supportive of freedoms and liberties” will join them.


Ms. Steel adds promptly that she’s “going to work with them.” The Squad, Ms. Steel says, “including AOC, are totally out of line. I want to conserve what we have in this country for future generations. I have a grandson who is 15 months old.”


Ms. Malliotakis concurs. “For me, socialism is personal. We’re going to fight back vehemently when we see policies being proposed that will fundamentally change our nation.” She adds that Mrs. Pelosi faces a choice: “Is she going to work with us in a bipartisan way, to accomplish things? Or will she empower the socialist Squad and kowtow to them?”
Guess what libtards, the GOP can have affirmative action mediocrities too! Libtards status: Owned.

All these chicks have to them is idpol, red-baiting, and empty cuckservative platitudes. If Republicans really were the nationalist populists they now claim to be and ruled in a populist way, they’d easily BTFO the Squad without having to astroturf a dime-store version of them. But they aren’t and won’t so there you have it.

BTW I’m sure them all being brown/immigrants/women is a total coincidence and they were selected entirely on the content of their character rather than the color of their skin. Muh identity politics!
 
AOC is ugly and I would not eat her adobo sauce. I probably enjoy my food spicier than the Westchester Wench, after all.
 
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