Michigan

December 7, 2007 - 8:18am

Update: Schiano will stay at Rutgers

On the day Gov. Jon Corzine announced he would lead a campaign to raise $30 million in private donations for renovations at Rutgers University Stadium, football coach Greg Schiano was meeting with the University of Michigan athletic director to discuss the coaching vacancy, according to a Star-Ledger report.  Update: Schiano said today that he will stay at Rutgers.

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March 10, 2008 - 6:39am

Maybe PSE&G will kick in $100k?

Gov. Jon Corzine says he'll help raise money for Florida and Michigan to help them run do-overs of the Democratic presidential primaries -- a move that might help Corzine's preferred candidate, Hillary Clinton, according to a report filed by WNBC-TV's Brian Thompson.  Corzine's pledge of generosity comes as he attempts to sell his own state budget cuts and toll hikes in New Jersey, and raise money for his non-profit toll hike advocacy group and a new football stadium for Rutgers University.

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December 6, 2006 - 5:31pm

For extreme political junkies: how Rumsfeld's support of Frelinghuysen cost him a seat on the House Appropriations Committee

Helped by Lyndon Johnson's landslide victory over Barry Goldwater in the 1964 election, Democrats picked up 36 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, giving them more than two-thirds of the House seats. After that election, a group of moderates challenged challenged conservatives for the top two House Republican leadership posts. Minority Leader Charles Halleck, 64, a sixteen-term Indiana conservative, lost to moderate Gerald Ford, a nine-term moderate from Michigan.

Ford then backed a fellow moderate for Minority Whip against the conservative incumbent, Leslie Arends: Peter H.B. Frelinghusyen, a 48-year-old seven-term New Jersey Congressman. Arends, who first went to Congress in 1935, beat Frelinghuysen in a 70-59 vote. Arends then used his clout to deny a seat on the House Appropriations Committee to a fellow Illinois Congressman who had been the chief strategist of the Ford/Frelinghuysen campaign: Donald Rumsfeld, then 32 and about to begin his second term in Congress.

Frelinghuysen, who turns 91 in January, spent ten more years in the House and was the Ranking Minority member of the House International Relations Committee when he retired in 1974. His son, Rodney Frelinghuysen, has represented his old district in Congress since 1995 -- and serves on the House Appropriations Defense Subcommittee.

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BELLEW FOR CONGRESS

Release Date: Aug 14 2006

THIS WEEK’S HEADLINES BRING A STARK REMINDER OF OUR NEED FOR VIGILANCE AND ENFORCEMENT!

On Tuesday, July 29, 11 Egyptian exchange students entered the U.S. at JFK airport in New York en route to Montana State University for a month long program, and disappeared.

On Thursday, August 10, British authorities foiled a terror plot so unimaginably horrific it would have set the entire free world back on its heals for years.

On Friday, August 11, three middle eastern men from the Dallas area were arrested in Caro, Michigan when 1,000 cell phones were found in their van. This comes three days after two men were arrested in Marietta,Ohio with 600 cell phones.

If there is a common thread in all of these incidents it is how vulnerable we still are and how essential it is for the United States not only to remain vigilant but to strengthen our government agencies and expand our efforts to protect American citizens. Michael Chertoff, Chief of Homeland Security said this week that he believes the U.S. should give wider authority to our enforcement agencies to thwart future terrorist attacks.

But that is not enough. The war on terror should not limit us to depend on our enforcement agencies to find and remove terrorist and their cells. Our war on terror requires that every domestic agency be involved in the process and be and working together to rid our shores of any and all potential threats. It also means a crackdown on all illegal immigration. It is time that we get tough on anyone crossing our borders without permission and inspection. Securing our borders is primary! Allowing people to come across the borders without permission makes it an easy entry way for terrorists that mean to do us harm.

Therefore, a program needs to be implemented quickly to allow potential workers to apply for and receive temporary visas only after they have been subject to health, background and identity checks. Along with these visas, Homeland Security must implement a plan to track these workers once they enter the United States. All of our cabinet Departments need to be armed with the power to share information between their agencies. Particularly included in this need are the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration, which is an agency within the Department of Homeland Security, the Internal Revenue Service, which is part of the Treasury Department and the Social Security Administration which is part of Health and Human Services. If the sharing of information of immigrant visas were mandatory, it would be difficult for someone to disappear into the system.

The efforts to control our illegal population, however, have clouded problems with the rest of our immigration system that allows students to enter the U.S. and disappear into our communities. Although most of the 11 students have been arrested we cannot afford to take an “all’s well that ends well attitude. Again, we were dependent on our law enforcement to clean up what should never have occurred in the first place.

We need stricter immigration controls on all non-immigrant visas, more surveillance from our law enforcement agencies and greater sharing of information between agencies. It is not enough to catch terrorist and their cells before they put their ghastly plans into place. We must make it so difficult for them to operate within our borders that they will be discouraged from trying.

Leigh-Ann Bellew is the Republican Candidate for Congress from New Jersey’s 6th District
CONTACT: Mike Lencsak Phone: 732-670-9839 info@bellewforcongress.com

July 21, 2006 - 12:33pm

Michigan Congressman says NJ GOP pollster playing both sides

The pollster for the New Jersey Assembly Republicans is now in the middle of a major controversy in Michigan, where an incumbent Congressman has filed a complaint alleging that his challenger in the GOP primary has coordinated expenditures with the conservative Club for Growth by having Adam Geller poll for both the campaign and the 527 organization. Geller works for Tim Walberg, a conservative who is challenging freshman Joe Schwarz for the Republican nomination in the August 7 primary.

The Club for Growth typically backs conservative candidates against more moderate incumbents in Republican primaries. They backed Scott Garrett against Marge Roukema in 2000. Geller conducted the CFG poll in the Rhode Island Senate race, where incumbent Lincoln Chafee faces tough primary and general election battles.

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Steve Kush

Release Date: Sep 30 2005

CONSULTANT TAKES FIGHT TO THE AIR WAVES
A cease and desist order and website weren't enough, Kush left with no choice but to tell all about Lipski.

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