Posts Tagged ‘Blue Hampshire’

STATE SEN. DEB REYNOLDS = CONSTITUTIONALLY CLUELESS

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Deb Reynolds, Socialist oops I mean Democrat State Senator from Plymouth, likens Obamacare to the 1792 Militia Act:

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Somebody needs to tell Deb, and her sycophantic supporters at BlueHampshire, that it is dangerous to rely on Daily Kos as constitutional authority.

The 1792 Militia Act was not an exercise of Congress’ commerce clause power; it was an exercise of its expressly enumerated power “[t]0  provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress”.

HAS THE HARD LEFT GIVEN UP ON JEFF GOLEY?

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

The special election for State Senate District is less than two weeks away.  But one would never know that from visiting the Blue Hampshire website. 

Not only is the front page devoid of any of the usual vitriol against conservative Republicans like David Boutin (note that Ovide is currently getting a pass from Blue Hampshire, because he is the Republican candidate most likely to lose to Paul Hodes), there is not even a mention of Jeff Goley! 

Are the rats –er, I mean hamsters– abandoning that sinking ship that is the Jeff Goley for State Senate campaign?  Looks that way.  Maybe young Jeffrey pissed them off when he flip-flopped on the LLC tax?

SOME GOOD ADVICE FOR THE NH GOP

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

elephants.fightingCheck out this op-ed in today’s WSJ.  It is particularly applicable to the NH GOP.  Liberal GOP’ers like Fergus Cullen shouldn’t be demanding or expecting that GOP’ers to his right, which appears to be just about everyone, will support Democrats-in-drag like Liz Hager.  By the same token, those on the more conservative side of the spectrum shouldn’t be branding anyone who doesn’t agree with them on every issue a RINO.  This is Blue Hampshire, whether conservatives want to admit it or not.  Let’s work to change that, but let’s not be political irrelevancies in the meantime.

BETTER LATE THAN NEVER, I GUESS

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

ovide.lamontagneThere is this website called “Red Hampshire,” which is a shameless takeoff on a website known as ”Blue Hampshire,” which apparently is where the far-left in NH (which is a lot of the left in NH) go to blog.  I only look at Red Hampshire to see what Rep. Steve Vaillancourt has posted there, because I value his insight.

In checking today, I noticed a post about Ovide Lamontagne’s birthday party on September 24, which apparently was a stalking-horse for his testing the waters to run for Judd Gregg’s U.S. Senate seat.  In reviewing the post, I noticed another post regarding Ovide and Sonia Sotomayor, which is apparently just a cut-and-paste of an Ovide press-release.  Here it is:

LAMONTAGNE STATEMENT ON NOMINATION OF JUDGE SOTOMAYOR TO THE SUPREME COURT

Press Release

August 06, 2009

(MANCHESTER) – Ovide Lamontagne, potential candidate for U.S. Senate in New Hampshire, made the following statement today regarding the confirmation of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Providing “advice and consent” on a nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court is among the most important duties facing a Senator. Supreme Court Justices are appointed for life, and they have extraordinary power. Our government is based on the principle of three separate and independent branches of government which serve as checks upon one another. Our Constitution demands this independence, and Americans expect and deserve this independence. I strongly believe that the Constitution requires that the use of that judicial power must be restrained. Put simply, judges apply and interpret the laws duly enacted by our elected representatives; judges must not make the law.

Judge Sotomayor has a truly remarkable life story which every American can admire. The child of Puerto Rican parents who spoke no English upon arriving in New York, she taught herself English and became an outstanding student at both Princeton University and Yale Law School. Professionally she has continued to succeed and accomplish a great deal, first as a prosecutor and most recently, as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals. There is no doubt that Judge Sotomayor possesses the experience and qualifications to be considered as a Supreme Court nominee. However, her record as a judge has clearly demonstrated that she does not exercise her judicial power with restraint. Instead, Judge Sotomayor’s rulings – several of which have been overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court – reflect her philosophy of judicial activism. I fear that, having been confirmed, she could become one of the Court’s leading judicial activists. In addition to her track record, Judge Sotomayor’s statements provide additional concerns. In 2005, Judge Sotomayor told an audience at Duke Law School that “The court of appeals is where policy is made.” That statement embodies precisely a philosophy of judicial activism. It is particularly remarkable that she made this statement while serving as a federal appellate judge. Other statements from Judge Sotomayor also raise questions about her ability to be truly impartial, an essential quality in any judge. A Supreme Court Justice must decide cases on the facts as presented, not how they may be viewed through the prism of a life experience, no matter how extraordinary. As Chief Justice Roberts has said, the proper role of a judge is to interpret the law and act as a referee. The role of a judge is not to legislate from the bench or make policy. I could not vote in favor of a nominee who does not meet the basic tests of a judicial philosophy grounded in restraint, strict construction of the Constitution and a commitment to impartiality under the law. Because Judge Sotomayor, despite her professional accomplishments and uniquely American life story, does not meet those tests, I would have voted against her confirmation.

I certainly am glad to see Ovide is against activist judges like Sonia Sotomayor, but what about judicial activism here at home, such as the New Hampshire Supreme Court’s Claremont/Londonderry decisions and its judicial takeover of redistricting?  It sure would have been nice to have seen some press releases by Ovide criticizing those exercises of judicial activism.  But, I suppose, better late than never.