01/30/2023
83.8% of 204 countries covered in the world don't have in-country postal voting (mail-in ballot). Source: t.ly/s-iw
AZGOP Asian American Coalition is comprised of different Asian American Community leaders who serve
01/30/2023
83.8% of 204 countries covered in the world don't have in-country postal voting (mail-in ballot). Source: t.ly/s-iw
08/17/2022
A must-read: t.ly/bBPr
07/05/2022
Don’t forget to register to vote by today, July 5, 2022, for Aug 2, 2022, Primary Elections.
Visit: https://elections.maricopa.gov/voter-registration/register-to-vote.html.
farhanashifaforchandler.com ,
06/29/2022
"I am confident that she knows what it takes to stand up for families, protect taxpayers, secure the border, and push back against the Biden Administration. I look forward to putting the full weight of my support behind her candidacy." -Matt Salmon
https://twitter.com/MattSalmonAZ/status/1542244461991690240?t=STzwFgzn67M22MTshRSw5A&s=19
Karrin Taylor Robson
05/01/2022
""May is Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month – a celebration of Asians and Pacific Islanders in the United States. A rather broad term, Asian/Pacific encompasses all of the Asian continent and the Pacific islands of Melanesia (New Guinea, New Caledonia, Vanuatu, Fiji and the Solomon Islands), Micronesia (Marianas, Guam, Wake Island, Palau, Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Nauru and the Federated States of Micronesia) and Polynesia (New Zealand, Hawaiian Islands, Rotuma, Midway Islands, Samoa, American Samoa, Tonga, Tuvalu, Cook Islands, French Polynesia and Easter Island).
Like most commemorative months, Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month originated with Congress. In 1977 Reps. Frank Horton of New York introduced House Joint Resolution 540 to proclaim the first ten days in May as Pacific/Asian American Heritage Week. In the same year, Senator Daniel Inouye introduced a similar resolution, Senate Joint Resolution 72. Neither of these resolutions passed, so in June 1978, Rep. Horton introduced House Joint Resolution 1007. This resolution proposed that the President should “proclaim a week, which is to include the seventh and tenth of the month, during the first ten days in May of 1979 as ‘Asian/Pacific American Heritage Week.’” This joint resolution was passed by the House and then the Senate and was signed by President Jimmy Carter on October 5, 1978 to become Public Law 95-419 (PDF, 158kb). This law amended the original language of the bill and directed the President to issue a proclamation for the “7 day period beginning on May 4, 1979 as ‘Asian/Pacific American Heritage Week.’” During the next decade, presidents passed annual proclamations for Asian/Pacific American Heritage Week until 1990 when Congress passed Public Law 101-283 (PDF, 166kb) which expanded the observance to a month for 1990. Then in 1992, Congress passed Public Law 102-450 (PDF, 285kb) which annually designated May as Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month.
The month of May was chosen to commemorate the immigration of the first Japanese to the United States on May 7, 1843, and to mark the anniversary of the completion of the transcontinental railroad on May 10, 1869. The majority of the workers who laid the tracks were Chinese immigrants." " - https://asianpacificheritage.gov/about/
04/07/2022
A similar procedure for other cities and counties.
Get ready to vote in Chandler elections Residents of Chandler are encouraged to get out and exercise their right to vote. Review key information and details about voting in Chandler elections, incl...
03/15/2022
Democrat party "keeps hiring political consultants for U.S. House races who know little to nothing about Latino voters":
"They run the same [expletive] game plan every two years."
Democrats talk about diversity. But by pleasing white progressives, they push out moderate Hispanic candidates.
Democrats target Latinos by talking about immigration. But polls show immigration ranks 5th or 6th among the issues most important to these voters. The economy is usually the top concern.
"As Democrats start to focus more on white, cultural, progressive cultural issues, they're losing the fastest segment of the non-college-educated population, and that's Latinos."
Axios: Democrats to lose more ground among Hispanic voters, operatives warn.
t.ly/kpNR
Operatives see Democrats losing more ground among Hispanic voters Democrats had hoped it might be a phenomenon specific to the Trump era. But new polling shows it accelerating.
03/04/2022
"Despite all the happy talk on the left about the benefits of diversity, America’s real strength has been its ability to transcend problems that have crippled other multiethnic, multireligious and multilingual societies. We’re at our best when the focus is on what unites us as Americans. And what seems to be uniting a growing number of Americans today is opposition to a Democratic equity agenda that effectively plays racial and ethnic groups against one another."
Opinion | Asian-Americans Fight Back Against School Discrimination From Harvard to a Virginia high school, courts take up racial preferences’ harm to this minority population.