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Showing posts with label Montgomery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Montgomery. Show all posts

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Kielsky takes on Montgomery

In the race for Maricopa County attorney, a heavily favored Republican incumbent is being challenged by a Libertarian who has run twice before for the office.

County Attorney Bill Montgomery, who took office after winning a special election in 2010, is facing Libertarian opponent Michael Kielsky. The Democratic Party did not slate a candidate in the race.

One of the sharpest contrasts between Montgomery and Kielsky is views on enforcing laws. Montgomery presents himself as a law-and-order stalwart who, in his career as a prosecutor, has pursued tough sentences. Kielsky's main campaign promise is that he will not prosecute victimless crimes such as marijuana possession and prostitution, using the slogan, "No victim, no crime, no time, no fine!"

Montgomery, 45, has done no television campaigning and bought no print ads. He and Kielsky will participate in a lunch forum tentatively set for Monday at the Phoenix School of Law.

Kielsky, 48, says, "It will be my most successful run yet" because the voters of Maricopa County will express their dissatisfaction with Montgomery's first two years as county attorney.

The last general election for Maricopa County attorney, in 2008, was a horse race in which then-incumbent Andrew Thomas edged out Democrat Tim Nelson.

But less than two years later, the Maricopa County Attorney's Office was thrown into turmoil because of Thomas' skirmishes with judges and county officials. Thomas resigned to run for Arizona attorney general.

Former County Attorney Rick Romley battled against Montgomery to replace Thomas, but Montgomery, the party's preferred candidate in the Republican primary, won and then rolled over Kielsky in the November 2010 special election.

Montgomery's tenure has been relatively uneventful compared with Thomas'; he has presented himself as a conservative lawman in contrast to Thomas' anti-corruption crusader. Montgomery has gotten criticism from political pundits for not pressing criminal charges against politicians who allegedly took favors from the Fiesta Bowl or against Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne for possible campaign-finance violations. Horne defeated Thomas in the 2010 GOP primary for attorney general.

Montgomery said that there was insufficient evidence to warrant criminal charges and that seeking indictments "opens me up to criticism that there was a political reason to get an indictment."

Tempe-based polling expert Michael O'Neil said he thinks a Democratic opponent could have capitalized to some degree on the lack of prosecutions.

"You could say he's protecting his cronies and build a campaign on that," O'Neil said. But "nobody is willing to step up for a race that they would definitely lose."

Montgomery moved to improve relations with county managers and the county Board of Supervisors, and his press conferences often focus on community activities such as shred-a-thons to combat ID theft or anti-drug programs.

On broader political issues, Montgomery has hewed to Republican Party positions, such as supporting Senate Bill 1070, the embattled Arizona immigration law. In addition, he will defend the state's ban on abortions beyond 20 weeks of pregnancy before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals next month.

He has been outspoken against Proposition 121, which would create an open primary system instead of separate primaries for each political party. He also has opposed the successful citizens' initiative that allows for legal medical use of marijuana. Kielsky supports decriminalization of marijuana.

Kielsky, a former head of the Arizona Libertarian Party, ran for a seat on the board of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District in 1992. He then ran for justice of the peace in 2002, Congress in 2004 and county attorney in 2008 and 2010.

As in his past campaigns, Kielsky, who has been an attorney since 2006, does not take stands on major political issues, instead focusing on not wasting resources by prosecuting victimless crimes, saying this will save money, lower the prison population and provide greater freedom and justice. He said he would not devote resources to prosecuting minor drug-possession charges, prostitution or immigration offenses.

"The job of the county attorney is to help protect individual rights by prosecuting those who harm other people," he said. "Bill Montgomery, like his predecessor, is spending a lot of resources on prosecuting people who aren't hurting anyone."

"How about if we just focus on the core issues of that office?" he said.

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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Republicans bringing party leaders to state - Montgomery Advertiser

Several prominent Republicans will visit Alabama in coming weeks to help raise the party?s profile and help raise money for coming elections. And the chairman of the Alabama Republican Party hopes to use some of the funds raised at events to help win seats at the county level.

The Republicans who will be visiting Alabama include Florida Gov. Rick Scott, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, U.S. Rep. Allen West, and Ari Fleischer, former press secretary for President George W. Bush.

Bill Armistead, chairman of the Alabama Republican Party, said when he became chairman he committed to bring rising stars in the party to different parts of the state.

Scott, who was elected in 2010, and Gov. Robert Bentley will be at the Grand in Dothan at 5:30 p.m. Monday.

Jindal, who took office in 2008 and who also served in Congress, will be in Mobile on May 10. He will attend events at the USS Alabama Battleship Memorial Park. Jindal is often discussed as a rising star in the party.

Fleischer, who was the face of the Bush administration from 2001 to 2003 when he served as press secretary and who is now a CNN contributor, will be in Birmingham for a reception May 21.

West, who was elected in 2010 to represent south Florida in Congress and who retired as a colonel from the U.S. Army, is the keynote speaker for the state party?s annual summer dinner on June 22 at the Renaissance Montgomery Hotel & Spa at the Convention Center. There will be a reception at 6 p.m. and a dinner at 7 p.m. General admission is $150.

West, even though he is in his first term, is no stranger to controversy.

Mark Kennedy, chairman of the Alabama Democratic Party, criticized West and Alabama Republicans for bringing him to the state. In a post on the Alabama Democratic Party?s website, Kennedy criticized West for his recent comments that he knew 81 members of Congress who are communists.

?Like his Republican brethren, Rep. West continually uses the politics of fear and rage to forward his own radical agenda,? Kennedy wrote.

He also wrote that ?Rep. West?s comments are an outrageous, but all too common, attempt by the Republican Party to pit a nation against itself.?

Primarily, Armistead said, the money raised at the events will be used for upcoming elections. He said some of the events are not fundraisers.

Armistead said they are also working to try to get former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, the presumed Republican nominee for president, back to the state.

With a plan that includes ?candidate school? and with the money raised at events and from donors, Armistead said they are targeting county races. He said, across the state, probate judges and circuit clerks are on the ballot this year. The chairman said the party is running a full slate of candidates, even in some areas that are still controlled by Democrats.

?We?re going to take this down to the street level,? Armistead said.

Armistead said about two-thirds of county courthouses are still controlled by Democrats, which he said is not acceptable. He hopes, in November, to pick up about 20 more courthouses.

That, Armistead said, is a ?pretty challenging goal,? but he believes it is manageable.

He said the party has recruited candidates over the last year and some of them have never run for office, but are respected in their communities. He said 750 Republicans qualified to run for office in the state this year.

?We?re going to have a real good year of celebrating our Republican victories,? he said.

People can call 205-212-5900 for more information about the events.


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