The Autumn Essential: Sweaters

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With Fall knocking on the front door, could that cause trouble for the fashionable individuals here in Nashville? During this season we will give insights on the do’s and don’ts of Fall 2019 fashions and also adjusting your wardrobe to the unpredictable Nashville weather. 

So far we are getting off to an unusual warm start this fall here in Nashville; however the evening temperatures can still drop and make it very cool to be outside.

That is why our fashion-goers continue to be prepared for the rest of the season to come. With the weather being so unpredictable, there is one necessary essentials that you have to have on stand by: 

Your favorite sweater

Even if the day starts really warm, it is the perfect item to keep enjoying yourself. Sweaters are a must as we come into cooler weather especially being that you can dress a sweater up or you can dress it down, it is your choice!

New Daiquiri Bar Coming Soon to North Nashville

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Nashville, TN – Known as a popular food truck often seen riding around the city, Willie B’s recently announced it will be opening its first brick and mortar restaurant.

Photo by: J'Len Bester
Photo by: J’Len Bester

Willie B’s is a new black owned establishment coming to Buchanan St. The restaurant will specialize in food, drinks, and even fun games. Willie B’s is combining flavors from Nashville, New Orleans, and Memphis.

Owner Christopher Jones developed a love for cooking when he was just a child. In 2016, Jones opened up a food truck that specialized in catering to different events throughout Nashville. Jones believes what makes his food unique is the heavy Creole influence and combination of flavors. Willie B’s will be the only daiquiri bar in the city.

Jones is excited about being so close to other thriving black businesses like cocktail lounge Minerva Avenue and Pizzeria Slim and Husky’s. “The fact that we are all young black thriving entrepreneurs, I think it’s a blessing” he said.

Willie B’s grand opening is set for the end of this year, Mr. Jones however, said it could be sooner.

 

Focus on the 615 Entrepreneurs

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Welcome to Nashville, TN where there are a growing population with a wide range of different people. With this growth there are a lot of new businesses flourishing and giving the city of Nashville more to get out and enjoy. Everyday there is a person that has an idea that they either are in love with or they think would be helpful for their targeted audience.

We simply call those people entrepreneurs.

The real definition of entrepreneurs is a person who organizes and operates a business or businesses, taking on greater than normal financial risks in order to do so. I think entrepreneurs are more important than people think. They are people that supply anyone of any age group different services, products, or activities that people need and want.

With articles to come I will give you different businesses in the city of Nashville that you can support and enjoy. For people that may have just moved here or the Nashville Natives that may be looking for something new/different to try out.

Mostly I will shine light on those slept on or smaller African American business owners. Some that have the potential of being bigger and greater and some newer businesses. There will be different types of businesses that will be included so I hope you enjoy and that I’m able to help in some way.

Tranesha Lee is an entrepreneur and a student at Tennessee State University.  

John Cooper Sworn in as 9th Mayor of Metro Nashville

Nashville, TENN – John Cooper was sworn in as the 9th Mayor of Metro Nashville at 10:00 A.M. Saturday morning at Stratford STEM Magnet High School.

The new mayor was joined on stage by Vice Mayor Jim Schulman, Metro Councilmember Brenda Haywood, and other members of the Metro Council.

Cooper defeated incumbent Mayor David Briley in a runoff election earlier this month. Briley, who was in attendance for Cooper’s inauguration, was thanked for his service by Vice Mayor Shulman and received a standing ovation from the crowd.

Mayor Cooper’s remarks are available below:

“Thank you to everyone for coming to Stratford High School this morning. This is special place. Fifty-six years ago — less than a week after Dr. Martin Luther King delivered his “I have a Dream” speech — my campaign co-chair — and my friend — Brenda Haywood — walked through these doors and integrated Stratford High. Today, Brenda joins me in my administration as deputy mayor for community engagement.

Brenda, can you please stand? I am so honored by your trust and your support.

Thank you.

Today we gather together to celebrate a very special moment — the commissioning of a new government for our city. A co-missioning — a coming together. This is a celebration of collective action to make our community stronger. Today, we begin the work of making Nashville a city that works for everyone. Of ensuring that Nashville is a livable, nourishing city. Of making our city better. And we will do it together.

That’s another reason we are here at Stratford STEM Magnet School. This is a school where TSU, Vanderbilt, and Nissan have come together to support the work being done here. This past year, 11 students from Stratford got full scholarships to Belmont University as part of Belmont’s Bridges to Belmont program. That’s a wonderful accomplishment. But Stratford — like many of our schools — also faces challenges. It started the year without a chemistry or Spanish teacher. We are struggling to recruit and retain teachers. Teachers struggle to lead middle-class lives. That has to change. We have to do better.

Supporting our schools — and making sure that teaching is a valued profession — must be our common purpose.

I want to acknowledge my partners on the new Metro Council. There’s no steadier or kinder hand than Vice-Mayor Jim Shulman, and I am grateful for his friendship. I am delighted to see my friend Bob Mendes take my old chair. Burkley and Steve — Sharon — I look forward to continuing to work closely with each of you in this new role. There are 19 new members on this council, including our host today, Emily Benedict.

They include new at-large council member Zulfat Suara, our first Muslim council member and a certified public accountant — I certainly appreciate that.

Sandra Sepulveda is the first Latina on Council. For the first time, the Council is half women. I’m honored to serve with our LGBTQ members, and we should all take a moment to acknowledge the leadership they are bringing to the council and the historic role of leadership that the minority caucus has had in Nashville. This Metro council — and this city — has become a gorgeous mosaic. Our diversity makes us stronger. Anyone who doubts that has only to look at the veterans here today.

Captain Jerry Neal, who led the pledge of allegiance at the beginning of this program, is now 98. He’s one of the 441 Tennesseans who took part in the invasion of Normandy on D-Day. Corpsman Jack Tyson — who is 86 — was a field medic during the Korean War. Staff Sergeant Kingdon served in special forces parades during the Vietnam War. David Van Klief served for 30 years as a Coast Guard chief warrant officer, including during the first Gulf War. Sergeant Teresa Carter — US Marine Corps — maintained F-18 Hornets. She’s now at MTSU, studying to become a psychiatrist.

Would you please stand up?

The risks you have taken for us — the sacrifices you have made — humbles all of us. Your spirit and presence honors us. You are our inspiration here today. Thank you.

I’d also like to recognize the former mayors who are in the audience today. Bill Purcell, Karl Dean, David Briley — thank you for your service to our city. David, your presence here today — and your graciousness — shows how American democracy is supposed to work.

Today we start the work of building a Nashville that works for everyone.

Today we begin the work of serving our people — of choosing our future — with confidence. What our fellow citizens want from us is VERY clear — a focus on neighborhoods, a Nashville where tourism benefits residents, not the other way around. Cost-effective, fiscally responsible government that is managed for everyone. A transparent, open government committed to high standards.

In many ways, the rebirth of downtown Nashville began with the decision to save the Ryman. I believe that the decision to protect Fort Negley Park will mark a second rebirth of our city. It starts with our neighborhoods and preservation.

Some people seem to think revenues generated downtown should stay downtown. I disagree. The people of Nashville made an investment. Now is the time to spread the benefits of growth — not just the costs — to all our neighborhoods. It is time to invest in Jefferson Street, in Antioch, in Donelson, in Bellevue, in Goodlettsville, and the other neighborhoods that make this a great city.

Downtown has been, of course, the heart of our economy. We must ensure that it circulates the benefits of growth to all our neighborhoods. We need to invest in sidewalks. In protecting and expanding our tree canopy. In becoming a sustainable, resilient city, a city of parks and greenways. Our creeks and our rivers outline what should become one of America’s greatest urban park systems. Atlanta’s BeltLine we can find in our river-line. Together, we can build a beautiful, livable, sustainable city.

In a great city, incomes and wages go up — for everyone — without the costs of growth forcing our neighbors to leave. It’s easy to have an environment where that doesn’t happen — where the benefits of growth don’t go to everyone, where people lose track of wage growth for everyone. That is why we have to invest in our people. Our job is make to make sure that our residents are ready for the great jobs that our city is now attracting.

This is our common purpose.

To the thousands of hard-working Metro employees who serve the public every day, thank you. I value your knowledge and your commitment to public service. In the months and years to come, I will be relying on your professionalism and expertise. You are my most important partners in the task ahead. It is my job to support you. Finding the money to take care of the people who take care of us must be a top priority for all of us.

At the beginning of this speech, I talked about the amazing group of veterans who honor us with their presence here today. Metro also has some very special people. Like our veterans, our first responders go out every day and protect and care for us. Would all first responders please stand up?

Let us all give them a round of applause.

While we are at it, would everyone who is working with our students to secure great futures for them —would you please stand up and give them a round of applause?

Doing right by our workforce begins with getting our finances right. We are facing fiscal challenges. Our sewers and water lines are antiquated. The city’s balance sheet is stretched thin. We have to address these problems in the Council term ahead. Well administered, long-term capital plans will create a great city. That is our challenge to this Council and to me as Mayor.

I’ve been told that I care too much about the numbers. But if we don’t get the money right, we can’t get anything else right. Because in government, to care about finances is to care about people. That is how you make our dreams real.

We face challenges, yes. But, working together, we can meet them. We are the envy of cities in America. We aren’t saddled with aging industries. Health, education, hospitality, entertainment, and logistics — anchor our economy. Our tax base is increasing. We all know people want to move here. We got the growth. And now we have to manage it to make our lives better and not worse. Now is the time to decide — with confidence — how we want to succeed as a city.

We decide how we live and what our city should be. That is the task of this commissioning of me as Mayor and the Council. We are in charge of our future. The decisions we make together will set the course of our city for generations to come.

Thank you for joining me. It is the honor of my life to serve you.”

‘Joker’ spurs security precautions from the US Army and the Los Angeles police

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Marianne Garvey and Barbara Starr, CNN

(CNN) — Both the US Army and the Los Angeles Police Department will be on alert — and one theater chain has banned all costumes — during the screening of “Joker.”

The movie hits theaters next week — and it’s the follow-up to 2012’s “The Dark Knight Rises,” which saw a mass shooting in Colorado during a midnight showing.

The Los Angeles Police Department has announced that officers will have “high visibility” at theaters during premiere screenings of “Joker.”

The US Army, meanwhile, confirmed it had sent out a memo obtained by CNN to commanders in Fort Sill, Oklahoma, about a potential violent threat discovered in discussion on the dark web about the possible targeting of a theater during the movie’s release.

The Fort Sill Criminal Investigation Command office “did so out of an abundance of caution to help keep our soldiers and their families safe,” said Chris Grey, a spokesperson for USA CID.

“At this point, we are not aware of any information indicating a specific, credible threat to a particular location or venue,” he said.

LAPD asks residents to stay vigilant

The dark theme of the $55 million film, about the rise of Batman’s bad clown nemesis, has invoked memories of a mass shooting in which 12 people were killed and 70 injured at a midnight screening of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Aurora, Colorado, in 2012.

The LAPD said in a statement to CNN that it is aware of the public concerns surrounding the premiere of the “Joker.”

“While there are no credible threats in the Los Angeles area, the Department will maintain high visibility around movie theaters when it opens,” the LAPD said. “We encourage everyone to go out and enjoy all of the weekend leisure activities the City has to offer. However, Angelenos should remain vigilant and always be aware of your surroundings. As always, if you see something, say something.”

Landmark bans costume

Meanwhile, Landmark Theatres, which owns 52 theaters in 27 markets, has extended its ban on masks and toy weapons to include all costumes during “Joker’s” theatrical run. The company declined to comment on its operating procedures but the policy mentions the film specifically.

“We want all our guests to enjoy the ‘Joker’ for the cinematic achievement that it is. But no masks, painted faces or costumes will be permitted into our theatres,” the company said in a statement included at the bottom of the page for advance ticket purchases on the website for Landmark.

Warner Bros. asked to take a stance on gun violence

Earlier this week, some family members and friends of loved ones who witnessed or were killed in the Aurora shooting called on Warner Bros., the film’s distributor, to help combat gun violence.

In a letter addressed to Warner Bros. CEO Ann Sarnoff and obtained by CNN, five family members and friends of victims of the theater shooting asked the studio to “use your massive platform and influence to join us in our fight to build safer communities with fewer guns.” (Warner Bros., like CNN, is owned by WarnerMedia.)

“Over the last several weeks, large American employers from Walmart to CVS have announced that they are going to lean into gun safety. We are calling on you to be a part of the growing chorus of corporate leaders who understand that they have a social responsibility to keep us all safe,” the letter states.

The letter asked execs to end political contributions to candidates who take money from the NRA and vote against gun reform, actively lobby for gun reform and make contributions to groups that support survivors and aim to reduce gun violence.

In a statement, Warner Bros. studio acknowledged that gun violence is “a critical issue.”

“Gun violence in our society is a critical issue, and we extend our deepest sympathy to all victims and families impacted by these tragedies,” the statement reads. “Our company has a long history of donating to victims of violence, including Aurora, and in recent weeks, our parent company joined other business leaders to call on policymakers to enact bi-partisan legislation to address this epidemic.”

The statement continued:

“At the same time, Warner Bros. believes that one of the functions of storytelling is to provoke difficult conversations around complex issues. Make no mistake: neither the fictional character Joker, nor the film, is an endorsement of real-world violence of any kind. It is not the intention of the film, the filmmakers or the studio to hold this character up as a hero.”

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Thieves steal 50,000 apples from an Indiana orchard

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By Alaa Elassar, CNN

(CNN) — A few bad apples stole 50,000 good ones from an orchard in LaPorte County, Indiana.

Jon and Robyn Drummond, owners of Williams Orchard, reported to the LaPorte County Sheriff’s Office last Saturday that thieves had stolen the apples from an acre of trees.

“I was floored,” Jon Drummond told CNN. “When someone comes in and commercially steals from you, it’s like, whoa. That’s a little disheartening.”

“Almost every single apple from every single tree was completely wiped out,” he said. “It was cleanly picked. I was like, oh my God, someone came in and stole these apples.”

The Drummonds recently purchased the orchard, which was established in the 1860s, and even hosted a grand reopening on Labor Day weekend.

They estimate the missing apples are worth $27,000.

“Sadly, I don’t have any insurance on it,” said Jon Drummond. “I don’t have theft insurance, and so I wasn’t able to recoup any money. It was purely stolen out of our pockets.”

The theft occurred in a secluded valley at the back of the orchard, he said.

The couple had just invested in building new gates, but had not yet installed locks, so the thieves were able to simply unchain the gates and drive through the orchard, he said.

“It probably was an insider job,” said Jon Drummond. “Someone knew this orchard really well. They knew where to go, the portion of the orchard where they couldn’t be seen.”

He believes the missing apples might be used to make cider, or possibly sold through wholesalers or other distributors.

While Drummond filed a police report with LaPorte County Sheriff’s Office, there have been no leads.

“We’re looking for a pickup truck or some kind of trailer that could pull this large of product,” Capt. Derek Allen of La Porte County Sheriff’s Office told CNN affiliate WSBT.

Despite the loss, Jon Drummond says he’s trying to stay positive.

“We’re going to laugh about it because the only other option is to cry.”

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In Or Out: Cooper Administration Edition

By The Editorial Board

We have a new mayor! With a landslide victory, Cooper is ready to take Nashville in a new direction. He will have to put together a team on all the campaign promises he has made. With the third incoming Nashville Mayor in less than 2 years, now Nashville needs stability and consistency for the future ahead.

With the announcement of Cooper’s transition co-chairs The Nashville Voice is going to give you our take on who we believe will be in the Cooper Administration, and those who are out of City Hall under the new mayor. There are three important positions he has to fill immediately: Chief of Staff, Finance Director, and Legal Director. There are many rumors swirling about key staff appointments, but who will fill those positions? Below is our list of people that could land in a Cooper Administration.

Here is what we think:

Brenda Haywood was named as transition co-chair for Cooper. Haywood is the outgoing council member for District 3, serves as Associate Minister at St. John Missionary Baptist Church and is the founder of Royal Heirs Youth Academy. Now a retired Nashville public school teacher and administrator, she was the first African American student to walk through the doors of Stratford High School in 1963, followed by three others, integrating the school.

She’s In.

Ben Eagles is a public policy expert, and seen as a Metro Nashville expert. The Vanderbilt grad started as a labor organizer for Laborers’ International Union of North America (LIUNA). Next, Eagles ran multiple successful campaigns to get pro-labor union amendments onto municipal ballots. He ran current TNDP Chair Mary Mancini’s unsuccessful primary against current TN Senate Minority Caucus Chair Jeff Yarbro. He also ran John Cooper’s successful 2015 At-Large Council race. After those campaigns, Eagles went to work in the Finance Department at Metro Nashville where he learned the inner workings of Metro Nashville government. He lead the Cooper team to victory for Mayor as campaign manager. He has a podcast called Nashville Sounding Board where he talks to various Nashvillians about topics of public interest.

Absolutely In

jeff obafemi carr was Senior Advisor for Cooper after his success with the No Tax for Tracks campaign. This was a project opposing then-Mayor Megan Barry’s transit plan in the referendum vote. He is a public relations professional, minister, and actor by trade. He has experience with programs working with urban youth and other social programs from the nonprofit world.

Will not work for the Administration

Ashford Hughes is the Chief Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Officer for the City of Nashville. He was appointed by newly elected Mayor Megan Barry to serve in her administration as Senior Advisor to Workforce, Diversity and Inclusion through the Office of Economic and Community Development. He served as the Assistant Business Manager and Political Organizer for the Southeast Laborers’ District Council, an affiliate of LIUNA. Prior to joining the Southeast Laborers’ District Council, Ashford served as the Political Director for the state Tennessee Democratic Party. He served as the liaison between the members of the Democrat House Caucus, Senate Caucus and the State Party. Since 2005, Ashford has worked as a senior political staffer and consultant on numerous candidate, labor, and issue based campaigns in Tennessee. His main focus has been political strategy, African American political outreach, candidate development, organizational and community development. Ashford also served as a leading Executive Board Member for N.O.A.H. (Nashville Organized for Action and Hope).

Definitely Gone

Greg Hinote has decades of a long relationship with the Cooper family, including serving as Congressman Jim Cooper’s Chief of Staff. Most recently Hinote served as former Mayor Karl Dean’s Deputy Mayor. He now works in the private sector as a Consultant.

Won’t join the administration.

Freda Player is Senior Legislative Advisor for the Briley Administration. A Fiskite, she began her professional political career on the Gore Presidential Campaign in Nashville, Tennessee. Worked for the Tennessee Democratic Party and was the Political Director of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 205.

Debatable

Jamari Brown is the director of the current Mayor’s Office of Economic and Community Development, leading business recruitment and expansion in Nashville. Brown has served as director of business development for the Tennessee Department of Economic & Community Development. He has led 70 teams that announced more than 13,000 jobs and $2 billion in investments in Tennessee.

We think he will stay.

Floyd Schechter is a commercial real estate developer who donated the campaign office in Donelson for Cooper. He has previously written op-eds about “old Nashville” and “new Nashville” coexisting, and about affordable housing. He has called for mixed-income, transit-oriented development in the past. He is also on the board of Woodbine Community Organization, which builds mixed-income housing.

Will probably be a close outside advisor.

Marcus Floyd is advisor to Mayor Briley for Public Safety and Justice Policy working on policing issues, community oversight of police and the deployment of body cameras for police officers. Prior to the Briley administration, he served as an Assistant District Attorney. Floyd was a probation officer in Memphis and Nashville and a judicial law clerk for the 21st Judicial District.

OUT!

Brenda Gadd is a leader in the progressive spaces of Nashville and was an advisor to the Cooper Campaign. She hails from East Tennessee and is a well-known political operative in the state. Brenda is a founding member of Emerge Tennessee, a political collaborative that encourages and supports women running for office. She worked on the Bredesen for Senate campaign in 2018 and has over two decades of campaign and lobbying experience. She currently is President of ReThink Public Strategies. She boosts Cooper’s progressive cred by joining his team. Brenda is married to Floyd Schechter, mentioned above.
Will not join the administration.

Hershell Warren is a senior advisor to Mayor Briley focused on community outreach. Serving in a part-time capacity, he worked with the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhoods and Community Engagement to help fulfill their mission of empowering neighborhoods and community groups. He was an incredible resource during the campaign in helping Barry to build relationships within the community. Warren also served as a senior advisor in Mayor Karl Dean’s administration from 2007 to 2013, before which he worked as the director of public policy and governmental affairs for Meharry Medical College from 2004 to 2007, and the Executive Director of the Lloyd C. Elam Mental Health Center prior to the public administration.

He’s Out!

Mark Cate leads Stones River Group. Stones River Group is a Public Affairs firm in Nashville that represents clients at all levels of government. He served as Governor Bill Haslam’s Deputy Governor in his first term. At the Metro level, Cate led John Ingram’s effort in successfully passing legislation to build the MLS soccer stadium. Notably, then At Large Council Member John Cooper voted against the legislation.

Will be a close advisor.

Mary Falls is a trusted Cooper advisor who is leading the transition team with Brenda Haywood. She is a longtime friend of the Cooper family. She served as the campaign’s treasurer. She was previously a lawyer. She serves on boards including: Catholic Charities, Saint Mary Villa, the Visitation Hospital Foundation of Haiti, Dress for Success, Project Reflect Education Programs, and Nashville’s Table. She is currently Chair of the Governance and Nominating Committee for the Alive Hospice Board, and is also board secretary and chair of the Governance and Nominating Committee for St. Thomas Health Services.

She’s In.

Ashley Warrington was brought onto the Cooper campaign team after the general election to streamline the day-to-day operations. Her background is in not only campaign work but also fundraising and lobbying, and is familiar with state and local politicians from both sides of the aisle.

She’s In.

John Lasiter is a friend of John and Laura Cooper dating back to the 2015 Nashville election, in which Lasiter ran for Council At-Large. He previously worked producing theater events in Nashville and as head of PR for PK Pictures, was an HIV/AIDS educator at Nashville CARES, and has an unlimited rolodex of Metro politics-interested people. Along with his partner, Daryl, he is well connected in the LGBT community. Lasiter is well-known and well-loved in the Metro political community.

He’s in.

Katie Lentile was brought on as Press Secretary and Communications Director after having done PR for Cooper’s largest development project, The Heritage at Brentwood (a retirement community), and the movement to save Fort Negley Park. Through these two projects, as well as previously managing Weld, Lentile became a close friend of John and Laura Cooper. She owns and leads the Lentile Group, which is her advertising/marketing firm which maintains a diverse list of clients.

Debatable

Kristin Canavan Wilson is proficient and experienced in business consulting and city planning. Wilson is seen as a leading candidate for a Senior position in Mayor Cooper’s office. After spending time in the private sector in organizational consulting and market planning, she served as Deputy COO of Atlanta from November 2011 to August 2018. She focused on operational efficiencies in her time there, as well as the implementation of citywide strategic initiatives. She has worked in Nashville as Head of Business Analytics at Velocity Risk Underwriters for almost a year. She fits in well with Cooper’s vision to run the city more efficiently. She is married to Whit Wilson, who is President of Cherokee Equity Corporation. He is the son of Justin P. Wilson, Comptroller of the State of Tennessee.

She’s In.

Finally, several prominent community leaders supported John Cooper. Former Clerk, David Smith, and Former Councilman, Frank Harrison are examples of these leaders who strongly supported the Mayor-Elect. There are others like community leaders, Kwame Leo Lillard and Eric Brown, who endorsed Cooper. Will they come into the Cooper Administration? Either way, what does this mean for the Nashville community and most importantly, the African-American community? Only time will tell.

John Cooper’s transition website is available at johncooperfornashville.com/transition and includes information for those interested in working in Cooper’s administration.

Romney: If Trump pressured Ukrainian president ‘it would be troubling in the extreme’

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By Devan Cole, CNN

(CNN) — Republican Sen. Mitt Romney said Sunday that it “would be troubling in the extreme” if President Donald Trump pressured Ukraine’s president to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden amid an ongoing controversy over a call Trump had with the foreign leader that was part of a whistleblower complaint.

In a tweet, Romney, who was his party’s presidential nominee in 2012, also said it was “critical” for the facts surrounding the call to emerge.

“If the President asked or pressured Ukraine’s president to investigate his political rival, either directly or through his personal attorney, it would be troubling in the extreme. Critical for the facts to come out,” Romney, who represents Utah, wrote in the tweet.

The comments from the prominent GOP senator are some of the strongest to come from his party, whose members have largely remained silent following news last week that a whistleblower complaint submitted to the Intelligence Community Inspector General was concerned in part with a July 25 call Trump had with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. On Sunday, after Trump acknowledged that he discussed Biden during the call but maintained that the conversation was “warm and friendly,” congressional Democrats urged an investigation into the matter, with some calling for Trump’s impeachment.

CNN previously reported Trump pressed Zelensky in the call to investigate Biden’s son, Hunter, according to a person familiar with the situation. There is no evidence of wrongdoing by either Joe or Hunter Biden.

Trump previously branded criticism of the call a “Ukranian Witch Hunt,” while Biden accused the President of abusing his power to “smear” him. In comments to reporters on Sunday, the President said he hopes officials release details of the call, but slammed the whistleblower responsible for filing a complaint.

On Sunday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi issued a strong warning to the administration, which has refused to hand over the whistleblower complaint, saying it “will be entering a grave new chapter of lawlessness” if the resistance persists. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, meanwhile, said Sunday that impeachment “may be the only remedy” to Trump’s refusal to make public the complaint and phone call transcript.

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a 2020 presidential candidate, and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, both Democrats, urged Congress to impeach Trump over the matter on Saturday, writing in tweets that their colleagues had an obligation to do so.

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526 people were asked to talk politics. The response tested American democracy

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By Kyung Lah and Kim Berryman, CNN

(CNN) — The arguments are heated but not insulting. The questions are probing with a purpose. This discussion on illegal immigration in the heart of North Texas is like many of those happening every day across the country, but this is not a normal discussion.

In large rooms across the Gaylord Texan Resort, passionate discussions played out among dozens of groups just like this one on the major issues in the 2020 election.

“If you’re illegal, then you’re just mooching off the country,” says Kathleen Mierzwa.

That could be the end of the immigration debate in mainstream or social media, or lead to a sharp turn to a much uglier debate, but at this gathering, that’s not the case.

“What is your real concern?” asks Natalie Montgomery from the other side of the long table. The women met just hours before, one from the Pacific Northwest and the other from the South.

“They’re illegal. They didn’t the follow the rules to get in here,” says Mierzwa.

Call it the ultimate test kitchen for the survival of American democracy, with the hope that citizens are able to move out of the bitter, partisan gridlock permeating political discourse and find solutions.

“It’s a pilot for what democracy could be,” said Jim Fishkin, the director for Center for Deliberative Democracy at Stanford University. “God knows if we don’t experiment with democracy, it’s just going to continue with deadlock division. It’s going to lose its legitimacy and we may lose our democracy.”

America in One Room

Fishkin and his colleagues assembled 526 participants, also known as “delegates,” for their project called “America in One Room.”

The name represents the goal of the organizers — assemble a representative sample of what America looks like, in one place.

“We had a hypothesis that the American people are not as polarized as the American political class, not as polarized as our elected representatives and politicians,” said Larry Diamond, a sociologist at Stanford University. All Americans need, say the researchers, is access to non-partisan information and discussion.

To test that belief, they brought together participants from 47 states. The NORC at the University of Chicago, a social research organization, pulled from a random sample of a nationally representative group of households. By income, age, gender, political party affiliation, region, education and race, NORC says the 526 participants reflect the population of registered voters.

The delegates all took a poll before arriving in the Dallas area.

Over the next four days, they met as a large group to listen to experts talk about health care, foreign policy, immigration, the environment, the economy and taxes. Several of the Republican and Democratic candidates for President spoke to the group, including Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet, former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Julián Castro, former Rep. Mark Sanford, former Rep. Joe Walsh and former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld.

The large group broke down into smaller groups of 13 to 15 people to discuss key issues.

‘They look at the US as a joke’

“The things we do sometimes are just … inhumane,” says Desmond Holmes, 25. Holmes was in the US Navy and now works in IT in Salisbury, North Carolina. He’s the youngest in the group of 13, and one of three black participants in the room. He’s a registered Democrat.

Half the group identifies as Republican or independent, among them Kathleen Mierzwa, 40. Mierzwa is a home health nurse in Kennewick, Washington, who bluntly says her challenging job has taught her, “I can’t help everybody and that’s how I feel about the country.”

That’s where Mierzwa draws her conservative position on immigration and DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.

“I can tell you I have a strong opinion, but I don’t have all the answers,” says Mierzwa.

Mary Krebs, 63, a retired psychotherapist, engages Mierzwa. Krebs was a registered Republican but changed parties in 2017. “I think you can guess why,” says Krebs.

“We need laws, but we also need to rule with our heart,” says Krebs.

“There are laws,” says Mierzwa.

“Yeah, and then you have a child” in the US, Krebs replies.

“You should have thought about that before you came over,” says Mierzwa.

The entire room reacts.

“I’m empathetic. I don’t want them to be separated from their families,” Mierzwa adds.

Rev. Brian McQuiggin, a pastor from nearby Clifton, Texas, jumps in. He’s a Republican and donates his ministerial time in Mexico to help migrants. He is conflicted, he says — supporting the rule of law but questioning whether his faith should rise above US immigration laws.

McQuiggin paraphrases from Matthew 25. “Christ says, ‘What you do unto the least of these, my brothers, you do unto me.’ And so it’s hard. You know, it’s hard. I feel like it’s back and forth.”

The group’s next section involves foreign policy and the conversation veers to President Donald Trump’s actions on the world stage.

“He leads along the lines of being a dictator,” says Lorenzo Spencer, 64, a retiree from Pasadena, California. “If it were to come down to a button, I think he would push it before he would go to Congress and get their advice.”

Jim Fredrickson, 68, who says he is a disillusioned Republican from Sharon, New Hampshire, says of Trump: “I don’t trust his decision making process.”

Evelyn Sierra-Mynk, 34, of Bullhead City, Arizona, defends Trump, the head of the party she’s registered to. “He’s our elected Commander in Chief,” she reminds the room.

A weird utopia

At the end of the four days of “America in One Room,” the group fills out another poll.

Those poll results, say the organizers, will show if the experiment worked. The results are expected to publish on October 2, organizers said.

Final comments in the small group’s comments suggest the researchers’ hypothesis may have merit.

“I want to say thank you,” says Kathleen Mierzwa, slowly and emotionally. “Even though we had multiple opinions, we were very civil. Even though we have different opinions, I walk out considering all of you friends.”

On the other end of the political spectrum, Natalie Montgomery, a Democrat, says she leaves less discouraged about American democracy.

“I had no plans to vote in 2020,” says Montgomery, an accountant. “I felt my vote didn’t count in elections.” Her opinion had now changed about the power of her vote.

Henry Elkus, CEO of Helena, the group that convened “America in One Room,” says the anecdotes shared out of the small groups suggest at a minimum, the participants learned to break out of their typical information silos.

“To see this weird utopia,” said Elkus, “in which people use facts as grounding for discussion was shocking to me in such a beautiful way. And if this can be exported to the rest of society, this is the kind of tool that can affect change in American democracy at scale.”

The-CNN-Wire
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