Tuesday, November 15, 2022

ARIZONA INTRIGUING. . .O Gosh! Yeah it is

 



apnews.com

High court rules against Arizona GOP leader in records fight


 

3 - 4 minutes

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court has cleared the way for the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol to get phone records belonging to the leader of the Arizona Republican Party.

The high court on Monday rejected GOP state chair Kelli Ward’s request to halt the turnover of records while a lawsuit proceeds. The court lifted a temporary order that had been put in place by Justice Elena Kagan that had paused anything from happening while Ward’s emergency request was at the Supreme Court.


Ward has said her First Amendment rights would be chilled if investigators were able to learn whom she spoke with while trying to challenge former President Donald Trump’s 2020 election defeat.

As is common in situations involving emergency requests to the high court, the justices did not explain their reasoning in their three-sentence order. Justice Clarence Thomas and Justice Samuel Alito said they would have sided with Ward but also did not elaborate.

Thomas’ wife Virginia “Ginni” Thomas is one of the people who was interviewed by the Jan. 6 committee and has stood by the false claim that the 2020 election was fraudulent. She had urged Republican lawmakers in Arizona after the election to choose their own slate of electors.

“We’re glad that two justices thought that the First Amendment associational interests implicated by the case were serious enough to warrant even the drastic step of a Supreme Court emergency stay,” said Alexander Kolodin, Ward’s attorney. ”And we hope that lawmakers and officials that might think of targeting people for engaging in First Amendment protected political association will hear this as a warning shot and think twice before doing it.”

A federal appeals court panel previously ruled 2-1 against Ward and said the committee should get records of calls she made and received from just before the November 2020 election to Jan. 31, 2021. That includes a period when Ward was pushing for Trump’s election defeat to be overturned and Congress was set to certify the results in favor of Democrat Joe Biden.

Ruling against Ward at the appeals court level were judges appointed by presidents of different parties. Barry Silverman, an appointee of Democratic President Bill Clinton, and Eric Miller, a Trump appointee, both ruled against Ward. Judge Sandra Ikuta, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush, dissented.

The appeals court ruling followed a September decision by a federal judge in Phoenix who also ruled against Ward.

Kelli Ward and her husband, Michael Ward, were presidential electors who would have voted for Trump in the Electoral College had he won Arizona. Both signed a document falsely claiming they were Arizona’s true electors, despite Biden’s victory in the state.

Read More 

 


apnews.com

Hobbs wins Arizona governor’s race, flipping state for Dems

By JONATHAN J. COOPER
6 - 7 minutes

PHOENIX (AP) — Democrat Katie Hobbs was elected Arizona governor on Monday, defeating an ally of Donald Trump who falsely claimed the 2020 election was rigged and refused to say she would accept the results of her race this year.

Hobbs, who is Arizona’s secretary of state, rose to prominence as a staunch defender of the legitimacy of the last election and warned that her Republican rival, former television news anchor Kari Lake, would be an agent of chaos. Hobbs’ victory adds further evidence that Trump is weighing down his allies in a crucial battleground state as the former president gears up for an announcement of a 2024 presidential run.

She will succeed Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, who was prohibited by term limit laws from running again. She’s the first Democrat to be elected governor in Arizona since Janet Napolitano in 2006.

“For the Arizonans who did not vote for me, I will work just as hard for you — because even in this moment of division, I believe there is so much more that connects us,” Hobbs said in a statement declaring victory. “This was not just about an election — it was about moving this state forward and facing the challenges of our generation.”

Lake tweeted after the call, “Arizonans know BS when they see it.”

The Associated Press called the governor’s race for Hobbs after the latest round of vote releases gave her a big enough lead that the AP determined she would not relinquish it. The AP concluded that, even though Lake had been posting increasingly larger margins in vote updates from Maricopa County, she was not gaining a big enough share to overtake Hobbs and was running out of remaining votes.

Vote counting had gone on for days since the Tuesday election, as officials continued to tally massive amounts of late-arriving ballots.

A onetime Republican stronghold where Democrats made gains during the Trump era, Arizona has been central to efforts by Trump and his allies to cast doubt on Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential victory with false claims of fraud. This year, many Trump-endorsed candidates faltered in general elections in battleground states, though his pick in the Nevada governor’s race, Republican Joe Lombardo, defeated an incumbent Democrat.

Before entering politics, Hobbs was a social worker who worked with homeless youth and an executive with a large domestic violence shelter in the Phoenix area. She was elected to the state Legislature in 2010, serving one term in the House and three terms in the Senate, rising to minority leader.

Hobbs eked out a narrow win in 2018 as secretary of state and was thrust into the center of a political storm as Arizona became the centerpiece of the efforts by Trump and his allies to overturn the results of the 2020 election he lost. She appeared constantly on cable news defending the integrity of the vote count.

The attention allowed her to raise millions of dollars and raise her profile. When she announced her campaign for governor, other prominent Democrats declined to run and Hobbs comfortably won her primary.

She ran a cautious campaign, sticking largely to scripted and choreographed public appearances. She declined to participate in a debate with Lake, contending that Lake would turn it into a spectacle by spouting conspiracy theories and making false accusations.

She bet instead that voters would recoil against Lake, who picked verbal fights with journalists as cameras rolled and struck a combative tone toward Democrats and even the establishment Republicans who have long dominated state government.

Pre-election polls showed the race was tied, but Hobbs’ victory was still a surprise to many Democrats who feared her timidity would turn off voters. She overcame expectations in Maricopa and Pima counties, the metro Phoenix and Tucson areas where the overwhelming majority of Arizona voters live. She also spent considerable time in rural areas, looking to minimize her losses in regions that traditionally support Republicans.

Lake is well known in much of the state after anchoring the evening news in Phoenix for more than two decades. She ran as a fierce critic of the mainstream media, which she said is unfair to Republicans. She earned Trump’s admiration for her staunch commitment to questioning the results of the 2020 election, a stand she never wavered from even after winning the GOP primary.

She baselessly accused election officials of slow-rolling the vote count this year and prioritizing Democratic ballots as she narrowly trailed Hobbs for days following the election.

Lake has cited a problem with printers at about a third of Maricopa County vote centers that led on-site tabulators to reject some ballots. Election officials told voters to put ballots in a separate box to be counted later, but Republican leaders told their supporters to ignore that instruction and lines in some places backed up.

The problem affected about 7% of ballots cast in person on Election Day and about 1% of the total cast in the county.

Maricopa County Sheriff Paul Penzone said he increased security around the elections center Monday in anticipation that the race would be called and emotions could run hot, though he said there was no specific threat. Demonstrators have gathered outside the building for several days but have remained peaceful, he said.

“I think we’re getting close to the end game so I want to be sure that we’re prepared,” Penzone told reporters in a news conference hours before the race call.

The sheriff’s office was caught off guard two years ago when armed and angry protesters descended on the elections building in downtown Phoenix after Fox News and the AP called Arizona for Biden, marking the first time a Democrat won the state in more than two decades.

___

Learn more about the issues and factors at play in the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/explaining-the-elections. And follow the AP’s election coverage of the 2022 elections at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections.

www.axios.com

Three Maricopa County judges are losing their judicial retention elections

Jeremy Duda
3 minutes
 
Illustration of a voting booth with a curtain shaped like a judge's robes

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

"Arizona may be on the verge of booting three sitting judges from office in one election. Only three judges have been rejected in the nearly 50 years since Arizona adopted its judicial retention election system.

State of play: Maricopa County Superior Court judges Rusty Crandell, Stephen Hopkins and Howard Sukenic are losing their retention elections, and are down by more votes than are left to count.

Context: Under the system adopted by voters in 1974, Superior Court judges in Arizona's most populous counties, along with those from the Court of Appeals and Arizona Supreme Court justices, are picked through merit selection. That's a system where governors appoint people from lists of candidates selected by independent commissioners.

  • Those judges must stand in retention elections every four years in which voters decide whether to keep them on the bench.
  • Superior court judges in smaller counties are still chosen by voters in direct elections.

Between the lines: All three judges got relatively poor reviews from the Arizona Commission on Judicial Performance Review, which was established in 1992 to set performance standards. . .

Flashback: Voters had only rejected judges three times prior to this year's election.

Of note: Crandell is one of 15 finalists for three positions on the Court of Appeals Division I — which will be selected by Gov. Doug Ducey — so he could theoretically get a new job on the bench if he loses his retention election."

MORE PHOENIX STUFF TO FLUFF...

11 hours ago - Sports
Glendale LVII

Glendale LVII: How to work at the Super Bowl

Illustration of the Arizona flag with the star turning into a football, and the red stripes rotating.

Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios

If you want to go to the big game without paying big bucks, your best bet may be to find a job at State Farm Stadium.

State of play: Instawork, a staffing platform that connects businesses with hourly employees, is releasing about 1,000 Super Bowl shifts on its app this week.

  • Positions include concessionaires and food runners.
  • Hourly rates start at $20.

How it works: Instawork partners with the vendors who run the food, beverage and retail stands at the stadium and posts the positions they need on their app.

www.axios.com

Arizona governor race: Democrat Katie Hobbs defeats Trump-backed Kari Lake


 

Jeremy Duda,Jessica Boehm
3 minutes

Arizona Democratic gubernatorial candidate Katie Hobbs greets supporters during a campaign event at the Carpenters Local Union 1912 headquarters on November 05, 2022 in Phoenix, Arizona.

Arizona Democratic gubernatorial candidate Katie Hobbs greets supporters during a campaign event in Phoenix earlier this month. Photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Katie Hobbs has won the Arizona governor’s race against Trump-backed Republican Kari Lake, AP reported, and will become the first Democrat to win the post since 2006.

Why it matters: Secretary of State Hobbs' win comes as a further rebuke to former President Trump, whose endorsed candidates lost in vital races for governor and control of Congress, as well as her Republican opponent’s prioritization of false claims about the 2020 election.

A  screenshot of a tweet from Katie Hobbs saying "Democracy is worth the wait. Thank you, Arizona. I am so honored and so proud to be your next Governor."
Photo: Katie Hobbs/Twitter

State of play: Hobbs, a former state legislator who was elected as Arizona's top elections official in 2018, will almost certainly have to work with a Republican-controlled legislature that is highly unlikely to pass any Democratic policies.

  • Among the issues she campaigned on were dramatically increasing teacher salaries, implementing a child tax credit for working families and repealing Arizona's pre-statehood ban on most abortions, which is in limbo due to ongoing litigation.
  • Still, Hobbs will be able to use executive orders and appointments to advance her agenda, though most significant gubernatorial appointments are subject to Senate confirmation or limited by other checks and balances.

Hobbs also will be able to use her veto pen to block conservative legislation, in the mold of the state's last Democratic governor, Janet Napolitano.


The big picture:
Hobbs defied party odds to beat Trump-backed Lake, a former local TV news anchor who was endorsed by former President Trump and widely viewed as a rising star in the MAGA wing of the Republican Party.

  • Hobbs as Arizona’s secretary of state gained national prominence following the 2020 election as a voice of opposition to Trump and his allies’ false claims it was rigged.
  • She also attracted more outside spending than any Arizona Democratic gubernatorial nominee in years.

Between the lines: Though polling had consistently shown a close race, Democrats became increasingly pessimistic and frustrated in the final weeks of the election cycle as Hobbs' campaign faltered.

The intrigue: Lake, who has repeatedly spread false and baseless claims about election fraud throughout her campaign, would not commit to accepting the results of the election if she lost.

 

Top stories
www.independent.co.uk

Liz Cheney trolls Kari Lake as she loses Arizona race to Katie Hobbs - follow live

12 - 15 minutes

Liveupdated

Kari Lake falsely claims rival Katie Dobbs has never been in lead in Arizona race

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Democratic candidate Katie Hobbs has won the Arizona governor’s race, defeating Donald Trump-backed Kari Lake, in one of the most-watched midterm contests in the country.

The race was called on Monday night, with Ms Hobbs taking 50.4 per cent of votes to Ms Lake’s 49.6 per cent.

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Republican Liz Cheney was one of the first to rub salt into the wounds of MAGA Republican Ms Lake.

Ms Cheney quoted a tweet from the extremist candidate last month where she mockingly thanked her, claiming that her “anti-endorsement” would secure her a win in the gubernatorial race. Ms Cheney bided her time with her response, replying as news of Ms Lake’s loss broke: “You’re welcome.”

Ms Lake, who amplified Mr Trump’s false narrative that the 2020 presidential election was stolen, has branded the results of the election “BS” and has so far refused to concede.

Declaring victory, Ms Hobbs said: “Democracy is worth the wait. Thank you, Arizona. I am so honoured and so proud to be your next governor.”

Liz Cheney sends perfect revenge tweet as Kari Lake loses Arizona governor’s race: ‘You’re welcome’

Arizona governor candidate Kari Lake has been mocked by her Republican colleague Liz Cheney after multiple news outlets called the race for the Democrats.

Ms Lake, a pro-Trump firebrand who has repeatedly spread conspiracy theories about the 2020 US presidential election, had written to Ms Cheney last month sarcastically thanking her for running a TV advert against her, which Ms Lake claimed had actually galvanised support.

“Thank you again for the huge boost to our campaign! Enjoy your forced retirement from politics,” Ms Lake had said.

Seventeen days later, as NBC News, CNN and The Associated Press declared victory for Ms Lake’s Democratic opponent Katie Hobbs, Ms Cheney responded on Twitter: “You’re welcome, @KariLake.”

Io Dodds has more here.

Johanna Chisholm15 November 2022 14:00

Poll: Many Republicans still back Trump for 2024, but that support is waning

A new Politico-Morning Consult poll has shown that former President Donald Trump’s popularity with Republican-leaning voters might be waning in the post-midterm climate.

Among all voters surveyed in the poll, 65 per cent said the ex-president should probably or definitely not run again (of those, 53 per cent were in the definite camp).

Those numbers haven’t shifted significantly since pre-election, when the same polling group found that the twice impeached president stood at 48 per cent. But it does show that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s star is rising, with the governor shooting up from 26 per cent to 33 per cent.

Johanna Chisholm15 November 2022 13:00

Kari Lake joins list of election deniers who received Trump’s endorsement but failed in their bid for elected office

Kari Lake, a former news anchor who was swiftly embraced by Donald Trump and MAGA enthusiasts after she began aggressively peddling election fraud conspiracy theories from the 2020 presidential election, has joined a growing list of election deniers who were similarly graced with the former president’s blessing only to be rejected at the polls

NBC News reporter Sahil Kapur aggregated the candidates who embraced Trump’s “Big Lie” heading into the November midterms and found that there were at least 10 substantial Republicans on the ballot who were rejected by the electorate in their respective state and federal races.

As Kapur points out, this is not an exhaustive list but rather a collection of the more substantial losses suffered by the MAGA Republicans who accepted the ex-president’s narrative of events during the 2020 election.

Johanna Chisholm15 November 2022 12:40

Critics of Kari Lake react to her ‘self-owning’ tweet after she claims election was stolen

Shortly after NBC News called the race in the Arizona gubernatorial race, declaring Democrat Katie Hobbs the victor over Trump-backed Kari Lake, the Republican candidate took to her preferred social media platform to begin spreading her preferred kind of conspiracies: election fraud.

“Arizonans know BS when they see it,” tweeted the former news anchor, hinting that her narrow loss to Ms Hobbs - where she secured 49.6 per cent to her opponent’s 50.4 per cent - was the byproduct of some kind of “BS” election fraud.

Unfortunately for Ms Lake, the Twittersphere took the tweet to mean an entirely different thing, with many critics using it as the punchline to several jokes about how Arizonans had roundly rejected her brand of election-denying politics.

“As it turns out, yes, yes they did,” quote tweeted former Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill.

“perfect concession: self-aware & concise,” tweeted New Yorker reporter and author Philip Gourevitch.

Johanna Chisholm15 November 2022 12:20

A stunningly accurate prediction on House and Senate control from August has gone viral after results

A prediction about the US midterms made on Twitter at the end of August has gone viral for apparently accurately guessing the outcome of the election.

User “umichvoter”, who appears to be 22-years-old with an interest in politics and elections currently studying for a medical degree, made the prediction on 31 August.

He wrote: “Based on special elections and generic ballot and president approval trends, I’d say we are probably at about a 50-49 Dem senate with GA headed to runoff and 219-216 GOP house.”

“Things could change tho,” he added.

Oliver O’Connell has more details here.

Johanna Chisholm15 November 2022 12:05

MAGA activist claims he can ‘will into existence’ a Kari Lake win

MAGA activist and “Stop the Steal” rally organiser Ali Alexander has claimed that he can “will into existence” a Kari Lake win.

Ms Lake was defeated by Democrat Katie Hobbs in the race for Arizona governor.

Before the race was called on Monday night, Mr Alexander claimed that he could “will” Ms Lake to victory.

“Even if Kari was going to lose, I would will it into existence. And I know that sounds kooky and I know that sounds crazy. But. Don’t catch me on a wild day,” he said on his podcast.

“Pete Davidson one time got on my bad side. Almost killed himself.

“So. You’re not going to believe me. It doesn’t matter. The point is, is that no one needs to believe you the first time. The point is, you just need to tell them the first time. You understand this? This is going to sound kooky for ya’ll in cosey, but you guys don’t understand the esoteric.

“What if I told you that all of us are capable of traveling? Well, not all of us, because you’re not smart enough. But what if I told you that there are a lot of people capable of time traveling? They just don’t know it.”

Despite his bizarre claims, Ms Lake was defeated just hours later.

Rachel Sharp15 November 2022 11:40

Katie Hobbs says ‘democracy is worth the wait’ as she wins race

Katie Hobbs celebrated her victory on Monday night, by saying that “democracy is worth the wait”.

The Democrat was called the winner of the gubernatorial race on Monday night, beating extreme right-wing candidate Kari Lake.

“Democracy is worth the wait. Thank you, Arizona. I am so honored and so proud to be your next Governor,” she tweeted.

Rachel Sharp15 November 2022 11:20

Kari Lake’s defeat marks another blow for Trump

Kari Lake’s defeat marks another blow for Donald Trump, as she becomes the latest candidate endorsed by him and latest extreme right-wing candidate to lose in the midterms.

The former president has shouldered much of the blame for Republicans’ disappointing performance in the midterms – with many members of the party distancing themselves from him and throwing their support behind Ron DeSantis as a 2024 hopeful.

Despite this, Mr Trump is still planning to make a “special announcement” on Tuesday night – believed to be his official announcement of a 2024 run.

Rachel Sharp15 November 2022 11:00

Katie Hobbs’ win flips state blue

Katie Hobbs’ win in Arizona has flipped the governor seat blue for the first time in 13 years.

After defeating MAGA Republican and election denier Kari Lake in the gubernatorial race, the secretary of state will now succeed Republican Governor Doug Ducey, who could not run again due to term limits.

Ms Hobbs will now become the first Democrat elected governor in Arizona since Janet Napolitano won in 2006, serving up to 2009.

The victory also puts Democrats closer to taking all three top statewide races in Arizona for the first time since 1972.

The race for attorney general is still too close to call, with Democrat Kris Mayes leading with 50.1 per cent of votes to Republican Abe Hamadeh’s 49.9 per cent.

Rachel Sharp15 November 2022 10:40

Why race was called for Katie Hobbs

The Associated Press called the Arizona governor’s race for Democrat Katie Hobbs on Monday after the latest round of vote releases gave her a lead that AP determined she would not relinquish.

The AP concluded that, even though Republican Kari Lake had been posting increasingly larger margins in vote updates from Maricopa County, she was not gaining a big enough share to overtake Hobbs, and was running out of remaining votes.

Vote counting had gone on for days since the Tuesday election, as officials continued to tally massive amounts of late-arriving ballots.

As of Monday night, there were 43,000 remaining votes to count in Arizona, according to state officials, including more than 17,000 early ballots.

Close Contact @ G20 SUMMIT INDONESIA 2022...COVID-19 Transmission

 

apnews.com

Cambodian leader leaves G-20 early after COVID-19 diagnosis

 

By ADAM SCHRECK
4 minutes

NUSA DUA, Indonesia (AP) — Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Tuesday he has COVID-19 and is leaving the Group of 20 meetings in Bali, just days after hosting President Joe Biden and other world leaders for a summit in his country’s capital.

The diagnosis came as the heads of the G-20 leading economies and other nations began a two-day meeting on the Indonesian resort island.

In a posting on his Facebook page, the Cambodian leader said he tested positive for the coronavirus Monday night and an Indonesian physician confirmed the diagnosis on Tuesday morning. He canceled his meetings at the G-20 as well as the upcoming APEC economic forum in Bangkok to return home.

The White House said Biden tested negative Tuesday morning and is not considered a close contact as defined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The two leaders spent considerable time together Saturday, and were at a joint meeting but not seated together as recently as Sunday.

Hun Sen said it was fortunate that he arrived in Bali late Monday and was unable to join a dinner with French President Emmanuel Macron and other leaders.

The Cambodian capital Phnom Penh was the host of the Association of Southeast Asian Nation summit that ended on Sunday. Hun Sen met and shook hands with many leaders who attended one-on-one, some on multiple occasions.

In addition to Biden, guests included Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang and many others.

Cambodia last month lifted most of its COVID-19 restrictions on travelers, and world leaders arriving for the ASEAN summit were recommended to continue following health and safety protocols but were not required to do so.

During the summit, almost none of the leaders or other participants wore masks and all were seated close to one another, often for lengthy periods of time.

Biden sat next to Hun Sen during a lengthy gala dinner Saturday evening. They spent time close together earlier Saturday in bilateral discussions as well as talks during the wider ASEAN meeting. They were both participants in Sunday’s parallel East Asia Summit as well.

As the leader of the host nation, Hun Sen had contact with almost all of the top-level participants.

On Sunday, Hun Sen met with New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and others at a separate meeting on the sidelines of the summit. A spokesperson said Ardern tested negative for the virus Tuesday.

Hun Sen also was in contact with G-20 host Joko Widodo, the Indonesian president. The two men shook hands Sunday as Hun Sen handed over the ASEAN gavel, turning over the rotating chairmanship to Indonesia for 2023.

In his Facebook post, Hun Sen said he had “no idea” when he might have become infected with COVID-19.

He said he feels normal and is continuing to carry out his duties as usual except for meeting with guests.

The G-20 summit’s Indonesian organizers required delegates and journalists covering the event to provide proof of vaccination against COVID-19 and undergo temperature checks on arrival. Participants were also expected to take daily coronavirus tests, though it was unclear if this requirement extended to heads of government.

_____

AP journalists David Rising in Bangkok and Sopheng Cheang in Phnom Penh contributed to this story.

Casey Blake @ The Bat: Hizzoner Jivin' John Giles Got His Own Talent Show!...The Man Who Killed Santa Claus is generously sponsored by Caliber - The Wealth Development Company.


 Just doing her job...Spinning public relations as an employee inside City Hall

 

 

 


 

Mayor Giles and the It’s Always Cool in Mesa podcast present The Man Who Killed Santa Claus

By Casey Blake
November 14, 2022 at 3:10 pm
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"As part of the Merry Main Street events in downtown Mesa, Mayor John Giles and several local actors will perform a live retelling of "The Man Who Killed Santa Claus"on November 25 at 7 p.m. at Mesa Arts Center. The evening will also feature musical guests and will be recorded for a future episode of the Its Always Cool in Mesa podcast, also hosted by Mayor Giles. 

Tickets for the live event are $10 and available now at the Mesa Arts Center box office, online at mesaartscenter.com, or by calling 480-644-6500.

"The holiday season in Mesa is something I look forward to each year, and Im thrilled this evening of storytelling and entertainment is becoming a tradition for everyone to enjoy, said Mesa Mayor John Giles. The Man Who Killed Santa Claus is a great story, in part, because its true! Thats what the podcast is all about sharing some of the great stories, places, people and events that are treasured in our city.

Its Always Cool in Mesa, now in its third season and available on Apple, Google and Spotify. Past episodes of the podcast include Mesa Pub Crawl: The Hot New Oxymoron, Jagger Eaton, Mesas Skateboarding Olympian, and Alice Cooper Comes to Town.

Those attending the live event are encouraged to enjoy the Merry Main Street tree lighting ceremony at 5 p.m. and visit a downtown eatery for dinner prior to the performance. Everyone is invited to return to Downtown Mesa throughout the season to take part in ice skating and other holiday activities.

The Man Who Killed Santa Claus is generously sponsored by Caliber - The Wealth Development Company. 

RELATED CONTENT


 

Mesa Mayor John Giles, seen center left standing in the middle of an empty Main Street with two of the principals in the Caliber Wealth Creation Fund for private wealth-creation in Opportunity Zones - there are 9 OZones here in Mesa with concentrated extreme poverty levels in distressed, neglected and low-income census tracts that qualified for deferred capital tax-gains investments in The TCAJA 2017 . . .


mesazona.blogspot.com

Distressed Entire Downtown Mesa Has Been Bought (Just In Case You Didn't Know)

CEO and co-Founder, Caliber – The Wealth Development Company
6 - 7 minutes

Your MesaZona blogger has been saying this all along since 2017. Now you can hear that fact directly from Caliber's CEO Chris Loeffler right here and right now in 4 minutes.
They started out flipping houses and now they've bought an entire downtown: Mesa.
REAL ESTATE PRIVATE EQUITY
MONOPOLY JOCKS
REAL ESTATE SYNDICATION
O Yeah! We got all here in "The Old Donut-Hole"

They knew ahead of time what was "coming down the road" before November in 2017. Yes, every deal has a story and it started months and years before the public it . . .
What was Caliber's Secret Sauce? 
Certainly NOT Transparency in any way, shape or form.
All "the deals" to scoop up a portfolio of first eight and then ten commercial properties right here on Main Street were all done behind the scenes. The structures used were the formation and register of holding companies.
As far as the Relationships go, it's the same closely-connected cohorts - some who hold public state and local office - who all have schemes for their own private wealth creation. 

Conflicts-of-interest. . . Who's asking?

After rumors for months - and a downtown Mesa Bus Tour in Nov 2017, we found out that then current AZ Senator Bob Worsley was forced to come out in public at a Mesa City Council Study Council [joined by Revolving-Door U.S. Congressman Matt Salmon and high-salaried ASU lobbyist, sitting behind him with a middle-finger under his nose, to admit he was privately gambling in rampant real estate speculation at the same time holding public office, scooping up ten commercial properties in holding companies with his wife as CH Holdings LLC.

The neglected and distressed downtown Mesa had turned into an Opportunity Zone for their own private wealth-creation. Worsley did this in public office.
Mesa Mayor John Giles does this also from the time he filled in the unexpired term in 2014 for former mayor Scott Smith. Giles is now serving his first elected 4-year term

Featured Speaker: Mesa Mayor John Giles

Take a look at this upcoming 7th Annual Caliber Summit Arizona Access

EDUCATE UPDATE CONNECT

May 2 - 4, 2019 | Phoenix, Arizona

The world of investing has fundamentally changed – knowing this, we’ve made it our mission to not only create a better way to invest, but to educate and empower individual investors along the way.
Join us for our 7th Annual Caliber Summit: Alternative Access 2019 for your chance to connect with world class experts in a fun and approachable environment. Guests will gain knowledge from seasoned industry insiders, stay up to date with live property tours and updates and connect with like-minded individuals – all while gaining access to wealth building alternatives you deserve.

_______________________________________________________________

At the same time Worsley formed a partnership with his own campaign manager Kent Lyons and W Tim Sprague (at left)[Found:Re Hotel in Phoenix] in a development company Habitat Metro.
Here's Mayor John Giles standing in the middle of Main Street with two other Caliber Wealth Fund principals in 2018

_________________________________________________________________________
Here's the 4-minute streaming video uploaded to YouTube where CEO Chris Loeffler tells how he started out in foreclosures just a few years ago and then gives his best spin on the company now making deals in Opportunity Zones and establishing Qualified Opportunity Funds - all of these subjects have been featured in multiple posts on this blog before.
Listen to what Chris Loeffler has to say . . . Pay close attention and play it again.

10 May 2019

Get To Know Him: A Staged-and-Scripted Sit-Down Talk with Jivin' John Giles

This remarkable streaming uploaded session has a transcript attached with it courtesy of Chamber Business News  . Giles is positioned be...

THE GATHERING GLOOM: International Economic Conditions are Getting Worse

 "We must not allow protectionism to take root and the world to drift into separate blocs."


 

1  We must not allow protectionism to take root--and the world to drift into separate blocs

We have calculated that a world divided would lose at least 1.5 percent of GDP annually. And the cost would be much higher--2 times higher or more--for open economies, those that depend on international cooperation.  


 

But we need not go that way. We can turn the tide and prevent sleepwalking into a world that is poorer and less secure.

2 Second, debt. This is challenging for everybody post-COVID. But for 25 percent of emerging market economies and 60 percent of low-income countries, it is crushing their ability to deal with food and energy insecurity. . .

3 Shocks will continue to hit us. But it is clear is that if we invest in climate-resilient agriculture and low-carbon development, we can have higher standards of living for people everywhere.. .We have US$40 billion today for the Resilience and Sustainability Trust, with four countries benefiting already. And we can do much more if you help us to do so.. ."

Georgieva has long warned against fragmentation of the world economy into blocs led by the United States and Western allies on one side, and China and other state-driven economies on the other, saying this would lead to differing technology and regulatory standards and increasing trade protectionism.


 

www.imf.orgs

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva Remarks at the G20 Leaders’ Summit

Bali, Indonesia
3 - 4 minutes

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva Remarks at the G20 Leaders Summit

November 15, 2022

As prepared for delivery

Congratulations to President Jokowi for bringing us together in this wonderful setting. 

We are discussing the issue of food and energy security at a particularly challenging time. 

Hopeful signs of recovery last year were replaced by an abrupt slowdown in the world economy because of COVID, the war in Ukraine, and climate disasters on all continents. This pushed prices up and led to a tightening of financial conditions. 


 

This is hard for everybody, but especially for emerging market and developing economies. They are experiencing, in many cases, high debt levels and depreciation of their currencies and, in this very difficult time, suffering even more from the high interest rates.

So what is the result of all this? We are seeing a reversal of all we had been fighting for: bringing poverty down, bringing hunger down. Now we have 345 million people that are suffering from a food crisis. 


 

And this is where the G20 can do so much to change the prospects for the world economy.

First, by allowing trade to do its job. Removing barriers, especially for food and fertilizers, can go a long way to counter the suffering of hundreds of millions of people. We must not allow protectionism to take root--and the world to drift into separate blocs.

We have calculated that a world divided would lose at least 1.5 percent of GDP annually. And the cost would be much higher--2 times higher or more--for open economies, those that depend on international cooperation. 

But we need not go that way. We can turn the tide and prevent sleepwalking into a world that is poorer and less secure.


Second, debt. This is challenging for everybody post-COVID. But for 25 percent of emerging market economies and 60 percent of low-income countries, it is crushing their ability to deal with food and energy insecurity. 

I am pleased that the G20's Common Framework for debt treatment is finally beginning to deliver—with Chad being the first country to complete an agreement with its official and private sector creditors. But we need to do much, much more.

Third, invest in resilience. Shocks will continue to hit us. But it is clear is that if we invest in climate-resilient agriculture and low-carbon development, we can have higher standards of living for people everywhere.

I want to take this opportunity to thank all those who have contributed SDRs so that the IMF can on-lend them to our member countries who need them most. We have US$40 billion today for the Resilience and Sustainability Trust, with four countries benefiting already. And we can do much more if you help us to do so.

The G20 has stepped up before during crisis situations. We look forward to the G20 stepping up again to help meet the difficult challenges facing the world now.

Thank you!  Terima kasih

IMF Communications Department
MEDIA RELATIONS

PRESS OFFICER: Ting Yan

Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

@IMFSpokesperson

 
www.nytimes.com

I.M.F. Will Lower Global Outlook as Recession Risks Rise

Alan Rappeport
2 minutes

The head of the International Monetary Fund, Kristalina Georgieva, painted a dark picture of the global economy.

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"The head of the International Monetary Fund said the organization would downgrade its global economic growth protections for the next year and warned that economic conditions could worsen.CreditCredit...J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The head of International Monetary Fund warned on Thursday that recession risks across the globe were rising as a toxic mix of inflation, higher borrowing costs and lingering supply chain disruptions continued to batter the global economy.

✓ Kristalina Georgieva, the leader of the I.M.F., said that as a result of these persistent problems, the international body would downgrade its growth projections for next year in an upcoming report, one that she said would paint a dark picture of the looming economic threats. The assessment is the latest example of how last year’s optimism for a strong global recovery has been replaced by worries about rapid inflation, Russia’s war in Ukraine and an ongoing pandemic.

“Multiple shocks, among them a senseless war, changed the economic picture completely,” Ms. Georgieva, the I.M.F.’s managing director, said in remarks prepared for a speech at Georgetown University. “Far from being transitory, inflation has become more persistent.”

 
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World Economic Outlook (October 2022)

This version of the IMF Data Mapper contains only selected key indicators from the World Economic Outlook (WEO). The WEO publication is available in full on the IMF’s website, www.imf.org. Accompanying it on the website is a larger compilation of data from the WEO database than is included in the IMF Data Mapper.

The data appearing in the World Economic Outlook (WEO) are compiled by the IMF staff at the time of the WEO exercises. The historical data and projections are based on the information gathered by the IMF country desk officers in the context of their missions to IMF member countries and through their ongoing analysis of the evolving situation in each country. Historical data are updated on a continual basis, as more information becomes available, and structural breaks in data are often adjusted to produce smooth series with the use of splicing and other techniques. IMF staff estimates continue to serve as proxies for historical series when complete information is unavailable. As a result, WEO data can differ from other sources with official data, including the IMF’s International Financial Statistics.

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