Difference between revisions of "Brian Kemp"

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*Vondracek, Christopher (May 7, 2019). [https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2019/may/7/brian-kemp-signs-fetal-heartbeat-abortion-ban-geor/ Georgia's approval of fetal heartbeat abortion bill virtually ends procedure in state]. ''The Washington Times''. Retrieved May 7, 2019.</ref> However, Kemp appointed [[establishment]]arian [[Kelly Loeffler]] to the U.S. Senate over conservative alternatives,<ref>Moran, Sean (December 4, 2019). [https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2019/12/04/brian-kemp-taps-establishment-backed-kelly-loeffler-setting-up-potential-clash-with-trump-conservatives/ Brian Kemp Defies President Trump, Taps Establishment-Backed Kelly Loeffler to Senate]. ''Breitbart News''. Retrieved December 4, 2019.<br>See also:
 
*Vondracek, Christopher (May 7, 2019). [https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2019/may/7/brian-kemp-signs-fetal-heartbeat-abortion-ban-geor/ Georgia's approval of fetal heartbeat abortion bill virtually ends procedure in state]. ''The Washington Times''. Retrieved May 7, 2019.</ref> However, Kemp appointed [[establishment]]arian [[Kelly Loeffler]] to the U.S. Senate over conservative alternatives,<ref>Moran, Sean (December 4, 2019). [https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2019/12/04/brian-kemp-taps-establishment-backed-kelly-loeffler-setting-up-potential-clash-with-trump-conservatives/ Brian Kemp Defies President Trump, Taps Establishment-Backed Kelly Loeffler to Senate]. ''Breitbart News''. Retrieved December 4, 2019.<br>See also:
*Joyce, Tom (December 3, 2019). [https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/georgia-gop-senator-to-be-kelly-loeffler-is-a-crappy-conservative Georgia's GOP senator-to-be is a crappy conservative]. ''Washington Examiner''. Retrieved December 6, 2019.</ref> and he avoided discussing immigration issues as governor despite emphasizing it during his 2018 campaign.<ref>King, D.A. (December 4, 2019). [https://immigrationpoliticsga.com/governor-brian-kemp-mentions-illegal-immigration-otherwise-ignores-the-crisis/ Georgia Governor Brian Kemp Mentions Illegal Immigration in Senate Pick Announcement! – Otherwise Ignores the Crisis]. ''Immigration Politics Georgia''. Retrieved December 10, 2019.</ref>
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*Joyce, Tom (December 3, 2019). [https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/georgia-gop-senator-to-be-kelly-loeffler-is-a-crappy-conservative Georgia's GOP senator-to-be is a crappy conservative]. ''Washington Examiner''. Retrieved December 6, 2019.</ref> and he avoided discussing immigration issues as governor despite emphasizing it during his 2018 campaign.<ref>King, D.A. (December 4, 2019). [https://immigrationpoliticsga.com/governor-brian-kemp-mentions-illegal-immigration-otherwise-ignores-the-crisis/ Georgia Governor Brian Kemp Mentions Illegal Immigration in Senate Pick Announcement! – Otherwise Ignores the Crisis]. ''Immigration Politics Georgia''. Retrieved December 10, 2019.</ref> Lin Wood has also strongly insinuated that Kemp had been getting kickbacks from [[Dominion Systems]], and thus was involved in the 2020 election fraud,<ref>https://youtu.be/R2OHdRUM9Gc</ref> with Kemp also changing his mind on whether to certify or decertify votes in Georgia.
  
 
==Spygate==
 
==Spygate==

Revision as of 00:54, November 22, 2020

Brian Kemp
Governor of Georgia
From: January 14, 2019 – present
Predecessor Nathan Deal
Successor Incumbent (no successor)
27th Georgia Secretary of State
From: January 8, 2010 – November 8, 2018
Governor Sonny Perdue
Predecessor Karen Handel
Successor Robyn Crittenden
Georgia State Senate, 46th district
From: January 3, 2003 – January 3, 2007
Predecessor Doug Haines
Successor Bill Cowsert
Information
Party Republican
Spouse(s) Marty Kemp
Religion Episcopalian

Brian Kemp is the Republican governor of Georgia elected in 2018.

Governor of Georgia

Kemp has a mostly conservative record. He defeated an establishment rival in the 2018 Republican primary election. In May 2019, Kemp signed Georgia's Heartbeat Bill into law.[1] However, Kemp appointed establishmentarian Kelly Loeffler to the U.S. Senate over conservative alternatives,[2] and he avoided discussing immigration issues as governor despite emphasizing it during his 2018 campaign.[3] Lin Wood has also strongly insinuated that Kemp had been getting kickbacks from Dominion Systems, and thus was involved in the 2020 election fraud,[4] with Kemp also changing his mind on whether to certify or decertify votes in Georgia.

Spygate

Obama National Security Advisor Susan Rice attempted to justify the Obama administration's illegal domestic spying by blaming Kemp, as reported by David Corn and Michael Isikoff.[5]

References

  1. Multiple references: See also:
  2. Moran, Sean (December 4, 2019). Brian Kemp Defies President Trump, Taps Establishment-Backed Kelly Loeffler to Senate. Breitbart News. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
    See also:
  3. King, D.A. (December 4, 2019). Georgia Governor Brian Kemp Mentions Illegal Immigration in Senate Pick Announcement! – Otherwise Ignores the Crisis. Immigration Politics Georgia. Retrieved December 10, 2019.
  4. https://youtu.be/R2OHdRUM9Gc
  5. *The media term, "Russian meddling," conflates "state election board" hacking with "DNC hack." The DNC hack never took place. There were efforts however, by the GRU to hack state election boards. The Obama Department of Homeland Security alerted the state boards, but failed to get cooperation for a coordinated response out of fear among the states of another intrusion and power grab by the federal government."Many of the state officials—especially from the red states—wanted little, if anything, to do with the DHS. Leading the charge was Brian Kemp, Georgia’s secretary of state, an ambitious, staunchly conservative Republican who feared the hidden hand of the Obama White House. “We don’t need the federal government to take over our voting,” he told Johnson.
    Johnson tried to explain that DHS’s cybersecurity experts could help state systems search for vulnerabilities and protect against penetrations. He encouraged them to take basic cybersecurity steps, such as ensuring voting machines were not connected to the internet when voting was underway. And he kept explaining that any federal help would be voluntary for the states. “He must have used the word voluntary 15 times,” recalled a Homeland Security official who was on the call. “But there was a lot of skepticism that revolved around saying, ‘We don’t want Big Brother coming in and running our election process.’ ”
    After the call, Johnson and his aides realized encouraging local officials to accept their help was going to be tough. They gave up on the idea of declaring these systems critical infrastructure and instead concluded they would have to keep urging state and local officials to accept their cybersecurity assistance.
    Johnson’s interaction with local and state officials was a warning for the White House. If administration officials were going to enlist these election officials to thwart Russian interference in the voting, they would need GOP leaders in Congress to be part of the endeavor and, in a way, vouch for the federal government."

    “Why the Hell Are We Standing Down?”, The secret story of Obama’s response to Putin’s attack on the 2016 election. Second of two excerpts adapted from Russian Roulette: The Inside Story of Putin’s War on America and the Election of Donald Trump (Twelve Books), by Michael Isikoff, chief investigative correspondent for Yahoo News, and David Corn, Washington bureau chief of Mother Jones. March 2018.

External links