Difference between revisions of "ConCon Hall of Shame"

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(South Carolina House)
(South Carolina House: Summary of SC House Races)
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Rep. [https://ballotpedia.org/Tommy_Pope Tommy Pope], as Republican Speaker pro tempore, who may aspire to higher office.
 
Rep. [https://ballotpedia.org/Tommy_Pope Tommy Pope], as Republican Speaker pro tempore, who may aspire to higher office.
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[https://ballotpedia.org/South_Carolina_House_of_Representatives_elections,_2022 Summary of SC House Races]
  
 
===Nebraska===
 
===Nebraska===

Revision as of 17:28, 1 April 2022

The ConCon Hall of Shame are state legislators who push the dark-money agenda of an Article V Convention, including the Convention of States.

The ConCon Hall of Shame includes:

South Carolina House

Rep. Russell Fry, who voted in March 2022 for an Article V constitutional convention that would allow Leftists to rewrite the Constitution as part of a constitutional convention.

  • Mark McBride is the candidate to support here [markmcbride.us].

Rep. Bill Taylor, who participated in the farcical Convention of States simulated convention. [1]

Rep. Tommy Pope, as Republican Speaker pro tempore, who may aspire to higher office.

Summary of SC House Races

Nebraska

Nebraska is unicameral, with only one chamber that is called its Senate.

Sen. Steve Halloran led the enactment of Convention of States there in 2022. He represents Senate District 33, and was elected unchallenged by 12,893 votes in the general election in 2020, and by 6,653 votes in an unchallenged primary.

Wisconsin

Sen. Kathy Bernier, who praised the passage in 2022. [2]

Rep. Dan Knodl, "Times like these are precisely why the Founders created the mechanisms in Article V," agreed Wisconsin State

West Virginia

Primary dates in 2022

Date of Primary State
May 3 Indiana, Ohio
May 10 Nebraska, West Virginia
May 17 Idaho, Kentucky, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania
May 24 Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia
June 7 California, Iowa, Mississippi, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, South Dakota
June 14 Maine, Nevada, North Dakota, South Carolina (requires runoff)
June 21 Virginia
June 28 Colorado, Illinois, Maryland, New York, Oklahoma, Utah
August 2 Michigan
August 4 Tennessee
August 9 Connecticut, Minnesota, Vermont, Wisconsin
August 13 Hawaii
August 16 Alaska, Wyoming
August 23 Florida
September 13 Delaware, New Hampshire, Rhode Island
September 20 Massachusetts
November 8 Louisiana (*)