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An awful lie about Haitian migrants led to this threat against citizens far away

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An awful lie about Haitian migrants led to this threat against citizens far away

The hateful lie pushed by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance, that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were eating their neighbors’ pets not only endangered those migrantsit also led to an Ohio sheriff three hours away threatening citizens who show support for the Democratic presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris.

In a Sept. 13 Facebook post that he later claimed “may have been a little misinterpreted,” Portage County Sheriff Bruce Zuchowski suggested tracking “all the addresses of the people who had [Harris] signs in their yards” so that “when the Illegal human ‘Locust’ (which she supports!) Need places to live…We’ll already have the addresses of their New families…who supported their arrival!”

There’s no misinterpreting the racism in that post, described to me by the county’s NAACP president as ‘vile and egregious.’

There’s no misinterpreting the racism in that post, described to me by the county’s NAACP president as “vile and egregious.” There’s no excusing the lie from the sheriff that Springfield’s Haitians — who are there as part of a federal humanitarian programfor migrants — are here illegally. On top of that, referring to human beings as pests (ravenous pests, at that) has preceded too many global atrocities for Zuchowski’s hateful statements to be excused.

And that’s before we get to heart of the matter, which is that Zuchowski veered into unconstitutional territory with the suggestion that residents lawfully expressing a political opinion warrant law enforcement’s attention. Zuchowski’s defense — that he has a “First Amendment right” to post what he did — is doubly offensive. His status as a public servant ought to come before his desire to express his opinion, and his post made his constituents afraid their government would be monitoring their constitutionally protected expression of speech.

Sheriff Bruce D. Zuchowski Portage County
Sheriff Bruce D. Zuchowski of Portage County, Ohio.Portage County Sheriff’s Office

Zuchowski, who has declined to speak to NBC News and multiple media outletstook down his post after the Portage County NAACP and the League of Women Voters complained to the Ohio secretary of stateand as the Ohio ACLU was gearing up to sue him. But if Zuchowski succeeded in making people afraid that he and his deputies are watching their political activity, it seems unlikely that his deleting the post is enough to make them breathe easy.

On its face, the story out of Portage County, where there are people I know well who vote, is evidence that a malignant lie about an innocent immigrant population metastasized into a threat against innocent citizens hours away. But it’s also part of what appears to be a larger campaign from conservatives to bully everybody else into political inactivity or silence.

In Florida, voters who signed a petition that put that state’s abortion referendum on the ballot cried foul at being questioned by Gov. Ron DeSantis’ election police unit. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton executed search warrants against members of the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), one of America’s oldest Latino civil rights groups, about two weeks after LULAC endorsed Harris’ presidential campaign. He says he was investigating “allegations of election fraud and vote harvesting” in 2022. The Republican National Committee’s so-called “Protect the Vote” project aims to recruit people from the suburbs to monitor the polls in urban Democratic strongholdswhich it has falsely declared are hotbeds of voting fraud.

I’ve never felt less protected and more scared than I do right now,” a resident of Ravenna, Ohio, wrote Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, according to the Akron Beacon Journal. At least 59 residents complained to Yost’s office, the paper reported. Zuchowski “has made me feel unsafe in my home of 24 years,” a Kent resident said.

Portage County NAACP President Renee Romine said at the emergency meeting her organization held about Zuchowski’s post that there were “people almost in tears” and “not wanting to go to the voting polls” because Zuchowki’s office provides security for in-person absentee voting. “People did not even want to go and vote if they were going to be there.”

He backed down, which is what we wanted. Not just what we wanted, it’s what the Constitution required him to do.

Freda Levenson, legal director of the ACLU of Ohio

The county’s board of elections voted to remove the sheriff’s office from that security rolewhich Romine described as a “big win for the people.” But to Freda Levenson, the legal director of the ACLU of Ohio, the win was Zuchowski removing the offending post.

“We were going to ask a federal judge to make him take down his post. So as soon as he took down his post, we no longer had anything to ask for,” she said. “He backed down, which is what we wanted. Not just what we wanted, it’s what the Constitution required him to do.”

But what the ACLU counts as a win may be cold comfort to Portage County voters. He made a post about monitoring who’s supporting Harris. There’s no reason they should believe that his being forced to take the post down has been accompanied by any change of heart.

Jarvis DeBerry

Jarvis DeBerry is an opinion editor for BLN Daily.

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Clyburn’s seat survives for now as South Carolina Republicans buck Trump on redistricting

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South Carolina Republicans defied President Donald Trump and blocked a redistricting measure that would have drawn out the state’s lone Democrat, Rep. Jim Clyburn.

The move Tuesday all but kills their chances of flipping that seat for 2026. It’s possible the GOP will still draw out Clyburn before 2028.

A procedural vote to end debate on the map early failed in the state Senate 24-20, with 12 Republicans joining all Democrats. The state Senate then voted to adjourn until June 10, effectively ending any hope of redistricting before the midterms.

It’s a massive pivot from just two weeks ago, when GOP Gov. Henry McMaster chose to call a special season to redraw after pressure from Trump and the White House. Now, Republican lawmakers who defected in South Carolina could face the same fate in 2028 as Indiana lawmakers who rebuked Trump — and then lost their primaries to MAGA-aligned challengers.

But because of the timing of the elections — the timing they refused to change — the South Carolina Republicans will likely be safe until the 2028 primaries, as early voting has already begun for this year.

The rebuke from fellow Republicans came as a shock to Trump’s political operation, according to one person close to the White House granted anonymity to discuss the internal dynamics. McMaster never gave the White House a heads up that the vote was on track to fail, the person said.

McMaster’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The state’s Senate GOP leader, Shane Massey, had long opposed a redraw, giving a fiery speech during a procedural vote earlier this month that received national attention. Despite earlier votes in the Senate looking on pace for a redraw, a number of Republicans flipped on Tuesday, citing the start of early voting as reason for doing so.

Even without the extra seat from South Carolina, Republicans have an overall edge in the redistricting war. But many of those wins came from the courts.

The Supreme Court’s decision earlier this year to narrow the Voting Rights Act has led to swift redraws across other Southern states, and the Virginia Supreme Court erased a four-seat Democratic gerrymander that was approved by voters.

There are still some states outstanding before November. Alabama Republicans are trying to use a 2023 map that eliminates a Democratic-held seat, but it’s jammed up in court. And Louisiana Republicans are still working to pass a map before the midterms.

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Shapiro weighs in on Trump, Harris and 2028 over South Philly pizza

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Shapiro weighs in on Trump, Harris and 2028 over South Philly pizza

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How to take the asymmetry out of asymmetric war

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How to take the asymmetry out of asymmetric war

On this Memorial Day, it is particularly relevant to make the case again as to why the terms asymmetric and hybrid are misplaced in examining war. …
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