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Editor's Note: These letters to the editor have been sorted by topic by the Tribune editorial staff in an effort to allow readers to read varied opinions on the issues, candidates, and other circumstances surrounding the 2012 general election. These submissions are the opinions of the author, not the Tribune, and have not been edited for grammar or content.
As a community organizer I have hosted debates and town halls for more than 30 candidates for elected office and I have not written an editorial about why an elected official should not be reelected, until now.
Frank Langella has shared stages, screens and beds with an illustrious array of actors, intimately essayed in his memoirs, "Dropped Names: Famous Men and Women as I Knew Them."
I have always believed that to volunteer for your community is one commitment every American should do at some point in their life. Not too far from volunteering in your community is serving the American people in the United States military. I have a lot of respect for those who serve our country protecting us from those who wish harm to America and the American people. My father served 24 years in the United States Air Force and my brother 30 years, both serving the American people honorably.
With the mixed verdict the Supreme Court gave SB 1070, Jan Brewer’s comment that the Court “vindicated” Arizona was one of the silliest reactions to the decision.
So what do we make of J.T. Ready, the white supremacist who murdered four people last week before turning his gun on himself?
So what do we make of J.T. Ready, the white supremacist who murdered four people before turning his gun on himself?
So Russell Pearce filled out some paperwork that suggests he might (or rather, could) run for a state Senate seat from a newly and differently configured Mesa district.
“What the heck has happened to ‘Los Suns’? They have become ‘Los Losers’ week after week since they came back. Some of these guys are getting old enough to qualify for one of those Medicare paid-for electric scooters. Maybe an oxygen station benchside might help. Remember what Steve Nash said when the lockout ended: ‘This is a playoff team.’ Well it’s sure looking like a ‘Kiss-Off Team’ right now.”
The last days of the election for Phoenix's next mayor are winding down and it's anybody's game. According to an August poll in the Ahwatukee Foothills News, Neely was ahead but Wright took a definitive lead in a poll on sonoranalliance.com. Each of the candidates have spent countless hours putting up signs, talking to residents and speaking at forums, and it will all come to an end in two short nights.
Guest commentary from Bill Richardson
Guest commentary from Bill Richardson
Guest commentary from Bill Richardson
A new candidate has joined the race for mayor and is hoping as a political outsider she can make the changes the city needs.
A new candidate has joined the race for mayor and is hoping as a political outsider she can make the changes the city needs.
Jon Kyl is going to retire; good for him, bad for us. Two of the worst possible replacements have surfaced. Both can be best characterized as turncoats. During the 2008 presidential campaign, J.D. Hayworth used his radio pulpit to tell his listeners that John McCain was not the best Republican candidate. He featured discussions about how some so-called conservatives were going to vote for President Obama. Nice job, look what it got us. Do I need to remind you of his "caveat emptor" response to his complicity in a free government money scam? I hope not.
Dear Editor:
Dear Editor:
Anthony Miller, the Republican Party's chairman in Ahwatukee Foothills' legislative district, resigned Monday, citing intimidation by Tea Party and far right activists and a fear for his family's safety.
Anthony Miller, the Republican Party's chairman in Ahwatukee Foothills' legislative district, resigned Monday, citing intimidation by Tea Party and far right activists and a fear for his family's safety.
Republican John McCain has defeated a little-known Democrat to win a fifth term in the U.S. Senate.
Voters changed the balance of Arizona's congressional delegation from heavily Democratic to majority Republican on Tuesday.
David Schweikert remembers knocking on doors in Arizona's Fifth Congressional District in 2008, saying that, in some cases, the conversation abruptly ceased when he revealed that he was the Republican nominee for the seat.
Guest Commentary by Mike McClellan
Guest Commentary by Tom Patterson
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
Guest Commentary by Bill Richardson
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