Dissecting Progressive Viewpoints Part I

News New Mexico received some hard to understand emails from Sun-News columnist Bill Varuola last week regarding our news and commentary. When we asked him for clarification, he let us know his upcoming column would illuminate some of the points he was trying to make.
In his column: “The U.S. is in demise, but it can be remedied” in the Sun-News on Saturday September 18th Varuola expounded on a few things. You can read his entire column by clicking here:  We surmised that what bugs Bill Varuola most is the Tea Party movement. We make this assumption because it was on the top of his list. Varuola says the Tea Party movement is “Indicative of a collection of fears that does not speak well of its members.” We disagree.
We have questioned Esteban Camacho on our program repeatedly. Though Camacho is relatively young, he knows his way around the U.S. Constitution. There seems to be the same sort of vague racist accusations of the Tea Party movement in the Varuola column that we have seen even more prominently in most “progressive” editorial pieces. In the real world, Esteban Camacho, like many local Tea party members is Hispanic. We have found nothing in the “concerns” Camacho or other local Tea Party members have expressed, that do not “speak well.” On the other hand, we do find many of the things described as troubling Varuola, that do not speak particularly well. Let’s dissect Varuola’s column further, on an idea by idea basis.
The troubled economist in Varuola opines as follows, “Deficit spending is necessary at times to stimulate the economy.” We can only infer that he is “troubled” by the withering criticism that is falling on the party in power because it is borrowing about $1,000 a month on behalf of every taxpayer in the country. The stated purpose for racking up the debt is to “stimulate” the economy. News New Mexico remains convinced that taxpayers in Dona Ana County could make better decisions than the federal government on how to allocate $1,000 in extra cash each month. And we are not troubled that the latest edition of the “borrow and blow” crowd in Washington is catching political hell.
Varuola continued down his troubled list by saying, “White men need not dominate the society.” In this comment we have no idea what Varuola is talking about. Is he saying we need more discussion in society about power and people’s skin color and gender? Is this still a relevant point given passage of the landmark civil rights bill in 1964? Is Varuola unswayed by Martin Luther King’s birthday being celebrated by hundreds of millions of Americans as a national holiday? How about the great Jackie Robinson’s number being retired in every major league ballpark in the land? Does the rise to power of Barack Obama provide evidence of significance? Does this “white men” statement by Varuola serve any legitimate basis for discussion? Or are these merely the words of an old political mockingbird who longs for the return of the disappearing concerns that are now being left behind for a different era of U.S. history?
Like many other media outlets, News New Mexico posts many editorial columns that are written by non-white men and women. Our favorite thinkers include Linda Chavez, Kathryn Lopez, Walter Williams, Star Parker, Larry Elder, Armstrong Williams, Humberto Finova, Thomas Sowell, Lurita Doan, Ken Blackwell, Joseph Phillips, Harry Jackson Jr. and Jaime Estrada. While we also dare to post the ideas of “white men,” none of the columnists listed above can be branded as a “white men.” Are their races, ethnicity, or gender relevant? We wonder why the subject of "white men" would make any list of what is troubling?
Tomorrow we will dissect the column for Varuola's views on Christianity, taxes, and immigration.


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Bill Varuola: The U.S. is in demise, but it can be remedied

Las Cruces— Some time back I devised a peculiar little list of reasons why I thought our United States were in their demise. It wasn't a serious list but some of the deep thinkers out there, waiting to pounce on my every word, took it as one and pounced. I'd like to tell you of a few things that do trouble me and trouble me seriously, sometimes directly, sometimes for what they stand. Because I do believe we are in decline, by degree, but in ways that can be remedied. There is the Tea Party movement, indicative of a collection of fears that does not speak well of its members. The president is a native born American citizen. Deficit spending is necessary at times to stimulate the economy. White men need not dominate the society. Immigration is not inherently a bad thing. Christianity is not by nature first among not-quite equals. Read more here:

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Kudlow - Tea Party Wins are Bullish

Larry Kudlow
Stalin, Lenin, Kalinen
This past week I gave a speech to a group of investors. The organizer of the event e-mailed me the night before, asking that I please try to be optimistic. Well, that’s my usual habitat. But optimism has been hard for me this year. Our muddle-through economy and lackluster stock market, challenged by so many taxing, spending, and regulating problems coming out of Washington, are the reasons why. In fact, until recently, I’ve been advising people to take profits in the stock market, rather than buy-and-hold. You should keep your money before the Obama IRS takes it from you. But following the tea-party primary victories in Delaware, New York, and New Hampshire this week, I’m once again getting energized.
Free-market capitalism is on the comeback trail. That’s one of the key tea-party messages. And make no mistake about it: The free-market power of the tea-party political revolt is totally bullish for stocks and the economy. In short, this is a revolution. The political elites in both parties don’t get it. Nor do the mainstream media. But the tea-party movement is stopping Obamanomics dead in its tracks. And it will overturn the Keynesian big-government planning effort now in full force in our nation’s capital. The tea parties are Reaganism reincarnate, and then some. It’s all there in the Contract from America: Limited government, individual liberty, economic freedom. Defund Obamacare. No tax-and-nationalize energy scheme. Stop the tax hikes and move to a flat-tax system. No special favors and subsidies. No crony capitalism. Read more here:


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Megalomania and Power Addiction in Alaska

Lisa Murkowski
Sept. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski will try to return to Congress with a write-in campaign, after losing a renomination battle to a Republican primary challenger backed by Sarah Palin and the Tea Party movement. “Today, my friends, my campaign for Alaska’s future begins,” Murkowski, 53, told a rally last night in Anchorage. “The gloves are off.” Murkowski lost last month’s primary to Joe Miller, a lawyer from Fairbanks and a former U.S. magistrate judge. In a year when small-government, anti-tax Tea Party activists have sparked intraparty Republican battles from Alaska to Delaware, Murkowski said she was getting back into the race because “we cannot accept the extremist views of Joe Miller.” Murkowski will have to run without official help from Republican colleagues in Washington. Within minutes of her announcement, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky issued a statement saying Murkowski resigned as Senate Republican Conference secretary, a senior leadership post.
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State Mandated Subsidies Complicate Power Policies

People in the process of putting a solar-energy system on their home or business rooftops could end up with less of an energy credit from Public Service Company of New Mexico under a plan approved by the Public Regulation Commission in mid-August. The plan also doesn't guarantee that the financial landscape for solar purchasers and installers won't change again next year, something renewable-energy advocates had hoped would change. PNM annually must present a plan to regulators stating how the company will meet its state-required renewable-energy goals. "We hoped to provide a little certainty in the agreement because, as business owners, we make certain commitments," said Randy Sadewic, general manager of Positive Energy, a solar-energy installation business in Santa Fe. "We can't do this based on short-term incentives." Read more here:
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Bill O'Reilly - Why Football Ratings are UP

Bill O'Reilly
From Townhall - Take it from me because I see the Nielsen television ratings every day: NFL football is riding a huge wave of popularity in America. In the first week of play, the ratings are up by double digits, and the games have even taken some viewers away from my news program, which is a complete and utter outrage. Why are more people watching football? The first reason is economic: It's free. Because of the recession, fewer people are going out for entertainment. Instead, they grab popcorn and a beverage and watch huge men run into each other. Simple and inexpensive. The second reason expands on the simplicity factor. We are living in a time of incredible spin and gross dishonesty in the public arena. Propagandists are everywhere, and they're spitting out so much bilge it is sometimes hard to even breathe. Football is an honest game. The toughest, smartest team usually wins. There is something pure in the presentation. Read more here:
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Aggie Football Falls 42-10 In Battle of I-10

bleedCrimson.net Report
The 88th renewal of the Battle of I-10 belonged to the Miners as UTEP would score on their first three possessions to take a 21-0 lead before the Aggies would even get their first first down. "We just played poorly," said head coach DeWayne Walker after the game. "We knew they were going to be explosive on offense, right now we have some major problems that we need to figure out. We're not a good enough football team right now to be be in a scoring fest." The Aggies would win the coin toss and defer to the second half giving UTEP the ball first. The Miners would get the ball on their own 26 yard line and drive nine plays covering 74 yards en route to a 7-0 lead. Trevor Vittatoe would find Julio Lopez on 2nd and 10 from the Aggie 18 for the touchdown. The Miners converted on 3rd and 7 twice during the drive. The Aggies would start their first drive on their own 22 yard line but would go three and out. The Miners would return the Tanner Rust punt to the Aggie 48. The Miners would convert on 3rd and 5 to the Aggie 36. After a holding penalty put the Miners back to the Aggie 46, the Aggies would force UTEP into a 3rd and 5 on the Aggie 20. George Callendar would stop Vernon Frazier for a four yard gain forcing a 4th and 1 on the Aggie 16. The Miners would convert the 4th down. Three plays later the Aggies would covert a 3rd and 4 on the Aggie eight as Trevor Vittatoe found Donald Kemp for the 8-yard touchdown pass putting the Miners up 14-0 with 2:33 left in the first quarter. The Aggies would start their second drive on their own 20 yard line and after a seven yard completion to Marcus Allen gave the Aggies 3rd and 3 on their own 27, Kenny Turner would rush for two yards coming up just short of the first down. Tanner Rust would punt the ball to the UTEP 31 where Marlon McClure would return it to the UTEP 44. Two consecutive offensive holding penalties would back the Miners up to their own 24 giving them 1st and 30. The Miners would start the second quarter with a 3rd and 25. The Aggie defense appeared to get the stop as Trevor Vittatoe's pass attempt to Kris Adams fell incomplete, however, a defensive pass interference penalty was called on Jonte Green giving the Miners a first and 10 on their own 44. The Aggie defense would again force a 3rd and long as UTEP faced a 3rd and 13 situation but again the Aggie defense would allow a third down conversion down to the Aggie 14 as Trevor Vittatoe found Pierce Hunter for a 45 yard gain. The Aggie coaching staff would call a timeout to try to settle down the defense, however, the Aggies would come back on the field and were flagged for having 12 men on the field giving UTEP a 1st and 5 at the Aggie 9. Two plays later the Miners would find the endzone for their third score. The extra point by Dakota Warren gave the Miners a 21-0 lead just three minutes into the second quarter. The Aggie offense, down by 21 points, would finally start to click as they were aided by a 32 yard kickoff return by Taveon Rogers giving the Aggies good starting field position at their own 37. On 3rd and 9 Aggie quarterback Matt Christian would find Marcus Allen for a 24 yard gain to the UTEP 38. On the next play, Christian would find Kyle Nelson for 11 yards down to the Miners' 27 yard line. Seth Smith would take a swing pass from Christian down to the UTEP 18 giving the Aggies 2nd and 1. Smith would pick up the first down rushing for six yards down to the Miners' 12 yard line. Two plays later the Aggies would face 3rd and 1 on the UTEP 3 yard line and Seth Smith would punch the ball in for a touchdown, his first of the season. Tyler Stampler would add the extra point cutting the Aggies' deficit to 14 at 21-7 with 7:43 left. The nine-play drive by the Aggie offense reinvigorated the Aggies on defense as the Aggie defense would hold on 3rd and 9 after UTEP had driven from their own 34 to the Aggie 48. UTEP's Ian Campbell would punt the ball pinning the Aggies on their own two yard line. The Aggies would take over with 5:13 left in the half and Brandon Perez would bowl his way up the middle for three yardsgiving the Aggies a little breathing room from their own goal line. Matt Christian would find Marcus Williams for 11 yards getting the Aggies out of the shadow of their own goal line and up to the Aggie 16 yard line. On 3rd and 13, Christian would again find Marcus Williams this time for 16 yards up to the Aggie 29. Two plays later Kenny Turner would help the Aggies convert a 3rd and 5 from their own 34 as he would take a pass from Matt Christian for seven yards to the Aggie 41. The Aggies would again convert on 3rd and 5 as Matt Christian found Todd Lee on a crossing pattern for 18 yards down to the UTEP 36. Christian would continue his hot streak finding Marcus Allen for 15 yards down to the Miner 21. The Aggies would drive down to the UTEP 13 but on 3rd and 2 Matt Christian's pass to Marcus Allen would be off the mark forcing the Aggies to attempt a field goal. Tyler Stampler would boot the 31-yard attempt through the uprights cutting the once 21-point deficit down to just 11 right before the half. The Aggies would get the ball to start the second half but, just as they had done on their first possession in the first half, the Aggies would go three and out punting the ball away to the Miners. The Miners would get the ball on the Aggie 49 yard line, and two plays later the Miners had covered 33 yards on a 13 yard pass play from Trevor Vittatoe to Marlon McClure and a 20 yard run by Jason Williams. On 3rd and 10 the Aggie defense would yield yet another conversion and Trevor Vittatoe would find Evan Davis in the endzone. The extra point would be successful and the Aggies would trail 28-10 with 11:56 left in the third quarter. After UTEP's kickoff would find the back of the endzone, the Aggies would take over on their own 20. However, the Aggie offense would sputter once again forcing a Tanner Rust punt. Rust would put the ball 37 yards and the Miners would start their next drive on their own 32 yard line. On the very first play of the drive, Vittatoe would find Kris Adams streaking down the right sideline behind the Aggie secondary for the 68-yard touchdown strike. Dakota Warren would add the extra point and the Aggies found themselves down 35-10. The Aggie offense would get the ball on their own 18 to start and Seth Smith would jumpstart the Aggie offense with a 24 yard rush to their own 42 yard line. Smith would rush for another seven yards to the Aggie 49. On 3rd and 5, Matt Christian would find Kyle Nelson for five yards down to the UTEP 48. After an incompletion, Matt Christian would call his own number on the quarterback keeper rushing down to the Miner 41. Unfortunately for the Aggies, Christian's pass attempt on 3rd and 3 would fall incomplete and the Aggies would be forced to punt once again. Tanner Rust's punt would find the back of the endzone giving the Miners the ball on their own 20. After a defensive holding penalty on the Aggies, Joe Banyard would break a 26-yard run up the right side to the Aggie 43. A couple plays later the Miners would convert a 3rd and 1 on the Aggie 34. With the ball on the Aggie 26 and the Miners facing 3rd and 6, the Aggie defense would stop Joe Banyard just short of the first down. However, with just under three minutes left in the third quarter, UTEP head coach Mike Price would elect to go for it on 4th and 1 and Elija Goldtrap would pick up the first down picking up four yards down to the Aggie 13. Two plays later on 3rd and 4, Vittatoe would find Kris Adams in the corner of the endzone for an 11-yard touchdown strike putting the Miners ahead 42-10 after the extra point.
The fourth quarter would see the Aggies run eight plays as they started a drive from their own 20 advancing all the way to midfield before seeing their drive stall forcing another Tanner Rust punt.
The Miners would get the ball back on their own with 12:10 left in the game. They would get all the way down to the Aggies' 26 yard line and after a James Thomas II pass fell incomplete on 3rd and 12, Mike Scott lined up for a field goal from 43 yards out. The Aggies would block the field goal attempt and Frank Padilla would recover on the Aggie 37 with 9:24 remaining. The Aggie offense would be unable to capitalize on the momentum from the blocked kick as Matt Christian would be intercepted on the UTEP 33 yard line. It was Christian's first interception thrown this season and the first turnover of the game.
The Miners would go three and out giving the Aggies the ball back with 5:43 left in the game. With the ball on the UTEP 47, the Aggies would mount one final drive to try to add to their 10 point total. The Aggies would drive all the way to the UTEP five yard line but back-to-back incomplete passes on third and fourth down would see the Aggies' hopes of scoring fall by the wayside. The Miners would take over on downs with 2:42 left to go and they would run out the clock giving them a 42-10 victory and their second consecutive Battle of I-10 win. The Aggies were out gained 495 yards to 296 yards, however, the Aggie passing game generated 200 yards to 246 for the Miners. Aggie quarterback Matt Christian finished the game 21-of-40 with one interception. Trevor Vittatoe would finish the game 19-of-30, however, he would throw five touchdown passes on the evening. The Miners outgunned the Aggies on the ground 249 to 96 as Seth Smith would rush for 46 yards on 10 carries and scored the Aggies' lone touchdown. Kenny Turner would rush for 19 yards on five carries. Marcus Allen led the Aggie receiving corps with five catches for 65 yards. Kyle Nelson caught four ball for 30 yards. Donavan Kemp had five catches for 38 yards for the Miners and caught one touchdown pass. Kris Adams had three catches for 86 yards and two touchdowns. Evan Davis had two catches for 25 yards and one Miner touchdown and Julio Lopez caught one ball for 18 yards and a touchdown. Joe Banyard scored the rushing touchdown for the Miners as he finished with 64 yards on 11 carries. Neither defense recorded a sack and the two teams combined for just five tackles for losses. Boyblue Aoelua led the Aggies with seven tackles while Royzell Smith led the Miners with 10 tackles and forced the game's lone turnover. The Aggies fall to 0-2 on the season while the Miners improve to 2-1. The Aggies will face Kansas in Lawrence, KS next Saturday with kickoff scheduled for 5:10 MT and can be seen on Fox College Sports.

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Aggie Volleyball Hangs Tough With Arizona But Falls In 3-0 Sweep

bleedCrimson.net Report
Starting three freshmen against a veteran Arizona team on Saturday afternoon, the Aggies would come up short falling in three sets to the host Wildcats, 25-18, 25-19 and 26-24. The Aggies would battle closely with the Wildcats in the first two sets before Arizona would pull away in the later stages of each set. The Aggies led by two points at 23-21 in set three but could not overcome the Wildcats. "We had three freshmen out there, sometimes four against a good Pac-10 team, that's difficult right now but there was definitely some competition," said head coach Mike Jordan after the match. The Aggie defense had no answer for Arizona's Tiffany Owens who finished the match with a match-high 22 kills on 30 swings with just one attack error and an astounding .700 hitting percentage on the left side. She added 12 digs and a service ace. "We didn't play very good defense in the first game, it was close for a long time but we didn't capitalize on some defensive opportunities," said Coach Jordan. The Aggies' freshman middle blocker Desire Scott, playing in place of injured junior Kelsey Brennan, finished with nine kills on 11 swings and committed no hitting errors for an .818 hitting percentage.
It was the sixth loss in a row for the Aggies, their longest losing steak since losing six in a row in the 1999 season, head coach Mike Jordan's second season at the helm. The Aggies would hang tough with Arizona in the first set early. The Aggies took a 1-0 lead in the set on a kill by Kayleigh Giddens but three straight points gave the Cats a 3-1 lead. The Aggies would keep Arizona in their sights as the Wildcats would lead by three on several occasions and on several occasions the Aggies would cut the Arizona lead to two and have a chance to trim the lead to one, however, they were unable to do so each time. The Wildcats push their lead to five points at 17-12 on a kill by Cursty Jackson. The Aggies would trim the lead to two at 17-15 after a kill by Desiree Scott, a service ace by Shelby Tamura and a bad set by Arizona's Paige Weber. The Aggies would have a chance to cut the lead to one but a kill by Arizona's Whitney Dosty pushed the Wildcat lead to three at 18-15. The Aggies would get a kill on a setter dump by Jenna DeVries to again cut the lead to two points at 18-16 but Arizona would run off three consecutive points to push their lead to 20-16 forcing an Aggie timeout. The Aggies would score just two more points after the timeout as the Wildcats would take the set 25-18. The second set again saw the Aggies hang tough with the Wildcats as the Aggies would lead 3-1 after a kill by Whitney Woods. Three straight points by the Wildcats would push them ahead 4-3. The Aggies would draw even on a service error by Arizona's Marketa Hanzlova. Arizona would run off three points to take a 7-4 lead. The Aggies would battle back to tie the set at 9-9 after a kill by Whitney Woods and would again tie the set at 11 on a kill by Kayleigh Giddens. Three straight points by Arizona would force an Aggie timeout trailing 14-11. The Aggies would cut the Wildcat lead to two points at 14-12 and 16-14 but a four point run by the Cats would give them a 20-14 lead. The Aggies would trail by five at 23-18 but the Wildcats would put the set away at 25-19. The Aggies would fall behind quickly 3-0 in the third set and would go down 9-5 after a kill by Arizona's Madeline Lozano. However, six straight Aggie points highlighted by three straight kills by Rocio Gutierrez would give the Aggies an 11-9 lead. The Aggies would hold a 12-11 lead as 5'8" Jennah DeVries would win a joust at the net over 6'3" Whitney Dosty. The Aggies would push their lead to three points at 16-13 after an attack error by Courtney Karst. The Aggies would still hold a two point lead at 19-17 after a kill by Desiree Scott but the Wildcats would tie the set after Rocio Gutierrez committed an attack error. The Aggies and Woldcats would trade points and the set would remain tied at 21-21 but two straight points by the Aggies would give them a 23-21 lead. Two points later the set would be tied at 23 forcing an Aggie timeout. Kayleigh Giddens would commit an attack error on the next point to give the Wildcats a 24-23 lead prompting another Aggie timeout. Whitney Woods would record a kill to tie the set at 24 but Arizona would finish off the match on kill by Tiffany Owens two points later to give the Wildcats a 26-24 set victory and send the Aggies home with their sixth straight defeat.
Kayleigh Giddens led the Aggies with 10 kills on 28 swings with six attack errors and hit .143 on the match. Desiree Scott had nine kills and committed no attack errors and hit .818 on the match. Fellow middle Michelle Kuester finished with four kills on eight swings with no attack errors and hit .500 for the match. "They've got talent and they're getting better, we've just got to keep feeding them the ball a little bit more as the opportunity arises," said Coach Jordan. "That comes with confidence. We understand that we can't just keep setting Kayleigh all the time and Woods all the time. With Kelsey Brennan out, we've got to prove our middles can get kills. They did a good job." Whitney Woods finished with seven kills, Rocio Gutierrez and setter Jennah DeVries each finished with five kills and freshman Deirdre Pajares recorded one kill.
Rocio Gutierrez finished with eight digs to lead the way for the Aggies. Kayleigh Giddens and Ellen Miks each had seven digs in the match. Tiffany Owens had a career night for the Wildcats with 22 kills, 12 digs and a service ace. Cursty Jackson finished with 10 kills on 13 swings and just one attack error to hit .692. Courtney Kars added 10 kills on 22 swings with three attack errors and hit .318. The Wildcats had seven service aces and seven service errors while the Aggies had two service aces and six service errors.
Arizona finished the match hitting .408 while the Aggies hit .312. The two teams combined for just 22 attack errors, 10 for Arizona and 12 for the Aggies. "It was very clean, it was an excellently played offensive match," said Coach Jordan. "They passed a little bit better serve receive than we did which helped them obviously. They're still big and physical and it's tough to stop them even when they're out of system. A lot of that big percentage came in the first game where we had a lot of defensive opportunities that we didn't make. I think if we can clean that up we'll be a lot tougher."
The Aggies open up WAC play on Thursday night when they face Louisiana Tech in Ruston, LA. at 6:00 p.m. MT.

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Massacre in Juarez Early Friday Morning

From the El Paso Times - JUAREZ -- At least seven people, including a woman in her 20s, were massacred early this morning in the Pronaf area, a bar strip in north Juárez, Chihuahua state police said. The shooting occurred about 4 a.m. inside the V-Bar and killed seven people and injured two others. Police have not identified the victims and did not confirm the conditions of the other two wounded. Read more here:
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Arnold and Bill versus Jan and Rick

From the El Paso Times -  U.S.-Mexico border governors will meet Sunday and Monday in Santa Fe to talk about border security and economic development even though Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer are boycotting the event, New Mexico officials said Friday. Brewer and Perry will not be there because they disagree with the decision of the other governors to move the conference from Arizona to New Mexico. The conference was supposed to be in Phoenix this year, but the six Mexican governors in the group announced in June that they would not travel to Arizona because of its new immigration law. At that point, Brewer canceled the conference. However, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson disagreed with Brewer and he moved the conference to New Mexico. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is helping Richardson host the conference.

Bill Richardson
Chihuahua state Gov. Jose Reyes Baeza is expected to be there. Richardson said the conference must go on regardless of who shows up."As border governors, we see the impact of border issues like security, economic development and energy issues every day," Richardson said in a statement. "While we may not always agree on every issue, as leaders of the U.S.-Mexico border region, we must maintain a strong dialogue to help assure cooperation along the border, resolve regional border issues, and make sure binational issues are given proper attention by our federal governments."
Jan Brewer
A spokeswoman for Perry said the Texas governor will not attend the meeting and referred all questions to the statements Perry made in July when the conference site was changed. "It was Arizona's turn to host this and he respected their decision to cancel it. He still intends to have a working relationship with all of the border governors," Perry spokeswoman Katherine Cesinger said. Read more here:
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