Rome News-Tribune

Why won’t the GOP fight for the little guy?

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From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The British are now looking into whether President Vladimir Putin’s Russia intervened in the United Kingdom’s June 2016 referendum on continued membership in the European Union. The “Brexit” won by about 52 percent, but it’s unclear whether Russian interferen­ce in the affair, through social media buys or other means, made a difference. Many people in Britain long have had reservatio­ns about integratio­n and complaints about the EU, so the outcome did not come as a shot from the dark.

At the same time, Russia was in favor of Britain’s leaving the EU as a means of putting the cat among the pigeons among the EU members, which include former satellites of the former Soviet Union.

Russia has also interfered in recent elections in France, Germany and the United States. It has showed itself capable of weighing in both through media and through technologi­cal capacities in the field of communicat­ions, hacking into innerparty communicat­ions and, less clearly, voting mechanisms.

This is troubling to the affected nations, but it must be kept in mind that government­s the world over, including various U.S. administra­tions, often had tried to meddle in others’ internal affairs.

In the United States there are still underway investigat­ions into the role of Russia in the 2016 elections. The most vigorous of these is led by special counsel and former FBI head Robert S. Mueller III, but there are less reliable, more politicize­d inquiries being carried out by the Senate and House of Representa­tives Intelligen­ce committees and the Senate Judiciary Committee.

These risk being slow-rolled in spite of their importance due to possible links they are exploring between Trump campaign personnel and Russians.

Negotiatio­ns between British and EU representa­tives over Brexit, which still has the support of the British public, is giving the U.K.’s political leadership, including Prime Minister Theresa May, fits. One painful issue is how much the British will have to pay the EU, based on commitment­s it undertook during its membership, to get out. Another is the new situation in terms of rights of British citizens in remaining EU members and other EU member countries’ citizens in Britain.

Another knotty question is what the new, post-Brexit situation will be at the border between Ireland, which will remain an EU member, and Northern Ireland, part of the United Kingdom but a part whose population voted against Brexit. That border is now wide open. Its changed status, to the border between an EU member and a nonmember U.K., risks blowing up the famous 1998 Good Friday agreement that brought peace to Northern Ireland.

Another major problem in the evolving EU-British negotiatio­ns is that, given the shaky political situation inside and among the British political parties since the Conservati­ves lost May’s hastily called elections in June, EU countries and negotiator­s are not certain that the British government can deliver home approval on any agreement reached with them.

If nothing else, Putin has to be wringing his hands with glee at both the intra-British quarreling over Brexit and the tension occasioned by the negotiatio­ns over Brexit between the British and the rest of the Europeans — just as he must be smiling at the energy Americans continue to expend battling each other over Donald Trump’s election.

All of this plays into Russia’s hands and points up for Americans the necessity to get to the bottom of the mischief that Russia has been able so far to wreak in American politics, and the need to block it off before Americans go to the polls again.

Mr. Avila, Severo at Rome Newspaper.

Please publish this article about this fine man ... an angel! Please give to Mr. Severo Avila Please and Thank you !! And there are little stars drawn on the envelope.

Of course, I’m intrigued so I open the envelope and there’s a typed letter inside. There’s no name on the letter but the author claims to be an older lady who wants me to share with y’all that there are “still very good people left in this world even though there is so much turmoil present.”

The lady claims that a few weeks ago she was walking down the street after just leaving Floyd Medical Center where she had surgery on her hand. Her son was supposed to pick her up but he didn’t show.

So she started wandering around looking for him. It was about 8 p.m. and she said it was getting colder and she became very worried being by herself.

Well out of nowhere, a “nice young man” stopped his car on the side of the road, got out and asked her if she needed help. She explained the situation and the man held her hand and walked her back to the hospital saying it would be warmer there and they’d figure out what to do next.

Back at the hospital, the man stayed with her and reassured her that they’d find her son. The lady said that the kind man stayed with her for about an hour until her son finally arrived then he walked her out to the parking lot and led her safely to her son’s car once he arrived.

The lady said she remembers that the man told her he was a local dentist and that his name was “Ellingwood” or “Ellington.”

she wrote, SEVERO AVILA Nick Anderson, Washington Post

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