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Jasper County vote update

All ballots cast in Jasper County in this year’s General Election were recounted this weekend and a hand recount will be held Monday (11/9) in a precinct in Mingo. The preliminary results — added to vote tallies from the 23 other counties in Iowa’s second congressional district — show Democratic candidate Rita Hart now leading Republican Mariannette Miller-Meeks by 163 votes. The Secretary of State ordered the recount after Jasper County Auditor Dennis Parrott notified state officials that a clerical error in his office had given Miller-Meeks and other candidates on the ballot too many votes out of the Mingo precinct. Parrott says Saturday’s (11/7) recount came up with the tally he expected.

“Which was the corrected results we sent to the Secretary of State on Thursday, so I’m very happy, very elated. The process is a perfect process. It catches things.”

Parrott says he stands by the results of the recount, which was done in the presence of election observers.  All results are still unofficial until Tuesday, when the Jasper County Board of Supervisors convenes to conduct what’s called the official canvass. There’s no declared winner in Iowa’s second congressional district race yet.  It’s possible one or both campaigns may seek recounts in selected precincts or in certain counties.

In Mahaska County, canvassing of ballots will take place at 1pm Monday at the Mahaska County Courthouse in Oskaloosa in the third floor conference room.

Error in Jasper County leads to new leader in US House race

An error in counting of ballots has led to a change in the US House District 2 race. Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate spoke Friday morning (11/6) in Newton:

“Our investigation determined that Jasper County’s unofficial election night results,  and I want to underscore unofficial election night results, were overreported votes in some races in one precinct.  The integrity of Iowa’s elections is my top priority as State Commissioner of Elections, which is why I’m ordering an immediate audit of the impacted precinct.  Additionally, I’m requesting that a county-wide recount be conducted of all votes cast in Jasper County.”

Jasper County Auditor Dennis Parrott says human error led to a miscounting of votes in one precinct in Mingo.  As a result of correcting the error, Rita Hart now leads the unofficial count with 196,603 votes to 196,441 for Mariannette Miller-Meeks.  The recount in Jasper County will take place Saturday (11/7).

Pate says neither Miller-Meeks, nor Hart, has reached out to his office for a recount.  And that could not happen until all votes in the 24 counties in House District 2 are canvassed.

Reynolds says Iowans know Covid trends ‘cannot continue’

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RADIO IOWA – Governor Kim Reynolds is launching a second public relations campaign to encourage Iowans to double-down on pandemic precautions, so Main Street businesses can stay open, hospitals don’t get overrun with Covid patients and kids can stay in school.

“I need every Iowan doing their part to be part of the solution,” Reynolds said late this morning, “so I’m going to do my part to ensure that Iowa gets the message.”

Reynolds launched a “mask up” public awareness campaign in July. This new effort will include messages on Iowa radio stations and in local newspapers. The number of Covid patients in Iowa hospitals has doubled in the past month.

“We all know that this trend cannot continue,” Reynolds said.

On Wednesday evening, there were 839 Covid patients in Iowa hospitals. It’s the 11th day in a row of escalation.

“As the news reports every single day: ‘Record cases…Record hospitalizations in every state across this country,’ what is honestly happening is people are just experiencing pandemic fatigue,” Reynolds said. “They are wearing down and wearing out and they want to get their lives back to normal and so I am going to double-down and I am asking them to double-down.”

Reynolds told reporters “government solutions alone cannot stop the virus,” so it’s up to “every Iowan” to take additional precautions. She’s asking Iowans to consider whether indoor gatherings are worth the risk and how they can safely celebrate the upcoming holidays.

“I understand that many people are tired of living differently because of Covid-19, but in the big picture these are really small sacrifices and they will help us manage the virus while living life, but I need your help to make that happen,” Reynolds said. “For the next three weeks, at least, I am asking Iowans to make every effort to help us stop the spread of Covid-19.”

Governor Reynolds invited Dr. Dave Williams, the chief clinical officer at UnityPoint Health in Des Moines, to speak at today’s news conference in her statehouse office.

“My job is to tell you it’s time. We have to start listening,” he said. “The illness burden in our community and in our country is too high…and it’s time that we really buckle down and start to do something about it.”

According to the state’s coronavirus tracking website, 4562 new Covid cases were confirmed by test results reported to the state in the past 24 hours, a significant spike from the previous 24-hour record set November 1. Dr. Hijinio Carreon, the chief medical officer at Mercy One in Des Moines, told reporters Iowa hospitals have contingency plans if additional capacity is needed.

“While we are experiencing significant surges in Covid-19 amidst this pandemic, it’s not something new,” he said. “Unfortunately, it is more severe and more critical than it was in the onset.”

Dr. Carreon said hospitals are more prepared than they were this spring to manage the volume of Covid patients and the most critically ill patients.

Biden ahead in Georgia, Pennsylvania; Trump attacks process

By JONATHAN LEMIRE, ZEKE MILLER, JILL COLVIN and WILL WEISSERT

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrat Joe Biden overtook President Donald Trump in the vote count in Pennsylvania and Georgia Friday morning, closing in on a presidency that hinges on the outcome of tight contests in key battleground states.

Both races remained too early to call with votes still being counted. Neither candidate has reached the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the White House, though Biden has the advantage after eclipsing Trump in Wisconsin and Michigan, two crucial Midwestern battleground states. Biden leads Trump by nearly 6,000 votes in Pennsylvania and just over 1,000 in Georgia.

It could take several more days for the vote count to conclude in some states, allowing a clear winner to emerge. With millions of ballots yet to be tabulated, Biden has already received more than 73 million votes nationally, the most in history

As Americans entered the third full day after the election without knowing who won the race, anxiety about the outcome was building. With his pathway to reelection appearing to narrow, Trump was testing how far he could go in using the trappings of presidential power to undermine confidence in the vote.

On Thursday, he advanced unsupported accusations of voter fraud to falsely argue that his rival was trying to seize power in an extraordinary effort by a sitting American president to sow doubt about the democratic process.

“This is a case when they are trying to steal an election, they are trying to rig an election,” Trump said from the podium of the White House briefing room.

Biden spent Thursday trying to ease tensions and project a more traditional image of presidential leadership. After participating in a coronavirus briefing, he declared that “each ballot must be counted.”

“I ask everyone to stay calm. The process is working,” Biden said. “It is the will of the voters. No one, not anyone else who chooses the president of the United States of America.”

Trump showed no sign of giving up and was was back on Twitter around 2:30 a.m. Friday, insisting the “U.S. Supreme Court should decide!”

Trump’s erroneous claims about the integrity of the election challenged Republicans now faced with the choice of whether to break with a president who, though his grip on his office grew tenuous, commanded sky-high approval ratings from rank-and-file members of the GOP. That was especially true for those who are eyeing presidential runs of their own in 2024.

Maryland GOP Gov. Larry Hogan, a potential presidential hopeful who has often criticized Trump, said unequivocally: “There is no defense for the President’s comments tonight undermining our Democratic process. America is counting the votes, and we must respect the results as we always have before.”

But others who are rumored to be considering a White House run of their own in four years aligned themselves with the incumbent, including Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who tweeted support for Trump’s claims, writing that “If last 24 hours have made anything clear, it’s that we need new election integrity laws NOW.”

Trump’s campaign engaged in a flurry of legal activity to try to improve the Republican president’s chances, saying it would seek a recount in Wisconsin and filing lawsuits in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia.

Judges in Georgia and Michigan quickly dismissed Trump campaign lawsuits there on Thursday, when Trump still held a small edge in Georgia — though Biden was gaining on him as votes continued to be counted. The same was true in Pennsylvania, where Trump’s lead had slipped to about 18,000 votes — and the race is destined to get tighter.

One reason is that elections officials were not allowed to process mail-in ballots until Election Day under state law. It’s a form of voting that has skewed heavily in Biden’s favor after Trump spent months claiming without proof that voting by mail would lead to widespread voter fraud.

Mail ballots from across the state were overwhelmingly breaking in Biden’s direction. A final vote total may not be clear for days because the use of mail-in ballots, which take more time to process, has surged as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Trump campaign said it was confident the president would ultimately pull out a victory in Arizona, where votes were also still being counted, including in Maricopa County, the state’s most populous area. The AP has declared Biden the winner in Arizona and said Thursday that it was monitoring the vote count as it proceeded.

“The Associated Press continues to watch and analyze vote count results from Arizona as they come in,” said Sally Buzbee, AP’s executive editor. “We will follow the facts in all cases.”

Trump’s campaign was lodging legal challenges in several states, though he faced long odds. He would have to win multiple suits in multiple states in order to stop vote counts, since more than one state was undeclared.

Some of the Trump team’s lawsuits only demand better access for campaign observers to locations where ballots are being processed and counted. A judge in Georgia dismissed the campaign’s suit there less than 12 hours after it was filed. And a Michigan judge dismissed a Trump lawsuit over whether enough GOP challengers had access to handling of absentee ballots

Biden attorney Bob Bauer said the suits were legally “meritless.” Their only purpose, he said “is to create an opportunity for them to message falsely about what’s taking place in the electoral process.”

___

Weissert reported from Wilmington, Delaware. Associated Press writers Colleen Long and Alexandra Jaffe in Washington contributed to this report.

Cobra football hosts Columbus Catholic in 1A quarterfinals

Sigourney-Keota’s football team hosts Columbus Catholic of Waterloo Friday night (11/6) in the Class 1A quarterfinals.  It will be a matchup of two ranked teams.  The 9-0 Cobras are ranked third by Associated Press, 8-1 Columbus is ranked tenth.  Sigourney-Keota Coach Jared Jensen says Columbus Catholic is a well-balanced team.

“Their return game, against Mediapolis they had over 100 plus return yards and a touchdown.  Offensively, they do a ton of shifting and motioning to try and get your defense moving before the snap to get you out of position. And offensively, they’ve got five guys they can get the ball to.  They’ve got two really good receivers and three guys that really carry the load in the running game for them.”

You can hear Sigourney-Keota against Columbus Catholic Friday night on KBOE-FM with pregame coverage at 6:40pm and the play by play at 7.

Thomas guilty of involuntary manslaughter in her daughter’s death

An Ottumwa woman accused of murdering her 5-year-old daughter has been found guilty of involuntary manslaughter, rather than murder.  Kelsie Thomas was arrested in July 2018 after her daughter, Cloe Chandler, was found dead at the family home.  Earlier this year, a Wapello County jury could not reach a verdict on whether Thomas was guilty of first degree murder.  In her retrial, Thomas asked that a judge decide on her guilt or innocence, rather than a jury.  Judge Lucy Gamon ruled Thursday (11/5) that there was no evidence of malice before the killing.  Premeditation is a requirement for a first degree murder conviction.  Thomas will be sentenced in January.

Race between Miller-Meeks and Hart may not be official until next week

The race for the District 2 US House seat is close.  When all the ballots were counted Tuesday (11/3), Mariannette Miller-Meeks led Rita Hart by 282 votes. The Miller-Meeks campaign released a statement Wednesday (11/4) saying Tuesday’s results won’t be made official until canvassing of ballots in each county next week…and that questions about a recount are premature at this time.

Biden pushes closer to victory as Trump presses legal moves

By JONATHAN LEMIRE, ZEKE MILLER, JILL COLVIN and ALEXANDRA JAFFE

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrat Joe Biden pushed closer Thursday to the 270 Electoral College votes he needed to win the White House, securing victories in the “blue wall” battlegrounds of Wisconsin and Michigan and narrowing President Donald Trump’s path to reelection.

With just a handful of states still up for grabs, Trump tried to press his case in court in some key swing states. In spite of the aggressive Republican move, the flurry of court action did not seem obviously destined to impact the election’s outcome.

Two days after Election Day, neither candidate had amassed the votes needed to win the White House. But Biden’s victories in the Great Lakes states left him at 264, meaning he was one battleground state away — any would do — from becoming president-elect.

Trump, with 214 electoral votes, faced a much higher hurdle. To reach 270, he needed to claim all four remaining battlegrounds: Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia and Nevada.

With millions of votes yet to be tabulated, Biden already had received more than 71 million, the most in history. At an afternoon news conference Wednesday, the former vice president said he expected to win the presidency but stopped short of outright declaring victory.

“I will govern as an American president,” Biden said. “There will be no red states and blue states when we win. Just the United States of America.”

Trump, in contrast, was escalating his efforts to sow doubt about the outcome of the race. A day after falsely claimed that he had won, he voiced support Thursday for ceasing the tallying of legally cast votes in a tweet, saying, “STOP THE COUNT!” He later falsely asserted that ballots received after Election Day “will not be counted,” a move that if implemented would affect military ballots, as his campaign propagated unsupported allegations of fraud.

Elections are run by individual state, county and local governments and Trump’s public comments have no impact on the tallying of votes across the country.

Trump’s campaign engaged in a flurry of legal activity to try to improve the Republican president’s chances and cast doubt on the election results, requesting a recount in Wisconsin and filing lawsuits in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia. Statewide recounts in Wisconsin have historically changed the vote tally by only a few hundred votes; Biden led by more than 20,000 ballots out of nearly 3.3 million counted.

Biden had an edge nationally over Trump after victories in Wisconsin and Michigan, key Midwestern battleground states. Contests in Georgia, Pennsylvania, Nevada and North Carolina were tight with votes still being tabulated.

The Trump campaign said it was confident the president would ultimately pull out a victory in Arizona, where votes were also still being counted, including in Maricopa County, the state’s most populous area. The AP has declared Biden the winner in Arizona and said Thursday that it was monitoring the vote count as it proceeded.

“The Associated Press continues to watch and analyze vote count results from Arizona as they come in,” said Sally Buzbee, AP’s executive editor. “We will follow the facts in all cases.”

For four years, Democrats have been haunted by the crumbling of the blue wall, the trio of Great Lakes states — Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania — that their candidates had been able to count on in presidential elections. But Trump’s populist appeal struck a chord with white working-class voters and he captured all three in 2016 by a combined total of just 77,000 votes.

The candidates waged a fierce fight for the states this year, with Biden’s everyman political persona resonating in blue-collar towns while his campaign also pushed to increase turnout among Black voters in cities like Detroit and Milwaukee.

It was unclear when a national winner would be determined after a long, bitter campaign dominated by the coronavirus and its effects on Americans and the national economy. The U.S. on Wednesday set another record for daily confirmed cases as several states posted all-time highs. The pandemic has killed more than 233,000 people in the United States.

Trump spent much of Wednesday and Thursday in the White House residence, huddling with advisers and fuming at media coverage showing his Democratic rival picking up battlegrounds. Trump used his Twitter feed to falsely claim victory in several key states and amplify unsubstantiated conspiracy theories about Democratic gains as absentee and early votes were tabulated. Aides did not say when he next planned to appear in public.

Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien said the president would formally request a Wisconsin recount, citing “irregularities” in several counties. And the campaign said it was filing suits in Michigan and Pennsylvania to halt ballot counting on grounds that it wasn’t given proper access to observe. Trump campaign spokesman Jason Miller said additional legal action was expected in Nevada.

“We will literally be going through every single ballot,” he said of the hotly contested state.

At the same time, hundreds of thousands of votes were still to be counted in Pennsylvania, and Trump’s campaign said it was moving to intervene in existing Supreme Court litigation over counting mail-in ballots there.

Despite Trump’s claims that he was taking fraud claims to court, most of the lawsuits demand better access for campaign observers to locations where ballots are being processed and counted. A judge in Georgia dismissed the campaign’s suit there less than 12 hours after it was filed.

Biden attorney Bob Bauer said the suits were “meritless”

“I want to emphasize that for their purposes these lawsuits don’t have to have merit,” he said. “That’s not the purpose. … It is to create an opportunity for them to message falsely about what’s taking place in the electoral process.”

In other closely watched races, Trump picked up Florida, the largest of the swing states, and held onto Texas and Ohio while Biden kept New Hampshire and Minnesota.

Beyond the presidency, Democrats had hoped the election would allow the party to reclaim the Senate and pad its majority in the House. But while the voting scrambled seats in the House and Senate, it ultimately left Congress much like it began — deeply divided.

The candidates spent months pressing dramatically different visions for the nation’s future, including on racial justice, and voters responded in huge numbers, with more than 100 million people casting votes ahead of Election Day.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell discounted the president’s quick claim of victory, saying it would take a while for states to conduct their vote counts. The Kentucky Republican said that “claiming you’ve won the election is different from finishing the counting.”

Vote tabulations routinely continue beyond Election Day, and states largely set the rules for when the count has to end. In presidential elections, a key point is the date in December when presidential electors meet. That’s set by federal law.

Dozens of Trump supporters chanting “Stop the count!” descended on a ballot-tallying center in Detroit, while thousands of anti-Trump protesters demanding a complete vote count took to the streets in cities across the U.S.

Protests — sometimes about the election, sometimes about racial inequality — took place Wednesday in at least a half-dozen cities, including Los Angeles, Seattle, Houston, Pittsburgh, Minneapolis and San Diego.

Several states allow mailed-in votes to be accepted after Election Day as long as they were postmarked by Tuesday. That includes Pennsylvania.

___

Jaffe reported from Wilmington, Delaware. Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani and Andrew Taylor in Washington and Kathleen Ronayne in Sacramento, Calif., contributed to this report.

___

Osky Rotary Christmas Food Basket sign-up

The Oskaloosa Rotary is preparing for its annual Christmas Food Basket program.  Oskaloosa Rotary Vice President Eddie Pierson tells us how to sign up.

“People can get their applications for the Christmas Food Basket at multiple public agencies such as the Department of Human Services, Sieda, United Way, the South Central Iowa Center for Independent Living.  They can also get the application for the Christmas Food Basket in the Oskaloosa Shopper.”

The deadline to sign up is next Friday, November 13.  The Oskaloosa Rotary will give out the food baskets December 5 at United Methodist Church.  Pierson says the Oskaloosa Rotary gave out around 550 Christmas food baskets last year.

This week’s weather in Iowa to aid wrap up of 2020 harvest

BY 

RADIO IOWA – The 2020 Harvest is speeding toward completion. Ninety-seven percent of soybeans have been harvested. Iowa Ag Secretary Mike Naig says about 1.5 million acres of corn was left to be combined when the week started — that’s equal to just 13 percent of this year’s corn crop.

“We’ve had a historic pace in terms of getting the crop out here, several weeks ahead of the five year average,” Naig says. “We’re well ahead of pace and we’ve got plenty of time here, but it’s especially nice when the weather cooperates as it has here when we flipped the calendar into November.”

It’s not unusual at this point in the season to have corn still standing in southern Iowa fields. The growing season is longer in southern compared to northern Iowa. In the fall of 2019, there was a propane shortage as Iowa farmers were using the fuel to power the driers in grain bins.

“This year hasn’t been nearly as much of a demand for propane because the corn has dried down in the field and just simply hasn’t needed it as much, so that’s been a bright spot for farmers,” Naig says. “They’ve been able to save some on that drying cost and that’s always appreciated.”

Up to four million acres of corn was damaged or destroyed by the August 10th derecho. Naig says that contributed to a slower harvest pace in fields where farmers were trying to harvest damaged stalks.

“They’ve had to literally go slower or maybe even go one direction in a field,” Naig says. “We also know that there were the compounding issues of grain storage that was damaged due to the wind storm.”

Naig says some farmers had to opt to pile corn on the ground because their grain bins were hit by the derecho.

 

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