The Work Families Party has endorsed Suzanne Bielinski for the town and city clerk position in the upcoming Democratic primary against the incumbent Peter Denuzze.
Richard Coe of Discover The Networks stated that the Working Families Party ( WFP) is a front group for the radical cult ACORN. WFP functions as a political party in New York and Connecticut, promoting ACORN-friendly radical candidates. WFP charges its member’s dues, approximately $60, which is a policy of ACORN and its affiliates. Also note that Acorn's Headquarters is located in the same address as the WFP’S, at 88 Third Avenue in Brooklyn New York. Bertha Lewis is the Co-Director of WFP and is the Executive Director of ACORN New York. In Hartford, ACORN and Working Families Party is located in the same office suite and even share the same fax machine, so make no mistake about it, Working Families Party in reality is just ACORN by another name.
By being cross endorsed by the WFP, it demonstrates that Ms. Bielinski is aligned and dedicated to the radical and socialistic ideology that ACORN and their thug approach of twisting arms of those who dare to oppose their views.
VOTE FOR AN EXPERIENCED CANDIDATE, PETER DENUZZE, WHO HASN’T ANY TIES TO SUCH ORGANIZATIONS, WHICH WILL KEEP OUR TOWN AND CITY CLERK’S OFFICE BEHOLDEN TO NO RADICAL FRINGE GROUPS.
Don't Let ACORN bus in a sea of red shirts to decide your election for you!
I agree....Peter Denuzze is the best of the Democrats for the Town Clerk...vote for him in the primary!
ReplyDeleteLittle Mac is apparently throwing Denuzze under the bus, despite his extensive qualifications for this job, simply because he is not liberal enough for a radical extremist like Little Mac, Sherwack, and Trulyworthless!
ReplyDeletePete's got my vote as well...he's a great guy and he's got one very important thing that Bielinski doesn't have...common sense.
ReplyDeleteFrank,
ReplyDeleteCheck your facts. The Working Families Party endorsement only applies to November. The primary is between Democrats only. Little Mac would like nothing better than to have commies vote in the primsry too.
Of course, even though your facts are incorrect, you are never wrong in my book.
The fact remains that only one candidate in the primary has been endorsed by the radical group Working Families Party, and that candidate is certainly not Denuzze.
ReplyDeleteThe Working Families Party (WFP) is a front group for the radical cult ACORN. It functions as a political party in New York State and Connecticut, promoting ACORN-friendly candidates. Unlike conventional political parties, WFP charges its members dues – about $60 per year – a policy characteristic of ACORN and its affiliates.
ReplyDeleteAccording to the party’s Web site, WFP is a coalition founded by ACORN, the Communications Workers of America, and the United Automobile Workers. However, ACORN clearly dominates the coalition. New York ACORN leader Steven Kest was the moving force in forming the party. WFP headquarters is located at the same address as ACORN’s national office, at 88 Third Avenue in Brooklyn.
The Working Families Party was listed as a co-sponsor of yesterday's nationwide protest at AIG, Bank of America and Citigroup offices in a press release issued by the leftist Service Employees International Union.
ACORN:
ReplyDelete* Largest radical group in America, with more than 400,000 dues-paying member families and more than 1,200 chapters in 110 U.S. cities
* Was implicated in numerous reports of fraudulent voter registration, vote-rigging, voter intimidation, and vote-for-pay scams during recent election cycles
* Pressured banks to lend money to underqualified minority borrowers
* Maintains close ties to organized labor
* Opposes capitalism
* Calls for more government control over citizens and the economy
* Favors a government monopoly in healthcare
* Advocates an open-door immigration policy.
A new congressional report accuses ACORN of massive fraud, money laundering, and racketeering directed from the highest levels of the organization's management. The report- called "Is ACORN Intentionally Structured As a Criminal Enterprise?" — was released by Republican staffers on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
In the infinite words of Dan Cook: It isn't over until the fat lady sings!
ReplyDeleteAcorn and its affiliates - Working Families Party - provided Obama with $33 million. So far, this commie group - and little Mac /DTC - has endorsed for office in New Britain: Tim O'Brien, Suzanne Bielinski, Greg Gerratana, Phil Sherwood, Mike Trueworthy and Marie Lausch. The WFP will endorse the rest of the commies next week. Are there any questions?
ReplyDeleteI am not supporting these candidates that have received backing from the WFP but without
ReplyDeletespeaking to an individual candidate, how would we know if that candidate agrees with the WFP
or ACORN for that matter. The support of these radical groups
may just be an unwelcome monkey wrench in one's campaign.
The focus of the New Britain voter should be changing the faces on the council after all this time. We need new ideas and to be rid the of antics of Trueworthy and associates.
The WFP sent young people out door to door this past spring here in New Britain. I shared my political
conservative views with the young man at my door and just as a good politician would do, he simply agreed with me over and over again and told me he and his family were
Republicans and that what he was doing was a paid position for the summer and didn't reflect his views. He also shared with me that he was attending university in Canada not the US to save alot of money although his major was US
politics and goverment?
Sad part is that The Herald does not carry any of the news that could bring down our Republic and end the freedom that we love.
ReplyDeleteIt is my wish that everyone would stop buying The Herald until they show some journalistic integrity and stop just writing safe, fluffy stories. The Herald is a big liberal yawn!
The support of these radical groups
ReplyDeletemay just be an unwelcome monkey wrench in one's campaign.--
You have to pay $60 for their endorsement, so anyone who would be willing to pay such a fee must embrace their radical views.
Do you go around paying fees to organizations you don't agree with?
So then each of these WFP endorsed candidates paid the fee it should be assumed.
ReplyDeleteIf anyone of them did not and would like to set the record straight they can do it right here
at FSSNB. I'm sure they read the blog.
It might be mentioned that as a voter at anytime we can pick up the phone and contact the candidates to discuss their views
and affiliations prior to voting.
The support of these radical groups
ReplyDeletemay just be an unwelcome monkey wrench in one's campaign.--
Apparently now that the truth is out, they are going to deny applying for the endorsements, proclaiming that they were endorsed without their knowledge.
How do they plan to explain the $60 annual dues that must be paid to receive the endorsement, (as published on their web site) or the proclamation from Bertha Lewis, ACORN NY EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND Co-DIRECTOR of Woirking Families Party, that when you see their endorsement, you know it is a candidate that has embraced a radical agenda?
“The [Working Families Party] was created in 1998 to help push the Democratic Party toward the left,” noted the Associated Press on March 28, 2000. In pursuit of this goal, WFP runs radical candidates in state and local elections. Generally, WFP candidates conceal their extremism beneath a veneer of populist rhetoric, promoting bread-and-butter issues designed to appeal to union workers and other blue-collar voters, Republican and Democrat alike.
ReplyDelete