Hemp Provision in Spending Bill Could Kill Legit Industry (regarding rand paul promoting hemp)

**Breitbart | Nov 14, 2025 | Lowell Cauffiel**

The hemp industry is gearing up for a lobbying effort following a provision in the recent government funding package that aims to stop the sale of intoxicating hemp products. However, this measure could inadvertently destroy a legitimate $28 billion industry and eliminate 300,000 American jobs.

The new ban, tucked into the spending bill, prohibits products containing more than 0.4 milligrams of THC per container. It is primarily aimed at stopping the sale of intoxicating products often found in gas stations and convenience stores.

While the spending bill was still in the Senate, Sen. Rand Paul voiced concerns over this provision.

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https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/4352710/posts

Skeptics to ask Legislature to ban mail-in voting in Hawaii

The state Legislature will be asked to ban wildly popular mail-in voting and return to one-day, in-person voting as a majority of Hawaii Elections Commission members continue to echo election doubts repeated by President Donald Trump and his MAGA supporters since his 2020 reelection defeat.

The panel has spent hours in meetings debating the findings of two “permitted interactive groups” that a majority of commissioners believe cast enough doubt on Hawaii’s ballot security to call for the Legislature to ban mail-in voting across the state.

The agenda of the Elections Commission’s Oct. 1 meeting included discussion of whether to ask lawmakers to order an audit of Hawaii’s elections. But Commissioner Ralph Cushnie, who was appointed by the House Republican caucus leader and has repeatedly unsuccessfully sued elections chief Scott Nago, made a motion to instead ask the Legislature to go back to a single day of in-person voting. Cushnie’s motion passed by a 5-3 vote with Commission Chair Michael Curtis abstaining.

The commission also voted to request that the Legislature require all in-person voters to produce identification; however, military members and people with special needs would still be allowed to cast absentee ballots.

Cushnie argued that U.S. Postal Service expenses charged to the state for delivering mail-in ballots do not match official state election results. Commissioners have spent multiple meetings debating whether that’s enough suspicion to call for an audit, which morphed Oct. 1 into Cushnie’s proposal to reverse how Hawaii voters would cast their ballots.

At the same meeting, Cushnie was unsuccessful in getting the commission to fire Nago — an issue that also was not on the agenda but was previously proposed by Cushnie.

### 2024 Presidential Election Voting Trends in Hawaii

In the 2024 presidential election, which ultimately pitted Trump against Vice President Kamala Harris, 69.6% of registered Hawaii voters cast ballots for a total turnout of 579,784. Some 551,036 of them, or 95%, voted by mail. Only 28,748 voted in person, representing just 5% of all votes cast. On Oahu, only 17,204 voters, or 3.1%, voted in person.

Trump beat former first lady Hillary Clinton in 2016 and planted no seeds of doubt about his election victory. But since his 2020 loss to Joe Biden, Trump has repeated claims that the election was rigged and “stolen.”

Since 2020, Hawaii’s first Election Day results have represented all mail-in ballots, which has made it easier to identify voting trends early in the night, before the release of final results, which typically aren’t released until early the following morning.

Although small in numbers, those who vote in person across Hawaii have disrupted the timely release of election returns since 2020 because Hawaii election law prohibits the release of any results until the last person waiting in line by 7 p.m. has voted. Any eligible voter also can register on Election Day and vote, further holding up lines at polling places.

In 2020 and again in the 2022 midterm elections, long lines of in-person voters wrapped around Honolulu Hale and Kapolei Hale. Combined with similar long lines of voters across the state, the release of election results was delayed until the last person voted.

### Public Response and Advocacy for Mail-in Voting

Over the last several Elections Commission meetings, online viewership has increased as both supporters and skeptics of mail-in voting have logged in to track the commission’s debates, said Janet Mason of the Hawaii chapter of the League of Women Voters.

Mason told the commission that her organization supports mail-in voting and trusts its security.

“I don’t think people understand the damage that could be done,” Mason told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser. “Misinformation can undermine confidence in elections. I hope it doesn’t happen. The league is going to keep working on this, for sure.”

In a November letter to the editor to the Star-Advertiser, Chair Patricia Morrissey and Vice Chair James Gashel of the Statewide Elections Accessibility Needs Advisory Committee wrote that mail-in voting “is convenient for many voters and for seniors and people with disabilities, it is a lifeline to civic participation.

“We do not want civic participation to be diminished by an unnecessary decision to alter how we vote. The so-called ‘chain of custody’ argument is false. Voting by mail is as safe and likely safer than voting in person.

“The commission’s inclination to reduce our voting options flies in the face of common sense and is an affront to democracy itself. Voting by mail has never been associated with fraud.”

### Elections Chief Scott Nago’s Response

In response to the permitted interactive groups’ reports, Nago wrote in a 26-page response that, “This finding of the PIG Report attempts to relitigate the previous court cases brought forth by Commissioner Cushnie without providing new evidence and seeks to continue a debate, dismissing what has already been stated.”

The groups, Nago said, found “no evidence of systemic error or fraud. The election processes, to compile these records, are methodical and multi-layered for transparency, accuracy, integrity, and security.”

As Trump and his supporters continue to press his unsubstantiated claims of election fraud, unpaid volunteer Hawaii Republican election observers have consistently told the Star-Advertiser over each of the last several election cycles that they have not seen any evidence of election interference or fraud as mail-in ballots are opened and counted at the state Capitol.

In his response to the permitted interactive groups’ reports, Nago wrote that “the public is invited to volunteer as a counting center official or official observer to experience the electoral process and the care and time involved in opening the valid return identification envelopes then scanning and securing the voted ballots.”

“Further still, voters can verify for themselves that the ballot they voted and secured in their personalized return identification envelope has been accepted to be counted.”

Nago also said that Hawaii’s election results are federally certified by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, which establishes testing system guidelines and authorizes test laboratories.

“These test laboratories are independent and review the hardware, software, and audit logs of the system,” he said.

### Political Analysis and Future Outlook

Political analyst Neal Milner was surprised by what he called the Elections Commission’s “lopsided” 5-3 vote that he said “reflects the major superstition that Trump has pushed.” Election skepticism, Milner said, has “moved from a crank idea to a Republican Party idea.”

Should the Legislature decide to require in-person voting for the 2026 mid-term elections, Milner said it could discourage voter turnout, especially among voters with ethnic backgrounds who may be intimidated by federal immigration enforcement tactics to detain anyone they believe may be in the country illegally, even U.S. citizens and sometimes with no probable cause.

During the ongoing Immigration and Customs Enforcement crackdown, Milner said calls to 911 in Chicago are already down “because people are afraid of the possibility that ICE is going to show up.”

He called the odds of the Democratic-dominated Hawaii Legislature banning mail-in ballots during the 2026 legislative session that begins in January “slim to none — more on the none side.”

The Elections Commission needs either a state senator or House representative to introduce a bill on its behalf. Neither Senate President Ron Kouchi nor House Speaker Nadine Nakamura, both Democrats, responded to requests for comment about whether they expect a bill to be introduced in next year’s session.
https://www.staradvertiser.com/2025/11/09/hawaii-news/skeptics-to-ask-legislature-to-ban-mail-in-voting-in-hawaii/

NYC bodega leaders voice support for Andrew Cuomo— days after rival group rocked by Mamdani endorsement

Leaders of a key New York City bodega and restaurant group are taking the rare step of speaking out about the mayoral election and throwing their support behind Andrew Cuomo, just days after a rival group faced backlash over a Zohran Mamdani endorsement, The Post has learned.

“We don’t endorse candidates,” said Francisco Marte, founder and president of the Bodega and Small Business Group, which represents some 3,000 bodegas, barber shops, beauty salons, mechanics, and restaurants in the Big Apple. “But we favor Andrew Cuomo,” Marte told The Post. “He’s the best of what we have now.”

At issue for many of these small businesses are Mamdani’s plans to open city-owned grocery stores that would offer customers wholesale prices. Small business owners, especially retailers, have also been rattled by Mamdani’s past comments about defunding the police.

Cuomo, the business owners believe, will be tougher on crime and shoplifting. He is “guaranteeing more public safety and is not coming with this crazy idea to compete with us with city-owned grocery stores,” Marte said.

Marte’s group is taking a stand after a rival organization, United Bodegas of America, blindsided its members this week—including its co-founder Fernando Mateo—by endorsing Mamdani. In response, Mateo angrily resigned from the trade group, which The Post exclusively reported on Wednesday.

Now, United Bodegas’ President Radhames Rodriguez, who made the surprise endorsement at a local eatery in the Bronx this week, is losing members, according to Marte and other grocers.

“I think a quarter of the United Bodega Association’s members will leave because they feel betrayed,” Marte told The Post, adding that several have already told him they are jumping ship to his group.

Rodriguez did not immediately respond for comment. His group has about 2,000 members in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, out of roughly 13,000 bodegas in New York City.

“We are planning to ask Mateo to sit with us and to bring members with him to the real association,” said Carlos Collado, who owns two Fine Fare supermarkets in the Bronx and is a vice president of the Bodega and Small Business Group.

Earlier this week, Mateo called Rodriguez’s Mamdani endorsement a “betrayal” and a violation of the trade group’s bylaws as a nonprofit, which is not supposed to publicly back a political candidate.

Mateo also told The Post on Wednesday, “Hundreds of bodega owners already reached out expressing their discontent. I had to explain to them that I had nothing to do with it.”

An outspoken conservative, Mateo unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination in the 2021 mayoral race. However, Mateo and Marte were not always on the same page.

They operated under the same umbrella, Bodega Association of the USA, until 2017, when they had a dispute over who would take the lead at a press conference on crime at bodegas, according to Marte. Subsequently, Mateo and Rodriguez split off to form the United Bodegas of America.

“If we see that we have common ground, we can find a way” to work together again, Marte said.
https://nypost.com/2025/10/31/business/nyc-bodega-leaders-voice-support-for-andrew-cuomo-days-after-rival-group-got-rocked-over-mamdani-endorsement/