NORTON META TAG

Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts

03 November 2025

‘See You in 4 Years’: Trump Drives Canadians Away From Western New York & Donald Trump Got Mad at the TV, So Now Stuff Costs More 25&26OKT25


UNTIL I moved from Warren County in NW Pennsylvania to Northern Virginia in 1986 going to Southern Ontario, Canada, specifically the area across the Niagara River from Buffalo and Niagara Falls, NY, was something we did a few times a year. Many Canadians visited Western New York and NW Pennsylvania too. Canadians were, and still are, in that border area, considered friends, neighbors and allies. They are family, and we never had to really think about our relationship because we knew Canada would always be there for us and we expected to be there for them. The only competition real competition we had was in sports. I know this is a very simplistic description of our countries relationship but it is accurate too, 2 countries can't share an 8891 KM / 5525 Mile unfortified border for a couple hundred years without having some sort of commitment to and friendship with each other. And then comes NOT MY pres drumpf / trump and his cabal of ass licking sycophants to ruin it. WE apologize to you, our Canadian family and friends, for their vile behaviour, their lies, deception, ignorance, hate, cruelty, and greed. Elbows Up Canada, and don't be afraid to tell them ( to quote a great movie ) ARGO FUCK YOURSELVES. Congrats on your new, massive trade agreements with China and other Asian countries ( excluding the U.S. ), and hopefully we will be able to get back to normal, neighborly relations in 3 years, if not sooner. God Bless America and Canada!!! From the New York Times and Mother Jones.....

‘See You in 4 Years’: Trump Drives Canadians Away From Western New York


The presence of Canadian visitors in Western New York has dropped off since the start of the year following tensions between Washington and Ottawa.


It’s been a strange fall in two of New York State’s westernmost counties, Niagara and Erie, on the Canadian border.

Far fewer Canadians are crossing into New York to enjoy the changing foliage and the region’s plentiful vineyards and orchards.

This is not entirely unexpected: Canadians have been scarce at cultural attractions, sporting events and shopping malls in the area since President Trump threatened Canada with tariffs two weeks into his second administration (following through on those threats March 4), and spoke of adding the country as the 51st state.

But that absence has been deeply felt, said Anthony Sprague, general manager of the Buffalo Bisons baseball club, the top minor-league affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays, who are facing off against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series. Canadians typically comprise a quarter of the club’s fan base at its downtown Buffalo stadium, he said. This season, that share has shrunk to 10 percent.

The team began receiving season ticket cancellations even before the baseball season got underway in March, Mr. Sprague said. “The narrative was all the same: ‘Nothing against you guys, we love you guys, but we need to take a stand by not coming across the border.’”

Tensions aren’t likely to dissipate anytime soon after Mr. Trump declared an immediate end to trade negotiations Thursday. His decision followed an angry post on Truth Social over an ad sponsored by the province of Ontario featuring President Ronald Reagan denouncing the use of tariffs.

“We stand ready to pick up on those discussions when the Americans are ready,” Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada said in response. On Friday, the premier of Ontario, Doug Ford, said the ad would be withdrawn next week so that trade talks could resume.

Residents of both nations have been driving back and forth and visiting since the Peace Bridge connecting Buffalo and Fort Erie, Ontario, opened in 1927. Many people own homes on both sides of the border.

Patrick Kaler, president of Visit Buffalo, Erie County’s tourism and convention bureau, worries about how long Canadians’ disenchantment with the United States will continue, and what the long-term consequences might be. Canadians typically generate 35 to 40 percent of the region’s annual tourism revenue, according to the bureau.

“The friendly, congenial nature we have had for years, I’m afraid, is going to be destroyed the longer this carries on,” Mr. Kaler said. “We’ve heard people say, ‘We’ll see you in four years,’ but that’s a long time from now.”

The Buffalo AKG Art Museum, formerly known as the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, had high hopes of a robust Canadian turnout when it planned its current exhibition, “Northern Lights,” featuring major Nordic and Canadian landscape paintings. The museum, which displays modern and contemporary art and completed a $195 million expansion in 2023, is just six miles from the border.

But the throngs of Canadians anticipated when the show opened in August haven’t materialized. Monthly visits by Canadians to the museum over the past two years (tracked using address information from online and in-person ticket sales) hovered between 7 percent and 10 percent, a museum spokesman said. This past February, after Mr. Trump took office, that figure plummeted to under 3 percent, where it has remained, said Janne Sirén, the museum’s director.

The prolonged drop-off is deeply worrisome, Mr. Sirén said. “The economic and cultural life of Buffalo is inextricably intertwined with Canada, and the same is true of the Buffalo AKG.”

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Martin House, also in Buffalo, has seen a similar decline in attendance by Canadians since February, according to Jessie Fisher, the chief executive of the nonprofit that manages the house.

Several Canadian school group tours have canceled their reservations for this year and 2026, citing the fear some Canadians have of being detained by U.S. agents at the border amid the Trump’s administration’s immigration crackdown, Ms. Fisher said.

She said the president’s posture toward Canada had created anger and alienation that, as a longtime Buffalo resident, she regretted as much as the lost revenue.

“When you grow up here, you know all the words to the Canadian national anthem, and when you grow up in southern Ontario, you are a Bills fan,” Ms. Fisher said, referring to Buffalo’s N.F.L. team. “We miss our neighbors.”

Michelle Urbanczyk, the chief executive of Explore & More — The Ralph C. Wilson Jr. Children’s Museum, on Buffalo’s waterfront, said the museum’s 2026 budget now anticipates Canadians comprising 10 percent of its visitors, down from 25 percent last year. “It’s such a disappointment,” she said.

Bridge crossings into the United States from Canada tell part of the story. In September, the number of vehicles crossing the Peace, Lewiston-Queenston, Rainbow and Whirlpool Bridges was down nearly 14 percent compared with a year earlier, according to the Buffalo and Fort Erie Public Bridge Authority. (That was an improvement from May, when crossings were down 21 percent year over year.)

The most recent study of Canadians by Longwoods International, a market research firm working with the tourism industry, found that 63 percent of active travelers said they were less likely to come to the United States, with most citing tariffs and political statements by U.S. leaders.

A slim majority of respondents said they no longer perceived the United States as “a place I would feel welcome” or “a safe place to visit.” They also disagreed that “international travelers are valued there” and that the country is “welcoming to travelers of diverse backgrounds.”

That study was conducted in mid-July, and attitudes may have shifted since then. But many Canadians continue to cite their anger toward the U.S. government and fear of crossing the border as reasons to stay home.

“I have gone back and forth across that border all my life with relative ease, but I don’t feel safe anymore,” said Cheryl Sulliman, a Fort Erie resident. “It’s not worth it for me to cross the border for any reason and put myself at risk.”

Tanya Evans, who lives in Crystal Beach, a waterfront neighborhood of Fort Erie, agreed: “I wouldn’t go to Niagara Falls, U.S.A., or to Buffalo to see the Bills play, simply because of what Trump has said and is doing to Canada.”

At Earl W. Brydges Artpark State Park in Lewiston, N.Y., about a 30-minute drive north of Buffalo, Canadian attendance this summer at concerts and other public events was about half of what it has been typically, said Dave Wedekindt, Artpark’s president, citing ticket sales data. The Aquarium of Niagara, in Niagara Falls, N.Y., has also seen a nearly 50 percent decline in Canadian patrons, according to Christine Stephans, its communications director.

The Fashion Outlets of Niagara Falls, a mall on the New York side of the border, has long depended heavily on Canadian shoppers, but on a recent afternoon the corridors’ polished floors looked as if they had received little foot traffic.

Shoppers and shop owners cited the exchange rate between the two countries’ currencies as another deterrent for Canadians. At Envoy International’s currency exchange branch inside the mall, 100 Canadian dollars was worth $68.16 on Oct. 21.

Arun Khosla, vice president of communications for Macerich, the mall’s owner, declined to be interviewed, saying only that “we acknowledge some softening in Canadian visits over the past several months.”

Some businesses viewed the drop-off in starker terms.

Engin Ozkan of Express Jewelers estimated that his business at the mall was down by nearly half. “The mall used to have a lot of Canadian shoppers,” he said. “Now you see a lot of stores are closed here. Why? Because those Canadians are not coming here anymore.”

At Larosa Pizza, in the mall’s food court, a cashier, Tahlia Willis, said a screen in the back office monitored traffic crossing the Rainbow Bridge between Niagara Falls, Ontario, and Niagara Falls on the U.S. side. “It’s usually people leaving,” she said. “There’s not a lot of people coming in.”

A version of this article appears in print on Nov. 2, 2025, Section MB, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Visiting Canadians Are Missed

Donald Trump Got Mad at the TV, So Now Stuff Costs More

“ALL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS WITH CANADA ARE HEREBY TERMINATED.”


Last month, Donald Trump’s administration assured the US Supreme Court that the president’s massive tariffs were intended to address an “unusual and extraordinary threat” and were “essential to the country’s future.” This weekend, Trump announced that he was jacking up tariffs on Canadian goods by another 10 percent—because he was angry about a television ad that ran during the World Series.

Ten days ago, Ontario—Canada’s most populous province—released a TV spot featuring former President Ronald Reagan explaining at length why tariffs are generally bad. The ad edits the Gipper’s speech and omits a bit of nuance about his support for a narrower set of temporary tariffs imposed in 1987 on Japanese electronics. But overall, it provides a pretty accurate picture of the GOP icon’s free-market economic views.


MAGA world wasn’t happy. The Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute insisted Thursday that the ad “misrepresents” Reagan’s words and threatened, absurdly, that the foundation was “reviewing its legal options.” Trump joined in hours later, calling the ad “fake” and an effort to “fraudulently” interfere with the ongoing legal battle over the tariffs. “Based on their egregious behavior,” the president declared on Truth Social, “ALL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS WITH CANADA ARE HEREBY TERMINATED.”

Ontario responded by agreeing to remove the ad—but not before it aired during the World Series this weekend. Enraged, Trump returned to Truth Social Saturday afternoon. “Because of their serious misrepresentation of the facts, and hostile act, I am increasing the Tariff on Canada by 10% over and above what they are paying now,” he wrote. “Thank you for your attention to this matter!”

Asked Sunday by NBC’s Kristen Welker why Trump is “setting trade policy based on a television ad he doesn’t like,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent claimed that Ontario’s actions represent “a kind of propaganda against US citizens.”

“It’s psyops,” Bessent said.

“This is interference in US sovereign matters,” he added on CBS, comparing the ad to foreign “election interference.”

Next month, the Supreme Court will hear arguments over whether the US president can unilaterally raise your taxes because he disagrees with how a province in a foreign country edited a 38-year-old radio address. While you’re waiting to hear what John Roberts thinks about that, you can watch Reagan’s complete remarks below and decide for yourself.


BEFORE YOU CLICK AWAY!

“Lying.” “Disgusting.” “Scum.” “Slime.” “Corrupt.” “Enemy of the people.” Donald Trump has always made clear what he thinks of journalists. And it’s plain now that his administration intends to do everything it can to stop journalists from reporting things they don’t like—which is most things that are true.

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01 April 2016

DEMOCRACY NOW! DAILY DIGEST 1APR16


Democracy Now! Daily Digest

A Daily Independent Global News Hour with Amy Goodman & Juan González

Friday, April 1, 2016

Stories


Advocates are calling it one of the largest pay raises for American workers in the history of the country. About 5 million workers will see their wages increase substantially ... Read More →

In a Democracy Now! exclusive, Cherelle Baldwin joins us for her first interview since a Connecticut jury found her not guilty in the death of her abusive ex-boyfriend, Jeffrey ... Read More →

Hundreds of thousands took to the streets in Yemen this week to protest the first anniversary of the U.S.-backed, Saudi-led offensive against Houthi rebels. The protests ... Read More →

Headlines →

14 March 2013

BIG LEG EMMA VIDEO

BIG LEG EMMA,  a band from my neck of the woods, Jamestown, NY. Enjoy, and check out more of their music at http://www.biglegemma.com/fr_home.cfm
Big Leg Emma



08 November 2012

2012 Presidential Election Results 6,7&8NOV12

2012 election results by the numbers, links for results on the national, state and local level, from the Washington Post....
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/politics/election-map-2012/president/
I chose Virginia because I live here, Pennsylvania because I am from there and Scandia, PA is still home, and New York, Colorado, Texas, Georgia, New Jersey and North Carolina because that is where my family is scattered....
VIRGINIA

Live 2012 results Votes % won

1,885,188 50.8%

1,772,304 47.8

Others
52,424 1.4
99.9% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

Barack Obama
1,959,532 52.7%

John McCain
1,725,005 46.4

Others
32,368 0.9
FAIRFAX COUNTY, VA

Live 2012 results Votes % won

260,835 59.3%

173,786 39.5

Others
5,553 1.3
100% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

Barack Obama
310,359 60.2%

John McCain
200,994 39.0

Others
3,895 0.8

President

Obama narrowly carried the Old Dominion by two percentage points in one of the most closely watched battlegrounds of the 2012 campaign. The president’s victory in Virginia four years ago was the first for a Democrat since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964, a reflection of the state’s increasing diversity. It was a key battleground this year, and polls put the race at a dead heat for months. Obama beat Romney handily in the three large Northern Virginia suburbs of Fairfax, Loudoun and Prince William counties. Republican Robert F. McDonnell also won the governorship in 2009 with all three counties, a reflection of the state’s ever-shifting electorate.

Senate

Democrat Timothy M. Kaine took one of the most contested Senate seats in the 2012 election, defeating Republican George Allen in the race to succeed retiring Sen. James Webb (D). The contest between two former governors was extremely close from the start and was among the country’s most expensive Senate races. The Old Dominion has become more diverse in recent years, split among white-collar suburbs with new immigrants; rural, blue-collar areas; and a heavily military presence. Kaine led the Democratic National Committee under Obama. Allen sought vindication after a defeat by Webb in 2006, when the Republican made national headlines after he was caught on video using a racially charged word, “macaca,” to describe a young man of Indian descent at a campaign rally.

House

Republicans held their 8-2 dominance in the state’s congressional delegation.

PENNSYLVANIA


Live 2012 results Votes % won

2,907,448 52.0%

2,619,583 46.8

Others
69,468 1.2
99.7% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

Barack Obama
3,276,363 54.7%

John McCain
2,655,885 44.3

Others
62,889 1.1 

WARREN COUNTY, PA
Live 2012 results Votes % won

9,415 57.2%

6,768 41.1

Gary Johnson
198 1.2

Others
81 0.5
100% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

John McCain
9,685 52.3%

Barack Obama
8,537 46.1

Others
295 1.6 



Pennsylvania
Updated: 5:58 a.m.
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President

Obama won the key swing state, keeping Pennsylvania in the Democratic column. Pennsylvania was a critical part of Obama’s math for winning the 270 electoral votes needed for victory. Pennsylvania last supported a Republican presidential candidate in 1988. Increasingly Democratic since 1992, Pennsylvania emerged as a late battleground. Romney’s campaign and conservative super PACs poured more than $11 million into the state during the final week. Polls gave Obama a lead of about 4 percentage points. For Romney, the state offered an alternative route to the 270 electoral votes late in the campaign as polls showed Obama ahead in some of the states that had been the election’s main battlegrounds, including Ohio and Iowa.

Senate

Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr. (D) won re-election to a second term, fighting off a tough challenge from GOP nominee Tom Smith, a retired coal company executive who spent $17 million of his fortune on the airwaves. The race had tightened by mid-October. Casey, an anti-abortion, pro-gun moderate Democrat whose father was a popular Pennsylvania governor, called his opponent “Tea Party Tom Smith” and said he was too conservative for the state. Smith had support from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other conservative groups.

House

In the newly drawn 12thDistrict race in western Pennsylvania, Republican challenger Keith Rothfus, a lawyer, upset incumbent Democratic Rep. Mark S. Critz in one of the most-watched races nationally. The district stretches from Johnstown to north of Pittsburgh to the Ohio border. Critz had defeated Rep. Jason Altmire in the primary. 

NEW YORK
Live 2012 results Votes % won

3,862,859 62.7%

2,212,562 35.9

Others
85,995 1.4
98.3% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

Barack Obama
4,804,701 62.9%

John McCain
2,752,728 36.1

Others
78,898 1.0

President

Obama was declared the winner of New York’s 29 electoral votes by the Associated Press soon after the polls closed. The president won more than 62 percent of the vote in the Empire State.

Senate

Incumbent Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D) was declared the winner by the AP over Republican Wendy Long, in a race that was never close in pre-election polls. And those polls turned out to be correct as Gillibrand won more than 70 percent of the vote.

House

Daniel Maffei unseated freshman Republican Ann Marie Buerkle in a rematch of their 2010 race in the the 24th District in central New York. Another freshman Republican incumbent, Nan Hayworth, lost to Democrat Sean Maloney in the 18th District north of New York City. Democratic incumbents Timothy Bishop in the 1st District on eastern Long Island and Brian Higgins in the 26th District around Buffalo won their races, but Democratic incumbent Kathy Hochul lost in the 27th District in western New York against former Erie County executive Chris Collins. 

COLORADO
Live 2012 results Votes % won

1,238,490 51.2%

1,125,391 46.5

Gary Johnson
32,262 1.3

Others
23,555 1.0
100% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

Barack Obama
1,288,576 53.7%

John McCain
1,073,589 44.7

Others
39,196 1.6
Battleground state watch
Colorado
Updated: 2:00 a.m.
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President

Obama repeated his sweep in Colorado from four years ago after a competitive contest with Romney. Before the president’s 2008 victory, Republicans had won the state in eight out of the previous nine presidential elections. On Tuesday, Obama won the two suburban counties around Denver, both major battlegrounds. He needed high turnout among Latinos and strong support from women to win, the same coalition that narrowly carried Democratic Sen. Michael F. Bennet to victory in 2010.

House

Republicans kept their 4-3 hold on the state’s congressional delegation. In the 6th District south of Denver, Rep. Mike Coffman (R) survived a challenge from Democratic state Rep. Joe Miklosi, despite a controversial comment Coffman made last spring when he questioned whether Obama was born in the United States and added, “I do know this: In his heart, he’s not an American.” 

TEXAS
Live 2012 results Votes % won

4,555,799 57.2%

3,294,440 41.4

Gary Johnson
88,110 1.1

Others
24,450 0.3
100% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

John McCain
4,479,328 55.6%

Barack Obama
3,528,633 43.8

Others
56,116 0.7

Texas
Updated: 6:20 a.m.
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President

Mitt Romney was the decisive winner of this consistently red state, according to the Associated Press said. He rolled up 57 percent of the vote compared to Obama’s 41 percent. Texans have voted for Republicans for president in each of the past nine general elections. In 2008, John McCain received 55 percent of votes in the Lone Star State.

Senate

Ted Cruz, a former state solicitor general and Republican up-and-comer, won the Senate seat of retiring Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R), defeating Democrat Paul Sadler.

House

Of the 36 House races in Texas, 24 went to Republicans and 12 to Democrats. In two hotly contested races, state Rep. Pete Gallego (D) beat out freshman Rep. Francisco R. Canseco (R) for the 23rd District, while state Rep. Randy Weber (R) bested former congressman Nick Lampson (D) for the 14th District seat. Weber will succeed GOP Rep. Ron Paul, who retired from Congress have eight terms in the House. 

GEORGIA
Live 2012 results Votes % won

2,070,221 53.4%

1,761,761 45.4

Gary Johnson
45,056 1.2
100% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

John McCain
2,048,759 52.2%

Barack Obama
1,844,123 47.0

Others
28,731 0.7
Georgia
Updated: 2:40 a.m.
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President

Romney won the Georgia contest by a margin of about 7.5 percentage points, with nearly all precincts reporting, according to the Associated Press. That’s an improvement for the GOP over 2008, when Obama lost to Sen. John McCain by a mere five percentage points in a rare show of strength in the Deep South.

House

A Republican, Doug Collins, has won a new, fourteenth House seat that Georgia gained through redistricting, according to the AP. However, Republicans otherwise failed in their bid to increase their House majority in Georgia, as all five Democratic incumbents were reelected (along with all eight GOP incumbents). Among the Democratic victors was Rep. John Barrow, the last white Democratic congressman from the Deep South. Barrow’s 12th District seat had been in jeopardy due to redistricting. His Republican challenger, State Rep. Lee Anderson, benefitted from $3.5 million in spending by outside groups. But Anderson won the GOP nomination by just 159 votes in a bruising primary that required a runoff election. And Barrow, a Blue Dog Democrat who has made a point of distancing himself from his party by voting against Obama’s health-care law, defeated Anderson by more than seven percentage points, according to the AP. 

NEW JERSEY
Live 2012 results Votes % won

1,924,329 58.0%

1,361,154 41.0

Others
34,201 1.0
98.9% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

Barack Obama
2,215,422 57.3%

John McCain
1,613,207 41.7

Others
39,608 1.0
New Jersey
Updated: 5:10 a.m.
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President

Obama won the Garden State, according to the Associated Press, making it the sixth straight victory here for Democrats.

Senate

Sen. Robert Menendez (D) defeated his Republican challenger, state Sen. Joe Kyrillos, who was outspent 4 to 1 by the incumbent. Menendez was not especially popular but had a sizable lead going into the contest.

House

In the new 9th District, Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr. beat his Republican challenger Shmuley Boteach, according to the Associated Press. Pascrell fought a tough race in the June primary, defeating Steven R. Rothman by a large margin in an expensive Democratic primary for the newly drawn district. In the most closely watched House race in the state, first-term Republican Rep. Jon Runyan in the 3rd District won reelection, fighting off Democratic challenger Shelley Adler, the widow of his 2010 opponent. Runyan, a former Philadelphia Eagles offensive tackle, was favored to win but it was a tough and sometimes nasty race. 

NORTH CAROLINA
Live 2012 results Votes % won

2,275,853 50.6%

2,178,388 48.4

Gary Johnson
44,798 1.0
100% of precincts reporting
Results: 2008 | 2004 Votes % won

Barack Obama
2,142,651 49.9%

John McCain
2,128,474 49.5

Others
25,722 0.6
North Carolina
Updated: 5:26 a.m.
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President

Mitt Romney secured a narrow victory in the Tar Heel state despite fierce efforts from the Obama camp, who won North Carolina by a margin of just 0.4 percent in 2008. Democrats poured significant resources into North Carolina, including holding the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte earlier this year. Democrats appeared to have toned down efforts in the state after that, and polls showed a consistent Romney lead. Despite a tighter-than-expected final margin of just two points, this proved more than enough to secure a Romney victory in this traditionally Republican state.

Governor

Republican Pat McCrory, the former mayor of Charlotte, claimed victory in the gubernatorial contest, a race he was strongly favored to win. Though eligible to stand for a second term, incumbent Democratic Governor Bev Perdue announced earlier this year she would not seek a second term. McCrory lost a tight race in 2008 to Perdue, but his growing political profile made him strong favorite for the 2012 race over Democrat challenger incumbent Lieutenant Governor Walter H. Dalton.

House

Redistricting hurt Democrats across several North Carolina House seats, leading to two incumbents – Reps. Brad Miller and Heath Shuler – retiring, both their seats picked up by Republicans. Rep. Larry Kissell attempted to defend his seat in the 8th District, but was defeated by Republican challenger Richard Hudson.