Entries in Bill Winkler (8)

Thursday
Mar092017

A little too quick on the draw there, Bill Hayden

There are conspirators within the Skylands Tea Party group that are allowing Freeholder George Graham to use the group's email list, mailing list, meetings, even the group's name, in order to conduct a political campaign.  This is in direct conflict with the organization's tax status and places the group in jeopardy, but these conspirators don't care about the Tea Party or its mission -- they care about George Graham.

When Freeholder Graham launched a vicious attack on the wife of a candidate for Assembly, photo-shopping the cancer-survivor's face in a very unflattering way, the Tea Party's own Bill Hayden had the attack posted to his Facebook page before the email even hit.  Either Hayden is clairvoyant or he is in on the deal.

Then there was this disgusting display.  Yep.  Hayden again.

https://www.facebook.com/whowhatwherewhen/videos/10208392022592286/

The fellow behind the urinating video above was one of the four people who attended Mark D. Quick's "rally" on Newton Green on February 25th.  Bill Hayden was another.

And it was Bill Hayden who snapped this picture of George Graham's nemesis, Bill Winkler (aka Wee Willy Winkler, Philly Bill Winkler, The Old Fat Quaker, The Fonz, Gail's Sweetheart, and so on) and Sussex County activist Harvey Roseff on Newton Green back in the autumn:

Wait a minute!  Why does Winkler get so many nicknames and Graham none?  Gail Phoebus and Kim Seelagy had one for George:  "Walk of Shame."  They gave him it after he got up to no good (in their words) down in A.C. at some League confab.  But "Walk of Shame" is too long, don't you think?  He needs something shorter and career-related, like "Freeloader."  Perfect!  Freeloader George Graham!

But we digress.  The photo Bill Hayden snapped above ended up in the rather vulgar post below:

So... it must be Bill Hayden again.  Unless Hayden gave the photo to George Graham and an elected member of the Sussex County Freeholder Board was up at night, in front of his computer, photo-shopping the heads of other Republicans onto vaginas?  Yeah, that sounds about right...

Something is wrong with George Graham.

On Tuesday night there was a wonderful exchange between Fox News host Tucker Carlson and Jay Parini, a professor, author, and poet.  Given the circumstances, they make the salutary point that "we all proceed on insufficient knowledge" and conclude that what is lacking in current political discourse is "modesty" and that we need to "teach modesty" and "inculcate a spirit of modesty" as a corrective.

Given what we've seen from the likes of Quick and Graham, maybe just teaching how not to be nuts would go a long way.

Thursday
Feb022017

Skylands Tea Party meeting turns into therapy session

They could have discussed how to help advance the agenda of President Donald Trump:  Illegal immigration, terrorism, rebuilding America...

But that would have been too positive.  Instead of moving forward, Skylands Tea Party boss Bill Hayden hogged the valuable time of those present at last night's meeting with a long rant about how much he hates conservative writer Bill Winkler. 

Yes.  This turned into one of those "anger therapy" sessions.

Inexplicably, some would say insanely, the Skylands Tea Party group allowed Bill Hayden to attack two guests at their meeting, Assemblyman Parker Space and his wife, GOP State Committeewoman Jill Space.  Jill Space is also the Vice Chair of the Sussex GOP.  She chaired the Trump campaign in Sussex County and was elected to go the Republican National Convention last year as a delegate for Donald Trump.

There should be no substantive policy disagreements between the Tea Party and Assemblyman Space.  But you can't have anger therapy, without the anger...

So Hayden manufactured one.  He demanded that he gets to pick and choose who Assemblyman Space hires to run his campaign.  As it happens, Bill Winkler managed the Assemblyman's successful upset win for Freeholder in 2010, as well as his two successful runs for Assembly in 2013 and 2015.  Here in America, we reward success.

Not in Bill Hayden's world.  Bill Hayden has been pimping for Freeholder George Graham, who has his own political consulting business:

This isn't the first time that the Tea Party in Sussex County has demanded that the LD24 legislators fire Bill Winkler and hire someone else.  In 2011, the same exact shakedown was attempted by the Tea Party on behalf of a former liberal state senator-turned consultant who wanted the business.  They threatened that if they didn't get their way, Mark Quick would run for the Assembly.  Their consultant wasn't hired and Quick ran and got 3 percent of the vote.

Fast-forward to last night and there was the Tea Party -- in the person of Bill Hayden -- demanding that Winkler be fired (and Graham be hired) and there was Mark Quick again, threatening to run for the Assembly.  Haven't any of these people heard of a "restraint of trade" lawsuit?

Restraint of trade is an economic injury that involves interfering with another person’s ability to do business freely.  Restraint of trade is part of antitrust law, but the topic covers a wide range of activities, that include forcing or coercing someone to quit doing business or to change their business so as not to compete in the market; agreeing to fix prices to drive other competitors out of business; tortious interference with a contract or business agreement that negatively affects someone else’s ability to do business freely.  In short, a “restraint of trade” is any activity that hinders someone else from doing business in the way that he would normally do it if there were no restraints.  While federal, state, and local governments can pass laws and regulations that create obstacles for certain kinds of businesses, it is generally considered improper for individuals to restrain one another’s trade in certain ways.  Someone who loses business or suffers another injury may have a tort case against another individual whose trade-restraining behavior injured him.

We don't know if Bill Hayden is in line for a "finder's fee" for strong-arming the legislators into firing Winkler and hiring someone like Graham, but understand that what happened at last night's meeting was recorded and that it is already on its way to legal counsel.  It is quite unambiguous.  While the Skylands Tea Party is certainly free to do whatever it wants, it should avoid becoming a party to Bill Hayden's actions, unless it genuinely wants to be.

Bill Hayden has never met Bill Winkler, but he has "targeted" him:

 

Hayden, a self-styled "tough guy" posts crap like this on people he's never met but then goes straight to "victimhood" when challenged.  What did Clint Eastwood call this?  "The pussy generation?"

The mantra is "free speech for me but not for you."

 

(The tutu of victimhood)

When assuming the "tutu" of victimhood, Bill Hayden appears to forget that it was he who posted what he thought was an aerial view of Winkler's home on Facebook -- in the middle of his work day as a state employee.  But with his usual incompetence, Hayden got it all wrong and actually posted the neighboring home of an innocent family with young children. 

Yep, the idiot "targeted" the wrong people.

As Hayden explained it, he was afraid that his boss might see it or that some law enforcement agency might contact the New Jersey Department of Transportation, where he works, so he went to his boss with what he had done.  We don't know what his boss did, but shortly thereafter, Hayden began claiming that he was in trouble, and that Winkler had gone to his boss -- a total fabrication and lie. 

But this is what those who wish to wear the "tutu of victimhood" do.  They always have to blame someone else for their own lack of good sense.  By the way, that's what liberals do.

And that is why Bill Hayden hates Bill Winkler.

And that is why he subjected the members of the Skylands Tea Party to an hour long rant about it.

Someone should tell him that it is a political organization, not a therapy session.

Wednesday
Feb012017

It's official: OLS says Skylands lied

It's official.  The accusations being posted and distributed about legislative staff by members of the Skylands Tea Party group are lies.  The Office of Legislative Services (OLS) has issued a formal statement saying that EVERY accusation made against the innocent staff workers was wholly false and without any basis whatsoever.  In other words, the jokers made it all up.

 

These idiots have placed themselves and the organizations they represent in legal jeopardy.  That should teach them to be a little more careful when sucking up the lies that fall from Gail Phoebus' lips. 

 

On another note, a Skylands Tea Party bigwig posted another rant on Facebook mocking conservative Bill Winkler as a cigar smoker.  In fact, Winkler has never smoked in his life.  It was Winkler's father who smoked cigars and it was this habit that factored into his death from cancer, several years ago.  If Skylands is going to bring something up like that, they should do more than just blatantly lie.

 

America needs jobs.  New Jersey needs jobs.  Sussex County needs jobs.  What will end the state's high foreclosure rate is good, well-paid jobs.  Not customer service industry jobs... but jobs in construction, building, and the trades.  This is the underpinning of sustained growth.  President Donald Trump has the answer:

 

"Refocus government spending on American infrastructure... Transform America’s crumbling infrastructure into a golden opportunity for accelerated economic growth and more rapid productivity gains with a deficit-neutral plan targeting substantial new infrastructure investments.

 

Create thousands of new jobs in construction, steel manufacturing, and other sectors to build the transportation, water, telecommunications and energy infrastructure needed to enable new economic development in the U.S., all of which will generate new tax revenues... Put American steel made by American workers into the backbone of America’s infrastructure.

 

Pursue an 'America’s Infrastructure First' policy that supports investments in transportation, clean water, a modern and reliable electricity grid, telecommunications, security infrastructure, and other pressing domestic infrastructure needs... Leverage new revenues and work with financing authorities, public-private partnerships, and other prudent funding opportunities.

 

Implement a bold, visionary plan for a cost-effective system of roads, bridges, tunnels, airports, railroads, ports and waterways, and pipelines in the proud tradition of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who championed the interstate highway system... Harness market forces to help attract new private infrastructure investments through a deficit-neutral system of infrastructure tax credits."

 

There are some who would prefer New Jersey to just sit on the sidelines and not participate in Making America Great Again.  They would starve New Jersey of the funding it needs to participate in President Trump's federal transportation matching funds programs. Their way is the way of rhetoric, not of action. 

 

These job killers would prefer to see families in Sussex County lose their homes to foreclosure.  It is the talk of a state worker who pockets more taxpayer money in a year than a legislator earns.  It is the talk of a boutique lawyer in a New York City firm, catering to the concerns of mega-rich foreign bankers and the champagne swilling, mega-rich, ultra-liberal world of NYC art dealers.  Talk about ELITES!  Some balls these guys have.


Tuesday
Jan312017

Local Tea Party group calls Trump a liberal

Apparently, some of the top movers and shakers in the Skylands Tea Party believe that working with labor unions means that you are a liberal.  Well, take a look at what just happened...

 

So let's get this straight.  President Obama refused to meet with these labor union leaders for eight years.  President Trump thought it important enough to do on his third day in office.  But anyone who meets with a union is a liberal???

And our new Republican president has promised to direct "hundreds of billions of dollars to infrastructure investments" but only "some of it (will come) from the federal government."  That's true because in our system, the federal government will generally match the money put up by state governments instead of directly funding projects from the start.  Just a few months ago, New Jersey didn't have the money to even hope for any of those billions that President Trump will be sending our way.  But now, thanks to a few forward thinkers in the Legislature, New Jersey will be in a position to be a part of Donald Trump's agenda and to make his most ambitious idea a reality. 

Apparently, the Tea Party would have preferred a broke New Jersey to sit in the gutter while its neighbors worked with President Trump to Make America Great Again.  "We'll show them," said the Tea Party.

There's this fellow named Bill Hayden who wants to be the "face" of the Tea Party in Sussex County.  That's kind of funny, because Hayden is a state employee who works for the Department of Transportation.  Nothing wrong in that, but it does place him on the spending side of the equation. 

Hayden has a thing about Gail Phoebus, a wealthy country club owner with a golf course and restaurant in New Jersey and a ranch in Colorado.  After kicking around Andover Township government, Phoebus was elected Freeholder in 2012 and Assemblyperson in 2015.  As a matter of disclosure, it was Phoebus who helped launch this website in the spring of 2012.

Gail Phoebus isn't Alison McHose.  Alison McHose went to Washington DC and was mentored by a group of conservative women -- including the founder of the National Conservative Political Action Committee (NCPAC).  She worked for Vice President Cheney's wife and then for John Bolton, one of the most hard-assed conservatives in Washington.  After gaining mentoring as a conservative, Alison McHose came back to New Jersey, ran for the Assembly, and against some very stiff opposition, she won.  Then she put in ten very productive years as one of the most ideological conservatives in the Legislature.

Gail Phoebus didn't have that kind of mentoring.  She was well over sixty when she won her first county-wide office, as Freeholder, and 65 when she was elected to the Legislature.  She had a sort of vague Republicanism with a libertarian streak picked up from the party circuit hanging around wealthy equestrian circles.  She was also something of a feminist and loathed such county institutions as the Branchville Businessmen's Club.  Hey, remember how Watchdog used to write about the "penis club"?  That was Gail.

As a mentor, Gail Phoebus had Alison McHose's confidante, Bill Winkler.  Winkler had a conservative pedigree going back 40 years.  He worked for Howard Phillips and the Conservative Caucus, was a Reagan delegate in 1980, and had done field work for the Fund for a Conservative Majority.  Under Reagan, he was trained by the RNC's "west point of American politics" and worked as a campaign manager for the National Republican Congressional Committee.  Sent to Alabama, he worked on Jeff Sessions victorious pick-up of a Democrat U.S. Senate seat in 1996 and he was by the side of Attorney General Bill Pryor in every campaign he ran (all of which were successful).  United States Senator Jeff Sessions is Donald Trump's nominee for the Attorney General of the United States.  William H. Pryor, Jr. is currently a Judge for the United States Court of Appeals, a Commissioner on United States Sentencing Commission, and has been mentioned as a potential Trump nominee for the United States Supreme Court.

If you tune in to Bill Hayden, he'll tell you that Bill Winkler isn't a conservative.  But however much he says it, real conservatives like Jeff Sessions, Bill Pryor, and Alison McHose will strongly disagree.

And that brings us to this question:  Is Bill Hayden a conservative?  And does the Tea Party as a whole have an attitude flaw that makes it something other than conservative?  If you study conservative ideology, the writings of Edmund Burke and such, you will know that conservatives build on the work of those in whose steps we follow.  In modern times that meant that Goldwater built on Taft and Reagan on Goldwater and so on, up to today. 

Conservatives respect those who were in the fight before them and view them as seasoned, senior compatriots.  Not the Tea Party.  It has no respect for the work of those who came before them.  Their instinct is to be skeptical, pessimistic, and disrespectful.  The Tea Party distrusts every conservative institution and individual that existed prior to their movement.  They would rather destroy their natural allies than work with them.    

This is Nihilism, not Conservatism.  It is the way of Cambodia's Pol Pot -- fearing and hating anyone who might have more experience, more knowledge, more intelligence.  2010 is their Year Zero and any acquired knowledge before then is suspect.

The Tea Party argues that people like Winkler are the "establishment."  We forget, where was Bill Hayden in 2009?  We know where Bill Winkler was, in the biggest showdown between conservatives and the establishment in recent New Jersey history, Winkler was with the anti-establishment candidate, working on Steve Lonegan's campaign.  He also managed the campaign of Mike Doherty when he defeated establishment incumbent Marcia Karrow for a State Senate seat.  Can anyone remember what part Bill Hayden played in those efforts? Probably not, because many Tea Partiers didn't even vote before the 2010 election.

And yet Hayden has the balls to try and label Winkler.  Based on what? 

Take the recent debate about the increase in New Jersey's tax on gasoline.  A classic user tax that had not been adjusted for inflation for 28 years.  Conservative ideology holds that user taxes are the fair way to tax.  True conservatives would apply user taxes to a much broader range, including education.  President Ronald Reagan, the father of the modern conservative movement, doubled the federal tax on gasoline in line with classic conservative thinking.

Guess the Tea Party would label Reagan a "liberal."

In fact, the American Conservative magazine -- founded by Pat Buchanan (remember him?) -- this week called for an increase in the user tax on gasoline as a way to fund infrastructure projects.  The American Conservative discusses cost-cutting but concludes:  "Some of the above proposals will save money; on net, the package will cost money. Where is that money to come from? From raising the gas tax. The federal gas tax should be the primary if not the only source of funding for the (federal) Transportation Trust Fund."

Guess that makes them "liberal" too.

Now there are others who might disagree.  Conservatives can have differing views on how to address a problem.  There is nothing wrong with that, and at one time conservatives would hold intellectually-stimulating, rational debates about issues.  Think William F. Buckley and National Review.

Ah yes, rational debates.  Seen any of that lately?  

Instead we get Tea Partiers like Bill Hayden -- folks who aren't particularly well-read, who wouldn't know Michael Oakeshott or Roger Kimball from Mao Tse-tung -- thinking that they have been anointed from on high to decide what "labels" to apply to people.  And it's about as rational a process as getting to sit at the "cool table" in high school.  The Tea Party is a clique -- "a small group of people, with shared interests or other features in common, who spend time together and do not readily allow others to join them."  To sit at their "cool table" (to be labeled "conservative" by them) you need only fan their butts, tell them how important they are, and get them to "like" you.  Then you are in.

This isn't a rational debate -- it's high school!

Since the Tea Party came to town, rational debate has gone out the window.  Now they go on Facebook and call you pornographic names -- and instead of the intellectual clarity of a William F. Buckley, we get the raw anger of people who call themselves "conservative" but who couldn't tell you who William F. Buckley was.  Good conservatives who the Tea Party disagrees with have their faces photo-shopped onto vaginas.  The Tea Party defends the practice by saying that it is just a "meme."  And little old church ladies who are part of the Tea Party, old gals who would shudder at the thought of showing this is a classroom, defend the practice and tell the pornographer, "good job!"     

N.B.  Next time you protest about some new outrage being fed to your children and grandchildren, remember your culpability when the school board says that it is "just a meme."

That leads to another question:  Is the Tea Party Christian at all?  We know they claim to be.  But have you met any members of the Christian clergy who would judge a man by a single vote?  We haven't.  The universal response is that people must be judged by the whole of their works, their character, and their intentions.  But not since the Tea Party came to town.  When you condemn a man and work it like a salesman, that is not the action of a Christian.  It is the action of a hustler.

Bill Hayden says that Bill Winkler doesn't like guns.  Hey, guns are tools.  They are not sex objects or fashion accessories.  What Bill Winkler has been fighting for these last forty years is to preserve the Second Amendment  of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution of the United States of America.  He worked for the NRA, as an election volunteer coordinator and has been involved in most of the legislative battles surrounding the Second Amendment.  The pro- Second Amendment legislators in several states know who he is and what he's done, as do activist leaders.  When did you show up, Bill Hayden?

Tea Partiers who really do understand and support the Second Amendment, should advertise their weaponry in a responsible fashion -- that is, in a way that will not give our opponents (those who would take away our rights) material to sway swing voters.  Much of what we have been seeing is doing just that and if we are slaughtered at the 2018 mid-terms it will be because of people without self-control, acting out.

Did you know that Gail Phoebus hired Bill Winkler to run her 2017 re-election campaign in August 2016.  Bet you didn't know that, did you?  That is how recent all this b.s. is.  Yep, Gail hired him and her daughter made him dinner.  You see, Gail didn't know what conservative ideology was until she met Winkler.  And without his constant handholding, she would go off the rails -- inviting a Holocaust denier to speak in Andover Township, insulting the police of Sussex County, or voting for every pro-solar deal and amendment (until the last one, when she was  beginning her Assembly race and her advisors told her no).    

She even screwed up her position on the gas tax.  First she voted to send a letter from the Sussex Freeholder Board that correctly expressed concerns that property taxes would go up if the gas tax was not raised.  Then she lied and said she didn't (the lie made it into her campaign literature).  Then the official freeholder minutes showed that she had indeed voted for it, even seconding the motion.  It is important to remember that Phoebus supported the gas tax increase even without any corresponding tax cuts.  Then she opposed the tax and the tax cuts.    Now she supports using the revenue from the tax to fund a train station in Andover Township.

In the end, it was the constant lying by Gail Phoebus that ruined her relationship with Bill Winkler.  Phoebus gossiped way too much about everyone and made up some unbelievable stories.  She seemed obsessed about two things -- the money she thought others were getting that she wasn't (all the GOP legislators in northwest New Jersey share the SAME contributors) and the sex lives of some members of county and local government.  Winkler just got tired of hearing about it.  After all, he's been spending less time as a campaign manager and more working with whistleblowers and writing.  Winkler spent much of the last two years working with a whistleblower who published a book exposing some of the homeland security weaknesses of the Obama administration.  After campaigning across the country for Donald Trump, the author is about to enter service at the White House. 

Phoebus also had her "other Winkler" in the person of Dan Perez -- as liberal as Winkler is conservative.  Perez... well, let's just let his biography speak for itself:


An old Marxist himself, William Kunstler was the lawyer for the Marxist Weather Underground terrorist organization  (remember Bill Ayres?) and the Marxist Black Panther Movement.   Kunstler did not believe that Republicans and other "right-wingers" should be defended and famously said:  "I only defend those whose goals I share. I'm not a lawyer for hire. I only defend those I love."

Having clerked for Kunstler, after he died Perez would continue with and later become managing partner in a firm with Ron Kuby, Kunstler's old partner.  At the time of Kunstler's death, he and Kuby were defending Omar Abdel-Rahman ("the Blind Sheik") for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

While Dan Perez and Ron Kuby were law partners, Kuby was quoted explaining how he would defend Osama Bin Laden.  Yep, Osama Bin Laden.  Here's what he had to say:

RONALD KUBY

Kuby & Perez 

New York City 

Having represented blind Muslim cleric Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, Long Island Rail Road murderer Colin Ferguson and Meir Kahane killer El Sayyid Nosair, Kuby is no stranger to the defense of unpopular figures and causes.

...If permitted to question individual jurors, Kuby would try to bring out jurors’ biases by touching on issues such as Zionism, Israel and the persecution of Islam. Another important part of the defense strategy would be to treat the trial and its players as part of a system of oppression. To that end, bin Laden would show no deference to the judge or jury. “That means you don’t rise for the judge,” Kuby explains.

That strategy also means turning evidence into a political statement...

“If done right it is a very powerful propaganda tool,” Kuby adds.

That's some very strange company the Tea Party is keeping.

Wednesday
Jan252017

Phoebus has a meltdown, blames staff she fired

If there is one thing you need to know about Assemblyperson Gail Phoebus it is this:  Since she fired her staff just before Thanksgiving, she has not authored a single piece of legislation.  None.  Nothing.  Nada.

 

In a weird, stream-of-consciousness posting on a Skylands Tea Party website, Phoebus channels that notorious "Queen of Mean", Leona Helmsley, and actually accuses those she fired of disloyalty because they were lucky enough to find employment because Assemblyman Parker Space and Senator Steve Oroho stepped in to help.

 

This is what comes from having a sense of entitlement.  Phoebus is a country club politician who owns a golf course and a restaurant in New Jersey and a ranch in Colorado.  She was a fixture on the wealthy equestrian circuit -- attending lavish parties where she bought and sold show horses. 

 

In 2012, Phoebus hired conservative Bill Winkler to do her writing and provide her with some intellectual help.  Phoebus allowed the Sussex County GOP to use her country club and she became the darling of the Sussex County GOP.  Her pathway to the Freeholder Board was cleared for her -- and three years later she was the anointed candidate to take the Assembly seat left by Alison Littell McHose. 

 

But it all went to her head and so quickly.  She replaced conservative Winkler with a liberal Obama supporter named Perez and started talking about forcing Senator Steve Oroho out of office.  At the same time, Perez let it be known that he wanted to be a Superior Court judge (something a Senator Phoebus could help him get).

 

PEREZ, DANIEL M MR

WEST CALDWELL

NJ

07006

MARC ECKO ENTERPRISES

SPECIAL COUNSELOR

OBAMA, BARACK / JOSEPH R. BIDEN VIA OBAMA FOR AMERICA

12/06/2007

500.00

 

In her meltdown-associated rant, Phoebus blanks out at the memory of how she fired her staff, just days before Thanksgiving.  Without warning she sent them a terse, one paragraph email (drafted by Perez?).  Like Leona Helmsley, the Queen of Mean, Gail Phoebus failed to treat her employees like human beings deserve to be treated.  Phoebus refused to meet with her employees before firing them, did not provide a reason for their firing, and did not give them notice.  Phoebus never looked them in the eyes or even spoke with them.  Phoebus never offered her assistance to help them find alternative employment.  Phoebus didn't care what happened to them -- so long as she has her country club, her ranch in Colorado, and her taxpayer-funded title.

 

In place of a constituent-service specialist and a legislative aide, Phoebus hired a personal friend to serve as her "body person" and follow her around to make her look important.  Phoebus failed to hire anyone to work on constituent problems or legislation. 

 

Phoebus lied when, in her meltdown-induced rant, she claimed that she told the LD24 legislators that she wanted to break up their constituent-service operation, before they endorsed her for Assembly in 2015.  If she had told them that, why would they have endorsed her?

 

When Alison Littell McHose announced that she would not be seeking re-election in 2015, Phoebus personally solicited the support of all the legislative staff members and assured them that she would continue the constituent service operation that had helped thousands of citizens in Sussex, Warren, and Morris counties.  There are literally dozens of people who heard Phoebus say those words, and the first mailing to voters from the Phoebus campaign referenced them:

 

 Before making her decision to step down, Alison wanted to make sure that the 24th District continued to get the strong constituent services that it has received from the joint legislative office with Senator Steve Oroho. 

 

Apparently, Gail Phoebus' promise to the voters wasn't worth very much, because it took her less than a year to break it.

 

Phoebus lied again when, in the midst of her meltdown, she let loose with the accusation that one of her staff members was too political.  Phoebus knows how she demanded that her staffer help the Freeholder campaign of George Graham and Sylvia Petillo.  It was Phoebus who involved her staffer in after-hours politics, something perfectly acceptable, but something that Phoebus now uses as an excuse to rudely fire someone. 

 

Further, as Freeholder Petillo and her husband can well confirm, the "consultant" that Phoebus' staffer assisted was not Mr. Winkler, it was Mr. Russell.  The campaign finance reports filed by the campaign of Freeholders Graham and Petillo and attested to for accuracy by their treasurer, will confirm this.  And again, it is perfectly acceptable to hire a consultant and Mr. Russell is a fine one.

 

For years and years, Gail Phoebus has dealt in lies.  She is an unashamed spreader of rumors.  She has whispered some incredible things into the ears of people over the years -- and especially over this last year.  This meltdown by Phoebus has provided the first glimpse -- in writing -- of what she's been about.  It will be our pleasure to unpeel this onion.