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Archive for the 'John Paul Mitchell' Tag

Governor candidate to hold first campaign event

July 27th, 2009, 3:14 pm by Le Templar
John Paul Mitchell

John Paul Mitchell

Early voting for Arizona’s state primaries is about a year away, but a candidate for governor scheduled to hold the first public event is already looking ahead to the November 2010 general election.

John Paul Mitchell hopes to qualify for the state ballot as an independent, which would allow him to bypass the primaries and go head-to-head against the Republican and Democratic nominees (and the Libertarian and Green alternatives, if those parties decide to get into the race).

I have written before about Mitchell, who is a manager at a Phoenix credit card call center. I continue to be impressed with the energy that Mitchell is throwing into what has to be a long-shot campaign. He’s got a robust Web site, is active on social media and has taken on some campaign staff. Now on Thursday, Mitchell will hold his first public forum before the Republican incumbent and the most likely Democratic challenger have even become candidates.

Mitchell is striving to run an unconventional campaign that uses rapidly evolving social technology to appeal to voters who are not longtime activists in the two major parties. In keeping with this theme, Mitchell will hold a two-hour online town hall to answer questions from the public. The chat, or liveblog, will feature Web software from Scribblelive, which allows users immediate access to such events through existing social media accounts such as Facebook, Twitter and Flickr.

Now, it’s hard to see how Mitchell will have a major impact on next year’s election. After all, a central tenet of his politics is running government without any taxes and the 16th Amendment never was legally ratified. The latter position tends to held by extreme, anti-tax protesters who sometimes wind up in prison.

But Ron Paul surprised a lot of people with his 2008 success in fundraising, if not with the popular vote, and pioneered some Internet techniques that Mitchell will try to expand upon. So it will be worth watching to see what Mitchell does.

Catching up on other news…

July 2nd, 2009, 10:21 am by Le Templar
U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano (far left) was part of a White House meeting in February with President Barack Obama in this photo posted at whitehouse.gov by the Obama administration.

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano (far left) was part of a White House meeting in February with President Barack Obama in this photo posted at whitehouse.gov by the Obama administration.

With the state budget crisis on hold until Monday, I can take a moment to mention other tidbits that have happened in the past week or so. Here’s a few items that caught my eye:

  • Janet Napolitano, one-time governor and now U.S. Homeland Security secretary, was named by President Barack Obama to be his lead negotiator with Congress on immigration reform policies. Obama revealed this after a high-level June 25 meeting at the White House intended to jump-start an effort to finally resolve the nation’s broken immigration system. Napolitano received a huge amount of media attention when the swine flu pandemic was first identified. She seemed to be on my television news every day for weeks. Now, she it’s likely she’ll be back in the spotlight this fall on an issue that, until the economy collapsed, had been one of hottest domestic topics especially among talk radio and television and certainly here in Arizona.
  • Have you taken the Tribune’s Fourth of July quiz yet? And you passed, right? Of course you did, that’s why you read this blog! But if you are, say, under 30, you are likely to be in a shrinking minority who actually understand basic American civics. Tribune writer Mandy Zajac used questions from the official test given to all immigrants seeking to become U.S. citizens. The Goldwater Institute used the same test when it recently surveyed 1,350 Arizona public high school students and found nearly 97 percent couldn’t pass the exam! The institute’s Matthew Ladner suggests high schools should require the citizenship test for graduation, or colleges should require it for admission. I’ve got to say, if we expect foreigners in this country to have this knowledge, how we can fail to demand it from everyone else?
  • The Associated Press reported on a Republican candidate for Maine’s governor who appears to have “borrowed” the Obama campaign logo from last year. I’m detecting a pattern here, as we noticed a similar concern in April with John Paul Mitchell, a Republican candidate for Arizona governor.

You decide: Is this an ‘original’ campaign logo?

April 15th, 2009, 11:12 am by Le Templar

A collection of wild-eyed dreamers already have emerged with the hope of challenging Gov. Jan Brewer in the 2010 elections. No, I’m not talking about Terry Goddard or Jim Pederson or Andrew Thomas or J.D. Hayworth. The first official candidates are real longshots, the kind that media pundits have traditionally called political gadflies.

The best known of this group would be Roy Miller, a political blogger who helped to found the Goldwater Institute and is a frequent Tribune letter writer. Others who have filed with the secretary of state include church pastor Tim Willis, insurance agent Janelle Wood and business accountant Hugh Kealer.

But the candidate with the catchiest name and best campaign Web site to date has to be John Paul Mitchell, who is just 30 and a manager at a Phoenix credit card call center. He also has self-published a book which lays some groundwork to explain how we can run modern government in America without collecting any taxes (the ultimate libertarian dream!).

I am most intrigued by Mitchell’s “self-designed” campaign logo. Take a look.

jpmitchelllogo

It is pretty good. But Mitchell claims he came up with the logo “from scratch” after teaching himself how to use Adobe Illustrator. Really? There isn’t anything out there that might have inspired this design? Nothing that looks remarkably similar and has been seen around the world for the past year?

obamalogo2web

Mitchell told me others have noted the same similarity since he unveiled his logo earlier this month. While “partially inspired” by the Obama campaign logo, Mitchell gives more credit to the Arizona state flag and its sunrise colors.

“I wanted to choose a circular logo because anything with a circle represents wholeness,” Mitchell said.

So, do you think Mitchell’s logo is a flattering imitation or is he simply a copycat? You decide.

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