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Lucille Moore Boutte

ERATH — Funeral Services for Mrs. Lucille Moore Boutte, 93, were held at 2:30 p.m. on Monday, August 22, 2022 at David Funeral Home Chapel of Erath with Deacon Russell Hayes officiating. Interment followed at Our Lady of Lourdes Mausoleum.
Visitation was at David Funeral Home of Erath on Monday, August 22, 2022 beginning at 9 a.m. until the time of the services with a recitation of the rosary at 11 a.m.
A native and resident of Erath, Mrs. Boutte died at 9:40 p.m. on Thursday, August 18, 2022 at Maison du Monde Nursing Home. She was a graduate of Erath High and retired from Vermilion Parish School Board after many years as a cafeteria technician. Mrs. Lucille was a devoted mother who loved gardening, cooking, playing bingo, and cards. She also enjoyed spending time with her friends and family.
She is survived by her daughter, Deena B. Touchet and her husband Randy of Erath; two grandchildren, Nick Touchet and his wife Maria and Cory Touchet and his wife Jessica; and two great grandchildren, Alex and Aidan Touchet.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Ray J. Boutte; her parents, Edier and Rose Delahoussaye Moore; and a sister, Gloria Dean Moore.
Serving as pallbearers will be Randy Touchet, Nick Touchet, Cory Touchet, Danny Delahoussaye, Ricky Boutte and Beau Boutte.
The family would also like to extend their thanks to Bridgeway Hospice and Maison du Monde Nursing Facility for t

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Arrests made for catalytic converter thefts in Vermilion Parish

According to Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office’s Public Information Officer Eddie Langlinais, two arrests have been made as a result of an investigation into the Thefts of Catalytic Converters.
On Aug. 16, after a week-long investigation, the Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office Criminal Investigations Division gathered enough information to obtain warrants and arrested:
Benjamin Richard, 36, charged with 3 counts of Felony Theft and 2 counts of Felony Criminal Damage to Property. Bond set at $17,500.
Blake Blanchard, 23 , charged with 3 counts of Felony Theft and 2 counts of Felony Criminal Damage to Property. Bond set at $17,500.
Both men from Kaplan were booked into the Vermilion Parish Correctional Center.
This investigation is still ongoing. Updates may follow as more information becomes available.
Vermilion Parish Sheriff Mike Couvillon would like to commend the Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office for their hard work in gathering enough information to make these arrests.

Four from Kaplan arrested by Narcotics Task Force

According to Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office’s Public Information Officer Eddie Langlinais, the Vermilion Municipal and Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force made the following arrests for narcotics related offenses within the parish:
On Aug. 9, agents with the Vermilion Municipal and Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force wrapped up a lengthy investigation inside the city limits of Kaplan that ended with a search warrant being executed. Upon execution multiple occupants were located and as a result of the investigation several were placed under arrest for various narcotics offenses. They are identified as follows along with their charges upon arrest:
· Benjamin Richard, 36, of Kaplan, was arrested and charged with: Possession with Intent to Distribute Schedule I, (Heroin), Possession of Schedule II, (Methamphetamine), and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia
· Baji Ramos, 49, of Kaplan, was arrested and charged with: Possession of Schedule II, (Methamphetamine) and Obstruction of Justice. Ramos was also detained by Probation and Parole
· Brandi Romero, 44, of Kaplan, was arrested and charged with: Possession of Schedule II, (Methamphetamine), Possession of Drug Paraphernalia and Possession of Schedule I, (Marijuana)
· Harlie Menard, 19, of Kaplan, was arrested and charged with Possession of Schedule II, (Methamphetamine) and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.
Vermilion Parish Sheriff Mike Couvillon would like to thank the Mayors, and their council, of Abbeville, Gueydan, Kaplan, Maurice, Delcambre and Erath, along with their Chiefs of Police, for their support of the Vermilion Municipal and Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force. Sheriff Couvillon also applauds the concerned citizens of Vermilion Parish for their awareness and assistance in helping the Task Force in fighting the war on illegal drugs. He encourages all citizens with information in regards to illegal drug activities to contact the Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office or the Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Unit at 337-740-4501 or E-mail the Task Force anonymously at taskforce@vpso.net and your e-mail will be held in the “strictest of confidence” and replied to in a very timely manner. Citizens can also report crimes by calling the Crime Stoppers of Vermilion Tips line at 740-TIPS (8477) or download and logon to the P3 app on your mobile device to report your tips anonymously, where you can earn a cash reward.
More information on reporting drug activities can be seen on our Web Site at www.vpso.net. Click on Narcotics and fill out the TURN IN A PUSHER information.

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Dozier Elementary reopened with a new entrance. Pictured are Principal Johnnie Suire and several faculty members.

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Dozier Elementary’s first faculty after opening as a 1st-3rd Erath feeder school in 1972. 1st Row (Top): Merille Marie (French teacher). June Boudreaux (1st) , Mary Jo Crutchfield (3rd), Judy LeBlanc (2nd) , Janice Plummer (3rd) Evelyn Boudreaux (3rd). 2nd Row: Eno Romero (Janitor), Mae Carlin (2nd grade aide) Cheryl “Pie” Domingues (1st) , Dora L. LeBlanc (2nd), Ann Pillette, (1st grade-aide) Jeanette Pillette (2nd) , Linda Charmount (1st), Theresa Peltier, Mary Lou LeBeaux, Principal Johnnie Suire. 3rd Row: Marilyn Dufrene (1st), Evola Antoine (3rd-aide), Electa Blanchette (2nd) Cynthia Frederick (3rd), Gayle Broussard (Library-Math Aide), and Kay Mayard (Reading Lab), Not pictured: Sweeper Verda Richard, Cafeteria Workers, Alice Menard, Eustis Toups, Verna Soirez, Linda Goutirrez, Beverly Libersat and secretary Betty Baudoin.

2022 marks 50th Anniversary of Dozier Elementary opening as an Erath Feeder School

A half-century ago, a new school emerged and changed the face of Erath’s educational system. On August 29, 1972, Dozier Elementary opened its doors with a new, caring, and motivated staff as the community’s feeder school for all students in grades 1, 2, and 3.
Before this time, Erath High was housing grades 1-12. It was decided in 1971, that the original brick RF Dozier structure built in 1954 and closed in 1968 due to integration would be utilized again.
The motion to create Dozier Elementary using the RF Dozier school facility, coupled with the renovations and construction of rooms, was made by then Erath school board member U.P. LeBlanc. Dr. Joseph Kite was superintendent at that time.
Vermilion Parish School Board minutes from October 21, 1971, which were printed on Monday, November 15, 1971, state: “Superintendent Kite reviewed student enrollment growth at Erath High since 1950 with an explanation that existing facilities including four temporary buildings on the main campus are taxed beyond capacity, the Superintendent recommending that six classrooms and a library be added to the Dozier school building and convert this facility to a separate elementary school housing grades 1, 2, 3 with a projected enrollment of 325 students.”

Background of the structure of the RF Dozier school

From 1942-1968 on the current Dozier grounds stood an African American school. The school was originally named after Robert and Francis (RF) Dozier, a couple who made strides in educating the Black youth in 1911, in both their own home and then the Beard Congregation Church.
By 1941, under the leadership of the Dozier couple’s son, Frank Dozier, and other citizens, the group approached the Vermilion Parish School Board to build a new school for Black students on what is now the Dozier Elementary campus. The land was purchased from Phillip and Eugenie Richard, and a wooden structure opened in 1942 for grades 1-6. However, by the fifties, a larger structure was needed to assist with the growing student body. More land was purchased from the Richard family and a larger school was built to accommodate grades 1-8.
In 1954, bearing the name R. F. Dozier, the new brick school opened, which honored Robert and Frances Dozier. That structure remains part of the present-day school, with the original plaque at the outdoor entrance.
From 1942-1968, Principal Reverend B. T. Whitt and his dedicated faculty were committed to providing their students with the best possible education. However, by May 1968, the R. F. Dozier School building closed its doors to integrate with Erath High School.
During the 1968-69 school year, the R. F. Dozier building remained closed. The following year, the school structure progressed through a new phase. Doors opened for children in the “Follow Through” Program in 1969.
By 1971, there was a need for more space for Erath students. So, with Superintendent Kite, school board members U.P. LeBlanc, Dalton Domingue, and the rest of the board, in 1971, a decision was made that the RF Dozier campus would be renovated and additional classrooms constructed to assist Erath High’s overcrowding situation.

A new school reopens, but its namesake remains

In August 1972, history was made as Dozier Elementary opened for all Erath students in 1st-3rd grade. Now encapsulated within this campus were strong roots, embedded with the past and present, as well as a new future. The former brick structure remained intact, with six new classrooms and a library added. Erath High was now grades 4-12, with the first elementary facility, as a feeder school in Erath. Subsequently, this motion and move changed the face of the Erath school system. In later years, grades 4-8 also split from the high school and became the town’s middle school, renamed Erath Middle, forming three schools in the community.
Johnnie Suire, a longtime Vermilion Parish educator, was named the new principal. Under the supervision of this dedicated administrator, Dozier Elementary took its first steps as a new school. However, Suire, who sincerely admired the story behind the Dozier couple who paved the path to educating the Black youth from 1911-1941, wanted the Dozier name to remain in place. Fortunately, that request was honored.
According to the Abbeville Meridional printed on Thursday, August 31, 1972, it stated that school opening of Vermilion Parish schools had opened on Tuesday (August 29, 1972) with Dozier Elementary housing 271 students that day.
As expected, the initial years at this primary school experienced hurdles but were productive. Johnnie Suire proudly shared that the perseverance and strength of the 1972-73 staff helped the school rise above problems that often accompany a school during its infancy. In a 1986 interview, shaking his head with a smile, then changing to an eager and proud face, Suire stated that a “strong sense of unity guided them through many chaotic situations their first year.”
Kindergarten classes began two years later, in 1974. At that time, additional classrooms were constructed for the incoming Kindergarten students. Those rooms still are in place and now house all Pre-K students.
Suire remained in his leadership role until his retirement in 1980. Dozier Elementary had taken many positive steps under the guidance of this longtime educator. Six more were to follow in his footsteps in the 50-year history.
Other leaders who followed suit were Sherry B. Trahan (1980-1986), Teddy Broussard (1986-2001), Ralph Thibodeaux (2001-2003), Elizabeth Gremillion (2003-2009), Karla Desormeaux Toups (2009-2020), and currently, Andrea Turner Ford, who began in the fall of 2020.
The first assistant principal, Elizabeth Gremillion, was named in January 2002. When Gremillion became principal in the fall of 2003, Dawn Amy stepped in as the new assistant principal. The duo remained together until 2009, when Gremillion retired and Amy was named as the LeBlanc Elementary Principal. In 2009, Natalie Hebert followed as assistant principal. Over the years, others followed: Christine Hebert, Susie Stephen, DeEtte Roy, and Jessie Leger.
After the six classrooms and library were added in 1972, the overcrowding situation brought additional wings. In 1981-82, a new wing was built behind the school. Then in the early 20002, yet another wing was added to accommodate the consistent student growth. Several modular buildings and the CCD building were also part of the campus through the years.
In 1997, a cafeteria large enough to house the student body was finally built. Johnnie Suire made the first proposal in 1972. Twenty-five years later, that became a reality. The dedication ceremony for the cafeteria took place on November 6, 1997.
Following the Erath Middle School fire in 2000, fourth-grade students from EMS were transferred officially to the Dozier Elementary campus utilizing the campus CCD buildings. In addition to that, PreK began in 2002. By 2002, the school now housed PreK-4th grade.
By 2005, Hurricane Rita’s tidal surge had created havoc on the school plant. The faculty, staff, and students were displaced and moved four times from 2005 until returning home in 2009. In addition, Henry Elementary, south of Erath had been damaged beyond repair, and those students were sent between Dozier and Abbeville elementary schools.
Due to Hurricane Rita, all Vermilion Parish schools closed from September 25 until October 5 due to flooding. From October 6, 2005, until March 13, 2006, Dozier Elementary was platooned and shared a campus with Cecil Picard Elementary in Maurice. In March, the staff and students returned to their home facility for short term use. The school had been cleaned thoroughly, however; the facility still needed renovations. The student body and staff returned to bare cement floors, curtains replacing doors, and other bare necessity needs, but most were thrilled to be back in Erath.
The next step was renovating and rebuilding the cleaned but damaged plant. Then, in June 2006, the school moved into FEMA trailers on north road in Erath, where it remained until June 2009.
During the 2008-2009 school year, the Vermilion Parish School Board decided to create another elementary feeder school in the Erath area. As a result, many students remained at Dozier, while others were moved to the second feeder school, LeBlanc Elementary, north of Erath.
By August 2009, under a new leader Karla Desormeaux Toups, (who attended Dozier Elementary as a child), along with the faculty, staff, and students, finally returned to their 415 West Primeaux address. The school was now a PreK-5th grade school. Erath Middle would return to their grades 6-8 status. That year, LeBlanc Elementary opened as Erath’s third feeder school.
In March 2020, schools were dismissed for what was believed to be a short break due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, that led to the school’s closing on March 13, 2020, until the schools reopened again in August 2020, with many protocols for the educators and students.
In the summer of 2020, Karla Toups (Langlinais) retired, and Andrea Turner Ford, (also a former student at DES), was named the new principal. She and newly appointed Assistant Principal DeEtte Bigot opened the 2020-2021 year. In the fall of 2021, Mrs. Bigot took a position at Erath Middle, and Jessie Leger was named the new assistant principal.
Faced during the past five decades were natural disasters, rebuilding, construction of new wings, a cafeteria and a new gym, being displaced four times, a global pandemic, and a revolving door involving thousands of different faces in the shape of leaders, teachers, staff members, parents, and the community.
Fifty years have since passed since Dozier Elementary opened its doors in August 1972 as the first feeder school in Erath.
Several changes occurred physically to the plant, coupled with a variety of good and bad emotions attached to them. However, the one constant evident at all times were the concerns for learning, growth, and most importantly, educating and caring for the children who attended Dozier Elementary through the years. The school motto “We Care” fits the school appropriately and always has.
The complete history of Dozier Elementary can be found on the website @ https://des.vpsb.net/o/des/page/dozier-elementary-history

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Photo by Doug Dugas / University of Louisiana at Lafayette
President Dr. Joseph Savoie announces UL Lafayette’s ascension to the ranks of nation’s top 100 public research universities during Wednesday’s State of the University.

State of the University: UL Lafayette among top 100 public research universities in U.S.

University sets new record for R&D expenditures

LAFAYETTE — The University of Louisiana at Lafayette has taken its place among the nation’s top 100 public research universities.
Dr. Joseph Savoie, UL Lafayette president, made the announcement Wednesday during the annual State of the University address.
“Coming on the heels of our R1 designation, this is exceptional news worth celebrating and it’s a headline that all of you helped to write,” Savoie said.
UL Lafayette’s rise to the ranks of the nation’s top public research universities is based on data from the National Science Foundation.
In 2020, the University expended $164 million on R&D. That figure ranked the University 134th among the 655 institutions the Higher Education Research and Development Survey included. The HERD Survey is NSF’s annual index of research spending at U.S. public and private colleges and universities.
But when considering only public universities on the HERD Survey, UL Lafayette ranks 94th – elevating it to the nation’s top 100 public research universities for the first time in its history.
The announcement was among several milestones related to the University’s research capacity that Savoie shared with faculty and staff members during the presentation. The State of the University is held at the start of the fall semester and marks the beginning of the new academic year.
Last year, the University’s research and development expenditures set a record at $181.4 million – an “incredible” 193% increase in R&D spending at UL Lafayette in eight years, Savoie said.
The University’s R&D expenditures increased by $119 million – from $62 million to $181.4 million – between 2013 and 2021, according to the HERD Survey. During that same period, UL Lafayette marked slightly more than $1 billion in R&D spending, Savoie announced.
UL Lafayette competes against other universities for federal and state grants, and private sector contracts. The University acts as a steward for the funds awarded to faculty and staff researchers.
“This money comes to us from state and federal funding agencies and through partnerships with business and industry because of the reputation this University has for consequential work that answers the greatest questions we face as a global community,” Savoie said.
“Because these dollars have an effect that ripples beyond campus – into our region and into businesses and into the tax base – this figure represents an infusion into the local economy that is extraordinary,” he added.
NSF has not released UL Lafayette’s HERD Survey ranking for 2021 that will be based on the $181.4 million total.
Classes begin at UL Lafayette on Monday. The fall semester marks the start of the first full academic year since the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education designated UL Lafayette as R1, or a university with “very high research activity.”
Just 146 – 3% – of public and private universities in the United States have R1 status. The designation is a “stamp of excellence” that also comes with an obligation, Savoie said.
“The vital questions asked and answered today by this University’s researchers and scholars strengthen the ability to confront – and answer – greater questions tomorrow. The region, state, nation and world we serve is looking to us for clarity, understanding and results,” he said.
“And this University is up to that responsibility.”

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Frank Leon Maraist Jr.

Frank Leon Maraist Jr. passed into eternal life on August 8, 2022.
He was born in his home in Kaplan, December 21, 1931, to Frank Leon Maraist Sr. and Christine Marie Deshotels. Frank spent his youth in Kaplan and left home after graduating from Kaplan High in 1947 to attend Southwestern Louisiana Institute where he studied history and journalism and worked for the athletic department as an assistant to the sports information director.
He later served in a similar capacity for Louisiana State University before being drafted and serving for two years in the army. Upon his discharge and returning from over overseas, Frank enrolled in the LSU Law School.
He graduated in 1958, the same year he married Catherine Montgomery Underwood, whom he had met while in law school. Following graduation, Frank began his legal career as an attorney at Sanders, Miller, Downing, Rubin and Kean, and he and Catherine settled in Baton Rouge and began to raise a family.
In 1962, Frank moved his family to Kaplan where he joined his uncle, Octave Henri “Junior” Deshotels, II, to form the law firm of Deshotels and Maraist. The two practiced together until 1968, when Frank and his family left Kaplan for New Haven, Connecticut, where Frank completed a Masters of Law at Yale University in preparation for a legal teaching career.
After a summer position teaching at the University of Texas in 1969, Frank took on a permanent position at Ole Miss, where he taught until 1973. After another stint as a visiting professor at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, he moved back to Louisiana, where he joined the faculty of the LSU Law Center.
Frank finally retired from teaching in 2011 with a career full of accolades and achievements that are too long to include here.
Frank is survived by his two daughters, Laura Irlbeck and Catherine M. Maraist and her husband (Jim Van Hook), and a son, Tom Maraist and his wife (Patti). He is also survived by his seven grandchildren, Christopher Maraist, Stephen Maraist, Daniel Maraist, Robbie Irlbeck, Isaac Irlbeck, James Van Hook, and Olivia Van Hook; a great-grandson, Dominic Maraist; his sisters-in-law, Jane Underwood McCall and Cathy Walker Underwood, and numerous nephews and nieces.
He was preceded in death by his wife of 58 years, Catherine, his parents, his sister, Myrtle Maraist Comeaux, and his son-in-law, Robert Irlbeck.
A memorial service and celebration of his life will be held on August 20th at the Faculty Club on the LSU campus. Visitation is from 10 a.m. until noon followed by the memorial service and a lunch reception.
For those of you who may not remember, Frank co-founded and co-edited the Kaplan Herald with Conrad Kaplan while he practiced law in Vermilion Parish from 1962-1968.

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Louisiane-Acadie Announces Dates of Great Acadian Awakening (GRA) Oct. 1-Oct. 9, 2022

Event will open in Abbeville on Oct. 1

Louisiane-Acadie the sponsor of the Great Acadian Awakening (GRA) is a non-profit organization domiciled in Lafayette, Louisiana whose mission is to celebrate our native French language, Cajun culture and Acadian heritage. Louisiane-Acadie’s premier event, the GRA is held every five years but was postponed to 2022 due to COVID. GRA is patterned after the World Congress of Acadians’ (CMA) festivities that are held in the Canadian Maritimes. GRA is a multi-day event with activities set to take place all around the Acadiana region. This year’s ceremonies will open in Abbeville on Saturday, Oct. 1st with events set to take place each day in St. Martinville, New Iberia, Arnaudville, Rayne, Church Point, Houma, Thibodeaux, Lafayette, Broussard and Port Allen. Closing ceremonies, set for Sunday, Oct. 9, 2022, will include a 9:00 a.m. French mass at St. John’s Cathedral in Lafayette, followed by a Tintamarre to Warehouse 535 and concluding activities at St. Luc’s Immersion School in Arnaudville.
GRA is about waking up the people of South Louisiana to the importance of preserving the cultural
resources of language, foodways, and music unique to Louisiana’s Cajun populace. Louisiane- Acadie also coordinates activities between Acadians of the North and Cajuns of the South and as such encourages families to organize reunions during this time to welcome their northern cousins. Come join us in celebrating what makes us unique!
For more information, visit Louisiane-Acadie’s website—www.louisianeacadie.com or contact a Louisiane-Acadie boardmember by emailing info@louisianeacadie.com or visit our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/GrandReveilAcadien/

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85 uncertified teachers in the classrooms in Vermilion Parish

There was a person in the classroom teaching Vermilion Parish public school children when school began on Thursday. Is that person a certified teacher or a non-certified teacher?
Nine years ago, that answer would probably have been certified because only one percent of Vermilion Parish’s public school teachers were uncertified.
Today, it is 11 percent, a jump of 10 percent or 77 teachers.
That means 11 out of 100 teachers in the parish are uncertified. Nine years ago, that number was like 1 out of 100.
The state average for uncertified teachers is 12.5%.
Vermilion Parish Superintendent Tommy Byler said many uncertified teachers are those waiting to take a state education certification test. In contrast, others are people who changed their careers and have a bachelor’s degree.
“Vermilion Parish is lucky to have the positions filled,” said Byler. “I know there are districts who are 50 or 60 teachers short with school beginning.
“I feel confident in the people we hired. They want to be in the classroom and have gone through training this summer.”
The parish school with the most uncertified teachers is J.H. Williams Middle School.
Only eight uncertified teachers were teaching in Vermilion in 2013-14.
In 2015-16, the number of uncertified teachers jumped to 34. It remained around 35 until the 2021 school year, when it jumped to 58. Last year there were 61 uncertified teachers in the school system.
It jumped from eight in 2013 to 85 in 2022.
Due to the teacher shortage, Vermilion, like other parishes, has had to hire uncertified teachers. This is a person with a college degree but not in education.
A majority of the uncertified teacher hires sign only one-year contracts.
Vermilion Parish is hiring more uncertified teachers, a state trend according to a state report.
The state has the fifth highest rate of uncertified teachers – 9% – and the fourth most teachers in their first or second years in the classroom – 16%, the report says. The national figures are 3% and 12%, respectively.
On the first day of school, Vermilion Parish still had six unfilled teaching slots as of Thursday. But according to assistant superintendent Paul Hebert, those six slots are expected to be filled by next week.
Vermilion’s starting pay for a teacher is around $46,000 a year. That amount is for an uncertified and certified teacher.

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Jeff Crouere

Republicans, fight for President Trump and equal justice

This week, Democrats just passed a massive expansion of government that will grow government, increase inflation, raise taxes, and unleash 87,000 Internal Revenue Service (IRS) agents on Americans. Even though Democrats have the slimmest of margins in Congress, and do not have a political mandate, they passed another piece of their radical agenda.
When Republicans controlled the White House and Congress during the first two years of the Trump administration, they were unable to dismantle the Affordable Care Act or build a border wall. Even though President Donald Trump tried mightily, these major agenda items were not fulfilled.
When Democrats took back the U.S. House of Representatives in January of 2019, they impeached the President twice for preposterous reasons. It set the stage for the utter horror they have unleashed on the nation since taking control of the entire government in January 2021.
Despite near monolithic power in our government, media, special interests, Hollywood and corporate America, Democrats are still suffering from “Trump Derangement Syndrome.” They cannot forgive Trump for winning the presidency in 2016 and planning to run in 2024.
Therefore, the plan to annihilate Trump and his supporters has been unleashed. It is on display with the corrupt January 6th committee, which is a one-sided probe into the protests on that day. Instead of trying to determine why two Trump supporters were killed on January 6, 2021, the committee is intent on pinning the blame for the “insurrection” on Donald Trump.
Almost 900 January 6th protesters have been charged with crimes, while dozens of these “rioters” have either received jail time or are languishing in prison, some being denied basic due process rights.
While these Trump supporters have been treated like terrorists, individuals violating the law by protesting outside the home of Supreme Court justices have not been arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). This same sort of indifference was shown toward the Antifa and Black Lives Matter protesters who committed acts of violence in 574 riots in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd in 2020.
For too long, Republican politicians acted with politeness while being steamrolled by cutthroat Democrats who will do anything to achieve their goals. After suffering a series of stinging defeats in Congress and having their party’s top leader and his associates abused by a biased FBI, it is time for Republicans to fight like Democrats.
The last straw for any Republican should be the unconstitutional and unprecedented raid of President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, Florida home by dozens of FBI agents early last Monday morning. Trump received the same treatment as many of the January 6th protesters, his former campaign manager Paul Manafort, his friend Roger Stone, and his attorney Rudy Giuliani.
While President Trump has been abused since he descended from the escalator in 2015 to announce his campaign, Hillary Clinton was given a pass for her involvement in Uranium One deals with Russia, her foundation’s suspicious donations, her activities setting up Trump with a phony dossier compiled by British spy Christopher Steele and her destruction of 33,000 emails, including top secret and classified communications. Of course, her home was not raided, and her associates were given immunity, not imprisoned by FBI agents.
Another lucky Democrat is “First Son” Hunter Biden. On his “Laptop from Hell,” Hunter commits a variety of crimes like using crack cocaine and employing prostitutes. His corrupt business deals are outlined on that laptop, as well as the role of President Joe Biden, “the Big Guy.”
While the FBI has allowed Hunter Biden three years to enjoy vacations with his father, it acted quickly to raid Mar-a-Lago. It is odd, considering that President Trump was cooperating with FBI agents when they visited his home in June to investigate these disputed documents.
According to Trump, he would have given them whatever documents they wanted without the need for a morning raid. However, for the FBI, the search was beneficial because agents roamed Trump’s home for ten hours, without his attorneys present. Eventually, they removed materials from a variety of rooms and even inspected Melania Trump’s closet.
These tactics are not in keeping with American history, but reminiscent of third world countries, where dictators suppress political opposition by authoritarian government tactics. No wonder, many have referred to our country as a “banana republic” after this shocking raid.
In response to this action, leading Republicans have been calling for patience to allow the process to continue. Others, such as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), seem to be uninterested.
Instead of apathy, congressional Republicans should be as outraged as their party’s base. A new poll shows that 57% support Trump as the 2024 presidential nominee.
It is time for GOP leaders to stop acting like patsies and fight for their principles, their President, and their millions of faithful supporters.

Jeff Crouere is a native New Orleanian and is a political columnist, the author of America's Last Chance and provides regular commentaries on the Jeff Crouere YouTube channel and on Crouere.net. For more information, email him at jcrouere@gmail.com

Biden’s 87,000 new IRS agents may be short-lived

President Joe Biden and ‘conservative’ Democrat Joe Manchin’s alleged inflation fighting legislation passed through the Senate this past weekend. It will be surprising to many Americans that the inflation fight includes hiring 87,000 new Internal Revenue Service agents, who are supposed to squeeze $200 billion out of their pockets over the next ten years.
This is the Democrats plan to stop American’s wallets from inflating – IRS audits.
Senate Republican Mike Crapo (R-ID) reports that the Biden inflation bill will make the IRS, “one of the largest federal agencies --- larger than the Pentagon, State Department and Border Patrol combined.”
Incredible to think about the tax collection agency dwarfing much of the rest of government, but there is an old saying that what you say about your priorities matters less than how you spend your money. The Democrats showed America what their priorities are. Not the border and increased security, not our ability to conduct diplomacy around the world or to keep the peace through strength, no Democrats prioritize higher taxes and dramatically more agents to collect them.
Those crazy Democrats, the political party that gives people just what they want right before election-day, an IRS auditor in every neighborhood.
The magnitude of the expansion cannot be overemphasized. Currently, the IRS has just over 78,000 total full time employees doing all of the business of the Agency. This number will be dwarfed by the newly incoming 87,000 enforcement agents. Just the seating charts will be a logistical nightmare.
By comparison the entire Border Patrol only has 19,500 agents. With the immigration crisis at the border, perhaps Biden is planning on auditing the under the table earnings of the millions of newly arrived illegals to make them think twice about their choice to invade our country, but somehow I don’t think so.
And remember President Joe Biden’s promise that he won’t raise taxes on anyone who makes less than $400,000 a year? Senator Crapo offered the Democrats in the Senate the opportunity to prohibit this tidal wave of auditors from conducting any audits on anyone who makes less than $400,000 through an amendment to the inflation bill, and yep, you guessed it, the amendment which needed 51 votes, failed on a 50-50 vote. Not a single Democrat voted to protect taxpayers making less than $400,000, and the feckless Vice President refused to break the tie on behalf of the little guy.
But there is a snag in Biden’s plan to audit America into oblivion. Congress revisits the appropriations for the IRS at least once a year through the Financial Services and General Government appropriations bill. Due to Congress being completely broken procedurally, this appropriation bill is often passed as part of a Continuing Resolution (CR) or by an Omnibus bill each of which lumps multiple spending bills together.
To pass a CR or Omnibus bill doesn’t require 51 votes, but instead needs the magical 60 votes to overcome a filibuster in the Senate. Meaning that 41 GOP Senators can lay down a line in the sand and simply just say no to this dramatic expansion of the Internal Revenue Service by refusing to fund it.
Ending Biden’s weaponized IRS enforcement army before it ever gets hired should be a non-negotiable part of the upcoming government funding negotiations. After all, the best way to stop an infestation is to stop it before it spreads.

Rick Manning is President of Americans for Limited Government

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