logo
GOP challenger aims to unseat Mark Pless in the primary

GOP challenger aims to unseat Mark Pless in the primary

Yahoo2 days ago

May 30—A Republican business owner from Maggie Valley has announced his intention to challenge N.C. House Rep. Mark Pless for the seat representing Haywood and Madison counties.
While it's rare for a sitting legislator to face opposition in the primary, the move is a reflection of Pless' strong-arm leadership style rubbing many in his own party the wrong way.
A self-avowed political junkie, Ken Brown has closely followed local and state politics, especially as they impact Maggie Valley where he operates MarxBrown Consulting.
After seeing politicians in Raleigh attempting to overturn the judgment of locally elected leaders, Brown began toying with the idea of running for the state legislature in House District 118, which encompasses Haywood and Madison counties.
Pless' bill to upend the credentialing process for emergency medical technicians across the state was the last straw.
After talking to a fire chief in the county about the bill — and learning that the bill had blindsided local EMS workers who were spitting mad over it — Brown said he knew it was time to act.
Pless is also a Republican, but Brown said he and the incumbent differ greatly in their approaches to local government.
"I'd been noticing a lot of the legislation Pless put forward seems to be working against the autonomy of local government," he said. "I don't even care if I agree with what a town is doing. If local folks want to do XYZ, and it is lawful across the state, it should be up to them."
He referred to local bills Pless has introduced that he said undermines local authority, among them a bill that passed to end down-zoning in Maggie Valley; one proposed this session to allow certain properties within Maggie's town limits to de-annex that did not make it out of committee; and one to dissolve the Haywood Tourism Development Authority and eliminate the county's right to collect an occupancy tax. That third bill, if passed as introduced, would have meant about $3 million in taxes collected annually from tourists would disappear. Again, the bill blindsided local business and tourism leaders. Pless has since done an about-face on the TDA proposal, actually proposing to increase the room tax along with reorganizing the TDA's board of directors.
"As a conservative, it boiled down to the fact the government that is closest to the people is best. That's why we elect federal, state, county and municipal leaders," Brown said. "To take away something, especially without their involvement, is unacceptable."
The candidate sign-up period for state seats isn't until December, but Brown's campaign has already gone public. The primary election is in March 2026, and the winner will go on to face a to-be-determined Democratic candidate in the November general election.
A natural next step
Brown believes his entire career has shaped the type of leader he wants to be in Raleigh, and that's based on the philosophy of servant leadership. This concept follows a philosophy that prioritizes the needs of others and focuses on empowering them to grow and develop. Brown said servant leaders are motivated to serve and help others — something he's done throughout his entire career, he added.
At Eastern Kentucky University, he double majored in business management and information systems and got a masters degree in business from Xavier University in Cincinnati. His career started in 1984 as a systems analyst with GE Aerospace — Jet Engines — and transitioned to sales and marketing three years later.
In the enterprise software business, Brown stressed it is vital to "listen a lot more than you talk," which helps identify problems corporations are having and create a roadmap to solve the problems.
"The problem-solving part and connecting the dots boils down to a listening and collaboration. My background fits nicely with what's needed as a legislator," he said.
Brown and his wife, Beth, bought property in the White Oak community in 2000, and moved to the county full-time in 2005. The duo has an office building in Maggie Valley where she has developed a thriving photography business and he runs MarxBrown Consulting.
In 2022, Brown opened a business to focus on helping smaller and start-up companies that couldn't afford and didn't have enough work for a full-time chief revenue officer. He accepts no more than five non-competing businesses at a time.
At age 63, Brown said he can adjust his work schedule to fit a campaign and eventual work schedule in Raleigh.
A plan
While those seeking federal, state or local elected positions can't file for office until Dec. 1, Brown said he has a lot of listening to do to prepare for the job. To lead with humility and empathy, tenets of servant leadership, requires knowing the issues and the stakeholders in House District 118, so he's getting started early.
Brown has launched a website that discusses his background, philosophy of servant leadership and a calendar that will show the places he will be as he listens to people across the district.
That includes not only local government meetings where he will learn about pressing issues local leaders face, but plenty of regular and special events through the summer and fall where he can connect with people.
For now, Brown conceded he's "probably best known as Beth Brown's husband," something he hopes will change as he kicks off his efforts to claim the N.C. House seat in 2026.
He will be adding a Facebook and a Linked-In page. For those interested in learning more about Brown and his candidacy, visit www.brown4nc118.com, call 828-944-9919 or email him at ken.brown@brown4nc118.com.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rand Paul Thinks There Are Enough GOP Senators to Block Trump Budget Bill
Rand Paul Thinks There Are Enough GOP Senators to Block Trump Budget Bill

Newsweek

time39 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Rand Paul Thinks There Are Enough GOP Senators to Block Trump Budget Bill

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Senator Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, said Sunday that he's confident there are enough members of his party to vote against President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful" spending bill amid concerns that it does not make enough cuts to spending. Newsweek reached out to the White House and Paul's office by email outside of normal business hours on Sunday for comment. Why It Matters Trump made the passage of a new spending bill one of his centerpiece policy goals for his second administration, aiming to wrap everything up into one single bill, the much-touted "big, beautiful bill" that will allow him to pursue his raft of policies. The bill would extend the president's 2017 tax cats, reduce taxes for individuals and corporations, and add new exemptions for tipped workers and overtime pay. Critics also warn that the bill's spending cuts would prove insufficient to pay for the proposed tax cuts and other spending priorities. However, some Republicans have voiced reservations about supporting the bill, with the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimating that it will add $3.8 trillion to the national debt over the next 10 years. The House of Representatives passed the bill by just one vote, 215-214, as two Republicans broke ranks and joined every House Democrat in opposing the bill. What To Know Paul has spoken out against the spending bill and said he will not vote to pass it due to the inclusion of a mechanism that would allow Congress to increase the nation's debt limit by $5 trillion. On Sunday, the senator appeared on CBS News' Face the Nation when host Margaret Brennan asked, "Do you have three other Republicans who will stand with you to block this bill?" Paul responded: "I think there are four of us at this point, and I would be very surprised if the bill at least is not modified in a good direction." He continued: "I want to vote for it. I'm for the tax cuts. I voted for the tax cuts before, I want the tax cuts to be permanent, but at the same time I don't want to raise the debt ceiling $5 trillion, so I've told them if you take the debt ceiling off the bill, in all likelihood I can vote for what the agreement is on the rest of the bill. And it doesn't have to be perfect to my liking, but if I vote for the $5 trillion debt, who's left in Washington that cares about the debt? The GOP will own the debt once they vote for this." The GOP senator said Trump's "big, beautiful bill" increases spending by about $320 billion for the military and for the border. "To put that perspective, that's more than all the [Department of Government Efficiency] DOGE cuts that we found so far, so the increase in spending put into this bill exceeds the DOGE cuts," he said Sunday. Paul then cited what he called inflated spending on the southern border wall, noting that the Trump administration managed to carry out its deportations without needing new spending or equipment and therefore deeming such expenditure in the bill is "asking for too much money." "In the end, the way you add it up to see if it actually is going to save money or add money is how much debt are they going to borrow—$5 trillion over two years is an enormous amount," he said. Brennan: Do you have three other Republicans who will stand with you to block this bill? Paul: I think there are four of us at this point — Acyn (@Acyn) June 1, 2025 What People Are Saying Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky wrote on X, formerly Twitter, on Sunday: "The American people, like the Great People of Kentucky, do not support Biden spending levels and $5T in new debt. Therefore, I will not. It's simple." Senator Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican, wrote on X on Sunday: "The House Budget process focused on $1.5 trillion in reduced spending and ignored the looming debt crisis. I am preparing a report: FY2025 Budget Reconciliation, Facts & Figures. I hope to complete it shortly and hold a hearing on it before we take any more Senate votes on the budget." President Donald Trump on Truth Social last week: "THE ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL" has PASSED the House of Representatives! This is arguably the most significant piece of Legislation that will ever be signed in the History of our Country!" He added a message to Senate Republicans: "Now, it's time for our friends in the United States Senate to get to work, and send this Bill to my desk AS SOON AS POSSIBLE! There is no time to waste." House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, in a statement on Thursday: "Today, the House has passed generational, nation-shaping legislation that reduces spending, permanently lowers taxes for families and job creators, secures the border, unleashes American energy dominance, restores peace through strength, and makes government work more efficiently and effectively for all Americans." What Happens Next? Other GOP senators, including Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine and Josh Hawley of Missouri, have also raised concerns about the bill, and have voiced concerns ahead of a vote on the bill, which the Senate has set to happen before the Fourth of July.

ADL says it's not aware of Stringer's plan to work with group to combat antisemitism despite mayoral candidate's claim
ADL says it's not aware of Stringer's plan to work with group to combat antisemitism despite mayoral candidate's claim

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

ADL says it's not aware of Stringer's plan to work with group to combat antisemitism despite mayoral candidate's claim

Longshot Big Apple mayoral candidate Scott Stringer's claim that he'd work with the Anti-Defamation League to root out antisemitism is news to the non-profit. An ADL spokesperson said Sunday that the organization is not aware of 'any authorized plans' to work with the former city comptroller, who said over the weekend he would use tech to help cops 'predict and prevent' biased attacks while referencing the ADL. Stringer unveiled his plan to fight Jewish hate over the weekend. Leonardo Munoz 'We are not aware of any authorized plans to partner with Mr. Stringer and, as a nonprofit organization, we would not partner with any candidate for elective office,' the spokesperson told The Post. The statement comes after Stringer told members of Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun synagogue on Manhattan's Upper East Side he would have the NYPD and Office of Emergency Management use 'advanced monitoring tools' to flag social media posts that incite violence or signal threats during and after an international emergency. The ADL Center on Extremism uses a 'first-of-its-kind' interactive map that allows users to detail specific incidents of hate, extremism, antisemitism and terrorism by state and across the country. A spokesperson for Stringer claimed the pol was only promoting the ADL's resources when asked about the claimed partnership. The ADL said it was not aware of the plan Stringer wants to partner with them on. Michael Nagle 'The ADL has one of the best tools available, and this one has been widely cited by Jewish thought leaders and elected officials,' the spokesperson said in a statement. 'It's been broadly promoted and positioned as a best practice. We should use the best tools and resources available to fight antisemitism — especially from groups that have long led the way on this issue. 'Employing best practices is good leadership, not an implication of a formal campaign partnership. The ADL has welcomed others promoting their resources.' Jewish New Yorkers have faced a disturbing spike in hate since Hamas launched its Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel, leading to the war in Gaza. Stringer, who is Jewish and a Zionist, has been polling in the single digits with the Democratic primary for mayor just weeks away.

US can't cut China off completely, but must defend AI and American innovation from nonstop theft: Sen Rounds
US can't cut China off completely, but must defend AI and American innovation from nonstop theft: Sen Rounds

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

US can't cut China off completely, but must defend AI and American innovation from nonstop theft: Sen Rounds

SIMI VALLEY, CALIFORNIA – China's rampant theft of intellectual property from American institutions and industry must be thwarted as the U.S. battles to remain the world's economic and military leader – but America cannot completely decouple from the economic behemoth, Republican South Dakota Sen. Mike Rounds told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview. The key, according to Rounds, is maintaining China as a key trade partner without giving them access to America's technology, including artificial intelligence and computer chips. "In doing so, maybe we'll restrict their ability to actually be able to have a market that they can create their own stuff with. They'll be using ours. And in using ours, they'll be our standards," Rounds told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview from the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library during the Reagan National Economic Forum on Friday in California. "Let's not necessarily just totally divest. Let's see if we can have an influence on them and the rest of the world as well when it comes to standards for AI and other technological advances in the future," he added. Rounds was among the conference panelists who spoke on the threats China poses as President Donald Trump addresses the country's chronic trade deficit with foreign nations, and his optimism for the future as the U.S. sprints to remain the world's economic and military leader. Spy Surge Sparks Trump Visa Crackdown On Chinese Students Read On The Fox News App Rounds' remarks focused on keeping the U.S. in the driver's seat of the world's economy, which he explained is deeply entwined in technological advances and bucking Chinese theft of intellectual property, while also acknowledging and combating how China has advanced into a "near-peer competitor" with the U.S. from a military standpoint. 'No Reason' For New Nukes: Trump Floats Disarmament Talks With China, Russia "We've got to do a better job of protecting the intellectual properties that we've got. The most advanced types of technologies that we have, everything we can do to slow down their connection with that, protecting against that infiltration or de-filtration of really good information that, right now, they're stealing from us on a regular basis," Rounds said during a panel called "China and the U.S.: When Trading Partners are also Great Power Competitors." He added that China has no qualms about stealing U.S. intellectual property – which is understood as intangible creations, such as patents for inventions or trade secrets such as tech algorithms. Rounds recalled a recent conversation with an ambassador to China who told him their culture does not understand "how someone can own an idea." Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced last Wednesday that the U.S. will begin "aggressively" revoking visas of Chinese students, most notably those with ties to the Chinese Communist Party who are trained at U.S. schools, but return to China or feed U.S. information to China. Rounds said the country needed a pause on admitting Chinese nationals with CCP ties into elite U.S. schools until an enforceable agreement is in place protecting intellectual property and processes from Chinese capture. "We have Chinese students that come in here, and then they [maintain] ties back home. And even if they want to stay here, one of the challenges we have is that their family may very well be coerced into requiring them to come back home again. And if that's the case, any of the knowledge that we've helped them to develop here goes back home with them," Rounds said. "Until such time as we're able to address that, and until such time as we're able to be assured that the information that they're getting here, the data that they are catching here, the knowledge that they gain here isn't going to be used against our young men and women in the future, we want to slow this down a little bit. Let's just take a break. Let's not be bringing in these Chinese students that have ties with the Chinese Communist Party, until we have some kind of agreement in place that is enforceable," he said. Rounds explained during the Reagan library forum that protecting U.S. intellectual property from Chinese theft has a ripple effect on U.S. efforts to remain the world's military leader as China seeks parity with America. State Department Says It Will 'Aggressively Revoke' Visas Of Chinese Students "[China is] a strategic challenger for us on the military side. They are a near-peer competitor. And they have an advantage over us in one particular way: They are unified in terms of when Xi Jinping wants to move, it's not just the government that moves, but the entire rest of their economic activity is required to move the way that he wants them to move. We don't have that here. And so for us, we have to recognize that challenge. Now, I'm not suggesting we go the direction that they go, but we have to recognize their ability to move very, very quickly," he said. The Trump administration leveled tariffs as high as 145% on Chinese goods in April, and China retaliated against the president's "Liberation Day" policies with tariffs of its own. China and the U.S. reached a preliminary trade agreement last month, which Trump said China violated in a Truth Social post on Friday. Trump Calls Out Putin, Accuses China Of Not Honoring Trade Deal Terms During 19Th Week In Office "I made a FAST DEAL with China in order to save them from what I thought was going to be a very bad situation, and I didn't want to see that happen. Because of this deal, everything quickly stabilized and China got back to business as usual. Everybody was happy! That is the good news!!! The bad news is that China, perhaps not surprisingly to some, HAS TOTALLY VIOLATED ITS AGREEMENT WITH US. So much for being Mr. NICE GUY!" he wrote. Rounds explained that the U.S. is in the midst of reaching a favorable trade deal while also acknowledging China has stolen billions of dollars in intellectual property for its own advantage. "We do, right now, really close to about a half a trillion dollars a year in economic activity with China today, but they steal about $600 billion in intellectual property on an annual basis. And so we have this dichotomy of trying to do good trade and at the same time recognizing that they're stealing our property," he said. Rounds said the floodgates of accepting and leveraging AI have not yet opened in the U.S., as many Americans are still hesitant to trust the technology. In mere months and years, however, he said the health industry will see massive overhauls, aided by tech that can quickly identify cancer or diagnose diabetes and Alzheimer's. This will lead American culture to accept AI and rally the private sector's proliferation of it, he said. House China Committee Zeros In On Latest Ccp Efforts To Steal American Agriculture Ip "I think what the American people want to see is, what's in it for them? What improves their quality of life? I think one of the most critical issues – that would really be one of the easiest to get into – is talking about health care. And I firmly believe that Americans will see AI as a benefit to them rather than as a challenge when we start to see cures for diabetes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and cancers. And those are all within reach," Rounds told Fox Digital. Rounds added during the forum that when Americans personally feel how their quality of life has improved due to AI, "that's when we'll really see the push across the country to develop AI at a rate that you've never seen before by the private sector, as well." "That's what's going to keep us ahead of China," he said. The forum at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, which is nestled in California's Santa Susana Mountains and the Simi Hills, kicked off on Thursday evening, and featured more than a dozen discussions and panels focused on the economy, artificial intelligence, U.S. defense strategies, the energy sector and more across Friday. Banking leader Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase, Energy Secretary Chris Wright and former Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin were among those who joined Rounds in addressing the nation's economic health. "The Reagan Library does an excellent job working on defense issues, and now they've also opened up a seminar basically working on economic issues critical to the United States. And so to come in here and to work with other people that care about the economic well-being of our country, this is an excellent place to do it.… So it's an opportunity for me to really learn what's going on and what other people are thinking about our economy in general," Rounds told Fox Digital of the forum. Jpmorgan's Jamie Dimon Calls On Us To Stockpile Bullets, Rare Earth Instead Of Bitcoin The conference comes as the Senate works to pass the Big Beautiful Bill, which is a sweeping multitrillion-dollar piece of legislation that advances Trump's agenda on taxes, immigration, energy, defense and the national debt. Rounds said the legislation must pass or Americans will see their taxes spike. "We don't have a choice. We have to pass the bill to get the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act back in place on a permanent basis. If we don't do that, the average American family is going to see about a $2,400 a year increase in their taxes. So we have to do something. And it's critical that we pass this bill. We're going to work with the House. We're gonna get this deal done. The Senate will put their mark of approval on it, but nonetheless, we want to do everything we can as quickly as we can to take care of this so that we can get on to other things. The president has made it very clear he wants to get this done. We want to help in that regard. This is our job," he article source: US can't cut China off completely, but must defend AI and American innovation from nonstop theft: Sen Rounds

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store