FLASH BACK! 2007 REAGAN LIBRARY SECURITY BREAKS-UP NBC INTERVIEW WITH GOP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE JOHN COX, CONFISCATES HIS MEDIA PASS

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What did the Reagan Library security staff know about the Chicago presidential candidate John Cox in 2007?

LOS ANGELES (May 3, 2007)— In an outrageous affront to free speech in America, the Ronald Reagan Library security broke up an interview between GOP Presidential Candidate John Cox and a KNBC reporter and camera crew, in front of the Reagan Library.

This is the second time in a row that the former Chicago Cook County Republican President was locked out of the free speech process. First he was excluded from the MSNBC/Politico.com Presidential Debates. Then when he “dared” to get independent publicity prior to the debate from which he was excluded, the hammer came down again, and he was kicked off of the Reagan Library grounds—and had his press pass confiscated!

As outrageous as this is, it gets worse. Now Cox is not able to conduct the other 6 interviews that were set up to be conducted in The Spin Room because Reagan security confiscated his Spin Room pass.

The May 3 GOP Presidential Debates being conducted at the Reagan Library were supposed to have given Americans a closer look at some of the lesser known candidates like James Gilmore and John Cox. In spite of the fact that Gilmore polls at virtually zero and has virtually no money spent in the campaign, Mr. Gimore was included in the debates but John Cox was not.

Actor Fred Thompson and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich also were not included in the debates but neither are formally declared candidates.

From Wikipedia

John Herman Cox (born July 15, 1955) is an American accountantbusinessman, and broadcaster. He is a Republican candidate in the California gubernatorial election, 2018.

Born on the near south side of Chicago, Illinois, Cox received his B.A. degree from the University of Illinois at Chicago, where he majored in accounting and political science. He received his J.D. degree from Illinois Institute of Technology – Chicago-Kent College of Law. He is married to Sarah, has four daughters, and is Roman Catholic. He credits his wife with inspiring him to run for president.

In 1981, he founded a law firm specializing in corporate law and tax planning, John H. Cox and Associates Ltd. In 1985, he founded Cox Financial Group Ltd., which specializes in investment counseling, income tax planning, retirement planning, and asset protection. In 1995 he founded Equity Property Management, a real estate management firm specializing in apartment rental property.

He hosted The Progressive Conservative, a twice-weekly bought-time radio talk show on low-wattage WJJG 1530 AM in Chicago.[4] Featuring guests like Michael Moriarty, its themes included criticism of trial lawyers and creation of a website in March 2003 that nominated public figures (such as Janeane GarofaloJacques Chirac, and Martin Sheen) as “Friends of Saddam”.

Opposes the Death Penalty

At the 2006 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), Cox was a speaker, in a debate on the issue of capital punishment. Cox opposes the death penalty.

Illinois political campaigns

In 2000, Cox ran for Congress in Illinois’s 10th congressional district to replace retiring Congressman John Edward Porter, losing the Republican primary race to former Porter aide Mark Kirk.

In 2002, Cox ran for U.S. Senate in Illinois on a conservative platform, aligning himself with Reagan Republicans. He lost the Republican primary with 23% to Jim Durkin. Cox later served as president of the Cook County, Illinois, Republican Party.

In 2004, Cox garnered 41.43% of the votes against long-time incumbent Democrat Eugene Moore in the Cook County Recorder of Deeds race. Cox said he decided to run for the office in order to eliminate the position; he saw the office as an unnecessary duplication of services that had become a “model of waste and corruption”.

2008 presidential campaign

On March 9, 2006, Cox announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for U.S. president in 2008, becoming the first Republican to formally enter the 2008 presidential race. He dropped out of the race later that same year, but did appear on several primary ballots.

“The Low Cost New Hampshire-Style Neighborhood Legislature Act”

Gingrich endorsed Cox

In 2013 and 2015, Cox filed petitions which were accepted by California’s Secretary of State to begin collecting signatures to subdivide California’s existing legislative districts into 100 neighborhood districts, arguing that substantially smaller districts will disempower the ability of special interest groups to buy votes by donating to legislators’ campaigns. However, both efforts fell short of the required amount of valid signatures to land them on the respective ballots. Cox spent in excess of $1 million to try to qualify these 2 propositions for the ballot.

Cox submitted an updated version of this initiative to the California Attorney General for title and summary.[ The initiative was cleared for circulation on April 28, 2017. He hired APC of Sacramento to validate the signatures and had until Oct. 25, 2017 to qualify it for the Nov. 2018. (Because it is a constitutional amendment, he needed approx. 586,000 signatures; as of June 26, he had collected 25% of the valid signatures, as reported to the California Secretary of State. The measure website can be accessed by googling ‘neighborhood legislature (act)’). According to an interview with the Modesto Bee from Oct. 17, he claimed he was submitting 900,000 signatures. After the counties did a 100% signature verification, the Secretary of State announced Feb. 6 the measure failed to qualify for the Nov. gubernatorial election.

“California is Not for Sale”

California is Not for Sale” was a proposed ballot initiative for the 2016 ballot that would require legislators to wear the logos of their top 10 donors on their suits when advocating for policies on the Senate or Assembly floor.[14] The effort failed to qualify; it was reported that the effort gathered roughly 250,000 signatures, short of the required approx. 366,000 signatures. Cox took a risk by hiring long-time coordinator/signature validator Michael Rhoades–who claimed the measure was ‘a slam dunk’–who had never before qualified a statewide issue. Overall, Cox spent nearly $1 million between consultants and paid signature gatherers via Rhoades..

2018 California gubernatorial election

Cox announced on March 7, 2017 that he is running for Governor of California in the 2018 election

 

 

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