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GA -

Chief Justice Michael Boggs of the Georgia Supreme Court announced on Tuesday that he’s stepping down from his post at the end of March. It’s speculated that this sudden retirement is so that he has time to run for another office in 2026, probably AG since Chris Carr is running for governor. A long time ago and in a galaxy far far away, Boggs was a conservative Democrat representing a South Georgia district in the state legislature - I am doubtful he would run as a Democrat these days.

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What does this mean for the Georgia Supreme Court? What is the liberal/conservative split? Does Georgia have issues similar to North Carolina, with a supreme court that is blatantly partisan and anti-democratic, willing to ignore past decisions and precedent, and eager to overturn elections that Democrats win?

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Officially, they’re all non-partisan, but it’s 8 R appointments & 1 justice who won an open seat, so speculate accordingly.

To my knowledge, I don’t think they’ve done anything as blatant as NC, but they’re still pretty conservative.

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We haven't held the Governorship in Georgia since Roy Barnes was booted in 2002. Interestingly, the guy who booted him - Sonny Perdue - not only was a Democrat until 1998, but he had been the Senate President Pro Tempore.

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I helped Sonny Perdue win in 1990(his first race for State Senate); in a Houston County based district; in those days, the only race that mattered was the Democratic Primary and in the first primary Sonny missed out of avoiding a runoff by like 33 votes or some such; the runoff was just a brutal slugfest between Sonny and an even more conservative named Stewart Bloodworth; the race actually split family's because the Houston County political old guard had much cross pollination if you get my meaning

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Apparently the reason for his party switch was because he didn't get along with the Senate Majority Leader Charles Walker, who would eventually become a convicted felon. Before his switch, Perdue had been talked about as a future Democratic statewide candidate and had strong relations with Lieutenant Governor Pierre (pronounced Pier for those of you unfamiliar with Georgia politics) Howard. I maintain Howard doesn't back out of the 1998 race for Governor, he wins that, then cruises to reelection in 2002.

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agreed; i knew Pierre Howard personally(his wife was one of the richest women in the state); he would have swamped almost anyone with cash and he was very nice guy and popular(hardly a bad thing could be said about him and he was a UGA tennis star to boot so he had many political tentacles at his disposal); Roy Barnes had a difficult relationship with Zell Miller, whereas Howard made easy friends with most everyone in politics(his wife's money didnt hurt in that regard either)

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another thing here is Charles Walker was a huge dude; think of a black John Fetterman(i once shook hands with him and it was like a bear paw); im 6 foot and Walker towered over me

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Democrats “should” be able to finally win that office in an open seat race in a Trump midterm with additional favorable trends in the Atlanta area (especially the southern suburbs). If not, I may start losing hope in this state becoming a blue leaning one.

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absolutely agree; Georgia is competitive with future demographic trends very much moving towards us

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Especially if Stacy Adams helps mobilize our voter turnout.

Quick question: Should she have been the last DNC Chair instead of Jaime Harrison?

He seemed rather invisible – and I have not heard a single thing that he’s done to re-energize or turn around the Democratic party since the November election. My impression is that he was "parked" in the chairmanship and waiting for the election of a new Chair.

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imo Abrams has always been somewhat overrated; Ossoff and Warnock are exceptionally good politicians who ran against mediocre(at best) Republicans; and yes Abrams did a lot of good but lots of other factors were involved that had little or nothing to do with her

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No.

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MN-Sen One thought I’ve had when it comes to who from the GOP could run is there isn’t really anyone from a blue/purple seat that would go for it bc it’s an easier constituency or race. It’s the only reason I can think of why GOP state Rep Robbins is considering bc her seat is going to slip from underneath her at some point soon due to suburbanization.

Her seat makes up half of the only state senate district where running for US Senate would be easier. State Senator Limmer is a relic of the past yet holds onto a suburban seat that we should have flipped already but things haven’t lined up. He definitely won’t run bc his incumbency gets him his wins at this point so starting over in a more Republican, yet still blue constituency, means an automatic state senate pick-up for us.

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McClure looks like a good candidate for what should be a near the top of the list district for Democrats.

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excellent candidate in a very winnable seat

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2dEdited

I’m hoping/expecting we get mostly top tier candidates for the House this cycle. “Waiting for the right time” is over bc that time is now.

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Interesting note from The American Prospect. In this article they list ten Democrats they believe need to be primaried – and their reasons. why.

https://prospect.org/politics/2025-02-27-these-ten-democrats-need-to-be-primaried/

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Ritchie Torres should be on the list. At the top.

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Completely agree with all of them, although Dan Goldman made himself useful during one of the impeachments.

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There is grumbling here in Fairfax County where I live - albeit in Don Beyer's district - about challenging Connolly next year. Locals are LIVID with him regarding his callous comments. The most generous thing I can say about him is that he's a throwback to a time when the Democratic Party was very much the minority party here - before 2004, the Republican Presidential candidate won the county EVERY time except in 1964 going back to 1944. Those days are very much over with Republicans holding ONE major office here - the Springfield District of the Board of Supervisors - and Connolly always a centrist Democrat has never fully caught up with that fact. He has goodwill here with events like his annual St Patrick's Day Fete, but even that hasn't stopped the grumbling. We shall see what happens.

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Yeah, it’s definitely not 2010 where Connolly losing was a real risk. The NoVA talent bench is deep.

On that note, Beyer should consider calling it a career, too

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To Beyer's credit, he does have regular town halls and attends local events. He also is very good on keeping close tabs on important issues here, i.e. coming out strongly AGAINST building a casino in Tysons (which I agree with 100 per cent). But yes, the realist in me expect him to be done in a few election cycles to make way for some younger blood. The VA-8 Democratic primary to succeed him when he either dies or retires though is going to be a mess.

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I remember that 2010 race well. The fact that he won re-election there in 2010 at all shows he’s a pretty good candidate. The district at the time was drawn to re-elected Republican Tom Davis (the Fairfax county chair prior to Connolly) and excluded as many heavily Democratic areas as possible.

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That last Republican standing, Springfield district Supervisor Pat Herrity, is now running for Lieutenant Governor. His father, Jack Herrity, was Fairfax Board chair for three terms in the 1970s and 80s, when the county's population and business expansion was, well, phenomenal. Unfortunately the transportation infrastructure didn't keep up with the population growth and economic development, and gridlocked voters booted him when he ran for a fourth term.

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What did Connolly say?

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He made comments saying federal workers should just do what Musk wants and submit five things they did.

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Not going to help him survive a primary challenge next year. His district is a D+18 Congressional District and not far from federal government agencies.

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Given those comments plus the fact that he has esophageal cancer, I wouldn't be surprised if he hangs it up next year.

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im a fan of Goldman but imo most of those districts can have primary races that wont change the party outcomes in november

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If Dick Durbin doesn't retire this cycle, we need to come for him HARD and make him absolutely choke on his precious blue slips, not to mention his decades of voting with the right wing on everything from wars to civil liberties. Through his entire career, he has actively harmed and hindered the progressive movement and continues to do so. He is not a thought leader, an activist, or any kind of motivation for the base or movement. He really just takes up precious space.

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I'd bet on Durbin surviving

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Welp, guess we should abandon all hope, then.

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cant agree with you here; hope is always a good thing to me

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FFS dude it was snark. You're so quick to have a comment for everyone else's comment that you're missing the entire point of what people are saying.

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I think it’s likelier than he retires this cycle than lose a primary

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Though, the chances of facing a seriously contested primary can push older incumbents towards retirement. Who wants to spend half a year in a slog through a nasty primary at 81 years old, especially if already considering retirement?

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who is going to primary him though??..see what i am saying??

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I’m not disagreeing with

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I'd love to see Underwood threaten a primary to force him into retirement. As a former constituent I'd prefer he just take the hint and shuffle off into retirement.

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Hold on, what you’re saying about Durbin voting with the GOP on wars is just not accurate.

Dick Durbin voted against the 2002 Iraq War Resolution and was consistently against the war from the get go. In fact, his record is better than Joe Biden and John Kerry’s when they served in the Senate back then.

https://www.ontheissues.org/senate/richard_durbin.htm

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19hEdited

You're definitely right. I must have lumped him in with Schumer and the other Dem leaders. I was looking at Durbin's House votes a few days ago and realized what a disappointment he was back then, but he has been much better as a Senator, except for the blue slip BS.

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Not a problem. I understand though and agree with your overall sentiment and argument about Durbin.

However, in the post-Trump world since 2016, it’s still fair to lump Durbin along with Schumer to the extent that they are behind the times with where the Democratic Party should be going. Just because Durbin had a good track record on fighting the Iraq War doesn’t mean he’s exactly firing up the base.

Durbin I think, like Schumer, wants to maintain the tradition of Congress and civility for the most part. That’s a noble thing but doesn’t make enough progress.

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I don't agree that all those incumbents merit primary challenges, or that successful ones will necessarily result in upgrades.

The author is continuing what he did when he co-wrote the "Primaries For Progress", later "Primary School" Substack newsletter: recommending ways to shift the Democratic Party to the left in primaries both of incumbents and in open seats, but limiting it to districts or offices where there's little or no chance of doing so backfiring by potentially flipping the races to the GOP.

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That’s interesting background on the author and a valuable clarification. I myself don’t have an informed opinion on most of these incumbents, but I found The Prospect’s article interesting and thought it might spark some interesting discussions here.

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totally agree with your take; all primary opponents are not necessarily better than the incumbent

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If anyone deserves to be replaced in a primary I would suggest that a certain Detroit area congresswoman who did everything possible she could last year to undermine our ticket and who sits in a safe seat deserves to be first in line. Her failure to endorse Kamala Harris may have actually cost us Michigan in 2024 and she needs to go.

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second your motion

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I doubt it cost us MI, nor would that have ultimately mattered, but I agree I'd love to see her go...

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2dEdited

Agreed. I saw some video of AOC at a committee doing her thing and it’s like damn, why can’t we have more people like her. Rep. Tlaib and Rep. Omar have made themselves political liabilities that costs us votes.

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AOC’s grown on me as a politician. She’s extremely intelligent but knows she has to be pragmatic if she wants to continue to be relevant. I was also impressed with how she was opening to listening to voters in her own district who voted for Trump last year instead of trying to be arrogant and condescending to them.

And she’s also a good team player.

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Gee, I can’t imagine why.

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Solid list. Important to prioritize officials that are potentially vulnerable over challenges that might make us feel good but are less likely to succeed.

Based on my admittedly limited knowledge, I'd highlight Moulton as a viable target. Massachusetts' dem establish will typically circle the wagons, but everything I've read and seen indicates that there is no love lost for Moulton there. His institutional support should be weaker than most incumbents. His vanity 2020 presidential run and quixotic anti-Pelosi stint in 2018 give ammunition to work for with "not focusing on his district" kind of attacks. Plus, it's a safe seat that any reasonably scandal free democrat could hold reliably.

I find it odd when candidates that win office by successfully primarying a member of their own party adopt a cavalier attitude for their own ability to win primaries. They know first hand that incumbents can lose in a primary yet so many of them act oblivious to the possibility that it could happen to them.

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Moulton’s mediocrity really bums me out; I was really excited about him in 2014 (granted I had more “bold centrist” inclinations then than I do now)

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I remember being optimistic about him after 2014 as well.

I don't feel bad about it though. There are a lot of flaws with the dem establishment so a rising anti-establishment person showing up, ousting an known corrupt incumbent in a primary, and in all likelihood preventing us from losing a blue seat in a red wave, is going to get people excited for that person's future.

Unfortunately in Moulton's case I think his ego got the better of him. He's problematic and we can and should do better, but he's not problematic in the same vein as someone like Gottheimer, who seems almost gleeful in his shittiness.

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I give Gottheimer credit for one thing - He unseated entrenched incumbent Republican Congressman Scott Garrett, one of the few House wins Democrats got back in 2016.

That's it.

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The beauty of primarying Moulton is that his district is blue with a rating of D+11.

When was the last time the GOP ever won a House seat in MA?

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Peter Blute and Peter Torkildsen were the last elected, both were first elected in 1992 and reelected in 1994, before losing in 1996.

Both of them are still in their 60s. Younger than some newer officials, despite not having been in office for nearly 30 years. By my count, younger than two house members first elected in 2024 (Latimer and Turner), and two first elected in 2022 (Self and Thanedar). Plus a further four first elected in 2020.

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Ro Khanna also is not going to fight hard against Silicon Valley’s corruptive influence on the economy and society as tech companies and CEOs have been donors of his campaign long ago. He should have been primaried sooner.

I remember it was Glen the Plumber on Daily Kos who provided the most information out of anyone on the site regarding Khanna.

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Khanna is insufferable.

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This is pretty much a list of Dems that the author doesn't consider to be sympathetic enough to a) Palestine and b) social justice issues. It doesn't take into account anything else that I can discern, like the relative partisanship of their districts. He's got a few good choices on there (Shri Thanedar for one) but otherwise, it's a pretty poorly selected and argued list.

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Interesting. "Palestinian" / Palestine is mentioned explicitly under only two of the names: Dan Goldman and Josh Gottheimer, both of whom are Jewish – in fact, I believe they’re the only Jews on that list.

(I do take issue with another politician on that list, Danny Davis, for calling Louis Farrakhan "an outstanding human being".)

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Well, he left out Ritchie Torres. And there’s probably no one worse on that issue in the caucus than him.

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I'd like to add my rep Brad Sherman to the list. Personally, I think anyone who's been in Congress since the last century should be primaried.

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But I also created a pretty rudimentary list of people that should theoretically be primaried. It's still a work in progress but it's something.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1SZDvPXXQCp7cKeTtyYa9tMW2RSQbQbkADxrX-kAgWDo/edit?usp=sharing

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Very interesting, but it looks like that document is not open access.

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If you requested access I gave you access.

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Yes, please, I would be very grateful.

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I don't disagree with many of the names on the author's list, but I'd prefer that he back up his assertions with something stronger than flame-throwing, which was his main strategy. But maybe flame-throwing is fine if this was really only aimed at insiders eho know the details. If this is the general tone of The American Prospect, then I can add it to the list of sites to ignore.

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imo Kemp is running for President or nothing

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imo no way La Rock makes that valid signature deadline(we shall see)

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Too late in the game or a different reason?

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too late; those requirements are stringent; some ballots can be obtained by simply paying a fee; it appears not to be the case in VA(i might add the state DEMOCRATIC party might be smart to actually help him obtain the primary ballot; only speculation on my part; when i was running campaigns a valid strategy was to get unelectable general election candidates on the opposing party's primary ballot)

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La Rock – no relation to Kid Rock?

/s

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I keep wanting to call him Dave Van Ronk.

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I better not post what "runke" means in Norwegian.

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This Swede appreciates it

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I am going to google it! Got it!

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Austria: We finally have a coalition government, and it doesn't include the misnamed "Freedom Party".

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/02/27/austria-freedom-party-coalition/?itid=sf_world_article_list

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Thank god

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Would-Be Freedom Party in other words?

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IA-SEN:

In light of what's happening with Musk and Trump within the last month, the IA-SEN race should be one to watch in 2026 as Senator Joni Ernst is up for re-election then.

FYI, Ernst is the Chair of the Senate DOGE Caucus but not always completely in line with Trump. Additionally, Ernst won re-election back in 2020 by 6.5% points, a drop from 2014 when she won the Senate election to replace retiring Senator Tom Harkin by beating Democratic Senate Candidate Bruce Braley by 8.3% points.

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Watch what happens with FDA DOGE cuts; GOP may be creating a 1980s farm crisis scenario all over again.

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Is there anyone besides Rob Sand stand out as possible strong candidates for us?

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And he appears to be eyeing the governor’s race.

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I’ve heard in previous discussions that Abby Finkenhauer would have a shot.

However, in 2020 Finkenhauer lost re-election in IA-01 by a tad less than 3% points. That doesn’t suggest to me that she’s battle tested in IA beyond serving one term in the House during when Trump was unpopular heading to the 2018 midterms.

Michael Franken did lose to Senator Grassley in 2022 by around 12%. However, Grassley as an incumbent Senator has more seniority than Ernst and by contrast is much tougher to challenge. Not sure Franken wants to take another dive at running for the Senate again.

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Truthfully, neither of them sound particularly promising to me. Would love to be proven wrong, of course, but neither comes across as a strong or compelling candidate. Fair or not, voters tend to give a penalty to candidates that lost office. I fear we'll need better in Iowa, even if we do see it move a bit back towards us in 2026.

Surely there's a promising state senator or mayor or someone out there for us?

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Are Tyler Olson or Zach Wahls still in the mix?

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