| Jason, Mike Lawler has held two town halls in 2026, and both times, instead of answering for his 100% Trump voting record, he spent the night fighting with his constituents. At his February town hall, Lawler had two veterans removed for demanding answers about ICE brutality, runaway federal spending, and what it would take for him to stand up to Donald Trump. At his second, it was more of the same: constituents asking tough questions, Lawler deflecting. He told worried families, "You might actually learn something if you listen," while refusing to give the straight answers they came for. Two town halls. Two chances to hear from the people he represents. And both times, Lawler chose lecturing over listening, confrontation over accountability. Growing up, my parents taught me that 95% of life is showing up. That's what I've done for over 20 years in this community—as a community advocate, school board member, and county legislator—and in the last few weeks alone, I've shown up at train stations, nonprofits, faith-based organizations, rallies, parades, and local arts events. And last week, I led the effort to cap Rockland County's sales tax on gas, delivering real relief for families who are struggling with the cost of living Mike Lawler keeps promising to fix. That's the key difference between Mike Lawler and me: He fights with his constituents, I fight for them. If you want a representative in Washington who shows up for the people instead of shutting them down, who demands accountability from Trump instead of rubber-stamping his MAGA agenda, can you pitch in $3 or any other amount today? |
Thank you for standing with me, Beth Davidson |
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