Duke and Harvard-Educated Veteran Now Serves on Fayetteville City Council
Politics

Duke and Harvard-Educated Veteran Now Serves on Fayetteville City Council

When Emmett Spurlock talks about city government, he does not begin with politics. He begins with planning. A Duke University graduate with an executive management credential from Harvard Business School, Spurlock was sworn in earlier this year as a Fayetteville City Council member after unseating a longtime incumbent by a narrow margin. It is his first time holding elected office, but not his first time leading complex organizations or weighing decisions with long-term consequences. “I’ve spent my career thinking about second- and third-order effects,” Spurlock said. “Just because something isn’t happening today doesn’t mean it won’t happen tomorrow.”A career built on strategySpurlock grew up in New Jersey and earned his undergraduate degree in computer science from Duke University. After graduating, he worked as a defense contractor and later held corporate roles with national organizations including McDonald’s Corporation...
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You Will Collapse and Go – Wike Rains Curses on Politicians Backing Betrayal
Politics

You Will Collapse and Go – Wike Rains Curses on Politicians Backing Betrayal

Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, on Saturday lashed out at politicians he accused of supporting those betraying him, raining curses on them. Wike spoke in Port Harcourt while commissioning the Rivers State chapter of the Renewed Hope Ambassadors’ office. He warned that senators and members of the House of Representatives backing acts of betrayal would, in turn, be betrayed. According to the minister, when such politicians eventually face betrayal, they “will collapse and go”. Wike said, “Whether you are a senator, House of Reps member, minister or governor, and you support betrayals, people will continue to betray you in life. Betrayal is your portion. “The day you will be betrayed, you will not have mouth to say anything. There you will collapse and go and they will announce that so so person has died. “That is the...
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Electoral Act: This Is Just a Warning — Isaac Fayose Speaks During Protest at NASS
Politics

Electoral Act: This Is Just a Warning — Isaac Fayose Speaks During Protest at NASS

Businessman Isaac Fayose has described Monday’s protest at the National Assembly complex as only the beginning of a larger movement. Politics Nigeria reports that a cross-section of Nigerians converged on the National Assembly on Monday morning to demand that electronic transmission of election results be made compulsory. Despite several clarifications by the Senate following reports that it rejected electronic transmission of results, the protesters insist that lawmakers must be clear by explicitly inserting the phrase “real-time electronic transmission” in the proposed legislation. Senate announced earlier that it would hold an emergency plenary session on Tuesday to address the concerns raised. Speaking to journalists at the protest ground, Fayose said the decision reached at the emergency sitting would determine whether the protest would continue. He said, “We all know what happens in a collation room. A collation room is a room...
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Electronic transmission: Give them everything, they will still complain – Senate blasts protesters
Politics

Electronic transmission: Give them everything, they will still complain – Senate blasts protesters

Senate spokesman, Yemi Adaramodu has lashed out at Nigerians protesting real-time electronic transmission of election results. Speaking during an interview on ‘Politics Today’, a programme on Channels Television on Tuesday, Adaramodu said the protesters have always been there even for good things. DAILY POST reports that Nigerians, on Monday converged in Abuja for the “Occupy National Assembly” protest against the rejection of e-transmission of election results by the Senate. Prominent politicians such as the former Labour Party presidential candidate, Peter Obi, as well as former Minister of Transport, Rotimi Amaechi, among others participated in the protest. Reacting, the Senate spokesman said, “Those people you saw on the street are always there, even for good things. “If you give them a road, they will say it is not wide enough. If you give them electricity, they will say the light is...
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