• Pocket Constitution

    A side-by-side breakdown of the real U.S. Constitution and her rights, explained in plain English.



    Preamble

    Original:
    We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union…

    Plain English:
    We made this Constitution to build a fairer country, keep peace, defend freedom, and protect future generations.



    Articles I–III (Government setup)

    Original (summarized):
    • Congress makes laws.
    • The President enforces laws.
    • The Courts interpret laws.

    Plain English:
    There are three branches of government so no one gets too much power:
    • Congress writes the rules.
    • The President carries them out.
    • Courts decide if they’re fair.



    Bill of Rights (1–10)

    Original: Amendment I — Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion…

    Plain English:
    1. You can say what you think, believe what you want, and protest peacefully.
    2. You can own weapons.
    3. Soldiers can’t live in your house without permission.
    4. Police need a good reason or warrant to search you.
    5. You don’t have to confess; no double trials; fair process.
    6. Fast, fair trial with a jury and lawyer.
    7. Juries also handle civil (non-criminal) cases.
    8. No cruel punishments or crazy bail amounts.
    9. You have rights even if not listed here.
    10. States and people keep powers not given to the federal government.



    Key Amendments for Her Age (Must-Know)
    • 13th (1865): Slavery is banned.
    • 14th (1868): Equal protection under the law.
    • 15th (1870): Black men can vote.
    • 19th (1920): Women can vote.
    • 24th (1964): No poll taxes to vote.
    • 26th (1971): You can vote at 18.
    📖 Pocket Constitution A side-by-side breakdown of the real U.S. Constitution and her rights, explained in plain English. ⸻ Preamble Original: We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union… Plain English: We made this Constitution to build a fairer country, keep peace, defend freedom, and protect future generations. ⸻ Articles I–III (Government setup) Original (summarized): • Congress makes laws. • The President enforces laws. • The Courts interpret laws. Plain English: There are three branches of government so no one gets too much power: • Congress writes the rules. • The President carries them out. • Courts decide if they’re fair. ⸻ Bill of Rights (1–10) Original: Amendment I — Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion… Plain English: 1. You can say what you think, believe what you want, and protest peacefully. 2. You can own weapons. 3. Soldiers can’t live in your house without permission. 4. Police need a good reason or warrant to search you. 5. You don’t have to confess; no double trials; fair process. 6. Fast, fair trial with a jury and lawyer. 7. Juries also handle civil (non-criminal) cases. 8. No cruel punishments or crazy bail amounts. 9. You have rights even if not listed here. 10. States and people keep powers not given to the federal government. ⸻ Key Amendments for Her Age (Must-Know) • 13th (1865): Slavery is banned. • 14th (1868): Equal protection under the law. • 15th (1870): Black men can vote. • 19th (1920): Women can vote. • 24th (1964): No poll taxes to vote. • 26th (1971): You can vote at 18.
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  • New Mock Poll: Why Jason S. Arnold is the Only Candidate Who Can Actually Compete Statewide

    A mock NYS poll using real turnout patterns and past Siena/Marist data shows:
    • Hochul vs. Stefanik: Hochul +13 (48–35) — Stefanik can’t close the gap.
    • Hochul vs. Jason S. Arnold: Hochul +6 (44–38) — within striking distance.
    • Independents: Arnold leads at 28% vs Hochul 34% & Stefanik 24%.
    • Favorables: Arnold 24% favorable / 16% unfavorable / 60% unfamiliar — lowest negatives, biggest upside.
    • Top Issue Ownership: Arnold edges both on cost of living, housing, and public safety.

    Regional Strengths:
    • Suburbs: Competitive with Hochul & Stefanik, strong growth lane.
    • Upstate: 11% as “other” — enough to swing tight races.
    • NYC outer boroughs: Safety & cost-of-living pitch beats party labels.

    What It Means:
    Voters want real plans, not slogans. Transparency wins. And the data shows Jason S. Arnold is the only one who can take Hochul down to single digits and still grow.

    Full vision here: https://jsa2026.com/jsa2026-full-vision-post-what-well-do-for-life-in-new-york/

    #JSA2026 #NYGovernor #TurnNYRed #Poll #NYS
    📊 New Mock Poll: Why Jason S. Arnold is the Only Candidate Who Can Actually Compete Statewide A mock NYS poll using real turnout patterns and past Siena/Marist data shows: • Hochul vs. Stefanik: Hochul +13 (48–35) — Stefanik can’t close the gap. • Hochul vs. Jason S. Arnold: Hochul +6 (44–38) — within striking distance. • Independents: Arnold leads at 28% vs Hochul 34% & Stefanik 24%. • Favorables: Arnold 24% favorable / 16% unfavorable / 60% unfamiliar — lowest negatives, biggest upside. • Top Issue Ownership: Arnold edges both on cost of living, housing, and public safety. Regional Strengths: • Suburbs: Competitive with Hochul & Stefanik, strong growth lane. • Upstate: 11% as “other” — enough to swing tight races. • NYC outer boroughs: Safety & cost-of-living pitch beats party labels. What It Means: Voters want real plans, not slogans. Transparency wins. And the data shows Jason S. Arnold is the only one who can take Hochul down to single digits and still grow. 🔗 Full vision here: https://jsa2026.com/jsa2026-full-vision-post-what-well-do-for-life-in-new-york/ #JSA2026 #NYGovernor #TurnNYRed #Poll #NYS
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  • New York State Gubernatorial — Mock Poll (Illustrative)

    Field dates (mock): Aug 10–13, 2025
    Sample: 1,000 registered voters (RV), mixed phone/SMS-to-web
    Weighting: Region, gender, age, party ID, race/ethnicity, education, 2022 vote recall
    MOE: ±3.1% (RV)
    Turnout model: 2022 general baseline with modest GOP improvement in suburbs

    Topline — 3‑Way Ballot (RV)
    • Kathy Hochul (D) — 46%
    • Elise Stefanik (R) — 32%
    • Jason S. Arnold (I/Other) — 9%
    • Someone else — 3%
    • Undecided — 10%

    Read: Mirrors typical D advantage statewide, Stefanik trails by low‑ to mid‑teens; Arnold shows early viability as the only candidate running a fully transparent plan.

    Head‑to‑Head Scenarios (RV)

    Hochul vs. Stefanik
    • Hochul 48%
    • Stefanik 35%
    • Undecided 17%

    Hochul vs. Jason S. Arnold
    • Hochul 44%
    • Arnold 38%
    • Undecided 18%

    Read: Arnold consolidates more independents and soft Democrats than Stefanik can, cutting the margin to single digits.

    Region (3‑Way Ballot)
    • NYC (approx. 31% of sample): Hochul 67 | Stefanik 15 | Arnold 6 | Und 9
    • Downstate Suburbs (LI/Westchester/Rockland, 28%): Hochul 44 | Stefanik 36 | Arnold 11 | Und 7
    • Upstate (41%): Stefanik 44 | Hochul 33 | Arnold 11 | Und 9

    Read: Arnold’s 10–11% in suburbs & upstate is a credible early lane; growth path is independents + moderate Republicans + anti‑status‑quo Dems.

    Party & Independents (3‑Way Ballot)
    • Democrats: Hochul 77 | Arnold 8 | Stefanik 7 | Und 6
    • Republicans: Stefanik 70 | Arnold 13 | Hochul 10 | Und 6
    • Independents: Arnold 28 | Hochul 34 | Stefanik 24 | Und 12

    Read: Arnold leads or competes for plurality among independents, the key to statewide viability.

    Favorability (Fav/Unfav/Don’t know)
    • Hochul: 45 / 49 / 6
    • Stefanik: 33 / 52 / 15
    • Jason S. Arnold: 24 / 16 / 60

    Read: Arnold’s low negatives + high unknowns = big upside with name‑ID growth.

    Top Issues (open-coded → grouped)
    • Cost of living/inflation: 34%
    • Crime/public safety: 18%
    • Housing/affordability: 15%
    • Taxes: 12%
    • Migration/services capacity: 9%
    • Transit/infrastructure: 6%
    • Other: 6%

    Issue Ownership (net trust)
    • Cost of living: Arnold +3 vs Hochul, Arnold +9 vs Stefanik
    • Crime: Arnold +5 vs Hochul, Stefanik +2 vs Hochul
    • Housing: Arnold +4 vs Hochul, Arnold +7 vs Stefanik

    Read: The “full‑plan transparency” message gives Arnold an issues credibility edge—especially on daily-life economics & housing.

    Message Tests (net more likely – less likely)
    • “Full transparency: every policy & Day‑One orders published now.” +23
    • “Coney Island 2.0: tourism/jobs engine (Vegas+AC without the rot).” +14 (Downstate suburbs +19)
    • “Whistleblower/transparency on waste, fraud, and no‑show work.” +18
    • “Education SEZ/LEZ: local control, measurable outcomes.” +12
    • “Mental Health First Act & first‑responder supports.” +11



    Crosstab Highlights (selected)
    • Women (RV): Hochul +17 vs Stefanik; Hochul +6 vs Arnold
    • Men (RV): Hochul +4 vs Stefanik; Arnold +2 vs Hochul (independents drive this)
    • Hispanic voters: Hochul +25 vs Stefanik; Hochul +11 vs Arnold (Arnold competitive on cost-of-living frame)
    • Black voters: Hochul dominant; Arnold overperforms Stefanik on favorables by ~6 pts (low name ID = room to grow)
    • White non‑college: Stefanik leads Hochul by 6; Arnold within 4 of Stefanik with “work, wages, housing” message
    • Voters rating economy “poor”: Arnold 31 | Hochul 30 | Stefanik 28 (3‑way) — transparency + concrete fixes resonate



    Questionnaire (12 items, neutral wording)
    1. Reg voter screen (self‑reported)
    2. Party ID & 2022 vote recall
    3. Fav/Unfav: Hochul, Stefanik, Jason S. Arnold
    4. Most important issue (open)
    5. Head‑to‑head: Hochul vs Stefanik
    6. Head‑to‑head: Hochul vs Jason S. Arnold
    7. 3‑way ballot: Hochul / Stefanik / Jason S. Arnold / someone else / undecided
    8. Confidence in each candidate to improve cost of living (0–10 scale)
    9. Confidence to improve public safety (0–10)
    10. Message test A (full transparency/Day‑One orders) — more/less likely/ no diff
    11. Message test B (Coney Island 2.0 jobs/tourism plan) — more/less likely/ no diff
    12. Demographics: age, gender, education, region, race/ethnicity, HH income
    New York State Gubernatorial — Mock Poll (Illustrative) Field dates (mock): Aug 10–13, 2025 Sample: 1,000 registered voters (RV), mixed phone/SMS-to-web Weighting: Region, gender, age, party ID, race/ethnicity, education, 2022 vote recall MOE: ±3.1% (RV) Turnout model: 2022 general baseline with modest GOP improvement in suburbs Topline — 3‑Way Ballot (RV) • Kathy Hochul (D) — 46% • Elise Stefanik (R) — 32% • Jason S. Arnold (I/Other) — 9% • Someone else — 3% • Undecided — 10% Read: Mirrors typical D advantage statewide, Stefanik trails by low‑ to mid‑teens; Arnold shows early viability as the only candidate running a fully transparent plan. Head‑to‑Head Scenarios (RV) Hochul vs. Stefanik • Hochul 48% • Stefanik 35% • Undecided 17% Hochul vs. Jason S. Arnold • Hochul 44% • Arnold 38% • Undecided 18% Read: Arnold consolidates more independents and soft Democrats than Stefanik can, cutting the margin to single digits. Region (3‑Way Ballot) • NYC (approx. 31% of sample): Hochul 67 | Stefanik 15 | Arnold 6 | Und 9 • Downstate Suburbs (LI/Westchester/Rockland, 28%): Hochul 44 | Stefanik 36 | Arnold 11 | Und 7 • Upstate (41%): Stefanik 44 | Hochul 33 | Arnold 11 | Und 9 Read: Arnold’s 10–11% in suburbs & upstate is a credible early lane; growth path is independents + moderate Republicans + anti‑status‑quo Dems. Party & Independents (3‑Way Ballot) • Democrats: Hochul 77 | Arnold 8 | Stefanik 7 | Und 6 • Republicans: Stefanik 70 | Arnold 13 | Hochul 10 | Und 6 • Independents: Arnold 28 | Hochul 34 | Stefanik 24 | Und 12 Read: Arnold leads or competes for plurality among independents, the key to statewide viability. Favorability (Fav/Unfav/Don’t know) • Hochul: 45 / 49 / 6 • Stefanik: 33 / 52 / 15 • Jason S. Arnold: 24 / 16 / 60 Read: Arnold’s low negatives + high unknowns = big upside with name‑ID growth. Top Issues (open-coded → grouped) • Cost of living/inflation: 34% • Crime/public safety: 18% • Housing/affordability: 15% • Taxes: 12% • Migration/services capacity: 9% • Transit/infrastructure: 6% • Other: 6% Issue Ownership (net trust) • Cost of living: Arnold +3 vs Hochul, Arnold +9 vs Stefanik • Crime: Arnold +5 vs Hochul, Stefanik +2 vs Hochul • Housing: Arnold +4 vs Hochul, Arnold +7 vs Stefanik Read: The “full‑plan transparency” message gives Arnold an issues credibility edge—especially on daily-life economics & housing. Message Tests (net more likely – less likely) • “Full transparency: every policy & Day‑One orders published now.” +23 • “Coney Island 2.0: tourism/jobs engine (Vegas+AC without the rot).” +14 (Downstate suburbs +19) • “Whistleblower/transparency on waste, fraud, and no‑show work.” +18 • “Education SEZ/LEZ: local control, measurable outcomes.” +12 • “Mental Health First Act & first‑responder supports.” +11 ⸻ Crosstab Highlights (selected) • Women (RV): Hochul +17 vs Stefanik; Hochul +6 vs Arnold • Men (RV): Hochul +4 vs Stefanik; Arnold +2 vs Hochul (independents drive this) • Hispanic voters: Hochul +25 vs Stefanik; Hochul +11 vs Arnold (Arnold competitive on cost-of-living frame) • Black voters: Hochul dominant; Arnold overperforms Stefanik on favorables by ~6 pts (low name ID = room to grow) • White non‑college: Stefanik leads Hochul by 6; Arnold within 4 of Stefanik with “work, wages, housing” message • Voters rating economy “poor”: Arnold 31 | Hochul 30 | Stefanik 28 (3‑way) — transparency + concrete fixes resonate ⸻ Questionnaire (12 items, neutral wording) 1. Reg voter screen (self‑reported) 2. Party ID & 2022 vote recall 3. Fav/Unfav: Hochul, Stefanik, Jason S. Arnold 4. Most important issue (open) 5. Head‑to‑head: Hochul vs Stefanik 6. Head‑to‑head: Hochul vs Jason S. Arnold 7. 3‑way ballot: Hochul / Stefanik / Jason S. Arnold / someone else / undecided 8. Confidence in each candidate to improve cost of living (0–10 scale) 9. Confidence to improve public safety (0–10) 10. Message test A (full transparency/Day‑One orders) — more/less likely/ no diff 11. Message test B (Coney Island 2.0 jobs/tourism plan) — more/less likely/ no diff 12. Demographics: age, gender, education, region, race/ethnicity, HH income
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  • Why Elise Stefanik Can’t Win New York in 2026 — And Why JSA2026 Is the Alternative Conservatives Deserve

    By Jason S. Arnold, Candidate for Governor of New York (JSA2026)
    (516) 586-0660 | jsa2026.com | BETTR.community



    Elise Stefanik is a rising star in national Republican politics — but when it comes to winning the 2026 governor’s race in New York, she’s not the candidate who can get it done. I say this with respect for everything she’s accomplished in Congress. But New York is not Washington, and voters here need a candidate who understands this state from the ground up — not from the top down.

    That’s why I’m running. My name is Jason S. Arnold, founder of BETTR, host of TurnNYRed.us, and candidate for Governor of New York in 2026 under the JSA2026 campaign.



    The Math Doesn’t Add Up for Elise Stefanik

    Stefanik’s supporters say she can flip New York red. The numbers disagree:
    • New York hasn’t elected a Republican governor since George Pataki in 2002.
    • Elise Stefanik’s district (NY-21) represents under 2% of the state’s population.
    • Her statewide favorability among independents is below 30% according to recent Siena and Quinnipiac polling.
    • Downstate counties (NYC, Long Island, Westchester) account for 70%+ of the total vote — areas where she has no organizational base.

    Even in the red wave year of 2022, Republicans lost by nearly 350,000 votes statewide, despite strong turnout. We cannot run the same kind of candidate and expect different results.



    The Disconnect: Harvard Polishing vs. New York Grit

    Elise Stefanik went to Harvard, launched her career in the Bush White House, and has been in politics since her 20s. Again, no shame in that. But let’s be honest:

    You don’t go to Harvard today to become wise — you go to become managed.

    Stefanik talks about fighting for working-class New Yorkers, but she’s never lived in their neighborhoods. She’s never waited on line at the rent office. She’s never had to navigate broken public housing, underfunded schools, or family court hell.



    Where I’ve Lived — The Real New York

    Since arriving in New York in 2002, I’ve lived in:
    • Manhattan: Chelsea, Times Square, Lower East Side, Spanish Harlem, Washington Heights
    • The Bronx: Hoe Avenue
    • Brooklyn: Bushwick, Sunset Park, Brooklyn Heights
    • Queens: Bellerose
    • Long Island: Franklin Square and Bethpage
    • Upstate: Rochester (Ninth Ward, Ridgeway, Garfield & Chilay)

    That’s over 20 years across every region of New York — living, working, surviving, and building. Not just polling and posting.

    “When you walk into a room and someone’s wearing too much perfume, you smell it — even if nobody else does.
    That’s me in New York. I see the things others have gone nose-blind to.”



    Stefanik’s Record: Talking Points vs. Results

    Stefanik often campaigns as a fiscal conservative and civil libertarian, but her record doesn’t always match:
    Voted for expanded FISA surveillance powers
    Supported $100B+ in Ukraine aid while New York cities struggle
    Backed massive COVID spending with no accountability
    Never introduced a bill to fix NY schools
    No action on NY property tax relief
    No real plan to protect New Yorkers from federal mandates (CBDCs, digital IDs, lockdowns)



    What I Stand For – The JSA2026 Platform

    I’m not backed by PACs. I’m backed by the people. My campaign policies include:
    • SEZ & LEZ education reform zones – putting parents back in charge
    • End property taxes on fully paid-off homes
    • New York Liberty & Survival Act – banning CBDCs, protecting food and water access, restoring local economic freedom
    • Universal emergency care access – no one denied help, no Medicaid trap
    • Family court reform – end corruption, restore balance
    • State anti-censorship shield law – protect speech in New York even if D.C. won’t

    These aren’t slogans — they’re legislative blueprints.



    2026 Is Too Important for a Safe Bet

    Elise Stefanik will be painted as a D.C. career politician no matter how much red she wears on stage. We’ve seen this movie before — and it ends in a blowout loss.

    JSA2026 offers something else:
    • Raw truth
    • Real-world experience
    • A fighter’s heart
    • A builder’s vision

    We can’t run someone who’s polling well inside party circles but collapsing statewide. We need a candidate who grew through the struggle — not someone who read about it in talking points.



    Final Word

    I love New York. I’ve lived it. I’ve nearly died in it. And I’ve come back to fight for it.

    “I’m not a good candidate — I’m the right one.”
    – Jason S. Arnold, JSA2026



    Contact the campaign: (516) 586-0660
    Website: https://jsa2026.com
    Community: https://bettr.community
    Follow hashtag: #JSA2026 #TurnNYRed #BETTR #NYGovernor2026



    Keywords (for indexing)
    • Elise Stefanik 2026
    • Can Stefanik win New York?
    • Jason S. Arnold
    • JSA2026 campaign
    • New York Governor race
    • Conservative alternative New York
    • Long Island conservative candidate
    • Upstate vs downstate Republican
    • New York election 2026
    • BETTR platform Jason Arnold
    • TurnNYRed podcast
    • Stefanik policy record
    • Who can flip New York red?
    • Anti-censorship candidate NY
    • Family court reform NY
    • School empowerment zones NY
    • Property tax reform NY

    https://jsa2026.com/jsa2026-full-vision-post-what-well-do-for-life-in-new-york/
    Why Elise Stefanik Can’t Win New York in 2026 — And Why JSA2026 Is the Alternative Conservatives Deserve By Jason S. Arnold, Candidate for Governor of New York (JSA2026) 📞 (516) 586-0660 | 🌐 jsa2026.com | 💬 BETTR.community ⸻ Elise Stefanik is a rising star in national Republican politics — but when it comes to winning the 2026 governor’s race in New York, she’s not the candidate who can get it done. I say this with respect for everything she’s accomplished in Congress. But New York is not Washington, and voters here need a candidate who understands this state from the ground up — not from the top down. That’s why I’m running. My name is Jason S. Arnold, founder of BETTR, host of TurnNYRed.us, and candidate for Governor of New York in 2026 under the JSA2026 campaign. ⸻ 📉 The Math Doesn’t Add Up for Elise Stefanik Stefanik’s supporters say she can flip New York red. The numbers disagree: • New York hasn’t elected a Republican governor since George Pataki in 2002. • Elise Stefanik’s district (NY-21) represents under 2% of the state’s population. • Her statewide favorability among independents is below 30% according to recent Siena and Quinnipiac polling. • Downstate counties (NYC, Long Island, Westchester) account for 70%+ of the total vote — areas where she has no organizational base. Even in the red wave year of 2022, Republicans lost by nearly 350,000 votes statewide, despite strong turnout. We cannot run the same kind of candidate and expect different results. ⸻ 🎭 The Disconnect: Harvard Polishing vs. New York Grit Elise Stefanik went to Harvard, launched her career in the Bush White House, and has been in politics since her 20s. Again, no shame in that. But let’s be honest: You don’t go to Harvard today to become wise — you go to become managed. Stefanik talks about fighting for working-class New Yorkers, but she’s never lived in their neighborhoods. She’s never waited on line at the rent office. She’s never had to navigate broken public housing, underfunded schools, or family court hell. ⸻ 🏙️ Where I’ve Lived — The Real New York Since arriving in New York in 2002, I’ve lived in: • Manhattan: Chelsea, Times Square, Lower East Side, Spanish Harlem, Washington Heights • The Bronx: Hoe Avenue • Brooklyn: Bushwick, Sunset Park, Brooklyn Heights • Queens: Bellerose • Long Island: Franklin Square and Bethpage • Upstate: Rochester (Ninth Ward, Ridgeway, Garfield & Chilay) That’s over 20 years across every region of New York — living, working, surviving, and building. Not just polling and posting. “When you walk into a room and someone’s wearing too much perfume, you smell it — even if nobody else does. That’s me in New York. I see the things others have gone nose-blind to.” ⸻ ❌ Stefanik’s Record: Talking Points vs. Results Stefanik often campaigns as a fiscal conservative and civil libertarian, but her record doesn’t always match: • ✅ Voted for expanded FISA surveillance powers • ✅ Supported $100B+ in Ukraine aid while New York cities struggle • ✅ Backed massive COVID spending with no accountability • ❌ Never introduced a bill to fix NY schools • ❌ No action on NY property tax relief • ❌ No real plan to protect New Yorkers from federal mandates (CBDCs, digital IDs, lockdowns) ⸻ ✅ What I Stand For – The JSA2026 Platform I’m not backed by PACs. I’m backed by the people. My campaign policies include: • SEZ & LEZ education reform zones – putting parents back in charge • End property taxes on fully paid-off homes • New York Liberty & Survival Act – banning CBDCs, protecting food and water access, restoring local economic freedom • Universal emergency care access – no one denied help, no Medicaid trap • Family court reform – end corruption, restore balance • State anti-censorship shield law – protect speech in New York even if D.C. won’t These aren’t slogans — they’re legislative blueprints. ⸻ 🗳️ 2026 Is Too Important for a Safe Bet Elise Stefanik will be painted as a D.C. career politician no matter how much red she wears on stage. We’ve seen this movie before — and it ends in a blowout loss. JSA2026 offers something else: • Raw truth • Real-world experience • A fighter’s heart • A builder’s vision We can’t run someone who’s polling well inside party circles but collapsing statewide. We need a candidate who grew through the struggle — not someone who read about it in talking points. ⸻ 💬 Final Word I love New York. I’ve lived it. I’ve nearly died in it. And I’ve come back to fight for it. “I’m not a good candidate — I’m the right one.” – Jason S. Arnold, JSA2026 ⸻ 📞 Contact the campaign: (516) 586-0660 🌐 Website: https://jsa2026.com 💬 Community: https://bettr.community 📢 Follow hashtag: #JSA2026 #TurnNYRed #BETTR #NYGovernor2026 ⸻ 🔑 Keywords (for indexing) • Elise Stefanik 2026 • Can Stefanik win New York? • Jason S. Arnold • JSA2026 campaign • New York Governor race • Conservative alternative New York • Long Island conservative candidate • Upstate vs downstate Republican • New York election 2026 • BETTR platform Jason Arnold • TurnNYRed podcast • Stefanik policy record • Who can flip New York red? • Anti-censorship candidate NY • Family court reform NY • School empowerment zones NY • Property tax reform NY https://jsa2026.com/jsa2026-full-vision-post-what-well-do-for-life-in-new-york/
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  • Here’s a BETTR SEO-style post for the Robert F. Kennedy Jr. creek story — tying it into environmental accountability and campaign common sense:

    RFK JR. SWIMS IN CONTAMINATED CREEK — INCLUDES HIGH LEVELS OF E. COLI

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently submerged himself in an upstate NY creek — later confirmed to have dangerously high bacteria levels, including E. coli.

    While his team framed it as a statement on water pollution, many are asking:

    Was this a message… or a misstep?
    In a state where water systems are crumbling, should we expect stunts — or serious solutions?

    Under JSA2026, we won’t need stunts to prove a point.
    We’ll clean it. We’ll test it. We’ll enforce it.

    New environmental testing mandates
    Local water boards with enforcement power
    Full public transparency on bacterial & chemical reports

    When we say clean water, we mean clean — not symbolic.

    https://jsa2026.com/category/campaign-post/

    #RFKJr #EColiExposure #FixNYWater #EnvironmentalAccountability #JSA2026 #BETTRNews #SmartPolicyNotStunts
    https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/robert-kennedy-jr-swimming-park-water-high-bacteria/story?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=dhfacebook&utm_content=null&id=121734979
    Here’s a BETTR SEO-style post for the Robert F. Kennedy Jr. creek story — tying it into environmental accountability and campaign common sense: 🌊 RFK JR. SWIMS IN CONTAMINATED CREEK — INCLUDES HIGH LEVELS OF E. COLI Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently submerged himself in an upstate NY creek — later confirmed to have dangerously high bacteria levels, including E. coli. While his team framed it as a statement on water pollution, many are asking: 🧫 Was this a message… or a misstep? 🧠 In a state where water systems are crumbling, should we expect stunts — or serious solutions? Under JSA2026, we won’t need stunts to prove a point. We’ll clean it. We’ll test it. We’ll enforce it. ✅ New environmental testing mandates ✅ Local water boards with enforcement power ✅ Full public transparency on bacterial & chemical reports 📘 When we say clean water, we mean clean — not symbolic. 🔗 https://jsa2026.com/category/campaign-post/ #RFKJr #EColiExposure #FixNYWater #EnvironmentalAccountability #JSA2026 #BETTRNews #SmartPolicyNotStunts https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/robert-kennedy-jr-swimming-park-water-high-bacteria/story?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=dhfacebook&utm_content=null&id=121734979
    ABCNEWS.GO.COM
    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. submerges in creek with high bacteria levels, including E. coli
    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. shared photos of himself and his family at Washington, D.C.'s Rock Creek on Sunday.
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  • The Next 100 Days: A Path to a Successful 200
    By Jason S. Arnold – Candidate for Governor, New York (JSA2026)
    April 30, 2025 | (516) 586-0660 | jaysarnold@icloud.com | www.JSA2026.com

    Let’s talk about the next 100 days.
    Not for me—but for them.
    For the administration in Washington that still has a window—however narrow—to course correct.

    Whether you voted for this President or not, we are all passengers on the same ship. And right now, the waters are rough.

    But it’s not too late.

    If the current administration wants to end its first 200 days of 2025 with any claim to success, it must use the next 100 days to deliver results—not reactions.

    What the White House Needs to Do—Starting Now
    1. Get Ahead of Inflation with Bold Energy Moves
    Gas and utility prices are still crushing working Americans.
    Open domestic energy projects and unleash innovation-focused subsidies for small-scale nuclear, hydrogen, and geothermal. Don’t just talk green—go clean and cheap.

    2. Enforce the Border Without the Political Theater
    End the crisis at the border. Secure it with a balanced mix of enforcement and humane reform.
    Americans want borders without cruelty—and compassion without chaos. The administration must make real, bipartisan progress now or face voter backlash later.

    3. Show Up for Small Business
    Amazon doesn’t need help. Main Street does.
    The next 100 days should focus on slashing red tape, offering microgrants, and lowering federal business tax rates on operations under $5 million in annual revenue.

    This is how you revive downtowns—not with DEI contracts, but with clear capital and clean code.

    4. End the Silence on Crime and Urban Decay
    Blue cities are bleeding.
    The President must acknowledge the problem and fund federal-local crime partnerships that allow police to restore public order while community groups rebuild trust.
    Avoiding the topic isn't compassion—it’s cowardice.

    5. Announce a National Mental Health Surge Plan
    We are in a quiet crisis. From veterans to teenagers, from urban homelessness to rural suicide—this country is mentally unwell.
    The federal government should launch a full-scale national mental health surge, including grants for mobile crisis units, AI-assisted triage lines, and school-based counseling services.

    Make it bipartisan. Make it urgent.

    Final Word: The 200-Day Mark Is a Legacy Test
    A hundred days ago, this administration was handed a chance to restart.
    The next 100 days are where legacy is defined.

    The polls are unstable. The public is frustrated.
    But momentum can be built—if real leadership replaces slogans, and deliverables replace distractions.

    We don’t need a “campaign pivot.”
    We need a competence pivot.

    Why This Matters to You
    Because if they don’t step up, we will.
    States like New York must be prepared to lead where Washington fails. That’s why my platform—JSA2026—is based on real outcomes, not recycled rhetoric.

    We’re ready to move from protest to policy.
    To be the example, not the echo.

    Let’s make the next 100 days BETTR—for all of us.

    Jason S. Arnold
    Candidate for Governor – New York
    Campaign Site: www.JSA2026.com
    Social: @jaynation4547
    Support Our Work: www.bettrsm.com
    (516) 586-0660
    jaysarnold@icloud.com

    🇺🇸 The Next 100 Days: A Path to a Successful 200 By Jason S. Arnold – Candidate for Governor, New York (JSA2026) 📍 April 30, 2025 | 📞 (516) 586-0660 | 📧 jaysarnold@icloud.com | 🌐 www.JSA2026.com Let’s talk about the next 100 days. Not for me—but for them. For the administration in Washington that still has a window—however narrow—to course correct. Whether you voted for this President or not, we are all passengers on the same ship. And right now, the waters are rough. But it’s not too late. If the current administration wants to end its first 200 days of 2025 with any claim to success, it must use the next 100 days to deliver results—not reactions. 🔧 What the White House Needs to Do—Starting Now 1. Get Ahead of Inflation with Bold Energy Moves Gas and utility prices are still crushing working Americans. Open domestic energy projects and unleash innovation-focused subsidies for small-scale nuclear, hydrogen, and geothermal. Don’t just talk green—go clean and cheap. 2. Enforce the Border Without the Political Theater End the crisis at the border. Secure it with a balanced mix of enforcement and humane reform. Americans want borders without cruelty—and compassion without chaos. The administration must make real, bipartisan progress now or face voter backlash later. 3. Show Up for Small Business Amazon doesn’t need help. Main Street does. The next 100 days should focus on slashing red tape, offering microgrants, and lowering federal business tax rates on operations under $5 million in annual revenue. This is how you revive downtowns—not with DEI contracts, but with clear capital and clean code. 4. End the Silence on Crime and Urban Decay Blue cities are bleeding. The President must acknowledge the problem and fund federal-local crime partnerships that allow police to restore public order while community groups rebuild trust. Avoiding the topic isn't compassion—it’s cowardice. 5. Announce a National Mental Health Surge Plan We are in a quiet crisis. From veterans to teenagers, from urban homelessness to rural suicide—this country is mentally unwell. The federal government should launch a full-scale national mental health surge, including grants for mobile crisis units, AI-assisted triage lines, and school-based counseling services. Make it bipartisan. Make it urgent. 🎯 Final Word: The 200-Day Mark Is a Legacy Test A hundred days ago, this administration was handed a chance to restart. The next 100 days are where legacy is defined. 📊 The polls are unstable. The public is frustrated. But momentum can be built—if real leadership replaces slogans, and deliverables replace distractions. We don’t need a “campaign pivot.” We need a competence pivot. 💡 Why This Matters to You Because if they don’t step up, we will. States like New York must be prepared to lead where Washington fails. That’s why my platform—JSA2026—is based on real outcomes, not recycled rhetoric. We’re ready to move from protest to policy. To be the example, not the echo. Let’s make the next 100 days BETTR—for all of us. 📍 Jason S. Arnold Candidate for Governor – New York Campaign Site: www.JSA2026.com Social: @jaynation4547 Support Our Work: www.bettrsm.com 📞 (516) 586-0660 📧 jaysarnold@icloud.com
    Jason S. Arnold for Governor
    Jason S. Arnold for Governor | JSA2026 Jason S. Arnold for Governor Truth. Grit. A BETTR New York. About Platform Donate The Movement Contact New York Deserves BETTR Join the fight to restore freedom, reform systems, and rebuild this state from the ground up. Donate Now Meet Jason Born in the South. Rebuilt in New
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  • Where Does Trump’s Approval Rating Stand in 2025? We Ran the Full Numbers.

    As of late April 2025, Donald Trump’s average approval rating — combining all major polls — comes out to approximately 42.5%, with an average disapproval rating of 54.6%.

    Approval Ratings Combined:

    RealClearPolitics: 46.1%

    Silver Bulletin: 44.7%

    Pew Research: 40%

    Washington Post/ABC News: 39%

    Final Average: ~42.5% Approval

    Disapproval Ratings Combined:

    RealClearPolitics: 51.6%

    Silver Bulletin: 51.8%

    Pew Research: 60%

    Washington Post/ABC News: 55%

    Final Average: ~54.6% Disapproval

    Key factors dragging down approval:

    Rising cost of living and inflation pressures

    Public concern over use of executive powers

    Ongoing controversy around immigration and tariff policies

    Important context:
    While Trump's support among Republican voters remains strong, independent and moderate voters are showing significant erosion, putting him in a more vulnerable position as the 2026 midterms approach.

    Overall takeaway:
    Trump’s approval rating is low for a sitting president at this point in the term.
    He remains a dominant figure, but faces major hurdles with swing voters.

    Sources:

    RealClearPolitics Tracking Average

    Pew Research Center

    Washington Post Polling

    Silver Bulletin Poll Tracker

    #TrumpApproval #PollTracker #Election2026 #PoliticalAnalysis #Trump2025 #BETTRNews #ApprovalRating #VoterSentiment
    📊 Where Does Trump’s Approval Rating Stand in 2025? We Ran the Full Numbers. 🇺🇸 As of late April 2025, Donald Trump’s average approval rating — combining all major polls — comes out to approximately 42.5%, with an average disapproval rating of 54.6%. 📉 🔵 Approval Ratings Combined: RealClearPolitics: 46.1% Silver Bulletin: 44.7% Pew Research: 40% Washington Post/ABC News: 39% ➡️ Final Average: ~42.5% Approval 🔴 Disapproval Ratings Combined: RealClearPolitics: 51.6% Silver Bulletin: 51.8% Pew Research: 60% Washington Post/ABC News: 55% ➡️ Final Average: ~54.6% Disapproval Key factors dragging down approval: Rising cost of living and inflation pressures Public concern over use of executive powers Ongoing controversy around immigration and tariff policies Important context: While Trump's support among Republican voters remains strong, independent and moderate voters are showing significant erosion, putting him in a more vulnerable position as the 2026 midterms approach. 🗳️ Overall takeaway: ➡️ Trump’s approval rating is low for a sitting president at this point in the term. ➡️ He remains a dominant figure, but faces major hurdles with swing voters. 🔗 Sources: RealClearPolitics Tracking Average Pew Research Center Washington Post Polling Silver Bulletin Poll Tracker #TrumpApproval #PollTracker #Election2026 #PoliticalAnalysis #Trump2025 #BETTRNews #ApprovalRating #VoterSentiment
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  • Australia Election: Coalition Support Plummets

    Labor has taken a commanding lead in the latest Newspoll as PM Anthony Albanese announces new tax deductions ahead of the May 3 election. Dutton’s approval hits a campaign low, with a majority predicting a hung parliament.
    #AustraliaElection #Albanese #Dutton #Politics #BETTRNewswire
    Full article:
    https://www.news.com.au/national/federal-election/coalition-drops-further-in-latest-newspoll-as-federal-election-looms/news-story/1d8c3f269b5e9bd01f83611804bd3a41
    🇦🇺 Australia Election: Coalition Support Plummets Labor has taken a commanding lead in the latest Newspoll as PM Anthony Albanese announces new tax deductions ahead of the May 3 election. Dutton’s approval hits a campaign low, with a majority predicting a hung parliament. #AustraliaElection #Albanese #Dutton #Politics #BETTRNewswire Full article: https://www.news.com.au/national/federal-election/coalition-drops-further-in-latest-newspoll-as-federal-election-looms/news-story/1d8c3f269b5e9bd01f83611804bd3a41
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