
WHEN: 6 PM Monday, April 1WHERE: Ruby Tuesday in TC
Dish With The DemsSay Goodbye to Winter and Help Welcome Spring with other Leelanau County Democrats! Cherry Republic, Glen ArborThursday, April 11thCocktails & Social Hour 5:00 p.m to 6:00 p.m.Dinner – 6:00 p.m. Please come
In response to David Henderson’s article entitled, AOC Versus Adam Smith, (published in the Hoover Institution’s, online newsletter “Defining Ideas,” Economics Department, Standford University, Feb 7, 2019, https://www.hoover.org/publications/defining-ideas) here are
https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/belgium/1936/beware.htm So what then is the lesson to be learnt? A waiting attitude, passive adaptation and manoeuvring, all incomprehensible to workers, render the best service to our opponents. A revolutionary
Dear Members of the Leelanau County Democratic Party, It’s on to a new year, and I could not be more proud to begin work with such a progressive bunch of folks.
Please see the following invitation to a Meet & Greet for Lisa Dirado, Candidate for MDP Chair: Saturday, January 12, 2019, 10:00 am to Noon: Traverse City – Northwestern Michigan
Happy New Year to All……It has been an honor to serve the Leelanau Democratic Party as Chair for the last two years. Our Party has a hard working and dedicated
DISH with the Dems–Volunteer Appreciation December 12, 5 PM at Harrington’s by the Bay, 13890 S West Bay Shore Drive, Traverse City Please come celebrate with Dem friends. We have
Greetings Indivisibles: We have good news for those of you burned out by the election and trying to figure out how Thanksgiving can possibly be only two weeks away. We
Leelanau County Democratic Party
P. O. Box 215
Empire, MI 49630
[email protected]
Leelanau County occupies the ancestral, traditional and contemporary lands of Anishinaabek people. The Leelanau County Democratic Party recognizes The Anishinaabek of the Three Fires Confederacy, the Odawa (Ottawa), Ojibwe (Chippewa), and Bode’wadmi (Potawatomi); historic Indigenous communities in Michigan; and those who were forcibly removed from their homelands. Leelanau County occupies land ceded in the treaty of 1855. We give thanks to the Anishinaabek as the caretakers of Mother Earth and for their relationship to the land; We further recognize the ongoing relationship of dependence upon, and respect for, all living beings of earth, sky, and water. In offering this land acknowledgement, we affirm Indigenous sovereignty, history, and experiences.