Saturday, July 12, 2014

LULAC - Word on the Street

The Editor - Word on the LULAC street is that the powers that be in LULAC, the Machine that wants to get Roger Rocha elected in New York City will try to get the Legal Advisor on the floor of the National Assembly to render an opinion that the 100 councils who voted to exclude the delegates from the 37 councils in the Puerto Rico state LULAC Convention to be considered councils and delegates not in good standing so that they would not be certified to vote in the Assembly in New York City.  If the Legal Advisor makes such a ruling and the good people in LULAC win, that is, the "coalition," the first order of business should be to expel the Legal Advisor from LULAC for life at "hard labor."
 
Word on the LULAC street tells Gabriel Rosales to avoid being a candidate for national LULAC office.
 
Word on the LULAC street has it that the Machine will bring in hundreds of New Yorkers who are being recruited from the streets of New York  to wear delegate badges and name tags of LULAC delegates from LULAC councils that are not present at the convention and if they run out of councils to create council slates once the math has been done.
 
If the good people win, that is, the "coalition," the new executive committee should conduct a prompt investigation and if it can be determined that Machine operatives have dirty hands that they and the fake delegates be banned from LULAC for life at "hard time."  If any of the dirty hands involve former LULAC Presidents, that their names be stricken from the chronological list of former National Presidents of LULAC.
 
The word on the street is that the Machine will not allow the National Assembly in LULAC, the supreme authority in LULAC, to be able to have a debate and to take a vote as a policy matter on the issue concerning Herbalife.  It appears that William Ackman has invested heavily with the Machine, to get the Machine's candidates elected, and is pulling the strings in LULAC on keeping the Herbalife issue away from the National Assembly for fear that the Assembly will vote to have LULAC go neutral on Herbalife.  The Machine is so scared about the LULAC membership voting against the Machine's anti-Herbalife position that it refuses to allow the National Board to vote on the matter and forget the National Assembly, the thought of the National Assembly voting on the Herbalife issue is not a part of their equation.

What has happen to LULAC is that the interim governing group of National LULAC, the National Executive Committee, runs every operation of LULAC.  The National LULAC Board is not part of the governing structure of LULAC as far as the National Executive Committee is concerned.  The National Assembly, well, the National Assembly is just that, they only meet one time per year.  The national Assembly, the supreme authority in LULAC is the weakest link in LULAC governance.

LULAC was set up so that the Executive Committee, that is, the full complement of the nationally elected officers of LULAC were to be the interim decision makers for LULAC.  They made decisions regard LULAC policy in the interim.  All interim decisions went to National LULAC Board whenever the Board met.  Interim decisions would be presented to the Board by the Committee for a more final say on matters that affected National LULAC.  The National Assembly guided the mother ship of LULAC in their National Convention.

The Executive Committee makes all LULAC decisions.  The Executive Committee gives the National Board nothing that dilutes the decision making power of National LULAC.  The National Assembly is at a point in LULAC where a politician from Texas who is running for the United States Senate from Texas, David Alameel, and a Wall Street hedge fund billionaire, William Ackman, are using criminal means to keep "their Executive Committee" in office so that the LULAC National Assembly remains in the back of the bus.

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