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Rotary Club of Abbeville President Brady Broussard Jr. (left) and Rotary Club member Mark Shirley (right) present Allen McLain Jr. with is 2023 Rotary Club Farmer of the Year.

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Allen McLain Jr. is joined by his sons, Allen III and Luke, his wife, Erin, and his parents, Laura and Allen Sr., during the Rotary Club of Abbeville’s presentation of the Farmer of the Year Award.

Rotary Club of Abbeville honors Allen McLain Jr. as Vermilion Parish Farmer of the Year

There is a saying about who to thank for the meal you ate today.
Each year, the Rotary Club of Abbeville dedicates a day to offer a special thanks to those who work to make sure food is plentiful, by presenting its Farmer of the Year Award.
Allen McLain Jr. is this year’s recipient. The Rotary Club honored McLain during its weekly meeting on Wednesday.
“It’s a huge honor,” McLain said after the meeting.
That is especially true, as the Rotary Club is not an ag-centric organization, he added.
“It’s an organization that doesn’t have direct ties to agriculture,” McLain said. “To know that they have a day set up to honor agriculture, it makes you understand how much agriculture really means to our parish.”
McLain farms more than 1,000 acres of rice and around 400 acres of crawfish in Vermilion Parish. McLain operates a crawfish boiling catering business, and recently acquired land at Live Oak Plantation for rice and crawfish production. That location will also be the site of an agrotourism venture McLain plans to launch.
“It’s a large part of what drives a community,” McLain said of every farmer’s operation. “It may not affect everyone directly, but it does indirectly.”
McLain has worked directly with numerous people in agriculture through various boards and organizations. McLain graduated from both the LSU AgCenter and USA Rice Leadership programs. He serves as the president of the Vermilion Rice Growers Association. He is an officer for the Louisiana Rice Growers Association. For Vermilion Farm Bureau, McLain is the Second Vice President, while also holding a seat on the board of directors for Louisiana Farm Bureau. McLain is also a participant on the Farm Bureau Crawfish Advisory Committee.
“We are happy to recognize the work and contributions to Vermilion Parish agriculture that Allen and his family are making,” Rotary Club member Mark Shirley said before presenting McLain with his award.
McLain comes from a farming family, including his parents, Allen Sr. and Laura, and brothers, John and Ryan.
“Allen and his wife, Erin, have two boys, Allen III and Luke,,” Shirley said while introducing McLain’s family during the presentation, “who may be the next generation of McLain farmers in Vermilion Parish. And ever present in their hearts and ours is their beautiful daughter, Kaylee.”
In the spirit of thanks, McLain made sure to offer some to his family, as well as everyone who is part of his operation.
“It was an honor to be recognized,” McLain said, “but it’s not just me. It’s all the people around me that need the credit. Without everyone who’s on your team, you can’t get done what you need to get done.”

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Task Force agents recovered drugs and paraphernalia during the arrest.

Woman faces numerous charges after Task Force arrest in Vermilion Parish

According to Sheriff Mike Couvillon, the Vermilion Municipal and Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force made the following arrests for narcotics related offenses within the parish.
After receiving complaints in reference to suspected illegal narcotic activity, Agents conducted a thorough investigation to identify the residence and its occupants. After lengthy surveillance and covert operations, agents were able to secure a search warrant for the residence, identified as 10416 Arbor Road in Abbeville After the safe execution of the search warrant, Agents were able to locate various suspected illegal narcotics intended for Distribution throughout the parish. Whitney Fruge, 35, was arrested and charged with the following:
• Possession with Intent to Distribute Schedule I, (Heroin)
• Possession with Intent to Distribute Schedule II, (Methamphetamine)
• Possession of Schedule IV, (Clonazepam)
• Possession of Schedule IV, (Alprazolam)
• Possession of Drug Paraphernalia
• Possession of Schedule II, (Amphetamine)
• Possession of Schedule II, (Buprenorphine)

Sheriff Couvillon would like to thank the mayors, and their council, of Abbeville, Gueydan, and Erath, along with their chiefs of police, for their support of the Vermilion Municipal  and Sheriff’s  Narcotics Task Force. Sheriff Couvillon also applauds the concerned citizens of Vermilion Parish for their awareness and assistance in helping the Task Force in fighting the war on illegal drugs. He  encourages all citizens with information in regards to illegal drug activities to contact the Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office or the Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Unit at 337-740-4501 or E-mail the Task Force anonymously at taskforce@vpso.net and your e-mail will be held in the “strictest of confidence” and replied to in a very timely manner.  Sheriff Couvillon and the agents of the Task Force will continue their fight against narcotics dealers and narcotics traffickers inside of Vermilion Parish and will continue to network with other agencies in this fight. All suspects are innocent until proven guilty.
More information on reporting drug activities can be seen on our Web Site at www.vpso.net. Click on Narcotics and fill out the TURN IN A PUSHER information. 

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The Abbeville High Wildcats travel to Lutcher to face the defending state champions of Non-Select Division II in a regional playoff game on Friday. Tickets will be sold in advance at the Abbeville High front office for fans wishing to attend the game. Tickets are $10 each if purchased in advance, or $12 at the gate.

Tickets on sale in advance for Abbeville-Lutcher playoff game

Tickets for Friday's second-round high school football playoff between the Abbeville High Wildcats and the Lutcher Bulldogs will be available in advance at a discount at the Abbeville High School front office.
Tickets are $10 apiece in advance, or $12 at the gate, according to AHS head football coach Roderick Moy.
Tickets may be purchased at the AHS front office during school hours this week.
Lutcher (7-2) is the defending Non-Select Division II state champion. As the No. 4 seed in the playoffs, the Bulldogs had a first-round bye.
Abbeville (9-2), seeded 13th, beat No. 20 seed Pearl River in the opening round at Wildcat Stadium, 34-20.

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Justin Montgomery (9) breaks a tackle attempt by Pearl River’s Charlie Carraway (16) in the process of scoring on a 23-yard run for Abbeville in the opening round of the Non-Select Division II football playoffs on Friday at Wildcat Stadium. Montgomery rushed for 130 yards and two touchdowns in Abbeville’s 34-20 win.

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Abbeville running back Ta’Zavian Andrews (3) finds a crease to run through against Pearl River on Friday. Andrews ran for 120 yards on 12 carries.

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Abbeville’s offense lines up in a steady rain against Pearl River on Friday.

Wildcats Roll in 1st Round

Abbeville piles up 418 yards on the ground to beat Pearl River, 34-20

Friday night’s wet, dreary weather kept the crowd to a minimum for Abbeville High’s first-round playoff game against Pearl River at Wildcat Stadium.
Temperatures in the lower 60s and upper 50s and a steady rain throughout the game suited the Wildcats just fine, though, as Abbeville rushed for 418 yards in beating the visiting Rebels 34-20.
Many of the Wildcats chose to celebrate their third straight first-round playoff win with impromptu slip-and-slide fun on the field, adding a bit more mud to their already well-saturated red jerseys and white pants.
“We did a real good job up front,” Abbeville head coach Roderick Moy said. “We had to hold on there at the end. That’s a tough football team on the other side that didn’t want to go home. At the end of the day, when they got it within one score and we needed a drive to not end our season, we were able to put it together, and we were able to do what we do. We didn’t change who we were.
“We’re not going to change who we are. Everybody else got nervous, and I said, we need to go down and be ourselves. And we did.”
The Wildcats were unstoppable in the first half. Pearl River used a lateral and a long return on the opening kickoff to stun the home crowd right off the bat, but couldn’t convert the extra point and settled for a 6-0 lead with only seven seconds off the clock.
Abbeville took the ensuing kickoff to the 31, and proceeded to dominate the line of scrimmage and the clock the rest of the half.
AHS chewed up the next 3 1/2 minutes with an eight play drive, capped by Justin Montgomery’s three-yard TD run with 8:11 to go. Zaylun Williams came in at fullback to tack on the 2-point conversion for an 8-6 AHS lead.
Montgomery led the Wildcats with 130 yards and two touchdowns on 23 carries.
After Tahj Judge snuffed out the next drive with an interception in the end zone, the Wildcats marched 80 yards in six plays, with quarterback Da’Zavien Maze scoring on a 20-yard keeper to extend the lead to 16-6 following a second 2-point run by Williams. Maze had 45 yards on six carries before leaving the game with an ankle injury in the fourth quarter.
After forcing a three-and-out, Abbeville marched 70 yards in eight plays, overcoming two penalties along the way, to tack on another touchdown, this time on a 23-yard run by Montgomery. The missed 2-point try left AHS with a 22-6 lead.
Another defensive stop set up a fourth straight touchdown drive, this one going 61 yards in 10 plays. Edmar Simon III capped the drive with a four-yard scoring run.
Simon finished the night with 53 yards and two touchdowns on only seven runs.
Abbeville scored on four of five first-half possessions with the only other touch coming on a kneel just before half after Williams recovered his own onside kick for the Wildcats with two seconds remaining in the half.

Pearl River mounted a comeback try in the second half, scoring on Tashod Badon’s eight-yard run with 3:43 left in the third quarter and the 2-point conversion by quarterback Trey Turnage.
After an Abbeville fumble gave the Rebels the ball, Pearl River drove into AHS territory, but Simon picked off Turnage at the 1-yard line on the first play of the fourth quarter.
“I’ve been needing that all season,” Simon said. “All my defensive back guys have one, and I’ve been waiting to get mine. I told coach it was going to come when we most needed it, and it came.”
The ensuing drive stalled thanks to a couple of penalties, and after a punt to the Pearl River 39, Badon broke loose on a 61-yard touchdown, breaking tackles at the 20 and 10 yard lines along the way, to pull the Rebels to within 28-20.
Badon, one of two runners for Pearl River with 1,000 rushing yards this year, finished the night with 184 yards and three TDs on 20 carries. Ziderius Brown, the other 1,000-yard rusher for PRHS, finished the night with 27 yards on six carries.
Abbeville answered quickly, returning the kickoff to the 48 and then driving 52 yards on eight plays, capped by Simon’s 11-yard touchdown run with 3:07 left in the game.
Simon stressed the running backs’ unselfish play, allowing each other to shine while trying to control the clock and keep the ball away from Pearl River at the end of the night.
“That’s what we try to do,” he said. “Just pound the ball. We trust our offensive line and not being selfish and playing defense, letting those guys get the carries, then when coach needed me, I go punch it in.”
Ta’Zavian Andrews had 120 yards on the ground for the Wildcats on a dozen rushes. Williams added 26 yards on five bruising carries, with three of those carries on the final scoring drive.
“Everybody,” Moy said of the rushing success. “From quarterback, both backs (Andrews and Simon), both fullbacks (Williams and Montgomery). Defensive guys coming across (to offense) and doing a good job for us. Receivers doing a good job blocking on the perimeter. At the end of the day, those five big hogs up front, those five guys on the offensive line, won this ballgame for us.”
“Having those five seniors on the offensive line who have been with us, we can always count on them,” Simon agreed.
The extent of Maze’s injury had yet to be determined, but Moy is confident in Tahj Judge, who started at QB for two years before becoming primarily a cornerback this season.
“Hopefully we can get (Maze) back next week, but we’ve got a guy waiting in the wings, and if it’s bad news, we’ve got a guy back there we trust either way.”
Thirteenth-seeded Abbeville, which improved to 9-2, travels to No. 4 seed Lutcher (7-2) to face the defending Division II state champions this Friday.
No. 20 Pearl River finished the season at 5-5.

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The Kaplan Pirates, shown in action earlier this season, finished their year in the first round of the playoffs on Friday, falling to Jennings, 34-6. (Photo by Kyle Comeaux)

Turnovers foil Kaplan's efforts in playoff at Jennings

JENNINGS — The Kaplan High Pirates moved the ball the way they wanted to in the first half of their Non-Select Division II playoff opener at Jennings on Friday, but turned the ball over three times and trailed 21-0 at halftime.
Jennings went on to a 34-6 win over the Pirates, ending Kaplan’s season at 7-4 overall.
Though the game didn’t turn out the way Kaplan hoped, head coach Cory Brodie said the team’s five seniors — Gabriel Campisi, Jed Devoltz, Talan Fruge, André Marceaux and Grant Stelly — laid the groundwork for the future team, especially with the example they set for the younger players.
“I’m super proud of the five seniors we had, not only on the football field, but guys who are always here,” Brodie said. “They’re the first people at practice. They never felt a job was too small for them. They set up the field for us. They took out the trash. Just five really good people that our younger guys can look up to.
“It kind of sucks for them that it was just five of them, because when we do progress in the future, a lot of our success is going to be because of what those guys showed the younger guys — even though we’re seniors, we’re going to do the little things every day to get better. A lot of them were leaders by example.”
Though KHS moved the ball early, turnovers kept them out of the end zone.
“We had the offense going in the first half,” Brodie said. “We got the ball inside the 30 three times, we just fumbled the ball. We fumbled three times. We thought out of those four drives we had the opportunity to score on three of them.”
Jed Devoltz scored the Pirates’ lone touchdown with 3:12 left in the game.
“We were kind of banged up,” Brodie said. “Carter Petry, our tight end, ended up going out. Kevin Small, our nose guard, ended up getting out. Our starting center sprained his ankle. Daylon Landry, our 1,000-yard rusher, didn’t play tonight. He had a pretty bad quad bruise.
“It was just kind of the wrong time to get banged up and the wrong time to have turnovers — on top of playing a good Jennings team that was hitting on all cylinders.”
Expectations will be high in the future after Kaplan turned around from a 4-6 year to a 7-3 regular season, the coach said.
“We’re going to go from exceeding expectations to trying to reach expectations when they’re super high, so that’s going to be the big battle this offseason, and we’re going to see how we respond to it.”
Though the season didn’t end the way the team wanted it to, Brodie said he thinks it was a successful season, and he’s proud of the senior class.
“Hopefully that’s a foundation of where we are, at 7-3, and we’ll build on that,” he said.

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The Abbeville Wildcats open the playoffs on Friday at home against Pearl River.

Establishing the Program

Abbeville developing into consistent playoff contender

It’s been a while since the Abbeville High Wildcats were consistently thought of as a contender in the football playoffs.
Head coach Roderick Moy and his staff are working to change that and make the Wildcats a perennial playoff team aspiring to make deep playoff runs.
It started with a surprising 9-1 regular season in 2021 that saw Abbeville go 11-2 overall and reach the quarterfinals.
The Wildcats followed that up with a 7-5 mark in 2022 that included a first-round win.
This year’s senior class has added the school’s first district championship in 25 years and the first outright district title the team has won since 1997.
“We want to drive and make sure that now people aren’t just talking about that one 11-2 team in 2021,” Moy said. “We are driving to make ourselves a program that can be respected across the state year in and year out as a quality football program.”
Abbeville opens the Non-Select Division II playoffs at home on Friday against Pearl River (5-4).
The Wildcats won’t be sneaking up on the Rebels.
“I think people can say we caught them by surprise in 2021,” Moy said. “I don’t think people can say that anymore.”
It’s a credit to the schedule, which has included back-to-back Select Division III state champion St. Charles Catholic (10-0 and the No. 1 seed in the Select DIII playoffs) and St. Mary’s of Natchitoches (7-2, No. 6 in Select Division IV), which has been in the quarterfinals for three straight years.
“The schedule we put together and the brand of ball and the success we’ve been able to have, I think has put us up there with some of the quality teams,” Moy said. “We’re one of those teams now, hopefully, that people think to be successful for two or three rounds (in the playoffs), some of those games have to come through Abbeville.”
Abbeville scheduled St. Mary’s and St. Charles on the road to prepare the Wildcats for the rigors of a potential long trip for the playoffs.
“We don’t want our kids to be caught off guard, either,” Moy said. “Sometimes people take long trips and that gets them out of their daily routine of being in school all day. Sometimes kids are funny like that. We want to make sure we’re doing everything to make sure we’re preparing them for every situation. That way, when those things do come up in the playoffs, and you do have a two or three hour ride, that’s not going to be anything foreign to our kids, and they’re going to be ready for that and they’re going to be prepared for that and we’re going to be able to go out and just play the best game we can play without having to worry about any distractions because we’ve been through those things before.”
The Wildcats bring their veer option attack into the playoffs with a number of ballcarriers contributing. Justin Montgomery has 677 yards and six touchdowns on 92 carries, while Edmar Simon II has 665 yards and nine TDs on 69 rushes. Ta’Zavian Andrews has contributed 330 yards and a touchdown on 53 runs and fullback Zaylun Williams has 205 yards and five touchdowns on 26 carries. QB Da’Zavien Maze has 230 yards and two touchdowns on 30 carries.
Williams also is a full-time starter on the defensive front, and Tahj Judge, who also plays some at quarterback, is a stalwart at defensive back.
“With our brand of ball it’s more of a wear-people-down than an early shot-taking thing,” Moy said. “Hats off to Kaplan (in the regular-season finale). They came in prepared, and slowed us down. But one thing about this offense, once we get going we’re tough to slow down.”
Pearl River is scary on offense, Moy said, using a run-oriented spread offense.
“They have two 1,000-yard backs, both over 200 pounds, so they’re going to be tough to stop,” he said. “We’re going to have to play, for lack of a better term, a Kaplan style ballgame of our best defense is going to be our offense, keep those two guys on the sideline while we hold onto the ball and hold onto the clock.
“Once we get in the red zone, we have to score. We’re going to have to score touchdowns. That’s the main thing for us. We can’t give those guys extra opportunities, and make the most of the opportunities we do have once we get into the red zone.”

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Jeff Crouere

Enough of the junior varsity debates

Haven’t the American people seen enough of the also-ran GOP presidential candidates debating on national television? These candidates have been highly promoted by the liberal media but cannot seem to gain any traction with Republican voters.
The ratings for the first two debates have been poor and significantly lower than the first presidential debates in the 2016 election. Of course, the reason is that the main attraction, President Donald Trump, has not been participating.
Sorry GOP insiders, but Republican voters want Trump to be the party’s nominee in 2024. Thus, despite the best efforts of the GOP establishment and anti-Trump media outlets, these other presidential candidates are barely registering in the polls.
According to a new survey by The Center Square and Noble Predictive Insights, Trump dominates his challengers with 59% support, followed by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis at 13% and former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley at 9%. The Chief of Research at Noble Predictive Insights, David Byler, said that “Trump is continuing to dominate the primary field,” and “there is only one candidate in the top tier and his name is Donald Trump.”
Byler also noted Republicans support Trump and are excited about another White House run, asserting “Republican voters believe that Trump is electable. They like his policies.”
With President Trump in such a dominating position, it is understandable why he is skipping these debates. He has nothing to gain and everything to lose. He should not waste his time allowing second-tier candidates an opportunity to relentlessly attack him.
What is infuriating is that the Republican National Committee (RNC) is continuing to sponsor these presidential debates, thereby giving unpopular candidates airtime to disparage their frontrunner. Wisely, the Trump campaign called on the RNC to cancel future debates so that it would “refocus its manpower and money” on defeating Democrats in 2024.
Instead of following this sound advice, the RNC is allowing a far-left network, NBC News, to host the third presidential debate on Wednesday night in Miami. The moderators will include the reliably liberal hosts of NBC Nightly News, Lester Host, and Meet the Press, Kristen Welker.
Once again, the RNC is rewarding the liberal media for their biased reporting. Instead of partnering with NBC News to televise another lackluster presidential debate, the network should be ignored by the RNC.
To qualify for the third debate, the RNC set some pathetically low benchmarks, including a 4% level of support in two national polls and at least 200 donors from twenty different states. Amazingly, former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, known for his outrageous attacks against President Trump, will be on the stage Wednesday night.
While Christie may be supported by out of touch GOP insiders, he is very unpopular with the grassroots Republicans. During his speech to the Florida Freedom Summit on Friday, Christie was met with loud boos and calls for him to “drop out now.”
Obviously, Trump is extremely popular with the GOP faithful, but he is also gaining support among the overall electorate. In a New York Times poll released Sunday, Trump leads President Joe Biden in five of the six swing states. Two-thirds of the respondents said the country was on the wrong track, while only 37% trusted Biden with the nation’s economy.
The poll was devastating for Biden, showing 71% believed he was “too old” while his support dropped significantly among key Democratic Party constituencies, young and minority voters. If the election were held today, the poll showed that Trump would win a major victory, with over 300 electoral votes.
After the shocking poll was announced, “Never Trump” activist Bill Kristol, a formerly respected journalist, tweeted that while Biden “served our country well,” it was time for him to display “personal sacrifice and public spirit” and “pass the torch to the next generation. It’s time for Biden to announce he won’t run in 2024.”
Obviously, those suffering from “Trump Derangement Syndrome” are getting nervous. It is also happening among the GOP establishment, who are working on their next ploy. DeSantis is laying the groundwork to challenge Trump at the GOP convention. In the view of Jack Posobiec, editor of Human Events, DeSantis, and his supporters “want to strip the nomination of Trump at the convention.”
This rationale was explained during a recent DeSantis interview on MSNBC. He claimed that if Trump is convicted after a sham trial prosecuted by a weaponized Biden Department of Justice, “I don’t think the party should nominate in that situation.”
Instead, all Republicans should denounce attempts to deny the nomination to the overwhelming frontrunner based on the deplorable shenanigans of Biden’s Department of Justice. DeSantis revealed the reason these other candidates are still in the race, their only hope to win is if Trump is convicted.
However, the charges against Trump are bogus and politicized. Biden’s Justice Department must not determine the GOP presidential nominee, it must remain the decision of Republican Party voters.

Jeff Crouere is a native New Orleanian and is a political columnist, the author of America’s Last Chance and provides regular commentaries on the Jeff Crouere YouTube channel and on Crouere.net. For more information, email him at jcrouere@gmail.com

Biden plans to vastly expand “refugee” applicants to circumvent border crisis, ignoring public opinion

While there is a dearth of data showing the border crisis is costing Biden heavily in polls, Biden’s plan to dramatically expand immigration and resettle record-breaking numbers of individuals from Latin America through the refugee program is wildly out of step with public opinion.
Not only have the massive spikes in illegal border crossings strained border patrol resources and posed threats to national security, but the Biden Administration’s response is to vastly expand the number of individuals entering the U.S. under the refugee program.
According to CBS News, the Biden Administration plans to “resettle” as many as 125,000 refugees in the year ahead, with almost 50,000 coming from Latin America alone. This number represents the highest refugee resettlement target since the early 1990’s and is not remotely in-line with public preferences.
Biden’s refugee resettlement plan is a reversal of Trump-era efforts to scale down the number of refugees entering the country, largely due to strains on U.S. resources and national security concerns. However, Biden has flipped that script and is well on the way to expanding the U.S. refugee program to unprecedented levels despite public resistance.
In Trump’s last year in office, a little over 10,000 individuals were admitted using refugee status, but Biden more than doubled that number by 2022. By the end of FY 2023 the Biden Administration will resettle as many as 60,000 individuals and will likely fully reach its target of 125,000 individuals in FY 2024.
The problem with this lofty resettlement agenda, aside from concerns over proper vetting of individuals and strains on U.S. resources, is the majority of Americans do not want immigration or refugee programs expanded.
October polling from YouGov shows Americans are deeply concerned about the toll illegal immigration is taking on the country, and broadly reject the idea of expanding the refugee program.
The poll asks Americans directly whether the United States should or should not accept refugees from Syria, Gaza, El Salvador, and Ukraine, and Americans strongly oppose accepting refugees from all countries except Ukraine.
Americans don’t believe the U.S. should accept refugees from El Salvador by a fifteen-percentage point margin, 45% to 30%, even though El Salvador is one of the regions the Biden Administration is greatly expanding entry from.
Americans don’t believe the U.S. should accept refugees from Syria by a fourteen-percentage point margin, 46% to 32%, and Americans reject the idea of accepting refugees from Gaza by a thirteen-percentage point margin, 46% to 33%. Americans are more open to accepting individuals from Ukraine and do so by a seventeen-percentage point margin, 50% to 33%.
According to the poll, only around a third of Americans (34%) say immigration makes the United States better off, and support for expanding the refugee program is even lower. Just 29% of Americans say refugees improve the U.S. compared to 39% who say they do not, a ten-percentage point difference.
There are strong partisan differences, with Republicans saying 64% to 12% refugees make the U.S. worse, while Democrats say 45% to 17%, refugees make the U.S. better. Independents side with Republicans, saying 36% to 28% that refugees do not improve the U.S.
Notably, even on the matter of legal immigration Americans are becoming weary. Just 32% of the country wants to increase legal immigration, while the majority (57%) want numbers reduced or kept the same. Even among Democrats support for increasing legal immigration is at just 40%.
These numbers come on top of polling from Reuters/ Ipsos that showed Americans say 48% to 37% that immigration is contributing to increased difficulties for native-born Americans.
Concerns about elevated crime and a slew of drugs and other smuggled items streaming over the southern border are major drivers behind this shift in sentiment on immigration. Strains on U.S. resources are also a concern.
According to Gallup, the share of Americans who say immigration is a good thing has dropped precipitously by nine percentage points in three years since Biden took office, from 77% in 2020 to 68% today.
Americans are increasingly skeptical of immigration and have deep concerns about President Biden’s attempt to expand the U.S. refugee program. With public opinion favoring a more controlled approach to immigration and asylum seekers, a law-and-order candidate like former President Trump running on tighter border security and increased scrutiny of refugee applicants could be increasingly appealing to Republicans and swing voters.

Manzanita Miller is an associate analyst at Americans for Limited Government Foundation.

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Tony James Porter

ERATH – Funeral Service for Tony James Porter, 61, will be held at 11 a.m. on Friday, November 10, 2023 at David Funeral Home Chapel of Erath. Interment will follow at Immaculate Conception Cemetery in Forked Island.
Visitation will be held at David Funeral Home of Erath on Thursday, November 9, 2023 beginning at 4 p.m. until 8 p.m., with a recitation of the rosary at 7 p.m. Visitation will resume on Friday, November 10, 2023 beginning at 8 a.m. until the time of service.
A native of Forked Island and a resident of Erath, Mr. Porter died at 7:33 p.m. on Tuesday, November 7, 2023 at his residence. He was the owner of Porter-X Exterminator for over 12 years and worked in the exterminator business for over 25 years. Tony enjoyed camping, hunting, fishing, and loved decorating for Halloween. He also enjoyed music and played drums in a band for several years. Tony cherished the title of “Granddaddy “.
He is survived by his wife of 16 years, Lori Gunter Porter of Erath; four sons, Corey J. Porter and his wife Megan of Youngsville, Ryan S. Porter of Abbeville, Tyler J. Porter of Abbeville, and Cameron Carpenter of Houston, TX; three daughters, Brittany N. Porter of Kaplan, Kristen Romero and her husband Cody of New Iberia, and Katelyn Broussard and her husband Holden of New Iberia; two brothers, Randal D. Porter and his wife Kathy and Wayne Kevin Porter and his wife Susan; and four grandchildren, Nova Ann Porter, Annelise Kate Broussard, Cohen Micheal Romero, and one on the way.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Collins and Ouida Hebert Porter.
Serving as pallbearers will be Randal Porter, Kevin Porter, Ryan Porter, Cameron Carpenter, Corey Porter, and Mark Lemaire.
Serving as honorary pallbearers will be Tyler Porter, Holden Broussard, Don Lemaire, Shannon Sonnier and Cody Romero.
You may sign the guest register book and express condolences online at www.davidfuneralhome.org
David Funeral Home of Erath at 209 E. Putnam St. (337)937-0405 will be handling the arrangement.

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Kaplan High School quarterback Sabe David (10) follows wingback Brayden Bearb (6) during this past Friday’s game at Abbeville High. The Pirates travel to Jennings to open the Non-Select Division II playoffs on Friday.

Kaplan playing ‘bonus football’

Pirates set to open Non-Select Division II playoffs at Jennings on Friday

KAPLAN — Friday’s Non-Select Division II playoff game at Jennings will be a new experience for many of Kaplan High’s starting football players.
It’s an experience the Pirates and head coach Cory Brodie are looking forward to after Kaplan narrowly missed the playoffs in 2022.
“Not making it last year, a lot of these guys didn’t play in the (playoff) game two years ago,” Brodie said. “For most of our starters, it’s their first playoff game, their first playoff experience. It’s always good to be playing bonus football, so we’re excited for the opportunity.”
The Pirates are 7-3 overall and earned the No. 23 seed for the playoffs. Kaplan finished 4-1 in District 5-3A, dropping a close 18-14 decision to Abbeville this past Friday in a battle of teams that were unbeaten in district.
“I thought it was a pretty even game,” Brodie said. “I think we kind of dominated the first half, and they had a big fourth quarter. We also turned the ball over twice late in that game. It came down to what I thought it was — the team that made the fewer mistakes won. They had one turnover and we had two.
“It was just a really good high school football game. I expect the same thing again in the first round of the playoffs. The more we’re tested like that, the better it’s going to be for us down the road. I think it’s a good test for us.”
Brodie said the loss stung for a bit but the players have done a good job of moving on to preparations for the playoffs.
“When you get to keep playing, at this point we know teams around the area aren’t playing in the playoffs, so we’ve got to be appreciative of what we’re doing and staying focused on the goal in hand,” he said. “We’re a 23 seed this year, and last year North Vermilion was a 23 seed and made a run to the quarterfinals. We’re just taking it one game at a time and one matchup at a time and not looking too far ahead or looking behind us is definitely the focus this week.”
Kaplan’s three losses have been by a combined 11 points, and three of their wins have been by a combined 11 points, so the Pirates have been tested already.
“We’re 7-3 and we’re 11 points away from being 10-0,” Brodie said. “The real difference from last year is we’ve won some close games this year. The last two years we found a way to lose those close games. We’ve lost some close games too but also we beat Erath by 3 and Crowley by 4, and then beat St. Martinville with 50 seconds left. I think Friday night’s going to be another example of two teams that are going to battle it out. Expect (a score) more in the low 20s and running the football. They’re pretty similar to Abbeville with their style.”
Both teams will try to run the ball. Kaplan’s offense is led by wingback Daylon Landry with 1,060 yards and 11 touchdowns on the ground, second in the parish rushing totals, and 261 yards and two TDs on 11 receptions, third in the parish in receiving yards. Fullback Jed Devoltz, who missed a few games with an injury, is fifth in the parish with 823 yards and seven touchdowns on the ground.
Quarterback Sabe David has thrown for 578 yards and six touchdowns, fourth in the parish in passing yards. Brayden Bearb (273 yards, 6 TDs rushing, 113 yards, 1 TD receiving), Wyatt Hebert (230 yards, 2 TDs rushing), Dane Frick (175 yards, 1 TD rushing) and André Marceaux (105 yards, 1 TD receiving) add to a potent offense for the Pirates.
Jennings forces teams to play sound defense, the coach said, much like North Vermilion and Abbeville, two teams the Pirates have played this year.
“They’re an option team,” he said. “They have a really good fullback over there that has created some problems for some people. The biggest thing about them is they’ve got a coach that’s won a couple of state championships at Kinder, and his first year going 7-3, obviously he’s doing a great job over there.
“They’re just a super disciplined team that if we don’t match that level of mental toughness and discipline, they can run away with the game,” Brodie said. “It’ll be a good test for us seeing where we’re at, preparing for a team that’s usually in contention for making a run in the playoffs.”
Brodie said he’s glad to see Kaplan having only a 45 minute drive to get to the first-round game. The Pirates were nearly paired up with Franklin Parish, a 3 1/2 hour drive away in Winnsboro.
“Being closer, I think it definitely benefits us just because we’re going to get more of our fans in the stands,” Brodie said. “Being in Jennings is a blessing just because a lot of people who want to go to the game wouldn’t have been able to drive three or four hours will be able to travel 45 minutes down the road.”
The winner of Friday’s game advances to the winner of the opening round game between No. 7 Leesville and No. 26 St. Martinville.

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