With the oldest of the three women running for Oregon’s next governor, the woman now in office has spent the past 12 days on an industrial project in Asia.
Gov. Kate Brown spoke to Oregon reporters Tuesday via Zoom from Japan, where she concluded a 12-day tour of South Korea and Japan. South Korea is Oregon’s fourth largest export market and Japan the sixth.
“Oregon’s strong dating industry with Korea and Japan has helped Oregon revel in the fifth-fastest export expansion in the U. S. “It’s been in the U. S. over the last five years,” Brown said. We were just one of six states that saw positive export expansion during the pandemic. “
Brown said it was timed to coincide with Japan and Korea’s recent reopening to foreign tourism after they shut down over Covid: Korea in April began allowing tourists for the first time since early 2020, and Japan reopened earlier this month. This allowed Oregon elected officials and business leaders to rekindle non-public relations after its last stop in 2019, he said.
But he also pulled her out of Oregon when the crusade for the upcoming election peaked, adding that President Joe Biden narrowly missed during his Portland stopover for the crusade for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Tina Kotek. Popular governor in Morning Consult’s quarterly polls for the year, and Kotek has stepped up his complaint of Brown in recent weeks.
That includes a TV commercial, filmed as if Kotek is in a doorbell camera, in which the Democratic nominee criticizes Brown for doing nothing about homelessness, and another on social media describing Brown’s lack of action on homelessness as the same as Republican Christine Celle. of Drazán.
Brown said he didn’t see the classified ads on a trip to Asia, but it backs up his roaming history.
“Frankly, I am very pleased with the paintings my management has done in close collaboration with the Oregon legislature,” Brown said. “It is a bipartisan task to invest to ensure that everyone in Oregon has a warm, safe, affordable and available environment to feel at home. We’ve made significant investments and, frankly, I don’t think any other jurisdiction has invested to the point where we have.
He said he hopes to run with the state’s next governor for housing prevention and homelessness, in addition to maintaining Oregon’s relationships with commercial components and developing the semiconductor industry. technology corporations to invest in semiconductor production in Oregon.
Brown also touted Oregon’s agricultural products, urging the Korean government to load Oregon-grown raspberries and blackberries. Both countries already import blueberries from Oregon, and Brown said he was surprised by the fruit’s popularity.
“Everywhere we went, other people were talking about Oregon blueberries,” he said. and I suspect a little ice cream. I was impressed.
by Julia Shumway, Oregon Capital Chronicle October 25, 2022
With the oldest of the three women running for Oregon’s next governor, the woman now in office has spent the past 12 days on an industrial project in Asia.
Gov. Kate Brown spoke to Oregon reporters Tuesday via Zoom from Japan, where she concluded a 12-day tour of South Korea and Japan. South Korea is Oregon’s fourth largest export market and Japan the sixth.
“Oregon’s strong dating industry with Korea and Japan has helped Oregon revel in the fifth-fastest export expansion in the U. S. “It’s been in the U. S. over the last five years,” Brown said. We were just one of six states that saw positive export expansion during the pandemic. “
Brown said it was timed to coincide with Japan and Korea’s recent reopening to foreign tourism after they shut down over Covid: Korea in April began allowing tourists for the first time since early 2020, and Japan reopened earlier this month. This allowed Oregon elected officials and business leaders to rekindle non-public relations after its last stop in 2019, he said.
But he also pulled her out of Oregon as the crusade for the upcoming election reached its peak, adding that President Joe Biden’s arrival was narrowly missing during his layover in Portland for the crusade for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Tina Kotek. popular governor in the Morning Consult quarterly polls for the year, and Kotek has stepped up his complaint about Brown in recent weeks.
That includes a TV commercial, filmed as if Kotek is in a doorbell camera, in which the Democratic nominee criticizes Brown for doing nothing about homelessness, and another on social media describing Brown’s lack of action on homelessness as the same as Republican Christine Celle. of Drazán.
Brown said he didn’t see the classified ads on a trip to Asia, but it backs up his roaming history.
“Frankly, I am very pleased with the paintings my management has done in close collaboration with the Oregon legislature,” Brown said. “It is a bipartisan task to invest to ensure that everyone in Oregon has a warm, safe, affordable and available environment to feel at home. We’ve made significant investments and, frankly, I don’t think any other jurisdiction has invested to the point where we have.
He said he hopes to run with the state’s next governor for housing prevention and homelessness, in addition to maintaining Oregon’s relationships with commercial components and developing the semiconductor industry. technology corporations to invest in semiconductor production in Oregon.
Brown also touted Oregon’s agricultural products, urging the Korean government to load Oregon-grown raspberries and blackberries. Both countries already import blueberries from Oregon, and Brown said he was surprised by the fruit’s popularity.
“Everywhere we went, other people were talking about Oregon blueberries,” he said. and I suspect a little ice cream. I was impressed.
Oregon Capital Chronicle is owned by States Newsroom, a network of grant-backed news offices and a donor coalition as a 501c(3) public charity. Oregon Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Please contact Editor-in-Chief Lynne Terry if you have any questions: info@oregoncapitalchronicle. com. Follow oregon capital chronicle on Facebook and Twitter.
Julia Shumway has reported on government and politics in Iowa and Nebraska, spent time at the Bend Bulletin, and most recently as a legislative reporter for the Arizona Capitol Times in Phoenix. An award-winning journalist, Julia recently reported on tangled efforts to audit presidents’ effects in Arizona.
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