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Huge incentive packages/infrastructure I'd call stimulus on a major level ...See the results here through improvements ...new state funds.
Nope on the filibuster .. has it been talked about in the party..yes.
Packing the courts..No
NR1 or a version will eventually be passed at some point..Dems actually have a platform..you can read about it if you like.

if you'd like to continue..fine.

Yeah, the donor friendly stimulus bill from early 2021, that is true.

But that's just donor stuff really, wasn't the 2nd bill that actual voters wanted or was promised. The Build Back Better thing. Then obviously they found 1 or 2 senators to put it not passing on, as they always do (the GOP does this as well)

Hilarious the media pushes the good/cop bad cop intra-party narrative and people fall for it. As if someone like Sinema/Manchin truly has the whole world in their hands

I don't think any legislative agenda has been rammed through
 

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Yeah, the donor friendly stimulus bill from early 2021, that is true.

But that's just donor stuff really, wasn't the 2nd bill that actual voters wanted or was promised. The Build Back Better thing. Then obviously they found 1 or 2 senators to put it not passing on, as they always do (the GOP does this as well)

Hilarious the media pushes the good/cop bad cop intra-party narrative and people fall for it. As if someone like Sinema/Manchin truly has the whole world in their hands

I don't think any legislative agenda has been rammed through
fair enough.... I think the main thing in this tread is pointing out the weakness and divisiveness within the party..I'll stick with "Its a mess". Not that the Dems are much better as a party but I will say the messaging coming from the party about the republican party is spot on.

The abortion stand the party is presenting is moronic, women will be a major voting block in the midterms and general in 24.
 

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GOP Proves They Are On the Other Side: Doubles Down Commitment to Being the Controlled Opposition with Ranked Choice Voting​

By Margaret Flavin
Published September 2, 2022 at 9:28am
146 Comments
alaska-2020.jpg


The Gateway Pundit previously reported on the GOP’s commitment to being the controlled opposition. In 2020, Alaska enacted troubling new election rules including Rank Choice Voting (RCV), a scheme to manipulate our elections and is a threat to our free and fair elections.

A RCV is an electoral system in which voters rank candidates by preference on their ballots. If a candidate wins a majority of first-preference votes, he or she is declared the winner. If no candidate wins a majority of first-preference votes, the candidate with the fewest first-preference votes is eliminated. First-preference votes cast for the failed candidate are eliminated, lifting the second-preference choices indicated on those ballots. A new tally is conducted to determine whether any candidate has won a majority of the adjusted votes. The process is repeated until a candidate wins an outright majority.

In August, Project Veritas released a devastating undercover video of Senator Lisa Murkowski campaign staffers claiming the Alaska RINO secretly supported RCV in her state to ensure election victory.

On Wedensday, two weeks after the election, Democrat Mary Peltola defeated Sarah Palin in the Alaska Special election to replace Rep. Don Young in Congress. Pelota is the FIRST DEMOCRAT to win the House seat in solid red Alaska in 50 Years.

In Missouri, dark money was behind efforts to enact RCV in the state which, thankfully, failed in August.

This is how Rhinos and Democrats will steal elections in Red states.

The Heritage Foundation provides a trouble report regarding the impact of Ranked Choice.
Here is how it works. In 2008, instead of choosing to cast your ballot for John McCain, Barack Obama, Ralph Nader, Bob Barr, or Cynthia McKinney, all of whom were running for president, you would vote for all of them and rank your choice. In other words, you would list all five candidates on your ballot from one to five, with one being your first choice for president and five being your last choice.
If none of the candidates were chosen as the number one pick by a majority of voters in Round One, then the presidential candidate with the lowest number of votes would be eliminated from the ballot. People who selected that candidate as their top pick—let us say it was McKinney—would automatically have their votes changed to their second choice. Then the scores would be recalculated, over and over again, until one of the candidates finally won a majority as the second, third, or even fourth choice of voters.
In the end, a voter’s ballot might wind up being cast for the candidate he ranked far below his first choice—a candidate to whom he may have strong political objections and for whom he would not vote in a traditional voting system.
Key Takeaways
Ranked choice voting is a scheme to disconnect elections from issues and allow candidates with marginal support from voters to win.
It obscures true debates and issue-driven dialogs among candidates and eliminates genuine binary choices between two top-tier candidates.
It also disenfranchises voters, because ballots that do not include the two ultimate finalists are cast aside to manufacture a faux majority for the winner.
Conservative voters need to wake up. The Republican Party has failed to represent conservative and populist voters.

The Republican Party has failed.
 

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Alaska now has RCV and mail-in ballots with no signature match.

Alaska will now become California.

WTF?!?!?!
 

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Thanks for Playing Herschel!, you just dropped 3 points in the polls!​

Georgia GOP Senate Hopeful Herschel Walker Says He's All In on Federal Abortion Ban

 
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^ We are so doomed If Herschel wins.

Guy has 2 qualities

1) He was a college football legend
2) He is friends with Trump

I'm not sure why ANYONE would vote for him?
 

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^ We are so doomed If Herschel wins.

Guy has 2 qualities

1) He was a college football legend
2) He is friends with Trump

I'm not sure why ANYONE would vote for him?
Business man and wife beater....sounding familiar.
 

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Incriminating himself at every turn...pretty amazing, naturally making him a better candidate for the GOP in 2024..
Run fatty Run..MAGA 2024

Additionally, Trump defended some aspects of his allies' plot to overthrow the results of the 2020 election, one of the key issues under investigation by the Justice Department, by claiming that it is "very common" for states to have a competing slate of "alternate" electors claiming the other candidate won.
 

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Rally With Trump? Some G.O.P. Candidates Aren’t Thrilled About It.

Whether he is invited or not, the former president keeps holding rallies in battleground states. It reflects an awkward dance as Republican candidates try to win over general-election voters.

Former President Donald J. Trump is preparing to swoop into Ohio on Saturday to rally Republicans behind J.D. Vance in a key Senate race. Two weeks earlier, he did the same for Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania.
Neither candidate invited him.
Instead, aides to the former president simply informed the Senate campaigns that he was coming. Never mind that Mr. Trump, while viewed heroically by many Republicans, remains widely disliked among crucial swing voters.
The question of how to handle Mr. Trump has so bedeviled some Republican candidates for Senate that they have held private meetings about the best way to field the inevitable calls from his team, according to strategists familiar with the discussions.
This awkward state of affairs reflects the contortions many Republican candidates are going through as they leave primary season behind and pivot to the general election, when Democrats are trying to bind them to the former president.
In New Hampshire, Don Bolduc won the Republican Senate nomination on Tuesday after a primary campaign in which he unequivocally repeated Mr. Trump’s false claims of 2020 election fraud. Just two days later, he reversed himself, telling Fox News, “I want to be definitive on this: The election was not stolen.”
Some of Mr. Trump’s chosen candidates, after pasting his likeness across campaign literature and trumpeting his seal of approval in television ads during the primaries, are now distancing themselves, backtracking from his positions or scrubbing their websites of his name.
The moves reflect a complicated political calculus for Republican campaigns, which want to exploit the energy Mr. Trump elicits among his supporters — some of whom rarely show up to the polls unless it is to vote for him — without riling up the independent voters needed to win elections in battleground states.

In North Carolina, Bo Hines, a Republican House candidate who won his primary in May after proudly highlighting support from Mr. Trump, has deleted the former president’s name and image from his campaign site. A campaign official described the move as part of an overhaul of the website to prioritize issues that are important to general-election voters.
In Wisconsin, Tim Michels, the Republican nominee for governor, erased from his campaign home page the fact that Mr. Trump had endorsed him — but then restored it after the change was reported, saying it had been a mistake.
“The optimal scenario for Republicans is for Trump to remain at arm’s length — supportive, but not in ways that overshadow the candidate or the contrast,” said Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist and a former top aide at the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
Mr. Donovan, as well as consultants and staff members working for Trump-backed Senate candidates, said the former president could be most helpful, if he chose, by providing support from his powerful fund-raising machine.
“A big part of the problem is that these nominees emerged from messy fields where the party has been slow to unify,” Mr. Donovan said. “But to fix what ails, what these G.O.P. candidates need isn’t a Trump rally, it’s a MAGA money bomb.”
Taylor Budowich, a spokesman for Mr. Trump, said in a statement that the former president’s “name and likeness was responsible for the unprecedented success of the G.O.P.’s small-dollar fund-raising programs,” and that he continued to “fuel and define the success of the Republican Party.”
Mr. Budowich added, “His rallies, which serve as the most powerful political weapon in American politics, bring out new voters and invaluable media attention.”
But linking arms with the former president could create problems for candidates in close races.
Even though he has been out of office for nearly 20 months, Mr. Trump has remained a constant presence in news headlines because of mounting criminal and congressional investigations into his role in the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, his refusal to hand over sensitive government documents that he took to his Florida home, and whether he and his family fraudulently inflatedthe value of their business assets.

On Thursday, when asked about the possibility of his being indicted in the document inquiry, Mr. Trump told a conservative radio hostthat there would be “problems in this country the likes of which perhaps we’ve never seen before.”
Polls suggest these controversies could be taking a toll. Among independent voters, 60 percent said they had an unfavorable view of Mr. Trump, compared with 37 percent who had a favorable view, according to a New York Times/Siena College poll released this week. President Biden was also underwater among these key voters, but by a far smaller margin of eight percentage points.
Asked whether Mr. Trump had “committed any serious federal crimes,” 62 percent of independent voters said they believed he had, and 53 percent said he had threatened American democracy with his actions after the 2020 election.
Republican candidates appear to be aware of such sentiments, backing away from Mr. Trump’s fixation on the 2020 election. While he has said that election fraud is the most important issue in the midterms, polls show that voters are far more worried about economic issues and abortion rights.
Three days after Mr. Trump’s rally in Pennsylvania, Dr. Oz, the Republican Senate nominee, told reporters that he would have defied the former president and voted to certify the 2020 presidential election.

Dr. Oz, a former TV personality, leaned on Mr. Trump’s endorsement to win a bitter primary. Since then, he has removed prominent mentions of the endorsement from his campaign website and has swapped out Trump-themed branding from his social media.
Republican campaigns said that they would not reject Mr. Trump’s help out of hand, but that accepting it created a whole set of other problems: Where, for instance, could a rally be held to energize the conservative base, while minimizing the damage among independents?
When Mr. Trump’s team called to say that the former president wanted to come back to Pennsylvania for a rally this month, Mr. Oz’s campaign guided him to Wilkes-Barre in Luzerne County. The county was one of three that voted twice for Barack Obama and flipped to Mr. Trump in 2016. It was also the only one of those three counties that backed Mr. Trump again in 2020. The other two — Erie and Northampton — supported Mr. Biden.
Mr. Trump’s rally in Ohio on Saturday will be his third visit to the state since leaving office — more than any other state so far. He twice won Ohio, a longtime presidential battleground, by eight percentage points.
This year, his endorsement of Mr. Vance’s Senate bid has been widely viewed as the clearest example of his enduring political influence. Mr. Vance, an author and venture capitalist, was trailing in the polls before Mr. Trump backed him with just over two weeks left in the race. Mr. Vance won the crowded primary by nearly 10 points.
For the rally on Saturday, Mr. Vance’s team directed the former president to Youngstown, a blue-collar area that had been a Democratic stronghold until Mr. Trump ran for president. The rally, at the 6,000-seat Covelli Centre, is also squarely in the congressional district represented by Tim Ryan, the Democrat running against Mr. Vance.
The event is scheduled to start at the same time as kickoff for an Ohio State University football game. Buckeyes games regularly draw huge statewide audiences, and the matchup on Saturday is against the University of Toledo, an in-state team.The timing was not viewed as ideal by either Mr. Vance’s campaign or Mr. Trump’s team, and Mr. Trump was ultimately consulted on the decision, according to people familiar with the discussions. In the end, the two sides determined that it was more important to hold the rally on a Saturday night, when Mr. Trump has the easiest chance of drawing a strong crowd.
Ohio politicians have long tried to avoid competing for attention with Ohio State football games. In an interview, Mr. Ryan said holding a rally at the same time suggested that Mr. Vance — an Ohio State graduate — was out of touch with the “cultural things” important to Ohioans.
“It just says a lot,” Mr. Ryan said. “These little things just sometimes reveal a lot more about a candidate than it appears.”
In a statement, Mr. Vance called his rival “a radical liberal” and said, “The only person out of touch with Ohio is Tim Ryan.”
Asked if he would campaign with the president this fall — even if it were not during a Buckeyes game — Mr. Ryan said: “No. Uh-uh.”
 

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Big tent? ..not so much..good good Jim Justice

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice signs abortion ban into law​

The ban has exemptions for medical emergencies and for rape and incest victims until eight weeks of pregnancy for adults and 14 weeks for children.

Republican Gov. Jim Justice on Friday signed into law a ban on abortions at all stages of pregnancy, making West Virginia the second state to enact a law prohibiting the procedure since the U.S. Supreme Court’s June ruling overturning its constitutional protection.

The bill will go into effect immediately, except for the criminal penalties, which will go into effect in 90 days, he said. Justice described the legislation on Twitter as “a bill that protects life.”
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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^ We are so doomed If Herschel wins.

Guy has 2 qualities

1) He was a college football legend
2) He is friends with Trump

I'm not sure why ANYONE would vote for him?

Haha, and yet he's running against the dumbest and least accomplished Senator in the country.

Of course, Warnock is not the dumbest man in DC, that honor belongs to Slow Joe

And if Fetterman wins in PA, Warnock could be only the second dumbest man in the Senate (if he beats Walker)

Walker has a chance because he takes away the only thing Warnock has going for him, he's black

Liberals hate policy, and they don't know what fights to avoid like the black plague (no pun intended)

Obviously, it has to be genetics. Lest you wouldn't see these flaws so uniform and so widespread. There would be some deviation from the norm. Buttt nooooooo, it's the lockstep group think they all suffer from

Whoop whoop whoop
 

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Most historians agree Ron Johnson is the dummest....Eastman for Dummest lawyer...Green/Matty G tied for dumbest in congress (Trafalgar polled)
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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I'm sure Bozzie is sucking suck dry, suck is all he knows

He's a fanatic
He's a cheerleader
He's a parrot
A pawn
and inflicted with TDS

Just your typical liberal in the political arena. Brings nothing to any table
 

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Senator Joe Manchin III of West Virginia has secured a promise from Democratic leaders and the White House to complete a highly contested 304-mile gas pipeline in his state, his office said, a major concession won as part of negotiations over a climate and tax bill...It would ensure that federal agencies “take all necessary actions to permit the construction and operation” of the gas line, known as the Mountain Valley Pipeline.

Sucker .


:lmao:
 

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