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  1. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Public Approval Of Obamacare Hits Record High Ahead Of 2018 Midterms

     
  2. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    This says alot about those that were polled:

    Those plled have no idea what is going on, none what-so-ever.
     
  3. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Election expert says GOP may have already lost House to Democrats: Trump coalition ‘will not turn out’

     
  4. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Shooter needs to clarify one thing.
    It seems Mr. Lebsock was a Democrat during his stint of boorish behavior.
    When the Democrats threw him under the bus, so to speak, he knew the inevitable outcome.
    So, the day before the debate and vote, he switched his affiliation to Republican.

    Now why, one would ask, would he do that?
    To smear the Republicans? Nope.
    To muddy the waters? Nope.

    He did it as a farewell FUCK YOU to his former mates, cause, you know, they threw him under the bus.
    See, because he was registered as a Republican when he got the boot, the Republicans get to appoint his replacement. If Mr. Lebsock had left his affiliation alone it would be the Democrats who would be appointing his replacement.

    These Democrats; they just never seem to get their poop inna group long enough to actually do something productive for their constituents.
     
  5. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Texas sees huge surge of Democratic voters in first primary of 2018 elections

     
  6. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    As polls opened in the Texas primaries on Tuesday, The Texas Tribune laid out seven key questions for election night. Now that the smoke is clearing, here are the answers:

    Did more Texas Democrats vote than Republicans?

    In short: No....A big fat fuck no.


    Before Election Day, a snapshot of the 10 counties in Texas with the highest number of registered voters showed motivated Democrats casting ballots early. But totals in the primaries for U.S. Senate told a different story: More than 1.5 million people voted in the Republican primary, with close to 100 percent reporting, compared to about 1 million Democrats, also with near 100 percent reporting.

    Gov. Greg Abbott tried to unseat three Republican incumbents. How did they do?
    State Reps. Sarah Davis of West University Place and Lyle Larson of San Antonio are one step closer to returning to the Texas House in 2019 — despite Abbott making an extraordinary effort to unseat them. Both Republicans won their primaries Tuesday night but face general election challengers.

    The Texas Tribune thanks its sponsors. Become one.


    But the governor did prevail in one race: Abbott-backed Mayes Middleton unseated state Rep. Wayne Faircloth of Galveston on Tuesday, edging out the incumbent by roughly 15 percentage points.

    Abbott went to particularly great lengths to unseat Davis, dumping around a quarter million of his own dollars on the race. Davis led Susanna Dokupil by more than 10 percentage points with almost all precincts reporting Tuesday night.

    The governor’s 1-for-3 record — and Davis’ explicit shots at Abbott during her victory speech — could color the next legislative session in 2019.

    What happened in Texas' 7th Congressional District?
    Laura Moser secured a slot in the party’s primary runoff on Tuesday, despite rare attempts by national Democrats to end her bid over concerns she is too liberal for the district.

    Moser, a journalist and activist, will face attorney Lizzie Pannill Fletcher in the May 22 runoff — which will likely be a brutal intra-party fight and could divide west Houston and the national Democratic Party.

    Fletcher led the crowded Democratic field on Tuesday with 30 percent of the vote, and Moser placed second with 24 percent.

    The Texas Tribune thanks its sponsors. Become one.


    Whoever makes it out of the runoff will face U.S. Rep. John Culberson, R-Houston, in the fall. This race is one of three in Texas that Democrats are expected to target in hopes of gaining a majority in the U.S. House in 2019.


    [​IMG]Democratic primary candidate for the 7th Congressional District Laura Moser cheers with supporters at a watch party in Houston in Houston on Mar. 6, 2018.

    What happened with Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush's re-election bid?
    Land Commissioner George P. Bush took a giant step toward serving a second term Tuesday night, winning outright a four-way Republican primary race for the statewide office.

    Bush — who kept a low profile during the campaign — raked in nearly 58 percent of the vote with around 93 percent of precincts reporting, avoiding a runoff against his predecessor, Jerry Patterson. Patterson came in second with around 30 percent of the vote, with Davey Edwards and Rick Range coming in third and fourth place, respectively.

    Bush, the nephew of President George W. Bush and son of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, will face Democrat Miguel Suazo in a November general election that’s not expected to be competitive.

    How many primaries for Texas' eight open congressional seats will have to be settled in runoffs?
    Five of the eight open-seat congressional primary races are headed to runoffs. The other three were decided Tuesday night.

    • State Sen. Van Taylor, R-Plano, easily won the nomination to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Sam Johnson, R-Richardson, and is expected to win the seat in November’s general election.
    • State Sen. Sylvia Garcia, D-Houston, also won her party’s nomination Tuesday for the seat being vacated by U.S. Rep. Gene Green, D-Houston, placing her on track to win in the fall.
    • Veronica Escobar edged out other Democrats in a crowded race for the seat currently occupied by U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke, D-El Paso, who is leaving to run for the U.S. Senate.
    Here’s who’s set for a one-on-one matchup in the remaining races:

    • 2nd Congressional District — Republicans Kevin Roberts, a Houston state representative, and Dan Crenshaw
    • 5th Congressional District — Republicans Lance Gooden and Bunni Pounds
    • 6th Congressional District — Republicans Ron Wright and Jake Ellzey
    • 21st Congressional District — Republicans Chip Roy and Matt McCall
    • 27th Congressional District — Republicans Bech Bruun and Michael Cloud
    Who came out on top in the expensive North Texas primary battle between Phillip Huffines and Angela Paxton?
    Paxton beat Huffines on Tuesday by about 10 percentage points in their race for an open state Senate seat.

    The Texas Tribune thanks its sponsors. Become one.


    The contest between Paxton, wife of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, and Huffines, twin brother of state Sen. Don Huffines, R-Dallas, was the most expensive primary for a state office this year.


    [​IMG]Angela Paxton speaks to her supporters at her primary election night watch party in Allen on Mar. 6, 2018.

    Which Democrat is going to run against Abbott?
    Lupe Valdez, the former Dallas County sheriff, and Andrew White, son of late Gov. Mark White, will duke it out this spring over who will be on the November ballot against Abbott.

    Both Valdez and White have long been considered likely frontrunners for the nomination. The two stayed far ahead of the other seven Democrats who had lined up to challenge Abbott on Tuesday night, with Valdez leading with around 42 percent and White placing second with roughly 28 percent.

    Whoever wins the May 22 runoff will face an uphill climb in their efforts to unseat Abbott. He’s the most popular statewide elected official, and he has $41 million in the bank for his re-election bid.
     
  7. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    Major Constituency Turns Their Backs On Democrats: Falling in Love With Trump
    [​IMG] Steven Ahle March 12, 2018

    While Democrats pander to the small minority of transgenders, they just lost a huge constituency that could cost them big time in this year.

    Leo Gerald definitely believes it. He says he has tried to swing the Democrats his way for thirty years but he now sees a huge constituency that has been solid blue for many many moons. They may now be about to be turned deep red.

    You see, Leo Gerald is the president of the United Steel Workers union. Factories and steel mills all across the country are reopening after years of being shut down due to steel dumping in this country.

    Suddenly, they have found that their industry is not dead, it was just put on life support during the Obama error era. Not only does it put them back to work but there are ancillary benefits. The steel mill in Ohio reopening in Lorain plans to produce 100 million tons of steel a year.

    Assuming every truck is loaded to full capacity at 45,000 pounds each means that that creates 4,444,444.45 trailers will be needed to haul the steel from just one of the reopening plants. Those workers need to be fed, clothed, need cars and appliances etc etc etc.

    It’s the snowball effect. I didn’t even mention all the iron ore that has to be mined and shipped on trucks to the steel mills.

    From The Conservative Tribune

    During a Thursday interview with the decidedly anti-Trump MSNBC network, the president of United Steelworkers had shockingly positive words to say about Trump and his tariff plan.

    “Gerard praised Trump for making it clear he is going to ‘tackle trade deficits’ which he called a ‘wealth transfer’ because they are ‘taking good jobs away,’” reported Real Clear Politics.

    “It’s going to make it very hard for our members to ignore what he just did and what makes me sad is we’ve been trying to get Democrats to this for more than 30 years,” Gerard told MSNBC host Chuck Todd.
    It’s not just the votes the Democrats will lose in 2018, it’s also the millions in campaign contributions.

    Those may also go to Republicans. Or at least the ones who didn’t express opposition to Trump’s plan.
     
  8. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Not even Trump, Pence, Don Jr, and $10 million Republican dollars could save a seat that should have never even been close for a Democrat. And what is even more bad news for the conservative/Republican/Tea Party/White Supremacists is the issues Conor Lamb ran on are healthcare, Social Security and pensions, and unions.

    7 takeaways from Conor Lamb's huge but very close night in Pennsylvania

     
  9. RetiredOF

    RetiredOF Porno Junky

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    Funny he ran as a pro-life, pro-gun, almost a Republican and won by less than 600 votes. His seat will not exist in the midterm election due to redrawn districts. Your bell cow Pigloosy and SFLR have been thrown under the bus by the DNC. Demos are defending 24 Senate seats and Replugs 6. Lots of BIG money will be spent to shift several of these seats. Words to Caesar "all fame is fleeting"
     
  10. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    No this is not true at all. And for one thing this was a House seat and nothing to do with the Senate. And money sure didn't make any difference in this race. The Republicans spent more than $10 million to try and hold it. Also this was already a Gerrymandered district specifically drawn to make sure Republicans win. The new districts though will be much more fair for Democrats. But let's at least get the lie that Conor Lamb is pro-life straightened out.

    Abortion debate is over inside the Democratic Party

     
  11. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    According to updated figures from Advertising Analytics, a whopping $11.7 million has been spent on ads in the race, with Republicans out-advertising Democrats, $7.3 million to $4.4 million.

    But with Democrat Conor Lamb outspending Republican Rick Saccone by more than a 3-to-1 margin.

    "Conor Lamb ran as a Republican," said RNC spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany. "He said 'I’m not running against Trump but I am running against Pelosi.'"

    It's true that Lamb refrained from taking many shots at Trump and said he wouldn't support Pelosi as Democratic leader. But the idea that Lamb convinced voters that he is "anti-Pelosi" also concedes, at the very least.

    There are 118 GOP-held House districts that are more Republican than the one Lamb appeared to win Tuesday.

    Lamb doesn’t make his support of abortion a big part of his campaign. A Roman Catholic, he says he personally opposes abortion.

    Which this all means one thing, conservative values still win seats.

    Lamb appears to be more of a Manchin type, and less progressive, which means Trump will get more done, with more support from the left.
     
  12. ridgerunner

    ridgerunner gardener of stone

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    Trump Responds To Dem Strength In Pennsylvania District He'd Won Big

    WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump downplayed the significance of the Democratic victory in the special election in Pennsylvania’s 18th Congressional District on Wednesday, claiming that Conor Lamb won because he tried to be “like Trump.”

    Lamb, a political newcomer, was projected to defeat state Rep. Rick Saccone in Tuesday’s election, although the margin was thin. It was a staggering show of Democratic strength in a deep-red Pennsylvania congressional district that Trump won by almost 20 points in 2016.

    “The young man last night that ran, he said, ‘Oh, I’m like Trump. Second Amendment, everything. I love the tax cuts, everything.’ He ran on that basis,” Trump said at a fundraiser in Missouri on Wednesday, according to The Atlantic. “He ran on a campaign that said very nice things about me. I said, ‘Is he a Republican? He sounds like a Republican to me.’”

    Lamb, in fact, ran against the GOP-passed tax cut law. And even conservative groups realized that the signature achievement of the Republican Congress wasn’t resonating with voters; they shifted away from that issue as the campaign went on. Saccone, however, tried to sell himself as a politician in the mold of Trump.

    Just last weekend, Trump campaigned outside of Pittsburgh for GOP candidate Rick Saccone, a state senator whose message was built on support of Trump and his policies. But what typically would have been an easy GOP victory on Tuesday evening became a narrow race between Saccone and Democratic opponent Conor Lamb that stretched into the wee hours of Wednesday morning.

    Lamb declared victory, leading by only a few hundred votes. By Wednesday evening, he was projected to win as the remaining absentee, provisional and military ballots would not have been enough for Saccone to surpass Lamb.

    Trump claimed Wednesday that he “lifted [Saccone] 7 points up,” although it’s not clear how he came up with that number.

    “It’s actually interesting, because it’s only a congressman for five months,” Trump added, downplaying the results. Because of redistricting, the 18th District will exist in its current form only until the end of the year. Lamb’s hometown will be shifted into a new district, an area where Trump would have won by just 3 percentage points.

    Saccone’s projected loss would add to a string of embarrassing Republican performances in special elections as the 2018 midterm primaries loom. Trump has distanced himself from previous GOP special election losers, including Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, who was upset by Democrat Doug Jones.

    The southwestern Pennsylvania congressional district, a traditional GOP bastion that includes the affluent south suburbs of Pittsburgh and rural towns in former coal country, became vacant late last year, when former Rep. Tim Murphy (R-Pa.) resigned after pressuring a woman with whom he had an affair to get an abortion.

    Republicans had invested vast time and energy trying to prevent a close race against Lamb, who gained support in part by distancing himself from national Democrats and staking out more conservative positions.

    In addition to Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and two of Trump’s children, Donald Trump Jr. and White House senior adviser Ivanka Trump, had visited the area in recent weeks to drum up support for Saccone.

    By Tuesday night, as a closer-than-expected race appeared likely, Republicans were already coming up with various reasons to blame Saccone and downplay the results, with one GOP strategist complaining about the candidate’s facial hair.

    White House deputy press secretary Raj Shah suggested to reporters Wednesday that Trump should take credit for helping Saccone ― a message similar to what the president said at the fundraiser later that night.

    “The president’s engagement in the race turned what was a deficit for the Republican candidate to what is essentially a tie,” he said.

    But Saccone was widely predicted to win the traditionally GOP district.

    Shah also claimed that Lamb won because he “really embraced the president’s policies and his vision.”

    Under Pennsylvania law, this congressional election does not automatically trigger a recount. Saccone could petition for a recount within five days.

    Amanda Terkel contributed reporting.

    • This article originally appeared on HuffPost.
     
  13. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    One thing that is just hilarious this morning is the news outlets like MSMBC and CNN running side by side clips of Republicans like Trump and Paul Ryan claiming that Conor Lamb ran as a Republican and then the clips of Lamb and Rick Saccone's debtes where Lamb vows to save Social Security and union pensions. Explains that he opposes restrictions on abortion like the 20 week ban. Is pro union and vows to save the ACA and stop Trump and the Republican's efforts to get rid of it and/or sabotage the ACA.

    While Saccone was running on "I was Trump before Trump. Vote for me. I support Trump's agenda."

    I tell you there are times the lie of conservatism as it is preached and practiced in this country is funny enough to make you bust out laughing and spit coffee all over your keyboard first thing in the morning.
     
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  14. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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  15. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    Love the leftist's spin today.

    Lamb ran as a blue dog leftists, it's just that simple, while running as a blue dog, Lamb also ran against the minority leader in the House.

    The district that Lamb is representing is not as red as you leftists think, and he damn sure didn't win by a landslide.

    As afr as I'm concerned, Trump got a leftist vote on a host of issues that Trump is proposing in the future.

    Suck it up leftists, all you got was a seat this doesn't impose much for the progressive agenda.

    Lamb will not stay locked step with the leftist leadership.
     
  16. RetiredOF

    RetiredOF Porno Junky

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    No quite as bad as the lies of liberalism. Anti-death penalty but for third trimester abortion. The convict has committed a crime but how do you justify killing a baby?
     
  17. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Exit poll shows health care a top issue in Pa. special election

     
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  18. JimmyCrackPorn

    JimmyCrackPorn Porn Star

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  19. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Republicans are ‘particularly vulnerable’ to Democrats in 2018 — because of Trump: Former GOP fundraising head

     
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  20. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Waiting.................
    Still waiting...............