Author Topic: The US Congress; Congressional races  (Read 377429 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1150 on: August 17, 2022, 11:47:47 AM »
Tucker said last night that Liz went from net worth of $7m to approx $40m IIRC.

G M

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1151 on: August 17, 2022, 12:00:23 PM »
Tucker said last night that Liz went from net worth of $7m to approx $40m IIRC.

Funny how that works.

Selfless servants of the people!

G M

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Re: Liz Cheney out
« Reply #1152 on: August 17, 2022, 12:13:44 PM »
https://ace.mu.nu/archives/cheneysrip.jpg



https://ace.mu.nu/archives/misspiggy.png



https://ace.mu.nu/archives/400519.php

The result I saw was 66 - 29%.  She conceded with 23% of the vote counted.   Even Democrats couldn't hold their nose for her.   Least surprised person was Liz Cheney.   She raised record $15 million and didn't spend it. Biggest loser is Dick Cheney's legacy.   Liz would need a map to drive the state.   One (of50) states she won't win if she runs for President is Wyoming,  especially after she sells her alleged property in liberal Teton County,  where the rich from out of state bought the most scenic properties.

Coincidentally,  she is now worth $15 million.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/much-liz-cheney-worth-113011842.html


Could easily give 1000 to 1 odds she will live in Virginia and work for liberal media and not live in Wyoming and work in the free enterprise private sector.


DougMacG

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Re: Liz Cheney out
« Reply #1154 on: August 17, 2022, 01:54:58 PM »
A leader with no followers is not a leader.

While the Presidential transition happened as promised,  she clearly debased the House and the sham committee process.

Cherry picking and omitting facts is not how you get at the truth.

What amount of cheating is acceptable?  They never say.  Answer is,  depends on who is doing it.

None of the 40,000 Democrats in Wyoming took the bait.   Sad that 29% of WY Republicans did.

Trump haters do exactly what they say they hate about Trump, lie, mislead, distort, divide, hate, and burn the earth behind them.

G M

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Re: Liz Cheney out
« Reply #1155 on: August 17, 2022, 06:38:31 PM »
https://www.newsweek.com/liz-cheney-wyoming-dems-switching-gop-primary-data-1731628

A leader with no followers is not a leader.

While the Presidential transition happened as promised,  she clearly debased the House and the sham committee process.

Cherry picking and omitting facts is not how you get at the truth.

What amount of cheating is acceptable?  They never say.  Answer is,  depends on who is doing it.

None of the 40,000 Democrats in Wyoming took the bait.   Sad that 29% of WY Republicans did.

Trump haters do exactly what they say they hate about Trump, lie, mislead, distort, divide, hate, and burn the earth behind them.

G M

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Re: Liz Cheney out
« Reply #1156 on: August 17, 2022, 06:49:33 PM »
https://ace.mu.nu/archives/image0.jpg



https://www.newsweek.com/liz-cheney-wyoming-dems-switching-gop-primary-data-1731628

A leader with no followers is not a leader.

While the Presidential transition happened as promised,  she clearly debased the House and the sham committee process.

Cherry picking and omitting facts is not how you get at the truth.

What amount of cheating is acceptable?  They never say.  Answer is,  depends on who is doing it.

None of the 40,000 Democrats in Wyoming took the bait.   Sad that 29% of WY Republicans did.

Trump haters do exactly what they say they hate about Trump, lie, mislead, distort, divide, hate, and burn the earth behind them.

Crafty_Dog

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NRO
« Reply #1157 on: August 18, 2022, 02:25:08 PM »
Are Republicans Blowing Their Chances of Winning Control of the Senate?

On the menu today: A deep dive into the current state of GOP efforts to win back control of the Senate this November, and the best way to reinvigorate a beloved adventure franchise.

The GOP Might Be Missing Its Chance

It’s reasonable to worry that Republicans are blowing their chances of winning control of the Senate this November. A couple of key races appear to be close to lost already; if the latest survey from Public Opinion Strategies is to be believed, the sputtering, momentum-free Ford Pinto that is Mehmet Oz’s Senate campaign in Pennsylvania is now trailing Democrat John Fetterman by a jaw-dropping 18 percentage points, after another poll earlier this month put Oz down by 14 points. (Although, as Nick Gillespie observes, my metaphor doesn’t completely work because Ford Pintos sometimes catch fire.) Oz may be working himself into the Republican Self-Inflicted Defeat Hall of Fame, alongside Christine O’Donnell, Sharron Angle, and Todd Akin.

But it is still mid August, and there are some signs of life for Senate Republican candidates. This morning, I wrote in the Corner about the new Emerson College poll in Ohio showing J. D. Vance ahead of Tim Ryan by three points. That’s not a massive lead, but it’s better than the long stretch of Ryan leads in polls over the past few months. Even a modest Vance lead is closer to what you would expect to see in a state that has shifted from purple to red, in what is supposed to be a good year for the GOP.

(By the way, that same survey showed that in a rematch between Donald Trump and Joe Biden in 2024, Trump would win Ohio, 53 percent to 39 percent. Trump won the state by eight points in 2020. At the presidential level, some of those red states are looking deep crimson these days.)

The collapse of Oz in Pennsylvania makes Georgia look relatively good, as Herschel Walker is still hanging around, even if he’s trailing. There’s no getting around it: Walker is a disappointing candidate who is struggling to improve his communication skills on the trail. But for all those problems, against an incumbent who’s a gifted orator and who gets adoring coverage, Walker is only trailing by around the margin of error in most polls. Georgia is a pretty darn right-leaning state, Biden’s job approval there is at 31 percent, incumbent Republican governor Brian Kemp is probably going to win the governor’s race against Stacy Abrams by a healthy margin, and it’s supposed to be a GOP wave year. Add it all up, and Walker still has a decent shot.

It’s been a while since we’ve had any polls in New Hampshire, but as of early July, likely GOP nominee Don Bolduc was within the margin of error against incumbent Democrat Maggie Hassan. While Hassan’s approval rating is still okay, Biden’s approval rating in the state is abysmal, and so a GOP campaign that relentlessly ties Hassan to Biden and his agenda could put the GOP nominee over the top.

This morning, Politico reports that, “In an eyebrow-raising new survey, the respected Marquette University Law School poll finds incumbent Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) trailing his Democratic opponent Mandela Barnes by seven points.” I’m raising my eyebrows at Politico‘s raised eyebrows. Ron Johnson polled terribly six years ago. Exactly one poll out of dozens had Johnson ahead of Russ Feingold in 2016, and quite a few had Johnson trailing by double digits. Yet somehow Johnson managed to surge near the end and win by three and a half percentage points. Six years earlier, the first time Johnson and Feingold squared off, Johnson took a lead in July and won by about five percentage points. This doesn’t mean Johnson is guaranteed to win in 2022; it just means you shouldn’t put too much stock in reports that Johnson is trailing in the polls.

In a final bit of good news for Republicans, the Missouri Senate race, which would have instantly become a toss-up if Eric Greitens had won the GOP nomination, now looks like an easy lay-up for Eric Schmitt.

But overall . . . yeah, the narrative that Republicans are blowing their chances in what should be winnable races because they nominate deeply flawed, relatively unknown, far-too-Trumpy or extreme candidates has a lot of evidence to support those contentions. Blake Masters has yet to look all that strong against incumbent Democrat Mark Kelly in Arizona’s Senate race, which was expected to be one of the most competitive races of the cycle. The hopes that Joe O’Dea would give incumbent Democrat Michael Bennet a serious run for his money in Colorado have yet to bear fruit. In a year like this, you would think a North Carolina Senate race would be a relatively easy win for Republicans, but that doesn’t appear to be the case yet, and it’s a similar story in Nevada, where incumbent Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto is hanging in there against GOP nominee Adam Laxalt.

None of these races look sewn up by the Democrats yet; it’s late summer, and people may not be paying much attention to the Senate races. Many campaigns contend that people don’t really tune in to the midterm elections until after Labor Day. Like Vance’s campaign, you’ll see more GOP ads, and the Democrats won’t have the airwaves to themselves in certain key markets.

It is also worth noting that some incumbent Republicans whom Democrats hoped to beat are looking strong. In Florida, Marco Rubio is on pace to win by a solid margin, maybe even by a double-digit percentage point. In Iowa, Chuck Grassley continues to be the genial juggernaut; every six years, Democrats talk themselves into believing they have a good chance of knocking him off, and every six years, he metaphorically runs them over with a corn harvester. Two years after Democrats convinced themselves that Lindsey Graham was beatable in South Carolina (he wasn’t), it appears that national Democrats aren’t even bothering to put up a serious fight against Tim Scott. (I notice that a lot of voters seem quite pleased with those allegedly boring “establishment” Republican senators.)

Running for office is hard. It looks easy from the outside; most aspiring political candidates walk around in a self-deluding fog of optimism and narcissism, believing that most people just naturally like them, and if they just go out and say the right things, they will coast to victory. A lot of people figure that their biggest obstacle is name ID, and that once the electorate gets to know them, voters will embrace the candidate in droves.

It very rarely works out that way.

Lots of Pennsylvanians know who Dr. Oz is, and if you put aside the controversies, he has an indisputably impressive life story. Back in 2013, The New Yorker called him “the most trusted doctor in America”:

Oz was a rare find: so eloquent and telegenic that people are often surprised to learn that he is a highly credentialled member of the medical establishment. Oz graduated from Harvard University in 1982. Four years later, he received joint medical and M.B.A. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. He then moved to Columbia and New York-Presbyterian Hospital, where, as a surgeon specializing in heart transplants, he has served as vice-chairman and professor in the department of surgery for more than twenty years. (He still performs operations there each Thursday.) Oz also directs Columbia’s Cardiovascular Institute and Integrative Medicine Program, which he established in 1994, and has published scores of articles on technical issues, such as how to preserve muscle tissue during mitral-valve replacements. He holds a patent on a solution that can preserve organs and one on an aortic valve that can be implanted without highly invasive open-heart surgery.

By 2009, after dozens of appearances on “Oprah,” Oz had become so popular that Winfrey offered him his own show, produced by her company, Harpo. “The Dr. Oz Show” has since won two Emmys and averages nearly four million daily viewers. Certainly, no American physician has greater influence over a larger number of people. Oz has been named one of Esquire’s 75 Most Influential People of the 21st Century, as “the most important and most accomplished celebrity doctor in history.” He ranks consistently in the top ten on the Forbes list of most influential celebrities, and has been included on a similar list of Harvard University alumni. In 2008, Oz received the Ellis Island Medal of Honor.

ccp

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Oz
« Reply #1158 on: August 18, 2022, 02:42:16 PM »
another thing about oz
is he is running against a guy who had a stroke in the middle of his campaign and is running from his basement

 :x

Oz is still doing surgeries once per week?  what ?

he needs to keep his day job and simply go away from politics .
baring a miracle there is no chance he will win at this point
« Last Edit: August 18, 2022, 02:53:04 PM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1159 on: August 18, 2022, 02:53:22 PM »
Very unsound call by Trump

ccp

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1160 on: August 19, 2022, 05:50:39 AM »
Saw hannity last night and he had Oz on.

so fetterman since his stroke has only had one crowd presentation
and sounds like someone brain damaged from the stroke

Oz has been out over 100 times works long hrs ( for God's sakes give up the one day a week doing surgery if not already!)

makes a few verbal missteps which of course the MSM blares all over the PA news outlets
.
and fetterman is full communist aoc and "squad" like bernie  kook

and yet is apparently trouncing Oz in the polls :-o

The Dems have controlled the messaging the news and hidden fetterman's brain damage
it seems

PA voters can't all hate Oz THAT much to want a brain damaged commie - ? can they ?



G M

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1162 on: August 19, 2022, 07:04:58 AM »
If you can vote for Biden's obvious mental impairment, Fetterman is just riding on those coattails.



Saw hannity last night and he had Oz on.

so fetterman since his stroke has only had one crowd presentation
and sounds like someone brain damaged from the stroke

Oz has been out over 100 times works long hrs ( for God's sakes give up the one day a week doing surgery if not already!)

makes a few verbal missteps which of course the MSM blares all over the PA news outlets
.
and fetterman is full communist aoc and "squad" like bernie  kook

and yet is apparently trouncing Oz in the polls :-o

The Dems have controlled the messaging the news and hidden fetterman's brain damage
it seems

PA voters can't all hate Oz THAT much to want a brain damaged commie - ? can they ?

ccp

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1163 on: August 19, 2022, 07:33:39 AM »
I must say as a physician Oz's medical and academic accomplishes are outstanding
no doubt about that !!! 

he must be a genius .

he didn't get his wealth handed to him

 he sweat tears and blood (though someone else's blood :-D) and likely workaholic persona
he earned it!!!

Why is being rich something to mock? whether earning it or inherited

the free shit crowd ......   :x jealous envious  losers .....

so someone who inherited wealth or earned it is something to hate
but getting free shit paid for from others is something that is justice and fair
and admirable

what horse shit.
damn dems








ccp

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1165 on: August 19, 2022, 01:54:17 PM »
bottom line
***********NEVER*********** >>>>> trust a democrat!

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1166 on: August 19, 2022, 02:36:22 PM »
As the saying goes "There are two things not to like about them-- their face."

Not a whole lot of Reps I would trust either.  Ask President Trump.

ccp

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panic over the Senate
« Reply #1167 on: August 20, 2022, 09:25:38 AM »
https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-reportedly-now-fuming-endorsed-040650486.html

with president at ~ 40% approval we can't gain one more Senate seat ?  :x

however this is MSM total bullshit:

*****In the latest of Oz’s widely mocked blunders, he moaned in a video, originally made in April, about the high cost of “crudité” in a city that prefers Philly cheesesteaks. He also referred to the well-known Pennsylvania grocery store Redner’s, where he was shopping for raw vegetables, as “Wegner’s.”*****

so the brain damaged commie sits in basement and his hit men blast the above all over the media as though it is such a big deal
and now the the state is going to vote in the an uglier male version of AOC ?

No, it is not this.
Oz is just not wanted in PA plain and simple ......
« Last Edit: August 20, 2022, 09:32:10 AM by ccp »

ccp

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Good news if true
« Reply #1168 on: August 22, 2022, 05:31:19 AM »
if true this an incredible comeback

every right news outlet should be promoting Oz!

and exposing stroked out Fetterman as not the voice of the common man but the voice of a Communist/ centralize politburo that will control every Pennsylvanian from dawn to dawn :

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/08/21/two-polls-suggest-oz-narrowing-gap-in-pennsylvania-senate-race/
« Last Edit: August 22, 2022, 05:34:08 AM by ccp »

ccp

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1170 on: August 25, 2022, 01:50:50 AM »
New York race saps ‘red wave’ confidence

Pro-choicers turn out for Democrat

BY KERRY PICKET THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Democrats hope Pat Ryan’s unexpected win in a special election to fill a vacant House seat in New York’s 19th Congressional District is a sign that the Republican Party’s “red wave” will be reduced to a puddle come November.

Top analysts Wednesday downgraded the Republicans’ outlook in the midterm elections and said Democrats may even hang on to their slim majority after Mr. Ryan’s surprise win over Republican Marcus Molinaro.

The nonpartisan Cook Political Report, which provides analysis of elections and campaigns, took notice of Mr. Ryan’s win and lowered its forecast for Republican gains in the House.

Based on “recent developments, we’ve revised our outlook to a 10-20 seat GOP gain, w/Dems maintaining control not out of the question,” said Dave Wasserman, a senior editor at the report.

The revision marked a drastic change from May, when Mr. Wasserman said House Republicans were on track to gain 20 to 35 seats.

Mr. Ryan, Ulster County executive, defeated Mr. Molinaro, the Dutchess County executive, in the race to fill the rest of the term of Democrat Antonio Delgado, who was appointed by Gov. Kathy Hochul to serve as the state’s lieutenant governor.

The district leaned Republican, and Democrats said Mr. Ryan’s

unexpected win showed their voting base was energized by the recent Supreme Court decision that overturned the 1973 ruling that legalized abortion nationwide.

“Voters are fighting back against Republicans’ extreme attacks on abortion rights,” said Democratic Congressional Campaign Chairman Sean Patrick Maloney said after Mr. Ryan’s win.

Republicans, Mr. Maloney said, “can say goodbye to their ‘red wave’ because voters are clearly coming out in force to elect a pro-choice majority to Congress this November.”

Democrats have suddenly become less pessimistic about a November wipeout that had been forecast partly because of President Biden’s poor approval numbers and high prices at the gas pump and grocery store.

The party has been on the rebound this summer, starting with the abortion ruling that Democrats have seized on to energize their voting base.

On Aug. 2, voters in traditionally conservative Kansas rejected a ballot measure that would have allowed the state Legislature to limit or ban abortion. Polls show voters may have more to say on abortion in November.

On Tuesday, the Pew Research Center Poll found that abortion has become a much more important issue for the majority of voters, Democrats in particular.

Among registered voters, 71% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning voters said the abortion issue will be “very important” in their midterm votes, up from 46% in March.

Abortion access has been a top campaign issue in key swing-state elections in Arizona, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Wisconsin, where Democratic candidates are leading or tying their Republican opponents, leaving Republicans in doubt about reclaiming the Senate majority.

Mr. Biden, meanwhile, has celebrated a string of victories, including the passage of a tax and spending bill that will cut prescription drug prices, fund green energy projects and extend Obamacare subsidies.

Gasoline prices have dropped for 70 days in a row.

On Wednesday, Mr. Biden announced a student loan forgiveness program that fulfills his key campaign promise of helping alleviate student debt and is aimed at winning over younger voters in November.

Democratic strategists said the abortion issue loomed as the biggest contributor to Mr. Ryan’s surprise win in New York.

“Two non-extremists in their respective parties face-off in a largely suburban, sometimes exurban area, and the battle over a woman’s right to choose against government regulation. Welcome to Kansas,” veteran New York Democratic campaign consultant Hank Sheinkopf said.

New York Republicans rejected Mr. Molinaro’s loss as an indicator for November. They said several unique factors affected the special election.

Former Rep. John Faso, who represented New York’s 19th Congressional District before Mr. Delgado, called it “wishful thinking” and said the primaries were structured to boost Democratic turnout.

One New York Republican political operative who asked to remain anonymous said the Molinaro campaign’s ground game and political messaging against Mr. Ryan’s attacks related to abortion were weak.

The source said the Molinaro campaign was knocking on only about 50 doors a day until a few weeks ago.

“That wouldn’t be good for a city council race or congressional race,” the source said. “There were no get-out-thevote operations.”

The National Republican Congressional Committee did not respond to a request for comment.

« Last Edit: August 25, 2022, 02:06:13 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ
« Reply #1171 on: August 25, 2022, 02:06:35 AM »
second

Republicans in Congress pondering who will paint their committee Chair portraits might want to hold off. The long-predicted GOP “wave” election may be crashing on an offshore reef, as abortion and Donald Trump energize Democrats.


That’s the message Tuesday from New York state, where the GOP lost a special election for Congress in a district where they were favored, continuing a trend of recent underperformance. Republicans may still retake the House in November, but another term for Nancy Pelosi as Speaker can’t be ruled out.

Republican Marc Molinaro was a strong candidate in New York’s 19th Congressional district. He’s the executive of Dutchess County, a large part of the district in the Hudson Valley north of New York City. But Democrat Pat Ryan won the special election with about 51% of the vote by making abortion rights his main issue. Democratic turnout exceeded expectations for a mid-August election.

Democrats also came closer than expected hitting abortion in a special election in New York’s 23rd district, coming within about 6.5 percentage points of Republican Joseph Sempolinski. This is a solidly GOP seat that should have been an easy GOP win.


These results are the fourth warning signal in recent weeks for the GOP. The Kansas abortion referendum lost in a rout, and while the GOP won special elections in districts in Minnesota and Nebraska, they did six percentage points worse than the party did in the 2020 presidential race in the districts.

This isn’t the same political climate as last November, when a voter swing of 12 points from 2020 helped the GOP take the governorship in Virginia and come close in New Jersey. Democrats are clearly more eager to vote than a year ago.

One reason is the reaction to the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade. That’s about all Mr. Ryan ran on in the Hudson Valley. Mr. Molinaro isn’t extreme on abortion, as he made clear he’s personally pro-life but opposes a national ban on abortion. He wants states to decide the issue. But Democrats will fan fears of a national ban from here to November.

Republicans are on the backfoot because they’re talking about abortion as if Roe were still the law, when it was easy to favor a total ban because it didn’t matter. Now the policy stakes are real, and Republicans will have to make clear what specific abortion limits they favor and why. The chance of abortion law changing in New York state is nil, but the GOP is still losing on the issue.

If Republicans shrink from engaging on abortion, then Democrats will define the debate. Republicans can also go on offense by pointing out that many Democrats are extreme in supporting no limits at all on abortion.

Voter turnout will be higher in November than in August, and the natural rhythm of a midterm election may assert itself, which tends to favor the party out of power. But after Dobbs, and with Mr. Trump back at the center of public debate, Democrats have a chance to overcome President Biden’s low popularity. GOP candidates have been warned.
« Last Edit: August 25, 2022, 07:34:29 AM by Crafty_Dog »

ccp

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if above true
« Reply #1172 on: August 25, 2022, 07:03:54 AM »
above 2 posts

 :x

we know the reasons for this......








Crafty_Dog

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Beto in Texas
« Reply #1175 on: August 25, 2022, 04:29:09 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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PA
« Reply #1176 on: August 26, 2022, 05:57:33 AM »
Poll finds Democrats leading Republicans in Pennsylvania races

BY TOM HOWELL JR. AND SUSAN FERRECHIO THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Pennsylvania Democrats are crushing Republican candidates in two critical statewide races, a new poll found.

A Franklin and Marshall poll released Thursday found Democratic Lt. Gov. John Fetterman leading Republican Mehmet Oz by 13 points in the race for an open Senate seat. The same poll showed Democrat Josh Shapiro, the current state attorney general, ahead of Republican Doug Mastriano by 11 points in the race for governor.

The bad news for Republicans follows an Emerson College poll that found Mr. Fetterman with a 4-point lead and Mr. Shapiro with a 3-point lead over their respective GOP opponents. Mr. Shapiro and Mr. Mastriano are vying to replace Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, who is barred from running for a third term.

The Oz-Fetterman battle is among a handful of contests that will determine which party will control the Senate in 2023.

Mr. Oz, a celebrity doctor and former talk show host, has struggled to gain traction with Pennsylvania voters despite former President Donald Trump’s endorsement. He’s suffered from social media missteps and constant hammering from Mr. Fetterman, who has worked to portray Mr. Oz as a rich carpetbagger.

Last week, Mr. Fetterman attacked Mr. Oz on social media for owning 10 houses, including a $48 million mansion in Palm Beach.

Mr. Oz has attacked Mr. Fetterman for poor eating habits and for living with his parents until he was 50.

The Oz campaign said if Mr. Fetterman had eaten more vegetables, he wouldn’t have had a stroke in May.

The Franklin and Marshall poll found the race closer when they included those who are leaning toward a candidate. Mr. Fetterman’s lead shrunk to 9 points (45% to 36%) over Mr. Oz.

The poll found Mr. Fetterman won a larger share of Democrats (76%) than Mr. Oz garnered from Republicans (62%), and Mr. Fetterman was found leading among independents by a margin of 34% to 17%.

Mr. Fetterman also led Mr. Oz 52% to 28% among voters looking for a candidate who best understands the concerns of Pennsylvanians.

The Emerson poll found the suburbs to be a battleground for the two candidates.

“Suburban voters are the battleground for this election, they are split, 47% support Fetterman and 47% support Oz,” said Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling


ccp

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Dick Morris on McConnell
« Reply #1178 on: August 28, 2022, 10:04:32 AM »
Dick's take on McConnell makes sense

I learned to take his election predictions with a giant grain of salt however and think he is overly optimistic about Repubs chances in Senate however.  I also notice how he ignored Oz in PA:

https://www.newsmax.com/newsmax-tv/mitch-mcconnell-senate-midterms/2022/08/27/id/1084883/

Sometimes I do think Morris has a tendency to say things he knows his audience wants to here in order to sell himself (and his book)

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Re: Dick Morris on McConnell
« Reply #1179 on: August 28, 2022, 11:14:00 AM »
Good article.  Pushes me over the top on McConnell.  He did some good things but now he is doing badly.

Calling McConnell out on trying to lose my be how you get him back in line.

I don't know about Oz but he is down only 4 or 5 points in the polls before Labor Day in a very difficult state.  That doesn't mean he will lose.  He has an open seat and a vulnerable opponent.

Pray - and give money.  Dems are out-raising Republicans across the country.  Of course they have an advantage.  They can reach people through email, Facebook and Twitter while conservative messages get blocked.

I think it's time to open the checkbook.
« Last Edit: August 28, 2022, 11:36:32 AM by DougMacG »

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A look at Fetterman - Oz
« Reply #1180 on: August 28, 2022, 11:57:22 AM »
https://spectatorworld.com/topic/pennsylvania-senate-race-bottom-john-fetterman-dr-oz/

Every election cycle has one. That absurd farce of a race that hardly seems like it can be real. This year the honors go to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and its clown car of a Senate campaign. There are 13 million people in the Keystone State and somehow it has come down to Republican Dr. Mehmet Oz and Democrat John Fetterman to serve in the upper house of the Congress. Where is DJ Jazzy Jeff when you need him?

By dint of a coin toss backstage, I’ll start with Dr. Oz. But where to begin? Oz is the Trump backed candidate, but he’s running like Mitt Romney, with all of the electric Utah energy that entails. There is a kind of Mid-Atlantic Republican who sort of apologizes for it — Oz oozes that. Because of this, there may be no other major GOP candidate in the entire midterm more out of step with the zeitgeist of the party than the mild-mannered, perfectly coiffed Republican.

Oz also has a demographic problem: as a daytime TV star and wellness guru, the group he should naturally appeal to is suburban women. The problem is that suburban women are the only group among whom Republicans have lost support in the past year. That’s not his fault, but it’s like being a fastball hitter who only sees breaking balls: you have to adjust — and Oz hasn’t. Even his viral crudités faux pas seemed directed at Martha Stewart-watchers, not NASCAR dads.

Now on to Fetterman. Let’s set aside the medical stuff for a moment and start from a baseline. He has the vibe of a Trump-endorsed Republican. He embodies the populist energy that Oz just can’t muster. ...
-----------------------------

[Doug]  Fetterman IS Left extremism.  Run against it.


DougMacG

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US Senat, One more tossup, Colorado
« Reply #1182 on: September 03, 2022, 09:23:47 PM »
Incumbent Dem 'up by one point in a state Joe Biden won handily'.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/colorados-sleeper-senate-race-just-got-real

Article by Salena Zito.
« Last Edit: September 03, 2022, 09:26:47 PM by DougMacG »

G M

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Re: US Senat, One more tossup, Colorado
« Reply #1183 on: September 04, 2022, 08:22:16 AM »
The dem machine will "fortify" the election.


Incumbent Dem 'up by one point in a state Joe Biden won handily'.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/colorados-sleeper-senate-race-just-got-real

Article by Salena Zito.

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1184 on: September 04, 2022, 04:03:03 PM »
Dems and media hounds along with the help of Trump and his tweets etc are able to turn the elections discussion all about him

that is all we read about now

we need independents....

who are not in love with Trump but like the policies

I don't know he we can re focus on failures of Biden with the DNC MSM onslaught
for 24/7 Trump and abortion

they seem to be able to create their own narrative and run with it every election cycle......

 :x



G M

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1185 on: September 04, 2022, 04:14:37 PM »
Dems and media hounds along with the help of Trump and his tweets etc are able to turn the elections discussion all about him

that is all we read about now

we need independents....

who are not in love with Trump but like the policies

I don't know he we can re focus on failures of Biden with the DNC MSM onslaught
for 24/7 Trump and abortion

they seem to be able to create their own narrative and run with it every election cycle......

 :x

Fill in the blank. Everyone the left hates is Hitler.

DeSantis? Deathsantis!

Mittens Romney was going to put blacks back into chains.

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Fetterman
« Reply #1186 on: September 05, 2022, 08:21:28 AM »
Media treat Fetterman’s health with gentle touch

BY DAVE BOYER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The health of Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman of Pennsylvania has received relatively little media scrutiny since he suffered a stroke more than three months ago, an episode that he says nearly killed him.

Mr. Fetterman and Republican rival Mehmet Oz were supposed to square off in their first debate Tuesday night, but Mr. Fetterman bowed out. Instead of saying he wasn’t physically ready to debate, Mr. Fetterman claimed the Oz campaign was mocking his recovery.

Rather than raising questions about debate-dodging and Mr. Fetterman’s fitness, most media coverage was devoted to criticizing Mr. Oz for complaining that his opponent was ducking transparency.

“The media is absolutely giving [Mr. Fetterman] a pass for his health,” said Republican strategist

Ray Zaborney, a veteran of campaigns in Pennsylvania. “If a Republican couldn’t debate because of his health, that is all we would hear about.”

Mr. Fetterman, the state’s lieutenant governor, also is avoiding questions about whether he will ever debate Mr. Oz, a former TV celebrity doctor. He is leading Mr. Oz by 7.4 percentage points in the Real Clear Politics average of recent polls.

In the absence of a debate, Mr. Oz has scheduled a press conference Tuesday with retiring Sen. Patrick J. Toomey, a Republican whose seat he hopes to win. The contest in the battleground state is one of the most closely watched this year as Democrats seek to defend their majority hold on the 50-50 split Senate.

In one of Mr. Fetterman’s few media appearances, he recently conducted a recorded interview with MSNBC and complained that the Oz campaign was ridiculing him as a stroke survivor.

“When they want to get into a serious conversation and really talk about having a debate, I’d be happy to engage in that,” Mr. Fetterman told host Stephanie Ruhle, who didn’t press him on the subject.

Mr. Fetterman did say that he feels “amazing” and is walking 5 miles per day. He also said he is having difficulty hearing sometimes.

“The only lingering issue is every now and then I will have auditory processing [difficulty],” he said. “And I might miss a word every now and then. Or I might mush two words together.”

Oz campaign communications director Brittany Yanick said Mr. Fetterman is ducking debates and lying about whether he will ever square off against Mr. Oz on a debate stage.

“He won’t debate Dr. Oz at all, and we all know it,” Ms. Yanick said. “We thought John Fetterman was a big, tough guy, so what is he so afraid of? Is he afraid of defending his radical record of releasing murderers back on the streets? Let us know, John.”

Mr. Zaborney said, “He should debate, and if he can’t, just say so and let voters make their determination. He’s trying to have it both ways. Either your health is bad and you can’t debate or your health is fine and he won’t debate — can’t be both.”

During the Democratic primary, Mr. Fetterman took part in two debates and was panned by fellow Democrats for poor performances. Other Democrats characterized his debating style as “unlistenable,” “painfully bad” and “not ready for prime time.”

The Fetterman campaign did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

Mr. Fetterman, 53, suffered a stroke on May 13, four days before the Democratic primary. He had a pacemaker implanted on May 17.

He credits his wife, Gisele, for recognizing the stroke symptoms and taking him to a medical facility within 20 minutes.

“I’m just so grateful that I not only that I survived because I was close to this top stroke facility,” he said. “And I was able to get there quickly, and that has allowed me to survive and to be now running a very successful campaign.”

The Democrat made two brief campaign appearances in August, raising questions about his stamina and whether he has fully recovered his communication skills. Mr. Fetterman said he is working to “improve my auditory processing and speech.”

He attended a mid-August fundraiser in the ultra-wealthy Hamptons in New York. A campaign spokesman told ABC News that Mr. Fetterman, who campaigns on his “regular guy” image, appeared in the posh summer playground “because his campaign needs to raise money to fight back against the unprecedented onslaught of attacks and negative ads from Dr. Oz and his rich friends.”

Fetterman campaign strategist Rebecca Katz said Mr. Fetterman’s “occasional issues he is having with auditory processing have no bearing on his ability to do the job as senator.”

“We are working to figure out what a fair debate would look like with the lingering impacts of the auditory processing in mind,” she told Politico. “John is healthy and fully capable of showing up and doing the work.”

Research on stroke survivors shows that “immediate medical attention, such as the treatment that Mr. Fetterman received, leads to better long-term outcomes,” said Suzanne Coyle, executive director of the Stroke Comeback Center in suburban Washington.

“Without working with Mr. Fetterman, it would be impossible to make a prediction about his ability or time frame to successfully return to a full work schedule,” she said. “This should be left to his team of physicians, physical and occupational therapists, and speech-language pathologists.”

After the stroke, Mr. Fetterman’s cardiologist issued a statement that essentially said his patient ignored warning signs over several years. Dr. Ramesh Chandra said Mr. Fetterman had undisclosed heart conditions and had not seen any doctor or taken his required medications since his first diagnosis in 2017.

“I first saw John in 2017,” wrote Dr. Chandra. “He was experiencing swelling in his feet and came to get it checked out. That is when I diagnosed him with atrial fibrillation, an irregular heart rhythm, along with a decreased heart pump.”

He said he prescribed medications and improved diet and exercise and asked Mr. Fetterman to see him again in the following months.

“Instead, I did not see him again until [after the stroke],” Dr. Chandra said. “John did not go to any doctor for five years, and did not continue taking his medications.”

The doctor said he plans to see Mr. Fetterman again in mid-November “to monitor his progress.”

“The prognosis I can give for John’s heart is this: If he takes his medications, eats healthy and exercises, he’ll be fine,” Dr. Chandra wrote. “If he does what I’ve told him, and I do believe that he is taking his recovery and his health very seriously this time, he should be able to campaign and serve in the U.S. Senate without a problem.”

Said Mrs. Fetterman, “The doctors all said that he will make a full recovery and that he’s more than fit and in shape to do this, to take this on. I did save his life, and I will never let him forget that.”

G M

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Re: Fetterman
« Reply #1187 on: September 05, 2022, 08:29:13 AM »
If a mentally impaired puppet can be in the white house, one can be in the senate as well.


Media treat Fetterman’s health with gentle touch

BY DAVE BOYER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The health of Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman of Pennsylvania has received relatively little media scrutiny since he suffered a stroke more than three months ago, an episode that he says nearly killed him.

Mr. Fetterman and Republican rival Mehmet Oz were supposed to square off in their first debate Tuesday night, but Mr. Fetterman bowed out. Instead of saying he wasn’t physically ready to debate, Mr. Fetterman claimed the Oz campaign was mocking his recovery.

Rather than raising questions about debate-dodging and Mr. Fetterman’s fitness, most media coverage was devoted to criticizing Mr. Oz for complaining that his opponent was ducking transparency.

“The media is absolutely giving [Mr. Fetterman] a pass for his health,” said Republican strategist

Ray Zaborney, a veteran of campaigns in Pennsylvania. “If a Republican couldn’t debate because of his health, that is all we would hear about.”

Mr. Fetterman, the state’s lieutenant governor, also is avoiding questions about whether he will ever debate Mr. Oz, a former TV celebrity doctor. He is leading Mr. Oz by 7.4 percentage points in the Real Clear Politics average of recent polls.

In the absence of a debate, Mr. Oz has scheduled a press conference Tuesday with retiring Sen. Patrick J. Toomey, a Republican whose seat he hopes to win. The contest in the battleground state is one of the most closely watched this year as Democrats seek to defend their majority hold on the 50-50 split Senate.

In one of Mr. Fetterman’s few media appearances, he recently conducted a recorded interview with MSNBC and complained that the Oz campaign was ridiculing him as a stroke survivor.

“When they want to get into a serious conversation and really talk about having a debate, I’d be happy to engage in that,” Mr. Fetterman told host Stephanie Ruhle, who didn’t press him on the subject.

Mr. Fetterman did say that he feels “amazing” and is walking 5 miles per day. He also said he is having difficulty hearing sometimes.

“The only lingering issue is every now and then I will have auditory processing [difficulty],” he said. “And I might miss a word every now and then. Or I might mush two words together.”

Oz campaign communications director Brittany Yanick said Mr. Fetterman is ducking debates and lying about whether he will ever square off against Mr. Oz on a debate stage.

“He won’t debate Dr. Oz at all, and we all know it,” Ms. Yanick said. “We thought John Fetterman was a big, tough guy, so what is he so afraid of? Is he afraid of defending his radical record of releasing murderers back on the streets? Let us know, John.”

Mr. Zaborney said, “He should debate, and if he can’t, just say so and let voters make their determination. He’s trying to have it both ways. Either your health is bad and you can’t debate or your health is fine and he won’t debate — can’t be both.”

During the Democratic primary, Mr. Fetterman took part in two debates and was panned by fellow Democrats for poor performances. Other Democrats characterized his debating style as “unlistenable,” “painfully bad” and “not ready for prime time.”

The Fetterman campaign did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

Mr. Fetterman, 53, suffered a stroke on May 13, four days before the Democratic primary. He had a pacemaker implanted on May 17.

He credits his wife, Gisele, for recognizing the stroke symptoms and taking him to a medical facility within 20 minutes.

“I’m just so grateful that I not only that I survived because I was close to this top stroke facility,” he said. “And I was able to get there quickly, and that has allowed me to survive and to be now running a very successful campaign.”

The Democrat made two brief campaign appearances in August, raising questions about his stamina and whether he has fully recovered his communication skills. Mr. Fetterman said he is working to “improve my auditory processing and speech.”

He attended a mid-August fundraiser in the ultra-wealthy Hamptons in New York. A campaign spokesman told ABC News that Mr. Fetterman, who campaigns on his “regular guy” image, appeared in the posh summer playground “because his campaign needs to raise money to fight back against the unprecedented onslaught of attacks and negative ads from Dr. Oz and his rich friends.”

Fetterman campaign strategist Rebecca Katz said Mr. Fetterman’s “occasional issues he is having with auditory processing have no bearing on his ability to do the job as senator.”

“We are working to figure out what a fair debate would look like with the lingering impacts of the auditory processing in mind,” she told Politico. “John is healthy and fully capable of showing up and doing the work.”

Research on stroke survivors shows that “immediate medical attention, such as the treatment that Mr. Fetterman received, leads to better long-term outcomes,” said Suzanne Coyle, executive director of the Stroke Comeback Center in suburban Washington.

“Without working with Mr. Fetterman, it would be impossible to make a prediction about his ability or time frame to successfully return to a full work schedule,” she said. “This should be left to his team of physicians, physical and occupational therapists, and speech-language pathologists.”

After the stroke, Mr. Fetterman’s cardiologist issued a statement that essentially said his patient ignored warning signs over several years. Dr. Ramesh Chandra said Mr. Fetterman had undisclosed heart conditions and had not seen any doctor or taken his required medications since his first diagnosis in 2017.

“I first saw John in 2017,” wrote Dr. Chandra. “He was experiencing swelling in his feet and came to get it checked out. That is when I diagnosed him with atrial fibrillation, an irregular heart rhythm, along with a decreased heart pump.”

He said he prescribed medications and improved diet and exercise and asked Mr. Fetterman to see him again in the following months.

“Instead, I did not see him again until [after the stroke],” Dr. Chandra said. “John did not go to any doctor for five years, and did not continue taking his medications.”

The doctor said he plans to see Mr. Fetterman again in mid-November “to monitor his progress.”

“The prognosis I can give for John’s heart is this: If he takes his medications, eats healthy and exercises, he’ll be fine,” Dr. Chandra wrote. “If he does what I’ve told him, and I do believe that he is taking his recovery and his health very seriously this time, he should be able to campaign and serve in the U.S. Senate without a problem.”

Said Mrs. Fetterman, “The doctors all said that he will make a full recovery and that he’s more than fit and in shape to do this, to take this on. I did save his life, and I will never let him forget that.”

DougMacG

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The toxic President and the 2022 Congressional races
« Reply #1188 on: September 07, 2022, 08:39:20 AM »
Imagine you're trying to get your name and message out there, fundraising is hard and messaging is really expensive, then the President of the United States, Leader of the Free World coms in to help you, literally millions of dollars of free attention - and you skip the event.

Wisconsin Democratic Senate candidate skips Biden speech for other ‘events across the state’
"...had other engagements and was unable to attend Mr. Biden‘s Milwaukee Labor Day campaign speech."

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2022/sep/6/wisconsins-mandela-barnes-senate-candidate-skips-b/
--------------------------------------------

In Colorado they skipped Biden and Pelosi:

"Michael Bennet Avoids Biden, Pelosi on the Campaign Trail"

"Colorado Dems want national leadership to stay away from the state"

"DENVER, Colo. — Sen. Michael Bennet (D.) wants the president nowhere near Colorado, highlighting how toxic Joe Biden is..."
"Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) on Wednesday arrived in Boulder, Colo., to champion the Inflation Reduction Act. No Colorado Democrat aside from Rep. Joe Neguse was in attendance."

https://freebeacon.com/democrats/michael-bennet-avoids-biden-pelosi-on-the-campaign-trail/

Biden carried both of these stats by "wide margins" (10,000 votes in WI) less than two years ago, and he's 'governing great', why would anyone consider him toxic?

Actions tell you what their words don't, Democrat's internal polling is way different than Dem-media polls released to the public.

In other words, they are lying to you.
-----
Update, free beacon, NC too:
https://freebeacon.com/?p=1634787
« Last Edit: September 08, 2022, 03:34:30 AM by DougMacG »

G M

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Re: Fetterman AKA Braindamage McManboobs
« Reply #1189 on: September 07, 2022, 04:44:34 PM »
https://www.revolver.news/2022/09/fetterman-is-not-doing-well-campaign-releases-yikes-statement/

If a mentally impaired puppet can be in the white house, one can be in the senate as well.


Media treat Fetterman’s health with gentle touch

BY DAVE BOYER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The health of Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman of Pennsylvania has received relatively little media scrutiny since he suffered a stroke more than three months ago, an episode that he says nearly killed him.

Mr. Fetterman and Republican rival Mehmet Oz were supposed to square off in their first debate Tuesday night, but Mr. Fetterman bowed out. Instead of saying he wasn’t physically ready to debate, Mr. Fetterman claimed the Oz campaign was mocking his recovery.

Rather than raising questions about debate-dodging and Mr. Fetterman’s fitness, most media coverage was devoted to criticizing Mr. Oz for complaining that his opponent was ducking transparency.

“The media is absolutely giving [Mr. Fetterman] a pass for his health,” said Republican strategist

Ray Zaborney, a veteran of campaigns in Pennsylvania. “If a Republican couldn’t debate because of his health, that is all we would hear about.”

Mr. Fetterman, the state’s lieutenant governor, also is avoiding questions about whether he will ever debate Mr. Oz, a former TV celebrity doctor. He is leading Mr. Oz by 7.4 percentage points in the Real Clear Politics average of recent polls.

In the absence of a debate, Mr. Oz has scheduled a press conference Tuesday with retiring Sen. Patrick J. Toomey, a Republican whose seat he hopes to win. The contest in the battleground state is one of the most closely watched this year as Democrats seek to defend their majority hold on the 50-50 split Senate.

In one of Mr. Fetterman’s few media appearances, he recently conducted a recorded interview with MSNBC and complained that the Oz campaign was ridiculing him as a stroke survivor.

“When they want to get into a serious conversation and really talk about having a debate, I’d be happy to engage in that,” Mr. Fetterman told host Stephanie Ruhle, who didn’t press him on the subject.

Mr. Fetterman did say that he feels “amazing” and is walking 5 miles per day. He also said he is having difficulty hearing sometimes.

“The only lingering issue is every now and then I will have auditory processing [difficulty],” he said. “And I might miss a word every now and then. Or I might mush two words together.”

Oz campaign communications director Brittany Yanick said Mr. Fetterman is ducking debates and lying about whether he will ever square off against Mr. Oz on a debate stage.

“He won’t debate Dr. Oz at all, and we all know it,” Ms. Yanick said. “We thought John Fetterman was a big, tough guy, so what is he so afraid of? Is he afraid of defending his radical record of releasing murderers back on the streets? Let us know, John.”

Mr. Zaborney said, “He should debate, and if he can’t, just say so and let voters make their determination. He’s trying to have it both ways. Either your health is bad and you can’t debate or your health is fine and he won’t debate — can’t be both.”

During the Democratic primary, Mr. Fetterman took part in two debates and was panned by fellow Democrats for poor performances. Other Democrats characterized his debating style as “unlistenable,” “painfully bad” and “not ready for prime time.”

The Fetterman campaign did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

Mr. Fetterman, 53, suffered a stroke on May 13, four days before the Democratic primary. He had a pacemaker implanted on May 17.

He credits his wife, Gisele, for recognizing the stroke symptoms and taking him to a medical facility within 20 minutes.

“I’m just so grateful that I not only that I survived because I was close to this top stroke facility,” he said. “And I was able to get there quickly, and that has allowed me to survive and to be now running a very successful campaign.”

The Democrat made two brief campaign appearances in August, raising questions about his stamina and whether he has fully recovered his communication skills. Mr. Fetterman said he is working to “improve my auditory processing and speech.”

He attended a mid-August fundraiser in the ultra-wealthy Hamptons in New York. A campaign spokesman told ABC News that Mr. Fetterman, who campaigns on his “regular guy” image, appeared in the posh summer playground “because his campaign needs to raise money to fight back against the unprecedented onslaught of attacks and negative ads from Dr. Oz and his rich friends.”

Fetterman campaign strategist Rebecca Katz said Mr. Fetterman’s “occasional issues he is having with auditory processing have no bearing on his ability to do the job as senator.”

“We are working to figure out what a fair debate would look like with the lingering impacts of the auditory processing in mind,” she told Politico. “John is healthy and fully capable of showing up and doing the work.”

Research on stroke survivors shows that “immediate medical attention, such as the treatment that Mr. Fetterman received, leads to better long-term outcomes,” said Suzanne Coyle, executive director of the Stroke Comeback Center in suburban Washington.

“Without working with Mr. Fetterman, it would be impossible to make a prediction about his ability or time frame to successfully return to a full work schedule,” she said. “This should be left to his team of physicians, physical and occupational therapists, and speech-language pathologists.”

After the stroke, Mr. Fetterman’s cardiologist issued a statement that essentially said his patient ignored warning signs over several years. Dr. Ramesh Chandra said Mr. Fetterman had undisclosed heart conditions and had not seen any doctor or taken his required medications since his first diagnosis in 2017.

“I first saw John in 2017,” wrote Dr. Chandra. “He was experiencing swelling in his feet and came to get it checked out. That is when I diagnosed him with atrial fibrillation, an irregular heart rhythm, along with a decreased heart pump.”

He said he prescribed medications and improved diet and exercise and asked Mr. Fetterman to see him again in the following months.

“Instead, I did not see him again until [after the stroke],” Dr. Chandra said. “John did not go to any doctor for five years, and did not continue taking his medications.”

The doctor said he plans to see Mr. Fetterman again in mid-November “to monitor his progress.”

“The prognosis I can give for John’s heart is this: If he takes his medications, eats healthy and exercises, he’ll be fine,” Dr. Chandra wrote. “If he does what I’ve told him, and I do believe that he is taking his recovery and his health very seriously this time, he should be able to campaign and serve in the U.S. Senate without a problem.”

Said Mrs. Fetterman, “The doctors all said that he will make a full recovery and that he’s more than fit and in shape to do this, to take this on. I did save his life, and I will never let him forget that.”
« Last Edit: September 08, 2022, 06:11:44 AM by G M »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The US Congress; Congressional races
« Reply #1190 on: September 08, 2022, 03:14:17 AM »
Oz has just said that he would have voted to certify Biden's election.

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Re: Manchin out in '24?
« Reply #1192 on: September 11, 2022, 12:38:05 PM »
https://www.westernjournal.com/joe-manchin-gets-bad-news-back-home-looks-like-career/

Good.  Joe M stayed Dem too long. 

Besides being wrong, I think he was backstabbed on the bill.  Does not know who his friends are.

He is 75, will be 77 in 24.  Maybe he's okay leaving.

If not leaving, he is a political survivor.  He could call out the backstabbing and anomosity from the Left, switch parties and shift the balance of the Senate right now.  That's what I would recommend.  )

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Bolduc wins primary in NH
« Reply #1193 on: September 14, 2022, 11:05:57 AM »
By CAROLINE DOWNEY
September 14, 2022 8:29 AM
MAGA champion and retired brigadier general Don Bolduc appears to have won the New Hampshire GOP Senate primary Tuesday, after moderate Republican candidate and president of the state senate Chuck Morse conceded early Wednesday.

As of 8 a.m., Bolduc held a 1,200 vote lead over Morse, though the Associated Press had yet to call the race. Despite the narrow margin, Morse wrote on Twitter that he had called Bolduc to concede the race.

It’s been a long night & we’ve come up short. I want to thank my supporters for all the blood, sweat & tears they poured into this team effort. I just called and wished all the best to @GenDonBolduc. The focus this fall needs to be on defeating Maggie Hassan.

— Senator Chuck Morse (@Morse4Senate) September 14, 2022

A supporter of former president Donald Trump, Bolduc doubled down on his 2020 election denial at a recent debate, insisting that the outcome was fraudulent. Outraged by the FBI’s surprise raid of Trump’s Florida residence on the grounds that he mishandled government records, Bolduc said he was open to abolishing the agency.

Bolduc served in the U.S. Army for 33 years and deployed to Afghanistan after the September 11 terrorist attacks. He first sought the Republican nomination for Senate in 2020, which he failed to secure, and then ran again this year. He decried the Biden administration’s haphazard withdrawal from Afghanistan last year as a disaster and a military embarrassment.

Bolduc has targeted Republican New Hampshire governor Chris Sununu on the campaign trail, last year calling him a “Communist Chinese sympathizer.” Sununu has been unconvinced that Bolduc is a competitive candidate to beat incumbent Democratic senator Maggie Hassan in the fall.

“He’s not a serious candidate, he’s really not, and if he were the GOP nominee I have no doubt we would have a much harder time,” Sununu said of Bolduc on WGIR radio last month. “He’s kind of a conspiracy theorist–type candidate.”


Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Alaska
« Reply #1195 on: September 15, 2022, 08:03:53 AM »
How Republicans Might Lose Alaska Again
New ranked-choice data say Begich beats Peltola, but Palin won’t quit.
By The Editorial Board
Sept. 14, 2022 6:31 pm ET


Mary Peltola was sworn in Tuesday as Alaska’s Democratic Congresswoman, and given her state’s Republican tilt, that phrase still hits the ear like the Cat representative from Dogtown. When Ms. Peltola won last month’s special election, many in the GOP blamed Alaska’s new ranked-choice voting system. The case for ditching it is now being bolstered by fresh data.

Recall how Ms. Peltola’s improbable victory went down: She was the only Democrat on the ballot, with 40.2% of first-choice votes. Two Republicans split the rest, Sarah Palin with 31.3% and Nick Begich with 28.5%. Under the ranked-choice system, Mr. Begich was eliminated and his voters were shuffled to their second choices. Half migrated to Ms. Palin. A quarter went to Ms. Peltola, giving her a 51.5% majority.

A quirk of ranked-choice voting is that the final winner might flip depending on the rankings further down the ballot. What if instead Ms. Palin had been eliminated? That’s the question we asked when the result was announced, but it was impossible to know, because the state hadn’t released data on the second choices of her voters. Here’s the answer: Mr. Begich would have won the seat with about 52.5% of the vote, a point higher than Ms. Peltola’s victory.

That’s according to an analysis of Alaska election data byFairVote, a group that favors ranked choice. If Ms. Palin had been eliminated, 59% of her voters would have gone to Mr. Begich and only 6% to Ms. Peltola. Interestingly, among voters who ranked the Democrat first, the effective second pick (skipping some write-ins) for 63% was also Mr. Begich. Only 5% chose Ms. Palin. Advocates say ranked choice is better at producing consensus winners, but in Alaska that would have been Mr. Begich.

The state’s new voting system isn’t responsible for the GOP split or Ms. Palin’s controversial history. In a traditional Republican primary, she might have beat Mr. Begich anyway and then lost to Ms. Peltola. But at least that would have given Mr. Begich a chance to make a direct case to Republicans that Ms. Palin is too polarizing to win. Ranked-choice voting discourages people from dwelling on the vital question of electability. The theory is that voters can simply number their favorites, and it will all come out in the wash.


Alaska will more or less re-run this election in November, and the strategies could get exotic. Ms. Palin has refused to drop out, arguing that she beat Mr. Begich. But why would Mr. Begich quit, since the data say he’s the only Republican who can win? His unenviable job now is to convince Palin superfans to think tactically and pick him first in a general election, while the ranked-choice crowd urges them to follow their hearts and trust the reallocation.

Democrats have an obvious incentive to ensure Mr. Begich is eliminated. What if the final pre-election polls show him edging out Ms. Palin among the GOP? Some Democrats might decide that the best use of their ballots is to vote for Ms. Palin, so she can survive to lose to Ms. Peltola in the last round. Ranked choice encourages this kind of thinking to game the system.

A final word about transparency: We’re relying on the FairVote analysis because Alaska still hasn’t released this data set in an easily readable format. Instead the state posted “a JSON file, used by the ranked-choice software.” The Division of Elections adds that it “cannot help voters access or analyze the data.”

Sorry, but this is moose baloney. Ranked-choice tabulation gets complicated, but a democratic government is supposed to let citizens see with their own eyes how the votes break down. That’s part of maintaining trust in elections.

The question for November is whether Republicans can coordinate better to prevent Ms. Peltola from getting a full two-year term. The longer debate is whether Alaskans want to stick with an opaque ranked-choice system that produces perverse results.

Crafty_Dog

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Newt: Masters will beat Kelly in AZ
« Reply #1196 on: September 15, 2022, 09:11:36 AM »
Why Masters will beat Kelly in Arizona

The issues all cut against incumbent — and most all other Democrats

By Newt Gingrich

Despite all the talk in Washington about Arizona’s U.S. Senate race, I predict Blake Masters will defeat incumbent Democrat Sen. Mark Kelly by a surprising margin.

No one in the left-wing establishment or the propaganda media wants to look at the facts on the ground in Arizona.

First, Arizona is a much more Republican state than Washington’s so-called experts think it is.

The most recent Emerson poll has former President Donald Trump three points ahead of President Biden. The same poll has the governor’s race tied at 46% for each candidate — despite the Republican having come out of a deeply divisive primary. Finally, Emerson has Mr. Kelly barely ahead at 47% to 45%.

When an incumbent senator is only two points ahead of a challenger who just came out of a tough primary, it is clear the incumbent is vulnerable. Furthermore, an incumbent who cannot get above 50% is even more vulnerable. James Carville once said a wellknown incumbent gets whatever their final poll number is, they don’t get any of the undecideds. If that is true, Mr. Kelly will likely lose 53% to 47%.

However, I think the margin of defeat will be bigger.

The issues all cut against Mr. Kelly — and most all Democrat incumbents. While the Democrats are desperately hoping fervor over the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade ruling will save them, the fact is a substantial majority of Americans favor some level of limits to abortion (usually 15 weeks). They also oppose partial-birth abortion, tax-funded abortion, and abortion for sex selection purposes (which tends to be anti-female). It is the Democrats who are the extremists on abortion, and every Republican who makes that clear is going to do fine in that fight.

Mr. Kelly has three big anchors weighing down his reelection bid: Inflation; crime and drugs; and the illegal immigration wave that’s threatening Arizonans.

The announcement this week that the inflation rate remained devastatingly high at 8.3% hurts every American family. Most people simply can’t maintain their standard of living with what is essentially an 8.3% pay cut. Furthermore, high infl ation rates hit senior citizens living on fixed incomes and the poor especially hard.

When the U.S. Army is announcing it is advising its lower-paid soldiers to go on food stamps, you know the system is breaking down. This has not happened since the Jimmy Carter administration’s inflation.

Mr. Kelly is further hurt by inflation because most voters think the spending bills he has been voting for increase the inflation rate. The socalled Inflation Reduction Act is seen as a bad joke by most Americans because they think it actually increases the inflation rate with its massive increase in spending.

The U.S. Federal Reserve’s commitment to push America into a painful recession as an anti-inflationary measure was reflected by the immediate drop in the stock market (which further hurts 401ks and retirement savings that people have worked so hard to set aside).

So, just like the Carter years, Democrats such as Mr. Kelly own a painful economy their party created that they can neither defend nor solve. Their desperate answer will be to launch hateful, divisive attacks on Republicans. They can’t solve anything, so they have to attack.

The flood of illegal drugs and crime crossing the border from Mexico — and the growing cartel violence which dominates northern Mexico — create a sense of insecurity and fear that the Washington elites simply can’t understand. They just don’t feel the pressure 2,300 miles from Phoenix.

For example, when Vice President Kamala Harris said on NBC’s Meet the Press that “the border is secure,” it was so clearly false the New York Post editorialized that she was telling “bald-faced lies.” The border may seem secure to Ms. Harris in an NBC studio in Washington, but it sure doesn’t seem secure to anyone living in Arizona.

Remember that Mr. Kelly voted 94% of the time with the Biden-Harris administration — despite the administration’s complete dishonesty about the border, crime, inflation, and so many other things.

This leads to Mr. Kelly’s greatest vulnerability.

Since January 2020, there have been an estimated 847,000 people illegally crossing the Arizona border from Mexico. (This only includes those encountered by U.S. Border Patrol and does not count the several hundred thousand who avoid all contact with authorities). In fiscal year 2021, there were 312,000 encounters. In July alone, there were 42,000 encounters (plus those who avoided authorities).

This steady flood of people illegally entering the United States is clearly more than the current members of the Border Patrol can handle. They need help.

When given the chance to help the Border Patrol, Mr. Kelly refused.

Sen. Rick Scott of Florida proposed an amendment to the so-called Inflation Reduction Act which called for hiring 18,000 more Border Patrol agents before a single new IRS agent could be hired. At 3:27 a.m. on Aug. 7, 2022, Mr. Kelly voted “no.” Nearly 12 hours later, at 3:04 p.m. Mr. Kelly voted “yes” to hire 87,000 more IRS agents.

When the people of Arizona learn that Mr. Kelly was against Border Patrol to protect Arizonans but for IRS agents to audit Arizonans, I suspect they will determine that he represents Washington and the Biden administration — not Arizona and the people of Arizona.

I am confident Mr. Masters will be the next senator from Arizona.

For more commentary from Newt

DougMacG

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Re: Newt: Masters will beat Kelly in AZ
« Reply #1197 on: September 15, 2022, 11:34:11 AM »
The facts are on our side.  Now how do you get the facts out to the voters - other than the preaching to the choir crowd?

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Blake Master for Senate from AZ
« Reply #1198 on: September 17, 2022, 06:16:36 AM »
Peter Thiel, Losing Arizona
He and Donald Trump helped Blake Masters get the nomination. Where are they now?
Kimberley A. Strassel hedcutBy Kimberley A. StrasselFollow
Sept. 15, 2022 6:46 pm ET



If Republicans lose a tantalizingly close Arizona Senate race, don’t place the blame entirely at the feet of nominee Blake Masters. Look to his AWOL booster club.

In the Republican push to retake the Senate, the Grand Canyon State ought to be a prime pickup. Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly only narrowly won his 2020 special election. Republican and unaffiliated voters make up the vast majority of the electorate, and most are angry over inflation, border chaos and rising crime. Polls are tightening and suggest Mr. Masters has cut the Kelly lead in half over the past month. He trails by about 4 points in the RealClearPolitics average.

The problem is money, or rather Mr. Masters’ lack of it. Only six weeks ago the nominee emerged from a brutal, expensive five-way primary. Spending even more heavily to ensure a Masters victory was billionaire donor Peter Thiel, who backed his former employee to the tune of $12 million. The Thiel support influenced Donald Trump to endorse Mr. Masters and to hold a rally for him in the run-up to the primary. The New York Times in February described Mr. Thiel as the new “would-be kingmaker” of the GOP.

Only where’s the would-be kingmaker now? Sitting in his counting house, the doors firmly locked. Mr. Thiel has abandoned the Arizona race, as well as the Ohio Senate candidate he spent $15 million to nominate, J.D. Vance. Mr. Trump is meanwhile using this cycle to hoover up grassroots donations that might otherwise go to competitive midterm candidates and so far refuses to commit any of the estimated $99 million in a leadership PAC to his endorsees. The Lucys have pulled the football, leaving the GOP’s Arizona project to fall on its back.

Criticism is landing on Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s Senate Leadership Fund, which recently announced it was canceling $8 million in Arizona ad reservations. But spare a thought for the outfit that has been left holding the Thiel-Trump bag. Resources aren’t infinite, and Mr. McConnell’s super PAC suddenly finds itself having to shovel unexpected millions into defending an Ohio seat that ought to be a breeze but in which (Thiel-less) Mr. Vance is struggling. It’s also defending seats in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and North Carolina. One Nation (affiliated with the Senate Leadership Fund) spent some $13 million in Arizona through Labor Day, and the fund will be playing on television again in October.

But it may prove too late. Mr. Kelly continues to coast on a bio that depicts him as a tough-guy former astronaut as well as a bold moderate who puts Arizona first. “I’m pushing for solutions today, even if it means taking on my own party,” brags a recent ad, in which he says he’s “bringing down gas prices by allowing more domestic oil production.” Another has him declaring his party’s defund-the-police movement “wrong,” and palling around with cops.

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Yet it’s notable how much money it has already required for Mr. Kelly to maintain this political facade and defend his narrow lead. His campaign and wealthy outside groups have spent an estimated $60 million to $80 million on his behalf this year alone (as Mr. Masters burned the vast majority of his cash in his primary). Arizona TV is currently wall-to-wall with pro-Kelly and anti-Masters ads, but the Democrat is still below 50% in voter polls.

This suggests real skepticism about Mr. Kelly’s “moderate” shtick, which Arizona Republican operatives are itching to exploit. Tallies show Mr. Kelly has voted 94% with Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s progressive agenda, including his support for Joe Biden’s 2021 “Covid relief” blowout that fueled inflation. He’s voted numerous times to shut down the Keystone pipeline and to allow a ban on fracking. During debate for the recently passed Inflation Reduction Act, Mr. Kelly voted against hiring 18,000 additional Border Patrol agents and for an additional 87,000 Internal Revenue Service auditors.

The Masters campaign has suffered from a lack of focus and discipline. It needs the dollars to redefine a candidate who emerged from a primary with marks. Yet as with many GOP campaigns, it’s struggling with Trump donor fatigue, as well as soaring inflation that has crimped household budgets and dried up small-dollar donations. Only big-donor money will match the flood of blue groups backing Mr. Kelly.

Some groups see the obvious potential for a win and are investing. A super PAC aligned with Heritage Action announced $5 million for the race, while Saving Arizona PAC staked a $1.5 million ad buy. The Club for Growth is spending and plans to spend more, while the National Republican Senatorial Committee continues to play a role.

But the big question among Arizona Republicans is: Where are the power players when you need them? Playing in the GOP primary sandbox is easy. Yet those “wins” now notched, the kingmakers are abandoning the only vote-counting that really matters, even as the stakes could not be higher? Republican voters shouldn’t forget this moment if a few months from now an expanded Democratic Senate is dismantling the filibuster.

ccp

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WE SHOULD BALLOT HARVEST LIKE THEY DO TO EXPOSE THEIR LIES
« Reply #1199 on: September 17, 2022, 07:31:17 AM »
these "close" races really worry me

especially those that include  mail in ballots
and worse ballots that are accepted AFTER election day.

no doubt the libs will be hard at work pulling there ballot fraud tricks.

Like we proved what we already knew about the hypocrisy of the elites with Martha/migrants vineyard

WE SHOULD PROVE THE HYPOCRISY OF THE DEMS ON BALLOT HARVESTING

WE DO THE SAME THING TILL THE LAST DAY POSSIBLE - THEN WE COUNTER THEIR CHEATING

AND WATCH THEM HOWL ABOUT ELECTION FRAUD!!!

 :-o