Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday November 6, 2020
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THE EPOCH TIMES
NOVEMBER 6, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
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AXIOS
Axios AM
It’s Friday. Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,484 words … 5½ minutes.
🍑 Bulletin … Potential game change: Just after 4 a.m., Joe Biden overtook President Trump in ballots counted in Georgia — a Republican stronghold the president must win. AP says the race is too early to call:
- Biden now has a 917-vote advantage. Thousands of ballots are still left to be counted — many in counties where the former vice president was in the lead.
- Biden’s vote margins grew as counties processed mail ballots cast in his favor.
- Go deeper: Why AP hasn’t called Georgia.
🐦 Twitter has slapped warnings on 12 Trump tweets in the past 60 hours.
President Trump arrives at 6:48 p.m. in the White House briefing room. Photo: Evan Vucci/AP
President Trump is pinning his hopes — and presidency — on a wild, relentless war against reality and truth, falsely claiming several states are stealing the election by adhering to their laws, rules, and long precedents.
- Why it matters: Trump fears the election will be called today, perhaps first by Fox News, and that his effort to get the Supreme Court to intervene will fail, officials tell us.
- Trump and his eldest son, Don Jr., are demanding Republicans support his campaign to paint the election as fraudulent and stolen.
Important to note: It is not at all unusual, much less fraudulent, to count mail-in votes after Election Day — and for the results to change as new tallies come in.
- Each state sets its rules well in advance of the election.
A Trump tweet at 3:10 a.m., which was labeled as “misleading” by Twitter, captures perfectly his war on truth:
- “I easily WIN the Presidency of the United States with LEGAL VOTES CAST. The OBSERVERS were not allowed, in any way, shape, or form, to do their job and therefore, votes accepted during this period must be determined to be ILLEGAL VOTES. U.S. Supreme Court should decide!”
Reality check:
- There’s no evidence of widespread illegal votes in any state, much less the several he would need to flip to “easily win.”
- Trump is trying, in several ways, to make it appear that observers — a normal part of the vote-counting process — are being shut out to cover up “illegal” votes. This is simply false.
- The Supreme Court only steps into elections in exceptionally rare instances. Even lawyers sympathetic to Trump struggle to find legal rationale for the current state-specific disputes to rise to the highest court.
The bottom line: The election could be called as soon as today. Trump can demand recounts and court cases — so be patient and allow the political and legal process to play out, as designed.
- Truth is, the system, imperfect as it might be, works.
Photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images
Senior White House and Trump campaign officials are complaining bitterly about poor internal communication, blaming colleagues, pondering what jobs they might try to get next year, and lashing out at their new enemy — Fox News, Axios’ Jonathan Swan reports.
- Aides told Swan they’re dreading the prospect of Fox calling Pennsylvania for Joe Biden, which could make the conservative network the first to give Biden 270 electoral votes.
- A Trump campaign official said the internal view was that it’s essential to keep the race “optically” alive, and that if Fox were to call it, it would severely harm their efforts to support President Trump’s (false) claims that he’d already won.
The incandescent anger at Fox within Trumpworld is hard to overstate:
- Trump’s advisers remain furious at Fox’s decision desk for its early call of Arizona for Biden, which was seconded by AP. Trump advisers have been unsuccessfully lobbying their contacts at the network to retract the call.
- Fox hasn’t budged. A graphic during news coverage last evening by lead election anchors Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum: “FOX DECISION DESK STANDS BEHIND DECISION TO CALL ARIZONA FOR BIDEN.”
Trump advisers are also venting at what they describe as a grossly incompetent post-Election Day operation. “I don’t know what the message is,” said one prominent surrogate who regularly appears on cable to defend Trump:
- A senior administration official said: “When Bush had this issue they tapped arguably the pre-eminent statesman of his generation, James Baker, to spearhead their legal and PR efforts, to great effect. … We rolled out Rudy Giuliani, Corey Lewandowski and Pam Bondi. You can draw your own conclusions.”
🗞️ How it’s playing … Headline on p. A1 of today’s WashPost (at the fold, as we used to say): “A desperate president lashes out.”
Supporters of the two campaigns outside the Clark County Election Department in Las Vegas yesterday. Photo: Jae C. Hong/AP
The Trump campaign legal team is throwing everything at the wall in battleground states — a last-ditch effort to use the courts to freeze time in states where President Trump was ahead, but keep counting in key places where he appeared behind, Axios’ Stef Kight and Sam Baker write.
- Why it matters: None of the legal actions were poised to change the outcome. But the effort could delegitimize the 2020 election in the eyes of millions of Trump supporters even if the final math based on legitimate counts shows Joe Biden the winner.
The big picture: The lawsuits themselves aren’t raising issues big enough to turn the election in Trump’s favor, and the claims they do make are often failing in the courts.
- “It’s difficult to see the long-term winning strategy behind these lawsuits,” Republican elections attorney Ben Ginsberg told Axios. “To mix metaphors, it looks like throwing the kitchen sink at the wall and see what sticks.”
Go deeper: Click here for a rundown of the arguments the Trump campaign is making in Pennsylvania (Parts 1 and 2), Michigan, Georgia, Wisconsin and Nevada.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
If Trump’s presidency is about to end, an unprecedented golden era for big businesses could end with it, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.
- Why it matters: Support from the president, Congress, the Supreme Court and the Fed have reached levels not seen in recent history — if ever. So large companies have done a lot of winning.
Trump’s policies have “created a favorable business environment,” U.S. Chamber of Commerce president Suzanne Clark emails Axios.
- Businesses have benefited most from the people Trump put in charge at the Fed and Supreme Court as well as his tax cut.
The bottom line: Joe Biden could turn the whole place over.
- He could replace Fed Chair Jerome Powell in 2022 and nominate at least three more Fed governors, add more Supreme Court justices by expanding the size of the court (perhaps after the 2022 midterms) and refang the IRS and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to boost the government’s revenue collection and business regulation without changing tax law.
💰 Sign up for Dion Rabouin’s weekday newsletter, Axios Markets.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Hundreds of millions of dollars are about to pour into Georgia, now that control of the Senate — and the fate of the next president’s agenda — hinges on runoffs for not one but both of the state’s seats, set for Jan. 5, Axios’ Alayna Treene and Hans Nichols report.
- Why it matters: If Joe Biden goes to the White House, the outcomes of these races will determine whether he can move aggressively to enact Democratic policy priorities and confirm his top Cabinet and judicial nominees.
The state of play: Republicans are currently on track for a two-seat advantage in the Senate, with a 50-48 breakdown. But the Georgia special elections give Democrats a tantalizing, if long-shot, chance to even the score.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
The 2020 election outcome presents big online platforms with a worst-case scenario for misinformation management, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes from the Bay Area.
- Why it matters: Aggravated red state/blue state grievances look to usher in an open-ended era of partisan trench warfare online — although a split Congress shrinks the likelihood of new laws reining in tech’s power.
The bottom line: Tech leaders hoped that the election would represent a peak in their political role, after which they could return to business as usual.
- The dream of a return to normalcy is gone. Instead, the tech platforms face a near-term future of deepening strife, ever-tougher decisions on content labeling and takedowns, and two sides determined to audit their every move.
Photo illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photos: Jim Bourg, Jon Cherry/Getty Images
For all the time Democrats spent debating Medicare for All, competing public insurance options and federal controls over drug prices, the near-term future for health policy is about gridlock and incrementalism, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.
- Joe Biden ran as a moderate in the Democratic primary field. But the policies he’s endorsed — a public option, lowering the Medicare eligibility age and expanding Affordable Care Act subsidies — would be non-starters in a Republican-controlled Senate.
NBC’s Lester Holt and Savannah Guthrie talk with Al Gore. Photo: NBC News
Protagonists from both sides of the Bush v. Gore recount fight of 2000, which ended with the Supreme Court awarding the presidency to George W. Bush, spoke out yesterday with a similar message: Trust and respect the system.
Former Vice President Al Gore said during NBC News’ rolling “Decision 2020” coverage that this “is a completely different election from the one 20 years ago — Joe Biden has multiple pathways to secure his victory”:
I was thinking as the president was speaking in the White House of the advice Mark Twain once gave to a group of young voters. He said: “Do right. You’ll gratify some and astonish the rest.”
If Donald Trump does face the situation where the votes are all counted and he turns out to not to be successful, I would urge him to do the right thing. And, yes, it would astonish a lot of people but it would be good for our country.
James Addison Baker III, 90, the GOP’s master strategist in the 2000 Florida recount, voted for Trump but told the N.Y. Times’ Peter Baker:
We never said don’t count the votes. That’s a very hard decision to defend in a democracy.
The National Basketball Players Association voted to support starting a planned 72-game season on Dec. 22, although a lot remains to be negotiated.
- The NBA’s goal “is to complete the 2020-21 season before the Tokyo Olympics, which are scheduled from July 23 to Aug. 8,” the N.Y. Times’ Marc Stein notes.
- “[A] new array of coronavirus protocols … will be needed because teams are planning to play in their home markets rather than in a … bubble.”
📬 Thanks for starting your day with us. Invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM/PM.
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nov 6, 2020 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI While Biden clearly sees path to victory, Trump attacks election integrity without any evidence; Election exposes America’s searing divides
In an extraordinary time, both crisis-laden and perilous, after a four-year U.S. presidential tenure which has upended a myriad of domestic and foreign policy norms, there was another stunning moment at the White House as a fraught nation, and world, anxiously awaited the final election results.
Donald Trump severely tested how far he can go in using the trappings of presidential power to undermine confidence in this week’s election against Joe Biden, as the Democrat gained ground in tight contests in some key battleground states and saw a clear path to the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House.
With his pathway to re-election appearing to shrink, Trump touted unsupported accusations of voter fraud to falsely argue that his rival was trying to seize power. It amounted to an extraordinary effort by a sitting American president to sow doubt about the democratic process, Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller and Will Weissert report.
He lashed out in a performance that suggested he knew his prospects for a second term were slipping away.
“This is a case when they are trying to steal an election, they are trying to rig an election,” Trump baselessly claimed from the podium of the White House briefing room.
His remarks deepened a sense of anxiety in the U.S. as Americans enter their third full day after the election without knowing who would serve as president for the next four years. His statements also prompted a rebuke from some Republicans, particularly those looking to steer the party in a different direction in a post-Trump era.
In the meantime, Biden tried to ease tensions, reassure the nation, and project a more traditional image of presidential leadership. “Each ballot must be counted,” he declared. “I ask everyone to stay calm. The process is working,” Biden said.
BREAKING: Biden overtakes Trump in battleground Georgia vote count. Follow all developments from AP here.
EXPLAINER–States of Play: A handful of states remained in play in the tightly contested race. The outcome of contests in Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Nevada will determine whether Biden, or Trump wins. Brian Slodysko has the latest lay of the electoral land.
EXPLAINER: Why AP hasn’t called Pennsylvania.
EXPLAINER: A closer look at Arizona.
Trump Analysis: When the president stepped to the podium in the White House and made a frontal attempt to undermine the vote, it was at the same time both shocking and utterly to be expected. Trump had spent months laying the groundwork for such a moment. He had repeatedly questioned the validity of mail-in ballots. He had dismissed election officials from Democratic states and cities as political hacks. And he had demanded in advance that the results be known on Election Day, which is never a given. All of that belies the truth about how elections are conducted in America, where voter fraud is extremely rare, White House news editor Nancy Benac writes.
AP FACT CHECK finds Trump fabricates election corruption: Trump unleashed a torrent of accusations about the integrity of the election. AP closely tracked distortions and falsehoods throughout his remarks. He spoke of an election rife with fraud and “horror stories.” He presented no evidence of systemic problems in voting or counting. In fact, the ballot-counting process across the country has been running smoothly, even with the U.S. in the throes of the pandemic, Calvin Woodward and Maryclaire Dale report.
U.S. TV Networks cut away from Trump’s White House address.
VIDEO: Biden feels ‘very good’ about election outcome.
Legal Challenges: Trump is looking at a political map in which he might have to persuade the Supreme Court to set aside votes in two or more states to prevent Biden from becoming president. That’s a substantially different scenario than in the contested presidential election of 2000, which was effectively settled by the Supreme Court, Mark Sherman and Jessica Gresko report.
EXPLAINER: What’s happening with poll watchers?
VIDEO: International observers say no evidence for Trump’s fraud claims.
Protests: Election officials in several states say they are worried about the safety of their staffs amid a cascade of threats and protesters responding to Trump’s fact-free insistence of widespread voter fraud in the race for the White House, Nomaan Merchant and Tim Sullivan report. Groups of Trump supporters have gathered at vote tabulation sites in Phoenix, Detroit and Philadelphia, decrying counts that showed Biden leading or gaining ground. The protests have not been violent or very large.
PHOTOS: Protests over vote counting as US awaits result.
Latinos: Trump and his GOP allies made inroads with Latinos that eroded Democratic strength among the nation’s second-largest demographic group. Not only did Trump win Florida partly from his support in heavily Cuban American Miami, but he also won some heavily Latino areas along the Texas border and ate away at Democratic margins among Latinos in New Mexico, Arizona and Nevada. The inroads demonstrate the diversity of the Latino electorate and how its members can be far more interested in the economy and jobs than in immigration, Nicholas Riccardi and Adriana Gomez Licon report. AP PHOTO/SCOTT APPLEWHITE House Democrats blame losses on polls, message and Trump; Twin Senate runoffs in Georgia could shape a potential Biden presidency
House Democrats have cast blame for a disappointing election that cut into their majority on the election message, ground game and leadership under Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s team that cost them seats.
Among their complaints: They focused too much on health care, rather than the economy; They didn’t do enough door-to-door campaigning in the pandemic; They let Republicans get away with incorrectly calling them “socialists.” Pelosi reminded them that they did, in fact, keep their majority.
Most importantly, Democrats are coming to grips with the fact that whether Trump is re-elected or defeated by Biden, they still have problems understanding, and winning over, Trump voters, Lisa Mascaro reports.
EXPLAINER–Inside the House: The counting is not over yet, but Democrats in Congress are asking what went wrong because it’s looking like their expected gains in the House aren’t happening. And while Democrats are likely to retain control for two more years, their current majority could easily shrink. This means passing legislation — especially on difficult issues — is going to get a little harder. Some of them say they made a mistake by not passing more virus aid before the election.
Senate Georgia: The ambitions of a Biden presidency, if he wins, could well come down to Georgia. This newfound battleground, long a Republican stronghold, appears poised for twin runoffs on Jan. 5 to settle which party will control the Senate. The outcomes mean the difference between a Democratic majority or a Republican majority led by Sen. Mitch McConnell, Bill Barrow reports. AP PHOTO/KEMAL SOFTIC Pandemic heaps new fears, trauma on war-scarred Bosnians; Greece joins other European nations, imposes lockdown to avoid worst at hospitals
As virus cases surge, the pandemic is heaping new trouble on an impoverished nation that has never recovered economically or psychologically from a ruinous war in the 1990s.
Mental health professionals fear that the coronavirus will now exacerbate mental health problems. They describe patients who lived through the war having increased anxiety now.
Meanwhile, others are cavalier about the risks because they perceive the invisible virus as much less frightening than the wartime bombardments, relentless sieges, massacres and hunger that still haunt them, Sabina Niksic reports from Sarajevo.
Europe Lockdowns: With exponential cases straining health systems in many European countries, Greece announced a nationwide lockdown in the hopes of stemming a rising tide of patients before its hospitals come under “unbearable” pressure. England’s own lockdown has kicked in. The British government and the Bank of England joined forces to provide further support to an economy and population facing a difficult winter. In Italy, four regions will be put under “red-zone” lockdown starting today. Elena Becatoros and Menelaos Hadjicostis have this story from a virus-blighted continent.
US Virus Surge: Voters went to the polls starkly divided on how they see Trump’s response to the coronavirus pandemic. But in places where the virus is most rampant now, Trump enjoyed enormous support. An AP analysis reveals that in 376 counties with the highest number of new cases per capita, the overwhelming majority went for Trump, a rate above other less severely hit areas. Health officials across the nation are facing record numbers of new cases, Carla K. Johnson, Hannah Fingerhut and Pia Deshpande report.
US Jobs: Employers may have slowed their hiring in October for a fourth straight month with confirmed viral cases reaching record levels and the loss of government aid deepening the hardships for many. Economists have forecast that employers added 580,000 jobs last month, down from 661,000 in September and 1.5 million in August. If that estimate proves accurate, it would mean that the U.S. economy has regained only about 12 million of the 22 million jobs that vanished when the pandemic paralyzed the economy in early spring, Christopher Rugaber reports. MISINFORMATION WATCH
Facebook has banned a large group called “Stop the Steal” that Trump supporters were using to organize protests against the presidential vote count.
Though the group amassed more than 350,000 members before Facebook took it down, it was just one among several similar groups that popped up as vote counting extended for days in several battleground states, Barbara Ortutay and David Klepper report.
Wisconsin Misinformation: Posts shared thousands of times on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram are falsely claiming that an impossible number of people cast ballots in Wisconsin. One tweet that went viral relied on outdated figures from 2018 to wrongly claim that the number of votes cast in the state exceeded the number of registered voters. In fact, there were roughly 3.6 million registered voters and 3.3 million votes were cast this year, Amanda Seitz reports.
EXPLAINER: How much misinformation is kicking around? Momentous events and false information that tells an inaccurate story about how they’re happening go together all too closely these days. The intensive period since Election Day demonstrates this to be true. Karen Mahabir, AP’s fact check and misinformation editor, says there’s lots of misinformation that focuses on ballots and the voting process, and that Pennsylvania has become a particular focus of bad information. Other Top Stories As the remnants of Hurricane Eta moved back over Caribbean waters, governments worked to tally the displaced and dead and recover bodies from landslides and flooding that claimed dozens of lives from Guatemala to Panama. It will be days before the true toll of Eta will be known. Its torrential rains battered economies already strangled by the pandemic, took all from those who had little and laid bare the shortcomings of governments unable to aid their citizens and pleading for international assistance. Ethiopia’s well-armed Tigray region asserts that fighter jets have bombed locations around its capital, aiming to force the region “into submission,” while Ethiopia’s army says it has been forced into an “unexpected and aimless war.” The strong words came a day after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed told the nation the military will carry out further operations this week in response to an alleged deadly attack on a military base by the regional government. Observers warn that a civil war in Africa’s second-most populous country would be disastrous and could destabilize the already turbulent Horn of Africa. New Zealand won’t be legalizing marijuana after the final votes in a referendum failed to change the result from election night — although it got close. The referendum to legalize the drug ended up with 48% in favor and 51% against, a tightening from the election-night split of 46-53. The final tally also gave Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and her liberal Labour Party a slightly increased majority, the first time any single party has commanded a majority in Parliament since New Zealand introduced a proportional system 24 years ago. Global stock markets have followed Wall Street higher amid protracted vote-counting following this week’s U.S. elections. London and Frankfurt rose Friday in early trading. Tokyo, Hong Kong and Sydney closed higher, while Shanghai declined. Markets are betting on control of the U.S. Congress being split between Republicans and Democrats, which could mean low taxes and light regulation will stay in place. GET THE APP
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Pritzker warns of restrictions as state hits ‘terrible milestone’ of 10,000 deaths
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THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: How this can get even more turbulent
DRIVING THE DAY
JOE BIDEN is continuing his steady march toward the White House. We don’t quite know when the race will be called — or even how — but he’s now ahead by 917 votes in Georgia. He’s also up in Arizona and Nevada. In Pennsylvania, President DONALD TRUMP is up by fewer than 20,000 votes, and as CNN’s PHIL MATTINGLY said in the 5 a.m. hour, it’s not a matter of if, but when, the Keystone State will be called for BIDEN. BIDEN sources told us they became aware that there is a large batch of votes in Philadelphia that will put the former VP over the top in the state. The campaign didn’t have anything to say about that.
BIDEN WORLD has started to mobilize in D.C. They have called around to business groups in town suggesting a call on the election is imminent, and requested that statements include a reference to “legitimate democratic processes.”
BUT, THAT DOESN’T MEAN there won’t be turbulence between now and Inauguration Day — should BIDEN pull it out. Of course, there are the court cases that TRUMP and his team have launched. But let’s assume those fall flat.
ON JAN. 6, THE HOUSE AND SENATE will come into joint session to count the electoral votes. VP MIKE PENCE will preside, as vice presidents always do.
BUT MISCHIEF CAN BREAK OUT. Here’s what the Congressional Research Service says: “While the tellers announce the results, Members may object to the returns from any individual state as they are announced. Objections to individual state returns must be made in writing by at least one Member each of the Senate and House of Representatives. If an objection meets these requirements, the joint session recesses and the two houses separate and debate the question in their respective chambers for a maximum of two hours.
“The two houses then vote separately to accept or reject the objection. They then reassemble in joint session, and announce the results of their respective votes. An objection to a state’s electoral vote must be approved by both houses in order for any contested votes to be excluded.”
— SO IT COULD GET INTERESTING, and the process can get dragged out, but it would just be a nuisance, because both houses will never agree to an objection. BTW: READ THIS — the Electoral College timeline.
WHERE WE ARE THIS MORNING … AT ABOUT 4:25 A.M., BIDEN took the lead in Georgia by 917 votes, powered by outstanding ballots in Clayton County — the home of the late Rep. JOHN LEWIS. Democrats haven’t won Georgia since 1992 — the last election an incumbent president lost.
ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION at 4:21 a.m.: “Biden won 87% of ballots tabulated between late Thursday night and Friday morning in Clayton, located south of Atlanta. … Thousands more absentee ballots will continue to be counted Friday, including 4,800 in Gwinnett County. In all, about 10,000 absentee ballots remained to be tallied, in addition to a few thousand military, overseas and provisional ballots. Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger has emphasized that every legal ballot must be counted. County election offices have until a Nov. 13 deadline to certify their results.”
PENNSYLVANIA, via CNN this morning: TRUMP was ahead 18,229 votes as of just before 6 a.m.
TALKER … DAVID SIDERS and CHARLIE MAHTESIAN: “The 3 storylines driving the election Friday”
Good Friday morning.
JOSH GERSTEIN: “Trump’s legal team makes no significant progress in election fight”: “President Donald Trump’s barrage of lawsuits related to the 2020 presidential election kicked up considerable dust on Thursday, but delivered his campaign no tangible progress in halting or slowing the slide of vote tallies away from him in key battleground states.
“The flurry of litigation yielded a couple of minor victories for the president, as a state judge granted his campaign’s poll watchers closer access to ballot counting in Philadelphia and a federal court judge there brokered a deal that’s likely to let more volunteers from Trump’s campaign observe the process.
“Despite mixed results, the court fights seemed to serve their intended purpose of creating an air of legal uncertainty around the election while the president and his advisers scramble to preserve a sense of viability for a reelection bid that is by objective measures growing more remote. The performative nature of the litigation was evidenced by the campaign’s dispatching some of its most combative surrogates to sites where court fights were underway or threatened.” POLITICO
— “Postal Service Is Ordered by Judge to Search for Remaining Ballots,” by WSJ’s Rebecca Smith, Byron Tau and Rob Barry: “A federal judge ordered the U.S. Postal Service to conduct rigorous sweeps of postal facilities serving states with looming election deadlines like Pennsylvania and North Carolina, so any ballots still in the mail system reach election officials in time to be included in election tallies.
“The order came in the midst of a close presidential race and as the Postal Service submitted data to a federal court in Washington, D.C., showing that at least 150,000 ballots likely reached election officials on Wednesday—too late to meet deadlines for inclusion in election counts in as many as 28 states.”
THE STEP BACK — NYT’S PETER BAKER and MAGGIE HABERMAN: “In Torrent of Falsehoods, Trump Claims Election Is Being Stolen”: “Even for President Trump, it was an imagined version of reality, one in which he was not losing but the victim of a wide-ranging conspiracy stretching across the country in multiple cities, counties and states, involving untold numbers of people all somehow collaborating to steal the election in ways he could not actually explain.
“Never mind that Mr. Trump presented not a shred of evidence during his first public appearance since late on election night or that few senior Republican officeholders endorsed his false claims of far-reaching fraud. A presidency born in a lie about Barack Obama’s birthplace appeared on the edge of ending in a lie about his own faltering bid for re-election. …
“He convinced few people who were not already in his corner. Most of the television networks cut away from the statement on the grounds that what Mr. Trump was saying was not true. On CNN, former Senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, a Republican often put in the position of defending Mr. Trump over the years, appeared exasperated as he denounced the president’s loose talk of election thievery as ‘dangerous’ and ‘shocking’ and declared that ‘counting absentee ballots and counting mail-in ballots is not fraud.’”
— REPUBLICANS were divided over the president’s comments. Several, including Maryland Gov. LARRY HOGAN, Sens. BEN SASSE (Neb.) and MITT ROMNEY (Utah), retiring Rep. WILL HURD (Texas) and former Pennsylvania Gov. TOM RIDGE, publicly castigated Trump on Twitter. However, some Trump loyalists, including House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY and Sens. TED CRUZ (Texas) and LINDSEY GRAHAM (S.C.), stuck by the president.
MCCARTHY WENT AS FAR as to baselessly claim TRUMP won the election. The clip
THE GOVERNMENT PREPARES FOR PRESIDENT BIDEN … “Secret Service plans to ramp up protection of Biden in anticipation of his possible win,” by WaPo’s Carol Leonnig
BURGESS EVERETT, ALEX THOMPSON and MARIANNE LEVINE: “America’s new power couple: Joe and Mitch”
THE REAL JAMES BAKER SPEAKS, by NYT’S PETER BAKER: “The White House hoped to find a ‘James Baker-like’ figure to lead its postelection battle to somehow find a way to win a second term. But the original James Baker says the White House should stop trying to stop the votes from being counted.
“Mr. Baker, the former secretary of state who led the legal and political team during the epic Florida recount battle in 2000 that secured the presidency for George W. Bush, said in an interview on Thursday that President Trump may have legitimate issues to pursue, but they should not be used to justify halting the initial tabulation of ballots. ‘We never said don’t count the votes,’ said Mr. Baker, a Republican who voted for Mr. Trump. ‘That’s a very hard decision to defend in a democracy.’” NYT
AND THIS … AL GORE to NBC’S LESTER HOLT on Thursday night: “This is a completely different election from the one 20 years ago. Joe Biden has multiple pathways to secure his victory. And of course, I’m for him and I’m hoping that will be the case very soon. But the most important principle that I defended 20 years ago, that Joe Biden and many others are defending tonight is, let’s count every legally cast vote and obey the will of the American people.”
HEATHER CAYGLE and SARAH FERRIS: “Dem leaders warn liberal rhetoric could blow Georgia races”
CNN’S MANU RAJU and LAUREN FOX: “Hill Democrats vent over struggles in congressional races as calls grow for shift in tactics”
THE NEXT FRONTIER — “Georgia preps for cash war with Senate majority on the line,” by James Arkin, Andrew Desiderio and Elena Schneider: “Democrats and Republicans are gearing up for an unprecedented two-month battle for control of the Senate that centers on just one state: Georgia. Democrats failed to deliver in Senate battlegrounds this week, but both parties are still short of a majority in the chamber. So now Georgia holds the keys to control of the Senate, with both of the state’s races appearing likely to head to runoffs in early January. And with Joe Biden favored to win the presidency, Democrats could win control of a 50-50 Senate if they flip both seats.
“With the stakes so high, the state is likely to see tens of millions of dollars pour in from small donors and super PACs from both parties ahead of the Jan. 5 runoffs. Already, high-dollar donors have begun lining up behind an effort to pour resources into the Georgia races, according to several Democratic donors and donor advisers, who described a flurry of phone calls on the matter to refocus funds. The anti-abortion group Women Speak Out PAC announced a $4 million expenditure on Thursday for the two races, for example, and the traditional GOP apparatus is already soliciting contributions.” POLITICO
TRUMP’S FRIDAY — The president has nothing on his public schedule.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Bob Costa: Yamiche Alcindor, Peter Baker, Sue Davis and Jake Sherman.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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ABC
“This Week”: Panel: Rahm Emanuel, Chris Christie, Matt Dowd and Yvette Simpson.
-
CBS
“Face the Nation”: Scott Gottlieb … Bob Schieffer.
-
Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren”: Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) … Matt Schlapp … Kevin Cirilli.
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Panel: Dana Perino, Jerry Seib and Marie Harf. Power Player: Army chief of staff Gen. James C. McConville.
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Cornell Belcher, Andrea Mitchell, Peggy Noonan and Dave Wasserman.
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Sinclair
“America This Week with Eric Bolling”: Nigel Farage … Anthony Scaramucci … Charlie Kirk … Austan Goolsbee … Amy Gardner.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE POLLING CONUNDRUM … WAPO’S BEN TERRIS: “It’s not you, Nate. It’s us. (And maybe a little you.)”
— STEVEN SHEPARD: “The polling industry blows it again”: “The pollsters got Donald Trump wrong — again. When all the votes are tallied, Joe Biden isn’t going to win the popular vote by double digits. Trump lost Wisconsin by a point, not the 17-point defeat one survey suggested. And Trump obviously didn’t go down in an election night landslide, as some polls suggested would happen.
“It wasn’t just the public polls that suggested Tuesday would be a big Democratic night. Much of the private polling on which both parties rely suggested Biden would win solidly, and they expected Democrats to benefit down the ballot. Now that it hasn’t happened, pollsters are wondering whether their methods are fundamentally broken — or just unable to measure Trump’s support, specifically.
“‘This is not just a few public pollsters out there that missed it. This is something that is unique to this election,’ said Patrick Murray, who runs the Monmouth University Polling Institute. ‘It just seems to be that if the name “Donald Trump” is on the ballot, all bets are off when it comes to the polls being right.’” POLITICO
— “‘Guesses upon guesses’: Polls fall short again in 2020, raising red flags for future contests,” by WaPo’s Michael Scherer
FED WATCH — “Fed Says Virus Poses Considerable Risks, Maintains Low-Rate Pledges,” by WSJ’s Nick Timiraos: “The Federal Reserve said the coronavirus pandemic poses considerable risks for the U.S. economy despite recent gains, and officials made no changes on Thursday to their commitment to provide sustained stimulus.
“Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said they were monitoring two prominent risks to the recent rebound in economic activity: one from rising infection rates and another from households exhausting savings after earlier fiscal relief measures had dissipated. ‘Economic activity has continued to recover’ but ‘the pace of improvement has moderated,’ Mr. Powell said at a news conference. …
“This week, Fed officials continued discussions this week over how to provide more support to the economy should the recent rebound fizzle, Mr. Powell said. They could do this by adjusting their purchases of $120 billion a month in Treasury and mortgage-backed securities if needed. ‘We may reach a view at some point that we need to do more on that front,’ said Mr. Powell. But he indicated comfort for now with the current program, which he twice described as ‘very large.’” WSJ
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VALLEY TALK — “Facebook curtails misleading posts, live video as election misinformation spreads,” by Steven Overly: “Facebook tightened its policies on election-related disinformation Thursday, limiting the reach of live videos and misleading posts in the latest effort by the world’s largest social network to tamp down an onslaught of baseless claims about vote-rigging and premature victory claims.
“The move comes as Facebook and other social networks face mounting criticism from the left that they are not doing enough to stop the spread of false claims that could undermine faith in the election and results when they’re declared. Some prominent Democrats have called for the platforms to suspend the account of President Donald Trump, whose posts alleging electoral fraud have received warning labels on both Facebook and Twitter.
“Facebook said it will now restrict posts on both Instagram and Facebook that its systems flag as misinformation so that they are seen by fewer users. It also is limiting the distribution of election-related live videos on its Facebook platform.
“‘As vote counting continues, we are seeing more reports of inaccurate claims about the election,’ Facebook said in a statement. ‘While many of these claims have low engagement on our platform, we are taking additional temporary steps, which we’ve previously discussed, to keep this content from reaching more people.’”
— “The Disinformation Is Coming From Inside the White House,” by NYT’s Matthew Rosenberg, Jim Rutenberg and Nick Corasaniti: “A disinformation push to subvert the election is well underway, and it is coming straight from President Trump and his allies. The goal: to somehow stop a victory by former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., or, failing that, undermine his legitimacy before he can take office.
“Mr. Trump’s false declaration of victory in the small hours of Wednesday morning quickly united hyperpartisan conservative activists and the standard-bearers of the right-wing media, such as Breitbart, with internet trolls and QAnon supporters behind a singular viral message: #StopTheSteal.
“But its impact has become apparent far beyond the internet, with the theme dominating conservative talk radio and the prime-time lineup on Fox News. There, Trump-aligned hosts pressed the false notion that the vote counting in the crucial, still-undecided states was illegitimate — the sort of message that was drawing flags on Twitter and Facebook but flourishing elsewhere.”
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
IN MEMORIAM — “Marylin Bender Dies at 95; Journalist in a Male-Dominated Era,” by NYT’s Katharine Seelye: “When Marylin Bender was the Sunday business editor of The New York Times in the 1970s, she was one of only a handful of women with any editing clout in the newsroom. … Ms. Bender enjoyed a long career as a reporter and editor, most of it at The Times, and as the author of four books. She died at 95 on Oct. 19 at her home in Manhattan. Her son, James Altschul, said the cause was complications of dementia.”
TRANSITION — Ambassador Joseph Manso is now U.S. representative to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. He previously was deputy assistant secretary in the bureau of international organization affairs at the State Department.
ENGAGED — Lauren Kane, VP of comms at the National Beer Wholesalers Association, and Sean Bakey, a commercial banker at Wells Fargo and former Navy pilot, got engaged this weekend. He surprised her with a proposal in front of the Lincoln Memorial, her favorite monument, during a bike tour. They met in D.C. in August 2018. Pic … Another pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Morgan Ortagus, spokesperson for the State Department, and Jonathan Weinberger on Thursday welcomed Adina Weinberger. Pic … Another pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Whitney Mitchell Brennan, SVP at Firehouse Strategies. What she’s been reading: “I try to read non-political books in my free time as a distraction from the negativity of the past four years. I loved and couldn’t put down ‘The Vanishing Half’ by Brit Bennett. For parents of young kids, I recommend ‘Cribsheet’ by economist Emily Oster, whose data-focused parenting books are full of helpful info.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. John Carter (R-Texas) is 79 … Eric Schulze … Rob Jesmer, managing partner at FP1 Strategies and Plus Communications … POLITICO’s Louis Nelson is 32 … Marlon Bateman is 32 … Social Security Administration Commissioner Andrew Saul is 74 … Andrew Snow … Alison Patch of APCO Worldwide … Katie Rosborough … Ashley Lewis, VP at Edelman … JoJo Sears … Rachel Weiss, director of external affairs at UnitedHealth Group … Julia Bennett … Ruth Messinger, global ambassador for the American Jewish World Service, is 8-0 … Arun Chaudhary, creative director and partner at Revolution Messaging, is 45 … Blair Gremillion, deputy director of war room operations at America Rising, is 28 … USCIS’ Diana Banister … NBC’s Gresham Striegel … Ana Estes …
… Dan Senor is 49 (h/t Dina Powell McCormick) … ABC’s Trish Turner … former Education Secretary Arne Duncan, managing partner of Emerson Collective, is 56 … Sidney Blumenthal is 72 … former Rep. Dan Donovan (R-N.Y.) is 64 … American Red Cross’ Eric Mondero … Bob Grand … Matt Kirk … Bloomberg’s Angelica LaVito … Jason Kinney (h/t Molly Weedn) … Alan Dechert … Catherine Crier is 66 … Mychal Denzel Smith … Rick Nussio … Sheila Walter … LaCreda Drummond-Mondon … Ramesh de Silva … Ian Braun … NPR’s Eric Deggans … Keaton Bedell … Christopher Joshua Arndt … Ben Wrobel … Julia Moseley … Gray Brooks … Chris Fitzgerald … Andrew Weinberg … Suzanne Granville … Scott Anderson (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Ira Fishman (h/t Jon Haber)
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CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Dems Have Turned U.S. Elections Into a Third World Embarrassment
The Dems Ruin Everything They Touch
Happy Friday in America, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. It’s still America, right?
Apologies for the no-show yesterday. Boring story that I won’t share, but a deep mea culpa from me.
After living in California for twenty-two years it was very strange going through a presidential election in a swing state. It was made all the more surreal by the fact that my beloved native state of Arizona was nowhere near swing state status when I left back in the nineties. As a conservative Republican, I am obviously dismayed that my state is purplish now, but as a pure political junkie, the swing state thing was kind of fun to watch.
While I was able to muster up some interest in everything leading up to Election Day because of my swing state status, everything in the two days since is practically making me want to weep for America. One would think that after 244 years and great leaps in technology that we wouldn’t actually be regressing in the way we handle our elections. Right now we’re a laughing stock that’s devolved into what looks like a Third World hellhole that’s never conducted a free election before.
My headline today was partially inspired by my colleague Stacey Lennox from both a Slack conversation we had and a post she wrote yesterday:
We are in the midst of a flaming dumpster fire of an election. Deep blue areas like Fulton County in Georgia, Philadelphia, and Detroit, along with states like Arizona and Nevada, are a national embarrassment. Scratch that, an international embarrassment. Somehow, Florida, one of the largest and most contested states, reported its results on election night. There are some governors, including my own, who should be asking for Florida’s blueprint.
President Trump has assembled a team to challenge some of the more blatant irregularities. This has Democrats and their media activists demanding he just takes the L if initial counts come through for Joe Biden. They insist on this despite the prima facie shadiness observed by the entire country. As Kyle Mann, editor-in-chief of the Babylon Bee, put it:
Ladies and gentlemen, we have a winner.
Irregularities abound but the MSM insists that none of it is really happening. Tyler wrote about the situation in Nevada, which is one of the many messed that the media pretending isn’t happening:
The Nevada Republican Party claims to have discovered 3,062 instances of voter fraud and the party sent a criminal referral to Attorney General William Barr. A Department of Justice (DOJ) official told The Washington Examiner that the agency received the referral and is looking into the matter. The Trump campaign announced plans to file a lawsuit based on similar claims.
“Our lawyers just sent a criminal referral to AG Barr regarding at least 3,062 instances of voter fraud. We expect that number to grow substantially,” the Nevada Republican Party announced on Twitter. “Thousands of individuals have been identified who appear to have violated the law by casting ballots after they moved from NV.”
The president continues to insist that he will prevail after recounts and the hopeful cleaning out of dubious ballots. I’ve talked to a few who have been hopeful but I’m honestly not feeling this. As I write this in the wee hours of the morning, this news just came through:
President Trump needs Arizona, Georgia, and Pennsylvania to win. I’ve been stalking the Arizona numbers for hours and the president has picked up ground but he doesn’t seem to be doing it quickly enough. I have talked to a few people here, including Rep. Paul Gosar, who think the president will win the state. Still, with Georgia going in the wrong direction, it’s bleak.
That we are going through this at all is the problem. We have an election month that’s not ending until well after election day. This is a clown show, and this is the way the Democrats want it to be. The longer they can keep things drawn out, the more opportunity for…hiccups, shall we say…are thrown into the mix.
The extended mail-in voting is the key component to the permanent election chaos that the Dems want. Ballots end up in a lot of places where they’re susceptible to mischief.
An excess number of absentee ballots creates new opportunities for manipulation:
The Democrats want this banana republic clown show embarrassment to go on forever. They’re terrified of having elections that are decided on election day and via the ballot box. It’s easy to understand why when you see the way things are unfolding right now. The Democrats vastly under-performed across the board on Tuesday. The vaunted “Blue Wave” they talked about for over a year wasn’t so much as a trickle.
We’re to believe, however, that Joe Biden over-performed everywhere, Erasing the substantial leads that President Trump had in several states. None of this passes the smell test. The media and the squish Republicans who insist that we don’t talk about fraud are wrong. We need to talk about it more and figure out ways to thwart the Democrats’ attempts to permanently denigrate our election process.
We’ll start by steamrolling the 2022 midterms after they steal the White House.
It’s always good to have a plan.
News You Can Use
2020, Amirite?
PJM Linktank
Treacher: NYT Exposes Nefarious Plot Behind Trump’s Twitter Typos
Explains a lot about this election: Ballot Initiatives on Legalizing Weed Pass in 5 States
‘America is Over’: Hundreds Arrested in Minneapolis Protest Against Trump
BINGO. Trump Challenges Joe Biden to Add One Word to His ‘Vote-Counting’ Rhetoric
VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #81: Nate Silver Addresses His Critics, ‘F*** You, We Did a Good Job’
What Became Clear in the Trump Years
The Fate of #NeverTrump Republicans Provides a Little Bit of Schadenfreude
Republican Leaders Take Note: Even in a Post-Trump World the Realignment Is Real
A Biden Presidency: Coffee Break’s Over, Back on Your Heads
Miss. School Bans 3rd Grader’s ‘Jesus Loves Me’ Mask, Allows ‘Black Lives Matter’
VIP
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Election 2020: Congratulations Are in Order — To All of Us
The Media Gave Me Cognitive Dissonance About This Election. Now I’m Undecided on the Results
VIP Gold
Win Or Lose, Democrats Will Never Be Able to Wash Trump Off of America
From the Mothership and Beyond
Georgia vote count: About 14,000 absentee ballots still being tallied
Schlichter: The Other Winners and Losers
Republican Lawyers Are Fighting to Stop The Steal
WATCH: Nevada USPS Worker Allegedly Offers Stacks of Ballots to Undercover Reporter
WATCH: Woman Recalls Learning Her Deceased Grandmother Voted
Facebook’s Takedown of Massive ‘Stop the Steal’ Group Exposes Glaring Double Standards
Trump Addresses the Nation: They’re Trying to Steal and Rig This Election
2020 House Races: It’s Not Over. Pelosi’s Gavel At Risk As GOP Make Significant Gains
Lindsey Graham Announces Huge Donation to Trump’s Legal Defense Fund
At State Level, 2020 Was a Bloodbath for Democrats…And Highlighted Something Interesting About Trump
We’re Finished: Frank Luntz Torches Polling Industry After Getting It Totally Wrong…Again
PA Secretary of States Tries (and Fails) to Explain Her Old Anti-Trump Tweets
Rep. Abigail Spanberger Blasts Her Party for Poor Showing This Week
Are the Dead Coming Back to Life to Vote Again in Michigan? This Is More Than a Bit Concerning
Ric Grenell Tells Reporters in Vegas to Do Their Jobs, Says Non-Residents Voted In NV
Kira Davis: Merely The Other Half
Portland rioters damage Catholic church known for outreach to the poor
Al Sharpton Admits Trump Did Well With Black And Hispanic Voters, Appealed To Minorities
Did The Left Just Get “Crushed” In The 2020 Elections?
McCarthy And Stefanik: Election Was The “Night Of Republican Women”
NYC Mayor: No, I Don’t Have A Plan To Fix Things
For a good cause: ‘Family Ties’ Cast To Reunite On ‘Stars In The House’
Epic. Brit Hume sets Thomas Friedman straight about Al Gore taking a bullet for the country in 2000
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
He did have a lot of fun doing this show.
I’m bought and paid for by Big Flavored Water.
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PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Fat Lady, Warming Up
Joe Biden inches into the lead in Georgia.
The Dispatch Staff | 1 hr | 4 |
Happy Friday! We know. We wish it was over too. (On the bright side, there will be no shortage of things to discuss at our What’s Next event next week. You can find more of what to expect over at the event site: An election post-op featuring Karl Rove and Joe Trippi, a look forward at the future of the GOP and American evangelicalism with Reince Priebus and Russell Moore, an examination of the state of American institutions with Yuval Levin, Jack Goldsmith, and Andy Smarick … and a lot more! We hope we’ll see you there!)
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Former Vice President Joe Biden overtook President Donald Trump’s narrow lead in Georgia overnight, holding a 917-vote advantage as we publish. Biden has also narrowed the gap in Pennsylvania on the strength of mail-in and absentee ballots that skew heavily in the Democrat’s favor and is expected to cruise into the lead there today when new votes are added to the tally. If Biden wins both states, and holds his narrow leads in Arizona and Nevada, he will win with 306 electoral votes—the same number Donald Trump won in 2016.
- Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Wednesday emphasized the need for a coronavirus stimulus package by the end of 2020. “Hopefully the partisan passions that prevented us from doing another rescue package will subside with the election and I think we need to do it,” he said. “I think we need to do it before the end of the year.”
- Initial unemployment claims fell last week by 7,000 week-over-week to 751,000, the Labor Department reported on Thursday. A total of 21,508,662 continued to claim some sort of unemployment benefits during the week ending October 17, a decrease of 1,152,854 from the previous week.
- The United States confirmed 126,077 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 8.2 percent of the 1,537,316 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,248 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 234,911. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 53,322 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
Biden Overtakes Trump in Georgia
Believe it or not, no more states have been called in the presidential race since we were last in your inbox. But all of the states are much closer to being called than they were 24 hours ago. A reminder, from yesterday:
Biden’s Electoral College lead over Trump now sits at 253 to 217—just 17 electoral votes from clinching a victory.
Given the states still up for grabs, Biden could secure those 17 votes by winning a) Pennsylvania or b) any two of Nevada, Arizona, Georgia, and North Carolina. To block Biden’s path, Trump would have to win Pennsylvania and any three of Nevada, Arizona, Georgia, and North Carolina.
As of early Friday morning, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Georgia are looking very likely to end up in Biden’s column. Arizona is close to a toss-up at this point, and North Carolina leans Trump. You can pretty safely expect major network decision desks to call the race for Biden later today.
We’ve gotten some questions about why the tallies in these states are taking so long, and why the late-arriving ballots in Pennsylvania and Georgia are so Democratic. On the first question, it has to do with when state legislature-passed law allows for the processing of absentee ballots. Pennsylvania poll workers, for example, were not legally permitted to begin processing mail-in votes until the morning of Election Day. Predicting months ago this would lead to chaos, counties around the state appealed to the GOP-controlled state legislature to change the law and allow for advanced processing of these absentee ballots. The legislature passed a law doing so, but attached to it several other provisions that Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf would not approve. The stalemate led to the status quo remaining in place. (States that allow for early processing, like Ohio and Florida, were able to be called early Tuesday night.)
And why are these mail-in ballots so Democratic? Because A) Democrats on average report being more concerned about COVID-19 than Republicans, leading them to avoid in-person voting at a higher rate, and B) President Trump for months told his supporters voting by mail was risky and fraudulent. His advisers repeatedly warned him over the summer that this rhetoric could cost him votes, but he continued to repeat his claims. “Cancel Ballots and go out and VOTE, just like in past decades, when there were no problems!” he said a little over a month ago. Yesterday, he told reporters “it’s amazing how those mail-in ballots are so one-sided.”
Checking in on the Two Campaigns
In very brief remarks in Wilmington, Delaware on Thursday afternoon, Biden noted he and Sen. Kamala Harris had just wrapped up briefings on the coronavirus pandemic. “Democracy is sometimes messy. It sometimes requires a little patience as well,” he said, turning to the election. “We continue to feel very good about where things stand. We have no doubt that when the count is finished, Senator Harris and I will be declared the winners. So, I ask everyone to stay calm. The process is working, the count is being completed, and we’ll know very soon.”
President Trump did not heed his opponent’s advice. “If you count the legal votes, I easily win,” he said in a White House press conference marked by multiple false claims. “If you count the illegal votes, they can try to steal the election from us.”
The president falsely claimed he “won by historic numbers” (nobody has “won” yet, though Joe Biden has already set a record for total number of votes received by a presidential candidate), and Trump accused pre-election polls of being “election interference” because they were “designed to keep our voters at home” (Trump also set a record for the number of votes for a Republican presidential candidate). He said the “election apparatus in Georgia is run by Democrats” (it’s not, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger is a Republican whom Trump endorsed in 2018), and pointed to supposed instances of election malfeasance in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Georgia without providing any evidence.
COVID-19 Hasn’t Gone Anywhere
There’s no other way to say it: COVID is spreading out of control in America. While the nation has (understandably) been captivated by the political climax of the election, the virus has been breaking new transmission records every week. On October 23, according to the COVID Tracking Project, 83,057 cases were reported across the country—then a single-day record. On October 30, 97,080 cases were reported. Yesterday, we smashed through even that number, racking up 116,225 new cases. (The COVID Tracking Project numbers are tabulated slightly differently from the Johns Hopkins numbers we use in our daily COVID update, so the daily totals don’t line up perfectly.)
These are mind-boggling numbers: During the worrisome summer COVID spike, the highest single day of cases was July 17, when 76,550 cases were reported. Hospitalization numbers haven’t yet reached summer levels, but they’re well on their way: 53,332 Americans are currently hospitalized with the virus, compared to a summer high of 59,311 on July 27. Deaths, a lagging indicator, are climbing steadily as well. The worst single day of the summer in this respect was August 12, when 1,519 deaths were reported; On Wednesday, we reported 1,116.
“We Need to Not Ever Use the Word Socialist, or Socialism, Ever Again”
Democrats went into Election Day with lofty goals of expanding their already firm hold over the House of Representatives, setting their sights on seats in historically safe Republican congressional districts. FiveThirtyEight projected as much; the average scenario forecasted by its House model showed Democrats gaining seven seats. But Republican challengers in Democratic districts, many of whom are new to politics, began to make headway early in Tuesday’s vote count. A far cry from the heavily anticipated “blue wave,” the GOP has, as of Thursday night, flipped eight seats across the country—a net gain of six, as Democrats have flipped two. Democrats are still projected to keep their majority.
On a conference call held by members of the House Democratic Caucus and subsequently leaked to the press, Rep. Abigail Spanberger—a former CIA officer and moderate from Virginia—cut to the chase. “Tuesday, from a Congressional standpoint, it was a failure, it was not a success,” she told her colleagues. “We lost members who shouldn’t have lost.”
She blamed the defeats on the Democratic Party’s progressive fringe. “If we don’t mean ‘defund the police,’ we shouldn’t say that,” she implored her fellow House Democrats. “And we need to not ever use the word socialist, or socialism, ever again. … If we are classifying Tuesday as a success from a Congressional standpoint, we are going to get f***ing torn apart in 2022.”
Worth Your Time
- Joe Biden may be trending toward a victory, but the former vice president’s coattails are nowhere to be seen. “In the battle for the U.S. Senate, Republicans appear to have pulled off what a few weeks ago looked nearly impossible,” writes former George W. Bush chief of staff Karl Rove. With the exception of Martha McSally in Arizona and Cory Gardner in Colorado, incumbent Senate Republicans held strong and—barring surprises in two runoff races in Georgia—will likely keep their majority. House Republicans are also defying the polling odds and are now projected to gain around a dozen seats. Rove also throws some cold water on claims of widespread voter fraud: “There are suspicious partisans across the spectrum who believe widespread election fraud is possible. Some hanky-panky always goes on, and there are already reports of poll watchers in Philadelphia not being allowed to do their jobs. But stealing hundreds of thousands of votes would require a conspiracy on the scale of a James Bond movie. That isn’t going to happen.”
- In Politico, Burgess Everett, Alex Thompson, and Marianne Levine have a primer on the two politicians who seem likely to become “America’s new power couple,” Joe Biden and Mitch McConnell. “Biden and McConnell have a real relationship—forged over the years as Senate colleagues and combatants,” the trio write. “McConnell was the only Senate Republican to attend the funeral for Biden’s son Beau in 2015, and he’s largely stayed away from GOP attacks on Biden’s other son, Hunter.” Chuck Hagel, former Republican senator and President Obama’s Secretary of Defense, thinks there’s hope for bipartisanship yet. Biden will be “personally involved. Obama’s style was different,” he told Politico. “Obama didn’t really understand the Congress, the Senate, like Joe does.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing The Company Line
- For Thursday’s mythbusters edition of the Advisory Opinions podcast, David and Sarah discussed the nitty gritty details surrounding ballot counting processes and whether the conspiratorial claims surrounding voter fraud allegations have any merit. They wrapped things up with a conversation about exit polls and some Supreme Court punditry.
- National Review’s Jim Geraghty was Jonah’s guest on the most recent episode of The Remnant. The pair talk about—you guessed it—the election. Whither goes the GOP? Is it now a “multi-ethnic, working class, populist party?” What is the correct story to tell about Latino voters and Trump? Is Mar-a-Lago Trump’s Elba, or his St. Helena?
- At the site today, Audrey has a piece on the head of Fox News’s decision desk, Arnon Mishkin, who has faced serious pushback from the Trump campaign and even from Fox pundits since he called Arizona for Joe Biden on Tuesday night.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photo by Tami Chappell/AFP via Getty Images.
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LEGAL INSURRECTION
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AMERICAN THINKER
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
THE BLAZE
Listen live to Blaze Radio Tune in to the next generation of talk radio, featuring original content from hosts like Glenn Beck, Pat Gray, Stu Burguiere, Steve Deace and more!
One last thing … Former presidential candidate and entrepreneur Andrew Yang scolded the Democratic party on CNN on Thursday, telling them that they had lost touch with the working class, and liberals responded by excoriating him on social media. Yang made the comments while on CNN Thursday evening discussing the results of the election and the disappointing los … Read more
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THE FEDERALIST
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The Federalist, 611 Pennsylvania Ave SE, #247, Washington, DC 20003, United States
NOQ REPORT
ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 14 new items) |
- Against All Frauds, Trump Fights on
- Evidence Of Cheating, Arizona Update, Another Shutdown
- The Disinformationists
- I Repeat: America’s Problems Are Not Political
- The Woke Lose
- From Sermons, to Speeches, to Protests & Riots: The Mayflower at 400 and an American Myth throughout the Centuries
- Election Update: “The Art Of The Steal”
- Voters Split On State Abortion Laws
- Best Indicator
- The Underdog Election
- Win or Lose, Trump’s American Revolution is Only Beginning
- Marine Who Earned Medal of Honor in Vietnam Finally Receives Burial at Arlington
- Trump Takes His Case to Court in 3 Battleground States
- Mad About Election Chaos? Blame Dems’ Fraud-Prone Vote-By-Mail Scheme
Against All Frauds, Trump Fights on
Posted: 06 Nov 2020 12:20 AM PST by Tony Perkins: They say waiting is the hardest part. But they were wrong. Waiting is much worse when the messaging is controlled by a radical media with no interest in a fair outcome. For 48 hours, Americans have been glued to their televisions anxiously hoping for accurate updates on this nail-biter of a presidential race. What they’ve gotten instead is a torrent of commentary about the ridiculousness of President Trump questioning the results or laying claim to contested ballots. Worse, some outlets — like the AP — are calling anyone who draws attention to the irregularities liars. If you believe in transparency, you’re a “conspiracy theorist.” If you think there are anomalies to investigate, you’re in denial. And yet the media — who’s gotten everything dead wrong for five years — still thinks we should trust their judgment? No thank you. Our country is swimming in a sea of unknowns right now — and maybe by the end of it, Joe Biden will lay claim to our highest office. But we’re a long way from knowing that with certainty — and certainty is what Americans, with so much at stake, deserve. As Ken Blackwell reminded everyone on “Washington Watch” today, “One of the brilliant aspects of our two-party system and our constitutional republic is that elections work best and have the confidence of the people when there is transparency and bipartisan oversight. When there is a lack of transparency, and partisanship in the administration of an election — not bipartisanship, but partisanship — you undercut not only the authenticity of the result, you undercut the buy-in to the result by those who are governed.” In other words, it’s to the benefit of everyone — including Joe Biden and his supporters — that these questions are answered, and that voters are reassured that this election was done by the book. Maybe some of us won’t like the outcome, but we need to be able to trust the outcome. Instead, the media — who’s spent the last five years doing everything they can to undermine and vilify Donald Trump, whether it was Russian collusion or Ukraine — wants to give fuel to another false narrative that there’s nothing in this election to dispute! Of course, they have plenty of selfish reasons for doing so. Not only does it help take the attention away from the “smoking ruins of their credibility” in predicting this election, but it also helps to accomplish their longtime extremist agenda. They’re so invested in the far-Left, they’ll do anything to stop Trump’s reelection — even if it means sowing seeds on any legitimate claim to the presidency. To be clear, I’m not suggesting that the results we’re seeing are fraudulent. Do I think there’s cause for suspicion in certain areas? Yes, and that’s where I think both sides have an interest in reassuring Americans that the outcome is accurate, and the process is impartial. In states like North Carolina and Georgia, liberal leaders aren’t helping that cause by postponing the counting or refusing to certify Trump votes. That not only keeps the country in limbo, it leads to more uncertainty and mistrust about what state officials are up to. It also gives the media more time to pound home this narrative that Joe Biden won, and Donald Trump is trying to steal the election. And frankly, that’s reckless and flat-out dangerous. The angry mobs have already put the country on notice that cities will pay if officials take the time to get this right. Donald Trump doesn’t just want every vote to be counted, he wants every vote to be verified, an important distinction made by John Nolte. And frankly, what does he have to lose? Nothing. What does America have to lose? Everything. If he’s criticized for fighting his country and taking a deeper look into the “workings of these Big Democrat Machines in cities like Detroit, Atlanta, Milwaukee, and Philadelphia,” so be it. Maybe that’s what the Left and their megaphones in the press are worried about. The longer this goes on, the greater likelihood more inconsistencies will be exposed. Even now, as Joy Pullman spells out in the Federalist, a lot of this just doesn’t add up. “We’re supposed to believe the GOP had a great night except for the president?” ———————– Tony Perkins (@tperkins) is President of the Family Research Council . Ken Blackwell on video. Written with the aid of FRC senior writers. Tags: Tony Perkins, Ken Blackwell, Against All Frauds, Trump Fights onTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Evidence Of Cheating, Arizona Update, Another Shutdown
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 11:58 PM PST
by Gary Bauer: Evidence Of Cheating My response is that the modern Democrat Party is built on the lie that an unborn baby is not a human being, so nothing is off the table. Not every Democrat is pro-abortion. But every voter who believes in abortion during all nine months of pregnancy votes Democrat. That issue is the most important thing to Joe Biden’s party. Why would anybody doubt that a party that believes it’s okay to kill an unborn child in the ninth month of pregnancy would have a problem cheating on Election Day? If I were getting ready to hire a babysitter to watch my grandchildren and discovered that she supports late-term abortion, I wouldn’t hire her. I couldn’t trust her. And I cannot trust members of a party that worships at the altar of abortion to count votes unless people of good character are watching them. The default position of every Republican should be that there is cheating in these big Democrat cities. Shame on Chris Christie and Rick Santorum for criticizing the president and his team. And some Republican politicians might want to think before they speak or tweet next time. Everything they say is being spun by the media as a “rebuke” of the president. There are multiple reports from all of the key states that appear highly suspicious.
For a better understanding of the legal issues at play, read this column by former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy. On a positive note, an appellate court has ordered the city of Philadelphia to allow GOP representatives to observe the ballot counting process from a distance of six feet. Transparency is a good thing, but Democrat officials are aggressively resisting it. Is denying access and covering windows an indication that a fair count is taking place? Of course not! Arizona Update While Fox has defended the call, there are many others who disagree. For example, the founder of the left-wing site Daily Kos tweeted yesterday, ” Arizona should not have been called. It’s not over.” Well, here’s the latest: Maricopa County, which Trump carried by four points four years ago, released the results from 140,000 ballots and President Trump won 57% of them, taking a big bite out of Biden’s lead. By some estimates, that’s exactly the margin he would need to overcome Biden once all remaining ballots are counted. What’s Up With Fox? The best thing on Fox are shows like Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham. I like Fox & Friends most of the time. But much of their regular news is quickly becoming an echo chamber of the liberal news. It’s not funny to hear Fox News hosts mocking polls from CNN, the Washington Post and other outlets, while failing to mention that their own polls were just as bad! Throughout the entire campaign, conservatives were routinely demoralized by Fox News polls, and Fox hosts routinely pressed Trump campaign aides and Republican officials to justify their positions in view of Fox’s bogus polls. For whatever reason, Fox News eagerly called Arizona for Biden much more quickly than they were willing to call Florida for Trump. Talk about a gut punch to the conservative base! And they have dug in their heels even as Biden’s lead is eroding. Even now CNN does not have Arizona in Biden’s column. And Nate Silver, the left’s favorite numbers cruncher, said, “I sure as heck don’t think [Arizona] should have been called by anyone, and I think the calls that were previously made should be retracted now.” Fox’s camouflage is slowly slipping away. Senate Update We thought we had a rising star 24 hours ago in John James. But as more Democrat votes in Michigan were found, not only did the president fall behind, so did John James. With losses in Arizona and Colorado, and only one pick-up in Alabama, the Senate majority currently stands at 52. While Sen. Thom Tillis leads in North Carolina, the state will continue counting ballots well into next week. His race may not be called for days, and who knows what ballots might suddenly turn up. And as of this writing, Georgia Sen. David Perdue has fallen below or is close to falling below the 50% threshold to avoid a January 5th run-off election. That means both of Georgia’s senators will be on the ballot again in a matter of weeks, and we won’t know which party controls the Senate until then. Another Shutdown? Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Evidence Of Cheating, Arizona Update, Another ShutdownTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Disinformationists
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 11:11 PM PST
Pollsters were widely wrong in 2016, yet learned nothing about their flawed methodologies. So how do they remain credible after 2020? by Victor Davis Hanson: A republic is not just a nation of laws. It also relies on its good-faith watchdogs, such as honest pollsters, the media, and bipartisan institutions. We still didn’t know the final result of Tuesday’s presidential election as of Wednesday night. But there are lots of reasons to worry that something in America has gone terribly wrong. Many of the mainstream pre-election polls predicted that Donald Trump would lose in a landslide. He did not — to the shock of a host of propagandists. A CNN poll had Trump down 12 percentage points nationally entering the final week before the election. An ABC News/Washington Post poll in late October claimed Biden was leading in Wisconsin by 17 points. That state’s voting ended up nearly even. YouGov’s election model showed Biden prevailing with a landslide win in the Electoral College. Progressive statistics guru Nate Silver had for weeks issued pseudo-scientific analyses of a Trump wipeout. Pollsters were widely wrong in 2016. Yet they learned nothing about their flawed methodologies. So how do they remain credible after 2020, when most were wildly off again? A cynic might answer that polling no longer aims to offer scientific assessments of voter intentions. Pollsters, the vast majority of them progressives, have become political operatives. They see their task as ginning up political support for their candidates and demoralizing the opposition. Some are profiteering as internal pollsters for political campaigns and special interests. Never again will Americans believe these “mainstream” pollsters’ predictions because they have been exposed as rank propagandists. That bleak assessment won’t make much difference to pollsters. They privately understand what their real mission has become and why they are no longer scientific prognosticators. Big liberal donors sent cash infusions totaling some $500 million into Senate races across the country to destroy Republican incumbents and take back the Senate. In the end, they may have failed to change many of the outcomes. But did they really fail? Democrats dispelled the fossilized notion that “dark money” is dangerous to politics. They are now the party of the ultra-rich, at war with the middle classes, whom they write off as clingers, deplorables, dregs, and chumps. In that context, the staggering amounts of money were a valuable marker. The liberal mega-rich are warning politicians that from now on, they will try to bury populist conservatives with so much oppositional cash that they would be wise to keep a low profile. Winning is not the only aim of lavish liberal campaign funding. Deterring future opponents by warning them to be moderate or go bankrupt is another motivation. Never again will Americans believe these “mainstream” pollsters’ predictions because they have been exposed as rank propagandists. That bleak assessment won’t make much difference to pollsters. They privately understand what their real mission has become and why they are no longer scientific prognosticators. Big liberal donors sent cash infusions totaling some $500 million into Senate races across the country to destroy Republican incumbents and take back the Senate. In the end, they may have failed to change many of the outcomes. But did they really fail? Democrats dispelled the fossilized notion that “dark money” is dangerous to politics. They are now the party of the ultra-rich, at war with the middle classes, whom they write off as clingers, deplorables, dregs, and chumps. In that context, the staggering amounts of money were a valuable marker. The liberal mega-rich are warning politicians that from now on, they will try to bury populist conservatives with so much oppositional cash that they would be wise to keep a low profile. Winning is not the only aim of lavish liberal campaign funding. Deterring future opponents by warning them to be moderate or go bankrupt is another motivation. Twitter co-founder and CEO Jack Dorsey seemed unapologetic that his company was systematically censoring and de-platforming conservative users. In a recent hearing he talked to members of the Senate as if he were a 19th-century railroad baron. Google has been accused of massaging its search results to favor progressive agendas. During the final weeks of the campaign, social-media platforms shut down accounts and censored ads and messages, providing an enormously valuable gift to Joe Biden. Silicon Valley, like the 19th-century oil, rail, and sugar trusts, sees no reason to hide its partisanship and clout. The media coverage of the election was unsavory. Journalists confirmed the findings of Harvard University’s Shorenstein Center, which in an assessment of news coverage of Trump’s first 100 days in office found that 80 percent of the coverage was negative. As in the fashion of the Russian collusion hoax, the media for weeks on end revved up their engines for a seemingly certain Biden landslide victory. They rarely cross-examined Biden on the issues. And they certainly stayed clear of the Biden family influence-peddling scandal. What do all these power players — big polling, big money, big tech, and big media — have in common other than their partisanship and their powerful reach? One, they stereotypically represent a virtue-signaling coastal elite that feels its own moral superiority allows it to destroy its own professional standards. Two, they worry little about popular pushback because they assume that their money, loaded surveys, and Internet and media cartels create, rather than reflect, public opinion. Three, while these elite cadres have enormous resources, they still are relatively unpopular. Despite being outspent 2 to 1, pronounced doomed by pollsters, often censored on social media, and demonized in print and on television, Trump was neck and neck with Biden — a fact that a few days ago was deemed impossible. If Biden wins, we should assume that in late January 2021, these same forces will regroup to frame a new post-election narrative. Expect our Big Brothers to instruct Americans that the COVID-19 pandemic is mutating into little more than a bad flu. The “Biden vaccine” and miraculous “Biden recovery” will have ended the need for Trump-era lockdowns. And the rioting, looting, and arson? They will all have miraculously disappeared because the disuniter and inciter Donald Trump is now gone. Tags: Victor Davis ahnson, The DisinformationistsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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I Repeat: America’s Problems Are Not Political
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 10:23 PM PST
by Chuck Baldwin: As readers should know by now, I adamantly refuse to get sucked into the phony left-right paradigm. I also refuse to get on board the Trump Train. I made a vow to God in 1996 that I would never again support a presidential candidate that I knew would be unfaithful to the Constitution and Natural liberties given us by our Creator. As I see it, there are two basic groups of Christians who are voting for Donald Trump this year. 1) Those who have a god-like vision of Trump. They truly believe him to be some sort of a messiah-figure. They believe he is an American Moses. In many respects, Trump has a religious cult following. These people believe everything he says is gospel. They believe everything he does is by divine miracle. 2) Those who are good conservative, freedom-oriented believers, who recognize Trump’s wickedness, but who are willing to overlook those evils, believing, a) Trump is doing enough good things to tolerate those evils and, b) The alternative (Joe Biden) is so repugnant that there is no choice but to support Trump. Sound familiar? The first group is composed of seriously deluded people. The second group could be defined as political pragmatists. Of course, a host of non-believers, conservative in politics, would embrace the philosophy of political pragmatism. But so do many Christians. To them, a vote for the “lesser of two evils” is not a violation of their moral convictions. In fact, they would see such an act as necessary—and even righteous. Obviously, the power-elite manipulate political pragmatists during every election cycle—especially at the national level. By stacking the deck in the general election with controlled candidates from both political parties, they ensure that no matter who wins, the establishment’s agenda moves forward unabated, while rank-and-file voters on both sides of the aisle believe they have voted for a difference. It is a masterful strategy. I firmly believe that two things are required to see through the above. 1) A studied understanding that there IS a cabal of very powerful people who not only conspire against the Liberty principles of America and Christianity but who are also wealthy and influential enough to actually manipulate—and even control—the major levels of leadership within countries, including their news media, educational, entertainment, medical and religious institutions. 2) A spiritual understanding that America’s strength lies in the moral courage of its pulpits. In other words, America’s problems are not political; they are spiritual. The forces of evil have hated this country from its inception. From the beginning, America’s core principles—enshrined in our Declaration of Independence, Constitution and Bill of Rights—were rooted in our Creator’s Natural and Revealed Laws. Christian faith and practice are at the heart of America’s heritage. The quote commonly attributed to Alexis de Tocqueville may have said it best: As I brought out in my message last Sunday at Liberty Fellowship (taken from Micah 6:1 – 8), the national crises that Old Testament Israel and Judah faced were due to the way that God’s people—especially the kings and priests—throughout the two nations had offended God with their vile and wicked conduct. This, my friends, is the crux of America’s problems. But Jerry Falwell Jr. seemed to speak for most evangelicals when he said, “You don’t choose a president based on how good they are.” I guess not. But we used to. There was a time in America when we expected our grocery clerks, our gas station attendants, our school teachers, our mailmen, our business managers, our repairmen, our physicians, our mechanics, our neighbors, and, yes, our civil magistrates, to be good. Does anyone remember Gary Hart? And he was a Democrat. Today, not only are pastors and Christians willing to enthusiastically support an immoral reprobate like Donald Trump but they actually believe that this immoral reprobate is America’s only hope. He is America’s only answer. He is God’s salvation for our country. Are we not able to stop and see what is happening? To a vast number of evangelical Christians, America’s hope rests with politicians—their preferred politicians, of course. To these believers, politicians are far more important to the future of America than preachers. Acts of Congress are more important than Acts of God. Fidelity to a political party is more important than fidelity to Holy Scripture. Salvation comes in the form of Executive Order and Supreme Court decision, not Holy Spirit conviction and God’s immutable truth. And in the case of Donald Trump, which came first: A corrupt president who is corrupting the Church or a corrupt Church that created a corrupt president? Susan Wright tries to sort it out: Is the evangelical church in America so lost? Is their faith only skin deep? Is there no remnant of faithful believers, ready to stand on God’s holy Word, above any temporal, worldly kingdom?At this point let me plainly assert: Ever since Trump was elected in 2016, Christians have been saying that God put Him in office. If that’s true, then God is certainly able to keep Trump in office. But if Biden is elected next week, then it must mean that God wants Biden in office. No matter who wins the election next Tuesday, America’s problems will not be solved, because, again, America’s problems are not political. And as long as evangelical Christians continue to put their faith and trust in politicians, our problems will only worsen. God eventually destroyed Israel and Judah due to their wickedness. Why should He spare an unrepentant America? And that’s exactly what we have right now: An unrepentant nation and an unrepentant Church. For example, I hear Christians constantly say the reason they vote for Donald Trump (or for any other Republican presidential nominee) is because he is “pro-life.” Really? As I have pointed out several times: Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans controlled the entire federal government—including the Supreme Court—for the first two years of his administration. G.W. Bush and Republicans controlled the entire federal government for 4.6 years. Did either of them overturn Roe? No, they did not. They did not even try to overturn Roe. Please try telling the 3.5 million babies who were surgically aborted and the 56 million babies who were chemically aborted since Trump took office how “pro-life” he is. And never forget that Republican-appointed judges have been a majority on the Supreme Court since before Roe v Wade was decided in 1973. That’s 50 consecutive years of a Republican-dominated Court. That’s right: A Republican-majority court gave us Roe, and 50 years of Republican-majority courts have kept Roe intact. Since when have we ever needed Democrats to legalize abortion-on-demand or keep it legal? Our family physician, Dr. Annie Bukacek, gave an excellent presentation pointing out that, as much as anything, support for phony pro-life legislation has been a major impediment to reversing Roe v Wade. Furthermore, under Trump’s presidency, more federal tax dollars have been given to Planned Parenthood than when Barack Obama was president. And speaking of federal spending, do we even dare to broach the subject of the national debt and deficit spending? No, because Trump has shattered all the records. But here’s what evangelicals never want to talk about: Donald Trump has extended America’s foreign wars beyond that of Obama or GW Bush. Donald Trump drops a bomb somewhere in the world every 12 minutes. You read that right: Every 12 minutes. Trump has dropped more bombs and missiles on Middle Eastern countries in a comparable period of time than any modern U.S. President. Presidents Bush, Obama and now Trump have dropped over 300,000 bombs and missiles on Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. Trump’s rate of bombing eclipses both Bush and Obama. Trump has dropped almost 200,000 bombs and missiles on Middle Eastern countries in just his first term of office—which surpasses the number of bombs and missiles dropped by Obama during his entire eight-year presidency and is two-thirds of all of the bombs dropped since 9/11. Trump began his presidency in a flurry of war, but as the 2020 elections drew nearer, he again started acting like a peace candidate. But why do I even point that out? It matters to almost no one. In addition, Trump has escalated the financial and military support for the warmongering Zionist State of Israel, which has murdered untold thousands of innocent Palestinians—both Christians and Muslims—throughout the Middle East. I am weary—and I think most of the rest of the world is too—with hearing evangelicals talk about how pro-life they are while at the same time supporting the wanton mass killing of innocent people all over the world via America’s Zionist-controlled military-industrial complex. Reading the Old Testament prophets, one will quickly observe that Israel’s perpetual shedding of innocent blood was one of God’s chief indictments against that nation—indictments that eventually led to the nation’s divine execution. Why should America be an exception? If the evangelical church would lose its misplaced infatuation with and unbiblical enthusiasm for the Zionist State of Israel and use its very powerful collective voice to call for an end to these wars for Israel and slaughter of innocent people, maybe—just maybe—God’s anger against us would be assuaged. Trump talks a lot about ending America’s endless wars, but in reality, he’s done nothing about it. And the truth is, most evangelicals would be angry if he actually did end the wars for Israel. As Trump recently told us, the only reason we are fighting in the Middle East is to protect Israel (a nation that is fully capable of defending itself and who’s Arab neighbors—including Iran—pose NO serious threat to it). And much of the impetus for these unconstitutional and immoral wars for Israel is the pressure exerted on the White House and Congress by AIPAC and the rest of the Israeli lobby in Washington, D.C., including the vast majority of evangelical churches. When Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, went to pray for her father’s re-election, she went to the grave of the Chabadist cult leader Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson. Yet, many evangelicals are salivating over the idea that Ivanka might be president in 2024. PLEASE! Doesn’t anyone see what has happened to the Church? To understand the terroristic and aggressive history of Zionist Israel—a violent, bloodthirsty history meticulously planned for decades before being implemented—it is imperative that you read the book The Ethnic Cleansing Of Palestine by Ilan Pappe. With all of this said, I am not advocating for people to not vote for Donald Trump. I have many friends (at least, I hope they are still friends) and family members who voted for Trump and will vote for him again. I wouldn’t even be upset with evangelicals who voted for Trump four years ago had they made a sincere effort to hold Trump accountable to the principles of constitutional government during his first term in office. But they didn’t. Instead, they covered up, made excuses for, overlooked, justified and condoned the very things that they screamed about when Obama was doing them—and the very things they will scream about again should Biden be elected and he repeats them. No! I am not advocating for people to not vote for Donald Trump. Voting is not our problem. I am advocating for Christian people to snap out of their idolatrous worship of politics in general and of Republican presidents in particular. I am advocating for Christians to return to the love of the truth of God’s Word. I am advocating for Christians to start putting principle before party. I am advocating for Christians to understand that until the Church gets right with God’s Word, all of the Republican politicians in the world will not be able to solve our problems. I am advocating for Christians to cast off their unbiblical support for the warmongering, antichrist State of Israel. I am advocating for pastors to collect themselves and begin preaching with the courage and convictions of the prophets of old—the kind of preaching that created this country to begin with. Remember the words of de Tocqueville: “Not until I went into the churches of America and heard her pulpits aflame with righteousness did I understand the secret of her genius and power.” If evangelicals were as excited about their pastors proclaiming truth as they are about their politicians pandering lies, we might see something besides an oncoming train at the end of the tunnel. I repeat: America’s problems are not political. And that means neither are the solutions. P.S. Once again, I am excited to distribute an amazing book about the creation of the State of Israel from an objective historical perspective, written by one of Israel’s most renowned historians. The Ethnic Cleansing Of Palestine, by Ilan Pappe. This is the true story of how Israel became a state off the blood, rape and ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people. The State of Israel loves to play the role of victim on the world stage, but the truth is, since WWII, Israel is one of the most murderous aggressor/terror states in the world. Had any other nation on earth committed the atrocities you will find documented in this book, the entire world—especially the United States—would hold it up to global condemnation. But you have likely read or heard absolutely nothing about it. The truth of Israel’s murderous conquest of Palestine is even hidden from the people of Israel themselves. Evangelical Christians who are enamored with the modern State of Israel, believing it to be a fulfillment of Biblical prophecy, need to take a close, hard look at the brutal history of the Zionist state. Reading this book is the best place to begin. Tags: Chuck Baldwin, American’s, problems , not political To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Woke Lose
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 09:55 PM PST by Ben Shapiro: On Tuesday night, the American people spoke. They spoke with millions upon millions of voices to produce the greatest presidential election voter turnout in over a century. And they sent a variety of messages, most of them quite positive. Voters rejected the prevailing narratives of a media determined to make the election a pure referendum on Donald Trump’s character. Even if Joe Biden prevails eventually, he will likely be faced with a Republican Senate majority and a 2022 contest that will put the House of Representatives squarely in Republican sights. Voters rejected the pollsters’ overconfident modeling: Pollsters were dramatically wrong in their national numbers and just as wrong in their Senate estimates. Voters apparently aren’t all that interested in registering their opinions with elite firms who see them as social science subjects rather than as individuals. Voters stuck to their guns in red states; they stuck to their guns in blue states; they stuck to their guns in purple states. America is divided, and it is not growing less divided just out of the elitists’ overwrought and hysterical mewling about Trump. This is still a country that is one-third conservative, one-third liberal, and one-third in the middle. But one message resonated above all others: the outright rejection of the ongoing quest by Democrats and the media to paint Americans into racial categories and then declare demographics destiny. Trump bucked four long years of Democrats and media members labeling both him and his supporters white supremacists, bigots, and homophobes. He refused to be cowed by a media determined to paint him as a racist for refusing the faulty premise that America is institutionally bigoted. And he won an increased share of black and Hispanic voters. According to Edison exit polling, as of election night, Trump had gained two points with white women; four points with black men and four points with black women; three points with Latino men and three points with Latino women; and five points in the “other” category. In Florida, according to NBC News exit polling, Trump’s coalition included a 55% share of the Cuban American vote, a 30% share of the Puerto Rican vote, and 48% of “other Latinos.” Trump substantially elevated the national share of Latino and black voters for Republicans—and did so without pandering on illegal immigration or buying into the trite and ugly lies of the Black Lives Matter movement. It wasn’t just Trump. In California, a majority-minority state, voters refused to greenlight the racist Proposition 16, which would have repealed a state constitutional provision banning racial discrimination, paving the way for reparations and affirmative action. They did so by a margin of over 10 points and despite the fact that Prop 16 advocates spent 12 times the money their opponents did. All of this has sent woke thinkers into spasms of apoplexy. The execrable Nikole Hannah-Jones, creator of the pseudo-historical 1619 Project, tweeted out that Latinos can no longer be considered a racial category, since some Cubans are “white.” Charles Blow of The New York Times tweeted, “We are surrounded by racists.” Actually, Hannah-Jones and Blow aren’t surrounded by racists. They’re surrounded by people who reject racism and reject the implicitly racist belief that ethnicity ought to dictate voting pattern. All of this is excellent news. Americans spoke Tuesday night. They spoke as Americans, as individuals, not as members of contrived interest groups. And that is certainly worth celebrating. Tags: Ben Shapiro, The Woke Lose, The Daily Signal To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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From Sermons, to Speeches, to Protests & Riots: The Mayflower at 400 and an American Myth throughout the Centuries
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 09:25 PM PST by Cory D, Higdon: The sermons, political speeches, and protests about America’s origin rely on harmful myths. This is true not only of the 1619 Project’s, but also the traditional view of the Pilgrims. The task of history, however, ought to replace myth with the far more compelling chronicles of human complexity. The year 2020 has been anything but predictable. It already promised to be an eventful year, but it quickly descended into utter chaos as a pandemic gripped the world, protests and riots shut down many American cities, and an iconic justice of the United States Supreme Court died, all while the nation prepared for one of the most consequential presidential elections in recent decades. It seems that nothing has escaped from the mayhem that is the year 2020—not even, as it turns out, the study of American history. Indeed, on October 13, 2020, an article appeared at The Washington Post by Sarah Ellison with the headline “How the 1619 Project Took Over 2020.” The article chronicled the controversy that erupted after the publication of The New York Times Magazine’s now infamous set of essays that sought to reframe the story of America through the lens of slavery. Ellison traced how the 1619 Project enjoyed immediate accolades while simultaneously suffering the severe scrutiny of a host of American historians who questioned the historical veracity of several of its claims. Moreover, she revealed how what began as a debate within the historical academy quickly bled into the broader American culture, even becoming part of the 2020 general election. The reason the 1619 Project “took over 2020” was that it questioned the seemingly unquestionable—namely, the foundation, formation, and origin of the American nation. In so doing, the 1619 Project destabilized American national identity and leveled a full broadside against crucial pillars of our civic religion and the idea of American exceptionalism. It descended on the American consciousness as protestors took to the streets in the summer months of 2020, tearing down statues and memorials to national figures, arguing that we must recast America’s origin and identity in a fundamental way. The centennial years 1820, 1920, and 2020 all featured assessments of the Pilgrims based more on myth than on fact. A sermon preached in 1820 that eulogized the Pilgrims as the fount of American liberty and religion shares an interpretive commonality with a band of protestors in 2020 who decry the Pilgrims as colonizing tyrants who deserve nothing but defamation. Each approach relies upon a different myth and deploys that myth for the purposes of defining American identity. If 2020 is to be taken over by disputes over the ideological and moral origins of the United States, then those conversations will be best served through a recalibration of historical thinking, one that relies less on myth and more on the stories of history as they happened. As John Turner argued in his new book on the Pilgrims, “When . . . mythology is stripped away, the more expansive and colorful history . . . remains.” A reception history of the Pilgrims at various national celebrations not only shows the power of myth in American identity-making, but it also connects present-day disputes to a broader narrative of a nation that has continually reinvented and reimagined the past for its own nationalistic purposes. The Bicentennial Yet, it was Daniel Webster’s two-hour-long speech at the official bicentennial celebration of the Mayflower that catapulted the Pilgrims from regional to national notoriety. Webster was already a prominent figure in New England, having enjoyed a successful career as a constitutional lawyer and served two terms in Congress. His specific political and national context, coupled with his own ideological convictions, directed his interpretation of the Pilgrims. Indeed, in 1820, the United States had entered what was known as “The Era of Good Feelings,” a time of prosperity that came in the wake of the nation’s victory in the War of 1812. At the same time, America began to look to the West and to the nation’s interior, a prospect cautioned against by members of Webster’s party—for coupled with expansion was the question of the legality of slavery in new American territories. At this political crossroads, Webster delivered his discourse on the Pilgrims, reimagining their story for the purposes and needs of America in 1820. His speech was a summons to the early republic, a clarion call to the nation that it might not be found “unworthy” of its “origin”—an origin not found in 1607 with the settlement of Jamestown in Virginia, to where the first slaves were brought in 1619. Indeed, Webster contrasted the Pilgrims’ project with that of Virginia and other Southern colonies, which, as he argued, began with corruption and vice, and were mired by the stain of slavery. Thus, Webster used the bicentennial celebration as an opportunity to assert New England exceptionalism over and against other colonial projects. New England exceptionalism, moreover, provided the foundation for American exceptionalism. Indeed, while Webster lauded the exceptional quality of New England’s colonial origins, he surreptitiously shifted from the story of New England to the American nation as a whole, making the story of America the story of New England. America did not take its first breath in 1607, but in 1620 when the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. Moreover, Webster emphasized what he believed were the virtues and commitments of the Pilgrims, and he contended throughout his speech that the character of the American nation sprang from New England. As America gazed upon the West, Webster summoned the nation to remember the characteristics of the Pilgrims and argued that expansion across North America ought to mimic the mythologized English Separatists. He pointed to the Pilgrims’ ethical heritage as a condemnation of slavery in America and used their story to curtail any effort to spread slavery into the American interior—a questionable move given the involvement of Plymouth and the Massachusetts colony not only in the African slave trade, to a certain degree, but especially in the enslavement of the Native American population. As is the case with myths, however, historical fact gives way to historical fiction. But it was this vision of the Pilgrims that would soon be found “on the shores of the Pacific.” Their virtue and commitment to liberty must be exported throughout the entire nation as a narrative that would purify America from the stain of slavery. Webster also looked to the Pilgrims for something far more crucial than a virtuous plan for westward expansion. Indeed, the Pilgrims offered the qualities and characteristics necessary for the entire experiment of American ordered liberty to succeed. The Pilgrims, Webster believed, built their society—a society dedicated to liberty—upon a moral framework grounded in religious piety and devotion. Without religion, there was no morality. Without morality, there was no liberty. Without liberty, there was no America. This liberty, however, did not connote the freedom to live licentiously. Instead, Webster’s vision of American liberty, as enshrined by the Pilgrims, conveyed the freedom to worship God rightly and to live virtuously. This was Webster’s Pilgrim myth that provided the moral, political, and religious foundation of the United States. The Tercentenary Indeed, The New York Herald reported on several dinners and galas in the winter of 1920 that celebrated the tercentenary. The Herald recounted the address given by Senator Bert M. Fernald of Maine, who fashioned a Mayflower myth that placed the Pilgrims within the early twentieth-century struggle against Bolshevism. Situating the hope of America’s placement in the world and its resistance to Bolshevism in a Pilgrim myth, Fernald proclaimed, “The foundation of the American Republic as laid in the firm cement of the covenant of the Pilgrim Fathers, will not be uprooted by the raging storm of Bolshevism that is now sweeping over the world.” He also invoked the memory of the Pilgrims to decry streams of European immigrants that flooded American harbors. Later in 1921, President Harding delivered a formal speech commemorating the Pilgrims and the voyage of the Mayflower. Throughout his address, President Harding leaned upon their memory to “combat the menace in the growing assumption that the state must support the people.” What twentieth-century American domestic economic policy had to do with the Pilgrims was, at best, unclear—at worst, it misrepresented the social ethic of the seventeenth-century English Separatists. The Mayflower at 400 The sermons, political speeches, and protests about America’s origin rely on myth and a faulty anthropology that fails to contend with the realities of the human condition. The task of history, however, is to replace myth with the far more compelling chronicles of human complexity. Hagiography and critical theory both represent an approach to history that culminates not in an exposition of the truth, but a myth. Such myth-making is historical malpractice. The story of the Pilgrims was and remains a complex narrative. As John Turner helpfully asserts, “Rather than bequeathing to later generations of Americans a simple story of democracy and freedom, the Pilgrims and the other inhabitants of Plymouth Colony left behind both a complicated legacy of human bondage and unresolved debates about liberty.” That is the story that demands to be told. Tags: Cory D. Higdon, Public Discourse, from sermons to speeches, protest to riots, Mayflower at 400, American Myth, throughout the Centuries To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Election Update: “The Art Of The Steal”
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 06:32 PM PST by Mike Huckabee: No matter what the polls were telling us, we knew all along there’d be no Biden landslide –- far from it. The pollsters failed spectacularly to predict the voting behavior of our broken country, as we showed ourselves to be unresolvably split along ideological lines. And now that it’s obvious what’s really happening — all in line with the Democrats’ stated plan of “never” conceding and “counting every ballot” (whether or not it corresponds to an actual voter) — Trump’s lawyers are fighting for the REAL votes to count, as opposed to the…well, the other ones. I reported Wednesday that the Trump campaign is filing suit in Michigan to make them stop counting ballots until Republicans are allowed to see the process, which has been hidden from them. According to the DAILY CALLER, Trump’s attorneys have also filed suit in Georgia, where the outcome remains up in the air and the support, as measured by the ballots, is virtually split down the middle. Nevada is also still pending; as of Wednesday evening, there was only a difference of about 8,000 between Biden and Trump. The counting continues, and at noon Eastern Time Thursday, another “batch” of who-knows-how-many ballots is supposed to have been counted. It’s impossible to imagine that Nevadans WANT to elect a candidate who is more than ready to shut down their state, considering its huge dependence on tourism and entertainment. The first shutdown wrecked them, and President Trump understands what another one would mean. Tucker Carlson spoke with Adam Laxalt, former attorney general of Nevada and state co-chair of the Trump campaign. As of late Wednesday, the ballot count showed Trump and Biden essentially tied in Nevada with 49 percent each. Laxalt said, “There is no question that Donald Trump would’ve won Nevada last night [Tuesday] convincingly if we did not move to mail-in ballots.” He said Democrats in Nevada have “stacked the deck” (haha) against Trump. They changed the rules within 90 days of the count, and GOP poll watchers aren’t allowed to watch the all-important process of signature matching or flag any of the nearly 400,000 mail-in ballots being counted. When Republicans challenged this, saying they had a right to see the process, a judge sided with the Democrats. So the GOP would just have to “trust” but not “verify,” he said. Never mind that an unknown number of these ballots would, of course, be from dead people, long-gone former residents, etc. “It’s just astounding,” he said, “that when you watch the news commentary…they keep acting like these systems are foolproof and there’s no way that any improper voter could get through, and it’s just simply not true.” Moving on to Michigan, last night NEWSMAX called Michigan for Biden, with 50 percent to Trump’s 48 percent. But they reported the story we had earlier Wednesday, about the Trump campaign filing suit to be able to see the same process Mr. Laxalt of Nevada was talking about. According to Matt Sealy, a spokesman for the Michigan Conservative Coalition who himself was supposed to be able to watch the counting, “Right now, we’re watching a bizarre scene unfold down in Wayne County…where all the votes are being counted that were absentee and mail-in. They’re supposed to be able to have challengers wherever the counting takes place, and an observer, and on Wednesday, “basically, we were never able to have a full group of Republicans in the room. They locked the doors, they chained the doors…police presence was high, and every time we tried to challenge a ballot…we were told we were ‘obstructing the count’ and to ‘get out of the way.’” “They are just doing everything they can to finish the count so that they can seal those boxes, and then we would have to go into recount mode.” At that point, he said, “you can never prove fraud.” A recount is just that, a COUNT, not any kind of verification. NEWSMAX even had video of a Detroit counting location putting cardboard in the windows to keep onlookers from seeing inside. The Republicans locked out chanted “Stop the vote!” “There’s a lot going on that we need explanations for,” Sealy said. Of course, as we reported yesterday, Rudy Giuliani was on his way to Michigan to assess the situation there, and he has filed a lawsuit to stop the counting. According to Sealy, though, as of Wednesday night the counting in Michigan was continuing, with Republicans still stuck outside. Question: Say, why would they lock Republicans out and block the windows if they weren’t trying to manipulate the mail-in ballot count? What other possible reason could they have? And in a breaking story out of Michigan, James O’Keefe of Project Veritas was contacted by a whistleblower in the Barlow branch of the Traverse City Post Office who claims that his boss told postal workers on the day after the election to collect any ballots they found in outgoing mail, collection boxes or wherever, separate them, stamp them with the previous day’s postmark and put them through (that’s allowing voting after the election is over.) O’Keefe says he’s been contacted by a special agent of the USPS Inspector General about a possible investigation. It had better be more than “possible.” As for Pennsylvania, Jeffrey Lord on NEWSMAX cited past stories from “distinguished news outlets in Philadelphia” such as the local ABC affiliate about people “voting in the grave,” with the names of people “who had been dead for 10 and 15 years but had managed mysteriously to vote in the last 5 elections,” and also a security lapse at a building that stored voting machines, with some equipment disappearing. Last but not least, a Philadelphia election judge was indicted for trying to steal elections using voting machines. We’ve heard (and told) all the jokes for years about dead Democrats voting and stealing elections, but this corruption has finally gone SO FAR that it’s no joke now. On Wednesday, an additional 23,277 ballots were “found” in Philadelphia, all for –- you guessed it –- Joe Biden! Every last one. They weren’t even bothering to make it look good. Giuliani says these ballots “could be from Mars.” (Insert your own Uranus joke here.) Watch him here at Wednesday’s press conference in Philly. I’ll hold Arizona for now, as that situation is still developing — just don’t believe what you hear and remember that it’s still very much in play. Only 93 percent of precincts had reported as of Wednesday evening, with a gap of less than 100,000 between the two candidates. Many Arizonans believe there’s been fraud there, too, and that will certainly be an issue. As for Wisconsin, Wednesday evening Biden was ahead 50 percent to Trump’s 49, a difference of about 20,000 ballots, with about 99 percent of precincts reporting. Giuliani is calling for a recount, and also, according to NEWSMAX, filing “a slew of lawsuits” in Michigan and Pennsylvania. Kim Strassel of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL did the math for Wisconsin’s ballot count and found that it just doesn’t work with the number of registered voters. THE RIGHT SCOOP has passed along her explanation, which boils down to this: Wisconsin claims an 89 percent turnout. To get to that, Wisconsin would’ve had to have 900,000 same-day registrations! Yes, same-day registration is legal in Wisconsin, but what is the likelihood of that many? “I think it’s absolutely reasonable to ask what the heck’s going on with this,” she says. We are NOT going to let this election be stolen. We’re doing this by the rules. This is not over by a long shot. We cannot allow the Democrats to use the kind of shady tactics they employ in local races, as revealed recently to the NEW YORK POST by a New Jersey fixer, to steal the White House: If Americans can’t trust their presidential elections to be fair and legal, then we will no longer have the United States of America. We’ll be living in the world’s largest Third World nation. Tags: Mike Huckabee, election update, Art of the Steal To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Voters Split On State Abortion Laws
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 05:55 PM PST by Bill Donohue: Voters in Colorado and Louisiana considered abortion legislation on election day and went in opposite directions. The voters not only have nothing in common on this issue, their preferences are rooted in their religious values, or the lack thereof. Louisiana voters passed an amendment to the state constitution that forbids the right to an abortion or the public funding of it. This means that even if Roe v. Wade were overturned, abortion rights cannot be established in the state. The measure passed by a wide margin. It was sponsored by a black female Democrat, State Sen. Katrina Jackson; she is a Baptist. A pro-abortion activist told CNN that “we must keep fighting because women—not just those of means but all women and all people who can become pregnant—deserve the basic right to bodily autonomy….” (My italics.) She did not identify who, other than women, can get pregnant. Nor did the reporter ask her what creature, or creatures, she was talking about. No matter, she wins a gold star for inclusivity. Colorado has one of the most relaxed abortion laws in the nation. Indeed, it is one of seven states that permits women to terminate their pregnancy any time they want, right up until birth. Some residents said that was a bridge too far and managed to place a proposition on the ballot to ban abortions after the 22nd week of pregnancy. They lost. Approximately 6 in 10 voters rejected the ban. Why are the voters in these two states so different? Much of the divide can be explained by looking at their religiosity profile, namely the extent to which they differ on religious beliefs and practices. In terms of an overall religiosity scale, a Pew Research study placed Louisiana at number 4; Colorado ranked 41st. For example, 75% of Louisianans believe in God and 71% consider religion important; the figures for Coloradans are 55% and 47%, respectively. At first glance, it seems surprising that when it comes to asking whether there are “clear standards of what is right and wrong,” or whether “right and wrong depend on the situation,” there is no difference between the two states. The figures for the two questions for those who live in Louisiana are 38% and 59%; they are 37% and 59% for residents of Colorado. A closer look reveals that what matters is the source of one’s notions of right and wrong. Religion is the source of right and wrong for 43% of Louisianans, yet it is only 29% for Coloradans; the other two categories are philosophy/reason and common sense. There is a profound difference between looking to God-based determinants of right and wrong and determinants of a more personal kind. The former for Christians would be the Ten Commandments; for the latter it would be their own moral compass. Thus, the content of our moral values is necessarily reflected in their source. To put it another way, those in Louisiana are more likely to see abortion as the killing of innocent human beings, something which is proscribed by the Ten Commandments. Those who look to their own values are more likely to make decisions based on what they want, or feel, not on what God ordains. It should come as no surprise that given the low levels of religiosity in the lives of Coloradans that they would not countenance restrictions on their sexual liberties any more than they would put up with restrictions on their drug use: marijuana was legalized a decade ago. Unfortunately, five years after they did so they had a three-fold increase in pot heads being admitted to the emergency rooms. Vomiting, racing hearts and psychosis are the most common ailments. In other words, the hospitals in Louisiana and Colorado are very different. In the latter, they kill babies in the third trimester and flood their wards with drug abusers. In Louisiana, these problems are minimal. It all depends on the source of our moral values. Tags: Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Voters, Split On, State Abortion LawsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Best Indicator
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 05:39 PM PST by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: The pollsters were way off. Again. Sure, there were a couple outfits that, prior to Election Day, said the race between Trump and Biden was going to be close, but most portrayed Biden as way ahead. Instead, it’s a squeaker. Still, Biden’s pulling ahead — Michigan was declared for the Democrat as I type this. Before we blame the pollsters for drawing the wrong conclusions from their data, let’s not draw the wrong conclusions from the most important data of all: Tuesday’s actual votes. We must remember: people vote for and against candidates for a variety of reasons — personal, tribal, single-issue, broad-spectrum, you-name-it. But how do we determine their actual political values? Here’s one good indicator, voting . . . on ballot measures. From Tuesday’s elections we learn, at the very least, that the American people are not foursquare behind the socialistic pandering of Kamala Harris. Just before Election Day, the Democratic Vice Presidential candidate explained why equality of treatment wasn’t enough: people must be compensated for their past disadvantages, to make outcomes equal. She was pushing a recent meme common on the left, framed as “equality” versus “equity.” Mrs. Harris may be on her way to Number One Observatory Circle (the vice president’s residence) and then the White House, but Americans aren’t onboard her socialistic egalitarianism. On Tuesday, her home-state Californians repealed Proposition 16, which would have stricken down an equal rights measure of the 1990s in favor of a compensatory hiring and firing scheme based on racial qualifications. Woke socialists really like this sort of thing. Yet supposedly ultra-blue (pink?) Californians defeated it 56/44. Once the politics of personality and party are put aside, Americans are not as divided as the political class wishes we were. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: pollsters, were way off, Best Indicator, Proposition 16, Americans aren’t onboard, Kamala Harris, socialistic egalitarianismTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Underdog Election
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 05:16 PM PST by Daniel Greenfield: Every Republican running for public office in areas run by Democrat political machines knows that he has to beat the voter fraud margin. The voter fraud margin is the amount of votes that Democrats add or can add to the total to rig the election. One of the unprecedented things about this election, in the year from hell, is that the amount of mail-in ballots, of ballot harvesting, made the voter fraud margin so much bigger. Democrats had set the ground by seizing control of key states and key positions in them in preparation for the election. And even where they didn’t, their machines got busy. This was always going to happen. It happens every election, but the scale of it is different. As are the stakes. I don’t have to state the obvious about all the Biden votes that “magically” showed up, about why vote counting was suddenly suspended, or why totals suddenly stopped being updated for no apparent reason. These are symptoms of voter fraud. It’s a “Hacks at Work” sign being hung up outside the door. America has one of the most unreliable voting systems in the world because everyone, especially Democrats, wants it that way. The two questions in every presidential election are whether the race will be close enough that the voter fraud margin will kick in and can it be exposed. This is where the post-election street fight comes into the picture. If the voter fraud margin is high enough, then it becomes all but hopeless. And this was a race designed for a high voter fraud margin. As I discussed in my article, Americans Won, Pollsters Lost, the margin needed low turnout. The more people went to the polls, the harder it was to sustain the scam. That’s why Democrats wanted minimal in-person voting and Republicans wanted maximum in-person voting. It’s much harder to steal an election if people show up. The post-election street fight is a test of how big the voter margin fraud can get, how many more votes can be discovered than there are people, and how many ballots can magically show up overnight. And even if the street fight is lost, it’s worth fighting because it exposes the lie behind the legitimacy of the powers trying to take over the White House. They couldn’t steal the election in the daylight, so they had to do it in the dead of night. They couldn’t steal it in empty halls, so they had to do it after everyone went home. And the more their lie is challenged, the weaker their power becomes, and the more they have to resort to blatant thuggery to wield it. That’s what happened on Election Day. The polite voter fraud margin failed and they had to steal the election crudely. Now the real test between lies and truth begins. President Trump went into Election Day with huge financial, structural, messaging, and economic disadvantages. The Democrats were far ahead in the money race. Elections had been rigged in multiple states, often unilaterally by Democrat governors, in unprecedented ways. The media and Big Tech had colluded to build a messaging operation for Democrats that actively suppressed Republican and even President Trump’s messaging. And the pandemic, the lockdowns, and the riots had ravaged the economy. Trump and Republicans went into this race as underdogs. And that was the right way to tell the story. The media created a fake narrative bolstered with fake polls in which the country had turned against him and a blue wave was coming. Some conservative media, now increasingly littered with social media grifters, overpromised the other way. The media’s Democrat narrative was meant to suppress Republican and Independent voters, and pave the way for a cover-up of the massive election fraud now underway, as I discuss in my article, “Americans Won, Pollsters Lost”. But the stuff percolating in conservative media was social media clickbait. The only thing it did was lead a lot of conservatives to feel baffled and crushed. 2020 was an incredible election. Republicans made gains despite everything being rigged against them. The presidential election is still being contested. This is an underdog story. Unfortunately too many conservatives went into this huffing up stories in which the black vote would turn to Trump (and in the process missed the much bigger story of the Latino vote in Texas and what that means) and California and New York would go red. The grifters got their clicks. Conservative media passed around its own share of bad polls, and I’m swamped with messages this morning from people wondering what happened. What happened is that President Trump and conservatives beat expectations, won unexpected victories, despite everything being rigged against them. Conservatives should be feeling that, instead of wondering where all the fake promises went. Pros on both sides understood that this would be a close race that would be likely settled with a street fight over ballots in key states, Social media clickbait on both sides encouraged the creation of false narratives that have left a lot of people unhappy, angry, and confused. Whatever happens now, this was not a defeat. It was a very close race in which conservatives outperformed the structural limits and expectations, and which may have changed the entire political landscape. That sets the stage for future battles, one way or another. If it ends up being that Republicans didn’t beat the voter fraud margin, this was a hard fight by underdogs against a corrupt system. Remember that. And forget the clickbait. Leftists need to believe in lies. Conservatives should uphold the truth. Tags: Daniel Greenfield, The Underdog ElectionTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Win or Lose, Trump’s American Revolution is Only Beginning
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 04:46 PM PST by Robert Romano: The states of Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania are still counting ballots, and the presidential election of 2020 between the President and former Vice President Joe Biden is still too close to call. Win or lose in 2020, President Donald Trump, his administration, campaign and supporters have a whole lot to be proud of. This is a President who has fought tirelessly for the American people: to get better deals on trade, to take on the Washington, D.C. establishment, bring jobs back to the U.S. and get the economy moving after eight years of the Obama-Biden stagnation. Whatever happens, President Trump’s America First Revolution is only just beginning. And in 2020, Trump dramatically built on his 2016 coalition by garnering more than 68 million votes, far more than any other Republican candidate in history. To get there, according to the CNN exit poll for this year, Trump significantly improved his standing amongst numerous demographics compared to 2016: white women by 3 points, blacks by 4 points, shrank Biden’s margin on both black men and women by 7 points, shrank Biden’s margin on Latino men by 6 points and on Latina women by 2 points. What Trump has done, and Republicans might not appreciate this right now, is create a new way for the GOP to win national elections by expanding the Republican base: by appealing to poorer, working class Americans of all races, creeds and colors. In doing so, President Trump has not only put the lie to the media falsely portraying him as a racist, he has guaranteed a competitive two-party system at a time when Democratic one-party rule is a real danger. 2020 has produced more votes than ever in American history across the board. But, in the Rust Belt states of Michigan and Wisconsin, Trump was narrowly beaten by Biden this time. Interestingly, the key to Biden’s wins there was on the President’s core constituency: Trump lost a small and yet highly significant ground with white men, and specifically white, no-college nationally and at the state level. In 2016, Trump won whites generally 57 percent to 37 percent. In 2020, he only won it 57 percent to 42 percent. Biden improved by 4 points there. On white men, last time Trump won 62 percent to 31 percent. In 2020, he won it 58 percent to 40 percent. My sense is Trump didn’t lose any support, it’s that Biden increased turnout amongst the D-leaning white men. It went from a 31-point edge to an 18-point edge. Devastating. Finally, on white, no-college, Trump won 66 percent to 29 percent last time. In 2020, Trump won 64 percent to 35 percent, going from a 37-point edge to a 29-point edge. And, the killer, on white, no-college men, Trump won 71 percent to 23 percent in 2016. In 2020, Trump won it 67 percent to 30 to percent. If Biden happens to eke out a victory, when Trump improved every one of his weaknesses on women and minorities but lost ground on his major strength, that will be the biggest reason why. To be fair, it’s not that Trump was necessarily losing support among this group, it was that Biden was able to improve on his own Democratic-leaning voters in this demographic, essentially bringing his numbers among whites back to former President Barack Obama’s 2008 levels. This is something the President’s campaign data team should have identified as a group that the Biden campaign was explicitly targeting — and moved to register more voters in this key demographic — even if it appeared to the GOP that it was already maximized. “The President may regret following the advice of conventional GOP consultants,” Market Research Foundation President Bill Wilson commented, adding, “They, as a group, have never understood the impact of the white, no-college voter. While the President may be able to off-set the lost among this core constituency with increased support from Hispanics and African Americans, it is a danger for him to have failed to equal the 2016 levels of support.” Clearly, the President’s road to victory in 2020 could have been considerably smoother by getting more out of higher-propensity potential base voters registered in order to offset Biden’s surge among whites. Additionally, here, Wilson makes a key point, which is that but for Trump’s successful outreach to women and minorities — given Biden’s improvement among men and whites — the President and Republicans would have been slaughtered in Election Day. They weren’t. And if Trump wins, that will surely be why. Instead, Trump is still in the running in Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania, has decisively carried Ohio, Florida and Texas, and Republicans appear to have held the U.S. Senate. In an election on the razor’s edge in a year when almost every poll said Joe Biden had this thing locked up, that is a remarkable accomplishment. It’s something Republicans can and should build on in the coming years. President Trump, since he started his historic run in 2015, was showing the GOP establishment something important all along — that the Republican Party can and must grow if it is to remain competitive. Tags: Robert Romano, Americans for Limited Government, Win or Lose, Trump’s American Revolution, is Only BeginningTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Marine Who Earned Medal of Honor in Vietnam Finally Receives Burial at Arlington
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 03:47 PM PST by Richard Sisk: At age 19, Marine Pfc. Bruce Carter fought off a swarming enemy in 1969, then threw his body on a grenade to save his buddies during a close-quarters battle in Vietnam’s Quang Tri province. His actions with H Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Division, earned him a posthumous Medal of Honor, and he was laid to rest at Vista Memorial Gardens in Miami Lakes, Florida. Over the years, his mother, Georgie Carter-Krell, came to think that it would be best for her son’s memory to have his final resting place be with more than 400,000 of the nation’s heroes at Arlington National Cemetery. Carter-Krell, who had been a receptionist at a huge Department of Veterans Affairs facility named for her son, the Bruce W. Carter Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Miami, worked with the Marine Corps and Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Florida, to make it happen. It has been rare in recent years, though not unprecedented, for the remains of those killed in battle to be reburied at Arlington. Last year, Army Pfc. Lamar Williams, who was killed in Vietnam in January 1971 shortly after his 21st birthday, was reburied there. On Oct. 30, motorcycle units from the Miami-Dade Police Department escorted the hearse carrying Carter’s flag-draped casket to the Miami airport. Marines and police stood at attention as pallbearers placed his remains aboard a waiting American Airlines flight to Washington, D.C. The 90-year-old Carter-Krell said in a statement at the airport ceremony: “We have finally achieved what should have been done 50 years ago.” Airport fire trucks sent up huge sprays of water, forming an arc that the aircraft passed under on the way to take off. On Wednesday, Carter’s remains were reburied with full honors in Arlington National Cemetery’s Section 60, where more than 900 of those who fell in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars have their last resting place. His casket was escorted by Marines from Marine Barracks, Washington, D.C.; the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard); and “The President’s Own” Marine Band. Carter was born in Schenectady, New York, in 1950. He attended schools in Miami Springs, Florida, and later West Jefferson High School in Wego, Louisiana, where he dropped out in August 1968. In April 1969, he was a radio operator with 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines, in Vietnam’s “I Corps,” the area bordering North Vietnam at the Demilitarized Zone. The 3rd Marine Division had to adapt to numerous types of terrain in I Corps during some of the heaviest fighting of the war, from the rice-paddy flats along the coast at Cua Viet, to the scrub and rolling hills in central areas, and the triple-canopy jungle west of Khe Sanh. The enemy was made up of main force North Vietnamese regulars. Much of the action for Marines was in small-unit patrols, interspersed with larger operations that had names such as Prairie III, Hickory, Cimarron, Buffalo, Kingfisher and Kentucky. For Carter and his battalion in August 1969, it was Operation Idaho Canyon, north of a strange outcropping in central I Corps that rose to 790 feet and was called the “Rockpile” by Marines. On Aug. 7, Carter’s H Company came under a “heavy volume of fire from a numerically superior hostile force.” He was with the lead element, which became separated from the rest of the company by a brush fire that was started by the fighting, according to his medal citation and Marine histories. Carter exposed himself to enemy fire to deliver return fire, giving the Marines in the lead element a chance to link up again wit the main body of H Company. “Shouting directions to the Marines around him, Private First Class Carter then commenced leading them from the path of the rapidly approaching brush fire when he observed a hostile grenade land between him and his companions,” the medal citation states. “Fully aware of the probable consequences of his action, but determined to protect the men following him, he unhesitatingly threw himself over the grenade, absorbing the full effects of its detonation with his own body. He gallantly gave his life in the service of his country.” Carter’s mother received the posthumous award of the Medal of Honor from then-Vice President Spiro Agnew in a White House ceremony in September 1971. In a statement issued last week, VA Secretary Robert Wilkie said, “Finally, this brave Marine is being laid to rest at the Arlington National Cemetery, where he belongs.” Wilkie praised Diaz-Balart for his help in arranging the reburial and thanked Carter-Krell “for going above and beyond to ensure her son receives the burial he always deserved.” “Fifty years have passed, and Pfc. Bruce Carter’s legacy remains strong,” Diaz-Balart said in a statement. The burial at Arlington was “a tribute to his heroism,” he added, and also a reminder that a life lost in battle “is always valued, no matter how much time has passed.” Tags: Richard Sisk, Military.com, Medal of Honor, Marine Pfc. Bruce Carter, reburied, Arlington National CemeteryTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Trump Takes His Case to Court in 3 Battleground States
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 03:04 PM PST
by Fred Lucas: The Trump campaign seeks a recount in Wisconsin and has gone to court in Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Michigan over ballot counting rules to settle a presidential election that remains undecided. As of Wednesday evening, Fox News Channel had former Vice President Joe Biden just six votes shy of the 270 needed in the Electoral College to defeat President Donald Trump and win the White House. The Trump campaign and some other news organizations disputed Fox’s Arizona call for Biden. Most news outlets called both Wisconsin and Michigan for the Democratic nominee Wednesday. Ballots in Pennsylvania are still arriving in the mail. On Oct. 19, the U.S. Supreme Court’s 4-4 deadlock left in place a Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling in a lawsuit brought by the state’s Democratic Party. That ruling requires state election officials to count absentee ballots received up to three days after the election, even without a postmark showing a ballot had been mailed by Election Day. With Nevada, North Carolina, and Georgia still too close to call, Biden had a lead of 264 electoral votes to Trump’s 214 votes as of Wednesday evening, according to Fox News Channel. The New York Times, however, gave Biden 253 electoral votes. Biden led Trump in Wisconsin 49.4% to 48.8% as of Wednesday evening, The New York Times reported. The former vice president also led in Michigan, 50.3% to 48.1%. In Pennsylvania, Trump led 51% to 47.7% as of Wednesday evening. In Georgia, the president held a lead of 49.9% to 48.9%. In North Carolina, Trump led 50.1% to 48.7%. In Nevada, Biden led 49.3% to 48.7%. In Arizona, already called for Biden, he led 51% to 47.6%. Independent groups also will sue the state of Michigan, said Gordon Pennington, a poll watcher for the Election Integrity Fund, which advocates clean elections in Michigan. Pennington said more than a recount is necessary in Michigan; a thorough examination should determine whether ballots are legitimate, he said. Pennington, speaking from Cobo Arena in Detroit where Wayne County officials are counting ballots, accused them of not following the rules. About 38,000 votes in the presidential election came in at 3:45 a.m. Wednesday without anyone explaining the point of origin or chain of custody for the ballots, he said. Under Michigan law, he added, ballots harvested or collected after 8 p.m. on Election Day are not supposed to be valid. “If you are recounting fake ballots, what’s the point of a recount?” Pennington told The Daily Signal. “We need more forensics.” The Trump campaign’s lawsuit argues that Michigan did not provide it with proper access to observe the opening of absentee ballots, and asks for a temporary halt to the counting until the campaign has “meaningful access” and the opportunity to review ballots. FOX 2 Detroit reported that election staff prevented GOP poll watchers from entering TCF Center in Detroit, a convention center where workers are counting hundreds of thousands of ballots. Trump led in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan early Wednesday based on in-person voting. But Biden announced in a brief speech just before 1 a.m. that he believed he would win the presidency. After 2 a.m., Trump essentially declared victory at the White House, accusing the other side of fraud. Trump campaign officials say the president has a strong chance of putting Arizona in his column; many news outlets called the state for Biden. During his early morning remarks in the East Room of the White House, Trump said: “We’ll be going to the U.S. Supreme Court—we want all voting to stop.” The Trump campaign filed a lawsuit to halt vote counting in Pennsylvania over a lack of transparency, asking the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene. A Pennsylvania Republican Party appeal already was before the Supreme Court on the question of whether the state may count votes that arrive in the mail from Wednesday through Friday. Although it’s likely the Supreme Court would prefer to avoid weighing in on the presidential contest, it may be forced to decide, said Jason Snead, executive director of the organization Honest Elections. Snead noted that the high court previously punted on Pennsylvania’s ballot-counting rules, making it more likely the court will have to hear the case after the election. “It is utterly ridiculous, because Pennsylvania had time to prepare for Election Day,” Snead told The Daily Signal. “The court, if it gets to that point, had the opportunity before the election to put the pin in the grenade and didn’t take it. They may regret that.” Even though Trump seemed to have a significant lead, Snead said he anticipates that Biden could flip Pennsylvania. “A massive amount of ballots are uncounted in Pennsylvania,” Snead said. “It’s very likely Pennsylvania will go blue.” The Trump campaign has asserted irregularities in several Wisconsin counties and is asking for a recount in the state. But Snead said he doesn’t anticipate this effort will go far. “In Wisconsin, it is their right to ask for a recount. But I don’t see a change there happening,” Snead said. “The margin is too great in Wisconsin. Recounts don’t usually change the outcome at that amount.” Snead added that he doesn’t see evidence of fraud at this point. “Just because it takes longer to count does not mean there is massive fraud or malfeasance,” he said. “It could be bureaucratic incompetence.” Asked about Michigan, he said it is likely a matter of counting absentee ballots. Snead said Trump likely will carry Georgia and North Carolina, but that litigation could expand to Nevada and Arizona. “If it is close in any of these [states], there could be litigation,” Snead said. “If Arizona flips red—I’m not sure it would, but the Trump campaign is bullish about it—the Biden campaign could initiate litigation.” Tags: Fred Lucas, The Daily Signal, President Trump, Takes His Case to Court, in 3 Battleground StatesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Mad About Election Chaos? Blame Dems’ Fraud-Prone Vote-By-Mail Scheme
Posted: 05 Nov 2020 02:37 PM PST by I & I Editorial Board: As many feared, the election has ended, but it isn’t over. Ballots are still being tallied, and races in Nevada and Pennsylvania remain up in the air. Even when finished, there will be angry disputes. The counts will go on, but even when done they’ll be litigated for months. Blame the Democrats’ vote-by-mail scheme for the election chaos. Fed up with riots, demonstrations, nonstop name-calling and demonization of political opponents, Americans speak longingly of a clear result to our elections that would let us all get on with our lives. It wasn’t to be in 2020. Costly, and no doubt lengthy, legal challenges await. It may yet even be discovered that there was massive electoral fraud. For this, you can thank mail-in voting, which the Democrats pushed as part of their “make every vote count” campaign (not to mention, of course, the four-year hate-affair the unhinged left in the Democratic Party conducted with President Donald Trump). As has been noted repeatedly, expanding mail-in voting under the pretense of making voting easier during the lockdown was always spurious. We saw just how deceitful that was this week when the Centers for Disease Control told those with COVID-19 to go ahead and vote in person – just be careful. So much for: “We have to vote by mail to keep people safe.” Of course, voting by mail is fraught with potential for fraud, something that has been demonstrated by numerous studies. How big is the problem? The federal Election Assistance Commission found that, between 2012 and 2018, 28.3 million mail-in ballots went unaccounted for. That’s equal to missing roughly 20% of “all absentee ballots and ballots mailed to voters residing in states that do elections exclusively by mail,” a recent Real Clear Politics piece noted. At the very minimum, this poses serious risks to election security. Add the likelihood that some of the ballots have no doubt been used to perpetrate fraud, and you have the makings of a crisis of confidence in our voting system. Even the New York Times once admitted this. Back in 2012, as President Barack Obama squared off against Republican Mitt Romney, the Times reported that voter fraud with mail-in ballots “is vastly more prevalent than the in-person voting fraud that has attracted far more attention, election administrators say. In Florida, absentee-ballot scandals seem to arrive like clockwork around election time.” That’s thousands of miles away from their current stance. Earlier, in 2008, the CalTech/MIT Voting Technology Project recommended that, rather than expanding vote-by-mail, states should instead “restrict or abolish on-demand absentee voting in favor of in-person early voting.” So what’s to stop the fraudsters? Nothing, really. Most poll locations no longer require identification. You have to have a driver’s license to fly, to drive and to buy alcohol. But not to vote. Millions of non-citizens have acquired Social Security numbers allowing them to work here. Does anyone believe that a no-I.D. registration requirement would be an impediment to them voting? As for those who claim election fraud is just another right-wing fantasy, sorry, not so. A recent report by investigative reporter John Solomon of Just The News found that our election system is rife with cheating: Then there’s the problem of putting our election system into the less-than-capable hands of the U.S. Postal Service. As we noted, a number of postal employees recently have been discovered throwing ballots out, including one charged with election fraud in West Virginia just last summer. Here are a few other recent examples from the news highlighting the problem of vote-by-mail and other vote fraud:
And those were from just one week in late September. If there were GOP examples, we didn’t find them. If there are, they’re just as wrong. Mere differences of opinion about voting or opposition to outright fraud is called “voter suppression” by the left. It’s time Americans admit that they’ve in fact been defrauded by the Democratic Party, which has systematically sought to undermine our voting laws by ignoring them. The linchpin of this effort has been vote-by-mail, which has delayed our election outcome, made the results less clear and reliable in the public’s eyes, and created a farcical air around one of our most sacred privileges: The vote. This is nothing new. It goes back at least to 2000, when the Democrats found that they could make large accusations of fraud in legitimate elections and manipulate Democrat-appointed judges to invalidate Republican votes. During the Obama years, of course, it died down. Barack Obama beat John McCain and Mitt Romney. Other than calling them both “fascists” and “Hitler,” voting shenanigans were minimized. In 2016, they thought they got their dream opponent: Donald Trump. He was brash, bold, loud, in charge, unorthodox, at times crude, and freely aired his no-holds-barred opinions. After he won the shocking 2016 election, Democrats saw he was not a clown but an authentic agent of political change, mostly conservative. They tried to take him down with a phony investigation for “Russian collusion.” They tried to impeach him. They let their extremist wing of Antifa and BLM adherents trash America’s major cities. They shut down the economy to fight a virus that’s not even close to as deadly as first predicted. They pushed to have voting by mail, the most fraud-prone voting method of all. Now, we’ll have months of nightmarish lawsuits, sudden “discovery” of lots of questionable Democratic ballots, and more questionable vote counts, to ensure that Donald Trump doesn’t serve a second term. That’s the context for our current electoral chaos. As with so many other rights these days — free speech, religious belief, the right to bear arms and to own and use property — our ability to vote for those who would represent us has been imperiled. Yet, it is the essence of a true republic. Protecting your rights begins with protecting your ability to vote without interference or intimidation. Tags: I&I Editorial Board, Mad About Election Chaos, Blame Dems, Fraud-Prone, Vote-By-Mail, SchemeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Friday, November 6, 2020
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Good morning, NBC News readers.
The nation — and the world — is holding its collective breath as officials in several key swing states hurry to finish counting votes so we can all find out who won the presidential election.
Here’s what we know so far this Friday morning.
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Biden erases Trump lead in Georgia, margin shrinks in Pennsylvania
As an anxious nation watched into the wee hours of Friday morning, Joe Biden took a slim lead in Georgia with the fate of the presidency still unknown.
All eyes are on five states — Pennsylvania, Georgia, North Carolina, Arizona, and Nevada — which NBC News has deemed either too close or too early to call.
Biden currently holds a 253 to 214 lead in Electoral College votes, according to NBC News Decision Desk. A candidate needs to secure 270 electoral votes to win.
Biden erased Trump’s lead in Georgia early Friday and currently holds a slim 917 vote-lead as ballot counting continues. His numbers in Georgia have steadily improved as absentee ballots from large Democratic counties have been counted. A win there would leave him one electoral vote shy of the presidency.
The former vice president has also tightened the margin in Pennsylvania, which has 20 electoral votes. If Biden pulls out a victory in Pennsylvania, he will win the election.
Much of the remaining votes to be counted in Pennsylvania are of the mail-in variety and from Philadelphia and the surrounding counties, both of which have voted substantially in Biden’s favor.
- See the full map of the U.S. presidential election results and dig into the state by state data.
- Follow our live blog for all the latest developments and analysis.
Here’s where things stand on the presidential electoral map as of early Friday. See the full results here.
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Trump falsely claims fraud in vote counting, again
President Trump made his first public appearance in two days Thursday evening and delivered remarks about the state of the undecided presidential election that were largely false.
“If you count the legal votes, I easily win. If you count the illegal votes, they can try to steal the election from us,” Trump said, offering no evidence.
Trump’s statement from the White House podium was riddled with falsehoods about the state of the presidential race. Check out our fact check on his comments.
But the president didn’t stop there. He took to Twitter at about 2 a.m. ET and repeated several of the same false and misleading claims.
Some Republicans have started to distanced themselves from the president’s attacks on the electoral system, while others have echoed his rhetoric.
Pennsylvania’s Republican Senator Pat Toomey called for patience as the votes are counted.
“All votes that comply with Pennsylvania law must be counted, regardless of how long the process takes,” Toomey said in a statement.
He added that once the states final election count is reached, “all parties involved must accept the outcome of the election regardless of whether they won or lost.”
Meantime, Trump’s campaign is continuing to press its legal challenges in swing states across the country.
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‘Democracy is messy’ and requires ‘patience,’ says Biden
For his part, Biden continued to project confidence Thursday that he would win the 2020 race after all the votes are counted.
“We have no doubt that when the count is finished, Sen. Harris and I will be declared the winners,” Biden said Thursday during brief remarks alongside his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, in Wilmington, Delaware.
The former vice president said “democracy is sometimes messy” and “sometimes requires a little patience.”
He reiterated his call that “each ballot must be counted,” urging supporters to “stay calm.” “The process is working,” he said.
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Plus
- The Russians have no need to spread misinformation. Trump and his allies are doing it for them, American officials and private experts say.
- Covid-19 cases break record for second day in a row, topping 120,000 new cases on Thursday.
- Exclusive: Defense Secretary Esper is working with Congress to strip Confederate names from military bases.
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THINK about it
Historic 2020 turnout highlights one of the Electoral College’s more subtle downsides, Seth Masket, director of the Center on American Politics at the University of Denver, writes in an opinion piece.
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Live BETTER
The truth about MSG and your health, according to experts.
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Quote of the day
“It’s important to act quickly, but it’s more important to get it right.”
— Republican Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said in a statement Thursday evening.
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One fun thing
As the world watches American democracy in action, one renowned Indian sand artist went to work.
Sudarshan Pattnaik created a work of art on Friday depicting the current uncertainty over the race to the White House.
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NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Biden has learned the lessons from the 2000 Florida recount. Trump hasn’t.
With Joe Biden on the cusp of 270 electoral votes – for yet another day – it’s become clear that the Biden camp learned the lessons from the Florida recount from 2020.
And Trump and his campaign didn’t.
RHONA WISE/AFP/Getty Images
Lesson #1: Pick a message and stick with it: In 2000, the Gore team said “count every vote,” while the Bush team said “the election is over,” our colleague Matt Rivera reminds us.
Well right now, Biden and his campaign have stayed with a consistent message. “We have to count the votes,” Biden said Thursday.
But Trump has been all over the place. First, the president said, “Frankly, we did win this election.” (Which isn’t true.) And then he tweeted, “STOP THE COUNT!”
Lesson #2: Project confidence in your win: We’ve seen that from Biden & Co. “We continue to feel very good about where things stand,” Biden also said yesterday.
But for Trump and Co?? The lawsuits and the unsubstantiated allegations of fraud haven’t projected much confidence.
Lesson #3: Never fall behind (or look like you will fall behind): Biden has now taken a slim lead in Georgia and (as of publication time) is closing the gap in Pennsylvania.
Trump, meanwhile, is behind in Arizona and Nevada.
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Waiting for the rest of the votes to come in
Arizona: Biden is ahead by 47,052 votes, 50 percent to 49 percent (90% in)
Georgia: Biden is ahead by 1,096 votes, 49 percent to 49 percent (99% in)
Nevada: Biden is ahead by 11,438 votes, 49 percent to 49 percent (89% in)
North Carolina: Trump is ahead by 76,737 votes, 50 percent to 49 percent (95% in)
Pennsylvania: Biden is ahead by 5,587 votes, 49 percent to 49 percent (95% in)
Alaska: Trump is ahead by 51,382 votes, 63 percent to 33 percent (56% in)
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DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
4,082,774 million: Joe Biden’s lead in the popular vote at the time of publication
About 75,000: The number of outstanding ballots in Maricopa County, where elections officials say they will give an update at 11am ET.
147,669: The estimated remaining vote in Nevada, where Joe Biden narrowly leads
About 35,000: The outstanding votes in Allegheny County at publication time.
9,688,731: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 120,625 more than yesterday morning.)
236,669: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,370 more than yesterday morning.)
152.51 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
53,332: The number of people currently hospitalized for Covid-19 in the U.S., per the Covid Tracking Project.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Well at least he’s used to it.
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2020 VISION: Divided Democrats
House Democrats are in disagreement over why they had a disappointing Election Night, and those grievances were on full display during a caucus call on Thursday.
Here’s the report from our Hill team: Moderate Democrats expressed frustration and anger over the Democrats’ strategy where at least seven incumbents have lost their seats and several more likely to as the results are finalized. And several members complained that movements like “defund the police” and some members embracing socialism hurt their races.
One of those members was Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-Va., who won her race by a thin margin in a conservative-leaning district. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the election was still good for Democrats because they held onto the House. One lawmaker told our team, “That’s B.S.”.
Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., refused to give any details about what was transpiring on the call but, clearly frustrated about Democratic performance, said, “My dad used to tell me, ‘You gotta turn chicken sh** into chicken salad.’ And that’s exactly what I intend to work towards.”
CBS
REASON
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MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
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LOUDER WITH CROWDER
It’s understandably buried beneath the presidential race, but one of the stories emerging from election night is just how horrible Democrats did in everything except for the presidential race. Republi … MORE
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