Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday November 5, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
November 5 2020
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Good morning from Washington, where President Trump is looking for options to overcome challenger Joe Biden’s apparent lead. Fred Lucas reports. How did incumbents do in cities and states that saw riots over the summer? Nathalie Voit has results. On the podcast, we examine the change in how Hispanics vote. Plus: Trump boosts minority support; the ongoing count; and lopsided media coverage. On this date in 1968, Richard Nixon wins the presidency by defeating Hubert Humphrey by 101 votes in the Electoral College and a narrow plurality in a three-man race with George Wallace.
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THE EPOCH TIMES
NOVEMBER 5, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
We hope you have been enjoying The Morning Briefs and the Breaking News emails! We have been providing this experience for you for free for some time now. As an independent news source, our team works tirelessly to provide you with the best journalism, with no hidden agendas. And we want you to have full access to all of our content. Take advantage of our limited time, 4 months for $1 offer. This is our best offer ever, and it will only be available for a limited time. Subscribe to The Epoch Times for 4 months for just $1: Offer Ends Soon Cancel anytime “Elections belong to the people. It’s their decision.” ABRAHAM LINCOLN “After decades of communist planning and operations, the governments and the societies of the United States and other Western countries have been severely eroded.” People rely on the media for the latest news and analysis. Topics that the media cover become matters of grave social concern. Issues that go unreported are ignored and forgotten. In the States, the media are traditionally regarded as the guardians of the truth and societies’ core values. But unfortunately, this becomes less and less true. Many media sources and platforms are mainly enthusiastic about promoting their ideology. In doing that, they ignore certain news or report it misleadingly.Right On Times news portal will change that. We will bring all news sources to you, especially those often ignored by “mainstream” media. We will let you see all the stories and let you discover the truth yourself.We will deliver the truth through unbiased news. Election Hangs on How Votes Are Counted PREMIUM Thanks in part to Chief Justice John Roberts and a deadlocked Supreme Court vote last month that upheld a Pennsylvania state Supreme Court decision regarding late-arriving mail-in ballots… Read more Election 2020 May Never End PREMIUM Election Day 2020 didn’t begin as anybody’s idea of a celebration of democracy. Storefronts were boarded up, from Beverly Hills to Manhattan and many places in between… Read more ‘Marilyn Monroe’s do’, ‘Beat to the tape’, ‘Lyrical lines’, ‘The Red, White and Blue’, ‘Spare tire’, and ‘Five-time U.S. Open champ’ are some of the clues in this crossword puzzle. The Chinese government recently announced it would cut all greenhouse gasses by 2060, yet at the same time has been working to gain control over an emerging oil market which could give it deeper influence over global energy. |
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AXIOS
Axios AM
Good Thursday morning. Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,199 words … 4½ minutes.
🗳️ The state of play: Joe Biden’s victories in Michigan and Wisconsin bring him to 264 electoral votes, meaning he’s one battleground win away — any would do, per AP’s tally.
- President Trump, with 214 EVs, would need all four remaining battlegrounds: Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia and Nevada.
- Trump’s campaign argues outstanding votes could flip Arizona, which AP and Fox News called for Biden.
The bottom line: A final, undisputed outcome could be weeks away. Trump plans to exhaust every legal and recount remedy in states Biden narrowly led, while declaring a Biden victory fraudulent.
- Some states’ cutoffs for counting postmarked mail-in votes are still days away, and certification deadlines are weeks away.
Mitch McConnell, if he keeps the Senate majority, plans to prevent Joe Biden from stacking his Cabinet with liberals and force him to go with more centrist options, like Lael Brainard for Treasury or Tony Blinken for State, sources tell me.
- Casualties could include Susan Rice, who’s talked about for State, and Stacey Abrams, an option for attorney general, Axios’ Hans Nichols reports.
- But the GOP constraints could open paths for others, like Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), who’d benefit from a tradition of senatorial courtesy for quick confirmations from within the chamber.
🥊 A source close to McConnell tells me a Republican Senate would work with Biden on centrist nominees but no “radical progressives” or ones who are controversial with conservatives.
- The Biden agenda would be severely restricted by GOP control, the source added: “It’s going to be armed camps.”
The big picture: This political reality could result in Biden having a more centrist Cabinet.
- It also gives Biden a ready excuse to reject liberal candidates, like Sens. Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders.
What’s next: Biden may end up leaning more on Democratic senators in blue states, or ex-senators.
- That could boost Coons’ case for State. And Alabama Sen. Doug Jones, who lost on Tuesday, may have an easier time than Sally Yates at Justice.
- Share this story.
📺 How it’s playing …
Health care stocks skyrocketed after election results indicated Republicans likely will maintain control of the Senate, pointing to continued gridlock, Axios health care business reporter Bob Herman writes.
- A Republican Senate means “the public option and direct government negotiation on drug prices are dead for at least the next two years,” Spencer Perlman, an analyst at Veda Partners, wrote to investors.
The winners: Health insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies and medical device firms scored the biggest stock gains.
- The status quo has been lucrative for pretty much every sector of the health care industry. The prospect of no major federal reform would insulate employer coverage, the ultimate pot of gold.
What we’re watching: The Supreme Court is about to hear a case that could invalidate the Affordable Care Act. If the conservative majority strikes down the law, the industry would face upheaval after spending the past decade incorporating the law into their businesses.
- Hospitals would be most affected: Millions would lose Medicaid and individual health coverage, resulting in more uncompensated care.
Flashback: This same health care stock surge happened after the 2018 midterms guaranteed congressional gridlock.
Democrats failed to flip legislative chambers in Texas, North Carolina, Iowa, Pennsylvania and Michigan, while Republicans flipped the New Hampshire House and Senate, the N.Y. Times reports (subscription).
- Why it matters: “Democrats had hoped for a ‘Blue Wave’ to sweep statehouses that Republicans had controlled for years, running expensive ad campaigns and extensive get-out-the-vote efforts.”
The bottom line: The GOP again controls significantly more legislatures and governor’s offices, meaning greater power over once-a-decade redistricting.
- The GOP governors’ count grew by one: Montana voters elected Rep. Greg Gianforte to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock.
New coronavirus infections surged by roughly 20% over the past week as cases continued to climb in every region of the country, Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon report.
- Hospitalizations are also on the rise nationwide, prompting renewed fears in some pockets of the country that local hospital capacity won’t be able to handle the rising tide.
Why it matters: All signs indicate that the pandemic will keep getting worse throughout the winter, making it harder to control.
- The outbreak will likely be worse by Inauguration Day.
The pandemic continued to get worse in almost every critical swing state as Election Day approached:
- The number of new infections rose over the past week by 14% in Wisconsin, 16% in Florida, 21% in Pennsylvania, 37% in Ohio and 56% in Michigan.
Between the lines: The U.S. is now conducting over 1.2 million tests per day. That’s a 5% increase over the week before — hardly enough to explain the much larger surge in cases.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Dedicated spreaders of misinformation are finding ways around platforms’ rules, Axios’ Ashley Gold and Kyle Daly write.
- Sometimes enforcement actions themselves provide fresh fuel for otherwise baseless conspiracy theories that the media, Big Tech and Democrats are colluding to steal the election from President Trump.
Even with tech firms’ checks, a baseless conspiracy theory that Republicans were given Sharpies to mark their ballots in Arizona so that election officials could throw them out spread widely enough to trigger an inquiry from Arizona’s Republican attorney general.
San Francisco voters, concerned about economic disparity, overwhelmingly approved an “Overpaid Executive Tax,” AP reports.
- Any company whose top executive earns 100 times more than their average worker will pay an extra 0.1% surcharge on its annual business tax payment.
- If a CEO makes 200 times more than the average employee, the surcharge increases to 0.2%. 300 times gets a 0.3% surcharge, and so on.
Some swing voters in Port St. Lucie, Fla., are desperately searching for an end to this cycle — even if it means accepting a Joe Biden win after they voted for President Trump, Axios’ Alexi McCammond writes.
- Why it matters: Fatigue over the political outreach and content they’ve been inundated with during this race — as well as fear of civil unrest no matter who wins — is pushing these voters to accept a president they don’t want.
This was the biggest takeaway from our post-election Engagious/Schlesinger focus group of 12 Florida voters who supported Barack Obama in 2012 and switched to Donald Trump in 2016.
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images
A potential President Biden would face an oppositional Senate if he tried an aggressive climate agenda, Axios’ Amy Harder writes.
- But bipartisan support could emerge for more clean-energy spending and tax incentives, such as those for carbon capture tech, wind and solar.
In Caracas, Venezuela, the headline translates: “Agony is prolonged for the White House.”
Spotted in Paris.
John King at his Magic Wall. Via CNN
An estimated 56.9 million people watched coverage over 21 networks during primetime hours Tuesday, down sharply from the 71.4 million viewers on election night in 2016, AP’s David Bauder writes from Nielsen data.
- It was a cable news night: Fox News led with 13.6 million viewers, followed by CNN (9.1 million) and MSNBC (7.3 million). The broadcast networks — ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox — followed in that order.
The coverage sought to reassure people that there was nothing nefarious about the process of counting votes.
- “It’s not fraud,” said CNN’s John King at his Magic Wall. “It’s math.”
📬 Thanks for starting your day with us. Invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM/PM.
THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nov 5, 2020 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER Biden on brink of presidency, rebuilding ‘blue wall’ in race for the White House; Trump tries to press his case in court in some key swing states
“I will govern as an American president. There will be no red states and blue states when we win. Just the United States of America.” Words spoken by Joe Biden as he is on the cusp of victory in a bitterly contested U.S. presidential election.
Biden has marched closer to the 270 Electoral College votes needed to carry the White House, securing victories in the “blue wall” battlegrounds of Wisconsin and Michigan, and narrowing Donald Trump’s path to reelection.
With just a handful of states still up for grabs, Trump tried to press his case in court in some key swing states, It was unclear if any of his campaign’s legal maneuvering over balloting would succeed in shifting the race in his favor.
Biden’s victories in the Great Lakes states left him at 264 electoral votes, meaning he was one battleground state away from becoming president-elect.
Trump, with 214 electoral votes, faced a much higher hurdle. To reach 270, he needs to claim all four remaining battlegrounds: Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia and Nevada.
Trump huddled with advisers, fuming at media coverage showing his rival picking up battlegrounds and used his Twitter feed to falsely claim victory in several key states and amplify unsubstantiated conspiracy theories about Democratic gains as absentee and early votes were tabulated.
With millions of votes yet to be tabulated, Biden already had received more than 71 million votes, the most in history. The former vice president said he expected to win the presidency but stopped short of declaring victory outright.
VIDEO: ‘Confident’ Biden urges unity as votes are counted.
Legal Challenges: As Biden inches closer to the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the White House, Trump’s campaign has launched a legal strategy attacking the integrity of the voting process in states where the result could mean his defeat. Democrats scoffed at the legal challenges the president’s campaign filed in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia, Mark Sherman reports.
EXPLAINER–States of Play: A handful of critical states remained in play in the tightly contested race and the AP examines why they could still go to either Biden or Trump. Brian Slodysko has this report on Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina and Pennsylvania.
EXPLAINER–Why AP called Michigan for Biden: The Democrat won this electoral battleground. It’s the third state Trump carried in 2016 that the former vice president has flipped, narrowing Trump’s path to re-election. The AP declared Biden the winner after conducting an analysis of votes and remaining ballots left to be counted. It showed there were not enough votes left in Republican-leaning areas for Trump to catch Biden’s lead.
Follow all election developments from AP here.
Protests: Dozens of angry Trump supporters converged on vote-counting centers in Detroit and Phoenix as returns went against the president in the two key states of Michigan and Arizona. Thousands of anti-Trump protesters demanding a complete count of the ballots, meanwhile, took to the streets in cities across the U.S. The protests came as the president repeatedly insisted — without evidence — that there were major problems with the voting and the ballot counting.
VIDEO: Chaos erupts at Detroit ballot processing center.
Protests — sometimes about the election, sometimes about racial inequality — took place in at least a half-dozen cities, including New York, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle, Houston, Pittsburgh, Minneapolis and San Diego, Mike Householder and Tim Sullivan report.
VIDEO: Election results bring out protests across U.S.
Florida: The post-mortem underway in Florida is especially wrenching for Democrats, as second-guessing has begun amid another high-profile loss at the ballot box. Some Democrats were unsurprised by their loss in the state to Trump, saying that Biden’s weakness with the Hispanic community, particularly in Miami, may be a symptom of deeper problems. After so many disappointing elections, many Florida Democrats are still asking themselves what is going wrong. Trump won the state by fewer than 4 percentage points, Bobby Caina Calvan and Brendan Farrington report.
Global Reaction: The delay in knowing the U.S. election winner has been jarring to a world weaned on American speediness. Leaders generally refrained from commenting but the particularly fractious contest has sparked concerns overseas that America’s sharp divisions will endure long after a winner is declared. Gloating was heard in some countries on the receiving end of U.S. criticism about how they run their elections. But others see the slow vote-counting as a living example of how democracy works, John Leicester reports.
AP PHOTO/TIMOTHY D. EASLEY US election splits Congress, sets up more partisan gridlock; With presidency in reach, Democrats grapple with disappointment
Congressional elections have scrambled seats in the House and Senate but ultimately leave Capitol Hill much as it was — deeply split and on course for further policy schisms at a time of multiple national crises.
Voters resisted big changes despite the heated race for the White House. The outcome dampens Democratic demands for a bold new agenda, emboldens Republicans and almost ensures partisan gridlock regardless of who wins the presidency, Lisa Mascaro reports.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi is on track to keep control of the House, but she saw her Democratic majority shrink and her leadership called into question.
Republicans appear likely to maintain control of the Senate after fending off an onslaught of energized challengers, though a few races remain undecided.
Democrats’ Disappointment: They went went into Election Day hoping to seize the White House and majorities in both chambers of Congress in a victory that would demonstrate an unmistakable repudiation of Trump and his Republican Party. It didn’t work out that way. There was no clear Democratic wave. Republicans held key Senate seats that Democrats hoped to flip, and the GOP may ultimately shrink the Democrats’ House majority. Many Democrats hailed Biden’s potential victory but acknowledged he would lead an electorate still bitterly divided, Bill Barrow and Steve Peoples report. AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY US sets record for coronavirus cases; England, Italy enter new lockdowns
”Where we are is in an extremely dire place as a country. Every metric that we have is trending in the wrong direction.” That’s how a public health expert at George Washington University described these perilous times in America.
The U.S. set another record for daily confirmed coronavirus cases as several states posted all-time highs, underscoring the vexing issue confronting Trump or Biden as a pandemic surges with the holidays and winter approaching.
The spiking cases and hospitalizations around the country reflect the challenge that the winner of the presidential race will face in the coming months, Lindsay Tanner reports.
Britain: As coronavirus infections and deaths surge, last-minute shoppers came out in force and thirsty drinkers enjoyed their final pints in a pub as England prepared to enter a four-week lockdown. Britain is joining large swaths of Europe in imposing new restrictions to save health care systems from being overwhelmed. England-wide, pubs, restaurants, hairdressers and shops selling non-essential items such as books and sneakers are closed from today until at least Dec. 2, Pan Pylas reports from London.
Italy: Four regions are going under a “red-zone” lockdown, with severe limits on when and why people can leave their homes. Premier Giuseppe Conte announced the “very stringent” restrictions on Lombardy, Piedmont and Valle d’Aosta in the north and Calabria in the south. The lockdown aims to tamp down a surge in COVID-19 infections and prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed. The lockdown, covering 16.5 million of Italy’s 60 million residents, includes Milan, begins Friday and lasts at least two weeks, Frances D’ Emilio reports from Rome.
Spain Poverty: The most vulnerable in Spain have not only been exposed to more contagion but they are already suffering greater economic fallout from the pandemic. With Spain deep into a resurgence of the virus, many of its poorest are still waiting for subsidies they were promised, including a basic income scheme that the ruling left-wing coalition has made a flagship of its social protection policies. Experts warn that insufficient social spending, too much red tape, job losses from tourism and a digital gap will only widen Spain’s economic inequalities between rich and poor, Aritz Parra reports from Madrid.
Is it safe to stay in hotels during the pandemic? The AP is answering Viral Questions in this series. MISINFORMATION WATCH
With the outcome of the U.S. presidential race still in limbo, Donald Trump and his supporters seized — and spread — online misinformation about legally cast absentee and mail-in votes in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.
They used the blatant falsehoods to bolster the president’s unfounded declaration on live television early Wednesday that Democrats are trying to “steal the election” from him.
The baseless allegations exploit public confusion over how elections are managed as Americans look for answers about election results, misinformation experts say, Amanda Seitz, David Klepper and Ali Swenson report.
Social Platforms: Ahead of the election, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube promised to clamp down on election misinformation, including unsubstantiated charges of fraud and premature declarations of victory by candidates. And they mostly did just that — though not without a few hiccups.
But overall their measures still didn’t really address the problems exposed by the 2020 U.S. presidential contest, critics of the social platforms contend, Matt O’Brien and Mae Anderson report.
Sharpie Pens: In what has come to be known as #Sharpiegate, social media posts circulated Wednesday claiming election officials in Arizona’s Maricopa County provided voters with Sharpie pens that canceled out votes, specifically those for Trump. The false claim came as Joe Biden was named the winner in the battleground state. Arizona election officials disputed the posts, saying using a Sharpie would not invalidate a ballot. In fact, officials said that voting centers used Sharpies so the ink would not smudge when ballots were counted, Beatrice Dupuy reports. Other Top Stories Eta is moving over Honduras as a weakened tropical depression but is still bringing the heavy rains that have caused deadly landslides and drenched the country’s east and northern Nicaragua. The storm is advancing so slowly and dumping so much rain that much of Central America remains on high alert. At least four people in Nicaragua and Honduras have been killed in landslides. The long-term forecast calls for Eta to spin back out into the Caribbean later today and then reform as a tropical storm on Friday — possibly reaching Cuba on Sunday and southern Florida on Monday. Philadelphia’s district attorney has vowed to make his own decision about whether to charge two young officers in the shooting death of Walter Wallace Jr. and not to rely solely on the police investigation. The city released police body camera video and other evidence in the death last month. The evidence shows that Wallace, a 27-year-old Black man, was killed outside his house within one minute of the officers’ arrival, Krasner said. Family members have said they called 911 to seek help as he went through a mental health crisis. Police said he ignored commands to drop a knife when they fatally shot him. Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and four of his Cabinet members are in quarantine after meeting with a visiting envoy who later tested positive for coronavirus. The Cambodian health ministry says all the tests so far were negative but their quarantine was a precaution. Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto tested negative when he left Hungary on Monday and negative again while in Cambodia. He tested positive upon his arrival in Thailand late Tuesday. Asian shares advanced after stocks rallied on Wall Street as investors embraced the upside of more gridlock in Washington, sending the S&P 500 index up 2.2% while the outcome of the U.S. presidential election remained in limbo. Hong Kong’s benchmark led the region, gaining 2.6%, while shares also rose by more than 1% in Tokyo and South Korea. GET THE APP
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Illinois’ big winners & losers weren’t all on the ballot
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THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Slow roll to the Oval
DRIVING THE DAY
WE CAN NOW SAY DEFINITIVELY THAT JOE BIDEN has the upper hand in the battle for the presidency. But we can also say with similar confidence that this battle will be a multi-front political and legal struggle that could drag on for weeks.
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP has demonstrated precisely what his White House and campaign suggested he’d do: He is filing lawsuits, lobbing rhetorical bombshells and trying to stave off defeat.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS has BIDEN at 264 electoral votes after it put Arizona in his corner — just six short of the presidency. Other media organizations have held off at putting him this close. (The Trump camp has said the early Arizona calls for Biden were premature and should be retracted. Nate Silver said the same thing on FiveThirtyEight on Wednesday night, though he still gives Biden a slight edge in the state overall.)
HOW FAR WILL TRUMP GO? He is warning of “secretly dumped ballots” and inexplicably has claimed victory in Pennsylvania, Georgia and North Carolina — comments that were flagged by social media giants.
SO HERE’S WHERE WE ARE: ARIZONA updated its total at 2:40 a.m. D.C. time, and BIDEN is winning by 68,000 votes statewide. Hundreds of protesters — some carrying guns — gathered outside the Maricopa County election office chanting “count the vote.” Among the protesters: Rep. PAUL GOSAR (R-Ariz.).
— ARIZONA REPUBLIC: “In latest batch, Trump gets share of votes he would need to reclaim Arizona. But next rounds of ballots present new challenges”: “President Donald Trump received almost the exact share he would need to charge back to win Arizona’s 11 electoral votes and potentially reelection. … But the problem for Trump is that he needs to replicate that performance across all of the remaining 470,000 votes left to count in the state. And he needs to do it across all Arizona’s 15 diverse counties, which include areas that are very blue: Pima, Coconino and Santa Cruz counties.”
GEORGIA OFFICIALS were working through the night to count the 90,750 outstanding ballots there. TRUMP was ahead by some 23,000 votes with 95% of the vote counted. Most of the uncounted ballots should, as they have elsewhere, favor BIDEN. An update is expected from Georgia Secretary of State BRAD RAFFENSPERGER at 10:30 a.m. today.
— ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION: “Thousands of absentee ballots still need to be counted in Georgia”: “About 76% of outstanding absentees are in Fulton, Clayton, Chatham, DeKalb and Gwinnett counties.”
PENNSYLVANIA still has 488,000 mail-in ballots to count, with at least 120,000 in the Philadelphia area alone. BIDEN has sliced into TRUMP’S lead there, which was down to 153,000 by Wednesday. Democrats and election analysts believe BIDEN will be able to catch up. If BIDEN wins here, he’ll win the presidency.
THE TRUMP CAMPAIGN has filed lawsuits in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Nevada.
— DETROIT FREE PRESS: “Trump campaign files lawsuit to temporarily stop vote count in Michigan”: “The lawsuit alleges that a poll challenger from Roscommon County — a small, rural county in northern Michigan — was excluded from viewing the counting of the absentee ballot counting board.
“The man who filed the lawsuit with Trump, Eric Ostergren, said he is from Roscommon but served as a poll challenger in Oakland County. The county received hundreds of thousands of absentee ballots, as did other large counties across the state. Ostergren alleges he was inappropriately removed from a site where he was watching absentee ballots being counted.”
— NEVADA INDEPENDENT: “A Republican victory in Nevada is still less likely than a Democratic one at this point, not just because of Biden’s lead, albeit narrow, but because almost all of the outstanding ballots are mail ballots, which heavily favor Democrats simply because they are far more preferred by Democrats than Republicans. Of the nearly 600,000 mail ballots that have been returned by voters statewide, nearly half of them have been from Democrats while only a quarter have been from Republicans and the rest from nonpartisans and those registered with minor political parties.”
NYT FRONT PAGE: “BIDEN BUILDS AN EDGE IN CRUCIAL STATES AS TRUMP CHALLENGES THE VOTE COUNTS”
NATASHA KORECKI, ELENA SCHNEIDER and ALEX ISENSTADT: “Biden campaign gears up for legal warfare as he nears 270,” by Natasha Korecki, Elena Schneider, and Alex Isenstadt: “Biden’s team activated teams of attorneys in Nevada, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan in preparation for court battles, and blasted out requests for donations to combat myriad legal challenges.
“The campaign is gearing up for an onslaught of court challenges. The campaign told donors it expected Arizona to be called for Biden Wednesday evening — the Associated Press has already done so — and Nevada on Thursday morning. They warned that vote counting in Georgia, Pennsylvania and North Carolina would take time.
“As Wednesday wore on, Trump advisers privately acknowledged they had all but given up on Michigan and Wisconsin and were pinning their hopes in Arizona and Pennsylvania. They also said they were nervously eyeing Georgia, a state where Trump’s lead has narrowed as votes from Atlanta have come in.
“Much of the campaign’s focus is on legal options, especially in Georgia and Pennsylvania. During an afternoon call with supporters, Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel requested donations to help fund forthcoming court action.” POLITICO
— WSJ ED BOARD: “What matters ultimately is the rule of law. As long as the judiciary follows it, neither candidate will have cause to claim an illegitimate outcome. If either side’s supporters take to the streets, Messrs. Trump and Biden have an obligation to calm them. Amid fears of unrest, shops in Midtown Manhattan and other major cities are boarded up. What a sad sight to behold in the United States.
“America’s experiment with mass mail voting was forced by the pandemic, but it’s turning out to be a brush with chaos that shouldn’t be repeated. The task for this year is to finish the job by the book: Ignore overheated rhetoric, let state and local officials complete the count, and trust in the rule of law.”
Good Thursday morning.
THE STEP BACK — WAPO’S PHIL RUCKER and BOB COSTA: “Election reveals deeper divides between red and blue America”: “When Donald Trump narrowly won Wisconsin in 2016 to clinch the presidency, he carried 23 counties that had previously voted for President Barack Obama. But when Joe Biden was projected on Wednesday to put Wisconsin back in the Democratic column, he was on track to pry back just two of them: Door and Sauk.
“Rather than flipping more Obama-Trump counties, Biden instead exceeded previous Democratic win margins in Wisconsin’s two biggest cities, Milwaukee and Madison. That pattern extended to Michigan and other battleground states, with Biden building upon Democrats’ dominance in urban and suburban jurisdictions but Trump leaving most of exurban and rural America awash in red.
“The urban-rural divide illustrates the pronounced polarization evident in preliminary 2020 election results. The split underscores fundamental disagreements among Americans about how to control the coronavirus pandemic or whether to even try; how to revitalize the economy and restore jobs; how to combat climate change or whether it is an emergency at all; and the roles of morality, empathy and the rule of law in the body politic.”
TERRIFIC TICK TOCK … NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN and ANNIE KARNI: “Fox’s Arizona Call for Biden Flipped the Mood at Trump Headquarters”: “That mirage of victory was pierced when Fox News called Arizona for former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. at 11:20 p.m., with just 73 percent of the state’s vote counted. Mr. Trump and his advisers erupted at the news. If it was true that Arizona was lost, it would call into doubt on any claim of victory the president might be able to make.
“What ensued for Mr. Trump was a night of angry calls to Republican governors and advice from campaign aides that he ignored, leading to a middle-of-the-night presidential briefing in which he made a reckless and unsubstantiated string of remarks about the democratic process. Standing in the East Room at 2:30 a.m., he dismissed the election as a ‘fraud’ and claimed he wanted to stop the counting of votes and leave the results to the Supreme Court. … Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser, was also in touch with Rupert Murdoch, the Fox News owner, as the night wore on. And on Wednesday morning, Mr. Trump’s campaign manager, Bill Stepien, insisted the president would win Arizona by 30,000 votes. …
“Mr. Kushner was making calls, looking for what he described as a ‘James Baker-like’ figure who could lead the legal effort to dispute the tabulations in different states, according to a person briefed on the discussions. (Mr. Baker led George W. Bush’s successful recount case in 2000.)”
AND NOW, MORE ON THE PATH TO 270 …
— IN PENNSYLVANIA: HOLLY OTTERBEIN in Philadelphia: “‘The math is pretty simple’: Trump’s lead shrinks in Pennsylvania”: “With President Donald Trump leading Joe Biden by 196,000 votes and 12 percent of the estimated vote still uncounted, Pennsylvania Democrats and Republicans spent Wednesday working out the rough math surrounding the as-yet-uncounted mail-in ballots.
“There were more than 1 million mail ballots left to be counted as of 2:35 p.m., according to Pennsylvania’s Department of State. So far, 78 percent of mail ballots have broken for Biden and 21 percent have been won by Trump. If that pace continues — and it’s a big if — Biden would take the lead. Looking at the amount of mail ballots Biden is winning as well as the places still to be fully counted, some Democratic elected officials and consultants, including Sen. Bob Casey, estimate Biden will carry Pennsylvania by about 100,000 votes in a tight race.
“‘Biden has been winning the absentee votes by a fairly steady margin, so the math is pretty simple,’ said J.J. Balaban, a Pennsylvania-based Democratic strategist. ‘There’s no reason to think that there is going to be a big change in the uncounted mail-in ballots from the ones that have been counted.’”
— TIM ALBERTA: “Three Reasons Biden Flipped the Midwest”
IN THE HOUSE … AT 2 P.M., TODAY, House Democrats will hold their first post-election caucus call. Now, remember: Calls like this are tightly controlled affairs, and Speaker NANCY PELOSI is at the wheel. Of course, there is significant discontent in the Democratic ranks about their miss Tuesday night — they lost seats, instead of gaining the five to 15 they were predicting. But discontent has its way of quickly melting away in the House Democratic Caucus — and PELOSI is a large part of that. There are a few things to know right now:
1) THERE ARE ALREADY MURMURS among some Democrats about delaying the leadership elections to give lawmakers more time to mull over the results. Remember: Speedy leadership elections only benefit the incumbents, who have an organization and the ability to immediately kick it into gear. Slow elections typically allow discontent to foment. That said, PELOSI has shown herself adept at leadership elections no matter when they happen — immediately, or later on.
2) PELOSI — who is widely expected to seek another term as speaker — has already shown a bit of how she’s framing the election. She said in a letter she sent Wednesday night that the election was “challenging,” but Democrats kept the House.
AGAIN, WE DON’T KNOW how angry people are, and who they will hold responsible, but this will be the first organized gathering since Tuesday night, and will go a long way toward setting a tone for the lame duck.
L.A. TIMES: “Republicans may take back two congressional seats in key Orange County races,” by Stephanie Lai
A BRIGHT SPOT FOR SENATE DEMS — Sen. GARY PETERS has won his reelection in Michigan.
THE CORONAVIRUS IS RAGING … AP: “U.S. sets record for cases amid election battle over virus,” by Lindsey Tanner: “New confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the U.S. have climbed to an all-time high of more than 86,000 per day on average, in a glimpse of the worsening crisis that lies ahead for the winner of the presidential election.
“Cases and hospitalizations are setting records all around the country just as the holidays and winter approach, demonstrating the challenge that either President Donald Trump or former Vice President Joe Biden will face in the coming months.
“Daily new confirmed coronavirus cases in the U.S. have surged 45% over the past two weeks, to a record 7-day average of 86,352, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Deaths are also on the rise, up 15 percent to an average of 846 deaths every day.”
MARKET WATCH — “Global Markets Join Election Rally as Tech Stocks Gain,” by WSJ’s Joanne Chiu: “International markets advanced, tracking a U.S. rally, as investors positioned for a potentially divided U.S. government, with a Democratic president and a Republican Senate. U.S. stock futures rose nearly 1%, suggesting American markets could gain later on Thursday, after a session in which the broad S&P 500 index logged its biggest one-day point and percentage increase since June. Likewise, government bonds continued to rally, pushing yields on the 10-year Treasury down 0.032 percentage point to 0.735%.”
TRUMP’S THURSDAY — Trump has nothing on his public schedule.
PLAYBOOK READS
JOHN HARRIS column: “Democrats Look at Trump Voters and Wonder, ‘What the Hell Is Your Problem?’”: “In an odd way, Donald Trump’s political performance in 2020 — an election he looks on track to narrowly lose — is far more impressive than his performance in 2016, the election he narrowly won.
“Unquestionably, his 2020 results are more disturbing, for anyone who does not share his enthusiasm for the politics of personal and institutional contempt. It has never been more clear the large numbers of people who do share that enthusiasm, or at a minimum have no overriding objections. This, in turn, has never been more unsettling in the implications.
“If the president manages through some combination of good luck and legal challenges to win a second term, ash-in-mouth Democrats and their sympathizers will ask Trump voters in a spirit of recrimination, ‘What the hell is your problem?’
“If Joe Biden hangs on to his narrow lead, his backers can ask the same question of Trump voters in a spirit of reflection, and possibly even genuine curiosity. Democratic disdain for Trump is natural; disdain for his voters is more problematic. But there is no logical way to scorn Trump without being somewhat scornful of voters who cheered his ascent to power and were eager for him to keep it.”
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GOP WOMEN GROW THEIR RANKS — MELANIE ZANONA and ALLY MUTNICK: “Recruitment push fuels record-number of women in House GOP”: “Two years after Democrats celebrated another ‘Year of the Woman,’ Republicans are having a historic moment of their own. House Republicans are poised to add at least 13 women — if not more — to their depleted ranks next year after a record-breaking recruitment effort.
“Several races involving female GOP candidates are still too close to call. But when all the votes are tallied, Republicans could count as many as 33 women in their conference, a new record for the party. They’re already on track to make history: previously, the highest number of GOP women in a freshman class was nine. ‘The story of the night is the success of Republican women at the ballot box,’ said Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), who launched a PAC dedicated solely to electing more GOP women. ‘For all these naysayers, we have proven that strong, Republican women are the best candidates to put on the ballot.’
“Most notably, female GOP candidates won in some of the toughest races in the country and have been responsible for flipping six of seven Democratic seats thus far.”
— CHECK OUT the WOMEN RULE podcast ANNA did with ALLY MUTNICK on how Republican women made inroads at the federal level. Listen and subscribe
VALLEY TALK — “Pressure rises on Facebook, Twitter to rein in Trump as false claims spread,” by Steven Overly: “Facebook and Twitter struggled Wednesday to contain a deluge of false claims from President Donald Trump and his supporters that Democrats were trying to steal the election — sparking criticism from the left that their labels and fact checks weren’t going nearly far enough. Trump has continued to incorrectly insist that he is the winner of Tuesday’s vote, even though ballots are still being counted in four critical states and it is still unclear who will emerge the victor.
“On Wednesday, Trump fired off a series of social media posts questioning the legitimacy of ballots for former Vice President Joe Biden, dubious or outright false claims that in several instances were labeled by Twitter and Facebook . But those messages were still amplified among the president’s stable of right-wing supporters and gained traction with conservative influencers and their followers online.
“The intense challenge and scrutiny facing Facebook and Twitter over the president’s false claims illustrates the platforms’ role as indispensable forums for billions of people to express opinions and share information — and the power the companies wield as a result. The social media companies largely operate under rules they set themselves, but those rules have increasingly become divisive.” POLITICO
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
SPOTTED: Mike Lindell and Nigel Farage seated at separate tables at the Trump hotel during lunch Wednesday.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Lauren Easton, global director of media relations and corporate comms at the Associated Press, and Matt Easton, financial consultant at Dixon Hughes Goodman, welcomed McCrea Nolan Easton on Tuesday. She came in at 6 lbs., 8 oz. and 19.5 inches. Pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Annie Kelly Kuhle, managing director at FP1 Strategies. How she’s celebrating: “I will be celebrating at home with my husband Kevin, my son Joe, my daughter Mary, and a few friends. Kevin and I have the same birthday, so we will have take-out Mexican food, margaritas, two cakes, two songs, and a long discussion with toddlers about how not all moms and dads have the same birthday.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.) is 78 … New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu is 46 … Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers is 7-0 … John Harwood … Phil Walzak … Janice Griffin … Craig Kirby … Tom Slater … Jackie Boynton … Karen Mulhauser … Heather Stone (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … NBC News D.C. bureau chief Ken Strickland … Justin Muzinich, deputy Treasury secretary, is 43 (h/t Tony Sayegh) … Valerie Biden Owens, vice chair of the Biden Institute at the University of Delaware … POLITICO’s Nolan McCaskill and Katy O’Donnell … Jason Calabretta, producer at “NBC Nightly News” … Steve Pfister … Stephen Rubright … WaPo senior correspondent Kevin Sullivan … Richard Parker … Trudy Vincent (h/ts Jon Haber) … Keith Castaldo, general counsel to Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) … Benjamin Wittes, senior fellow at Brookings and editor-in-chief of Lawfare … Max Eden (h/t Alice Lloyd) …
… Moira Whelan, director of democracy and technology at the National Democratic Institute … Katie Oyama … Sebastian Arcelus (h/ts Ben Chang) … Matt Nicholson, government relations senior manager at Accenture … former Rep. Bob Barr (R-Ga.) is 72 … Steve Caldeira, president and CEO of the Household & Commercial Products Association … Brian Lawrence … Jane Timken, chair of the Ohio GOP … Autumn VandeHei … Casey Smith … Camille von Kaenel … Jeremy Ravinsky … Curtis Skinner … Betsy Wiley … Tom Guthrie … Zack Marshall is 41 … Kristin Bodenstedt … John Procter, partner at Avisa Partners, is 41 … Jenny Mueller … James Melcher is 81 … Chris Mewett … Ryan Mewett … Ingrid Dineen-Wimberly … Susan Arbetter … Malik Haughton … former Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski is 8-0 … Kate Throneburg … Meryl Holt Silverman … Bernard-Henri Lévy is 72 … Jessica Harris … Rick Leach
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AMERICAN MINUTE
CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: RIP America, the Mail-In Voter Fraud Fix Is In
Your Freedom Vote Has Been Lost In the Mail
Well, it’s Wednesday. I do hope you’re all having a good one so far, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing Friends.
It’s going to be a quick one this morning after yesterday’s festivities. I hope you all enjoyed the blanket election coverage that we here at PJ Media and the Townhall Media Mothership provided. I know we had a lot of fun.
We would have had more fun if there had been some sort of resolution to the election, of course. There isn’t because the Democrats worked overtime to make sure that it didn’t happen. The push for mail-in voting by the Left had one goal: to denigrate the established American presidential process.
Progressives are all about tearing down institutions in the United States, and introducing the potential for fraud in presidential elections is the cornerstone of their plan to render asunder the fabric of the Republic. When every election can be called into question and thrown to the courts, a power-hungry party doesn’t have to develop a sound strategy or run a viable candidate to win.
There was a time when an attempt was made to count all of the votes right away. The mail-in scam gives officials an excuse to punt that responsibility. So Election Day becomes election week and probably election month.
The longer the process goes on, the easier it is to introduce fraud into it. You will be told otherwise by “experts,” but this is true.
President Trump told supporters that he won the election. It’s comforting that he’s going to fight any ensuing mail-in ballot shenanigans.
Election Day ballots are easier to account for than those left up to the vagaries of the performance of the United States Postal Service. In a calmer, saner society that wouldn’t even be up for discussion. Now, we’re supposed to get comfortable with any lack of precision introduced into the system.
If one looks at the Electoral College map right now President Trump has won reelection. We’re being told, however, that his substantial leads in several states could be erased by ballots yet uncounted that are lingering en masse God knows where.
Are you feeling comfortable with the system yet?
As long as the election doesn’t have to end on, or even near, Election Day, the potential for nefarious manipulation exists. I am not stating unequivocally that’s what’s happening right now, I’m merely saying that it might be. A big “might.”
The interminably long campaign process, along with the mail-in and early-voting nonsense have watered down a once cherished right. Voting for the president of the United States is a right that should be treated with the utmost gratitude and respect.
Now people are just mailing it in.
Just Because It’s Not About Politics
PJM Linktank
Lindsey Graham Rakes Pollsters, Liberal Donors, Over the Coals in Fiery Victory Speech
Pelosi Calls Amy Coney Barrett an ‘Illegitimate Supreme Court Justice’
Violent Crime in Chicago Surges More Than 50 Percent Through October Compared to Last Year
Treacher: CDC: Sure, You Can Go Vote Today if You Have COVID-19
Vienna Terrorist Wanted to Join ISIS; Had Previous Terror Conviction
China Blocks WHO From Investigating Origins of the Coronavirus
Greg Gianforte, Notorious for Assaulting Reporter, Wins Governor Race in Montana
Cuban-American Republicans Pick Off One Democrat House Seat — And May Snare Another
Between an Antifa Maoist and a Dope, Portland Picks the Dope for Mayor
Florida Welcomes Conservative Black Republican to the U.S. House
Tom Cotton, Rising Star in the Republican Party, Wins Reelection
From the Mothership and Beyond
Alleged Comedian Re-Ups Call to Violence Against President Trump
Liberal Law Professor Shreds Dems’ Calls for ACB to Recuse Herself From Election-Related Cases
She’ll be back. Despite a Hard Fight, GOP Rising Star Kimberly Klacik Loses MD Congressional Race
Nancy Mace Upsets Joe Cunningham in South Carolina’s First Congressional District
Congresswoman Elise Stefanik Cruises to Reelection
It’s Official: Rising Conservative Star Madison Cawthorn Will Become Youngest Member of Congress
Senator Kelly Loeffler Advances to Runoff in Georgia’s Special Election
Poor Parenting A Bigger Issue Than Unlocked-Up Guns
Irony Alert: Rapper Glokk9 Arrested For Illegal Gun Possession
Confirmed: Dead People Are Voting In New York City
In Daring Move, Walmart Fires Inventory Tracking Robots (Video)
Nothing Says ‘Get Out and Vote’ Like Kate Beckinsale in a Black Bra With ‘Vote’ Emblazoned in Gold
Let the Anarchists Rage But Keep the American Faith
‘Speaks for all of us’! Brit Hume ‘visibly annoyed’ by Fox News’ hesitance to call certain races
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
I’m looking for a new mantra.
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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: Steady As She Goes
With counts ongoing in several swing states, Joe Biden is a hair’s breadth away from a win.
The Dispatch Staff | 2 hr | 1 |
Happy Thursday! We’re getting there, folks. Not there yet, but we’re getting there.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden picked up key battleground states Wisconsin and Michigan on Wednesday, setting him well on his way toward rebuilding the “blue wall” that flipped for President Trump in 2016. President Trump won a single electoral vote from Maine’s 2nd Congressional District.
- After weeks of trailing in the polls, Maine Republican Susan Collins beat out her Democratic challenger Sara Gideon and won reelection to the Senate, all but assuring the GOP will retain its Senate majority. Sen. Gary Peters—a Michigan Democrat—eked out a win against Republican challenger John James. Meanwhile, with ballots still trickling in in Georgia, GOP Sen. David Perdue is hovering right at the 50-percent mark he needs to win his race outright and avoid a runoff against Democrat Jon Ossoff.
- DHS Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Chris Krebs released a statement Wednesday stating that the federal agency had found “no evidence any foreign adversary was capable of preventing Americans from voting or changing vote tallies.”
- The United States confirmed 97,675 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 8.1 percent of the 1,207,119 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,036 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 233,663. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 52,049 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
Biden is Trending Closer to a Victory—But He’s Not There Yet
When we hit send on TMD yesterday morning, North Carolina, Georgia, Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania remained too close to call, and Joe Biden was 32 electoral votes away from reaching the 270 necessary to secure the presidency. He’s still not quite there, but the former vice president is much closer to that mark than he was 24 hours ago. Here’s the latest:
Wisconsin (10 Electoral Votes): At publish time yesterday, Biden maintained an approximately 20,000-vote lead in the Badger State, with 97 percent of the expected vote reported. His advantage held mostly steady from then to now, expanding slightly to 20,558, and multiple networks officially called the state for the former vice president yesterday midday. In a statement just before 1 p.m. ET, Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien announced the president will request a recount due to “reports of irregularities in several Wisconsin counties which raise serious doubts about the validity of the results.”
Stepien did not say what supposed irregularities he had in mind. A spokesman for the Wisconsin Elections Commission told PBS that “we are not aware of any irregularities in the election,” but that this would not preclude the Trump campaign from seeking a recount.
Trump ally and former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker tweeted that “requesting a recount is a legitimate legal option for the Trump Campaign considering the slim margin,” but pointed out that the past two statewide recounts in Wisconsin resulted in a swing of only 131 and 300 votes. “20,000 is a high hurdle,” he said.
Where Does That Leave Things?
In adding Wisconsin and Michigan’s combined 26 electoral votes and subtracting (for now) Arizona’s 11, 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.
Georgia (16 EVs): Like Michigan and Wisconsin, Trump’s early lead in Georgia has continued to erode as absentee ballots from Atlanta and the surrounding areas are tabulated.
Pennsylvania (20 EVs): The Keystone State remained up in the air Wednesday night, with Biden continuing to close in on Trump’s early lead as results trickled in. State election officials have said they expect most results to come in by Friday, but as of publishing time, the count stood at about 90 percent of the estimated total vote reported, with Trump leading Biden by 166,146 votes.
At first glance, that’s an uphill climb for Biden given the margins in other states. But a whopping 763,311 mail ballots are yet to be counted—and those are breaking heavily for the former vice president. Perhaps even more ominous for Trump’s chances, just 66 percent of mail ballots from heavy-Democratic Philadelphia County—where Biden currently leads Trump by nearly 70 percentage points—have been tabulated.
Nevada (6 EVs): If Biden holds on to win Arizona, then Nevada’s six electoral votes would be enough for him to hit the election-clinching threshold of 270 on the dot. The state announced no results at all yesterday, so Biden still sits on the 7,647-vote lead we mentioned yesterday. New results are expected to come in at 9 a.m. local time—just after noon for us out here in the East.
Claims of Election Fraud: A Paper Tiger So Far
As his path to reelection narrowed throughout the day yesterday, President Trump and his allies opted for a well-worn page of their playbook: Denounce the contest—without evidence—as rigged from the start.
With late-reporting absentee ballots from Democratic strongholds like Milwaukee, Detroit, and Atlanta slowly chipping away at his election night lead, Trump went on a Twitter bender, insisting throughout the day that Michigan and other states had “a large number of secretly dumped ballots” and that the ongoing counts should be stopped. Several tweets—including one where Trump baselessly asserted he had “claimed, for Electoral Vote purposes, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (which won’t allow legal observers) the State of Georgia, and the State of North Carolina”—were labelled by Twitter as disputed and potentially misleading. Biden campaign adviser Bob Bauer also prematurely declared victory Wednesday morning, saying “we’re winning the election, we’ve won the election, and we’re going to defend that election.”
In his speech in the wee hours of Wednesday morning, Trump had promised that “we’ll be going to the U.S. Supreme Court” to stop the “fraud on the American public.” Accordingly, the president’s son Eric Trump and personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani traveled to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the late afternoon to announce a total-war legal campaign against the ballot totals in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Georgia, states where Biden was creeping up in late-reported votes (though curiously not in Arizona or Nevada, where it is Biden nursing an early lead and Trump who is hoping to benefit from a late push).
Presented Without Comment
Toeing The Company Line
- Jonah is ready to eat crow in his Wednesday G-File (🔒). Despite months of reading the tea leaves, pollsters and their readers overestimated the likelihood of a huge Democratic victory. Fortunately, that’s good news. “This election was a pretty clear repudiation of unvarnished progressivism,” Jonah writes. “Biden can claim no mandate other than some gauzy efforts at ‘healing’ and taking the pandemic seriously.”
- David, meanwhile, has a less cheery outlook on our divided government. “I’m reminded of a political version of trench warfare. During World War I the combatants on the Western Front expended an enormous amount of blood and treasure to move the lines a mile here and a mile there, only to see them snap right back after the next counteroffensive,” David writes in the latest French Press (🔒). “The effort was overwhelming. The gains were often nominal.”
- On Wednesday’s episode of the Dispatch Podcast, Sarah and the guys dissect this year’s polling catastrophe, where their electoral predictions went sour, and how we should analyze the president’s comments about his standing in the race.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photo by Elaine Cromie/Getty Images.
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LEGAL INSURRECTION
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
THE BLAZE
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One last thing … While the presidential election hangs in the balance Wednesday morning with outstanding votes to be counted in six states and no clear winner, House Democrats received an Election Day shock, losing at least six seats and potentially more as the votes continue to be counted.Projections that Democrats would win a dozen seats in the House of Represent … Read more
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ARRA REPORT
ARRA News Service (in this message: 13 new items) |
- Idle Wave: The Democratic Landslide That Wasn’t
- Campaign Update, Good News, The Totalitarian Left
- The Election: This Legal Expert Said What?
- The Good News Is That Biden Is Screwed, Even if He Wins
- GOP Raises Concern About Voting Practices in Pennsylvania
- A Throne of Bayonets
- No Winner Yet for 2020, But Some YUUUGE Take-Aways
- It’s NOT Over, Every Legal Vote, A Dicey Situation
- The Isolated American Jews
- Pandemic Catastrophe
- No More Looting Without Consequences
- President Trump Deserves the Nobel Prize For Peace
- Suppression, Supprussian Russian, Ression; Who Can Keep It Straight?
Idle Wave: The Democratic Landslide That Wasn’t
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 09:29 PM PST by Tony Perkins: Democratic donors are feeling a lot lighter in the wallet this week, but how much do they have to show for it? While Fox News raced to call the House for Democrats, the real story behind the numbers is a crushing one for Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). She didn’t just watch her majority shrink — she witnessed a foreboding flip of seats in solidly blue districts. Will she have control over the House when it’s all over? Probably, but from a much weaker position — and without a Senate takeover to cushion the blow. It might be one of the most underreported narratives of Tuesday night, but when the dust settles, the GOP will have significantly outperformed in the U.S. House. Both parties, Politico points out, thought the congressional races would be a bloodbath. Democrats were supposed to win “a dozen seats in the House,” they explain, “and knock off a whole host of Republican incumbents.” Guess what? Those projections, like all the rest, were completely wrong. Instead, it was Republicans beating Democrats — and, more importantly, Democratic incumbents. “They beat Minnesota Rep. Collin Peterson after a few decades of trying,” reporters announced. They stunned in liberal strongholds like Miami, knocking off Debbie Mucarsel-Powell and Donna Shalala. In places like Staten Island, South Carolina, and New Mexico, the wins came tumbling in for Republicans. “And, to add insult to injury, the chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Rep. Cheri Bustos, is struggling to hang on to her Illinois district.” “So much for the election landslide,” the Wall Street Journal proclaimed. “We defied the odds,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy told reporters triumphantly. After wasting a year on bogus impeachment charges and refusing to negotiate on any legislation of substance, the country’s message to Democrats seems to be: Start doing your jobs, or we’ll give them to someone else. For pro-lifers, who’ve been battling the most extreme abortion agenda in history, the GOP’s upsets are especially good news. The more they chip away at the Left’s majority, the better likelihood of success on things like the discharge petition of the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act. Depending on where the final numbers end up, Republicans may finally be able to force a vote to stop legal infanticide. That, in itself, would be a major win for the unborn. Of course, the biggest prize of the night was the U.S. Senate, where liberal activists had pumped tens of millions of dollars into defeating the GOP. But outspent, Americans quickly learned, does not mean outgunned. And within a few short hours, it was clear that voters weren’t ready to hand the keys to a party who threatened to blow up the filibuster, pack the Supreme Court, and unseat district judges. Pollsters, who insisted the Senate was a lock for the Left, had even more egg on their face when Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), the Democrats’ biggest target and shepherd of the Amy Coney Barrett nomination, won in a race that wasn’t even close. Donors lost $90 million in their bid to unseat Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), a record-breaking $108 million to oust Graham, and another $24 million to dispose of Senator John Cornyn (R-Texas). When CNN’s Van Jones Tsaid that “a lot of Democrats are hurt and scared tonight,” he wasn’t just talking about the presidential race. The fact that the Left couldn’t live up to its lofty goals is proof that the party is in some disarray. Despite the advantages Pelosi and Senator Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) had — not just financially but with their liberal megaphones in the media and social media — Democrats still can’t overcome the realities of their unpopular agenda. With Michigan’s John James (R) still in the hunt, Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and David Perdue (R-Ga.) up by two points, Alaska’s Dan Sullivan (R) double-digits ahead, and Alabama’s Tommy Tuberville (R), Iowa’s Joni Ernst (R), Montana’s Steve Daines (R) now safely in the win column, Republicans’ worst fears are put to rest. Within the next 24 hours, Senate control should be safely in the GOP’s hands — which, depending on what happens to the White House, may prove monumentally important. Not to mention miraculous, considering the obstacles they faced. At least for now, while we watch the presidency swing from one candidate to the other, we can take comfort that this Senate will either be a check on a radical Biden or a boost to a second-term Trump. Either way, it’s a victory worth celebrating. Tags: Tony Perkins, Family Research Council, U.S. House, U.S. Senate, Idle Wave, The Democratic Landslide That Wasn’tTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!/b>
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Campaign Update, Good News, The Totalitarian Left
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 08:50 PM PST
by Gary Bauer: Campaign Update “Despite ridiculous public polling used as a voter suppression tactic, Wisconsin has been a razor thin race as we always knew that it would be. “There have been reports of irregularities in several Wisconsin counties which raise serious doubts about the validity of the results. The President is well within the threshold to request a recount and we will immediately do so.” The Trump campaign also announced that it is suing the state of Michigan, claiming that it has been locked out of the ballot review and counting process. And just moments ago, the Trump campaign declared at a press conference in Philadelphia that it is suing the state of Pennsylvania. Good News As of now, two Republican incumbents – Cory Gardner (CO) and Martha McSally (AZ) – have been defeated, although McSally is refusing to concede. Offsetting their losses are Tommy Tuberville’s victory in Alabama and what we hope will be a victory by John James in Michigan, although James is now behind Democrat Gary Peters. Senators Collins (ME), Ernst (IA), Perdue (GA) and Tillis (NC) seem to have firm leads. Senators Cornyn (TX), Daines (MT), Graham (SC) and McConnell (KY) easily defeated their liberal challengers in spite of the unbelievable amounts of money that the left threw against them. As Lindsey Graham put it in his victory speech last night, the left’s record-breaking fundraising amounted to the “worst return on investment in the history of American politics.” There’s still one more race up for grabs. Sen. Kelly Loeffler was forced into a January runoff with Democrat Raphael Warnock. Meanwhile, it also appears that we have picked up a handful of House seats. The Atlanta Journal Constitution declared the Democrats’ House performance to be an “unexpected disappointment” given that many analysts were predicting gains of 10 to 15 seats for Nancy Pelosi’s party. But I also remember what happened in 2018 when it looked like our Election Day losses were minimal. Days later they turned out to be major losses due to ballot harvesting. We will keep you posted as the results are finalized. The Totalitarian Left Tucker Carlson addressed this fact several times last night, noting how polls are being manipulated and weaponized, and that the mainstream media are lying to us, meddling in the election in the process. But in defense of the polling industry, Carlson said that there is a big swath of America that is afraid. They are afraid to tell a pollster what they believe. They are afraid to put up a sign in their yard. They are afraid of losing their job, afraid of having their home vandalized, afraid of having their car trashed. The fact that we seem to be accepting this assault on free speech is unacceptable in the United States of America. This is one of the most dangerous developments in a free society when large portions of the country are afraid to publicly share their values. Why is this happening? It is happening because normal Christian views, the love of country and traditional conservative opinions – even normalcy itself – are being labeled as “racist,” “bigotry,” “anti-this & that,” you name it. This has got to stop! The appropriate response is to call out the demonization, not make jokes about it. We must aggressively fight back against the demonization every time the left engages in it. We must also have the courage in our own arenas and spheres of influence to proudly show who we are. That is our right as Americans! And in this fight, those who cherish faith, family and freedom have no greater champion than Donald Trump! President Trump has fought political correctness and the cancel culture. He has boldly defended religious liberty. He defended our flag from the anthem kneelers and protestors. He is defending our history and our country from the nihilists, Marxists and Antifa thugs who would impose their ideological fascism on the rest of us. No matter how this election turns out – and I am still expecting a Trump/Pence victory – safeguarding our First Amendment freedoms from the left and Big Tech will be a defining battle in the weeks and months ahead. Fighting Anti-Semitism The webinar is sponsored by the American Christian Leaders for Israel, and will feature remarks by Dr. Susan Michael, director of the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem, and State Department Special Envoy to Combat Anti-Semitism Elan Carr. I will also be participating in the webinar as a Trump appointee to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. The webinar is taking place at 1:00 PM ET. Click here for more information and to register online. Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Campaign Update, Good News, The Totalitarian LeftTo 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 Election: This Legal Expert Said What?
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 08:24 PM PST by Mike Huckabee: At this writing, we’re no closer to an outcome on the election count than we were late last night. I think President Trump will prevail, as some of the Biden-Harris vote in states like Pennsylvania is obviously fraudulent and, hopefully, will be revealed as such. But it has been clear to me for a long time that if Trump doesn’t win re-election, it’s mainly because of the relentless negative treatment he’s received in the media. Never mind the brilliant economic turnaround (before a highly contagious virus spread from China) that benefited all demographic groups and the stunning foreign policy successes. Never mind his handling of the logistical nightmare of providing ventilators and other supplies around the country, and the amazing fast-tracking of a vaccine. Never mind that he was honest with us and did everything he could to keep his promises. Never mind that he was transparent with a rabidly hostile press corps, making himself available to them frequently on the White House lawn and answering question after question, knowing they would always find ways to twist what he said or attribute the “wrong” motives to him. No, all those remarkable things didn’t matter, because Donald Trump was a Russian agent, a traitor to his country who collaborated with Vladimir Putin to get himself into the White House. He was a white supremacist, a misogynist, an all-around monster who put children in cages and drummed up stories about the pure and innocent Bidens for political purposes and tried to get his family investigated without any evidence at all! His tie was too long, his face too tan, and he ate too many scoops of ice cream. We knew that whatever he did in any given situation — one thing or its exact opposite — he would be trashed. This is the totally made-up Donald Trump that the media presented to America over four-plus years. They never let up. They even hired disgraced members of the intelligence community to go on the air and lie about him some more. Even now, social media is working to “cancel” him. In breaking news this afternoon (after all votes have presumably been cast), Twitter is still censoring Donald Trump’s tweets. In a strange twist of logic, legal expert Jonathan Turley, a Democrat who is not a fan of Trump, is acknowledging the media’s constant negative attacks on Trump but using it to argue the opposite of what I just laid out above: namely, that their constant barrage of attacks actually HELPED Trump. Say, what? On Wednesday morning, he said on “FOX and Friends” that the unrelenting negative coverage actually did Trump some good because “a lot of voters were turned off by it.” He said that if Trump wins, this will be why. Anti-Trumpers will be quick to cast blame in creative ways if Trump wins. Ex-ESPN host Jemele Hill, sensing the possibility of a Trump victory, has already blamed white people. Unlike Hill, who is just a racist idiot saying stupid things, Turley is a noted legal scholar who often makes great points. But I’m not buying this one. The voters who were seriously turned off by negativity in the media were the Trump supporters, who avoided it the way Biden tries to avoid the virus. But a lot of the negativity was subtle –- a derogatory line inserted here or there in a column about entertainment, fashion, or human interest. It was like a spice, flavoring the commentary on just about everything. People in the middle, the ones who didn’t live on a steady diet of CNN and MSNBC, might not have seen much of the really hateful stuff but were constantly exposed to subtle digs at Trump. Dig, dig, dig. This was inescapable. It would be hard not conclude that he must be a bad guy. The anti-Trump media also helped Biden immensely by minimizing or downright ignoring stories about alleged corruption, and also the ones about violence in “blue” cities and the failure of law enforcement there. Antifa arsonists are still being released without bail –- think CNN will dwell on this? Suspects released without bail after Antifa-supporters nearly burn down occupied apartment complex As for the most hateful and disgusting (and phony) anti-Trump coverage, Democrats and never-Trumpers ate it up with a spoon. It energized them. I believe this atmosphere of intense hate is what drove many of them to go to the polls and stand in long lines. (It also might have driven them to manufacture thousands of fake mail-in ballots, or lose real ones, in key districts.) These people weren’t voting for feeble old Joe Biden –- they were voting AGAINST TRUMP. So, no, I don’t agree with Turley’s assessment at all. If Trump wins, it will be no thanks to the media but because he and his team were able to overcome the chaos and ballot fraud encouraged and facilitated by massive nationwide mail-in balloting. The way the vote count has been evolving in key states run by Democrats convinces me that Trump must have won the real total. Tags: Mike Huckabee, Evening Edition, The Election, This Legal Expert, Said What?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 Good News Is That Biden Is Screwed, Even if He Wins
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 07:59 PM PST David P. Goldman: My gut says that Donald Trump will snatch victory from the jaws of the pollsters. A great deal hangs on Pennsylvania, where Trump now leads by 600,000 but where 1.7 million mail-in ballots remain to be counted. There’s a 2:1 ratio of registered Democrats to registered Republicans among mail-in voters, and the pundits are saying that this will cancel out Trump’s lead. What they don’t consider is that a lot of registered Democrats in Pennsylvania will vote for Trump. Of course, getting the ballots counted fairly is a non-trivial problem. Politico.com’s headline this morning reads, “Biden looks screwed even if he wins.” The Republicans kept a Senate majority and reduced the Democratic majority in the House. If Biden squeaks by, he will have no popular mandate, no Senate, and no help from the Supreme Court. He won’t be able to pass tax increases, big changes in health care, or his Green New Deal boondoggles. He will have the same headaches confirming his favorite nominees as Trump did, and worse, as a Republican Senate casts a jaundiced eye at Biden’s supporting cast. The good news is that the election stymied the Democratic Party’s plan for radical transformation of the United States into an Orwellian state enforcing political correctness, and turning the federal budget into a pinata for Democratic constituencies. That’s the genius of the American political system. To make big changes you need either a big majority or a small majority for a very long time, and the Democrats have neither. Of course, a Biden administration would have the freedom to undo some of President Trump’s accomplishments in foreign policy, for example, returning to the repugant Obama policy of coddling Iran. If Trump wins — as I hope and expect — the White House will still have freedom of action in foreign policy, as well as the ability to go after Big Tech. He will also have time to drain the swamp in the Intelligence Community. Trump will not forget that Twitter and Facebook suppressed the New York Post’s revelations about the Hunter Biden emails on the recommendation of a gaggle of retired spooks. As Glenn Greenwald, a left-leaning investigative journalist, told Tucker Carlson last week: The mainstream media spiked the political story of the year at the diktat of the spook establishment — perhaps the scariest thing that ever has happened in American political history. If the Deep State can do this sort of damage when it is out of power, I shudder to think what they will do if and when Biden brings them back into power. That’s why the White House is critical. It’s the Deep State vs. the American republic. But even if Biden squeaks through, the Republican Senate and the Supreme Court provide constitutional bulwarks against the Democratic cabal. We will live to fight another day and win another presidential election. Tags: David P. Goldman, PJ Media, The Good News Is, Biden Is Screwed, Even if He WinsTo 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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GOP Raises Concern About Voting Practices in Pennsylvania
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 07:31 PM PST by Virginia Allen: Pennsylvania’s Republican Party has raised concerns over voting practices in the battleground state. “New picture from the field: an official ballot box being taken away by an unidentified civilian. What’s going on here?” Philly GOP tweeted Tuesday.
Only two hours before polls closed, the Philly GOP account tweeted, “Unidentified civilians moving ballot boxes, Unlicensed poll ‘observers’ entering polling places, Rampant, unchecked ballot harvesting, Twitter censoring all our tweets.” The Trump team has also raised concerns about remarks from Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, a Democrat. On Saturday, Shapiro tweeted, “If all the votes are added up in PA, Trump is going to lose. That’s why he’s working overtime to subtract as many votes as possible from this process.” And he added, “For the record, he’s [Trump] 0-6 against us in court. We’ve protected voting rights. Now, ignore the noise—vote!” On Tuesday, White House strategic communications director Alyssa Farah told “Fox Across America” with Jimmy Failla, “We’ve been really concerned with some of those early comments from the attorney general.” The president does have a legal team in Pennsylvania to ensure that election results are accurate and every vote is counted, Farah said. But she added that “it’s always concerning when those who are tasked with objectively carrying, executing an election really seem to be putting their thumb on the scale one direction or the other.” President Donald Trump visited the swing state 13 times over the course of the campaign and former Vice President Joe Biden made 16 trips to the state. In 2016, Trump won Pennsylvania by only 0.7 percent, or 44,000 votes. The state has 20 electoral votes. “There’s a lot of paths to victory for the president … ” Farah said. “So we hope we win Pennsylvania. It would be an honor, but there’s other routes as well.” Will Chamberlain, editor-in-chief of Human Events, shared a video of workers preventing a poll watcher from entering a polling place in Philadelphia because his certificate was “not for this location.” A photo of the man’s “Philadelphia County Board of Elections Watchers Certificate” shows the paper “authorizes the individual to watch in any ward/division in Philadelphia.”
Mandy Gunasekara, chief of staff to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Andrew Wheeler, shared a conversation she overheard between “Democrats watching the mail-in ballots being counted in PA.” “We need to slow this down and screw it up,” Gunasekara reported the poll workers saying.
Overheard Democrats watching the mail-in ballots being counted in PA: “This” and “it” being the election. They don’t even try to hide what they are doing and know @realDonaldTrump is winning! We won’t let them steal it! @PhillyGOP — Mandy Gunasekara (@MississippiMG) November 3, 2020
State laws do not allow officials to begin counting mail-in ballots in Pennsylvania until Election Day, which could add to delays in declaring a winner. Philadelphia’s mayor, James Kenney, wrote in a letter Monday that “getting a tally of mail-in ballots will easily take several days.” Last month, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day can be received and counted up to three days after the election. In a 4-4 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court left the state Supreme Court’s ruling in effect. Biden, who is originally from Scranton, Pennsylvania, visited his hometown on Election Day and promised a crowd of about 200 supporters he would restore “decency to the White House.” The president also made Pennsylvania one of his final campaign stops. During a rally Saturday, Trump said, “A great red wave is forming.” He added, “As sure as we’re here together, that wave is forming and they see it, they see it on all sides, and there’s not a thing they can do about it.” Tags: Virginia Allen, The Daily Signal, GOP Raises Concern, About Voting Practices, in PennsylvaniaTo 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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A Throne of Bayonets
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 06:32 PM PST
by Judd Garrett: This is embarrassing. The most important mechanism of our country is conducting a fair and honest election. That is infinitely more important than who actually wins the election. When the people have lost trust in the integrity of the election system, we have lost the country. Going to the mail-in ballot system was flawed to begin with. It was ripe for corruption and completely unnecessary. When certain states are allowing ballots to be turned in and counted days after Election Day, when signatures on ballots need not match the signatures on voter registration cards, when makeshift ballots boxes are set up throughout the country with no guarantee of the custody of each ballot, it is an invitation for voter fraud, and stuffing the ballot boxes. When determining which ballots should be counted and which ones discarded is turned over to the courts who will favor the candidate of their political persuasion, the legitimacy of the power of the elected officials will be highly questioned, making the laws and legislation they pass appear illegitimate. It’s easy to admonish people for questioning the legitimacy of the recently elected officials, and tell them to simply ignore what we have just witnessed, accept the results of the election and acknowledge these elected as our leaders. But that would only serve to legitimize an apparent illegitimate process. It’s difficult to accept something that is unfair and rigged. It made no sense to go down this road of mail-in ballots. I voted in person, and the process was more safe from Covid-19 than going to the grocery store. The health risks were minimal, if at all. And for those who did not want to take that minimal risk, the absentee ballot system which has been in place for decades with a proven track record of integrity was there for them. Why did we need mail-in ballots? We didn’t. It was put in place specifically for what we are witnessing today, either steal the election or delegitimize the President if you can’t. When a country has lost its integrity in its elections, it has lost its soul. We have lost the soul of this great nation, and how do you regain a lost soul? You probably can’t. And the attempts to do so by hypocritical politicians will be feeble at best. Their speeches filled with high sounding words calling for unity based in principle will fall on deaf ears. For what will it profit a man, if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul? Do you want to be Hank Aaron with 755 legitimate home runs, or Barry Bonds with 762 home runs (445 legitimate and 317 steroid-induced), where the record-books say you’re the home run king but everyone knows you’re not. To those part and parcel to this fraud, what have you really gained? A divided nation where half the country sees you as illegitimate. You cannot gain power through corrupt means and then expect the laws you use that power to impose on others to be adhered to. Why should the people follow the rules when the leaders have not? How can we expect the people to act with integrity when those in charge have not? The people will rally around a President they didn’t vote for only if they believe the process of electing him had been fair and legitimate. But if they don’t, they won’t because they will believe they were disenfranchised of their vote in the process. This is why going to the extreme to uphold the legitimacy of elections is the most paramount duty of our government, and in the 2020 election, it is a duty that our officials failed miserably at, and the damage caused may never be repaired. This election is not the end, it is only the beginning. Boris Yeltsin once said, “You can build a throne with bayonets, but you can’t sit on it for long.” Our future leaders will not be those picked by the will of the people, but will be those who can perpetrate the bigger fraud. Tags: Judd Garrett, Throne of BayonetsTo 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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No Winner Yet for 2020, But Some YUUUGE Take-Aways
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 05:56 PM PST by Mike Huckabee: The vote count goes on, as we knew it would, but enough of the results are in to give us some YUUUGE takeaways. First, we’ve seen that Democrats have been true to their stated plan to interfere with the election process, particularly in Philadelphia –- ironically, the birthplace of American democracy. There were reports throughout the day of attempts to discourage and disenfranchise Trump voters there, and even to keep Republican poll watchers out. This is the kind of thing that reportedly was going on all day. And at the time of this writing (the wee morning hours), Philadelphia has mysteriously STOPPED COUNTING votes until Wednesday morning. The media, as well, stopped adding to their projections as Trump was seen pulling ahead. Everything sort of ground to a halt, with critical battleground states still not called. A subdued Trump addressed supporters at almost 2:30 AM to thank them generously but also to say, in effect, “We’ve been doing so well, we thought we’d be coming out here to claim success –- brilliant successes in Texas, Ohio, Florida and other states –- and all of a sudden they stop? What happened?” He referred to the efforts to disenfranchise voters and said, “We won’t stand for it.” He also expressed bewilderment that certain states still hadn’t been called for him when he was up so far that the Democrats “can’t catch us.” His explanation: the Biden campaign knew they couldn’t win and are now going to say, “Let’s go to court.” It’s certainly understandable that he would distrust the results, especially from Pennsylvania, whose state attorney general, Josh Shapiro, tweeted the day before Election Day that “when all the votes are counted in Pennsylvania, Trump will lose.” “This is a fraud on the American public,” Trump said. (I have a feeling his campaign had advised him not to go that far, at least not yet, even if it is true.) “This is an embarrassment to our country. We were getting ready to win this election — frankly, we DID win this election.” The media and the Biden campaign –- same thing –- will have a field day with Trump’s claim that he has won, and NBC even broke into his speech to “fact-check” it. But he’s right about this: a freeze on ballot-counting gives Democrats the chance to see how many votes they need to “find” in Philadelphia to win Pennsylvania, and time to miraculously “find” them. This has the appearance of classic voter fraud. The next few days — or weeks — will have to be handled very carefully, by experts in election law. Update: the Georgia count was stopped as well. Another takeaway: it should now be clear to leftists who want to pour billions of dollars into statewide elections for the U.S. Senate to try to brainwash people with a steady barrage of nasty commercials that it doesn’t work very well. Actually, it’s kind of fun to see that they’ve flushed so much of their money down the toilet, and also kind of nice the way they helped all those TV and radio stations with their bottom lines. It’s one of the few ways Democrats know to stimulate the economy. But still. They should’ve learned when “Beto” (Richard) O’Rourke of El Paso received about $70 million in his 2016 Senate race against Republican incumbent Ted Cruz that this is not a dependable strategy. “Beto” was the darling of the Hollywood left, complete with his own VANITY FAIR cover –- not the way to impress Texans –- and instant celebrity status. Ooh, and if you squinted, he even looked a little like Bobby Kennedy! News flash: that doesn’t impress Texans, either. At that time, it was the most expensive Senate race ever. But you might have noticed that Texas still has the same Republican senator it had before. Texans outside El Paso found out a little about his background: the vast wealth this “progressive” candidate married into; his embarrassing weakness as a speaker, his fondness for jumping up on dining tables, flailing his arms and dressing up like animals; and (especially) his eagerness to seriously infringe on the Second Amendment. All those millions were not enough to impose a leftist agenda from outside the state. And now, four years later, we see this again, as Democrats spent more than a quarter of a billion dollars trying to get senatorial challengers elected in Texas (against its other Republican senator), South Carolina and Kentucky. But Texas Sen. John Cornyn has won re-election by a large margin. So have South Carolina Sen. Lindsay Graham (who also chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee) and Kentucky’s Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Graham clearly had been concerned about the $100 million (!) being spent by Democrats to get him out of office, but it turned out he didn’t need to worry. One other important take-away, and an especially welcome one: People are tiring of Democrats playing the race card and aren’t necessarily going to follow expectations. Look at how much better Trump and the Republicans are doing this time with black and latino voters. I’m so sick of all the condescending talk about Trump’s “base” — the assumption being that it’s a bunch of white (racist) males who don’t have much book-learnin’ — so it’s nice to see that stereotype defied in 2020. Trump has actually even lost a little support among white males. (I’d rather he not lose ANY support, but this statistic does help make my point.) And since 2016, Trump has gained support among black men, latino men, white women, latino women and black women. Biden’s remark that if you don’t support him, “you ain’t black” was offensive to many of all races. Cubans in Florida turned out so strongly for Trump that some on the left have decided “they ain’t latino” and are now referring to them as ‘white.” (!) I have a better idea: Will the media please stop using identity politics as a way to pigeonhole us regarding our voting preferences and every other thing about us? No? Didn’t think so. We’ll keep you up to date as the story of the 2020 election continues to play out. How I wish our country could be spared the spectacle and the stress of the coming days. But at least the process itself is telling us a lot about where our country is right now, so maybe we can get a handle on some serious issues facing us before it’s too late. Tags: Mike Hucakbee, No winner yet, for 2020, but some, YUUUGE take-awaysTo 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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It’s NOT Over, Every Legal Vote, A Dicey Situation
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 05:24 PM PST
by Gary Bauer: It’s NOT Over President Trump and Vice President Pence came out later and warned that the left was trying to steal the election. President Trump said: “This is a fraud on the American public. This is an embarrassment to our country. . . Frankly, we did win this election. . . We want the law to be used in a proper manner. So we’ll be going to the U.S. Supreme Court. We want all voting to stop. We don’t want them to be finding any ballots at 4 o’clock in the morning.” The vice president added: “While the votes continue to be counted, we’re going to remain vigilant. The right to vote has been at the center of our democracy since the founding of this nation, and we’re going to protect the integrity of the vote. . . But I truly do believe that we are on the road to victory.” People wondered in this election if we would have another “Florida situation” similar to what happened in 2000 between George W. Bush and Al Gore. It’s worse than that. We’ve got multiple states hanging in the balance with growing evidence of illegality — all the things we have seen in big Democrat cities for decades. When Kennedy beat Nixon everyone knew it was because the Daley machine in Chicago manufactured votes. Richard Nixon and the Republican Party chose not to fight back because they felt it would hurt the country Donald Trump and Mike Pence are going to fight back because the left will hurt the country! Every Legal Vote Unfortunately, many commentators today, including on Fox News, are repeating the progressive socialist talking point that was echoed for the past two weeks and is now becoming a chorus. “Every vote must be counted.” They keep leaving out the most important word that should be in that sentence. Every LEGAL vote should be counted. The Democrats can manufacture votes from now until Christmas! I believe Donald Trump and Mike Pence won yesterday. Let me repeat that: I believe Trump/Pence won. President Trump won four million more votes than he did in 2016. Now Democrats will try to steal this victory from them. They changed the rules in North Carolina and Pennsylvania. The president warned weeks ago that mail-in balloting could lead to fraud and chaos, and that’s exactly what we have now. A Dicey Situation Because of the unprecedented vote-by-mail juggernaut the Democrats rammed through in states like Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, we are facing a dicey situation this morning. But there are ways it could still work out. I believe there is ample evidence that mail-in votes were handled in such a way that inevitably resulted in fraud for the Democrats. There were duplicate ballots being sent to households. Incorrect ballots were mailed out. The Trump campaign went into court multiple times to get this under control, and I know it will continue to fight. But given where the uncounted vote remains in Michigan and Wisconsin, I think it is very possible that these states could be called for Joe Biden sometime today. That takes Biden up to 264 Electoral College votes. In Nevada, Biden has an 8,000-vote lead. The state is still counting mail-in ballots, and officials are indicating they will not announce results until tomorrow. If Biden maintains his lead and wins Nevada, he will claim 270 Electoral College votes, exactly the number needed to win. Not So Fast! Nevada had serious problems with mail-in votes during its primary elections, and it could also be headed to a recount with contested results. The odds are overwhelming that the Trump campaign will demand a recount in Wisconsin. If Biden loses those 10 Electoral College votes, everything is back up in the air. And here’s a real possibility: Arizona was called too early for Biden. Our sources are saying there are as many as a half million uncounted ballots in Arizona, and Trump is down by only 90,000 votes. Governor Ducey has reportedly told the White House that he believes the GOP’s absentee ballot campaign will overwhelmingly win those yet-to-be-counted ballots. If he’s right, another 11 Electoral College votes flip from Biden to Trump. So there is still hope for this working out. And given what a fighter Donald Trump is, I know he will do everything possible to ensure that every option is utilized. Lessons From Donald Trump Donald Trump appears to have won the Sunshine State by nearly 400,000 votes. Hillary Clinton won Miami-Dade County by 30 points. Biden only won it by seven. This was accomplished by a president we were told would destroy the Republican Party due to his insistence that our borders be controlled. Yet he did better than every weak Republican president before him among Hispanic voters in Florida. Trump is destroying the “lock” Democrats thought they had on Hispanics. Zapata County, along the Texas/Mexico border, has one of the lowest median incomes in the country. More than a third of its residents live below the poverty line. Four years ago, it voted for Hillary Clinton by 33 points. Yesterday, Zapata County voted 53% for Donald Trump. Trump’s message of manly conservatism and manly Christianity can win many votes for us. We saw it in Florida and we saw a glimmer of hope along the Texas/Mexico border. Virtually every $1 million house that I have seen in the northern Virginia suburbs has a Biden sign. But the blue collar, working-class neighborhoods of Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin continue to vote for Donald Trump’s conservative populism Now that message is taking root in Hispanic areas of Florida and Texas. We can see in conservative populism the path to becoming a governing majority for decades. I’ll have another report later this afternoon. Tags: Gary Bauer, It’s NOT Over, Every Legal Vote, A Dicey SituationTo 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 Isolated American Jews
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 03:20 PM PST by Caroline Glick: Without knowing the results of the US presidential elections, certain conclusions can already be drawn safely. For instance, we can say with certainty that between 70 and 80% of American Jews voted for the Democrat, former Vice President Joe Biden. On the face of things, American Jews could have been expected to vote in the same proportion, in the exact opposite direction. After all, from Britain to France to Australia, in recent decades, Jewish communities in advanced industrial democracies have moved from Left to Right. Their move came in response to the transformation of their traditional political homes into hostile ground. Since the early 20th century, parties on the political Left were traditionally more sympathetically inclined to Jews than parties on the right. But since the outset of the 21st century, that historic trend has been largely reversed. Parties on the Left have become increasingly hostile to Jews and parties on the Right have been making sustained efforts to win over the support of the Jewish communities. From Toulouse to Leeds to Berlin to Melbourne, Jews have been reading the same political map and turning to the Right. In America, the political situation is comparable to that of other Western democracies. From one election cycle to the next, the power of progressive forces hostile to Israel and to Jewish Americans has grown in the Democratic Party. In contrast, the Republican Party has become the most pro-Israel and pro-Jewish party outside of Israel the world has ever seen. And yet, in stark contrast to their brethren in England and Belgium, American Jews have steadfastly maintained their allegiance to the Democrats and the political Left. Over the past four years, the contrast in political behavior between American Jews and Jews from other Western democracies has become ever more remarkable. On the one hand, Donald Trump is the most pro-Israel and pro-Jewish president in US history. Trump has stood with Israel almost unconditionally. He has fought anti-Semitism in the US more effectively than any other president and he has done so throughout his presidency. For their part, the Democrats have taken giant strides towards becoming the US version of the Jeremy Corbyn-led Labour Party. It isn’t simply that rising stars of the Democrat Party like congresswomen Alexandria Ocasio Cortez and Ilhan Omar boycott Israel. They do so with the full backing of the party’s leadership. Biden’s running mate Senator Kamala Harris sided with Omar against American Jews who called for the party to censure Omar after one of her more egregious anti-Semitic outbursts last year. Harris has strong ties to the National Iranian-American Council – the Iranian regime’s lobby in Washington. Campaign financing filings from the Biden campaign on the eve of the election show that NIAC is one of its largest campaign donation bundlers. Harris enthusiastically supported the nuclear deal with Iran and boycotted last year’s AIPAC conference. In his 47 years in politics, Biden arguably racked up the largest and most long-standing record of support for Iran in US politics. Biden’s initial reaction to the 9/11 attacks was to call for the US to give $200 million to Iran. British Jewry abandoned Labour in droves and devoted their communal efforts to calling out and fighting anti-Semitism in the Labour Party after Corbyn first won the leadership race in 2015. Some 90% of British Jews voted for Conservatives in last year’s elections. In contrast, American Jews are among President Trump’s most outspoken and peripatetic demonizers. What explains the yawning gap between American Jews and other Western Jewish communities, not to mention between American Jews and Israeli Jews? American Jews are giving the Democratic Party a pass for abandoning them because they don’t want to acknowledge that they are being abandoned. Despite the progressives’ hostility to the Jews, the Jews want to remain progressives. Among the progressive Jews who have noticed the rise of anti-Semitic forces in their party, they are consoled and given permission to remain in the party from Jewish leaders and public figures who insist that while things are not perfect, or even good in their own camp, they can stay because Trump – while nice to Israel – is a crypto-Nazi. Repeated, fact-free slanders from the likes of Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt and from writer Bari Weiss alleging that Trump praised white supremacists at the Charlottesville riots in 2017 – even when he condemned them, both during and immediately after the riots three times; along with allegations that Trump dog-whistles to white supremacists and thus enables their attacks against Jews, enable progressive Jews who are concerned about what is happening in their party to stay put despite their concerns. Skyrocketing assimilation rates among American Jews indicate that all things being equal, most Jews on the political Left will cease identifying as Jews within a generation and a half. So, too, the rise of anti-Zionist American Jews who support the annihilation of Israel as a Jewish state indicates that in the coming years, more likely than not, American Jews will take leading roles in the Democratic/progressive campaign against Israel. Notably, two months after he called for Israel to be destroyed in a column in the New York Times, last month the NYT gave leading American Jewish anti-Zionist Peter Beinart a regular column. As their massive support for Biden indicates, regardless of what the future holds for them, American Jews today are isolated more than ever before. They are isolated within their political camp which doesn’t care about them, and they are isolated within the Jewish world. Tags: Caroline Glick, FrontPage Mag, The Isolated American JewsTo 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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Pandemic Catastrophe
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 02:49 PM PST by Kerby Anderson: The authors of a new book remind us that for the first time in history, the world shut itself down—by choice—because of a virus that was spreading. We did not understand the nature and danger of the coronavirus, but we understand much more now. I had Dr. Jay Richards on my radio program to talk about the book, The Price of Panic, written by him and two other authors. The subtitle of the book expresses some of their concerns: “How the tyranny of experts turned a pandemic into a catastrophe.” They illustrate with lots of facts, figures, and graphs the reality that the human cost of the emergency response to the pandemic far outweighed the benefits. They recognize that other books will be written in the future about the response to the virus. But they wanted to publish these results now because there is another push to close down the economy. In previous commentaries, I have documented some of the economic, educational, emotional, and medical costs of the lockdowns that took place. This book goes into even more detail to talk about the total costs in dollars, lives, and livelihoods as well as the ongoing problems with emotional and medical issues. One of the biggest surprises for the authors was how ineffective the lockdowns actually were. They assumed that the lockdowns would do what they were predicted to do but you would still have to count the other negative costs. But if you look at the charts in the book, you will discover the lockdowns weren’t very effective. In chapter nine (with the title: Did the lockdowns work?) are a number of graphs for a dozen states showing when the lockdown was implemented and what happened more than a week later to the number of reported cases. The impact was much less than we were led to believe. Our elected leaders and our newly elected leaders need to read this book before they make any decisions about another lockdown. Tags: Kerby Anderson, Point of View, Pandemic CatastropheTo 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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No More Looting Without Consequences
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 02:18 PM PST by Newt Gingrich: There is something obscene and repulsive about American businesses having to board up store windows on the eve of an election because they know their government cannot protect them from anti-American barbarians and thugs. There is something unAmerican about mobs going into neighborhoods and restaurants and intimidating innocent citizens. President Donald Trump should respond to the vicious, destructive, and lawless mob precisely as President Abraham Lincoln did. Consider how deeply Lincoln understood the importance of enforcing the law and providing safety and order – and the obligation of the government to use force when necessary. President Lincoln understood mob rule, and he hated it. Lincoln believed in the obligation of government to take action to protect people and property from mob violence. In Lincoln’s lyceum address of January 1838, titled On the Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions, he describes mobs as the enemy of law-abiding citizens. He also captures the exasperation of citizens when government does nothing to suppress the mobs: “Having ever regarded Government as their deadliest bane, they make a jubilee of the suspension of its operations; and pray for nothing so much, as its total annihilation. While, on the other hand, good men, men who love tranquility, who desire to abide by the laws, and enjoy their benefits, who would gladly spill their blood in the defence of their country; seeing their property destroyed; their families insulted, and their lives endangered; their persons injured; and seeing nothing in prospect that forebodes a change for the better; become tired of, and disgusted with, a Government that offers them no protection; and are not much averse to a change in which they imagine they have nothing to lose. Thus, then, by the operation of this mobocratic spirit, which all must admit, is now abroad in the land, the strongest bulwark of any Government, and particularly of those constituted like ours, may effectually be broken down and destroyed I mean the attachment of the People. Whenever this effect shall be produced among us; whenever the vicious portion of population shall be permitted to gather in bands of hundreds and thousands, and bum churches, ravage and rob provision stores, throw printing presses into rivers, shoot editors, and hang and burn obnoxious persons at pleasure, and with impunity; depend on it, this Government cannot last.” In 1850, Lincoln wrote a “Fragment on Government,” which connected the protection of people and property from lawlessness with the government’s central existence: “The legitimate object of government is ‘to do for the people what needs to be done, but which they can not, by individual effort, do at all, or do so well, for themselves.’” “…But a far larger class of objects springs from the injustice of men. If one people will make war upon another, it is a necessity with that other to unite and cooperate for defense. Hence the military department. If some men will kill, or beat, or constrain others, or despoil them of property, by force, fraud, or noncompliance with contracts, it is a common object with peaceful and just men to prevent it. Hence the criminal and civil departments.” Days after the Baltimore riots against Massachusetts and Pennsylvania militia on April 19, 1861, Lincoln replied to a delegation from Baltimore who insisted he should do nothing: “You, gentlemen, come here to me and ask for peace on any terms, and yet have no word of condemnation for those who are making war on us. You express great horror of bloodshed, and yet would not lay a straw in the way of those who are organizing in Virginia and elsewhere to capture this city. The rebels attack Fort Sumter, and your citizens attack troops sent to the defense of the Government, and the lives and property in Washington, and yet you would have me break my oath and surrender the Government without a blow. There is no Washington in that no Jackson in that no manhood nor honor in that. …Keep your rowdies in Baltimore, and there will be no bloodshed. Go home and tell your people that if they will not attack us, we will not attack them; but if they do attack us, we will return it, and that severely.” In Lincoln’s Special Message to Congress on July 4, 1861, he posed the necessity of calling out the “war powers” of the government to resist insurrection: “It presents the question, whether discontented individuals, too few in numbers to control administration, according to organic law, in any case, can always, upon the pretences made in this case, or on any other pretences, or arbitrarily, without any pretence, break up their Government, and thus practically put an end to free government upon the earth. It forces us to ask: ‘Is there, in all republics, this inherent, and fatal weakness?’ ‘Must a government, of necessity, be too strong for the liberties of its own people, or too weak to maintain its own existence?’ So viewing the issue, no choice was left but to call out the war power of the Government; and so to resist force, employed for its destruction, by force, for its preservation.” Lincoln explained the results of resisting the mob in Baltimore “I distrust the wisdom if not the sincerity of friends, who would hold my hands while my enemies stab me. This appeal of professed friends has paralyzed me more in this struggle than any other one thing.” In the spirit of President Lincoln, President Trump should issue the following warning to the violent and the lawless: Every honest citizen will be asked to submit video of anyone they see engaged in violence, looting, and destruction. Every business will be asked to share any pictures its security cameras produce of mobs and violence. Every TV news show will be scrutinized to seek to identify the violent and the destructive. Every policeman will be asked to use their phones to film every violent or destructive person they encounter. The Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security will be tasked with coordinating with state and local authorities to track down, arrest, and prosecute the violent, lawless, and criminal. Those local authorities who refuse to cooperate will have all their federal funding suspended until they are replaced by the voters with people who are anti-criminal and anti-looting. Like Lincoln, we are going to ensure “that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom – and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.” Tags: Newt Gingrich, commentary, No More Looting, Without Consequences 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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President Trump Deserves the Nobel Prize For Peace
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 02:05 PM PST The Trump Doctrine is a pragmatic platform for peace.
by Joseph Puder: Whether or not President Trump wins a second term in the White House, his place as a peace maker will be noted in the annals of history. Unlike his predecessor in the White House, he deserves the Nobel Prize for Peace. He has been nominated to receive the Nobel Prize for Peace by the eminent law professor, David Flint, who is among four Australian law professors who nominated President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize on the basis of the “Trump Doctrine.”In fact, the peace between Israel and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), as well as Bahrain, and Sudan (in the process of being completed) is vastly different and far more productive than the peace that President Jimmy Carter negotiated between Egypt and Israel or that between Jordan and Israel. Unlike the “cold peace” between Israel and Egypt, which essentially is a deal between two governments that left the people out of it, Trump’s peace is all inclusive. The peace President Trump brought to fruition between the UAE, Bahrain, and Israel has all the elements of a warm and enduring peace that involves people to people interactions. Whereas, the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt were based on territory (the entire Sinai Peninsula returned to Egypt in exchange for peace) for peace; the September, 2020 Abrahamic Peace is based on peace for peace, something Israelis have yearned for since independence. Under Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, few Egyptians ventured to visit Israel, and when they returned, they were “black listed.” At the same time, thousands of Israelis flocked to Egypt. The Jordanian-Israeli peace was slightly better. Still, it involved Israel returning a small piece of land to Jordan. While Jordanian workers come to Israel to earn money, they are not spending money as tourists would. Conversely, the Abrahamic Peace is an attractive peace that is underlined by commercial and trade exchanges, tourism, intelligence and defense partnership, health, and educational cooperation.The foreign policy “experts” advised President Trump to entice first the Palestinians to make peace as all of his recent predecessors have done. In other words, give them a veto power to block any regional peace between Arab states and Israel; Trump realized that he is dealing with a Palestinian dictatorship that has little interest in the welfare of its people. He rejected the advisors “advice,” and chose another way. He brought together the common interests of the Arab Gulf states and Israel.President Trump has vouched that an additional five moderate Sunni-Arab states are set to make peace with Israel. In Israel, Trump is considered the most pro-Israel president in history. But it was not just in the Middle East that Trump achieved the previously unachievable peace. He also did it between the European Balkan nations of Serbia and Kosovo. The majority of ethnic Albanian Muslims in Kosovo, previously part of Serbia, split away from Serbia in 2008, in what turned out to be a bloody conflict. Trump brought the two parties together in the White House, and convinced them to end the conflict, and sign a peace treaty.The Trump Doctrine seeks to enable its allies, notably Israel and friendly Arab nations, to create regional security vis-à-vis Iran. This is in the national security interest of both the U.S. and Israel. Trump’s vision astutely seeks to create a NATO-like alliance between the moderate Sunni-Arab states and Israel. The Trump Doctrine is another winning approach for America. It is meant to end seemingly endless wars that cost America precious human lives while depleting its treasury. Afghanistan is one such example. Trump’s commonsense approach reasoned that American forces went to Afghanistan as a result of the Afghan Taliban hosting Al-Qaeda perpetrators of the September 11, 2001 attack on America. President George W. Bush was right to punish those who murdered almost 3,000 Americans. But, trying to achieve nation building and democracy in a land that has never known orderly or democratic governance is futile. A 20-year war in Afghanistan has yielded little benefits for America. Trump is however, interested and supportive of the western alliance, while at the same time demanding that the NATO allies pay their share of at least 2% of their GNP on defense, which they have largely complied with. Lt. Col. Anthony Shaffer, President of the London Center for Policy Research, in an opinion piece in The Hill, pointed out that, “The war in Afghanistan is no longer crucial to the core of our national security, leaving our troops with no obvious mission. Our Afghan partners need our support, but to exact conditions that would constitute a victory are unclear. Even if we had clear victory conditions, we do not even have accurate metrics to judge whether we have achieved them.” Shaffer added, “Trump gave a lot of American families a great deal of renewed hope when he promised to stop endless wars that have lost so many American lives over the past two decades. By fulfilling that promise he is finally turning that hope into gratitude and relief across the country.” Col. Shaffer reflects the thinking that went into the Trump Doctrine. Trump is guided first and foremost by American national interest. It is, after all, a most natural instinct. Just as individuals act first to secure their own self-interests, so should nations. “America First” encapsulates that Trump attitude. He sees the European immigration policies, for example, being exploited by other unfriendly nations who see the Europeans as naïve. According to the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies of Bar Ilan University, “The Trump Doctrine’s goal is simple: safety and prosperity for America and its allies. The “international system” as such does not figure into it. Naturally, this thinking has enraged foreign policy experts who are accustomed to preaching theory, nuance, process, and the wisdom of both their own expertise and that of the international system they serve.” Stanley Hensohn, of the City University of New York, defined the Trump doctrine as emphasizing American national identity as the cornerstone of America’s elemental and duel relationship with itself and the world. It puts emphasis on American strength in all its forms, including resilience and resolve, and the use of maximum and repeated economic and diplomatic pressure in an effort to avoid war. Both Presidents Carter and Obama talked a lot about peace, but pursued policies of appeasement that emboldened enemies of freedom and invited conflict. During Carter’s tenure as U.S. President, he held back the Shah of Iran from cracking down on the Islamist and radical leftist revolutionaries. The result was the takeover of Iran by the radical and repressive Ayatollahs’ regime. Obama failed to counter the rising aggression of Russia and China, led from behind as the Arab Spring spawned ISIS, and produced an Iran nuclear deal that did not block Iran’s path to a nuclear bomb. President Donald Trump brought a genuine and historic peace between Arabs and Israelis, as well as between Kosovo and Serbia in the Balkans. He has thus changed the Middle East for the better. That should earn him the coveted Nobel Peace prize. Tags: Joseph Puder, FrontPage Mag, President Trump, Deserves, Nobel Prize For PeaceTo 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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Suppression, Supprussian Russian, Ression; Who Can Keep It Straight?
Posted: 04 Nov 2020 01:35 PM PST
Broken records and overplayed election narratives; but what about the inability to count votes on a timely basis? As for me, thinking back to my fraternity parties in the early 60’s, where “records” were routinely marred beyond sober enjoyment, makes me forever grateful for the arrival of CDs, though even these have become passe’ as digital downloads have become the norm. Still, Democrats can’t help but keep us in a time warp by getting the needle stuck in the “voter suppression” groove. Voter suppression, click, voter suppression, click, voter suppression click. You get the idea. Are they kidding? Could you lay out some examples, please? And rain doesn’t count, nor does a fixed election “day” as opposed to a floating election “month.” If you don’t have the presence of mind to know when the election is, or to see to it that you take advantage of the opportunity, then there isn’t much we can do for you. Speaking of “long playing” records, can you believe that Rep. Adam “Schifltess” Schiff cranked up his Victrola and played his “Russian” tracks over and over again as a response to the Hunter Biden “Oops” revelations? Thank goodness the listening public had about all they could take of that “tune” without a danceable beat, and Joey B went back to using the Aviators as his primary distraction. Now, if you don’t mind, can we talk about election conduct? As far as I know, a “national election” is the sum total, or aggregation, of the individual state elections. If I have that wrong, please speak up now. I also believe that all states have elections at least every two years, though Presidential elections only occur every four years. I’m also old enough to recall that elections have historically been conducted on Election Day, which I believe is established by the Constitution, and is the same in each state. Pretty simple so far, right? I can recall walking with my parents down to the local poll, which in my town was the Fire Station, and watching as they voted. I don’t remember, however, that election outcomes took 5, 6, 7 days or more to determine conclusively. Somehow, in those days of Ralphie and Randy, officials were able to tally the results without much ado. Sure; absentee ballots have existed for a long time; I used them because I was often out of town on Election Day itself. The ballot had to be submitted on a timely basis so it could be counted no later than Election Day, with all the real time ballots. Maybe crises occurred under these protocols, but I don’t remember any. (I’m not considering possible recounts caused by challenging of very close results, which can obviously delay the final results, but only in specific races.) So here we are in November, 2020. Suddenly, all kinds of talk about not knowing the results for 6, 7, or more days beyond the actual election because of counting delays is surfacing, not to mention longer delays because of legal challenges. I give up; what’s the problem? Besides same day voting, what are the other options? “Early voting,” which in my location is the equivalent of in person “absentee” voting, because it uses the same documentary protocol. “Absentee voting,” which involves specifically requesting a ballot by some deadline well before Election Day, and requires returning the ballot in time to be tallied during Election Day conduct. Last is “Voting by Mail,” the widespread practice this year of mailing out ballots, unrequested, to the general voting populace. Clearly, this has to be done substantially ahead of Election Day, and should require return of the ballot by the same deadline imposed on Absentee voting ballots, so they can be counted on Election Day with all the other ballots. So here’s my problem. Unless we suddenly created millions and millions and millions of voters beyond what we had in recent elections, why is it we can’t get everything counted on a timely basis and announce results beginning late on Election Day with final results certified no more than say….12 hours after the closing of the polls? Everything is computerized these days, for crying out loud, so there is no excuse for running out of adding machine paper or similar histrionics. And by definition, the total ballots to be counted cannot exceed those that would be cast if everyone had to vote in person on Election Day at the polls. The difference now between that scenario is that a huge percentage of the ballots are arriving BEFORE Election Day, and instead of waiting for everyone to show up whenever they like, these early votes can be counted immediately (or beforehand, dammit!), so the challenge of coming up with the final results is less ominous than it would have been under traditional election conduct! IOW, what the hell is the problem? Everything argues for the process of counting being easier and faster, but officials act as if it has somehow become much harder and slower. While I would never suggest that mischief is somehow afoot here, readers more cynical than I could easily be excused for wondering just how many rotten eggs there are in the Denmark where our elections take place. Stand by for the worst seems to be the best advice, for reasons that escape me. Tags: Pem Schaeffer, Suppression, Supprussian Russian, Ression; Who Can Keep It Straight?To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. 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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Thursday, October 5, 2020
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Good morning, NBC News readers.
We’re still in electoral purgatory. The presidential election remains undecided as all eyes focus on the final vote count in a handful of swing states.
Here’s where things stand this Thursday morning.
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Biden gains Wisconsin and Michigan as tense nation watches final count
The outcome of the presidential election is still unknown this morning as the nation focuses its attention on five battleground states that are still counting the crush of ballots that will decide if President Donald Trump or Democratic nominee Joe Biden is the winner.
Biden’s Electoral College lead grew Wednesday as he flipped Wisconsin and Michigan, two states that went for Trump in 2016.
NBC News has projected the outcome in 44 states, giving Biden a narrow but growing lead over Trump in the Electoral College count. But both remain shy of the 270 electors needed to win.
All eyes today will be on the ongoing vote counts in Pennsylvania, Georgia, North Carolina, Arizona and Nevada, which up to this point have been too early or too close to call.
Trump has made moves to litigate the results — both in the courts and via social media.
Meanwhile Biden expressed confidence he would be the victor in the end and called for patience as the vote count continues.
“When the count is finished, we will be the winners,” Biden told a small group of reporters in Wilmington, Delaware, on Wednesday. But he noted that he was “not here to declare we won.”
There were scattered protests through the country Wednesday night calling for both a halt to the vote count and for the tally to continue.
- See the full map of the U.S. presidential election results and dig into the state by state data.
- Graphic: See which counties in the remaining battleground states have the most votes left to count.
- Follow our live blog for all the latest developments and analysis.
- Listen to our Into America podcast. In the latest episode, host Trymaine Lee tracks the Black vote in the crucial swing state of North Carolina.
Here’s where things stand on the presidential electoral map as of early Thursday. See the full results here.
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Trump is gearing up for a legal fight: Here’s where his campaign says it’s suing, and why
President Trump is being encouraged by aides and advisers to not give up on his shrinking odds of victory, with those in his orbit determined to push a range of allegations about voting irregularities as they hold out hope that the count somehow shifts in his favor.
Trump’s campaign announced new lawsuits Wednesday to stop ballot counting in Pennsylvania and Michigan, while threatening to demand a recount in Wisconsin as his path to victory narrows.
Here’s a breakdown of where Trump and other Republicans are suing, and to what end.
News analysis: Trump thinks he’s losing. Just listen to him, NBC News’ senior political analyst Jonathan Allen writes.
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How Biden reclaimed Michigan for the Democrats, but Texas stayed as red as ever
Democrats were optimistic that a “blue wave” would hit several states ahead of the election. In Michigan, their hopes seemed to have panned out, while in Texas, they were not so lucky.
A record surge of voters — along with softening support for Trump among seniors and white college graduates — appears to have returned Michigan to its former status as a blue state and cleared the path for Biden’s projected win in the crucial Midwestern state.
Meantime in Texas, election polls showed an unusually tight presidential race, raising the possibility that Biden might become the first Democrat to win the state since 1976.
Those hopes quickly faded on Tuesday night, making one thing clear: Even though Democrats spent tens of millions of dollars here, Republicans still dominate the Lone Star State.
“In the end, we still saw Texas operating under the 3 Gs: God, guns and gas,” one political expert said.
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Plus
- For the first time, the U.S. saw 100,000 new coronavirus cases in one day on Wednesday.
- Denmark plans to cull 15 million minks after coronavirus mutation spreads to humans.
- Philadelphia police released 911 calls, body camera video of the moments leading to the fatal shooting of Walter Wallace.
- The U.S. formally exited the Paris climate change pact amid election uncertainty.
- “I think what we need is a leader who can save the world”: How the rest of the world sees America’s election drama.
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THINK about it
Trump suing over election results and claiming he’s won won’t help him, but it will hurt us, Lee Drutman, senior fellow in the Political Reform program at New America, writes in an opinion piece.
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Live BETTER
Change of seasons got you down? Here are 9 mood-boosting foods for shorter, darker days.
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Quote of the day
“There are millions of ballots left to be counted.”
— Pennsylvania Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar said Wednesday morning about the mail-in ballots yet to be counted.
One om thing
Don’t worry, you’re not alone if you are feeling a little anxious about the uncertainty of the election right now. We probably all need to take a deep breath.
NBC News’ Anne Thompson talks to an expert about the best ways to cope with uncertainty, including accepting it and finding distractions to bring calm.
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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: After a broken year, is it time to rethink how we conduct and cover our presidential contests?
With Joe Biden on the cusp of 270 electoral votes, it’s time to discuss the political institutions and instruments that the 2020 cycle broke – or demonstrated once again that they were already broken.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
The Iowa caucuses (remember that botched count?).
The supposed importance of the first three nominating contests (Biden lost them all, but he seems headed to the White House).
The polls (especially of the state battlegrounds).
The exit polls (they again were a mess).
All of the Twitter pundits (who didn’t necessarily reflect the views of Democratic primary voters), plus all of the online misinformation.
And the Commission on Presidential Debates (remember when Trump pulled out of the second debate?).
(There’s also an Electoral College that doesn’t exactly match the popular vote, but that can only change via a constitutional amendment.)
All of these institutions and instruments were created in the 20th century – except Twitter, of course – and they became essential parts to how America practices politics.
But they no longer seem fit for our modern times.
Should small states really go first in choosing a presidential nominee?
In our changing technological world, how do you better gauge public opinion, especially in a political system where electoral votes in the key battlegrounds – not popular votes from national polls – determine who wins the White House?
When more and more Americans are voting early or by mail, how do you better conduct exit polls and – more importantly – combine the different streams of data (the phone polls for the mail-in votes, early exits, day-of exits)?
Who should be the gatekeepers and custodians of information in our current media ecosystem?
And should an organization that’s not accountable to the public really be charge of organizing and setting the rules for the presidential debates?
Over the last several years, President Trump has tried to smash many of these institutions and instruments, criticizing the polls, undermining the media and pulling out of that presidential debate.
But their performances in 2020 raise an important question: Is it time to reimagine how we choose presidential nominees, gauge public opinion, cover races and hold debates?
Because we’re no longer living in the 20th century.
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Waiting for the rest of the votes to come in
Arizona: Biden 51 percent, Trump 48 percent (86% in)
Georgia: Trump 50 percent, Biden 49 percent (96% in)
Michigan: NBC News called it for Biden on Wednesday
Nevada: Biden 49 percent, Trump 49 percent (86% in)
North Carolina: Trump 50 percent, Biden 49 percent (95% in)
Pennsylvania: Trump 51 percent, Biden 48 percent (89% in)
Wisconsin: NBC News called Biden the apparent winner on Wednesday
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DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
3.56 million: Joe Biden’s lead in the popular vote at the time of publication
About 57 percent to 40 percent: Donald Trump’s share over Joe Biden in a batch of votes from Maricopa County late last night
489,323: The estimated remaining vote out in Arizona, where Biden currently leads by about 68,000 votes.
202,085: The estimated remaining vote out in Nevada, where Biden currently leads by about 7,600 votes.
223,862: The estimated remaining vote out in Georgia, where Trump leads by fewer than 19,000 votes
292,412: The estimated remaining vote out in North Carolina, where Trump leads by about 77,000 votes
801,292: The estimated remaining vote out in Pennsylvania, where Trump leads by about 164,000 votes.
78 percent: The share that Biden has gotten of absentee voters in Pennsylvania so far, per the Secretary of State’s office.
9,568,106: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 106,258 more than yesterday morning.)
235,299: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,728 more than yesterday morning.)
150.97 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
52,049: 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: Is it really Thursday?
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2020 VISION: Rose is behind in NY-11
House Democrats haven’t had the election cycle they were hoping for, and rather than gaining seats, they’ve lost several. One of their more vulnerable seats is still up in the air: NY-11.
Rep. Max Rose’s seat – which is composed of Staten Island in New York and parts of Brooklyn – is trailing his Republican challenger by more than 35,000 votes as we wait for the remainder of the vote to trickle in. The challenger, Nicole Malliotakis, declared victory, but Rose hasn’t conceded.
Rose flipped the historically Republican seat in 2018, and while it’s looking less and less likely that he’ll hold onto it, it may take a while to officially call.
Local election boards in New York won’t begin canvassing, or accounting for all the ballots, until Friday at the earliest. After the canvassing is completed, counties can then begin opening absentee ballot envelopes. Plus election boards have until Nov. 10 to accept postmarked absentee ballots.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Here’s our lede-all on NBCNews.com with all of the developments in the last 24 hours.
Jonathan Allen posits that Trump’s rhetoric in the last day shows he believes he’s losing.
Here’s where the Trump campaign is suing and why.
Protests over the ballot count are spreading.
Democrats’ hopes fell short in Texas. Here’s what’s gone wrong for them.
Mitch McConnell says economic stimulus is his top priority for the rest of the year.
Don’t sleep on what the California ride-sharing ballot measure could mean for other states.
Black voters may have saved Biden’s campaign — again.
Congress will have its first gay Black members.
CBS
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REASON
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MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
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LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Prior to America casting their votes, there was much ballyhoo over Donald Trump’s alleged support among various non-cis white male voting blocs. Anecdotal evidence pointed to the president — regularly … MORE
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