Unity for you, but not for & # 039; we & # 039;
Unity for you, but not for & # 039; we & # 039;
** Do you want FOX News Halftime Report in your inbox every day? Sign up here. **On the list: Unity for you, but not for 'us' - Gillum's ethics issues arise before the final debate tonight. Menéndez leads, but very close to Hugin. Iowa Democrats worry about the end of direct voting - It's worth it, tbh
UNIT FOR YOU, BUT NOT FOR 'US'
In light of the bombs sent to prominent Democrats and CNN, the former vice president Joe Biden He urged his Twitter followers: "This country has to unite, this division, this hatred, this ugliness has to end."This was the same Joe Biden who at a Florida rally the day before said that Donald Trump, "This president is more like George Wallace what George Washington. "
What Biden had to say about our division president and the conquest that stimulates the cultural mood for political gain, it is true that by campaigning to see the first elected black governor of Florida, we assumed that Biden he was more interested in invoking the first chapter of Wallace's career as a vicious and enthusiastic segregationist.
Therefore, the "this" in Biden's observations on division, hatred and ugliness could best be understood as "you".
But when it comes to misleading parts of the speech, Biden's articles have nothing on the president's pronouns.
"We have to unify. We have to unite, "Trump said in a few comments today promising to bring the perpetrators to justice." The acts or threats of political violence of any kind do not take place in the United States of America. "
Now, we will take the word to the president that he is opposed to political violence, despite his lustful speech about violence in his 2016 rallies. But Trump talking about national unity would be like Kim Kardashian Speaking of the need for modesty in social networks.
After all, this was the same Trump that Monday in Houston declared that "the democrats have launched an assault on the sovereignty of our country, on the security of our nation and on the security of all Americans."
It is not that their policies can produce these things, yes, but the intention of the party that includes something like a third of its compatriots wants to destroy the nation and endanger all citizens.
Trump even falsely accused the Democrats of opposing the bill against opioid addiction, whose signature provided the backdrop for his petition for national unity. At a rally in Ohio on October 12, he claimed that the bill that was passed with "very little Democratic support". The bill was approved in the Senate by 99-1, with only Republican representatives. Mike Lee of Utah dissent. Lolz
Therefore, Trump's "we" about the need to unify must be read as "you." He should join with him and, otherwise, shut up.
Trump has taken the long-lamented practice of subtly, but insidiously posing, questions about the motives of one's political enemies and has turned it into a firearm of slander. The term "chief divisor" has been applied to its two immediate predecessors, but Trump is the only one who embraces it.
Now, it is foolish to devote too much time to analyzing the subtleties that politicians offer when they feel that terrible events can lead to their own political risk. Pay attention to what they are saying when they think they have room to turn the ax to get an idea of them, not what they say when they are worried.
But indulge in just one more.
Campaign for a Democratic candidate for the House today in Florida, Hillary Clinton, one of the recipients of the explosives, also had some thoughts on the need for national healing.
"It's a disturbing moment, is not it?" He said. "And it's a moment of deep divisions, and we have to do everything possible to unite our country."
This is the same woman who told CNN two weeks ago: "You can not be a civilian with a political party that wants to destroy what you represent, what matters to you."
"That's why I believe that, if we are fortunate enough to recover the House of Representatives and the Senate, it is when civility can begin again," he continued.
So his "we", today is, of course, is like the president's. It means "you". When you are ready to bend the knee, then we can "unite our country."
Surprisingly, Clinton continued his comments in Miami saying that the way to cure these deep divisions was ... to choose the candidate of his party in the election. There is nothing to suggest that the election among the Democrats Donna shalala and republican Maria Salazar Or it would deepen or heal the wounds that Clinton described, but why miss the opportunity to score some points?
We are not telling you anything that you do not know. But we suggest that at a time when political violence is on the rise and public confrontations are becoming more common, it is time to stop hoping that the politicians who benefit from these divisions will be those who somehow solve them.
THE REGULATION: WHAT IT TAKES
"No axiom is more clearly established in the law, or in reason, than when the end is required, the means are authorized; wherever a general power of attorney is granted to do one thing, each particular power necessary to do so is included. " James Madison, Federalist n ° 44TIME OUT: HEAVENLY DENSITY TO THE DENT
Atlantic: "Neutron stars exist in unfathomable conditions. For one to form, another star must age and die. When a giant star has been burned through the fuel supply that makes it glow, its core collapses under its own weight, combining electrons and protons to produce neutrons. ... The light show eventually fades, but the compressed core, now a newly formed neutron star, glowing on its own, remains. ... For all astrophysicists who have learned about these strange objects since they were first predicted in the 1930s, they still do not know exactly what the neutron stars look like inside. For now, the study of their interiors is based on theoretical models ... They compare them with pasta. "I guess physicists love their food," he says. Matt Caplan, an astrophysicist at McGill University who studies neutron stars. It's not just that, of course. The heavy carbohydrate frame, proposed for the first time in the early 1980s, may seem silly, but it makes a lot of sense. "The structures that astrophysicists predict exist within neutron stars really do resemble some classic forms of pasta."Mark on the play? - Send us an email to HALFTIMEREPORT@FOXNEWS.COM with
Your advice, comments or questions.MARKER
Trump work performance
Average approval: 44.2 percent
Average disapproval: 52 percent
Net score: -7.8 points
Change since a week ago: up to 1 point
The[[The average includes: Gallup: 44% approves - 50% disapproves; NBC / WSJ: approval of 45% - disapproval of 52%; CBS News: 42% approve - 53% disapprove; Fox News: 47% approve - 52% disapprove; ABC / WaPo: 43% approve - 53% disapprove.]House control
Republican media 40.4 percent
Democrat average: 49.6 percent
Advantage: Democrats plus 9.6 points
Change since a week ago: Democratic advantage up to 2 points.
The[[The average includes: Fox News: 49% Dems - 42% GOP; ABC / WaPo: 53% Dems - 42% GOP; CNBC: 42% Dems - 36% GOP; CNN: 54% Dems - 41% GOP; NPR / PBS / Marist: 48% Dems - 42% GOP.]GILLUM ETHICS WOES ARISE RAISED THE FINAL DEBATE THIS NIGHT
NYT: "Persecuted by an investigation by the state ethics commission on the trips he made as mayor of Tallahassee, Andrew Gillum, the Democratic candidate for governor of Florida, has insisted that all his trips were made without expenses, paid by himself, his wife or his younger brother. "I do not take free trips from anyone," Gillum said in a debate on Sunday. But records published on Tuesday suggest that Mr. Gillum knowingly accepted a ticket to Broadway's "Hamilton" show of men who he believed were businessmen seeking to develop a property in Tallahassee, but who were actually undercover F.B.I. Agents The records also suggest that a friend lobbyist provided Mr. Gillum and his brother with a hotel room in New York, and possibly paid much of the vacation the mayor shared in Costa Rica. Mr. Gillum never reported any of the benefits as gifts, as required by law for elected officials in Florida. "Survey shows a stricter race for the governor of Connecticut WSJ: "Republican Bob Stefanowski and democrat Ned Lamont They are locked in a closed race for governor in Connecticut, according to a survey by Sacst Heart University and Hearst Connecticut Media Group published on Tuesday. Mr. Lamont, a cable television entrepreneur, runs Mr. Stefanowski, a former business executive, from 39.5% to 36.1%. ... Mr. Lamont's advantage over Mr. Stefanowski has been reduced in recent weeks. A similar survey in September made Mr. Lamont lead from 43.1% to 36.9%. ... The state's economy has had a slow performance in recent years, and the next governor will have to close a budget gap of $ 4.4 billion in the next two fiscal years. ... Other polls have shown Mr. Lamont a greater advantage. A survey by Quinnipiac University published earlier this month showed Lamont leading by 8 percentage points. "
Survey: Dead heat in South Dakota gubernatorial for Noem, Sutton - Sioux Falls Argus Leader: "It's a dead heat. Two weeks before the general election in South Dakota, two aspiring governors are tied, according to a survey commissioned by leader Argus and KELO TV. In a poll of 500 registered voters likely to vote in the election, 45 percent said they would vote for Republicans Kristi Noem If the race was celebrated today. Meanwhile, 45 percent said they would vote for Democrats. Billie Sutton. One percent of respondents said they planned to support libertarian Kurt Evans. Another 9 percent said they were undecided. Between October 18 and October 22, Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy, based in Jacksonville, Florida, interviewed voters by phone. The margin of error is 4.5 percentage points. The numbers illustrate that for the first time in more than 40 years, a Democrat could be ready to take over the governor's mansion. While internal campaign surveys reported a more restrictive race and the Cook Political Report earlier this month changed the race from a possible Republican victory to a raffle, this is the first independent poll showing that the race is a point dead. "
Civil but sharp debate in the governors race of Georgia - WaPo: "Candidates in the overwhelming dispute and closely watched the Georgia governor's competition stood their ground in their respective political corners on Tuesday night in a debate that touched on some of the ideological divisions that are developing nationwide. Stacey abrams, the Democratic candidate who hopes to become the first female black governor in the nation, talked about the expansion of Medicaid, as well as the electorate, accusing the Republicans Brian Kemp, who is the secretary of state of Georgia, of frightening the growing minority population of the state by making it more difficult to vote. Kemp spoke about lowering taxes and "putting Georgians first," criticizing Abrams for wanting to allow some young undocumented immigrants to participate in a state-funded scholarship program and saying he's encouraging "illegals" to vote . Each of them was continually accused of expressing their positions erroneously, but the hour-long debate was not spiteful and offered no surprises. "
Laxalt of Nevada faces a political attack by members of his family - Fox News: "The mid-term elections are ruining Thanksgiving, at least for a handful of deeply divided families over family members who are running for office. In a surprising trend, this year several candidates have been hit with attack ads and editorials with brothers and other family members. The last political fight of the family to make public involves the Laxalt family, of which Adam laxalt he is running as the Republican candidate for governor of Nevada. A dozen relatives essentially called him a great phony, in an editorial published this week in the Reno Gazette-Journal. "[W]we feel compelled to speak publicly about why we believe that Adam Laxalt is the wrong choice for the governorship of Nevada, "they wrote, from a proclaimed interest in" protecting our family's name from being leveraged and exploited by Adam Laxalt. " The opinion article continued to question his narrative of Nevada roots ... "
MENENDEZ TAKES, BUT TANTALLY CLOSE TO HUGIN
NJ.COM: "The same day of the only debate in the US Senate race In New Jersey, a poll published on Wednesday gave the US Senators Robert Menendez a 5-point lead over the former Celgene Corp. executive Bob Hugin. the Rutgers-Eagleton Survey he places Democrat Menendez ahead of Republican Hugin among potential voters, from 51 to 46 percent, within the margin of error of the poll of 5.1 percentage points. The candidates are scheduled to meet on Wednesday night. Each survey has put Menéndez at the helm, but narrower than expected given the blue tone of New Jersey and the opposition in the state to Republican President Donald Trump. In an interim election considered a referendum on the president, only 41 percent of likely voters approved Trump's performance in office, with 56 percent disapproval. "Donnelly and the Braun trade survey lead the tie in Indiana - Fox News: "Republican businessman Mike Braun and Democratic senator Joe Donnelly They are exchanging leadership at the polls just two weeks before voters cast their votes in the hardening of the Indiana Senate race. A new poll, published on Tuesday by IndyPolitics.org and Mason Strategies, found that 47 percent of voters in the Hoosier state endorse Braun, while 43 percent said they support Donnelly in his bid for a second term. in the Senate. Libertarian candidate Lucy Brenton It gained 3 percent, while 7 percent has not yet been decided. Another poll, published Monday by the Indianapolis Business Journal, found that 41 percent of voters in Indiana support Donnelly, while 40 percent said they support Braun. Brenton ranks third with 8 percent of the vote. "
RNC pumped cash to the chamber, Senate committees - Politician: "The Republican National Committee has transferred $ 3.5 million each to the campaign arms of the House of Representatives and the Senate of the Republican Party. The last-minute infusion, which was confirmed by a person with knowledge, is designed to help Congress committees fight a wave of Democratic spending. The House Republicans, in particular, have been inundated. Until the end of last week, the Republican National Congress Committee had exceeded television broadcasts by its Democratic counterpart, from $ 65 million to $ 44 million. With the transfer, the RNC, which has benefited greatly from President Donald Trump's fundraising, has awarded the congressional committees almost $ 17 million in total. "
THE DEPTHS OF IOWA ARE CONCERNED ABOUT THE END OF THE VOTE IN STRAIGHT TICKET
Politician: "Democrats in Iowa are concerned that a small change in the state's voting law could have serious implications for the ballot this fall." For the first time, Iowa voters will be denied the opportunity to vote a direct ticket. of the party, a traditional practice that allows voters to choose the full list of candidates for a single-brand match.Until the legislature banned the practice in 2017, voters could simply complete an oval to support all candidates of the parties on the ballot. "Now that popular enthusiasm is rising and higher-than-normal turnout is expected in November, Democrats are increasingly nervous that the change will end up crushing their vote totals in a year that shows signs to be a wave of elections for the party. "What about those ballot initiatives? - National review"However, many important ballot measures that could have a much more direct impact on people's lives are often overlooked than high profile careers that receive all the news coverage. ... But in six states, voters will have the opportunity to limit, limit or restrict taxes. Arizona voters will consider whether they should prohibit new or higher taxes on real estate transactions, banking, investment management, medical care and other services. In Florida, voters will vote on two measures against taxes. The first would make permanent a 10 percent limit on property taxes that is currently scheduled to expire next year. The second would require a two-thirds majority in both houses of the legislature to increase taxes. "
PLAY TO PLAY
Nate Silver It offers two alternative views on election day. - Five thirty eightAnd yet it persisted: Mitch McConnell Opinion pens about the restaurant's recent protest - Messenger diary
A study finds that only eight states require a civic education class - Ed Week
AUDIBLE: NEED ANY ICE FOR THAT BURNING?
"I did not know we were so close." Mayor of Dallas Mike Rawlings after he was asked by the Dallas Morning News about his relationship with Rep. Pete sessions. This comes after Rawlings has endorsed. Colin Allred during Sessions, so Sessions said he was hurt because it was the end of his relationship with Rawlings.OF THE BLOACHERS
"Many years ago the senator Bob Dole He taught me a lesson, a lesson that Congress needs to relearn. He had a project in front of Senator Dole, working through his staff. When the opportunity to obtain final approval came, he entered the room, introduced himself and said, "I know why this project is good for Kansas, but you tell me why it is good for this country." I understand why "resistance" is good for a part, but I do not understand why it is good for this country. I and all the rest of the "deplorable" hope that our elected officials will do what is good for this nation. " Lee GerhardFranklin, Tenn.The[[Ed. Note: I certainly understand your point. But I would also say that the obstruction is as American as the apple pie. The Republicans spent six years of the Obama administration repressing policies, nominees and initiatives they considered damaging to the country. Certainly, they had this clear for the voters who gave them the House and then the Senate for that purpose. In addition to ongoing investigations and oversight hearings, the GOP proved to be very effective in blocking previous administration. Now, the Democrats are asking for the opportunity to do the same in return. It is a pity that we can not see more cooperation on issues that really enjoy a broad consensus such as immigration, infrastructure, firearms and more. That was the norm when Dole was a senator, but not anymore. There are many reasons why, particularly a system of primary elections that rewards radicalism, but our moment is certainly an obstruction on cooperation.]
Share your color comment: Send us an email to
HALFTIMEREPORT@FOXNEWS.COM and please be sure to include your name and hometown.VALE, TBH
KFSN: "The Fresno Fire Department said that a man who was sitting in his parents' house set fire to the house after he used a blowtorch to kill black widows. Yes, you read it well. Fortunately, firefighters say there were no injuries in the fire and that the man who called them initially managed to get out safely. The house fire occurred on Tuesday night in a house in the development of homes in Lake Woodward. Fire crews said there was damage to the second floor of the house and the attic. Twenty-nine firefighters responded to the fire of two alarms and could extinguish it. Although the official cause has not been determined, the firefighters believe that the torch is the culprit. "AND NOW, A WORD OF CHARLES ...
"Defending the status quo today is an ungrateful task." Charles Krauthammer(1950-2018) writing in the Washington Post on June 23, 2016.Chris Stirewalt He is the policy editor of Fox News. Brianna McClelland Contributed to this report. Do you want FOX News Halftime Report in your inbox every day? Sign up here.
!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s)
{if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?
n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};
if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0';
n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;
t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0];
s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window, document,'script',
'https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js');
fbq('init', '369524843414444');
fbq('track', 'PageView');
.
SOURCE LINK ERESVIRAL.COM https://www.beviral.online

Comentarios
Publicar un comentario