"President Joe Biden said Thursday the risk of nuclear "Armageddon" is the highest it has been for 60 years after Russian President Vladimir Putin renewed his threats as his military retreats in Ukraine ."
"Expected final Jan 6 public hearing to show new video evidence, examine Trump's state of mind."
"The Democrat-led House select committee on Jan. 6 public hearing, on Thursday afternoon, will present new video evidence and examine former President Trump's state of mind during the riot.
The public hearing is expected to be the final one for the panel with this session of Congress ending in early Jan. 2023."
It appears the New York Times is promoting the obvious dirty political stunt that democrats and the media pulled on Herchel Walker:
"In today’s highly polarized political climate, it takes a lot for a scandal to make a big difference in a high-stakes general election.
But if the latest polls are any indication, then recent allegations against Herschel Walker, the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, might be big enough not only to decide his race but also control of the Senate.
Walker has slipped behind his Democratic opponent, Senator Raphael Warnock, by an average of about 2.5 percentage points across all four polls taken since Oct. 3, when an ex-girlfriend accused Walker of paying for an abortion she had in 2009. Walker has made opposition to abortion a cornerstone of his campaign and has denied the woman’s account.
In polls, just 2.5 points is not a huge shift. Maybe as few as one in 25 of Walker’s former supporters have flipped to Warnock or drifted into the undecided column; Georgia is a closely divided state. And it’s possible this period represents Walker’s low-water mark. While the accusations against him are still fresh, some Republicans may be reluctant to show support for him in responding to pollsters but may ultimately vote for him if the heat of the issue fades for them over the coming weeks.
As recently as a few weeks ago, Georgia was arguably the closest Senate race in the country. Now, every new poll shows Warnock leading, by an average of over three percentage points. (He had already been ahead by about a half point in polls taken by those same four pollsters before the abortion revelations.) And unlike in many other states, the polls have a relatively good track record in Georgia.
Not only does this edge make Warnock a much clearer favorite than a month ago, it’s a wide enough lead to give him a chance of winning the 50 percent of the vote necessary to win outright and avoid a December runoff. (Georgia election law requires a runoff if no candidate secures a majority of ballots.)
And even if Walker does force a runoff, it would pose an additional challenge to the Republicans: Will reluctant Walker voters show up for him in that election? The Warnock vote will be there."
And if all that wasn't enough:
"President Joe Biden said Thursday the risk of nuclear "Armageddon" is the highest it has been for 60 years after Russian President Vladimir Putin renewed his threats as his military retreats in Ukraine ."
That's all folks!
"Expected final Jan 6 public hearing to show new video evidence, examine Trump's state of mind."
"The Democrat-led House select committee on Jan. 6 public hearing, on Thursday afternoon, will present new video evidence and examine former President Trump's state of mind during the riot.
https://justthenews.com/government/congress/jan-6-committee-public-hearing-show-new-video-evidence-examine-trumps-state?utm_source=sf&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=twjs
It appears the New York Times is promoting the obvious dirty political stunt that democrats and the media pulled on Herchel Walker:
"In today’s highly polarized political climate, it takes a lot for a scandal to make a big difference in a high-stakes general election.
But if the latest polls are any indication, then recent allegations against Herschel Walker, the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, might be big enough not only to decide his race but also control of the Senate.
Walker has slipped behind his Democratic opponent, Senator Raphael Warnock, by an average of about 2.5 percentage points across all four polls taken since Oct. 3, when an ex-girlfriend accused Walker of paying for an abortion she had in 2009. Walker has made opposition to abortion a cornerstone of his campaign and has denied the woman’s account.
In polls, just 2.5 points is not a huge shift. Maybe as few as one in 25 of Walker’s former supporters have flipped to Warnock or drifted into the undecided column; Georgia is a closely divided state. And it’s possible this period represents Walker’s low-water mark. While the accusations against him are still fresh, some Republicans may be reluctant to show support for him in responding to pollsters but may ultimately vote for him if the heat of the issue fades for them over the coming weeks.
As recently as a few weeks ago, Georgia was arguably the closest Senate race in the country. Now, every new poll shows Warnock leading, by an average of over three percentage points. (He had already been ahead by about a half point in polls taken by those same four pollsters before the abortion revelations.) And unlike in many other states, the polls have a relatively good track record in Georgia.
Not only does this edge make Warnock a much clearer favorite than a month ago, it’s a wide enough lead to give him a chance of winning the 50 percent of the vote necessary to win outright and avoid a December runoff. (Georgia election law requires a runoff if no candidate secures a majority of ballots.)
And even if Walker does force a runoff, it would pose an additional challenge to the Republicans: Will reluctant Walker voters show up for him in that election? The Warnock vote will be there."
Another fine contribution Vic.
Somebody had to do it
I've removed meta from these articles before. Locking this until Perrie can review the meta in this one.
I've removed the offending paragraph and taken care of the offense. I have reopened it.
Oh really?
I don't need it.
I'll re-lock it