Examples of GOP Leadership

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I’ve been saying the same thing and I’m not nearly as smart as Chris Hayes.
The polls are shifting and Mitch is worried enough to actually start acting like a government official, instead of a civil warrior. If women hit the neighborhoods with clipboards, drop the signs in the streets and whining on social media, they could have an impact with a massive volunteer ground game. Winning elections by large margins is their only way forward and that is where the sole focus should be. You don't need to be standing in the street like a dummy with a sign, if you are sitting at the seat of power calling the shots.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
McConnell moves to center ahead of midterms
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is moving to the center ahead of the midterm elections, backing a gun safety measure and insisting he is willing to work with President Biden on middle-of-the-road proposals if Republicans win back the Senate majority in November.

McConnell’s message is aimed squarely at suburban voters, whom he believes will make the difference in battleground states such as Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Such voters moved away from the GOP under former President Trump, but McConnell and Republicans feel they can make inroads in a year where the public is frustrated with high inflation and gas prices.

The push for such voters explains why McConnell risked his A-plus rating with the National Rifle Association (NRA) to back a gun safety measure last week that was opposed by a majority of his conference.

It also was reflected in some of the remarks he made Monday at a Rotary Club lunch in Florence, Ky., where he emphasized that if Biden is willing to come toward him, he is willing to make a deal.

“We have pretty big differences,” McConnell acknowledged. “Whether Joe Biden has the dexterity, shall I say, to pull off a pivot or not, I don’t know, but he won’t have any choice. Because if he wants to be able to function the next few years with divided government, he’ll need to come to the middle.”

McConnell appears to be doing everything he can to make independent and swing voters as comfortable as possible with the GOP, despite the noise coming from Trump — who is often at odds with McConnell — and the huge social upheaval coming from a court that McConnell had a strong hand in putting together.

On Monday, he shut down speculation that Republicans would push a law restricting abortion nationwide if they win control of Congress. Instead, he said state governments would decide future limits on abortion.

“Neither side of this issue has come anywhere close to having 60 votes, so I think this is likely to all be litigated out, dealt with by the various states around the country,” he said.

The GOP leader has pointed out several times in recent weeks that he has worked with Democrats to pass a $1 trillion infrastructure bill, postal reform and legislation to help the United States compete with China, in addition to a $40 billion Ukraine aid bill and the gun safety measure signed into law this weekend.

“I’ve already indicated to you I’m not always opposed to doing bipartisan deals. I’ve done infrastructure, I voted for postal reform and I was one of a minority of my party who voted for this school safety, mental health bill, just last week,” he said Monday.

In backing the gun safety bill, McConnell underscored the need for the GOP to win back suburban voters who left the party under Trump.

“It’s no secret that we lost ground in suburban areas. We pretty much own rural and small-town America, and I think this is a sensible solution to the problem before us, which is school safety and mental health,” he told reporters before voting with 14 other Senate Republicans on Thursday for the gun safety bill.

“I hope it will be viewed favorably by voters in the suburbs we need to regain in order to hopefully be in the majority next year,” he said.

McConnell isn’t going too far in saying he’ll work with Biden, warning the GOP will block more Biden nominees if they take back the Senate.

“If I’m the majority leader, we’ll be really picky on appointees,” he said. “There are 1,200 executive branch appointments that come to us. They’re not all as important as the Supreme Court, but many of them are quite important and [need] to be confirmed by the Senate.”

McConnell also warned Monday that large spending packages will be dead on arrival in a GOP-controlled Senate. Biden spearheaded a $1.9 trillion relief measure in early 2021, and the GOP Senate also backed large spending measures in response to the COVID-19 pandemic under Trump in 2020.
They call him the turtle, but he's moving as fast as a snake! Mitch smells the change in the wind and he smells the smoke of his future senate majority as it burns to the ground.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
McConnell moves to center ahead of midterms
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is moving to the center ahead of the midterm elections, backing a gun safety measure and insisting he is willing to work with President Biden on middle-of-the-road proposals if Republicans win back the Senate majority in November.

McConnell’s message is aimed squarely at suburban voters, whom he believes will make the difference in battleground states such as Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Such voters moved away from the GOP under former President Trump, but McConnell and Republicans feel they can make inroads in a year where the public is frustrated with high inflation and gas prices.

The push for such voters explains why McConnell risked his A-plus rating with the National Rifle Association (NRA) to back a gun safety measure last week that was opposed by a majority of his conference.

It also was reflected in some of the remarks he made Monday at a Rotary Club lunch in Florence, Ky., where he emphasized that if Biden is willing to come toward him, he is willing to make a deal.

“We have pretty big differences,” McConnell acknowledged. “Whether Joe Biden has the dexterity, shall I say, to pull off a pivot or not, I don’t know, but he won’t have any choice. Because if he wants to be able to function the next few years with divided government, he’ll need to come to the middle.”

McConnell appears to be doing everything he can to make independent and swing voters as comfortable as possible with the GOP, despite the noise coming from Trump — who is often at odds with McConnell — and the huge social upheaval coming from a court that McConnell had a strong hand in putting together.

On Monday, he shut down speculation that Republicans would push a law restricting abortion nationwide if they win control of Congress. Instead, he said state governments would decide future limits on abortion.

“Neither side of this issue has come anywhere close to having 60 votes, so I think this is likely to all be litigated out, dealt with by the various states around the country,” he said.

The GOP leader has pointed out several times in recent weeks that he has worked with Democrats to pass a $1 trillion infrastructure bill, postal reform and legislation to help the United States compete with China, in addition to a $40 billion Ukraine aid bill and the gun safety measure signed into law this weekend.

“I’ve already indicated to you I’m not always opposed to doing bipartisan deals. I’ve done infrastructure, I voted for postal reform and I was one of a minority of my party who voted for this school safety, mental health bill, just last week,” he said Monday.

In backing the gun safety bill, McConnell underscored the need for the GOP to win back suburban voters who left the party under Trump.

“It’s no secret that we lost ground in suburban areas. We pretty much own rural and small-town America, and I think this is a sensible solution to the problem before us, which is school safety and mental health,” he told reporters before voting with 14 other Senate Republicans on Thursday for the gun safety bill.

“I hope it will be viewed favorably by voters in the suburbs we need to regain in order to hopefully be in the majority next year,” he said.

McConnell isn’t going too far in saying he’ll work with Biden, warning the GOP will block more Biden nominees if they take back the Senate.

“If I’m the majority leader, we’ll be really picky on appointees,” he said. “There are 1,200 executive branch appointments that come to us. They’re not all as important as the Supreme Court, but many of them are quite important and [need] to be confirmed by the Senate.”

McConnell also warned Monday that large spending packages will be dead on arrival in a GOP-controlled Senate. Biden spearheaded a $1.9 trillion relief measure in early 2021, and the GOP Senate also backed large spending measures in response to the COVID-19 pandemic under Trump in 2020.
mitch mcconnel is a lying sack of maggoty shit. if he says the sky is blue, i'm going outside to check it myself.
if he is being cooperative, i would run the other direction as quickly as i could, because that means at some point soon i'm about to be stabbed in the back
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

The 'Republican Road to Hell' Chronicled In New Book
100,449 views Jun 28, 2022 Author Tim Miller joins Morning Joe to discuss his new book 'Why We Did It: A Travelogue from the Republican Road to Hell,' which finds Miller conducting a forensic study of the party he once loved.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Steve Kornacki: Colorado Senate Race Is 'Marquee Race' For Primary Day
6,290 views Jun 28, 2022 NBC News' Vaughn Hillyard breaks down the Colorado Republican Senate primary and Steve Kornacki looks at the key primaries across the country.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Rep. Boebert: 'I'm Tired of This Separation of Church and State Junk'
Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., is arguing against the separation of church and state, according to a new video.

Boebert’s comments came Sunday at Cornerstone Christian Center in Basalt, Colorado, according to The Denver Post.

In the video, which has been viewed over 835,000 times on Twitter, Boebert said America’s Founding Fathers never intended separation of church and state.

"The reason we had so many overreaching regulations in our nation is because the church complied," Boebert said. "The church is supposed to direct the government. The government is not meant to direct the church. That is not how our Founding Fathers intended it.

"And I'm tired of this separation of church and state junk; that's not in the Constitution. It was in a stinking letter, and it means nothing like what they say it does."

Newsweek reported that the letter Boebert referred to was written by Thomas Jefferson to the Danbury Baptists in 1802. In the letter, Jefferson called for the separation of church and state.

"I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declares that their legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between church and state," Jefferson wrote.

The Post reported that the case in favor of separation of church and state is strong, according to Richard Collins, a retired constitutional law professor at the University of Colorado Boulder.

"But like so many issues, you can debate it," Collins said. "It's not completely unassailable, and that’s what encourages people like Boebert to go after it."

The Post noted Boebert's comments came just days after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

Newsmax has contacted Boebert’s office for further comment.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Who is going to tell Ted, Elmo isn’t a real person?

Ted is antivaxx for children, he will use anything to grasp at power, Ted is an intelligent sociopath and this has been widely reported. He has obvious blind spots that he compensates for with intellect, but it doesn't work very well in novel situations. He can't read a room like Trump or sense the rage and play on it, Ted doesn't feel much of anything, other than fear.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
These are people under siege, the republicans know they are losing and know they have to cheat to win, instead of reforming and adapting. It's a long term demographic and immigration trend and they have painted themselves into a white corner, but even there, younger white voters lean left and pro human rights, more than older ones do. They are more subject to media and the greater modern culture than previous generations and are not as influenced by local conditions and opinions, or even by parents. Only old people watch foxnews and it's mostly cowardly incels, morons, brainwashed "Christians" and Nazi miscreants who are young republicans these days. The future does not belong to these people and they know it, every year more of their voting base dies than is replaced and covid recently helped with that.
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‘So much worse than we thought’: GOP pollster on potential political violence in America
44,238 views Jul 1, 2022 Republican pollster Neil Newhouse and former Obama pollster Joel Benenson speak with CNN’s John King about a poll they conducted that showed more than a quarter of Americans think it may be necessary to take up arms against the government and that most Americans think their government is corrupt and rigged against them.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

In Wisconsin, A Portrait Of America's Broken Democracy
44,252 views Jul 2, 2022 Ali Velshi reports on an example in Wisconsin of Republicans abusing their position to maintain partisan power and prevent an elected democrat from performing the duties of their office.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Texas Paul REACTS to the Christo-Fascist Takeover of America
33,937 views Jul 2, 2022 Texas Paul gives an epic rant on how the prevailing ideology of the GOP appears to be Christo-fascism. The GOP thought they could pander to and control this element of the political party but have now become captured and dominated by it. Texas Paul gives examples of other countries that devolved quickly into fascism and the strikingly scary similarities to the United States right now. This is vintage Texas Paul.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Donald destroys the GOP, another reason to delay his prosecution. He will drive democratic turnout, steal republican donor money and take revenge on republican candidates. It is just a distraction and hope to cloak himself in legitimate politics, but it is too far away from the 2024 election to do him much good and Donald has a lot of legal trouble between now and then.
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Trump told associates he’s eager to launch run this month
21,014 views Jul 3, 2022 Over the past week, Trump has told associates he is eager to launch another presidential campaign as early as this month to capitalize on President Joe Biden’s increasingly dismal poll numbers and put his potential GOP rivals on notice.
 
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