192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
blatham
 
  5  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:13 pm
White voters overwhelmingly for Moore. So a lot of the African American community found reason to be motivated. Thank god.
0 Replies
 
glitterbag
 
  3  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:14 pm
@layman,
You must be under the impression that people can’t do their jobs if they don’t think Donald Trump is wonderful. That seems to be the case with so many of you, I’m guessing you don’t understand how seriously people take their jobs. The two folks exchanging texts about that clown Donald Trump were reckless with their texts but that doesn’t mean they would sabotage Trump. They don’t have to like him to do their jobs. But they did have to go, I would want them off the project to avoid any shadow of doubt. The decision was right, but it doesn’t mean they are sabatours. This ain’t Russia, yet.
0 Replies
 
BillW
 
  2  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:14 pm
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

Quote:
Jonathan Chait‏Verified account
@jonathanchait
Alabama voters to Roy Moore: **** you and the horse you rode in on




I'm sure Moore does sheep too...
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  3  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:17 pm
The deep reason that Moore lost this contest is that he has a Jew lawyer.
0 Replies
 
BillW
 
  2  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:18 pm
I heard Moore's Jewish lawyer and black friend (ol' what's his name?) voted against him.......
0 Replies
 
maporsche
 
  5  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:21 pm
Tonight is a good night and more proof that we need the bumbling TV obsessed foot in mouth president Trump to stay in office and not get impeached.
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BillW
 
  3  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:25 pm
@maporsche,
Minus little red "Easy Button"!
glitterbag
 
  4  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:38 pm
@BillW,
Oh ****, of course Roy Moore is speaking now....he hasn't conceded and he thinks he's going to need a recount. Hang on, hang on a mo.....Judge Moores is preaching right now, ok it's official....God's vote hasn't been counted yet and when God votes he will elevate Roy Moore to his rightful place among the righteous of the Senate.

I predicted this a few posts back, I know more than I care to about these corncob pipe smoking kiddie &$:@€#+£. Let's see how it falls out on Wednesday.
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BillW
 
  2  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 10:57 pm
@glitterbag,
glitterbag, 21,000 votes separate them, 1% of the vote not in, 14,000 still outstanding; therefore, if all outstanding votes still out went to Moore, it won't stretch that far....... Winner Jones, period.
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Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 11:15 pm
So it was a lousy night for Republicans and a resounding defeat for Trump.
But why do some think a recount is possible? 49.9% (670,551) vs. 48.4% (649,240) isn't really close.
glitterbag
 
  4  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 11:17 pm
@BillW,
I also think Jones won but you should never underestimate the stubborn obstructionists who think they are in a battle to save Christianity. Moore is delusional and he leads the deluded. All he will be able to do is muddy the waters and claim the election was rigged. Hell, maybe he will try the old "a million illegal aliens were bused into Alabama by Muslim terrorists to steal the election from Moore". It's nuts, but so are Roy Moore supporters.
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  3  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 11:20 pm
@layman,
Quote:
FINALLY! The Democrats have now devised a winning strategy. At least 20 young girls will come out of the woodwork and accuse every Republican candidate of child molestation in the 2018 elections.
A month ago the democrats have already displayed a winning strategy in Virginia, New Jersey, and other places around the country.

November 8, 2017
This story is part of our 2017 elections coverage.

Women claimed big victories on Tuesday in a night that marked many firsts and could signal the start of a sea change for women in politics.

The sheer volume of success for women candidates was a surprise to many, mainly because they were running against incumbents who historically win re-election 90 percent of the time. But not this year. Incumbents in Georgia, New Jersey and Virginia all lost their seats to women.

“It would be foolish to make too much of any one race,” says Jean Sinzdak, associate director of Rutgers University’s Center for American Women and Politics. "But all of this together -- there’s something going on right now.”

A handful of cities elected their first female mayor or -- in the case of Seattle, its first in nearly a century. Women were elected to the mayor's office for the first time in Manchester, N.H., and Newton, Mass. There's also more to come as Atlanta (which has only had one woman mayor) and New Orleans (which has never had a woman mayor) are both holding mayoral runoff elections between female candidates.

Other firsts on the local level include Nassau County, N.Y., electing its first woman executive, and in Boston and Boise, Idaho, voters electing enough women that their city councils will now be either majority or near-majority female for the first time in their history.

At the state level, women in Georgia, Virginia and Washington claimed victory in open legislative seats formerly held by men or outright defeated male incumbents to make gains in state-level representation.

Notably, women in Virginia led the surge in flipping 11 of 16 Republican-held seats in the House, with one race too close to call on Wednesday. Starting next year, the chamber will have at least 28 women serving. That’s a record high and an increase of more than half.

Election night was also historic for minority and LGBTQ women.

Charlotte, N.C., elected Vi Lyles to be its first black woman as mayor, and Sudanese-American Mazahir Salih became the first Muslim and first immigrant to win a seat on the city council in Iowa City, Iowa. Sheila Oliver was elected New Jersey's first black woman lieutenant governor, and the first two Latinas were elected to the Virginia House of Delegates.

An openly transgender woman won a statehouse seat for the first time in Virginia, while Andrea Jenkins in Minneapolis became the first transgender woman elected to a city council in a major city. Lisa Middleton in Palm Springs became California's first transgender candidate to win a city council seat. And in Seattle, Jenny Durkan will be the city's first lesbian mayor.

In some ways, the groundswell of victories can be viewed as a direct result of the many women inspired to run after President Trump’s surprise defeat of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton a year ago. Certainly, some races had the tone of a referendum on Trump.

In New Jersey, 32-year-old Democrat Ashley Bennett was inspired to run against Republican Atlantic County Freeholder John Carman when he mocked the Women’s March on his Facebook page. She won with nearly 60 percent of the vote.

In Virginia, transgender candidate Danica Roem ran against long-time Republican Del. Robert Marshall after he sponsored a so-called bathroom bill in the state legislature. Roem, 32, campaigned on ideals like inclusion and equality, but her main platform spoke to local concerns, such as better transportation and infrastructure. She won with 54 percent of the vote.

But Mirya Holman, a political science professor at Tulane University, cautions that change in politics doesn’t happen in a matter of months. She sees this as a culmination of the work that organizations promoting female candidates -- like Emily’s List and Ready to Run -- have been doing for years.

“We also had five women elected mayor in Utah,” she says, “which is just amazing because that is not a liberal place. But the reason is that the Republican party in Utah has been working really hard to encourage women to run.”

The surprise victories this week for so many first-time female candidates has many hopeful that mainstream donors and organizers -- who generally don't gravitate toward unknown women candidates -- will take notice. But, Rutgers’ Kelly Dittmar notes that Virginia -- where a whopping nine of 30 women challenging incumbents won their race -- is now a solidly purple and leaning blue state. So, expecting the same level of upsets next year in red states might be overly optimistic.

“We have to be a little careful about saying Virginia is like other states,” she says. “But there is a lot of hope that this inspires funders and parties to invest more.”

*CORRECTION: A previous version of this mistakenly reported Lisa Middleton's win as being to the California Legislature. She in fact won a seat on the Palm Springs City Council.

http://www.governing.com/topics/politics/gov-election-2017-historic-night-women-candidates.html

0 Replies
 
BillW
 
  3  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 11:21 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
1% of vote still outstanding, vote not certified for about two weeks, automatic recount if less than 1/2% difference (probably be outside that), if candidate wants to pay for recount outside of 1/2% - then it can be done also. Otherwise and in the real world, it's over Walter!
BillW
 
  3  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 11:37 pm
Quote:
USA Today bashes Trump as 'not fit to clean the toilets' in Obama's presidential library

USA Today isn't known for its blistering opinion pieces. Which makes the one the paper's editorial board just published on President Donald Trump all the more savage.

"With his latest tweet, clearly implying that a United States senator would trade sexual favors for campaign cash, President Trump has shown he is not fit for office," reads the editorial. "Rock bottom is no impediment for a president who can always find room for a new low."
The reference here is Trump's tweet Tuesday morning in which he said that Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York was "begging" him for campaign contributions not long ago "and would do anything for them."
Builder
 
  -4  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 11:40 pm
@BillW,
No link, William? The more I hear about Obomney, the more I understand about how he came to be the prez of the 1%.
Walter Hinteler
 
  4  
Tue 12 Dec, 2017 11:54 pm
@BillW,
OK, thanks- (Here, we would have at least a preliminary official result by now.)

Edit: I've just read
Quote:
“When the vote is this close . . . it’s not over,” Moore said. Why? Well, if a race is within half a percentage point after all the votes are tallied, an automatic recount is triggered which could conceivably flip the result. And with a narrow Jones lead and military ballots still needing to be counted, Moore assured the crowd that some miracle still might happen.
Quote:
Let’s start with the numbers, as of midnight on Dec. 13. Jones has 671,151 votes and Moore 650,436. That’s 49.9 percent of the vote for Jones and 48.4 percent for Moore — because 22,819 voters wrote in someone else.

Quick math shows us that 49.9 percent minus 48.4 percent is 1.5 percentage points, three times the margin that would be required to trigger an automatic recount. The vote was close, as Moore said, but when the vote is that close, 1.5 percentage points close, the state actually thinks it is over. Merrill noted that either candidate could call for a recount regardless — but that candidate would then have to foot the bill.
Quote:
In situations like this, when a candidate is favored to win after months of campaigning but comes up short, it’s hard to tell if a refusal to concede is motivated by sincere concern over the result or simply a dogged refusal to accept reality. In 2014, Chris McDaniel narrowly lost a Senate election to Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) and, according to the Clarion-Ledger’s Sam Hall, simply never conceded. Perhaps that’s Moore’s eventual fate: Always being the guy that almost won but who never admitted it.

Source
0 Replies
 
 

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