Pkow Good Friday Cat Blogging - 6 April 2007
Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue used the term cotton-pickin to describe the Florida governor s race in which Democrat Andrew Gillum is vying to become the state s first black governor. The contest is among the most closely-watched races in tomorrow s midterm elections. Public policy matters. Leadership matters, Perdue said at a rally Saturday in Lakeland Florida, according to audio posted online by American Bridge, an anti-Republican Political Action Committee. And that is why this election is so cotton-pickin important to the state of Florida. I hope you all don t mess it up. The audio was first reported by Politico.Perdue, a former Republican governor of Georgia, was campaigning for the Republican candidate for governor, Ron DeSantis. Perdue s office did not respond to a request for comment. DeSantis and his campaign have already battled accusations of racism. After Gillum won the Democratic nomination in August, DeSantis warned that Florida shouldn t monkey this up while speaking ab [url=https://www.stanleycup.lt]stanley cup[/url] out the state in an interview. DeSantis said the phrase was not meant racially.DeSantis has also faced criticism for speaking at a conference organized by conservative activist David Horowitz. [url=https://www.cup-stanley.us]stanley flask[/url] At the last debate between the two candidates, Gillum said, I m not calling Mr. DeSantis a racist, I m simply saying the racists believe he s a racist. The DeSantis campaign did not respo [url=https://www.stanley-cups.uk]stanley cups uk[/url] nd to a request for comment.Watch special election coverage Hcat Obama, Netanyahu Will Learn They Need Each Other
THE REAL DEAL....So why did Mitt Romney crap out against a field of weak competition The press narrative is pretty clear:Boston Globe: In the end, his campaign foundered for one basic reason: He lacked a [url=https://www.cup-stanley.at]stanley cup[/url] uthenticity. New York Times: Mr. Romney s ad [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley spain[/url] visers...conceded that they had failed to overcome doubts about Mr. Romney s authenticity as they sought to position him as the most electable conservative in the race. LA Times: Romney failed the authentic test. Slate: [Romney] faced one fundamental problem that almost all the papers summarize with one word: authenticity. Well, maybe. That s certainly how Romney seemed to me. But I can t help but notice that none of the news pieces hawking this narrative really presents much evidence for it. And based on a scientific poll of a friend I had lunch with yesterday, I m beginning to wonder about this. To battle-hardened reporters and cynical liberals, Romney probably did seem phoney. But when I mentioned this offhandedly at lunch, not really expecting an argument, my Romney-supporting friend was clearly taken aback. That had never occur [url=https://www.stanley-cup.ca]stanley drink bottle[/url] red to him. To him, Romney seemed like the real deal: conservative, good business background, command of the issues, good looks, etc. etc.So I m not sure. But I will say this: it felt to me that Romney s real problem was a lack of passion from his opinion-leader supporters. I read National Review s The Corner pretty regularly, and they were editorially committed to Romney. Despite
sxmh Senator Tim Scott says Trump has obviously reflected on his Charlottesville comments
Wed, 12/04/2024 - 04:16
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sxmh Senator Tim Scott says Trump has obviously reflected on his Charlottesville comments