Opinion · 117th Congress
Biden goes from a contrast to Trump to a contrast to competency
“Have either gotten the job done for the American people?” Both public and private polls are clear: The answer to all of them is “No.”
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“Have either gotten the job done for the American people?” Both public and private polls are clear: The answer to all of them is “No.”
Polls show the American public considers PACs to be one of the top three most preferred ways to finance elections, next to self-funded campaigns and individual contributions.
As polls show his base stagnant and his poll numbers dropping, Donald Trump has decided to replay an old favorite.
Vi Lyles, the Democratic mayor of the very blue city, walked a tightrope, as a leader and supporter of the effort who also said she would not give a welcoming speech, as the values voiced by Trump
clearly more than that, a case of who gets the benefit of the doubt, even after the last two-term Democratic president was a black man with the name Barack Hussein Obama who was down double digits in the polls
The California senator, a new entry into a crowded and growing Democratic field to challenge Donald Trump next year, answered simply, “I describe myself as a proud American.”
Values matter to people.
Faith leaders and congregants themselves disagree, with polls showing most wish things to remain as they have been.
Shawn Major, a 53-year-old pastor from Bon Secour, Alabama, told Bloomberg Politics that he supports Moore for his “Christian values, his morals, his stand on the word of God.”
Values Coalition, which supported Republican Kenny Smith.
As nervous Democrats obsess about tracking polls, Joe Biden recently offered a poignant reminder of what might have been when he told CNN, “I thought I could beat Hillary.
If he wins the presidency, we don’t know if Donald Trump would crush domestic dissent by rolling tanks over American citizens.
. — Lara Trump, the candidate’s daughter-in-law, is just a “Carolina girl,” from Wilmington, she wants you to know, with “good Southern values.”
These were common words and values,” Trump campaign chief Paul Manafort said on CNN’s “New Day” Tuesday morning.
Why this focus at a time when polls find Americans are starting to move away from organized religion?