Here’s how the media missed the story, from joy to democracy
And in the end, those narratives simply did not pan out, as the results and exit polls show.
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And in the end, those narratives simply did not pan out, as the results and exit polls show.
"And what the American people do want is that we have leaders who can build consensus," she added.
That decision was driven by what he dubbed a "war on free speech" by Democrats, American support for Ukraine and anti-child policies at home.
If the polls are to be believed, Nevada is among the states where the Biden campaign has both a challenge and an opportunity.
"This election is about many, many important issues, including the ability of the people to organize in support of what we believe to be foundational values and principles about who we are as America,"
Ron DeSantis, trailing in his bid for the Republican presidential nomination, this week used the dress code as an opening to attack Fetterman rather than the man beating him in the polls. "The U.S.
The power of that issue drove Democrats to the polls this year.
Presidential primary candidates in both parties are also lured by the siren song of the media — social and otherwise — that values bombast and hyperbole above all else.
Tim Ryan launched a $3.3 million ad buy, the first in the state’s Democratic Senate primary, focused on China’s threat to American manufacturing.
Heads en fuego: Democrats, eyeing recent polls, fear Hispanic voters may be trending away from their party.
The ads feature a grunting actor in period costume who appears to order an attack on China, the elimination of “liberal scribes” and the persecution of various offenders of conservative values.
And Trump’s rhetoric has only intensified, as he warns of subhuman immigrants transforming American neighborhoods from Long Island to California into “blood-stained killing fields.”
Values Coalition, which supported Republican Kenny Smith.
Both polls showed Clinton beating Trump in the district.
An April 17 Washington Post/ABC poll found what countless polls have told us before: An overwhelming majority (72 percent in this case) supports the highest earners paying more of their fair share in taxes