Examples of GOP Leadership

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Last I looked this is money already paid for; as usual GOP is muddying waters and trying to confuse their supporters- hey! Whatchya doing with all that cash that Biden gave to RED STATES AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN WHO WOULD NOT PASS IT ON TO THEIR CITIZENS?????????

Say..wasn't that CHILD TAX CREDIT GREAT FOR ONE YEAR? Bet you wish it were back.

This is who stands in your way of being able to put more on the kitchen table, fix that car leak..pay for kids soccer or cheerleading.

View attachment 5104343

Vote them out!
After the 50 Republicans who are actively stopping legislation from being able to be passed by allowing their loudest idiots to filibuster everything.

These two will at least vote for it generally when it comes up, they just won't blow up the filibuster.

Let's get rid of these idiots first.

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schuylaar

Well-Known Member
After the 50 Republicans who are actively stopping legislation from being able to be passed by allowing their loudest idiots to filibuster everything.

These two will at least vote for it generally when it comes up, they just won't blow up the filibuster.
Generally speaking, I believe that money was in here; a memorandum was signed by Manchin witnessed by Schumer his bottom line of $2B.


Renegged.
 
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hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Generally speaking, I believe that money was in here; a memorandum was signed by Manchin witnessed by Schumer his bottom line of $2B.

That one was back in December.

It is a shame that there is not ANY of the 50 Republican senators that are willing to step up and help out our economy. We need to vote them out so that the conservative Democrats don't have the power to hold up every bit of legislation that is otherwise fully supported by all the other 48 Democrats.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Republicans ramp up support for candidates snubbed by Trump
Republicans are growing increasingly bold in their support for a handful of candidates snubbed by former President Trump in hotly contested GOP primaries.

While Trump remains the most coveted endorser among Republicans, his picks in some races have stirred concern and frustration within some corners of the GOP, with some Republicans questioning whether the former president is picking the strongest candidates in potentially competitive races.

In most cases, Trump has prioritized a candidate’s loyalty and willingness to back up his claim that the 2020 election was stolen when deciding whom to endorse. And while Republicans acknowledge that the former president’s support matters, his endorsement also has its limits.

“I think people are, rightfully so, paying attention to who he’s endorsing,” said Saul Anuzis, a longtime Republican strategist and former Michigan GOP chairman. “But it’s important to note that, in general, endorsing a candidate doesn’t necessarily mean you’re going to determine who the winner is.”

“They still have to be credible candidates, they still have to run good campaigns, they still have to raise the money and do what they need to do to win,” he added.

Keith Naughton, a veteran Republican strategist, also noted that Trump has been reluctant to spend money backing up his endorsed candidates. While Save America, the former president’s leadership PAC, ended February with more than $110 million in the bank, it didn’t make any donations to the candidates he is supporting.

“He’s not spending it,” Naughton said. “That’s his money and he wants to reserve it for himself.”

In fact, several of Trump’s preferred candidates have struggled to keep up with their top primary rivals in the money race. Britt, for instance, raised more than three times as much as Brooks in the final three months of 2021 and has more than twice as much money in the bank as the Alabama congressman.

Trump’s endorsement also hasn’t always translated to success in the polls. In Georgia’s GOP gubernatorial primary, former Sen. David Perdue has routinely trailed Gov. Brian Kemp in public polling and fundraising despite having Trump’s support.

Kemp, meanwhile, has been singled out for particularly aggressive criticism from the former president for rejecting his pleas to toss out his electoral loss in the 2020 presidential race in Georgia. In a break with Trump, the Republican Governors Association launched an ad in support of Kemp last month — the first time in its history that the group has financed a TV buy boosting a GOP incumbent facing a primary challenge.

Trump has continued to insist upon the strength of his endorsement, arguing that he’s “almost unblemished in the victory count.” Still, there are signs that his influence over GOP voters may be loosening, at least a little bit.

An NBC News poll released in late January found that most Republican voters — 56 percent — see themselves as more supportive of the GOP overall than Trump, while 36 percent said that they see themselves as more supporters of Trump than the party itself. By comparison, a similar poll from 2020 found that 54 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents considered themselves more supportive of Trump than the party as a whole.

“The bottom line is he’s getting stale,” Naughton said. “He’s not offering anything new. It’s like his TV show ‘The Apprentice.’ After a while, people stop watching because it gets boring.”
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Noem signs bill that rejects 'divisive' race trainings at South Dakota universities
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) on Monday signed legislation banning the state's public universities from using training and orientation materials that could cause racially based "discomfort."

“No student or teacher should have to endorse Critical Race Theory in order to attend, graduate from, or teach at our public universities,” Noem said in a statement. “College should remain a place where freedom of thought and expression are encouraged, not stifled by political agendas.”

Noem said the state House Bill 1012 "prohibits colleges from requiring students and teachers to attend trainings or orientations based on Critical Race Theory," though the actual text of measure makes no mention of critical race theory.

Instead, it lists seven “divisive concepts” that are prohibited from being a mandatory part of trainings for college students or faculty members. It does not ban teaching that racism is systemic in societal institutions, which is the framework of critical race theory.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of South Dakota has previously said that the measure dampens the First Amendment rights of educators and “creates more questions than answers.”

“It opens the door for a wide range of interpretations that could be used to chill free speech and academic freedom, discouraging open and honest discussions about systemic racism in classrooms and in higher education communities,” ACLU of South Dakota advocacy manager Jett Jonelis said.

“That House Bill 1012 passed shows the very need for the types of discussion our government is trying to prohibit,” Jonelis added.
 

Boatguy

Well-Known Member
Noem signs bill that rejects 'divisive' race trainings at South Dakota universities
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) on Monday signed legislation banning the state's public universities from using training and orientation materials that could cause racially based "discomfort."

“No student or teacher should have to endorse Critical Race Theory in order to attend, graduate from, or teach at our public universities,” Noem said in a statement. “College should remain a place where freedom of thought and expression are encouraged, not stifled by political agendas.”

Noem said the state House Bill 1012 "prohibits colleges from requiring students and teachers to attend trainings or orientations based on Critical Race Theory," though the actual text of measure makes no mention of critical race theory.

Instead, it lists seven “divisive concepts” that are prohibited from being a mandatory part of trainings for college students or faculty members. It does not ban teaching that racism is systemic in societal institutions, which is the framework of critical race theory.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of South Dakota has previously said that the measure dampens the First Amendment rights of educators and “creates more questions than answers.”

“It opens the door for a wide range of interpretations that could be used to chill free speech and academic freedom, discouraging open and honest discussions about systemic racism in classrooms and in higher education communities,” ACLU of South Dakota advocacy manager Jett Jonelis said.

“That House Bill 1012 passed shows the very need for the types of discussion our government is trying to prohibit,” Jonelis added.

For those here that dont have a clue what it is, or how long its been around.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Noem signs bill that rejects 'divisive' race trainings at South Dakota universities
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) on Monday signed legislation banning the state's public universities from using training and orientation materials that could cause racially based "discomfort."

“No student or teacher should have to endorse Critical Race Theory in order to attend, graduate from, or teach at our public universities,” Noem said in a statement. “College should remain a place where freedom of thought and expression are encouraged, not stifled by political agendas.”

Noem said the state House Bill 1012 "prohibits colleges from requiring students and teachers to attend trainings or orientations based on Critical Race Theory," though the actual text of measure makes no mention of critical race theory.

Instead, it lists seven “divisive concepts” that are prohibited from being a mandatory part of trainings for college students or faculty members. It does not ban teaching that racism is systemic in societal institutions, which is the framework of critical race theory.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of South Dakota has previously said that the measure dampens the First Amendment rights of educators and “creates more questions than answers.”

“It opens the door for a wide range of interpretations that could be used to chill free speech and academic freedom, discouraging open and honest discussions about systemic racism in classrooms and in higher education communities,” ACLU of South Dakota advocacy manager Jett Jonelis said.

“That House Bill 1012 passed shows the very need for the types of discussion our government is trying to prohibit,” Jonelis added.
and this is why people all around the world are not sending their children to American colleges and Universities the way they did a few years ago...well, along with most of the world hating trump's guts, and American culture being portrayed in the foreign press (at least partially rightfully) as a nation of ignorant rednecks with firearm fetishes and closets full of KKK sheets.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
When folks talk about CRT in relation to grade school, I tell them they must be proud of their kid. Going to law school and the sixth grade at the same time. (they never understand. I have to explain)
i know, i get the same shit...rednecks go off about it and all i have to do is ask them if they know what it is...then tell them it's a college level subject, not taught in any grade schools or high schools in the United States. even in a college level curriculum, it would only be part of a larger area of study, they don't offer degrees in critical race theory.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
i know, i get the same shit...rednecks go off about it and all i have to do is ask them if they know what it is...then tell them it's a college level subject, not taught in any grade schools or high schools in the United States. even in a college level curriculum, it would only be part of a larger area of study, they don't offer degrees in critical race theory.
I understood it to be a study of the effects of slavery and Jim Crow laws on the justice system today. Taught mostly in law school.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
I understood it to be a study of the effects of slavery and Jim Crow laws on the justice system today. Taught mostly in law school.
i didn't think it was that tightly defined. i know it's touched upon if you're taking sociology classes, and in some history classes as well, but i don't know how deeply they go into it
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
She Resigned Over Links to an Alleged Sex Trafficker. Now She’s Running for Congress.


Former Minnesota GOP chair Jennifer Carnahan resigned last summer after one of her closest allies was arrested for allegations of sex trafficking minors.
 
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