elxn Ready To Go : Illinois Senator Wins Primary 2-to-1 Over Clinton, Edwards, Brings - Printable Version +- Forums (https://australiantravelforum.com/Upload) +-- Forum: My Category (https://australiantravelforum.com/Upload/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: My Forum (https://australiantravelforum.com/Upload/forumdisplay.php?fid=2) +--- Thread: elxn Ready To Go : Illinois Senator Wins Primary 2-to-1 Over Clinton, Edwards, Brings (/showthread.php?tid=187909) |
elxn Ready To Go : Illinois Senator Wins Primary 2-to-1 Over Clinton, Edwards, Brings - Jeaoneuntor - 11-12-2024 Tdhx Trump administration is stripping protections from Tongass National Forest, called America s last climate sanctuary Sporting a pair of personally embroidered black cowboy boots, Jeb Bush literally started off on the right foot at the Iowa State Fair on Friday.He tweeted out a photo of his boots next to Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst s boots saying it was a boot duel and leapt into a four-hour fair circuit to engage Iowans of all ages, offer facetime with local politicians and soak up local delicacies like fried Snickers and pork chops. 2016 candidates try to connect with voters at Iowa state fair 01:42 His competitors better keep up with him, Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley told stanley cup reporters. And though the state s Senate representatives joined Bush for a press conference early Friday, neither Grassley or Ernst offered the former Florida governor an official endorsement. Not-so-friendly poll numbers preceded Bush s trip to the state. A Suffolk University poll release stanley cups d earlier this week showed Bush polling at just 5 percent in Iowa, finishing seventh in the crowded GOP field. Donald Trump, the billionaire businessman dominating news cycles for his bombastic remarks, topped the Suffolk poll.At the Iowa State Fair, Bush made the plea that polls are irrelevant, reminding reporters that his father won the 1980 Iowa caucuses but he was stanley mugs just an asterisk at this point in the campaign. B Xdwn Jeff Flake Announces Senate Bid CBS/AP Not long after Sen. Blanche Lincoln s narrow victory in last night s Democratic Senate primary in the Arkansas runoff, an unnamed White House official told Politico that Organized labor just flushed $10 million of their members money down the toilet on a pointless exercise. Labor unions had aggressively thrown their resources behind Lt. Gov. Bill Halter in the race, in large part because they felt betrayed by Lincoln due to her decision not to support a bill that would make it easier to form unions and her wavering on the health care bill. More on that here. Labor s intere stanley taza sts were parochial: don t take us for granted, or we ll come after you, even in a state with low union density, CBS News chief political consultant Mar stanley thermos mug c Ambinder wrote. Lincoln, who has spent nearly 12 years in the Senate, was the preferred candidate of the White House and Democratic establishment; Presidents Obama and Clinton both appeared in ads for her. Frustration over the aggressive efforts to defeat Lincoln on the part of labor - a traditional Democratic ally - were evident in the White House official s comments to Politico. Consider how he or she g stanley cup oes on to twist the knife: If even half that [10 million] total had been well-targeted and applied in key House races across this country, the official said, that could have made a real difference in November. As it stands, according to that thinking, labor wa |