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Post by soonernvolved on Oct 1, 2018 17:45:43 GMT -6
7:37 PM: Trump: “A vote for Marsha is a vote for me… and everything we stand for.” He says a vote for Bredesen is a vote for “Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi, and the real leader of the Democrats–Maxine Waters.” He says Bredesen opposes the border wall, raises taxes, and supports driver’s certificates for illegal aliens. “You want him to be running? I don’t think so,” Trump says. He blasts Bredesen for writing a book supporting “government-run health care” and proposing to fund it by raising payroll taxes. He says Bredesen was a major financial backer of Obama and “crooked” Hillary Clinton–“crooked as hell.” He says Chuck Schumer will become Majority Leader if Bredesen gets elected.
7:35 PM: Blackburn says the blue wave will run into the great “red wall” when it hits Tennessee. She talks about Trump’s “amazing 20 months” of accomplishments and asks Tennesseans to stand with her and take Tennessee values to Washington, D.C.
7:33 PM: Blackburn says Tennessee loves Trump and thanks the Volunteer State for sending Trump to the White House. Trump carried the state by nearly 30 points.
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Post by soonernvolved on Oct 1, 2018 17:55:44 GMT -6
An important issue for Tennessee voters that Trump highlighted on the stump at Blackburn’s rally:
7:42 PM: Trump says Republicans have “amazing things” planned while Democrats want to flood streets with criminals and cut the military. He also says this election is about protecting Medicare and pre-existing conditions. He says a lot of people think it’s not a very “Republican thing” but “it is now.” He says Democrats want to give welfare and free healthcare to illegal aliens while Republicans want to protect public benefits for “truly needy Americans.” Trump says Republicans believe America should be a “sanctuary” for “law-abiding Americans” and not criminal illegal aliens. He calls Democrats “the party of crime” and says this November is about “safety” and “prosperity.” Trump lists off his economic achievements since election day.
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Post by soonernvolved on Oct 1, 2018 18:42:47 GMT -6
8:11 PM: Trump now speaking about Old Hickory. Trump says some people have said his election was was more impressive than Jackson’s. Says he loves Jackson and talks about having visited The Hermitage.
8:07 PM: Trump says “strong, tough cookies” have come up to him and said “we were losing out country” and thanked him for “saving our country.” “It is not up to the media to decide our fate,” Trump says.
8:06 PM: Trump says the media can’t believe all that he’s done in less than three years and –“they don’t want to report it…. so we report it ourselves.”
8:05 PM: Trump now talking about “earned media”–“And I’ve earned it!”
8:03 PM: Trump also says “Made in the USA” is coming back as he talks about how a vote for Republicans is a vote to reject Dems’ agenda of “anger” and “hatred.”
8:02 PM: TRUMP: “Fighting the media is tougher than fighting the Democrats. But they’re equal partners.”
8:00 PM: Trump speaking about faith–“we need more faith in this country.” He also spoke about ladders of opportunity.
7:56 PM: Trump speaks about the “sadists” at the VA who sometimes rob and steal. He says with the VA Accountability Act, his administration can now “go after them.”
7:51 PM” “No more. Can’t do it,” Trump says about losing billions of dollars to China in bad trade deals. Instead of building other nations, Trump says he is building America with aluminum, steel.
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Post by soonernvolved on Oct 1, 2018 18:43:08 GMT -6
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Post by soonernvolved on Oct 1, 2018 18:46:50 GMT -6
www.breitbart.com/big-government/2018/10/01/poll-heitkamp-under-water-gops-cramer-by-10-in-north-dakota-senate-race/109 A new poll released on Monday by Valley News Live, the NBC-TV affiliate in Fargo, North Dakota, and Strategic Research Associates, shows that Republican Rep. Kevin Cramer (R-ND) has jumped to a ten point lead over incumbent Sen. Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) in the North Dakota Senate race. The poll of 650 likely voters in North Dakota conducted between September 17 and September 27 shows that Cramer now leads Heitkamp 51 percent to 41 percent, with eight percent undecided. It has a margin of error of 3.5 percent. Cramer has increased his lead over Heitkamp by six points in the past few weeks. A Fox News poll conducted between September 8 and 11, two weeks before the dramatic testimony of Brett Kavanaugh and accuser Dr. Christine Blasey Ford on September 27 before the Senate Judiciary Committee, showed Cramer with a four point lead, 48 percent to 44 percent, which was within the poll’s margin of error. Heitkamp is one of two Democrat senators who have not yet announced how they will vote on the confirmation of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. The full Senate is expected to vote up or down on his confirmation this Friday. The poll also shows that likely voters in North Dakota overwhelmingly support confirming Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court: In another question that VNL asked, 60% of the likely voters in North Dakota support the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court. 27% were opposed. Keep in mind, the poll was conducted during the disclosure that the judge may have engaged in sexual misconduct, while in high school or college, before last week’s testimony by Kavanaugh and one of his accusers, before the Senate Judiciary Committee. In 2016, President Trump won the state’s three electoral college votes by a margin of 36 points over Democrat nominee Hillary Clinton. Heitkamp’s campaign has stumbled in recent weeks. Last week, she tried to dismiss an attack that criticized her support for sanctuary cities as a “scare tactic,” as Breitbart News reported: Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp is taking heat for her refusal to “crack down on dangerous sanctuary cities” in an ad released Tuesday. The North Dakota Republican Party ad opens with a narration: “President Trump wants to stop illegal immigration — but Heidi Heitkamp must not.” Heitkamp faces a tough challenge from Republican Rep. Kevin Cramer. President Donald Trump flashes onto the screen with his comments on Heitkamp at a recent rally: “Heidi voted in favor of the deadly, very very dangerous, horrible, sanctuary cities.”The ad points to three opportunities Heitkamp had to vote to defund sanctuary cities but did not. “When Heidi was confronted with her record of failure, she dismissed the issue as a ‘scare tactic,’” the ad states. Earlier in September, Heitkamp’s brother, Joel Heitkamp, a North Dakota talk radio host, said in a tweet President Trump will help victims of Hurricane Florence because “they’re white.” Sen. Heitkamp is a frequent guest on her brother’s radio show. On Monday, the Cramer campaign took advantage of the momentum in the race by launching a new ad that criticized Heitkamp for voting against President Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Here’s the full transcript of that ad: I’m Kevin Black, president of Creedence Energy Services. President Trump’s tax cuts kicked in pretty quick, and our company jumped at the chance to grow. Did the tax cut make a difference? You bet. Black: We hired 12 new people, and now we are up to 28 good-paying jobs. Our nation is booming, and our economy is creating thousands of new jobs. Black: That’s why I’m voting for Kevin Cramer.” Black: I can’t believe Heidi Heitkamp would repeal the tax cuts. Try telling that to my new employees. The Cramer campaign statement notes that while he voted for the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, “Senator Heidi Heitkamp voted against the tax cuts that have benefited North Dakota more than any other state. Heitkamp said she does not regret her opposition to these cuts, and her Democrat party in Washington wants them repealed.” You can watch the ad here:
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Post by soonernvolved on Oct 1, 2018 20:27:20 GMT -6
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Post by trumped on Oct 2, 2018 22:02:52 GMT -6
I have not seen 1 Dem rally, not 1
Where are their rallies? Where is their enthusiasm? They went too far left and lost voters.
Meanwhile another Trump rally he is doing 4 this week and every one is packed house with equal to more people standing outside. Its amazing and I don’t ever recall rallies like this in any election and especially midterms.
I think we found the walk away folks:
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Post by trumped on Oct 3, 2018 10:24:38 GMT -6
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Post by trumped on Oct 3, 2018 10:26:00 GMT -6
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Post by trumped on Oct 3, 2018 16:09:33 GMT -6
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Post by trumped on Oct 4, 2018 16:32:32 GMT -6
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Post by oilsooner on Oct 4, 2018 16:35:58 GMT -6
The crazier the Dems get, the worse it’s gonna be for them. The big Muller reveal should lock up 2020 for sure!! MAGA Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Post by oilsooner on Oct 4, 2018 17:09:50 GMT -6
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Post by trumped on Oct 6, 2018 19:57:14 GMT -6
This is like Bama recruiting after winning another title.
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Post by trumped on Oct 6, 2018 23:29:39 GMT -6
Oklahoma's top election official says voter registration is surging prior to the Nov. 6 general election. Election Board Secretary Paul Ziriax said Friday almost 2.1 million people were registered to vote in the state at the end of September. Ziriax says more than 76,000 people have registered to vote since Jan. 15. The deadline to register to vote in the general election is Oct. 12. Ziriax says Republicans make up almost 60 percent of the new voters, increasing by more than 44,000. The number of registered Independents increased by more than 23,000, and the number of registered Democrats rose by more than 5,000. Registered Libertarians increased by about 3,000. Republicans make up 47.2 percent of registered voters in the state and Democrats 37 percent, with Independents making up 15.4 percent. www.therepublic.com/2018/10/05/ok-voter-registration-oklahoma/
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Post by sooner8th on Oct 7, 2018 20:29:22 GMT -6
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Cop killer.............................
After police killings, Huckabee defends clemency for suspectFormer Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee on Tuesday defended his decision to commute the prison sentence years ago of the man who allegedly killed four police officers Sunday near Tacoma, Wash., saying the defendant had received an unfairly harsh sentence because he was young and black. The comments in a radio interview came a day after Huckabee accepted responsibility for the decision and said "it's not something I'm happy about at this particular moment." The killings have renewed scrutiny of Huckabee's pardon record, and some prominent conservatives say the episode could be damaging to his candidacy if Huckabee decides to run for president in 2012. Though one of the Republican Party's most popular figures, Huckabee has been dogged by questions over the more than 1,000 commutations and pardons he issued -- more than his three predecessors combined -- during his 10-year tenure. "If I could have known nine years ago this guy was capable of something of this magnitude, obviously I would never have granted a commutation," he told Fox News Channel host Bill O'Reilly on Monday night. "It's sickening." Maurice Clemmons was convicted in Arkansas in 1989 of robbery and theft, and he was serving a 108-year prison term when Huckabee commuted it to 47 years in 2000, making Clemmons eligible for parole. ad_icon "That was the commutation," Huckabee told O'Reilly. "I'm responsible for that. And it's not something I'm happy about at this particular moment." The Arkansas parole board subsequently released him from prison. After the Sunday shootings, a massive manhunt ended Tuesday when a police officer fatally shot Clemmons. He was carrying a handgun that had been taken from one of the slain officers, police said. On Tuesday, Huckabee defended his decision to commute Clemmons' sentence during a call to "The Joe Scarborough Show" on 77 WABC radio in New York. If his critics had been there in the governor's mansion, Huckabee said, "They would have seen a 16-year-old kid commit crimes of which normally, there would have been a few years. And if he'd been white and middle-class with a good lawyer he'd have gotten probation, a fine and some counseling. But because he was a young black kid, he got 108 years!" "People don't go to prison for murder" with that sort of sentence, Huckabee said. In his 2008 presidential campaign, Huckabee faced similar questions over the release from prison of convicted rapist Wayne DuMond, who was convicted of another rape and a murder. Huckabee tried then to distance himself from any role in the DuMond parole, and on Sunday he similarly pointed at "a series of failures in the criminal justice system" regarding Clemmons.
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Post by sooner8th on Oct 7, 2018 20:33:50 GMT -6
Mike Huckabee’s Maurice Clemmons problem
If former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee is going to run for president in 2016, his campaign is going to have to run through the Forza coffee shop in Parkland, Wash. That’s where one of Huckabee’s many parolees, Maurice Clemmons, assassinated four Lakewood police officers in 2009, depriving nine children of a parent and setting a national perception that Huckabee abused his powers of clemency.
Huckabee told The New York Times’ Jonathan Martin (the other Jonathan Martin) that he views a 2016 presidential bid as “a real opportunity for me.” The Washington Post quickly called Huckabee “a long shot” because he is a disinterested fundraiser who has credibility problems with the GOP’s fiscal conservatives.
He’s had those problems for a while, but still came in first in the Iowa caucuses in 2008. But back then he didn’t have a Maurice Clemmons problem.
As anyone living here in 2009 will recall, Huckabee became a national story after the officers’ deaths because he freed Clemmons from a 108-year sentence in 2000. Huckabee granted more pardons and commutations – 1,033 – than his three predecessors (including Bill Clinton) combined. Clemmons wasn’t Other Side covereven his most controversial pardon.
As part of a book on the Maurice Clemmons case I co-wrote with Seattle Times reporter Ken Armstrong, I spent a week in Little Rock peeling back Huckabee’s handling of the case. As we detailed in “The Other Side of Mercy: A Killer’s Journey Across the American Divide,” Huckabee viewed clemency as a means to right the wrongs of Arkansas’ racial history. A fine goal, but he failed use it wisely. He did not do the basics with Clemmons – such as contacting the prosecuting attorney for comment – or assuring that Clemmons’ release plan – to move to Seattle – was solid, or even factual (it was neither).
In fact, it doesn’t appear Huckabee even checked out Clemmons’ prison file, which was thick with acts of violence and absent indications of rehabilitation. Here’s how we described it in the book:
In years to come Huckabee would be asked how much he knew about Clemmons’ prison history while weighing his request. Huckabee would tell CNN: “I read the entire file … It was a file this thick … I looked at the file, every bit of it.”
Every bit of it? That seems unlikely. By 2000, Clemmons’ prison file already exceeded a thousand pages. But if Huckabee did read every bit of it, he would have seen a record—dated October 21, 1999—that boiled Clemmons’ stay in prison down to his damning score sheet:
Disciplinaries: Twenty-nine times Achievements: None
If Huckabee is serious, he’ll have to answer his Maurice Clemmons problem.
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Post by trumped on Oct 8, 2018 9:59:54 GMT -6
If you are going to post articles you need to start posting the links so they get credit. Otherwise its spam.
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Post by trumped on Oct 9, 2018 14:50:48 GMT -6
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Post by redrex1 on Oct 9, 2018 15:13:35 GMT -6
Mike Huckabee’s Maurice Clemmons problemIf former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee is going to run for president in 2016, his campaign is going to have to run through the Forza coffee shop in Parkland, Wash. That’s where one of Huckabee’s many parolees, Maurice Clemmons, assassinated four Lakewood police officers in 2009, depriving nine children of a parent and setting a national perception that Huckabee abused his powers of clemency. Huckabee told The New York Times’ Jonathan Martin (the other Jonathan Martin) that he views a 2016 presidential bid as “a real opportunity for me.” The Washington Post quickly called Huckabee “a long shot” because he is a disinterested fundraiser who has credibility problems with the GOP’s fiscal conservatives. He’s had those problems for a while, but still came in first in the Iowa caucuses in 2008. But back then he didn’t have a Maurice Clemmons problem. As anyone living here in 2009 will recall, Huckabee became a national story after the officers’ deaths because he freed Clemmons from a 108-year sentence in 2000. Huckabee granted more pardons and commutations – 1,033 – than his three predecessors (including Bill Clinton) combined. Clemmons wasn’t Other Side covereven his most controversial pardon.As part of a book on the Maurice Clemmons case I co-wrote with Seattle Times reporter Ken Armstrong, I spent a week in Little Rock peeling back Huckabee’s handling of the case. As we detailed in “The Other Side of Mercy: A Killer’s Journey Across the American Divide,” Huckabee viewed clemency as a means to right the wrongs of Arkansas’ racial history. A fine goal, but he failed use it wisely. He did not do the basics with Clemmons – such as contacting the prosecuting attorney for comment – or assuring that Clemmons’ release plan – to move to Seattle – was solid, or even factual (it was neither). In fact, it doesn’t appear Huckabee even checked out Clemmons’ prison file, which was thick with acts of violence and absent indications of rehabilitation. Here’s how we described it in the book:
In years to come Huckabee would be asked how much he knew about Clemmons’ prison history while weighing his request. Huckabee would tell CNN: “I read the entire file … It was a file this thick … I looked at the file, every bit of it.” did you even Every bit of it? That seems unlikely. By 2000, Clemmons’ prison file already exceeded a thousand pages. But if Huckabee did read every bit of it, he would have seen a record—dated October 21, 1999—that boiled Clemmons’ stay in prison down to his damning score sheet:
Disciplinaries: Twenty-nine times Achievements: NoneIf Huckabee is serious, he’ll have to answer his Maurice Clemmons problem. Did you even read this ICKY ?----Its about Huckabee running in 2016-----Try and stay current
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Post by kingswitz on Oct 9, 2018 15:16:22 GMT -6
Mike Huckabee’s Maurice Clemmons problemIf former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee is going to run for president in 2016, his campaign is going to have to run through the Forza coffee shop in Parkland, Wash. That’s where one of Huckabee’s many parolees, Maurice Clemmons, assassinated four Lakewood police officers in 2009, depriving nine children of a parent and setting a national perception that Huckabee abused his powers of clemency. Huckabee told The New York Times’ Jonathan Martin (the other Jonathan Martin) that he views a 2016 presidential bid as “a real opportunity for me.” The Washington Post quickly called Huckabee “a long shot” because he is a disinterested fundraiser who has credibility problems with the GOP’s fiscal conservatives. He’s had those problems for a while, but still came in first in the Iowa caucuses in 2008. But back then he didn’t have a Maurice Clemmons problem. As anyone living here in 2009 will recall, Huckabee became a national story after the officers’ deaths because he freed Clemmons from a 108-year sentence in 2000. Huckabee granted more pardons and commutations – 1,033 – than his three predecessors (including Bill Clinton) combined. Clemmons wasn’t Other Side covereven his most controversial pardon.As part of a book on the Maurice Clemmons case I co-wrote with Seattle Times reporter Ken Armstrong, I spent a week in Little Rock peeling back Huckabee’s handling of the case. As we detailed in “The Other Side of Mercy: A Killer’s Journey Across the American Divide,” Huckabee viewed clemency as a means to right the wrongs of Arkansas’ racial history. A fine goal, but he failed use it wisely. He did not do the basics with Clemmons – such as contacting the prosecuting attorney for comment – or assuring that Clemmons’ release plan – to move to Seattle – was solid, or even factual (it was neither). In fact, it doesn’t appear Huckabee even checked out Clemmons’ prison file, which was thick with acts of violence and absent indications of rehabilitation. Here’s how we described it in the book:
In years to come Huckabee would be asked how much he knew about Clemmons’ prison history while weighing his request. Huckabee would tell CNN: “I read the entire file … It was a file this thick … I looked at the file, every bit of it.” did you even Every bit of it? That seems unlikely. By 2000, Clemmons’ prison file already exceeded a thousand pages. But if Huckabee did read every bit of it, he would have seen a record—dated October 21, 1999—that boiled Clemmons’ stay in prison down to his damning score sheet:
Disciplinaries: Twenty-nine times Achievements: NoneIf Huckabee is serious, he’ll have to answer his Maurice Clemmons problem. Did you even read this ICKY ?----Its about Huckabee running in 2016-----Try and stay current This is a desperate person digging for anything. Didn’t even read it, just copy and paste. Lol
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Post by 1tc on Oct 9, 2018 15:51:28 GMT -6
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Cop killer.............................
After police killings, Huckabee defends clemency for suspectFormer Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee on Tuesday defended his decision to commute the prison sentence years ago of the man who allegedly killed four police officers Sunday near Tacoma, Wash., saying the defendant had received an unfairly harsh sentence because he was young and black. The comments in a radio interview came a day after Huckabee accepted responsibility for the decision and said "it's not something I'm happy about at this particular moment." The killings have renewed scrutiny of Huckabee's pardon record, and some prominent conservatives say the episode could be damaging to his candidacy if Huckabee decides to run for president in 2012. Though one of the Republican Party's most popular figures, Huckabee has been dogged by questions over the more than 1,000 commutations and pardons he issued -- more than his three predecessors combined -- during his 10-year tenure. "If I could have known nine years ago this guy was capable of something of this magnitude, obviously I would never have granted a commutation," he told Fox News Channel host Bill O'Reilly on Monday night. "It's sickening." Maurice Clemmons was convicted in Arkansas in 1989 of robbery and theft, and he was serving a 108-year prison term when Huckabee commuted it to 47 years in 2000, making Clemmons eligible for parole. ad_icon "That was the commutation," Huckabee told O'Reilly. "I'm responsible for that. And it's not something I'm happy about at this particular moment." The Arkansas parole board subsequently released him from prison. After the Sunday shootings, a massive manhunt ended Tuesday when a police officer fatally shot Clemmons. He was carrying a handgun that had been taken from one of the slain officers, police said. On Tuesday, Huckabee defended his decision to commute Clemmons' sentence during a call to "The Joe Scarborough Show" on 77 WABC radio in New York. If his critics had been there in the governor's mansion, Huckabee said, "They would have seen a 16-year-old kid commit crimes of which normally, there would have been a few years. And if he'd been white and middle-class with a good lawyer he'd have gotten probation, a fine and some counseling. But because he was a young black kid, he got 108 years!" "People don't go to prison for murder" with that sort of sentence, Huckabee said. In his 2008 presidential campaign, Huckabee faced similar questions over the release from prison of convicted rapist Wayne DuMond, who was convicted of another rape and a murder. Huckabee tried then to distance himself from any role in the DuMond parole, and on Sunday he similarly pointed at "a series of failures in the criminal justice system" regarding Clemmons. It appears that you are a racist.
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Post by Cooter Brown on Oct 10, 2018 7:10:14 GMT -6
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Cop killer.............................
After police killings, Huckabee defends clemency for suspectFormer Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee on Tuesday defended his decision to commute the prison sentence years ago of the man who allegedly killed four police officers Sunday near Tacoma, Wash., saying the defendant had received an unfairly harsh sentence because he was young and black. The comments in a radio interview came a day after Huckabee accepted responsibility for the decision and said "it's not something I'm happy about at this particular moment." The killings have renewed scrutiny of Huckabee's pardon record, and some prominent conservatives say the episode could be damaging to his candidacy if Huckabee decides to run for president in 2012. Though one of the Republican Party's most popular figures, Huckabee has been dogged by questions over the more than 1,000 commutations and pardons he issued -- more than his three predecessors combined -- during his 10-year tenure. "If I could have known nine years ago this guy was capable of something of this magnitude, obviously I would never have granted a commutation," he told Fox News Channel host Bill O'Reilly on Monday night. "It's sickening." Maurice Clemmons was convicted in Arkansas in 1989 of robbery and theft, and he was serving a 108-year prison term when Huckabee commuted it to 47 years in 2000, making Clemmons eligible for parole. ad_icon "That was the commutation," Huckabee told O'Reilly. "I'm responsible for that. And it's not something I'm happy about at this particular moment." The Arkansas parole board subsequently released him from prison. After the Sunday shootings, a massive manhunt ended Tuesday when a police officer fatally shot Clemmons. He was carrying a handgun that had been taken from one of the slain officers, police said. On Tuesday, Huckabee defended his decision to commute Clemmons' sentence during a call to "The Joe Scarborough Show" on 77 WABC radio in New York. If his critics had been there in the governor's mansion, Huckabee said, "They would have seen a 16-year-old kid commit crimes of which normally, there would have been a few years. And if he'd been white and middle-class with a good lawyer he'd have gotten probation, a fine and some counseling. But because he was a young black kid, he got 108 years!" "People don't go to prison for murder" with that sort of sentence, Huckabee said. In his 2008 presidential campaign, Huckabee faced similar questions over the release from prison of convicted rapist Wayne DuMond, who was convicted of another rape and a murder. Huckabee tried then to distance himself from any role in the DuMond parole, and on Sunday he similarly pointed at "a series of failures in the criminal justice system" regarding Clemmons. What a desperate buffon...2012...Hahahahahah...keep diggin up old shit...it's all ya got
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Post by redrex1 on Oct 10, 2018 7:12:34 GMT -6
ICKY struggles with reading , numbers and spelling
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Post by sheepdog on Oct 10, 2018 22:46:22 GMT -6
Project Veritas out with a video illustrating that the democratic senate hopeful from Tennessee supported Kavanaugh publicly to garner votes but otherwise it was nothing other than a ploy.
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Post by soonernvolved on Oct 11, 2018 8:42:17 GMT -6
dailycaller.com/2018/10/10/walkaway-founder-democrats-are-jumping-ship-over-kavanaugh-smear-video/Brandon Straka, the openly gay former Democrat behind the recent movement to #Walkaway from liberalism says he has seen an uptick in the number of people who say they’re ‘walking away’ from the Democratic party. He says hundreds of people have reached out to him since the Justice Brett Kavanaugh battle started, and he began receiving more video testimonials and messages from people who say they will now vote Republican because of the smear campaign launched against Kavanaugh. Straka also talks about the first #WalkAway Campaign march he will be hosting in Washington D.C. on Oct 26-28th. For more details about the event, you can visit WalkAwayMarch.com .
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Post by principledcon on Oct 11, 2018 20:08:01 GMT -6
I have not seen 1 Dem rally, not 1 Where are their rallies? Where is their enthusiasm? They went too far left and lost voters. Meanwhile another Trump rally he is doing 4 this week and every one is packed house with equal to more people standing outside. Its amazing and I don’t ever recall rallies like this in any election and especially midterms. I think we found the walk away folks: They have mob marches designed to disrupt and produce fear and division...
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Post by soonernvolved on Oct 12, 2018 11:09:51 GMT -6
www.dailywire.com/news/37055/pollsters-have-some-devastating-news-senate-james-barrettAccording to new polling data, the Democrats' scorched-earth strategy for delaying the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh not only failed to keep the textualist judge out of the Supreme Court, it appears to have destroyed their chances to gain the coveted 51-seat majority in the Senate. Just a month ago, Real Clear Politics' average of the key polls for all of the Senate seats up for election in 2018 listed 9 seats as "toss-ups" that could go either way. At that point, RCP gave Democrats 44 seats that were either safe or not up and Republicans 47 seats. Many of the nine toss-up seats were leaning Democrat. But the electoral landscape has since changed significantly in the Republicans' favor. After ceding two of the toss-ups to Republicans since the Kavanaugh circus a few weeks ago, RCP has now given the GOP one more. In other words, RCP now lists 50 seats as relative locks for Republicans. Vice President Mike Pence gives Republicans the tie-breaking vote. The most recent seat to move from "toss up" to safely Republican is Tennessee, where after Democrat Phil Bredesen announced that he would've voted to confirm Kavanaugh, angering many of his base, Republican Marsha Blackburn has taken a commanding lead. A New York Times/Siena poll (conducted October 8-11) found Blackburn with a stunning 14-point lead over Bredesen. Prior to the Democrats pushing uncorroborated allegations against Kavanaugh, Bredesen led Blackburn by 5+ points. A CBS News/YouGov poll taken last week showed Blackburn with an 8-point lead and a Fox News poll conducted a few days earlier gave her a 5-point lead. The other two formerly toss-up seats that have gone red are in North Dakota and Texas. North Dakota Republican Kevin Cramer now leads Democrat Heidi Heitkamp (who recently said she decided to vote against Kavanaugh after watching his testimony with the sound off) by 12 points, according to a recent Fox News poll. An NBC News poll conducted at the end of September found Heitkamp trailing by 10 points. After polls had tightened last month, Texas Republican Ted Cruz now has an 8-point and 9-point lead over Democrat Beto O'Rourke in recent polls by NYT/Siena and Quinnipiac, respectively. The six remaining toss-up seats are Arizona, Florida, Indiana, Missouri, Montana and Nevada, all of which are very tight and some of which have been trending towards the Republicans. If Republicans win a single one of those seats and the "safe" seats indeed go red, the GOP will maintain its current 51-seat majority. If Republicans gain two or more, they will have strengthened their control over the Senate.
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Post by kcrufnek on Oct 12, 2018 13:10:05 GMT -6
Project Veritas out with a video illustrating that the democratic senate hopeful from Tennessee supported Kavanaugh publicly to garner votes but otherwise it was nothing other than a ploy. Isn't this Taylor's guy? Brilliant!!
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Post by oilsooner on Oct 12, 2018 15:23:23 GMT -6
Playing them like a fiddle.
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