Poll: Voter Pessimism on Economy Helping GOP

Poll: Voter Pessimism on Economy Helping GOP (Newsmax)

By Theodore Bunker | Tuesday, 01 November 2022 11:33 AM EDT

Republicans have received a slight bump in recent polls before the midterm elections mostly due to voters' unfavorable outlook on the economy, according to a new survey from The Wall Street Journal.

The poll asked voters to say why "this election is more important than most elections":

  • 16% said the country needs to change direction.
  • 13% said protecting election integrity and democracy.
  • 12% said to remove President Joe Biden.
  • 12% said to prevent Republicans from winning.
  • 11% said to keep Democrats from winning.
  • 11% said the economy.
  • 9% said abortion or women's rights.

Voters also were asked to name the issue that "has made you MOST likely to vote in the upcoming Congressional election in November":

  • 34% said inflation and rising prices.
  • 28% said threats to democracy.
  • 17% said the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
  • 11% said illegal immigration and border security.
  • 8% said crime.
  • 2% don't know or refused to answer.

Republican pollster Tony Fabrizio, who conducted the survey with Democrat John Anzalone, said "the focus on the economic stuff, particularly inflation, is helpful to the GOP headed into the final stretch."

Fabrizio noted that undecided voters are more likely to express concerns about the economy, meaning they "look more likely to break Republican than they do Democrat, if they vote."

If the election were held today:

  • 46% in total support Republicans.
  • 44% in total support Democrats.
  • 9% are undecided.

Anzalone said that no matter what party holds control over Congress or the White House, unaffiliated voters "break against the party when you have economic diagnostics like we're seeing. End of story, done."

He added: "Voters trust the Republicans on that, right now. That's tough sledding for us."

The poll also found that in a hypothetical head-to-head matchup, Biden and former President Donald Trump would be tied if the 2024 presidential election were held today:

  • 46% would vote for Biden.
  • 46% would vote for Trump.
  • 8% are undecided.

The Journal polled 1,500 registered voters across the country Oct. 22-26 with a margin of error of plus/minus 2.5 percentage points.

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Doug Mastriano to Newsmax: Biggest Upset Coming in PA Governor Race

Doug Mastriano to Newsmax: Biggest Upset Coming in PA Governor Race Doug Mastriano Doug Mastriano (Getty Images)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Tuesday, 01 November 2022 10:47 AM EDT

Pennsylvania State Sen. Doug Mastriano, the state's GOP nominee for governor, said Tuesday on Newsmax he is looking forward to pulling off "one of the biggest upsets" in the state next week by defeating his Democrat challenger, Attorney General Josh Shapiro, to win the neck-and-neck governor's race.

"The latest polls have us in a statistical dead heat, and although we're being outspent, we're just outworking the other side, which is fantastic," Mastriano said on Newsmax's "Wake Up America," but he also lambasted Shapiro for refusing to debate with him.

He noted the debate in the U.S. Senate race between Republican Dr. Mehmet Oz and his Democrat opponent, Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, completely changed the environment for that election because of Fetterman's apparent difficulties after having suffered a stroke earlier this year.

"That debate performance was absolutely superb," Mastriano said of Oz. "This is why I'm a bit frustrated that my opponent has absolutely refused to debate me because I'll make him look worse than John Fetterman. I'd smoke him like a cheap cigar. But he's a chicken. He won't go on the stage with me because he's terrified that that's going to happen to him, too."

Mastriano said that the governor's race will likely come down to undecided and independent voters, "and we're reaching them, talking about 'kitchen table' topics, law and order and crime, and specifically what I'm going to do about."

And while there is a lot of "background noise" about the Oz-Fetterman election, Mastriano said, the gubernatorial election has a more direct bearing on his state.

"There's nothing a federal senator can do about crime and the economy in Pennsylvania," said Mastriano. "I'm talking about that, talking about school choice, talking about inflation, and how I'm going to have an economic renaissance in our state by unleashing our energy sector. The last we checked, independents are breaking for me, you know, by six or seven to one."

Mastriano further on Tuesday called claims from the left on his being an "election denier" concerning the 2020 presidential race "ridiculous."

"I'm a senator, and under the U.S. and state constitutions, as a legislator, I have oversight on the matter of conduct of elections," he said. "It's my job to ask questions, and simply asking questions about an election makes you intellectually curious. It doesn't make you an election denier. I mean, these people are so ridiculous on the left … no, we just want to have answers. People across the state have questions. We want to make things better and more secure."

Mastriano, though, said he doesn't think such claims have hurt him among his voting base, as most are talking about crime, the economy, and other topics beyond election integrity.

Meanwhile, President Joe Biden and former President Barack Obama will be in Pennsylvania this weekend to hold last-minute election rallies, as will be former President Donald Trump, and Mastriano said the Biden-Obama appearance will hurt Democrats because they will remind voters "of the dark times."

"Obama is tied to Biden who was his vice president for eight years, and Obama worked hard to get 'Sleepy Joe' in," he said. "You'll see 10,000 or 20,000 people at our rally outside of Pittsburgh, and you'll see maybe 100 or less over, you know, attending Biden's or Obama's rallies when they come into town. It does not help them at all, because everything is falling apart under this current administration."

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Chief Justice Roberts Pauses Handover of Trump Tax Returns to House Panel

Chief Justice Roberts Pauses Handover of Trump Tax Returns to House Panel Chief Justice Roberts Pauses Handover of Trump Tax Returns to House Panel (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Tuesday, 01 November 2022 10:05 AM EDT

Chief Justice John Roberts on Tuesday put a temporary hold on the handover of former President Donald Trump's tax returns to a congressional committee.

Roberts' order gives the Supreme Court time to weigh the legal issues in Trump's emergency appeal to the high court, filed Monday.

Without court intervention, the tax returns could have been provided as early as Thursday by the Treasury Department to the Democrat-controlled House Ways and Means Committee.

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Rep. Tenney to Newsmax: ‘Huge Shift’ Points to N.Y. ‘Red Wave’

Rep. Tenney to Newsmax: 'Huge Shift' Points to N.Y. 'Red Wave' rep. claudia tenney speaking Rep. Claudia Tenney, R-N.Y. (Getty Images)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Tuesday, 01 November 2022 09:00 AM EDT

A "huge shift" is happening in New York's politics, particularly in the gubernatorial race between Rep. Lee Zeldin and Gov. Kathy Hochul, and "we're seeing a potential red wave, maybe a tsunami," Rep. Claudia Tenney, who is seeking reelection, said on Newsmax on Tuesday.

"People are finally starting to kind of wake up to what's going on in the elections," the New York Republican told Newsmax's "Wake Up America." "I think the biggest indicator that we have is that the Democrats are starting to pour money into these races. How desperate is Kathy hopeful that she's going to roll out Hillary Clinton, who was beaten by Donald Trump?"

The Democrats also just dropped another $250,000 into the race in New York's 25th Congressional District between Republican La'Ron Singletary and Democrat Joseph Morelle, "so you know that they're nervous," Tenney added.

She also noted that the support that is coming in for Zeldin is strong, with Govs. Ron DeSantis of Florida and Glenn Youngkin of Virginia, who she called "rock stars," campaigning for him.

"I think this does help because the big issue is we're seeing great polling, but it's going to come down to turnout and who is going to get their voters out," said Tenney. "The Republicans are surging right now, so you're seeing a lot of interest from a lot of Republicans across the state. If you drive anywhere in upstate New York, there are Zeldin signs everywhere. Very rarely do you see a Hochul sign anywhere in upstate New York, and we're even hearing that's the case in some of the blue areas like even Albany and other cities."

The main thing, Tenney said, is the importance of getting people out to vote.

"We are in free fall under Kathy Hochul and one-party rule in Albany," said Tenney. "I just can't implore people enough to get out and vote, especially Republicans, moderate Democrats, independents, people who know that the state of New York is in their hands."

Meanwhile, former President Barack Obama has been out campaigning, rather than President Joe Biden, and that's because Biden's ratings are so low, said Tenney.

"There hasn't been a president with lower approval ratings at this point in office than (Harry) Truman," said Tenney. "That takes us back to 1946. Even President (Donald) Trump had higher ratings at this point in his term, so Joe Biden is a liability for the Democrats."

The issue of election integrity is also an indicator in this year's midterms, said Tenney.

In 2020, at this point, 60,000 absentee ballots had been requested and 40,000 were Democrats, she said, noting the difference between a presidential election period versus a midterm.

"We now have 16,000 requested and only 7,000 were Democrats," said Tenney. "Republicans, as they say, who don't vote elect Democrats, so I say the election integrity is there. Just make sure you vote and make sure that you are aware of what's happening at the polls."

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Sen. Tommy Tuberville to Newsmax: Border ‘Disaster’ Under Biden, Dems

Sen. Tommy Tuberville to Newsmax: Border 'Disaster' Under Biden, Dems (Newsmax/"Eric Bolling The Balance")

By Charles Kim | Monday, 31 October 2022 10:47 PM EDT

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., told Newsmax he witnessed the "complete disaster" taking place at the southern border following a trip there about a year ago.

"It's a disaster," Tuberville told Monday's "Eric Bolling: The Balance." "I was there about a year ago. You got to give the Border Patrol credit and what they're doing down there, understaffed. They're losing people every day. It's just amazing."

Biden administration claims of a secure border are "just a big lie," Tuberville told hos Eric Bolling.

Many of the more than 2 million illegal migrants that came into the country this year wanted to come "for the right reasons," but they have to come in "by the law," Tuberville noted.

He said the border started really becoming a problem after former President Barack Obama took office in 2009 but was stopped during the administration of former President Donald Trump, and became a bigger problem when Biden took office, reversing Trump's policies and refusing to keep building the wall.

"[Democrats] just pick up where they left off," Tuberville continued. "It's just that they want to change this country. They want to reset it to something that it's not. The election next week is not about Republican and Democrat. It's about capitalism, freedom in America, versus socialism and dictatorship. That's exactly what it's about."

He said Democrats want "to control everything" people do and they are not scared to buy votes with a variety of handouts to different groups.

"It's hard to beat Santa Claus," he said. "They're giving away entitlements, they're allowing them to do crime. They're doing everything they possibly can to get as many people coming across the border."

Tuberville said the scariest part of the border crisis is the number of "gotaways," the people that were never detected when they came across.

"The people coming across is one thing, but the ones that we don't know that are coming across, bringing the drugs, human trafficking, and the terrorists coming across," he said. "Those are scary, and it's forever."

He said the number of those illegal migrants could be around 10% of those that are caught.

"When you are running from Border Patrol, you are running for a reason," he said.

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Sen. Tommy Tuberville to Newsmax: Border ‘Disaster’ Under Biden, Dems

Sen. Tommy Tuberville to Newsmax: Border 'Disaster' Under Biden, Dems (Newsmax/"Eric Bolling The Balance")

By Charles Kim | Monday, 31 October 2022 10:47 PM EDT

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., told Newsmax he witnessed the "complete disaster" taking place at the southern border following a trip there about a year ago.

"It's a disaster," Tuberville told Monday's "Eric Bolling: The Balance." "I was there about a year ago. You got to give the Border Patrol credit and what they're doing down there, understaffed. They're losing people every day. It's just amazing."

Biden administration claims of a secure border are "just a big lie," Tuberville told hos Eric Bolling.

Many of the more than 2 million illegal migrants that came into the country this year wanted to come "for the right reasons," but they have to come in "by the law," Tuberville noted.

He said the border started really becoming a problem after former President Barack Obama took office in 2009 but was stopped during the administration of former President Donald Trump, and became a bigger problem when Biden took office, reversing Trump's policies and refusing to keep building the wall.

"[Democrats] just pick up where they left off," Tuberville continued. "It's just that they want to change this country. They want to reset it to something that it's not. The election next week is not about Republican and Democrat. It's about capitalism, freedom in America, versus socialism and dictatorship. That's exactly what it's about."

He said Democrats want "to control everything" people do and they are not scared to buy votes with a variety of handouts to different groups.

"It's hard to beat Santa Claus," he said. "They're giving away entitlements, they're allowing them to do crime. They're doing everything they possibly can to get as many people coming across the border."

Tuberville said the scariest part of the border crisis is the number of "gotaways," the people that were never detected when they came across.

"The people coming across is one thing, but the ones that we don't know that are coming across, bringing the drugs, human trafficking, and the terrorists coming across," he said. "Those are scary, and it's forever."

He said the number of those illegal migrants could be around 10% of those that are caught.

"When you are running from Border Patrol, you are running for a reason," he said.

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DC Court Dismisses Meadows’ Lawsuit to Block Jan. 6 Subpoena

DC Court Dismisses Meadows' Lawsuit to Block Jan. 6 Subpoena (Newsmax)

By Eric Mack | Monday, 31 October 2022 09:54 PM EDT

A U.S. District Court judge in Washington, D.C., has dismissed former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows' lawsuit against the House Jan. 6 Select Committee on Monday.

Judge Carl Nichols ruled the Speech or Debate Clause bars Meadows' lawsuit seeking to block the committee's subpoena and "therefore dismisses Meadows' claims for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction."

"The record makes clear that the challenged subpoenas are protected legislative acts," Nichols ruled.

The ruling will be appealed, though, and that will effectively halt any Meadows compliance of the subpoena before the new Congress is seated in January. Assuming Republicans retake the House majority, the speakership, and the committee gavels, the House Jan. 6 Select Committee's time will be over by the end of the year.

"We will review the decision carefully and consider any further steps that may be appropriate," Meadows' attorney George Terwilliger told Politico.

Meadows was challenging the validity of the House Jan. 6 Select Committee subpoena, including whether a senior aide to a former president can be compelled to testify before Congress, whether a former president can validly assert executive privilege, and whether a sitting president can override a former president's claim of privilege.

Nichols, a judge appointed by former President Donald Trump, warned the House Jan. 6 Select Committee could raise the "speech or debate" on any appeal if it got an unfavorable opinion.

"Such an outcome could cause a significant waste of time and resources, especially considering the novel constitutional questions that this case presents on the merits," Nichols' opinion read.

Original Article

DC Court Dismisses Meadows’ Lawsuit to Block Jan. 6 Subpoena

DC Court Dismisses Meadows' Lawsuit to Block Jan. 6 Subpoena (Newsmax)

By Eric Mack | Monday, 31 October 2022 09:54 PM EDT

A U.S. District Court judge in Washington, D.C., has dismissed former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows' lawsuit against the House Jan. 6 Select Committee on Monday.

Judge Carl Nichols ruled the Speech or Debate Clause bars Meadows' lawsuit seeking to block the committee's subpoena and "therefore dismisses Meadows' claims for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction."

"The record makes clear that the challenged subpoenas are protected legislative acts," Nichols ruled.

The ruling will be appealed, though, and that will effectively halt any Meadows compliance of the subpoena before the new Congress is seated in January. Assuming Republicans retake the House majority, the speakership, and the committee gavels, the House Jan. 6 Select Committee's time will be over by the end of the year.

"We will review the decision carefully and consider any further steps that may be appropriate," Meadows' attorney George Terwilliger told Politico.

Meadows was challenging the validity of the House Jan. 6 Select Committee subpoena, including whether a senior aide to a former president can be compelled to testify before Congress, whether a former president can validly assert executive privilege, and whether a sitting president can override a former president's claim of privilege.

Nichols, a judge appointed by former President Donald Trump, warned the House Jan. 6 Select Committee could raise the "speech or debate" on any appeal if it got an unfavorable opinion.

"Such an outcome could cause a significant waste of time and resources, especially considering the novel constitutional questions that this case presents on the merits," Nichols' opinion read.

Trump Weighs In on N.M. Race for Governor

Trump Weighs In on N.M. Race for Governor Trump Weighs In on N.M. Race for Governor Ronchetti (AP)

Monday, 31 October 2022 08:27 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump has endorsed Republican nominee for governor Mark Ronchetti in a social media post.

It's unclear how the endorsement influences Ronchetti's prospects in the Nov. 8 general election in a state that Trump lost twice. President Joe Biden won the New Mexico vote by roughly 11 percentage points in 2020.

In a post on the Truth Social social media network, Trump called incumbent Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham “absolutely terrible” and said that Ronchetti “will be tough & smart on Crime, the Border & everything else. Mark (h)as my Total Endorsement!"

Ronchetti has campaigned for governor at arms length from Trump. The two have never spoken, said Ronchetti's campaign spokesman Ryan Sabel.

In a statement, Sabel highlighted a gamut of high-profile endorsements for Ronchetti, including Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, former U.N. Ambassador Nicki Haley, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson “and now former President Trump.”

“Mark is supported by people from all walks of life and all different viewpoints,” he said.

President Biden has announced plans to visit New Mexico on Thursday in support of Lujan Grisham's campaign as she runs for reelection.

Prominent endorsements for Lujan Grisham's include Vice President Kamala Harris, California Gov. Gavin Newsom and former President Barack Obama.

Original Article

Trump Weighs In on N.M. Race for Governor

Trump Weighs In on N.M. Race for Governor Mark Ronchetti looks on Mark Ronchetti (AP)

Monday, 31 October 2022 08:27 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump has endorsed Republican nominee for governor Mark Ronchetti in a social media post.

It's unclear how the endorsement influences Ronchetti's prospects in the Nov. 8 general election in a state that Trump lost twice. President Joe Biden won the New Mexico vote by roughly 11 percentage points in 2020.

In a post on the Truth Social social media network, Trump called incumbent Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham "absolutely terrible" and said that Ronchetti "will be tough & smart on Crime, the Border & everything else. Mark (h)as my Total Endorsement!"

Ronchetti has campaigned for governor at arms length from Trump. The two have never spoken, said Ronchetti's campaign spokesman Ryan Sabel.

In a statement, Sabel highlighted a gamut of high-profile endorsements for Ronchetti, including Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, former U.N. Ambassador Nicki Haley, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson, "and now former President Trump."

"Mark is supported by people from all walks of life and all different viewpoints," he said.

President Biden has announced plans to visit New Mexico on Thursday in support of Lujan Grisham's campaign as she runs for reelection.

Prominent endorsements for Lujan Grisham's include Vice President Kamala Harris, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, and former President Barack Obama.

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Dr. Oz: Pennsylvania needs high paying energy jobs

HARRISBURG, PA - OCTOBER 26: Republican Pennsylvania Senate nominee Dr. Mehmet Oz speaks at an event with Nikki Haley on October 26, 2022 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. In the November general election, Oz faces Democratic nominee John Fetterman. (Photo by Mark Makela/Getty Images)
Republican Pennsylvania Senate nominee Dr. Mehmet Oz speaks at an event with Nikki Haley on October 26, 2022 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. In the November general election, Oz faces Democratic nominee John Fetterman. (Photo by Mark Makela/Getty Images)

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UPDATED 1:00 PM PT – Monday, October 31, 2022

Pennsylvania Republican Senate nominee Dr. Mehmet Oz says the state needs high-paying energy jobs.

During an interview with Breitbart News over the weekend, Oz commented on the matter while slamming his opponent, John Fetterman. Oz claimed that left-wing politicians like Fetterman are mistakenly focusing on increasing the federal minimum wage.

Oz added that his goal is to help people earn more than just the minimum wage by unleashing energy sector jobs with good benefits and opportunities for pay increases.

The Trump-endorsed candidate said the Keystone State has the opportunity to build a facility in Philadelphia, which would bring tens of thousands of high-quality trade jobs.

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John Bolton to Newsmax: Outgoing Brazil President Had ‘Pro-American’ Views

John Bolton to Newsmax: Outgoing Brazil President Had 'Pro-American' Views (Newsmax/"The Record With Greta Van Susteren")

By Jay Clemons | Monday, 31 October 2022 08:05 PM EDT

John Bolton, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, says Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's projected victory over conservative incumbent Jair Bolsonaro in the Brazil presidential election could have an interesting impact with American leaders moving forward.

"Bolsonaro was pro-American," Bolton told Newsmax's "The Record with Greta Van Susteren."I think people get lost in the haze of the comparisons to [former President Donald] Trump.

"But Bolsonaro's outlook of the world was pro-American. He was very concerned about China's economic influence inside Brazil."

Bolton, a onetime national security adviser to President Trump, added Bolsonaro initially wanted "Brazil to join NATO, which would have been quite something, if it had happened."

At the last reported tally, 98.8% of the votes have been counted in Brazil, with Lula da Silva collecting approximately 50.8% of support.

To exacerbate his point about future relations, Bolton noted how the Biden administration preferred the left-leaning Lula de Silva to prevail over the Trump-friendly Bolsonaro — even though it could greatly affect Israel's relationship with Brazil and the U.S.

Bolsonaro was always "pro-Israel," says Bolton, while adding the Brazilian leader even opened up a trade office in Jerusalem — the acknowledged capital city for Jewish leaders in Israel.

"And now, it's not clear with what Lula will do, if elected," in terms of whether he will recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

During his first stint as Brazil's president (2003-10), Lula de Silva was "pro-Palestine" and also "very negative on Israel," according to Bolton.

Lula de Silva was also friendly with Iran's leaders during his time as Brazil's president, he added.

"[Lula's] record before, I think, should give [Americans] a lot of concern," Bolton noted.

At the time of Bolton's Newsmax interview, Bolsonaro had yet to offer any public acknowledgment of his projected defeat.

However, Bolton called for the Brazilian president having sufficient time to process the events of the past 48 hours — before "jumping to any conclusions" of election denial.

When asked about a number of South American countries — such as Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Venezuela, and potentially Brazil — having presidents that fall into the left-of-center category, Bolton bluntly said, "Well, they're going the wrong direction yet again."

From Bolton's perspective, instead of aligning with economic powers such as the U.S, Germany, Japan, etc., some South American countries are buying into the promises of socialist leadership.

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The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Has Endorsed ‘Smooth-Talking’ Oz

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Has Endorsed 'Smooth-Talking' Oz (Newsmax)

By Brian Pfail | Monday, 31 October 2022 07:16 PM EDT

Democrat Senate nominee John Fetterman lost an endorsement to his opponent Republican Dr. Mehmet Oz, from one of Pennsylvania’s most prominent newspapers in the home stretch to the midterms.

The editorial board of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette released a statement of the endorsement on Sunday, citing transparency issues surrounding Fetterman’s health and a lack of real-world experience.

“We believe Mr. Oz is the better bet for Pennsylvania,” wrote the board, then mentioned Fetterman’s ailments stemming from a stroke he suffered earlier this year as not part of the reasoning for the Oz endorsement.

“His lack of transparency, however, in refusing to release his medical records is troubling. It suggests an impulse to conceal and a mistrust of the people. All candidates for a major elected office should release their medical records, as did Mr. Oz. If you want privacy, don’t run for public office,” the board added.

The editorial board wrote that Oz was more moderate on some issues and did not believe he would be a “stooge” of more conservative Republicans.

“We’re encouraged that Mr. Oz is portraying himself as a unifier who will work with Democrats to get things done for Pennsylvania. It remains to be seen whether he can pull that off, but he has the potential to become an influential, thoughtful and independent senator,” wrote the board. “Mr. Oz is likable, engaging, extremely smart and a good listener. Yes, he can sound like a smooth-talking salesman, but that may be what it takes to get deals done in Washington.”

The paper endorsed its first Republican since 1972, with former President Donald Trump in 2020.

According to pollsters, the race is much of a toss-up, although Fetterman struggled immensely during the debate showing signs of cognitive decline, general anxiety and confusion.

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Elon Musk deletes tweet highlighting report that alleges Paul Pelosi was attacked by gay prostitute

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 02: Elon Musk attends The 2022 Met Gala Celebrating "In America: An Anthology of Fashion" at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 02, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)
Elon Musk attends The 2022 Met Gala Celebrating “In America: An Anthology of Fashion” at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 02, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)

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UPDATED 11:50 AM PT – Monday, October 31, 2022

Elon Musk has taken down a tweet in which he shared an article that alleged that the attack on Paul Pelosi may have been connected to gay prostitution.

In the now-deleted tweet, Musk shared an article by the Santa Monica Observer, which claimed that Paul Pelosi left a gay bar with a suspected male-prostitute on Friday morning. The two men then went to Pelosi’s home where the assault took place. In addition to sharing the article, Musk tweeted “There is a tiny possibility that there might be more to this story than meets the eye.”

This report comes after Hillary Clinton and other Democrats attempted to blame “Trump supporters” for the attack on Pelosi.

It remains unclear whether the Santa Monica Observer’s claims are accurate.

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Maryland Gov. Hogan Tests Positive for COVID-19 a Second Time

Maryland Gov. Hogan Tests Positive for COVID-19 a Second Time (Newsmax)

By Jay Clemons | Monday, 31 October 2022 06:40 PM EDT

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, announced Monday that he has tested positive for COVID-19.

On social media, Governor Hogan tweeted: "Just wanted to let Marylanders know that after testing positive for COVID-19, I am working from home."

Hogan then added, "Fortunately, I'm up to date on my boosters and my symptoms are minimal."

The Maryland governor won't be on the ballot for next week's midterm elections (Nov. 8), since his gubernatorial limit of two terms expires in January.

Instead, for the new governor's race, Maryland voters will decide between candidates Dan Cox (Republican), Wes Moore (Democrat), Nancy Wallace (Green Party), and David Lashar (Libertarian Party).

In recent years, there have been reports of Hogan — a frequent critic of former President Donald Trump — pursuing the Republican National Committee's presidential nomination in 2024.

However, if that's the case, the deep pool of GOP presidential hopefuls could also include Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former Vice President Mike Pence, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina., and Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, among others.

Monday's announcement marks the second time — at least publicly — that Hogan has tested positive for COVID-19. The Hill reports the Maryland governor also had it last year.

Also, Rochelle Walensky, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has reportedly tested positive for COVID-19 a second time — a supposed "rebound" case, after completing a round of the coronavirus antiviral treatment Paxlovid.

According to CDC data, provided by The Hill, COVID-19 cases in the United States have been "dropping steadily" since August — perhaps due to 68% of Americans being fully vaccinated.

As Newsmax chronicled last week, the White House warns that, in the absence of additional congressional funding for COVID-19 treatments, immunocompromised people would soon be at greater risk against emerging subvariants of the omicron strain.

Ashish Jha, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, offered a public plea for increased COVID funding, claiming "with some of the new subvariants emerging, some of the main tools we've had to protect the immunocompromised, like Evusheld, may not work moving forward. That's a huge challenge."

According to its corporate website, Evusheld is an "investigational medicine used in adults and adolescents (12 years of age and older) who weigh at least 88 pounds for pre-exposure prophylaxis for prevention of COVID-19."

Evusheld "is the only monoclonal antibody authorized as a periodic injection to prevent [COVID] infection," according to The Hill.

"New variants may make some existing protections ineffective for the immunocompromised. Sadly, this means you may be at a special risk this winter," President Joe Biden said last week, while receiving his updated booster shot.

"So, I urge you. I urge you to consult with your doctor on the right steps to protect yourself. Take extra precautions," added Biden.

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Dick Morris to Newsmax: Biden’s Bad Policies Spurring Red Wave

Dick Morris to Newsmax: Biden's Bad Policies Spurring Red Wave (Newsmax/"American Agenda")

By Nick Koutsobinas | Monday, 31 October 2022 06:19 PM EDT

Dick Morris, an adviser to former Presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, told Newsmax that President Joe Biden's bad policies are pushing the electorate, and in some cases where voters might otherwise vote Democrat, toward the GOP this midterm.

"I think the most important insight to learn at this point in the race," Morris tells "American Agenda" during his appearance,"is that there are some times when candidates and parties are able to articulate the national theme that weaves together all of these candidates in all of their districts and all of their issues."

"It's kind of like looking at an individual star," the political author continued, "you put them together into a constellation, and that makes it easier to identify them and to derive meaning from them."

Note: Get Dick Morris' new book "The Return" on Trump's secret plan for 2024. See It Here!

Providing examples of points in the public zeitgeist that rallied voters en masse, Morris points to the "Iraq war … opposition to Obamacare … and the Tea Party movement," that, for their time, resulted in "massive victories in the House of Representatives. And that's what we're facing now in the House and the Senate."

"The theme," spurring voters towards Republicans, Morris adds," is opposition to Biden's policies; opposition to the big spending; opposition to the weak on crime positions; and opposition to the open borders. And Biden's policies have left such an imprint on the country that opposing them has woven Republicans together into a thematic campaign."

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Oath Keepers Member Chokes Up on Stand: ‘Sorry For What I Did’

Oath Keepers Member Chokes Up on Stand: 'Sorry For What I Did' Oath Keepers Member Chokes Up on Stand: 'Sorry For What I Did' People inside the U.S. Capitol building on Jan. 6, 2021. (Sipa via AP)

MICHAEL KUNZELMAN Monday, 31 October 2022 05:29 PM EDT

A Florida man who stormed the U.S. Capitol with other members of the far-right Oath Keepers testified Monday that he believed they were participating in a historic “Bastille-type event” reminiscent of the French Revolution.

Graydon Young, a government witness at the seditious conspiracy trial of Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes and four associates, said he saw parallels between the mob that attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and the French people who “stood up and resisted kings and tyrants” more than two centuries ago.

“The people were obviously attacking the government and their function,” Young said during the trial's fifth week of testimony.

Young said he came to Washington to fight against “the corrupt elements of the government” that were preparing to certify President Joe Biden's 2020 electoral victory.

“I guess I was acting like a traitor,” he added.

Young, 57, of Englewood, Florida, was the first Oath Keepers member to plead guilty to a conspiracy charge related to the Capitol attack. He was the second group member to testify for federal prosecutors at the trial under a cooperation agreement.

Rhodes, of Granbury, Texas, and four others are charged with seditious conspiracy for what authorities have described as a plot to stop the peaceful transfer of presidential power from Republican incumbent Donald Trump to Biden, the Democrat who won the 2020 election.

Young pleaded guilty in June 2021 to conspiring to obstruct the joint session of Congress for certifying of the Electoral College vote.

Defense attorney James Lee Bright, one of Rhodes' attorneys, pressed Young to point to any evidence of a criminal conspiracy or “explicit plan” for Oath Keepers to attack the Capitol.

“It was implicit to me at the time,” Young said. “I did not explicitly say, ‘Let’s commit a crime,' but I thought it was implicit."

“It was spontaneous,” Bright said.

“It was,” Young said.

The others on trial are Thomas Caldwell of Berryville, Virginia; Kenneth Harrelson of Titusville, Florida; Jessica Watkins of Woodstock, Ohio; and Kelly Meggs of Dunnellon, Florida.

Jason Dolan was the first Oath Keepers member to testify at the trial. Dolan, who pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge, said group members were prepared to use “any means necessary” on Jan. 6 to stop the certification of Biden’s electoral victory.

After leaving the “Stop the Steal” rally where Trump spoke on Jan. 6, Young said he initially joined Meggs in escorting a rally speaker's relative. But their “goal” changed, Young said, when Meggs learned that the crowd had breached police barricades at the Capitol.

“We all knew that there was the potential for a historical event to be taking place at the Capitol,” Young said.

Young was wearing a helmet and carrying a radio when he joined other Oath Keepers in walking up stairs on the east side of the Capitol in a military-style “stack” formation, according to a court filing accompanying his guilty plea. After entering the building, Young and others pushed against a line of police officers guarding the hallway connecting the Rotunda to the Senate, the filing says.

“We stormed and got inside,” Young later posted on Facebook before deleting his account.

Young said he became scared and ashamed as he realized how much trouble he was in after the riot. He choked up when a prosecutor asked him why he decided to cooperate with authorities.

“It’s really embarrassing,” he said.

Young, who served in the U.S. Navy reserves for 11 years, said he was a Trump supporter who “got really ginned up” by a steady diet of political videos on YouTube in 2020. Young’s sister in North Carolina told him about the Oath Keepers. He joined the group less than two months before Jan. 6, thinking “it might be an effective way to get involved.”

Young posted an encrypted message to other Oath Keepers on Dec. 20, 2020, that said “something more is required” than marches and protests. Asked what he was referring to in that message, Young said, “Something more effective and more forceful than just the protests.”

Young said he believed Trump’s claims of a stolen election, thought a “corrupt government” was responsible and felt a sense of “desperation and hopelessness” as Jan. 6 approached.

Jurors also heard testimony Monday by a police officer who crossed paths with Oath Keepers members inside the Capitol during the riot. Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn said none of the rioters offered to help him during an encounter captured on video, undercutting a defense claim that Oath Keepers tried to protect the officer from other rioters.

Justice Department prosecutor Alexandra Hughes asked Dunn what rioters could have done to help him and other officers during the siege on Jan. 6, 2021.

“Just leave the building,” Dunn said.

Dunn acknowledged telling the FBI in May 2021 that he allowed rioters in tactical gear to stand near him while he was guarding a stairwell. He said that interaction occurred in the Capitol's Crypt area and he couldn't be certain whether the rioters who stood in front of him there were Oath Keepers.

Jurors saw a video of a separate encounter in which Dunn interacted with Oath Keepers in military-style gear near a staircase in the second-floor Rotunda.

“I'm not letting you come this way,” Dunn recalled saying in the Rotunda.

Video also captured Dunn telling rioters that they wanted “an all-out-war” and had injured dozens of officers.

“You want to kill everybody,” Dunn said.

Dunn said he hadn't heard of the Oath Keepers before Jan. 6 and only later learned that he had interacted with members of the group.

More than 900 people have been charged with federal crimes for their conduct on Jan. 6. Rhodes and his four associates are the first Capitol riot defendants to be tried on seditious conspiracy charges.

Original Article

Why Is Biden Avoiding Battleground States 8 Days Before Vital Midterms?

Why Is Biden Avoiding Battleground States 8 Days Before Vital Midterms? (Newsmax)

By Jack Gournell | Monday, 31 October 2022 04:56 PM EDT

President Joe Biden's relatively light midterm campaign schedule has him completely avoiding battleground states that aided in his election two years ago.

Instead, the Daily Mail notes, with just more than a week before the final in-person votes are cast, Biden is focusing on Democratic strongholds that would normally be easy wins.

In some cases, candidates don't want to be seen with the current president. Inflation is the top concern of most voters, according to multiple polls, and it has dragged Biden's approval numbers down. Some hopefuls fear they'll be dragged down with him if voters see them on stage together.

Instead, former President Barack Obama, who remains popular with Democrats, has served as a campaign surrogate.

Also, Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris produce a large "footprint" when showing up with required Secret Service protection and other White House staffers that are required to travel with them at all times. Nongovernment travel expenses must be reimbursed, so that can put a strain on campaigns as well.

The Wall Street Journal writes that since Sept. 1, Biden has visited only 6 of the 14 states with the most competitive races for U.S. Senate and governors, according to the Cook Political Report. Biden has not campaigned i, Nevada or Arizona at all, even though all three were critical to his 2020 presidential win.

He has made three campaign stops in New York and two in Maryland, but has been to Michigan and Wisconsin only one time apiece, the Journal noted. All four states are solid "blue" states with a few competitive races.

The only major battleground state he has gone to repeatedly is Pennsylvania — where he was born.

Biden is scheduled to be in the competitive state of Florida on Tuesday to campaign for Charlie Crist for governor and Val Demings for Senate. But both are down in the polls to incumbent Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Marco Rubio.

Biden lost the state in 2020 to former President Donald Trump.

He will be in Delaware, his current home state, on Monday, a traditionally blue state.

Obama will be the attraction on Tuesday in Nevada, on Wednesday in Arizona and on Saturday in Pennsylvania.

Republicans are seen as taking control of the House easily, but with a 50-50 Senate, those races, are seen as vital to controlling the president's agenda.

Original Article

Feds Concerned About Armed People at Arizona Ballot Boxes

Feds Concerned About Armed People at Arizona Ballot Boxes Feds Concerned About Armed People at Arizona Ballot Boxes (Dreamstime)

LINDSAY WHITEHURST Monday, 31 October 2022 04:31 PM EDT

Reports of people watching ballot boxes in Arizona, sometimes armed or wearing ballistic vests, raise serious concerns about voter intimidation, the Justice Department said Monday as it stepped into a lawsuit over the monitoring.

The statement from the Justice Department comes days after a federal judge refused to bar a group from monitoring the outdoor drop boxes in the suburbs of Phoenix.

Threats, intimidation and coercion are illegal under the federal Voting Rights Act, even if they doesn't succeed, the government's attorneys wrote. While lawful poll watching can support transparency, “ballot security forces” present a significant risk of voter intimidation, the court documents state.

“While the First Amendment protects expressive conduct and peaceable assembly generally, it affords no protection for threats of harm directed at voters,” U.S. government attorneys wrote.

The filing runs counter to a judge's order Friday.

U.S. District Court Judge Michael Liburdi found the allegations present “serious questions” but it wasn't clear they were a ”true threat" to specific people or groups and barring them could violate the watchers' freedom of speech.

Liburdi is a Trump appointee and a member of the Federalist Society, a conservative legal organization. The Arizona Alliance for Retired Americans is appealing the order in the swing state with several closely contested races this year.

The group sued a group calling itself Clean Elections USA after reports that people were watching 24-hour ballot boxes in Maricopa County, including some who were masked and armed. A separate suit was filed in rural Yavapai County, where the League of Women Voters alleges voters have been intimidated by three groups, including one associated with the far-right anti-government group Oath Keepers.

The two cases were merged and the Justice Department filed a statement of interest Monday. Attorneys for Clean Elections USA did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

Complaints that people were watching the boxes, taking photos and videos, and following voters alarmed local and federal law enforcement. Sheriff’s deputies began providing security around two outdoor drop boxes in Maricopa County after a pair of people carrying guns and wearing bulletproof vests showed up at a box in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa. Another 24-hour outdoor drop box in downtown Phoenix is now surrounded by a chain link fence.

The law doesn't specifically list which activities are prohibited near polling places, but video recording and photographing voters has been recognized as a concerns for decades and was named in a 1994 Justice Department letter on potential violations of the Voting Rights Act, federal attorneys wrote.

As of last week, Arizona’s secretary of state said her office has referred six cases of potential voter intimidation to the state attorney general and the U.S. Department of Justice, as well as a threatening email sent to the state elections director. Arizona law states electioneers and monitors must remain 75 feet (23 meters) from a voting location.

Groups around the United States have embraced a film called “2000 Mules” that claimed people were paid to travel among drop boxes and stuff them with fraudulent ballots during the 2020 presidential vote.

Original Article

Police: Pelosi Suspect Wanted to Hold House Speaker Hostage, Break Kneecaps

Police: Pelosi Suspect Wanted to Hold House Speaker Hostage, Break Kneecaps Police: Pelosi Suspect Wanted to Hold House Speaker Hostage, Break Kneecaps (AP)

LISA MASCARO and STEFANIE DAZIO Monday, 31 October 2022 03:19 PM EDT

The man accused of attacking Paul Pelosi, the husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, told police he wanted to hold the speaker hostage and “break her kneecaps," authorities said Monday.

David DePape, 42, confronted a sleeping Paul Pelosi in the couple's San Francisco bedroom early Friday morning, according to a federal affidavit filed in court Monday.

Federal prosecutors have filed two charges against DePape, days after police say he broke into the Pelosi's home and struck the Democratic leader’s 82-year-old husband in the head with a hammer. He was left seriously injured in the attack, underwent surgery for a skull fracture, and suffered other injuries to his arms and hands.

DePape is charged federally with influencing, impeding, or retaliating against a federal official by threatening or injuring a family member. He also faces one count of attempted kidnapping of a United States official on account of the performance of official duties.

The announcement of the federal charges comes as San Francisco's district attorney is set to announce state criminal charges as well against DePape, who police say shouted out “Where is Nancy?” during the attack. He was arrested Friday on suspicion of attempted murder, elder abuse and burglary and is expected to be arraigned on state charges Tuesday.

San Francisco's district attorney, Brooke Jenkins, also rejected conspiracy theories about the attack, confirming the assailant was targeting the Democratic leader when he broke into the couple’s home.

“At the time that the suspect had entered the Pelosi home that he was in fact, looking for Ms. Pelosi,” Jenkins told reporters late Sunday in San Francisco.

“The other thing is we want to make it clear that there were only two people in the home at the time that the police arrived, Mr. Pelosi and the suspect, there was no third person present,” she said.

“We have nothing to suggest that these two men knew each other prior to this incident.”

The district attorney’s remarks come as the gruesome attack on the husband of the House speaker is being mocked and dismissed in conservative, far-right social media, even among some Republicans leaders and those at the highest levels of social power. San Francisco’s police chief has also said the attack was targeted.

Elon Musk over the weekend tweeted, then deleted, a fringe website’s far-flung conspiracy theories to his millions of followers, as his purchase of Twitter has raised concerns that the social media platform would no longer seek to limit misinformation and hate speech.

In the toxic political climate, a week before the midterm elections, tensions are high with record security threats against lawmakers and other officials.

Paul Pelosi remains hospitalized in San Francisco after undergoing surgery for a fractured skull and other injuries. Speaker Pelosi, who was in Washington, D.C., at the time, returned swiftly to California. Unlike presidents, the congressional leaders have security protection for themselves, but not their families.

The attack was an unsettling echo of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, when rioters trying to overturn Joe Biden’s election defeat of Donald Trump stormed the halls eerily calling “Where’s Nancy?” DePape, was also carrying zip ties into the Pelosi home, two people briefed on the matter told The Associated Press. The people could not discuss details of the investigation publicly and spoke to AP on condition of anonymity.

Police were dispatched to the home in the upscale Pacific Heights neighborhood around 2:20 a.m. Friday after Paul Pelosi placed a 911 call. Jenkins said DePape broke into the rear door and made his way upstairs to confront Paul Pelosi. Police said they arrived to see the two men struggling over a hammer, when DePape struck Pelosi at least once before being tackled by officers.

The incident sparked fresh security concerns for lawmakers and other elected officials before the midterms.

With nearly 10,000 threats against members of Congress in the last year, U.S. Capitol Police have advised lawmakers to take precautions. Chief Tom Manger, who leads the U.S. Capitol Police, has said the threat from lone-wolf attackers has been growing and the most significant threat the force is facing is the historically high number of threats against lawmakers, thousands more than just a few years before.

The beating of the speaker’s husband follows other attacks and threats. This summer, a man carrying a gun, a knife and zip ties was arrested near Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s house in Maryland after threatening to kill the justice. In 2017, Republican Rep. Steve Scalise was seriously injured when a Bernie Sanders supporter opened fire on Republicans at a congressional baseball game practice.

Original Article