https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DiZHY15Z8So0369名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。2018/02/11(日) 07:29:56.41ID:jGX/hkLe Texas R+8 Ted Cruz (R) 57% R Cook Likely R I.E. Safe R Sabato Likely R CNN Safe R 0370名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。2018/02/11(日) 08:22:35.66ID:mFvpWKIO ▲動画に映っていた子供3人は 平塚正幸の信者 ともこ の子供だろう。
Retiring Sen. Bob Corker is “listening” to Republicans urging him to run for reelection, according to a person close to him, a development that would quell anxiety among Republicans over losing a must-win seat to Democrats this fall.
The two-term Tennessee GOP senator decided to call it quits in September amid an on-again, off-again dispute with President Donald Trump that has eroded his standing with the party’s base. But now a faction of Republicans in Tennessee and Washington are worried that the favorite for the Republican Senate nomination, Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), could lose the general election ? and with it the Senate majority.
An internal poll taken in late January shows former Democratic Gov. Phil Bredesen narrowly edging out Blackburn in a hypothetical match-up. With Republicans controlling just 51 seats, a loss in Tennessee and other competitive races could put the Senate in play - despite an electoral map tilted heavily in the GOP’s favor.
The poll, conducted by Glen Bolger of Public Opinion Strategies for a Tennessee business group and obtained by POLITICO, shows Bredesen up 47 to 45, despite a sample that was overweighted with Republicans. The survey shows that voters preferred a generic Republican over a Democrat and strongly approved of Trump, signs that even in a Republican-leaning state like Tennessee, Blackburn is in for a tough race.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has spoken to Corker about whether he should reconsider his retirement, but the leader told Corker he needed to work it out with the president, a source with direct knowledge of the conversation said. Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander has also discussed the race with Corker, but is not explicitly pushing Corker to run again, said a Republican familiar with those talks.
マコーネルは再選出馬問題に対しコーカーのトランプに対する姿勢の転換を条件としている節があるし 同僚のアレクザンダーも必ずしも好意的ではないようだ 0396エルトゥールル ◆hbayNPWdX7g8 2018/02/13(火) 18:31:04.46ID:UiFSeM/0 Yet Corker would almost certainly need a blessing from Trump to have any hope of beating Blackburn, who has received money from Vice President Mike Pence’s political action committee. Corker has reached out to the White House to gauge Trump’s support, according to a source familiar with those conversations. And almost all of the dozen Republican officials and operatives interviewed for this story say Corker would need a presidential endorsement to have any chance against Blackburn.
今更コーカーが出たところであれだけトランプを批判していてどの口で、という批判は当然起こりそうだな 0411エルトゥールル ◆hbayNPWdX7g8 2018/02/13(火) 21:24:47.91ID:UiFSeM/0>>409 実際トランプは上記のリンク先でそう言ってる 妊娠20週後の中絶禁止は世界の潮流だと ファクトチェックしてないから事実かどうかは分からない 0412エルトゥールル ◆hbayNPWdX7g8 2018/02/13(火) 22:10:19.70ID:UiFSeM/0 he vote by the Senate rejects scientific fact and puts the United States out of the mainstream in the family of nations, in which only 7 out of 198 nations, including China and North Korea, allow elective abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy.
The vote by the Senate rejects scientific fact and puts the United States out of the mainstream in the family of nations, in which only 7 out of 198 nations, including China and North Korea, allow elective abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy. 0414名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。2018/02/13(火) 22:28:23.18ID:MPA/mC9e 保守派におもねるなら、中期とか後期とか言わないで、受胎した瞬間から、それは1人の人間だと言わないとな。 0415名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。2018/02/14(水) 00:52:49.52ID:ArNt4TgE elective abortions。 0416名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。2018/02/14(水) 07:44:03.51ID:h6IZ9eYt トランプ政権:低所得者食料補助の現金削減、食品直接支給を提案 Alan Bjerga 2018年2月13日 15:32 JST https://www.bloomberg.co.jp/news/articles/2018-02-13/P42OE96JIJUO01 フードスタンプ制度の改革によって10年間で2140億ドル節減見込む 現金支出の3割削減を提案−代わりに「100%米国産食品」を支給
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DiZHY15Z8So0431名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。2018/02/15(木) 06:53:55.95ID:S+ZvRGP6 Poll: GOP gains on generic ballot, Trump approval ticks upward By STEVEN SHEPARD 02/14/2018 05:40 AM EST https://www.politico.com/story/2018/02/14/trump-polling-democrats-republicans-407315 Republicans have erased the Democratic advantage on the generic congressional ballot in a new POLITICO/ Morning Consult poll that, for the first time since April, also shows President Donald Trump’s approval rating equaling the percentage of voters who disapprove of his job performance.
Fully 39 percent of registered voters say they would support the GOP candidate for Congress in their district, while 38 percent would back the Democratic candidate. Nearly a quarter of voters, 23 percent, are undecided.
Voters are split almost evenly along party lines. Democratic voters break for their party, 85 percent to 5 percent, while Republicans similarly favor the GOP, 84 percent to 8 percent. Among independent voters, 26 percent would vote for the Democrat, 25 percent for the Republican and nearly half, 49 percent, are undecided.
The GOP’s 1-point advantage comes after three months of tracking in which Democrats maintained a lead ranging between 2 and 10 points on the generic ballot. That has been generally smaller than the party’s lead in other public surveys: The most recent RealClearPolitics average shows Democrats ahead by 7 points on the generic ballot, though that’s down from a high of 13 points late last year.
The new year has also produced a Trump polling bump. In the new poll, 47 percent of voters approve of the job Trump is doing as president, while the same percentage disapprove.
Among Democrats, 16 percent approve of Trump’s job performance and 80 percent disapprove. The numbers are almost exactly inverted among Republicans: 82 percent approve, while 16 percent disapprove. Trump is still underwater among independents: 39 percent approve and 49 percent disapprove. 0432名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。2018/02/15(木) 11:17:51.73ID:f0MAUbG0>>427 ラスムッセンだけ信用するんじゃなかったの? -5だけど 0433名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。2018/02/15(木) 13:50:05.55ID:NrIikEtg>>432 #RCPTOO
Cramer, a staunch Trump ally, acknowledged earlier this week that he was being pushed to reconsider by forces both in Washington and in North Dakota. Trump reportedly was among those applying pressure.
Cramer's change of heart comes as Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., also is said to be reconsidering his decision to leave Congress at the end of his current term.
"I don't really have anything to say," Corker told NPR Monday evening. But on Tuesday evening a spokeswoman suggested Corker could be rethinking his decision to retire.
"In recent days, people across Tennessee have reached out to Senator Corker with concerns about the outcome of this election because they believe it could determine control of the Senate and the future of our agenda," Micah Johnson, a Corker spokeswoman, said in a statement provided to NPR. "The senator has been encouraged to reconsider his decision and is listening closely."