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Packing the Supreme Court with several new liberals is massively unpopular with the American public, according to a respected polling firm on Wednesday. Will the networks who routinely parrot the talking points of Joe Biden, even bother to inform their viewers?
Politico poll, “by a nearly 2-to-1 margin, voters oppose allowing more justices to serve on the high court.” The Morning Consult’s Cameron Easley relayed the bad news for liberals: “Just 26% of voters say Congress should pass a law allowing more than nine justices to serve on the Supreme Court, compared with 46% of voters who say it should allow only nine justices to serve.”
Most Voters Don t Want More Judges on the High Court | Opinion On 4/21/21 at 4:10 PM EDT
The Democrats are returning to their roots during Joe Biden s presidency. The Clintonian concession that the era of big government was over has been nullified. The bigger-is-better approach to public policy fueled by tax and spend is back.
Biden was portrayed as the moderate candidate in the last election, so this switch may seem odd. Those who follow politics closely know, however, that was spin. He s only middle of the road because the party has moved so far left since he first achieved national prominence.
USA TODAY
The judge presiding over the murder trial of former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin said disrespectful statements made by Rep. Maxine Waters Saturday may give the defense grounds to appeal and overturn the trial. Attorneys for the prosecution and the defense delivered closing arguments on Monday.
Waters, D-Calif., joined protests in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota on April 17, where she told the press we are looking for a guilty verdict in Chauvin s trial. If nothing (happens), then we know . we ve got to not only stay in the streets, that we ve got to fight for justice. That I am very hopeful, and I hope that we re going to get a verdict that is a guilty, guilty, guilty. And if we don t, we cannot go away, Waters said, according to video by WCCO-TV.
Voting Rights Inspire Company Words While Actions Fall Short Bloomberg 3 hrs ago Mike Dorning
(Bloomberg) Corporate America is sounding the alarm over moves in Republican-led states to limit access to voting. But few companies have been willing to put their political might behind federal laws to protect those rights, underscoring the challenge to stopping such efforts, which disproportionately affect voters of color.
Hundreds of U.S. corporations and executives signed a two-page ad published last week in the New York Times and Washington Post that opposed laws that would make it harder to vote, underscoring friction between the business community and the GOP establishment. Amazon.com Inc., Blackrock Inc., Facebook Inc., General Motors Co. and Target Corp. were among the companies that put their names to it.