Gideon Saar s first ad that was produced by his Lincoln Project advisors.
Gideon Saar, currently the most popular anti-Netanyahu candidate, has hired the services of four American strategic consultants, all former Republicans, whose most recent endeavor has been The Lincoln Project, aimed at preventing the re-election of Donald Trump and defeating all the Republican Senators who were running in close races in 2020, Israeli journalist Amit Segal reported Monday.
The four, Steve Schmidt, Stuart Stevens, Reed Galen, and Rick Wilson, used to work for the election campaigns of GW Bush, John McCain, Mitt Romney, and Arnold Schwarzenegger. But on Dec. 7, 2019, they announced in a NY Time op-ed by George Conway, Steve Schmidt, John Weaver, and Rick Wilson, the foundation of the Lincoln Project political action committee. Other co-founders include Jennifer Horn, Ron Steslow, Reed Galen, and Mike Madrid. Stuart Stevens joined the project in May 2020.
For decades, the United States has lacked a fully credible and feasible overall strategy for backing liberal democracy. To restore the right kind of US global leadership, President-elect Joe Biden's administration should develop one.
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Editor’s Note: The article originally described Luce as an MSNBC contributor. Luce has been a guest on MSNBC multiple times, but is not a contributor. He is the national U.S. editor for the Financial Times.
MSNBC guest Ed Luce said in a Monday appearance on “Morning Joe” that Republican Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse should show the same courage “all the time” that has been displayed by Russian dissident Alexei Navalny in his return to Russia after nearly being assassinated.
Luce was discussing the stances that senators have been taking in response to President Donald Trump’s second impeachment and the potential impeachment trial when he brought up Navalny and made the comparison to Sasse.
Senate Rejects Hawleyâs Attempt To Preserve Confederate Military Base Names Photo by Mizzou CAFNR licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0
The Senate rejected an effort by Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) just before the July 4 holiday to preserve the names of U.S. military facilities named after leaders of the Confederacy.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell filed a cloture motion to end debate on the bill without a vote on Hawley s amendment.
The amendment would have eliminated a requirement â agreed to on June 11 by the Senate Armed Services Committee â that the Defense Department remove the names of Confederate generals from 10 major military bases within three years.