colbert. good evening, reverend sharpton. always good to see. i ve been keeping abreast of your activities this week, and want to applaud you for your protest with respect to the pushback that we are facing around d.c. and i efforts across the country. but i do have a quick question for you. for a policy measure, what s it gonna take for us to actually move the needle and finally keep dni from having the attacks that it s currently facing? i think we must make cities, municipalities, states and others, say that the a.i. must be enacted if people are gonna get state city contracts are funds. these businessmen, when we picketed on thursday, i ll do business in the public space. they cannot do public space business with taxpayer dollars if they re not trying to make it an equal place for all. so we need to have politicians putting legislation and policy in place to protect dei. well, that protection doesn t start without any pressure. and so with that, reverend sharpton, t
things they care about. we don t have to make things up when the republicans do their big tax bill in 2017, they said it will reduce your taxes to the average middle class person. it was aimed at the rich. we are talking about exactly what this bill does. we don t have to make it up because we are aiming directly at the american people and what they want. so, let me say this. say no to something is easy. it gets mistaken that no, say no, that is tough. there is no strategy or counting to saying no. it s simple, it is easy. legislating is about getting to yes. i ve always been a yes person. not a no person. always wanted to get something done. if you ask me, what helped you get the stun? some people have asked me that. i put it in one word, persistence. i just tell you a brief story for those of you who haven t heard about my dad. my dad passed away in november, he would have been 99 on flight day, june 14th. he was i won t go into the whole story, but he was a brilliant par
all that is essentially one extended campaign regardless of the formal venue? yeah, it doesn t matter to donald trump whether he s in washington, d.c., saying crazy stuff or even iowa saying crazy stuff. he says crazy stuff wherever he is. and the republicans can t get up and repeat the stop no matter where he happens to be. i think with the trials and all that they benefit him to a degree among the republican primary because they actually don t need to meet him and talk to him, if you meet him and talk to him, he drains your eyebrows is this what we want to do in the course of this. i agree with everything that s been said, donald trump is toxic to the republican party. but donald trump is not toxic within the republican party, and that s the problem. nick pressley, thank you, matt and juanita, stick around so stay with me. coming up after the break, republican hopefuls prepare for yet another presidential debate without donald trump as a former president holds a
"We're running right up against the deadline here, so you might not want to rely on the U.S. Postal Service to get there on time," the director of one group said.
Cleveland’s principal voter advocacy group, Northeast Ohio Voter Advocates, gained approval in mid-September to canvass cell blocks and help inmates register to vote and request mail-in ballots. The pandemic, jail staff shortages, and the lack of a clear policy governing advocate access meant this was the first time NOVA entered the jail since 2018.