February 11, 2021 - 9:50am
At 85, the most influential Republican political donor in modern U.S. history says he has some regrets. According to soft-ball corporate media interviews and a new book he s written, billionaire industrialist Charles Koch wishes that his more than five decades of organizing and funding far-right, partisan politicians, advocacy groups, and academia had slightly less partisan results.
Koch s latest media makeover strains credulity. The man spent his entire adult life, while helming one of the largest and dirtiest private companies in the nation, working to fundamentally alter society and move it towards his ideal: a libertarian utopia with low taxes, no unions, weak regulations, and unlimited corporate political spending.
If You Thought The 2020 Elections Were Chaotic, Just Wait zerohedge.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from zerohedge.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In my previous article, I laid out the general case for why conservatives need to take action to ensure the taking back of the House and Senate in 2022 and electing a Republican president in 2024.
ANALYSIS/OPINION:
Officials with the Nevada Secretary of State had a problem emerging on their hands in early 2020, and they knew it. The state had embarked on the grand experiment of automatically registering voters (AVR) as they were serviced by the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) and all the typical warnings of such systems were quickly coming true.
Election officials in Clark, Churchill, and Humboldt Counties were emailing about green card holders with driver’s licenses showing up in their offices complaining they were now registered to vote. Whether they presented foreign identification or simply declared to not be U.S. citizens at the DMV did not matter they were still hitting the voter rolls. It wasn’t supposed to be this way. Proponents of AVR, and the Nevada DMV thereafter, promised that foreign nationals would be filtered out.
Daily Monitor
Saturday February 06 2021
Summary
Rt Rev Fred Sheldon Mwesigwa says: There is no doubt that millions viewed Trump as a divisive, bigoted and mean president.
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As Donald Trump finally bowed out of the Office of the President of the United States of America (POTUS) on January 20, he left behind a legacy of being perhaps the most loathed, but almost in equal measure, the most loved United States President.
The massive record voter turn out in the 2020 elections reached fever pitch when 155 million citizens turned up for the decisive historical elections. A whooping 81 million is recorded as having cast their ballot against Donald Trump in favour of Joe Biden. While the US election is influenced by several factors like the economy, climate change policies, gun ownership rights, it is essentially an ideological battle.