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Page 10 - ஸியீந கல்லூரி ஆராய்ச்சி நிறுவனம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Churchill: One man s plan to beat Andrew Cuomo

Churchill: One man s plan to beat Andrew Cuomo Churchill: One man s plan to beat Andrew Cuomo A Republican from the Buffalo area says the GOP should open its gubernatorial primary to unenrolled voters. Party chairman Nick Langworthy says no way. FacebookTwitterEmail 1of6 Joel Giambra, formerly the Erie County executive, says the GOP should open its gubernatorial primary to unenrolled voters.CINDY SCHULTZ/DGShow MoreShow Less 2of6 Gov. Andrew Cuomo holds a news conference in New York on Monday, May, 3, 2021. The embattled Democrat is up for reelection in 2022.Timothy A. Clary/APShow MoreShow Less 3of6 4of6 In this image from video, Rep. Lee Zeldin, R-N.Y., speaks as the House reconvenes to debate the objection to confirm the Electoral College vote from Arizona, after protesters stormed into the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021. Zeldin is considered the early Republican frontrunner for next year s gubernatorial election.Associated PressShow MoreShow Less

Like searching for a unicorn : Few moderates in sight as GOP plots Cuomo takedown

Like searching for a unicorn : Few moderates in sight as GOP plots Cuomo takedown POLITICO 2 hrs ago By Anna Gronewold © Stefani Reynolds/Pool via AP Rep. Lee Zeldin notched another clear marker when he announced he’d been backed by Republican county chairs representing more than half the party’s weighted vote. ALBANY, N.Y. New York Republicans are about to get their best chance in years to take back state government: A five-alarm scandal that’s left Gov. Andrew Cuomo facing an impeachment inquiry and multiple investigations. But 15 years after the departure of George Pataki a moderate and the only Republican to win a New York governor’s race in five decades the GOP is bucking conventional wisdom that suggests a center-right gubernatorial candidate is their best, perhaps only, shot at success.

Two-thirds of voters oppose court-packing Supreme Court: poll

A general view of the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, November 15, 2016. | Reuters/Carlos Barria A little over two-thirds of Americans oppose the idea of expanding the number of justices on the U.S. Supreme Court, according to a new poll. The survey of over 1,100 U.S. registered voters was conducted by Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy, Inc. and sponsored by the conservative legal nonprofit First Liberty Institute, which is devoted to protecting religious freedom rights.  The poll gauged the opinions of voters about the debate over adding seats to the nine-justice Supreme Court days after President Joe Biden established a commission to look into adding justices to the Supreme Court. 

After Pandemic Year, Siena Releases 14th Annual Business Leaders Study

3:33 The Siena College Research Institute has released its 14th annual survey of Upstate New York Business Leaders. Don Levy, director of the Siena College Research Institute, says the survey, released earlier this month, found 80 percent of more than 1,000 upstate CEOs polled agree that economic conditions in New York state have worsened since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. “Over half of CEOs told us that the demand for their product or service decreased over the course of the year due to COVID 51 percent. That number is even higher. Over 60 percent of CEOs in fields like engineering and construction, our friends in food and beverage, well over 60 percent said the demand decreased. How about revenue? A staggering figure, really, 67 percent of the revenue decreased. Again, specifically in the Southern Tier, we saw that to be over 70 percent, and in engineering construction over 70 percent said that their revenues decreased. “

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