Author Topic: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States  (Read 174585 times)

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1480 on: January 29, 2022, 04:53:28 pm »
This is how you throw shade on Republican voter registration restrictions.  Get old veterans outraged.


The Guardian
Second world war veteran twice denied absentee ballot under Texas voting law
Gloria Oladipo - 1h ago


A 95-year-old second world war veteran twice denied an absentee ballot under a restrictive Texas voting law has attracted support from prominent figures including Beto O’Rourke, a voting rights campaigner and former presidential candidate now running for Texas governor.

Kenneth Thompson, who served in the US army in Europe, told Click2Houston, a Harris county news outlet, he had voted in every election since he was 21 and even remembered paying a 50-cent poll tax in the 1950s.

“I’ve been voting many, many years and I’ve never missed a vote,” he said, adding that he considers voting a duty.

But under a voting restriction bill known as SB1 and passed last August, Thompson could be unable to meet the state’s 31 January voter registration deadline for an absentee ballot.

According to the new law, Thompson is required to submit a social security or driver’s license number that matches state or county records. When Thompson registered to vote decades ago, however, such requirements were not in place.

“He registered to vote in the 1940s and they didn’t require that,” said Delinda Holland, Thompson’s daughter.

Support for Thompson has poured in, including from O’Rourke, who tweeted out Thompson’s story and a call to fight against voting laws introduced by Republicans seeking to restrict voting among communities likely to vote Democratic.

“Now we need to fight for him by taking on [Governor Greg] Abbott’s voter suppression law that is making it harder for Kenneth and millions of other Texans to participate in our democracy,” O’Rourke tweeted.

As Thompson did not meet new requirements under SB1, his application for an absentee ballot was denied twice. He says he was not notified either time by county officials and had to call to confirm his status himself.

“There’s gonna be a lot of people not gonna vote,” said Thompson. “If I hadn’t have called in about mine, people wouldn’t have known.”

On behalf of her dad, she said, Holland tried to call authorities including the office of the Texas secretary of state, seeking to add his license number to his registration file. She discovered there wasn’t a way to do so, which meant he would have to re-register.

“We know it’s a new law, we’re happy to correct [his registration],” said Holland. “He’s a law-abiding citizen. He doesn’t want to miss voting and yet there’s no mechanism to add that driver’s license to your record.”

Thompson said he now checked his mailbox every day, hoping his absentee ballot had arrived. If it did not, he said, he would vote in person.

“I can get out and move around and go to a regular polling place,” he said, “but … lots of people just can’t.”

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/second-world-war-veteran-twice-denied-absentee-ballot-under-texas-voting-law/ar-AAThbLL?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531

Kill the humourless

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1481 on: February 14, 2022, 09:45:19 pm »
Insider
Manchin wants Sinema to take a fresh look at tax rate hikes on corporations and the rich, but she's not budging
Joseph Zeballos-Roig 5 hours ago


Manchin wants Sinema to revisit her opposition to hiking tax rates on the rich and corporations.

"Why can't we just get a good solid tax plan that works?" he told the Wall Street Journal.
But Sinema doesn't appear like she's dropping her opposition to those tax increases anytime soon.

Sen. Joe Manchin is starting to turn up the heat on another Democratic holdout with competing demands on President Joe Biden's spending bill.

The conservative West Virginia Democrat has ramped up calls this month to step up taxes on the richest Americans and large firms. But he's likely to encounter resistance from Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, who shut the door on hiking tax rates on both of those groups last fall.

"I respect her and what her concerns may be, but I think basically our financial situation is getting worse, not better, so maybe we can take another look at it," Manchin told The Wall Street Journal. "I would hope so."

"Why can't we just get a good solid tax plan that works? That's the first thing to do." he told the Journal.

The Arizona Democrat doesn't seem like she'll budge anytime soon and it's unclear whether she'd drop her opposition when Democrats take another swing at passing a skinnier spending bill later this year. A spokesperson for her office opened the door to other plans that strengthen economic competitiveness and add jobs.

"There are many ways to pay for such ideas that do not include tax-rate increases that hurt small businesses and our economic competitiveness while we continue to emerge from a pandemic and economic downturn," a Sinema spokesperson told the Journal.

The competing demands from the pair underscore the difficult and tricky path ahead for Democrats trying to resuscitate the spending plan. Manchin torpedoed the House bill in December, and all Senate Democrats must coalesce around another package to muscle it through the 50-50 chamber along party lines.

Sinema's opposition to tax rates prompted Democrats to scramble in the fall for new ways to finance their plans to expand healthcare, childcare and education. Many in the party appeared taken by surprise at the prospect that Democrats could blow a campaign pledge to roll back the Republican tax law.

"​​Boy, oh boy, that would be a great irony — if a Democratic president, House and Senate embraced the 2017 tax cuts," Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia told Insider last October.

Manchin has said he backs hiking the corporate tax rate to 25% as part of a future spending bill. He told NBC News earlier this month that he's onboard with a 15% corporate minimum tax, a 28%
capital gains tax, and closing other loopholes.

https://www.businessinsider.com/manchin-sinema-to-budge-tax-rate-hikes-corporations-rich-2022-2
Kill the humourless

Offline GreatEx

  • pectations. might be a cunt but isn't a capitalist cunt. Blissfully ignorant.
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 8,456
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1482 on: February 15, 2022, 12:26:18 am »
https://twitter.com/alexanderbolton/status/1493342904764579846

Quote
Joe Manchin tells @mkraju and other reporters that if there’s another SCOTUS vacancy right before midterm election, the Senate shouldn’t vote on Biden’s nominee before the 2023 majority is known.

“I’m not going to be hypocrital on that,” he says.

Beyond parody, that country.

Offline Chakan

  • Chaka Chaka.....is in love with Aristotle but only for votes. The proud owner of some very private piles and an inflatable harem! Winner of RAWK's Carabao Cup captian contest.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 91,079
  • Internet Terrorist lvl VI
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1483 on: February 15, 2022, 12:30:58 am »
Democrats fucking each other over again. Well in. What an utter cluster fuck.

Offline Red-Soldier

  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 16,857
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1484 on: February 15, 2022, 04:31:10 pm »
Ocasio-Cortez: ‘Very real risk’ US democracy won’t exist in 10 years

Efforts by Republicans to restrict voting rights could result in return to Jim Crow era, says progressive in New Yorker interview


Quote
The progressive New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez believes the Republican-led pressure on political systems is so great that there is “a very real risk” democracy will cease to exist in the US within a decade.

The leftist Democratic politician derided efforts by Republican legislatures around the country to restrict voting rights as the “opening salvos” in a war on democracy, which she said could result in a return to the Jim Crow-era disenfranchisement of racial minorities.

In the interview with the New Yorker, she warned that the clock was ticking for Joe Biden and other Democratic leaders to do anything about it, with huge chunks of the president’s agenda, including legislation to protect voting rights, stalled in Congress by more conservative or moderate members of her own party.

“Honestly, it is a shitshow,” Ocasio-Cortez said of working in the same Democratic-controlled Congress in which centrist senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema have blocked both electoral reforms and Biden’s ambitious Build Back Better social spending initiative.

“We don’t have much time,” she said. “The president has not been using his executive power to the extent that some would say is necessary.”

The issue of voting rights was a dominant theme of the interview with New Yorker editor David Remnick, who asked her about her previous use of the phrase “if we have a democracy 10 years from now”.

“There’s a very real risk that we will not,” she said. “What we risk is having a government that perhaps postures as a democracy, and may try to pretend that it is, but isn’t.

“We’ve already seen the opening salvos of this, where you have a very targeted, specific attack on the right to vote across the United States, particularly in areas where Republican power is threatened by changing electorates and demographics.

“You have white nationalist, reactionary politics starting to grow into a critical mass … the continued sophisticated takeover of our democratic systems in order to turn them into undemocratic systems, all in order to overturn results that a party in power may not like.”

Although she believes the situation “is not beyond hope”, Ocasio-Cortez fears inaction will lead to a “return to Jim Crow”, a reference to repressive laws in the US south to the mid-20th century designed to enforce racial segregation and disenfranchise Blacks.

“You have it already happening in Texas, where Jim Crow-style disenfranchisement laws have already been proposed,” she said.

“You have the complete erasure and attack on our own understanding of history, to replace teaching history with institutionalized propaganda from white nationalist perspectives in our schools. This is what the scaffolding of Jim Crow was.

“The question we’re really facing is, was the last 50 to 60 years after the Civil Rights Act just a mere flirtation that the United States had with a multiracial democracy that we will then decide was inconvenient for those in power? And we will revert to what we had before?”

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/feb/15/aoc-alexandria-ocasio-cortez-democracy

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1485 on: February 15, 2022, 04:54:33 pm »
The way to fight Repug roadblocks to voting is to enrage the disenfranchised into getting registered.

Wait'll you see the new Georgia and North Carolina.
Kill the humourless

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1486 on: February 17, 2022, 02:54:01 am »
I see a ship carrying 1200 Porsches and 189 Bentleys is on fire off the coast of Portugal.

Now prices will go up even further.

Fewmin, me  :no.  Thanks a lot, Biden!
« Last Edit: February 18, 2022, 03:52:00 pm by jambutty »
Kill the humourless

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1487 on: February 17, 2022, 03:12:56 am »
NBC News
Democrats to Biden: Time to make changes at the White House
Jonathan Allen and Natasha Korecki - 7h ago


WASHINGTON — There’s a growing sense among Democrats that it’s time for a change of course at the White House — whether that means new strategy or new staffers.

On the political front, President Joe Biden’s numbers aren’t getting better, his message isn’t resonating, and his party’s midterm prospects are bleak. On policy, his Build Back Better plan is dead, Covid is alive, and inflation is rising.

If he doesn’t take a new tack soon, it may be impossible for him to deliver for the public, help his party in November or move an agenda in the final three years of his term, according to a dozen lawmakers, White House officials and veteran Democratic Party operatives who spoke to NBC News about their concerns.

“A sign of a good leader and a successful executive is to identify the policies or personnel choices that have not resulted in success and make necessary course corrections — because it’s too important not to,” said Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla., a co-chair of the centrist Blue Dog Coalition, which has chafed over Biden’s efforts to accommodate the progressive wing at the perceived expense of moderates.

While only a handful of Democrats have called for heads to roll in the White House — even privately — there is broader agreement within the party that Biden can’t keep doing the same things and expect different results. Suggestions range from picking a handful of high-stakes fights with Republicans to elevating Cabinet secretaries to altering his inner circle by addition, subtraction or both.

A member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, speaking on the condition of anonymity to avoid angering the president, said the U.S. exit from Afghanistan and the coronavirus pandemic have led voters to question a key component of Biden’s campaign-trail sales pitch: that his team would be competent.

Replacing top aides, including chief of staff Ron Klain, would send a signal to the public that Biden understands something has to change, this lawmaker added.

“Biden’s the star quarterback, and you can’t fire the star quarterback, so you start looking at the head coach and the offensive coordinator and the defensive coordinator,” the lawmaker said, pointing to Klain as the architect of a failed strategy to advance Biden’s agenda. “Fairly or unfairly in a situation like this, you start looking at the person who is in the chief of staff position.”

The lawmaker pointed to three moments last year, describing them as strategic failures by the White House. After months of fellow Democrats’ berating of Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., for failing to make his positions known on the Build Back Better plan, it was revealed that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., had signed a document in which Manchin had recorded his priorities for the legislation. And Biden twice traveled to Capitol Hill to meet with House Democrats, with major bills pending, only to decline to ask them to vote for his infrastructure measure.

“There was no strategy. That just put the president in a horrible, horrible situation,” the lawmaker said. “That has to fall on the head of the chief of staff.”

Another Democratic lawmaker applauded Biden’s recent promise to travel the country more but said he needs a change at the top.

“I don’t think there’s anything abnormal after a year of looking at your staffing situation and maybe shaking things up,” this lawmaker said. “My hope is that he does do that.”

Specifically, the House member said, Klain hasn’t been an enforcer with progressives on Capitol Hill, resulting in the delay of the infrastructure law and futility so far on the Build Back Better measure.

“You’ve got to crack some heads sometimes,” the lawmaker said.

But Biden has long been reluctant to fire veteran aides or bring new ones close. The upper echelon of his administration is full of people who were members of his staff when he was vice president or when he was a senator. They include Klain, deputy chief of staff Bruce Reed, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, advisers Mike Donilon and Steve Ricchetti and national security adviser Jake Sullivan.

“I’m satisfied with my team,” Biden said last month at a White House news conference, where he said he would travel more, raise money for the midterms and seek more advice from outside experts.

That hasn’t changed in the intervening weeks, White House spokesman Chris Meagher said.

“The president has spoken to questions around any staff changes in the past,” Meagher said. “There’s no change since his comments.”

Former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle, a member of the board of the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank, said the core group of staffers is a source of strength for Biden and that the White House has accomplished a lot in terms of economic growth, combating Covid and reducing poverty among children.

“The president has got a terrific team that he trusts, has great chemistry with,” said Daschle, who is also a registered lobbyist for Comcast, the parent company of NBCUniversal, among other companies. “The last thing they need to do right now is change the people.”

Most of the Democrats who were interviewed praised Biden for enacting the infrastructure law and a Covid relief measure, as well as for overseeing an economy that has grown and added more than 6 million jobs — a record for a president’s first year in office.

A White House official defended Biden’s record on Capitol Hill when asked about some Democrats’ frustration with Klain.

“The reality is there is a 50-50 Senate and four-vote margin in the House for Democrats,” the official said. “Getting anything passed is incredibly difficult. The fact that we got the American Rescue Plan passed, as well as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law passed, is remarkable and speaks to the skill of the team we have led by the president, and BBB is a work in progress that we are confident we can still get done.”

The official noted that Biden’s agenda reflects his campaign platform and added a question: “Are those criticizing saying the Biden administration should not have done what it was elected to do by the American people?”

Klain and other key decision-makers within the White House get the most criticism, public and private, because they have the highest profiles, said Matt Bennett, a co-founder of the center-left think tank Third Way.

“When you have the largest profile you also wear the largest target, and time immemorial when you have White House shake-ups you shake up the people who are most visible,” Bennett said. It’s “usually done as a concession to the voices in that party who are nervous, but I don’t think it has the impact people believe it does. There’s no magic person that can come in and fix all these problems.”

Adding new strategic thinkers could be a productive route, Bennett said, but mainly, the administration needs to start striking the right chords in public comments about Covid and inflation.

“The whole administration could be clearer about arguing how they expect this to go. I think they know that and they’re working on it,” he said. Bennett said that with the economy, Biden should be hammering home that he will do everything in his power to drive down prices, clear up the supply chain and work out kinks in the labor market.

“He needs to be seen as working on those aggressively, and they know this. None of this is news to them,” he said.

As the pressure mounts, there have been signs of finger-pointing in the news media as Democrats look for a way forward. The White House recently raced to reassure Latino leaders rankled by White House officials’ criticism of Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra’s job performance in news reports, with Biden and top staff members giving Becerra a tight embrace.

NBC News reported that Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison had considered leaving his post before the midterms because of tension with Biden’s aides. Biden plans to meet with Harrison soon, the White House said.

In an interview this month, Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, said the Becerra episode was the result of larger structural issues with how the White House has decided to carry out key priorities, such as the coronavirus response.

“You don’t handicap your secretary by layering them under somebody else,” Castro said.

Democrats say the signs of infighting matter, because Biden can ill afford to preside over dysfunction in his administration when he is still trying to convince the public that he can unify and run the country. There is some level of jockeying within every White House, where ambitious high achievers can clash with one another in a crucible of high stakes for both careers and the country.

That is only aggravated by the public dissatisfaction with Biden.

Inside the White House, some aides fear that Biden won’t be able to make changes in time to help the party in the midterms or himself in 2024. So far, even amid a handful of high-profile departures, Biden’s top team has stayed in place.

“He has blind spots with staff,” said a second White House official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak on the record. “He should not have the second-worst approval rating of all time given the positive things that he’s done. If that were me, I would re-evaluate the advice that I’m getting and the people that I surround myself with. I don’t see that happening.”

The same official lamented a sense of strategic drift and said that “everyone’s resigned” to Democrats’ getting thwacked in the midterms.

“It feels like there is a wave coming and no one is doing anything to stop it,” the official said.

Philippe Reines, a onetime top adviser to Hillary Clinton, said a staff shake-up wouldn’t be a magic bullet.

“He’s not one staffer away from a higher approval rating,” Reines said. 

Reines attributed the high disapproval numbers to an electorate so polarized that half would never support Biden. The numbers, he said, also reflect discontent over an unrealistic expectation that the sheer act of ousting former President Donald Trump and electing Biden would shut off the noise and bring a semblance of civility back to politics.

“There’s a national hangover, and when you have a hangover you just want to sit in peace and quiet, pop some Advil and drink some water,” Reines said. “Instead, it’s become a situation where everyone’s got a hangover but we’re stuck at a rock concert.”

As a candidate, Biden vowed to turn down the temperature in Washington, and a core tension of his presidency has been between impulses to demonstrate civility and attack political opponents. Faiz Shakir, who managed Bernie Sanders’ 2020 presidential campaign, said Biden resurrected his campaign when he began to take more aggressive swipes at his opponents.

Calls for a staff shake-up risk “infantilizing Biden” and suggesting that he’s a puppet of his aides, Shakir said, and adding a fighter to his operation could clarify where he has the most passionate disagreements with Republicans.

“On the political score, it would be helpful to have some people who have some sharper elbows, for the president to make sure that side of him is projected,” Shakir said.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/democrats-to-biden-time-to-make-changes-at-the-white-house/ar-AATVbSB?ocid=msedgntp
Kill the humourless

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1488 on: February 19, 2022, 01:13:13 am »
Business Insider
Bernie Sanders takes thinly-veiled swipe at Manchin for siding with the GOP and opposing child tax credit checks
jzeballos@businessinsider.com (Joseph Zeballos-Roig,Juliana Kaplan) - 7h ago


Sanders indirectly jabbed at Manchin for siding with the GOP to oppose checks to families.

"50 Republicans and 1 corporate Democrat allowed the $300 a month Child Tax Credit to expire," Sanders tweeted.

AOC also assailed the conservative Democrat for "nuking" the child allowance.

Senator Bernie Sanders said on Twitter that ending monthly checks to families was "morally obscene," after new research illustrated just how many children fell into poverty as payments dried up.

In December, families across the country stopped receiving up to $300 monthly child tax credit checks per kid — money that had been a "godsend" for some parents receiving them. The IRS said that over 36 million families received about $16 billion in the last batch of payments on December 15.

Sanders cited a new analysis from the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at Columbia, which found that 3.7 million kids slid back into poverty with the credit's expiration. Child poverty rose to 17% in January compared to 12% in December, a 41% increase that brought it in line with late 2020 levels. The researchers found that Latino and Black children saw the largest rises in poverty.

—Bernie Sanders (@SenSanders) February 18, 2022
"How did this happen? 50 Republicans and 1 corporate Democrat allowed the $300 a month Child Tax Credit to expire. That is morally obscene," Sanders wrote. Sanders' office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on why the credit ended.

Despite calls to keep the checks going, Democrats were unable to win over a holdout in their own ranks: Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia. A one-year extension was included in the now-stalled Build Back Better plan, which the conservative Democrat declared dead earlier this year.

Manchin has said he wants only working parents to receive the tax credit, making the poorest parents ineligible. He's been skeptical of sending direct payments without conditions and privately raised concerns about parents spending the cash aid on drugs.

His office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Stormy Johnson, a single mother from Manchin's home state of West Virginia, previously told Insider's Erin Snodgrass that she was "heartbroken" over losing the payments.

"Without these payments, I won't eat so my kids can," she said.

Sanders isn't the only progressive to take aim at fellow Democrats over the credit's expiration. On Thursday night, Representative Alexandria Ocasio Cortez of New York assailed Manchin without naming him.

—Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) February 18, 2022
"One US Senator 'heard stories' about people allegedly using the Child Tax Credit 'for drugs' without any evidence or data to back it up," she wrote on Twitter. "He then used that as justification to nuke the entire national program, causing millions of kids to fall into poverty in weeks. Horrifying."


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/bernie-sanders-takes-thinly-veiled-swipe-at-manchin-for-siding-with-the-gop-and-opposing-child-tax-credit-checks/ar-AAU2FyI?ocid=msedgntp
Kill the humourless

Offline Jiminy Cricket

  • Batshit fucker and Chief Yuletide Porcine Voyeur
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 10,274
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1489 on: February 19, 2022, 10:39:30 am »
Last week, Cheney and Kinzinger did not support the bipartisan bill that raised the debt ceiling through to the beginning of December too. Thankfully for them, there's been another vote tonight regarding Steve Bannon which will help to keep some useful idiot Dems swooning over them.
I think the point is - like a few old Tories in the UK - they generally adhere to broad democratic principles. Obviously, they should support voting rights reform, but continuing to speak up for them when they are on the right - I mean 'correct' - side of the fence on a particular issue is the right thing to do. Puritanism is dangerous, be it on the right, or the left.

Edit: Ha. I just realised that I am months behind on this thread. Feel free to ignore the above. :)
« Last Edit: February 19, 2022, 10:43:23 am by Jiminy Cricket »
would rather have a wank wearing a barb wire glove
If you're chasing thrills, try a bit of auto-asphyxiation with a poppers-soaked orange in your gob.

Online Ray K

  • Loves a shiny helmet. The new IndyKalia.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 36,271
  • Truthiness
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1490 on: February 25, 2022, 01:59:28 pm »
@jaketapper
According to a source who has been notified about the decision, President Biden has decided to nominate to the Supreme Court Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit

Jackson, 51, has served as an assistant federal public defender, a commissioner on the U.S. Sentencing Commission, and on two prestigious federal courts. She will be the first African-American woman in the history of the United States to be nominated to the US Supreme Court.
"We have to change from doubters to believers"

Twitter: @rjkelly75

Offline Boston always unofficial

  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 3,369
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1491 on: February 25, 2022, 04:57:54 pm »
She's related by marriage to Paul Ryan,that could make for some awkward thanksgiving day conversations,when the republican/trump/ fox attack fascists go after her?

Offline John C

  • RAWK Staff
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 42,517
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1492 on: February 25, 2022, 07:41:21 pm »
This is an excellent choice for SCOTUS, apparently she is tenacious. Another good thing difficult to be ecstatic about presently.
Good luck Ketanji.

Offline RedG13

  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 6,952
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1493 on: February 25, 2022, 09:31:27 pm »
She's related by marriage to Paul Ryan,that could make for some awkward thanksgiving day conversations,when the republican/trump/ fox attack fascists go after her?
Paul Ryan was one the people who spoke in her favor when she was nominated for the DC Circuit.
She is an excellent choice and should be able to get at least 52 votes if not more in the senate

Online Red Beret

  • Yellow Beret. Wants to sit in the Lobster Pot. Fat-fingered. Key. Boa. Rd. Kille. R. tonunlick! Soggy Knickers King. Bed-Exiting / Grunting / Bending Down / Cum Face Champion 2023.
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 52,223
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1494 on: February 25, 2022, 09:44:45 pm »
Paul Ryan was one the people who spoke in her favor when she was nominated for the DC Circuit.
She is an excellent choice and should be able to get at least 52 votes if not more in the senate

The only way any Biden SCOTUS nominee gets 52 votes is if Mitch McConnell wants them to get 52 votes. Hopefully the choice is enough to satisfy Manchin and Sinema - otherwise the vacancy could be held open indefinitely.
I don't always visit Lobster Pot.  But when I do. I sit.

Popcorn's Art

Offline afc tukrish

  • How long for them sausages? Maggie May's Mythical Turkish Delight. RAWK's Expert Sausage Monster! Oakley Cannonier is fucking boss. Likes blowing his friends and undoing their nuts? Who nose?!
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 17,133
  • This looks like a nice spot...
    • Flat Back Four
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1495 on: February 25, 2022, 10:20:17 pm »
The only way any Biden SCOTUS nominee gets 52 votes is if Mitch McConnell wants them to get 52 votes. Hopefully the choice is enough to satisfy Manchin and Sinema - otherwise the vacancy could be held open indefinitely.

Agreed, I think RedG13 is overly optimistic about her confirmation process...
Since haste quite Schorsch, but Liverpool are genuine fight pigs...

Offline Boston always unofficial

  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 3,369
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1496 on: February 25, 2022, 10:56:53 pm »
Paul Ryan was one the people who spoke in her favor when she was nominated for the DC Circuit.
She is an excellent choice and should be able to get at least 52 votes if not more in the senate
 

He doesn't get a say anymore and is currently on the board at Fox.I'm guessing the repubs will do everything they can to stop this however good she is and eventually the dems will cave in.

Offline John C

  • RAWK Staff
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 42,517
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1497 on: February 25, 2022, 11:02:40 pm »
I think the nomination will go through marginally. Marginally confirming the US is a verging on being a "shit-hole country". If Ketanji isn't conformed, then the lawmakers in that country are scum. And I don't used that word lightly.

Offline Jiminy Cricket

  • Batshit fucker and Chief Yuletide Porcine Voyeur
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 10,274
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1498 on: February 25, 2022, 11:45:51 pm »
The only way any Biden SCOTUS nominee gets 52 votes is if Mitch McConnell wants them to get 52 votes. Hopefully the choice is enough to satisfy Manchin and Sinema - otherwise the vacancy could be held open indefinitely.
Mitch McConnell has all but said that he will support the nomination of any of the proposed candidates. He made clear that Biden did nothing wrong when he indicated and later draw up a short list of black female judges. McConnell also reminded Republicans how Reagan and Bush II (I think) made similar decisions (announcing that they intended to nominate a judge from a minority group).
would rather have a wank wearing a barb wire glove
If you're chasing thrills, try a bit of auto-asphyxiation with a poppers-soaked orange in your gob.

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1499 on: February 26, 2022, 12:25:12 am »
I think the nomination will go through marginally. Marginally confirming the US is a verging on being a "shit-hole country". If Ketanji isn't conformed, then the Republican lawmakers in that country are scum. And I don't used that word lightly.

Fixed that for you.
Kill the humourless

Offline RedG13

  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 6,952
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1500 on: February 26, 2022, 01:18:20 am »
The only way any Biden SCOTUS nominee gets 52 votes is if Mitch McConnell wants them to get 52 votes. Hopefully the choice is enough to satisfy Manchin and Sinema - otherwise the vacancy could be held open indefinitely.
She was confirmed with 53 votes last time just last year. Graham, Murkowski and Collins. Murkowski need Dems in the next election to win she is 100% going to vote to confirm. Collins I would lean Yes, Graham lean No.
Manchin and Sinema have voted for all of Biden Judges so far. Replacing a judge with somebody who used to be his clerk and probably pretty close on ideology is very normal thing and for the 2 "Moderate GOP" they likely agree with confirming on that.
I would be shocked if VP Harris needs to break the tie.

Offline RedG13

  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 6,952
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1501 on: February 26, 2022, 01:21:23 am »
 

He doesn't get a say anymore and is currently on the board at Fox.I'm guessing the repubs will do everything they can to stop this however good she is and eventually the dems will cave in.
he never had an official say in the senate confirmation process but he did speak on her behalf in favor during her senate confirmation process last year weather that moves Senators to vote for her we will see.

Online Red Beret

  • Yellow Beret. Wants to sit in the Lobster Pot. Fat-fingered. Key. Boa. Rd. Kille. R. tonunlick! Soggy Knickers King. Bed-Exiting / Grunting / Bending Down / Cum Face Champion 2023.
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 52,223
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1502 on: February 26, 2022, 10:00:18 am »
Mitch McConnell has all but said that he will support the nomination of any of the proposed candidates. He made clear that Biden did nothing wrong when he indicated and later draw up a short list of black female judges. McConnell also reminded Republicans how Reagan and Bush II (I think) made similar decisions (announcing that they intended to nominate a judge from a minority group).

Well that just confirms what I said, doesn't it? ;)

But let's not forget, Mitch also laid the blame for January 6th squarely at the feet of Donald Trump before voting to acquit him in his second impeachment. I trust anything that comes out of McConnell's mouth about as much as I do with Putin.

She was confirmed with 53 votes last time just last year. Graham, Murkowski and Collins. Murkowski need Dems in the next election to win she is 100% going to vote to confirm. Collins I would lean Yes, Graham lean No.
Manchin and Sinema have voted for all of Biden Judges so far. Replacing a judge with somebody who used to be his clerk and probably pretty close on ideology is very normal thing and for the 2 "Moderate GOP" they likely agree with confirming on that.
I would be shocked if VP Harris needs to break the tie.

With mid-terms coming up, then it makes sense for Republicans to give the impression of bipartisanship if it helps in their campaigns. As I said, if Mitch wants it, it will happen.
« Last Edit: February 26, 2022, 10:03:06 am by Red Berry »
I don't always visit Lobster Pot.  But when I do. I sit.

Popcorn's Art

Offline RedG13

  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 6,952
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1503 on: February 26, 2022, 10:07:17 am »


With mid-terms coming up, then it makes sense for Republicans to give the impression of bipartisanship if it helps in their campaigns. As I said, if Mitch wants it, it will happen.
Alaska is ranked Choice voting so Murkowski going to need to Independents and Democrats to win. Collins isn't up again till 2026(but she probably want to keep the look of being bipartisan in this).
52 is my lowest I expect. I expect all the Dems and Murkowski to vote for her.

Offline Jiminy Cricket

  • Batshit fucker and Chief Yuletide Porcine Voyeur
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 10,274
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1504 on: February 26, 2022, 10:19:30 am »
Well that just confirms what I said, doesn't it? ;)
Well, these comments from McConnell are perhaps a week old.
Quote
But let's not forget, Mitch also laid the blame for January 6th squarely at the feet of Donald Trump before voting to acquit him in his second impeachment. I trust anything that comes out of McConnell's mouth about as much as I do with Putin.
Undoubtedly, he's a very cynical man and generally untrustworthy. However, he would have to totally contradict himself (I know, I know), and it should be remembered that his wife is from an ethnic minority.
would rather have a wank wearing a barb wire glove
If you're chasing thrills, try a bit of auto-asphyxiation with a poppers-soaked orange in your gob.

Offline Mimi

  • Maguire!
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 3,114
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1505 on: February 26, 2022, 02:38:29 pm »
From Mitch’s Twitter yesterday:
Leader McConnell
@LeaderMcConnell
The Senate must conduct a rigorous, exhaustive review of Judge Jackson’s nomination to the Supreme Court. This is especially crucial as Americans families face major crises that connect directly to our legal system, such as skyrocketing violent crime and open borders.
8:27 AM · Feb 25, 2022·Twitter for iPhone

Has he crammed enough of dog whistles into that tweet? Unqualified black lady, crime and open borders should about do it. You can bet your ass that this racist asshole was not talking about possible lack of qualifications, crime or open borders when hand maid ACB was up for nominations.

When will you guys ever learn when it comes to McConnell? Jambutty, no offence, but Mitch sweet talking reporters is nothing new and any article in which he does it is not worth to print.




"And Israeli aggression will continue unabated. BDS. Armed struggle. Peace talks. Protests. Tweets. Social media. Poetry. All are terror in Israel’s books.” Refaat Alareer
https://www.youtube.com/@refaatalareer9499

Online RedSince86

  • I blame Chris de Burgh
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 17,599
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1506 on: February 26, 2022, 02:40:03 pm »
Old white man from Kentucky hates the nomination of a  black person in the SC.

Shocked.
"Since its purchase by the sheikh of Abu Dhabi, Manchester City has managed to cheat its way into the top echelon of European football and create a global, immensely profitable football empire, ignoring rules along the way. The club's newfound glory is rooted in lies."

Offline Mimi

  • Maguire!
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 3,114
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1507 on: February 26, 2022, 03:13:52 pm »
Just for a comparison in case any of you think that because Mitch is married to Chao he can’t be racist (also, honestly, Jiminy Cricket? The equivalent of he can’t be racist because he has a black friend):


Leader McConnell
@LeaderMcConnell
The Senate just voted to advance one of the most qualified nominees in generations. Judge Barrett’s intellectual brilliance, integrity, and commitment to impartiality are above reproach.
 
Tomorrow, we will vote to confirm the next Associate Justice of the Supreme Court.
12:12 PM · Oct 25, 2020·Twitter Web App
Old white man from Kentucky hates the nomination of a  black person in the SC.

Shocked.

Tired.
"And Israeli aggression will continue unabated. BDS. Armed struggle. Peace talks. Protests. Tweets. Social media. Poetry. All are terror in Israel’s books.” Refaat Alareer
https://www.youtube.com/@refaatalareer9499

Offline Mumm-Ra

  • Dunking Heretic. Mexican drug runner. Can go whistle for a pair of decent trainees! Your own personal cheese. Yes.
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 3,524
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1508 on: February 26, 2022, 05:49:38 pm »
Well, these comments from McConnell are perhaps a week old.Undoubtedly, he's a very cynical man and generally untrustworthy. However, he would have to totally contradict himself (I know, I know), and it should be remembered that his wife is from an ethnic minority.

She ain’t black, Jack

Offline Jiminy Cricket

  • Batshit fucker and Chief Yuletide Porcine Voyeur
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 10,274
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1509 on: February 26, 2022, 05:51:33 pm »
Just for a comparison in case any of you think that because Mitch is married to Chao he can’t be racist (also, honestly, Jiminy Cricket? The equivalent of he can’t be racist because he has a black friend):
You should reread my post - I qualified my comments.

McConnell from a few days ago:

https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/595349-mcconnell-says-he-didnt-think-bidens-announcement-to-nominate-black-woman-to
would rather have a wank wearing a barb wire glove
If you're chasing thrills, try a bit of auto-asphyxiation with a poppers-soaked orange in your gob.

Offline Jiminy Cricket

  • Batshit fucker and Chief Yuletide Porcine Voyeur
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 10,274
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1510 on: February 26, 2022, 05:52:43 pm »
She ain’t black, Jack
And where did I suggest that she is? I wrote that she is from an 'ethnic minority'.
would rather have a wank wearing a barb wire glove
If you're chasing thrills, try a bit of auto-asphyxiation with a poppers-soaked orange in your gob.

Offline Mumm-Ra

  • Dunking Heretic. Mexican drug runner. Can go whistle for a pair of decent trainees! Your own personal cheese. Yes.
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 3,524
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1511 on: February 26, 2022, 06:54:35 pm »
And where did I suggest that she is? I wrote that she is from an 'ethnic minority'.

That’s a really tiresome way to communicate you know. Unless you really didn’t understand the point I was making - marrying a wealthy Chinese woman does not automatically make you a friend to all colors (up pops a smiling Glen Johnson).

Offline Jiminy Cricket

  • Batshit fucker and Chief Yuletide Porcine Voyeur
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 10,274
  • We all Live in a Red and White Kop
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1512 on: February 26, 2022, 07:04:53 pm »
That’s a really tiresome way to communicate you know. Unless you really didn’t understand the point I was making - marrying a wealthy Chinese woman does not automatically make you a friend to all colors (up pops a smiling Glen Johnson).
And where did I suggest that? :)
She ain’t black, Jack
I wrote what I meant and I meant what I wrote. And it was part of several other points. I have subsequently linked to an article where McConnell is quoted quite extensively. The article also includes quotes from Ted Cruz for contrast.
would rather have a wank wearing a barb wire glove
If you're chasing thrills, try a bit of auto-asphyxiation with a poppers-soaked orange in your gob.

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1513 on: February 28, 2022, 08:11:09 pm »
Business Insider
Pentagon says it was 'a fat finger mistake' when Biden's defense secretary retweeted a screenshot from one of Tucker Carlson's pro-Putin monologues
jlahut@insider.com (Jake Lahut) - 3h ago


After Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin retweeted a screenshot from one of Tucker Carlson's pre-invasion monologues sympathetic to Russian President Vladimir Putin, the Pentagon's press secretary said it was an accident.

"It was a fat finger mistake by one of our social media guys," Jon Kirby, the Pentagon press secretary, told Politico's Alex Ward. "He undid it immediately."

—Alex Ward (@alexbward) February 28, 2022
The screenshot showed Carlson arguing that Russian President Vladimir Putin had no intentions of war, instead simply seeking to "keep his western border secure."

Carlson has since changed his tune, jettisoning his mocking of the Ukrainian government and defense of Putin for a more simple condemnation.

"He is to blame for what we're seeing tonight," Carlson said of the dictator in his opening monologue Thursday night.

"Again, what Russia has done is awful, but we can make it worse," he said later in the show.

Ahead of Russia's invasion of Ukraine last week, Carlson frequently argued that Putin was being unfairly characterized by mainstream media outlets and Democratic lawmakers.

Carlson was highly dismissive of the likelihood of an invasion. In the same monologue, he mockingly asked whether Putin is the real enemy compared to China, drug cartels, and American teachers.

"What is this really about?" Carlson said. "Why do I hate Putin so much? Has Putin ever called me a racist?

"Has he threatened to get me fired for disagreeing with him?" he continued. "Has he shipped every middle-class job in my town to Russia? Did he manufacture a worldwide pandemic that wrecked my business and kept me indoors for two years? Is he teaching my children to embrace racial discrimination? Is he making fentanyl? Is he trying to snuff out Christianity? Does he eat dogs?"

 https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/pentagon-says-it-was-a-fat-finger-mistake-when-biden-s-defense-secretary-retweeted-a-screenshot-from-one-of-tucker-carlson-s-pro-putin-monologues/ar-AAUqnZb?ocid=msedgntp


Oooooops!

Soz, that was an accident!  ;) 8) :tosser :scarf
Kill the humourless

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1514 on: March 1, 2022, 03:37:02 pm »
Business Insider
3 Democratic members of Congress are giving responses to Biden's State of the Union
gpanetta@businessinsider.com (Grace Panetta) - 9m ago


Every year after the president's State of the Union, a member of the opposing party traditionally gives a formal response. This year, Gov. Kim Reynolds of Iowa is set to give the official Republican response to President Joe Biden's big speech on Tuesday night.

But, unlike in previous years, Biden will get multiple responses from his own party — a highly unusual development that reflects some of the splits within the Democratic caucus. As of Tuesday morning, three Democratic members of Congress from across the ideological spectrum will also give their own speeches after Biden's State of the Union.

Rep. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, a member of a group of progressive House lawmakers of color that calls themselves "the Squad," was the first to announce she would give a State of the Union response on behalf of the Working Families Party.

Fox News reported on Monday that Rep. Colin Allred of Texas would give a State of the Union response on behalf of the Congressional Black Caucus.

Then, on Monday night, the centrist group No Labels announced that "immediately following" the speech, it would host "an unprecedented bipartisan perspective" panel featuring Democratic Rep. Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey and Republican Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, the two co-chairs of the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus in Congress.

Gottheimer skewered Tlaib for planning a State of the Union response in comments to Axios on Monday, calling it "massively counterproductive" and "like keying your own car and slashing your own tires."

But both Tlaib and Gottheimer have unfinished business with Biden's economic agenda.

In 2021, the White House and congressional Democratic leaders sought to enact Biden's economic plans with a "two-track" strategy: first passing a landmark bipartisan infrastructure bill and then a larger social spending and climate package, known as the Build Back Better agenda, that Democrats planned to pass along party lines in the Senate.

Both chambers passed the bipartisan infrastructure law in 2021. But the key elements of Build Back Better struggled to gain consensus within the Democratic caucus, and Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia officially put the final nail in the coffin of Build Back Better in a December 2021 Fox News interview.

Since then, there's been little to no sign of Build Back Better coming back from the dead. Policy-wise, Manchin is far more interested in a bipartisan deal on election reform, and the Senate is preoccupied with the crisis in Ukraine and confirming Biden's Supreme Court nominee, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson.

Tlaib denied that her message would be confrontational or critical of Biden himself and Axios suggested she would instead criticize Manchin — if anyone.

"Despite some sensational coverage, it's simple: I'm giving a speech about supporting President Biden and his Build Back Better agenda for the people," Tlaib tweeted. "Look past the headlines & hear progressives' vision for working with the President & Congress to deliver for our residents."

"This is about the people who are hurting w/o BBB," she added.

Gottheimer, meanwhile, is a leader of the so-called SALT Caucus in Congress, a group of Democrats who want to raise the cap on the amount of state and local taxes that people can deduct from their federal taxes. The deduction, which primarily benefits well-off suburban homeowners in places like Gottheimer's Northern New Jersey district, was limited under President Donald Trump's 2017 tax overhaul.

But, to be sure, not every House Democrat is happy with the split-screen programming.

"Democrats giving a response to democratic President SOTU…priceless," Rep. Elaine Luria of Virginia, a vulnerable moderate Democrat, tweeted on Tuesday morning.

—Elaine Luria (@ElaineLuriaVA) March 1, 2022
 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/3-democratic-members-of-congress-are-giving-responses-to-bidens-state-of-the-union/ar-AAUt9P6?ocid=uxbndlbing


Bret Stephens: "Woke is the Progressive's gift to the Conservative party."
Kill the humourless

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1515 on: March 11, 2022, 04:44:51 pm »
Newsweek
New Poll Shows Americans' Changing Opinions on Biden, Putin, Zelensky
Jake Thomas - Yesterday 7:28 PM


Quote
Americans' perceptions of Russia's and Ukraine's leaders have changed significantly since the beginning of the conflict in Ukraine two weeks ago, according to a new poll. But perceptions of their own president shifted only slightly.

As Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues to dominate headlines, a new Economist/YouGov Poll released Thursday reveals how the conflict is shaping Americans' opinions of the three leaders. The poll found that Americans hold Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in high regard while an increasing minority view his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, as "weak" and ever more see him as a threat. President Joe Biden also saw a modest bump after months of declining approval.

"The share of Americans who view Zelensky favorably has doubled in a couple of weeks, with little change to the share who view him unfavorably," reads a YouGov news release.

The poll of 1,500 adults, conducted between March 5 and March 8, found that 60 percent of Americans view Zelensky "very favorable" or "somewhat favorable." Just 17 percent viewed him unfavorably.

The positive perception of the pro-western Ukrainian leader among Americans is up considerably since before the conflict broke out. A similar poll conducted between February 19 and February 22 (before Russia invaded) found that 30 percent of Americans viewed him favorably. Over half didn't have an opinion.

"Though Zelensky is well-liked by many Americans, few expect him to hold onto his presidency for long," reads a press release describing the poll's results.

Roughly a third of Americans say Zelensky will be president in a year, about the same for those who think he won't. Those who are unsure made up 38 percent.

"American opinion on Putin has been negative for some time, leaving little room for it to get worse," reads the statement from YouGov. "Yet Russian forces' actions that have killed civilians and prevented civilian evacuation may have hurt Putin's standing among Americans further."

Americans also now see Putin as a weaker leader. The poll found 69 percent of Americans saw Putin as a "very strong" or "somewhat strong" leader, down from 78 percent before the invasion. Now, nearly a third of Americans see him as "somewhat weak" or "very weak," up from about a quarter before the war.

The poll, however, found less dramatic changes in how Americans see their president. Now, 42 percent of Americans approve of Biden's handling of foreign policy, up from 37 percent in late January.

Forty-four percent of Americans now either "strongly approve" or "somewhat approve" of Biden's handling of Russia and Ukraine, according to the poll. That's an increase from 42 percent found by an earlier poll.

The percentage of Americans who see Biden as a strong leader or are confident of his ability to handle an international crisis has barely budged. Just 33 percent are confident in Biden's ability, and 44 percent see him as a strong leader, both an increase of two percentage points from February 26.

Just 42 percent of Americans approve of Biden's foreign policy, an increase from 41 percent from an earlier poll.

"While Americans' views of leaders of other countries can be subject to rapid changes—as they can be based on less exposure, and are less tied to U.S. party politics—Americans' views of Biden are more stable," reads a YouGov statement. "But small positive shifts toward Biden on a few questions suggest at least some Americans are thinking more positively about him as a result of his handling of the war in Ukraine."

However, YouGov noted that despite the uptick in Americans holding a positive view of Biden, a majority still disapprove of his leadership.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/new-poll-shows-americans-changing-opinions-on-biden-putin-zelensky/ar-AAUTZgp?ocid=undefined
Kill the humourless

Offline John C

  • RAWK Staff
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 42,517
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1516 on: March 11, 2022, 09:54:53 pm »
We have concerns about your nation anyway Jam, but if Americans can't understand the Biden's regime brilliant strategy and distinguish the difference between the cluster-fuck that Trump would have permitted in Ukraine, your country will continue to diminish the importance of truth and demonocracy.

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1517 on: March 11, 2022, 11:36:25 pm »
We have concerns about your nation anyway Jam, but if Americans can't understand the Biden's regime brilliant strategy and distinguish the difference between the cluster-fuck that Trump would have permitted in Ukraine, your country will continue to diminish the importance of truth and demonocracy.

They are a thick lot.

But then they've never been through the shite we've had.

Never bombed, never done without.  They don't know they're born.
Kill the humourless

Offline jambutty

  • The Gok Wan of RAWK. Tripespotting Advocate. Oakley style guru. Hardman St. arl arse, "Ridiculously cool" -Atko- Impending U.S. Civil War Ostrich. Too old to suffer wankers and WUMs on here.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 13,864
  • June 20, 2009. Still no justice for Neda
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1518 on: March 16, 2022, 01:30:54 am »
A poll released Tuesday by the Pew Research Center found that 47 percent of Americans approve of the Biden administration's handling of the Russian invasion—only 39 percent disapproved. The poll also found that 42 percent of respondents say the U.S. should be providing more support to Ukraine and that 35 percent support taking military action, even if its risks nuclear war with Russia.
Kill the humourless

Offline Chakan

  • Chaka Chaka.....is in love with Aristotle but only for votes. The proud owner of some very private piles and an inflatable harem! Winner of RAWK's Carabao Cup captian contest.
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 91,079
  • Internet Terrorist lvl VI
Re: The Joe Biden Presidency Thread - 46th President of the United States
« Reply #1519 on: March 16, 2022, 02:05:41 am »
Dunno where to mention this but the senate just approved a bill to make daylight savings time permanent here in the US. Thank fucking god my prayers have been answered! There might actually be a god!

Now it just have to become law.

Please please please don’t fuck this up!!