Fl Sen: Palm Beach County Election Supervisor Says GOP Lawsuit Could Be Racist, or Something

It’s a total mess. We don’t know how many ballots are left to be counted in Florida’s elections because some election supervisors are simply not telling us. Yeah, in a state that was hit hard by Hurricane Michael, the storm-ravaged counties have counted all their ballots, but two of the most Democratic counties, Broward and Palm Beach, are still tabulating votes. The lack of transparency, regular updates on vote tallies, and overnight vote dumps are raising eyebrows among Republicans and rightfully so. These two counties, Broward in particular, has a long history of incompetence, negligence, and violations of state law. The Miami Herald has more on Elections Supervisor Brenda Snipes in Broward:

Following a court ruling in May that Broward Elections Supervisor Brenda Snipes had illegally destroyed ballots from a 2016 congressional race, the governor’s office announced the Florida Department of State would send election experts to Snipes’ office during this year’s election “to ensure that all laws are followed” and “to observe the administration of the election.”

Snipes says the extra scrutiny is undeserved.

[…]

Even beyond her own reprimand for authorizing the destruction of ballots, Snipes cannot deny the department’s patchy track record. In 2016, early voting results for Broward were posted a half hour before polls closed, in violation of election law. Her office was sued unsuccessfully because a constitutional amendment was missing from some mail-in ballots. The electronic system used by the county was also later found to have been targeted by Russian government hackers — although it’s unclear whether that affected results and had nothing to do with the early posting.

(Read more from “Fl Sen: Palm Beach County Election Supervisor Says GOP Lawsuit Could Be Racist, or Something” HERE)

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Michelle Obama Makes Insane Accusation About Trump

Former first lady Michelle Obama has some choice words for President Trump in her new book “Becoming” which will be released Tuesday. The Associated Press reported Friday that Obama accused Trump of stalking Hillary Clinton during a debate through his “body language.” She also said she would “never forgive” him over his birtherism comments.

She accused Trump of stalking Clinton through body language during an election debate because he followed her around the stage and stood nearby “trying to diminish her presence.” . . .

This refrain of “stalking” during an October 2016 presidential debate was something the Clinton campaign initially claimed and was subsequently taken up by many on the left.

“This is not OK, I thought,” Clinton wrote in her memoir a year later. “It was the second presidential debate and Donald Trump was looming behind me.”

“We were on a small stage and no matter where I walked, he followed me closely, staring at me, making faces. It was incredibly uncomfortable. He was literally breathing down my neck. My skin crawled,” she said. (Read more from “Michelle Obama Makes Insane Accusation About Trump” HERE)

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The Time to Start on 2020 Primaries Is Today

The general election of 2018 is over. The GOP primaries of 2020 should begin now if we ever hope to build a meaningful majority in Congress.

While disappointed with the results from the House races, conservatives are likely happy that Republicans appear to have netted three Senate seats and flipped the de facto Democrat seat of Bob Corker from Tennessee with the election of Marsha Blackburn. Rather than going back into our caves like a bunch of Election Day groundhogs, we should begin focusing on the 2020 Senate primaries now.

The inconvenient reality for conservatives is that we are nowhere close to a majority in the Senate. More than half of the GOP senators passionately support the amnesty agenda, are weak on crime, never saw a government program or spending bill they didn’t want to expand, are ardent proponents of judicial supremacy, fundamentally adopted the Democrat view on health care, and have generally eschewed any semblance of fiscal or social conservatism the day after they win primaries. Every election year we are stuck with this nonsense of voting for “the lesser of two evils” in November.

This is why it’s so important to start the primary season as early as possible so that we can actually aspire to something greater than the lesser of two evils. We are now as far away as possible from the next general election. Let’s stop this Election Day-only talk of “we can’t let the Democrats win” and actually focus on correcting the problems among our own ranks so that we can actually provide a bold contrast to the other side during the next election. Let’s ensure that Democrat policies don’t win every day from now through the next election and thereafter. There actually is a good theory to voting for any Republican in a general election no matter how liberal they are, simply because we can pressure them with public shaming on the legislative issues and with the threat of a primary challenge. But that is only if we actually stay awake and alert after the election and use that leverage.

Here’s a political aptitude test I’d like you all to take. Pull out two sheets of paper, and on both of them, list at the top the 10 or so most important policy issues – from health care and welfare to immigration, crime, religious liberty, life, education, etc. On the first sheet of paper, just under your top issues list, jot down the number of Democrat senators who dissent from their party’s platform in any meaningful way on a single one of those issues. Now, turn to the second sheet of paper and jot down the number of Republicans who dissent from their party’s platform on major issues.

Your first sheet of paper will likely be blank, while your second sheet of paper will be full before you even scrape the surface of the GOP Senate roster. It might be easier if you simply listed the GOP senators who, indeed, adhere to the platform on all or most of the major issues.

The sad reality is that the liberal Republicans who spend every day undermining the conservative position on a given issue are not just from swing states. Many of them are from states that Trump won, often by wide margins. Democrats don’t have senators who dissent from their party in a meaningful way even from states that are bright red, yet Republicans barely have senators who enthusiastically promote conservatism even from friendly territory.

There’s a unique Senate map for 2020. Unlike this year, most of the senators up for re-election are Republicans. However, the overwhelming majority of them are from red states in a presidential year with Trump on the ballot and likely to carry these states, in most cases, by large margins. God forbid we should actually only nominate conservatives like Democrats only nominate uber-liberals in their primaries. I might get called a “purist” for such a suggestion. But is it too much to ask that we at least try to nominate someone as conservative as, say, a Marsha Blackburn in every state that Trump carried in 2016, or at least the ones he carried by a substantial margin? Do we really need to rubber-stamp the nomination of Lamar Alexander, a passionate supporter of government-run health care and education and open borders, from a state like Tennessee? It would be nice to try to find a Ron DeSantis, but I’ll take another Marsha Blackburn.

Here is just a selection of senators up in red states, as juxtaposed to Trump’s margin of victory and their Liberty Scores:

Is this the best we can do?

Remember, the Liberty Scores don’t fully account for how subversive some of these members are to the conservative agenda. Each one of these members either fundamentally doesn’t share our values on the issues within their respective committee jurisdictions, or they value working with the Left more than with conservatives.

This is evident with many of the committee chairs, such as Lamar Alexander being in charge of health care and education. What about energy? We have Lisa Murkowski as the quarterback on all issues pertaining to energy. She has a 22% Liberty Score and has bought into the global warming agenda. Reform food stamps and farm subsidies? Over the dead body of big spender Pat Roberts. Fighting the Pelosi-led House on budget bills? Good luck approving that idea with go-along-to-get-along Mike Enzi chairing the Senate Budget Committee.

And what about the Judiciary Committee? Guess who is slated to take the gavel from Chuck Grassley? None other than Lindsey Grahamnesty. Yes, I know the clickservatives are now obsessed with him because of his macho talk during the Kavanaugh hearings. Great for clicks on internet videos, but he is still terrible on immigration and crime, two of the main areas of the committee. Almost everyone is good on judicial nominees, but few Republicans are good on immigration, most certainly not Lindsey Graham.

Is pro-abortion and pro-amnesty Shelly Moore Capito the best we can do in West Virginia, one of the most pro-life and pro-sovereignty states in America?

It’s not just their voting record that is a problem. After all, they barely take any votes of substance any more. They are not just votes, but voices for the other side’s agenda on any given legislative battle or news cycle. Just watch what Mitt Romney will do for the Left at every turn now that he’s been elected to the Senate from a state we usually win by 35 points.

Obviously, it’s a monumental task to defeat RINOs in popular primaries driven by money and name recognition, unless we switch to representative conventions. But we can at least begin with open seats. I put Oklahoma on the list because it’s very likely that Inhofe will retire. We should be preparing now. Why shouldn’t we get someone from this state, which gave Trump the vote in every single county, as conservative as the Democrats’ California pick is liberal?

Let’s also keep in mind that often the way to push a member out the door through retirement, thereby opening up the seat, is by threatening a primary challenge. This is likely what paved the road for Corker and Flake to retire this year.

One easy pickup is Alabama. Sen. Doug Jones is up in 2020 and will easily lose to any Republican. What better person to run than Jeff Sessions? With a dearth of leadership in the Senate on immigration and crime (and everything else), Sessions could reclaim his seniority and bump Lindsey Grahamnesty for the chairmanship of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

We must also mobilize to fill the seat of John McCain with someone in the mold of Rep. Andy Biggs, not some McConnell drone who is being prepared to run once interim Sen. Jon Kyl retires.

Political parties are like football teams. All men on the field must be committed to driving the ball forward in the same direction. Could you imagine a team where half or two-thirds of its members are running or throwing the ball in the opposite direction, failing to make catches, too distracted to block the rush, or declining to make tackles? That doesn’t work for a minute. Which is why the GOP, particularly in the Senate, has never worked for conservatives.

Clearly, Senate Republicans, if committed to a smart and winning conservative agenda, can still accomplish a lot against the Democrat-held House if they used the leverage of must-pass legislation. At the very least they can use these moments to expose the radicalism of Democrats elected in red-leaning districts and draw a sharp contrast. But that won’t happen with much of the current roster.

We need to begin building for the future, but that construction will not work if built on quicksand of aimless Republicans from the most conservative states. Let’s say we succeed in winning back the House in 2020, along with the re-election of President Trump. How will we be more successful in the second term than we were in the first two years of this do-nothing Congress if we don’t shake up the Senate? If you are willing to ignore the nature of the Republicans we nominate and merely hope for 60 warm bodies of any stripe with Rs next to their names in 2020, you are high on political heroin. A quick glance at the Senate map in 2020 shows there is no way they could net six Democrat seats or anything close to it. But even if the GOP got 65 seats one year, if we build that majority on quicksand, we will immediately see we don’t even have 51 votes for the critical reforms we want on health care, budget, and immigration.

Here’s the reality going forward: Democrats will have to spend all their time and money on their presidential primary. Republicans won’t have any presidential primary of consequence. Therefore, we should begin focusing on congressional primaries, which begin earlier in a presidential year, now. I would encourage my colleagues that, rather than using their platforms to focus incessantly on the soap opera of the Democrat primary, they should worry about cleaning our own house so that at this time in two years we have a slate of senators to vote for without the clothespin on our noses. (For more from the author of “The Time to Start on 2020 Primaries Is Today” please click HERE)

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5 Reasons Why Conservatives Can Support Acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker

Conservatives have many reasons to be optimistic about acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker, following the resignation of Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Wednesday. Here are five things you should know about him.

1. Positioned well to take the fight to Mueller

Whitaker is a longtime critic of Mueller’s endless Russia probe, which has failed to produce a scintilla of evidence related to Russian collusion. He has previously suggested drastically reducing the budget of Mueller’s special counsel probe, in order to thwart Mueller’s threat to the president’s constitutional mandate. Whitaker has also argued that Mueller has overstepped his authority. As acting attorney general, he will be well positioned to rein in the special counsel.

Mueller is said to be in the process of writing his “final report,” which is sure to be incredibly hostile to the Trump administration and people close to the president. The president may need to have a poised AG by his side when Mueller’s attack dogs once again come after his legitimacy.

2. He takes authority away from Rod Rosenstein

Early indications are that Whitaker has no intention of recusing himself from oversight over the Mueller probe, thereby shifting oversight away from the controversial Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

Rosenstein has several severe conflicts of interest when it comes to the Mueller probe and the Obama administration’s “spygate” efforts against President Trump and his associates. Rosenstein signed off on multiple Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) applications to extend surveillance on Trump campaign aide Carter Page, who was unfairly accused of being a Russian spy. The saga was only one instance of extreme overreach by members of the Obama administration. Rosenstein offered a weak wave-off of his role in the surveillance process, claiming he may not have read the whole FISA application before signing off on it.

3. He’s not afraid to go after the untouchables

The acting AG has in the past said that there is a strong case to “indict” Hillary Clinton for violating several U.S. laws during her government service.

“I believe myself to have been a reasonable prosecutor, and when the facts and evidence show a criminal violation has been committed, the individuals involved should not dictate whether the case is prosecuted,” Whitaker wrote in a 2016 op-ed for USA Today.

He added:

“A reasonable prosecutor may ask, if on numerous occasions, an unknown State Department employee had taken top secret information from a secured system, emailed that information on a Gmail account, and stored the information on a personal server for years, would that individual be prosecuted? I believe they would.”

In a separate op-ed for The Hill, Whitaker vehemently disagreed with fired FBI Director James Comey’s decision to recommend against the prosecution of Hillary Clinton.

4. Whitaker can continue Sessions’ progress on crime and immigration issues

Conservative immigration and crime hawks are in good hands with the acting AG, according to people who know him well.

“[Whitaker] is a strong supporter of President Trump’s agenda on religious liberty, immigration, drugs, violent crime, and protecting the rule of law,” a senior Trump administration official who was not authorized to speak on the record tells Conservative Review.

Andy McCarthy of National Review also has high regard for Matt Whitaker, describing him as “well credentialed and an excellent choice to assume the duties of attorney general.”

5. An acting attorney general can still accomplish a lot

Under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, Whitaker can serve 210 days without Senate confirmation before the president nominates a permanent attorney general. During that period, and into the confirmation process, he has plenty of time to accomplish the aforementioned tasks. (For more from the author of “5 Reasons Why Conservatives Can Support Acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker” please click HERE)

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Transgender File Complaints Against 16 Women for Refusing to Wax His Male Genitalia

Sixteen Canadian women have had human rights complaints filed against them by a male-to-female transgender individual for alleged “gender identity” discrimination after they refused to wax his male genitalia.

John Carpay, a lawyer and the president of the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, is representing two of the women who are being targeted by the complainant, who is referred to only as “JY.” In accordance with an order from the BC Human Rights Tribunal, the transgender individual must be kept anonymous.

“In recent months, JY approached 16 Vancouver-area female estheticians who only serve women, requesting a ‘Brazilian’ bikini wax on his groin area,” revealed Carpay on Tuesday. “In spite of the fact that JY is able to obtain a Manzilian in Vancouver, JY has filed 16 complaints against these women at the BC Human Rights Tribunal, claiming discrimination on the basis of ‘gender identity.'”

The female estheticians in question only serve women and do not offer so-called “Manzilians” — the male equivalent to a Brazilian wax. “The procedure for providing a man with a ‘Manzilian’ is quite different, using a different kind of wax and a different technique,” noted the lawyer. . .

According to the lawyer, JY said he was willing to withdraw his complaint against Poyer for $2,500. “If JY is demanding similar sums from the other 14 women, he stands to receive as much as $35,000 for dropping his human rights complaints,” noted Carpay. (Read more from “Transgender File Complaints Against 16 Women for Refusing to Wax His Male Genitalia” HERE)

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Trump Moves Toward Tightening Asylum Claims at Border

By The Daily Caller. The Trump administration will publish a new rule in the federal register allowing the president to classify a group of aliens as ineligible for asylum claims if they illegally cross the U.S.-Mexico border, senior administration officials told reporters Thursday afternoon.

The new rule in the federal register will allow President Donald Trump in the future to classify a group of aliens under his authority from the Immigration and Nationality Act.

“The interim rule, if applied to a proclamation suspending the entry of aliens who cross the southern border unlawfully, would bar such aliens from eligibility for asylum and thereby channel inadmissible aliens to ports of entry, where they would be processed in a controlled, orderly, and lawful manner,” new Department of Justice guidance reads.

“Today, we are using the authority granted to us by Congress to bar aliens who violate a Presidential suspension of entry or other restriction from asylum eligibility,” acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker said in a Thursday statement. (Read more from “Trump Moves Toward Tightening Asylum Claims at Border” HERE)

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Trump Administration Publishes Rule Restricting Asylum Seekers

By NBC News. Fulfilling President Donald Trump’s midterm promise to crack down on undocumented immigrants crossing the Southwest border, the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security published a rule on Thursday that will make it harder for immigrants to claim asylum if they are caught crossing the border between designated ports of entry.

Senior administration officials told reporters on a conference call that the president has the legal authority to do so because of sections of immigration law that allow the president discretion over who is admitted into the United States — the same language the administration used to support its travel ban in court.

The officials said the plan is to force more immigrants who wish to claim asylum to do so at designated ports of entry. Recently, many asylum-seekers have chosen to cross illegally because they are kept waiting for days in Mexico due to backlogs at ports of entry. (Read more from “Trump Administration Publishes Rule Restricting Asylum Seekers” HERE)

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Supreme Court to Hear Another Landmark Religious Liberty Case

The Supreme Court granted cert last week in what promises to be another landmark case on religious liberty — call it the Masterpiece Cakeshop case of war memorials. In The American Legion et al. v. American Humanist Association et al, the Supreme Court will decide whether to reverse a lower court decision that ruled the Bladensburg World War I Veterans Memorial should be removed. The plaintiffs argue a public monument that includes any aspect of Christianity entangles government and religion and is therefore unconstitutional.

The Bladensburg World War I Veterans Memorial is a 93-year-old cross-shaped monument that sits in Prince George’s County, Maryland, on state land. Decades ago, local Gold Star mothers spearheaded the project to honor 49 Prince George’s County men who gave their lives while serving in WWI.

They chose a cross shape to mimic the cross-shaped grave markers standing over the countless American graves on the Western Front of that war. This gesture was particularly meaningful for family members who were unable to bury their dead on U.S. soil. The monument stood for dozens of years, until 2014, when the American Humanist Association filed a lawsuit claiming the cross-shaped memorial was unconstitutional.

In 2015, the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland disagreed, ruling the memorial was in fact constitutional. Crosses mark the graves of fallen American servicemen overseas, in Arlington cemetery, and in hundreds of other important places we remember the fallen . . .

The Supreme Court will now hear the merits of the case and decide if the latest ruling that found the monument unconstitutional should stand or not. As was to be expected, liberals are not happy the Supreme Court decided to hear this case. For starters, it’s typically a good sign when the court wants to hear something. It means they might disagree with the previous ruling. The Supreme Court has reversed 70 percent of lower court rulings since 2007, so the chances the previous decision will be overturned are high. (Read more from “Supreme Court to Hear Another Landmark Religious Liberty Case” HERE)

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Sessions Already Considering Running for His Old Senate Seat

. . . [Jeff] Sessions was fired as attorney general Wednesday, less than 24 hours after Republicans lost control of the House of Representatives in the midterm elections. President Donald Trump had publicly savaged Sessions throughout his tenure, and his dismissal had long been expected.

After Sessions left the Senate in 2017, his vacated seat was won by Democrat Doug Jones in a special election upset. Jones is up for a full term in 2020, and he is widely viewed as the most vulnerable incumbent senator facing reelection given Alabama’s conservative tilt. Republicans are certain to contest the seat aggressively as they look to protect their majority . . .

Sessions, who spent two decades in the Senate, is practically a household name in his home state, and speculation has been simmering for weeks within Alabama political circles that he might seek a return. Yet, party officials stress that the 71-year-old Sessions wouldn’t necessarily face a clear path should he wage a comeback. Trump’s relentless attacks on the former attorney general, they say, have taken a toll on his popularity in the state. (Read more from “Sessions Already Considering Running for His Old Senate Seat” HERE)

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American Airlines to Allow yet Another Group to Board Planes Early… People Allergic to Nuts

American Airlines announced that it will allow early boarding for people with nut allergies so they can wipe down their seats to avoid allergens.

The airline announced its new policy, which will go into effect Dec. 12, in a Tuesday filing with the U.S. Transportation Department. The change comes in response to complaints that Food Allergy Research & Education and the mother of a highly allergic boy filed against American Airlines in 2017.

“Customers with nut allergies who would like to board flights early to wipe down surfaces may ask to do so at the gate,” an airline representative told Bloomberg. (Read more from “American Airlines to Allow yet Another Group to Board Planes Early… People Allergic to Nuts” HERE)

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California Shooting Leaves 12 Dead at Bar

A Marine Corps veteran who had served in Afghanistan fatally shot at least 12 people Wednesday night when he stormed a crowded country and western dance hall in Thousand Oaks, Calif., the authorities said.

The Ventura County sheriff, Geoff Dean, said that the gunman, Ian David Long of nearby Newbury Park, Calif., apparently took his own life after being confronted by officers responding to the Wednesday night attack. One officer, Sgt. Ron Helus, was killed when he entered the building to help. The gunman used a .45-caliber handgun that he purchased legally. It had been outfitted with an extended magazine.

The shooting came just over a year after 58 people were killed at a country music festival in Las Vegas when a gunman opened fire from a high-rise hotel room. There was an eerie parallel between the two shootings as some of the same people who emerged from the bar, the Borderline Bar & Grill, described having survived the shooting on the Las Vegas Strip. (Read more from “California Shooting Leaves 12 Dead at Bar” HERE)

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