Obama manipulates behind the scene as he pulls his puppet's strings in order to restore his "pet" achievement, ie. the existential threat to Israel.
Israel concerned as US offers to axe Iran sanctions for JCPOA compliance
The JCPOA is the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, which placed limitations on the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program that would expire in 2030.
a) Allow the radical Democrat Party to self destruct ,as it is doing.
The Best Tonic for
Restoring the GOP: Overreaching Democrats
Republicans have a record fundraising quarter,
no thanks to corporate PACs.
The media has reveled
this year in the frequent, gleeful penning of obituaries for the Republican
Party. The GOP is described as broken, fractured, befuddled about its identity,
dying or already dead, not to mention up an unprintable creek, after corporate
donors cut money following the Jan. 6 riot.
Or maybe not.
The obits are hard to
square with a surprising new number from House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s
political team: $27.1 million. That’s the amount they tell me Mr. McCarthy
single-handedly raked in during the first quarter of 2021. It’s the most money
any Republican representative has ever raised in a quarter.
It’s even more notable
given it was accomplished mostly in two months: January was rough for
Republicans. And it was done almost entirely without big-business support. Only
about $450,000, or less than 2%, came from corporate political-action
committees. How big is a $27.1 million quarter? Mr. McCarthy raised about $100
million over the entire previous two-year cycle, or an average of $12.5 million
a quarter.
The National Republican
Congressional Committee announced on Thursday that it raked in $33.7 million in
the first quarter (about $5 million of which came from Mr. McCarthy). It pulled
in $19.1 million in March alone—an odd-year fundraising record. And the
National Republican Senatorial Committee, under Florida Sen. Rick Scott, had
one of its healthiest Februarys in years, bringing in $6.4 million—despite a
precipitous drop in corporate PAC donations. (It has yet to report quarterly
numbers.)
The numbers are even
more striking because they shouldn’t be. Republican voters remain demoralized
over losing the presidency, and some are furious that more GOP lawmakers didn’t
dispute the results. The party has yet to figure out how it will manage Donald Trump, and the potential for damaging
clashes with the former president—over recruitment, primaries and
issues—remains high. The Democrat-media complex is working hard to brand the
party as racist, insurrectionist and toxic for suburban or minority voters to
support. And Democrats crushed Republicans in fundraising last year.
So what gives? Here’s what the obits are missing: Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer. Nothing unifies the Republican Party more than the threat of an all-Democrat, progressives-gone-wild Washington. GOP fundraisers tell me their pitch to donors the past two months has been as simple as it has been effective: The only way to stop the left’s radical transformation of the country is to retake the House and Senate. That objective is bringing Republicans together and opening pocketbooks—and the more Mr. Biden pushes left, the bigger and more the checks. The unity is forming much faster than it did in 2009, the last time the Democrats took the presidency and both congressional chambers.
The fundraising also
highlights the widening split between the GOP and corporate America and the
risks to business of losing clout with its traditional free-market defenders.
Media outlets crowed when dozens of corporations announced in January that
their PACs would “pause” donations to the GOP in the wake of the Jan. 6 riot.
“Republicans’ Corporate Money Problem Is Getting Worse by the Day,” exulted
HuffPost in January, one of dozens of pieces predicting doom for a party said
to rely on business dollars.
The reality is that
corporate PAC money has faded in significance over the years, and the GOP
message with this fundraising blowout is that Republicans can get by without
it, thank you very much. Mr. McCarthy raised his $27.1 million from more than
50,000 unique donors, with average amounts less than $540. (By comparison, in
the first quarter of 2019, he raised $22 million from about 6,000 donors.) The
NRSC reports that half of its February money came from online contributions,
and that it has seen a surge in small-dollar donors.
If anything, GOP
fundraisers report that corporate America’s politicking is helping the
party’s bank accounts. Many Americans are furious over the likes of Delta
and Coca-Cola wading into the Georgia
election-law fight, and a growing anticorporate wing of the party is donating
to Republicans to make a point—and to encourage the GOP to make a break. This
is potentially dangerous territory both for companies and the economy, and it
may explain why some firms are now quietly “unpausing” donations, seeking to
repair ties with Republicans.
Money isn’t a direct
proxy for political support, and dollars alone don’t win elections, as Hillary
Clinton proved in 2016. Republicans have tricky territory to navigate in coming
years, from recruiting worthy replacements for many retiring incumbents to
managing real divides in the base. Democratic contenders for key Senate races
are already pulling in bucks.
But the GOP fundraising numbers show that reports of the party’s death are greatly exaggerated. The best tonic for restoring the Republican Party’s health is an overreaching Democratic White House and Congress.
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Just another day in the Biden household TV series:
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/
EXCLUSIVE: What WASN'T in Hunter Biden's book: How he got unauthorized Secret Service protection, begged Joe to run for WH to salvage his own reputation and made porn films with prostitutes. Forensic experts prove laptop IS President's son's.
It also establishes President Biden lied again when he said he was unaware of his son's nefarious actions or aware of his involvements. Sitting on a plane he never discussed the matter.
APPOMATTOX, VA. — On April 9, 1865, Gen. Robert E. Lee strode onto the porch of a two-story brick home and stared out at a lawn filled with Union soldiers, his Confederate staff of two, and his horse Traveler.
Still wearing full military dress, Lee raised his gloved hands and punched his left fist into his right palm. The sound of leather meeting leather echoed in the unsteady silence.
Then, as Lee mounted Traveler, Major Gen. Ulysses S. Grant emerged from the house onto the porch.
Now facing each other, Grant raised his hat, as did Lee. It wasn’t a salute, but clearly an acknowledgment of the moment.
As Lee turned towards the dirt road and headed east towards his troops, the 198th Pennsylvania Infantry played “Auld Lang Syne.”
The Civil War was over.
As the two generals waited for their treaty to be prepared in McLean’s parlor, Grant introduced Lee to his staff, including Lt. Col. Ely Parker, a Seneca Indian, who later recalled their exchange.
“It’s good to see one real American here today,” Lee told him.
“General, we are all Americans today,” Parker replied.
Click here for the full story.
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Blinken "nods." More stupidity and return to what was tried and never worked. Guess, because Trump was successful by thinking outside the box, Biden needs to destroy because he finds himself "boxed in" as usual.
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