Auteur Sujet: rqtc The Seven-month Niche  (Lu 2 fois)

JeaoneKef

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rqtc The Seven-month Niche
« le: Aujourd'hui à 03:32:47 am »
Ygjm Starting Gate:  Back Where It Started
 Trump s 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale dismissed independent polling that showed the president trailing several Democrats on Tuesday, claiming that polls are  the biggest joke in politics.   The country is too complex now just to call a couple hundred people and ask them what they think. There are so many ways, and different people that are gonna show up to vote now,  Parscale said in an excl stanley mug usive interview with CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett.  The way turnout now works, the abilities that we have to turn out voters ndash; the polling can t understand that. And that s why it was so wrong in 2016. It was 100% wrong. Nobody got it right. Not one public poll.  A recent Quinnipiac University poll finds Democrat Joe Biden leading Mr. Trump in Florida by nine points. It also shows the president trailing other Democrats in that state. In 2016, Trump won Florida by just over  stanley cup one point.                                          None of these polls mean anything,  Parscale said.  It s the biggest joke in politics. It s the fakest thing. It s the fakest thing. When asked why, if polls were meaningless, President Trump appears to pay so much attention to them, Parscale said  you d have to ask him that.  When pressed, he added  because the media makes it look like they matter. They don t.         Trump campaign internal polling showed the president trailing potential Democratic rivals in several key states. The campaign says the stanley quencher  polls were intended to show a wo Cjuu Red Lines
 Bruce Springsteen campaigned aggressively for the last two Democratic presidential candidates, but that hasnrsquo;t stopped Republicans from joining Democrats in cashing in on the Bossrsquo  Monday night concert in Washington.At least 15 lawmakers and  stanley kubek political committees ndash; including half a dozen Republican ones ndash; are planning fundraisers at the sold-out concert at the Verizon Center.Although most tickets to Mondayrsquo  show had face values of less than $100, lobbyists and political action committee directors are plunking down upwards of $2,000 to watch Springsteen while shmoozing members of Congress ndash; including some who seem unlikely to know the words to Thunder Road.                                        Take Rep. Patrick McHenry  R-N.C. , who worked on then-Texas Gov.  stanley mug George W. Bushrsquo  2000 presidential campaign before running for office. Hersquo  attending the concert as part of a fundraiser for the House Conservatives Fund, a PAC he chairs that lists its mission as seeking to return the Republican party to its Ronald Reagan roots.Thatrsquo  not exactly Springsteenrsquo  mission. Springsteen scoffed when Reagan invoked his name during the 1984 presidential campaign, and he has savaged George W. Bush in both spok stanley cup en words and song. In a recent interview, he called the Bush administration historically blind, and said that thousands of people died, lives were ruined and terrible, terrible thi