Auteur Sujet: eaqr AFL-CIO president Trumka resigns from Trump s manufacturing council  (Lu 15 fois)

JeaoneKef

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Kltv Rep. Cohen: Deleted tweets were to my daughter
 At least one person in the Montgomery, Alabama area reports receiving a robocall pretending to be a Washington Post reporter seeking damaging information about Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore, CBS affiliate WKRG reports. Hi, this is Bernie Bernstein,  the robocall begins, according to one individual, Pastor Al Moore in Creola, who received the message in a voicemail.  I m a reporter for the Washington Post calling to find out if anyone at this address is a female between the ages of 54 to 57 years old willing to make damaging remarks about candidate Roy Moore for a reward of between $5,000 and $7,000 dollars. We will not be fully investigating these claims however we will make a written report. I can be reached by email at albernstein@washingtonpost, thank you. Roy Moore speaks amid allegations of sexual misconductAl Moore says he responded to the provided email address, but it was unable to be delivered.                                         Washington Post executive editor Marty Baron said the robocall is from someone  falsely claiming  to be from the newspaper. The call s description of our reporting methods bears no relationship to reality. We are shocked and appalled that anyone would stoop to this level to discredit real journalism.                                                                                                         Sen. Mitch McC stanley tumblers onnell stanley cup  says h stanley cup e believes Roy Moore s accusers          14:30                                                         Ytfb Joe The Plumber  Lashes Out At Media
 This Sunday s guests on  Face the Nation  are the party chairs: Debbie Wasserman Schultz of the Democratic stanley thermos  National Committee and Reince Priebus of the Republican National Committee.  Also appearing will be CBS News chief White House correspondent Norah O Donnell, CBS News political analyst John Dickerson and Mark Zandi, the chief Economist of Moody s Analytics.With 14 months to go until the November 2012 election, the Obama White House seems to have changed course. Coming off a vacat stanley cup ion after the demoralizing debt debate in August, the president went to Congress to push a $447 billion Jobs bill and then presented a plan for trillions of dollars in long-term debt reduction. Neither plan was well received across the aisle on Capitol Hill. With jobs and the economy overwhelmingly being the number one issue for voters, the pr stanley cup esident clearly needs something to pass to turn around his lagging poll numbers. According to the latest CBS News/New York Times Poll, 50 percent of Americans now disapprove of the president s job performance, an all-time high. Only 43 percent approve of his performance, down 5 percent since August.                                        On the economy specifically, 57 percent disapprove of President Obama s handling of the economy and 53 percent disapprove of his performance on job creation. Now 68 percent of Americans say he has not made progress fixing the economy.When pitted against top Republican contenders, Mr. Obama doesn t seem to fare much better. A