Dick Morris to Newsmax: Fetterman ‘Way Over to the Left’ for Pa. Senate Race

Dick Morris to Newsmax: Fetterman 'Way Over to the Left' for Pa. Senate Race (Newsmax/"Spicer & Co.")

By Jay Clemons | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 07:29 PM EDT

Reports of the Pennsylvania Senate race stealthily shifting to "toss-up" territory should have Republicans brimming with newfound optimism, says Dick Morris, a political strategist, best-selling-author, and TV host.

As for the Democrats, Morris believes they might now be wondering how Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, the primary winner in the Pennsylvania Senate battle, lost a double-digit polling lead to Republican challenger Dr. Mehmet Oz over the last few months.

"Fetterman is way over to the left on criminal issues," Morris told Newsmax on Wednesday, while appearing on "Spicer & Co." with hosts Sean Spicer and Lyndsay Keith.

When discussing Fetterman, who sometimes appears uncomfortable during speaking engagements, Morris — a former adviser to Presidents Donald Trump and Bill Clinton — chided the Pennsylvania politician for blaming Washington on the ills of Americans in a recent TV advertisement.

"I think Oz will [counter] with an ad saying, 'No it's your fault,'" said Morris, a possible reference to how Fetterman's campaign has been propped up by the same national Democrats he's supposedly knocking.

Another theory for Oz's recent surge in Pennsylvania: It could be the same issue driving many of kitchen-table discussions in America today, says Morris, author of "The Return: Trump's Big 2024 Comeback."

"The whole country is now focused on inflation. It's the issue that's driving everything else," said Morris, while adding that young American voters view high inflation as a "real impediment to their lives" — in terms of moving out on their own, buying a car, getting married, or just improving their overall quality of life.

"Voters are just in agony right now," says Morris, while discussing a recent Gallup poll that has generic Republicans with a 44% favorability rating nationwide — or 5 percentage points higher than Democrats.

Morris, who hosts "Dick Morris Democracy" on Newsmax, believes the upcoming midterms could be a significant bellwether for Republicans, looking ahead to 2024, when Trump is expected to make another run for the White House.

Also, a number of prominent Senate Democrats could be in trouble with their respective states, says Morris.

Trump "has a lock" on the Republican nomination for 2024, says Morris, before boldly predicting, "He will be the next president."

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Justice Thomas Gives DOJ Until Tuesday to Respond to Trump’s Request

President Donald Trump shakes hands with Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol on January 20, 2017 in Washington, DC. In today’s inauguration ceremony Donald J. Trump becomes the 45th president of the United States. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

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UPDATED 12:35 PM PT – Wednesday October 5th, 2022

45th President Donald J. Trump has requested the Supreme Court to intervene in the Mar-a-Lago raid case.

In a 37-page filing on Tuesday, Trump asked the court to partially reverse an appellate court ruling. The ruling prevents a special master from examining 100 alleged classified documents that were seized by the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI).

Trump’s lawyers wrote, “In sum, the Government has attempted to criminalize a document management dispute and now vehemently objects to a transparent process that provides much-needed oversight.”

Trump has asserted that he had declassified the documents before leaving office. He claims that the Department of Justice (DOJ) has no right to withhold them.

Justice Clarence Thomas holds jurisdiction over the emergency appeals that occur in the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. Thomas has given the DOJ until Tuesday, October 11th at 5 pm to respond to Trump’s request.

Original Article Oann

Walker Talks About Mental Health Struggle in New Campaign Ad

Walker Talks About Mental Health Struggle in New Campaign Ad Walker Talks About Mental Health Struggle in New Campaign Ad Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker speaks to the media at a campaign event in Gwinnett, Georgia. (Megan Varner/Getty Images)

By Nicole Wells | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 07:12 PM EDT

Herschel Walker, who is running as the GOP Senate nominee in Georgia, talks about his mental health struggles in a new ad released Wednesday.

"As everyone knows, I had a real battle with mental health," Walker says in the ad. "I even wrote a book about it. And by the grace of God, I've overcome it."

The Trump-endorsed Senate hopeful goes on to say that his opponent, Democrat incumbent Raphael Warnock, is running "a nasty, dishonest campaign" that doesn't tell his "full story."

"Warnock's a preacher who doesn't tell the truth," Walker says. "He doesn't even believe in redemption."

Walker's 2008 memoir "Breaking Free: My Life with Dissociative Identity Disorder" discusses his challenges with mental health.

According to his campaign website, the former NFL star was diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder due to "trauma he experienced in childhood."

Released Wednesday, the ad is Walker's first since reports surfaced earlier in the week that he urged a former girlfriend to have an abortion in 2009 and reimbursed her for the cost.

Walker, a staunch anti-abortion advocate who has backed a national abortion ban, took to Twitter Monday to push back against the allegations.

"This is a flat-out lie — and I deny this in the strongest possible terms," the 1982 Georgia Bulldog Heisman Trophy winner said.

The New York Post reports that the woman making the claims produced a $575 receipt from an abortion clinic, as well as a $700 signed personal check and a "get well" card allegedly from the former Dallas Cowboys star player.

The Post was not able to independently verify the allegations.

Warnock regained a 3-point lead over Walker in an InsiderAdvantage-Fox 5 poll conducted the day after the allegations were published, fueling Republican anxiety over the already close Senate race.

Walker is running on a "conservative family values" platform that is "pro-life and pro-family."

Former President Donald Trump said in a statement Tuesday that Walker "is being slandered and maligned by the Fake News Media and obviously, the Democrats."

"Interestingly, I've heard many horrible things about his opponent, Raphael Warnock, things that nobody should be talking about, so we don't," Trump continued. "Herschel has properly denied the charges against him, and I have no doubt he is correct. They are trying to destroy a man who has true greatness in his future, just as he had athletic greatness in his past."

Original Article

Conservative-Leaning Appeals Court Delivers Mixed DACA Verdict to Biden

Conservative-Leaning Appeals Court Delivers Mixed DACA Verdict to Biden Conservative-Leaning Appeals Court Delivers Mixed DACA Verdict to Biden (Dreamstime)

Ted Hesson Wednesday, 05 October 2022 06:08 PM EDT

A federal appeals court ruled on Wednesday that a program that has protected hundreds of thousands of young immigrants from deportation was unlawful, but said current enrollees could renew their status and sent the case back to a lower court to consider a new Biden administration regulation.

A panel of three judges from the conservative-leaning 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court's ruling against the program, called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), but remanded the case in light of a new regulation issued in August.

The decision is a mixed one for Democrat President Joe Biden, who said he wants a permanent pathway to citizenship for DACA recipients – often known as "Dreamers."

The court allowed for the current 594,000 DACA enrollees to maintain their status, but continues to block new applications.

In remanding the case, the appeals court said it did not have enough information to rule on the new regulation, which is set to take effect on Oct. 31, but that the case should be resolved as quickly as possible.

The 46-page opinion signaled the judges were skeptical of DACA's legality.

"The legal questions that DACA presents are serious, both to the parties and to the public," they wrote. "In our view, the defendants have not shown that there is a likelihood that they will succeed on the merits."

Former President Barack Obama, a Democrat, whom Biden served under as vice president, created DACA in 2012 after efforts by U.S. Congress to grant citizenship to immigrants brought to the country as children failed.

Texas and a coalition of states with Republican attorneys general in 2018 sued to end DACA, arguing it was illegally implemented. In July 2021, U.S. District Court Judge Andrew Hanen in Texas sided with states.

Hanen's decision blocked new DACA applications from being processed, but pre-existing DACA recipients were allowed to continue receiving benefits and apply for renewal.

The Biden administration appealed the decision, sending the case to the 5th Circuit.

People with DACA status can obtain work permits, a Social Security number and in some states, receive driver's licenses and financial aid for education.

DACA recipients have faced years of uncertainty and legal wrangling. Biden's predecessor, former Republican President Donald Trump, tried to end the program but was stymied by the Supreme Court.

The opinion issued on Wednesday was authored by an appointee of former President George W. Bush, a Republican, who was joined by two Trump appointees.

Biden came into office promising to work toward a long-term solution for the "Dreamers," but Republicans and Democrats have found little common ground on immigration in recent years, making a legislative fix before the Nov. 8 midterm elections unlikely.

Original Article

Poll: Percentage Who Think Nation Is United Has Doubled Since 1/6

Poll: Percentage Who Think Nation Is United Has Doubled Since 1/6 Poll: Percentage Who Think Nation Is United Has Doubled Since 1/6 A demonstrator supporting the people who have been imprisoned following the January 6, 2021 unrest yells at counter-protesters during a rally near the U.S. Capitol. (Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)

By Nicole Wells | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 05:33 PM EDT

The percentage of people who say the nation is united has doubled since the breach of the U.S. Capitol building on Jan. 6, 2021, according to a new poll.

Although only 12% of those surveyed think the country is united, that's twice the 6% that was recorded in the immediate aftermath of the protest, according to an NBCLX-YouGov poll released on Wednesday.

An overwhelming 93% of respondents in January 2021 said they felt the nation was divided; nearly two years later, the number has fallen to 81%.

In the new poll, men were nearly twice as likely as women to say the country is united, 16% to 9%.

Eighty-five percent of White respondents reported feeling division, versus 74% of Hispanic respondents and 63% of Black respondents.

According to the survey, the 18-29 age group said they felt the strongest sense of unity, at 23%, with that share shrinking with each successive age group. Just 2% of those 65 and older said they feel the country is united.

Broken down by political party affiliation, Democrats were more hopeful about the country's closeness, with 23% of Democrat poll participants saying the country feels united, compared to a paltry 6% of Republicans and 8% of independents.

Among Democrats surveyed, 40% said the country has become more united under President Joe Biden. Three percent of Republicans and 15% of independents agreed.

Nearly half of Democrats – 49% – said Biden should prioritize fulfilling his campaign promises and passing his legislative agenda, even if that results in a less unified country.

Conversely, 45% of Republicans said that Biden should make more of an effort to unite the country, even if he has to tap the brakes on advancing his legislative agenda. In the 2021 poll, which was taken after Biden had been elected but before he had been sworn in, 70% of Republicans said his focus should be on unity.

When asked if they thought former President Donald Trump committed crimes during and after his presidency, 49% and 43% respectively said they believed he had.

The new poll was conducted Sept. 8-11 and surveyed 1,000 U.S. adults. The margin of error was plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

Original Article

Dick Morris: Biden’s Coming ‘October Surprise’ — Count on It!

Dick Morris: Biden's Coming 'October Surprise' — Count on It! (Newsmax/"Spicer & Co.")

Dick Morris By Dick Morris Wednesday, 05 October 2022 10:40 PM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

The world has become a dangerous place, made especially so when both the leaders of the United States and Russia are "cornered" and, yes, quite desperate.

As Ukraine wages a successful counter-offensive, Russian dictator Putin faces a serious humiliation.

His army is in full retreat and could be crushed.

Interestingly, Biden faces his own humiliation. A political one, but a serious humiliation nonetheless.

Special: Dick Morris' "The Return" now at top of bestseller lists, get your FREE copy offer – Save $28! See More Here

So each leader thinks he is fighting for his very existence in power.

The stakes are extremely high.

If Putin is defeated in Ukraine, he could be swept from power, in a best case.

In a worst case, he will be assassinated.

If Biden loses, Congress will become Republican, and its increasingly possible both the Senate and House will fall to the GOP.

Biden will face massive congressional inquiries into his dirty laundry.

Republicans will want to know how the DOJ and FBI have become weaponized.

They'll want to know about the horrendous, over-the-top abuse of power we all witnessed with the FBI raid.

Biden also fears a real investigation into Hunter's laptop and the role "the big guy" played in all of his son's business dealings.

This won't be pretty — and will make any prayer of Biden's re-election very dark.

Joe Biden needs an October surprise to survive the coming tsunami Democrats face this November.

His pathetic attempt to shift attention on to Donald Trump with his ant-MAGA speech has failed.

In "The Return," I warned repeatedly that the 2022 mid-terms would be the first real battle of the 2024 presidential election.

Whatever party wins 2022 will be in a superior position to win the White House in 2024.

Biden knows this.

And so does Trump.

Trump and I have spoken many times about what really is play in 2022.

I think it's a key reason he not only praised my book "The Return," but told his supporters to "get it now" and buy it.

Trump is unlike other politicians.

He wants you to know both what his enemies are trying to do against him, and how he will respond.

Donald Trump loves a fight.

Yes, a Biden October surprise is coming.

With inflation soaring, the housing and stock markets collapsing, oil prices rising, and a border in crisis underway — he and his advisers know only a "wag the dog" event can save him.

In "The Return," I lay out what this "surprise" might be — a military action, an economic one, or another, bigger legal hit on Trump.

Trump is already preparing a massive response.

That's in "The Return" too.

Buckle up friends, the next 30-plus days might be the most shocking ones we have seen in a very long time.

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Dick Morris is a former presidential adviser and political strategist. He is a regular contributor to Newsmax TV. Read Dick Morris' ReportsMore Here.

Original Article

Changed Situation In Pennsylvania-8 Congressional ‘Rerun’

Changed Situation In Pennsylvania-8 Congressional 'Rerun' Pennsylvania sign Pennsylvania sign (Dreamstime)

By John Gizzi | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 05:00 PM EDT

The current race in Pennsylvania's 8th District is one of several throughout the U.S. that are 'reruns' from 2020. But with 5 weeks to go before Republican Jim Bognet again squares off against Democrat Rep. Matt Cartwright, there are significant differences that now make Bognet at least even money to reverse the outcome of two years ago.

"Joe Biden has been president and [Cartwright] has complete, abject loyalty to the president who has given us 8.3 percent inflation and gas prices up to $3.89 per gallon," Bognet told Newsmax, "And that's the highest it has been here since I was 3 years old."

A native of Hazleton, Pennsylvania, and former Trump Administration official in the Export-Import Bank, Bognet in 2020 lost by about 12,000 votes out of more than 344,000 cast.

"And it took 4 days for me to learn I was behind," said the GOP hopeful.

Along with his ties to Biden, Bognet predicted, Cartwright will be hurt by his position on abortion.

In Bognet's words, "My opponent has always said he is pro-life, but he has increasingly voting pro-abortion. And we're a very Catholic, pro-life district."

The conservative hopeful is a strong opponent of abortion and made clear he has no problem voicing his point of view in the campaign with Cartwright.

Earlier this year, Cartwright faced an unanticipated "bump" when he appeared in advertisements soliciting business for a plaintiff's lawyer — who also happened to be one of his top contributors. Members of Congress have ethics rules barring them from promoting commercial business for anyone in the private sector. Following several published reports that pointed this out, Cartwright cited "an apparent misunderstanding" about the shot and sent a cease and desist letter to the law firm, which promptly pulled the ads.

Because of the tight outcome of the race in '20, Bognet is likely to get the national party support that eluded him in his last campaign. And, as it was in the twilight hours of the campaign two years ago, the race in Pennsylvania-8 is already beginning to be watched nationwide.

John Gizzi is chief political columnist and White House correspondent for Newsmax. For more of his reports, Go Here Now.

Original Article

Biden Juggles Iran Nuke Talks as Iranian Repression Grows

Biden Juggles Iran Nuke Talks as Iranian Repression Grows Biden Juggles Iran Nuke Talks as Iranian Repression Grows President Joe Biden waves before boarding Air Force One for a trip to Florida to visit areas impacted by Hurricane Ian, Wednesday. (AP)

MATTHEW LEE and AAMER MADHANI Wednesday, 05 October 2022 03:36 PM EDT

President Joe Biden has hit back at Iran over the government’s brutal crackdown on antigovernment protests. He’s praised the “brave women of Iran” for demanding basic rights and signaled that he'll announce more sanctions against those responsible for violence against protesters in the coming days.

The outpouring of anger — largely led by young women and directed at the government's male leadership — has created a seminal moment for the country, spurring some of the largest and boldest protests against the country’s Islamic leadership seen in years.

But as the Biden administration says it is dedicated to standing by the women of Iran, the president faces a tough question: Can he credibly side with the protest movement while also trying to salvage the languishing 2015 Iran nuclear deal that would pump billions into Tehran’s treasury?

“The risk of a nuclear Iran is terrifying on all levels,” Marjan Keypour Greenblatt, director of a network of activists that promotes human rights in Iran and a nonresident scholar with the Middle East Institute’s Iran Program, wrote in an analysis this week. “However, President Biden simply cannot offer the prospect of sanctions relief and de facto legitimize a regime that is ruthlessly gunning down its own citizens in the street.”

The weeks-old protests were triggered by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who died in Iranian security custody. Morality police had detained Amini last month for not properly covering her hair with the Islamic headscarf, known as the hijab, which is mandatory for Iranian women. Amini collapsed at a police station and died three days later.

Her death and the subsequent unrest have come at a complicated moment as the administration tries to bring Iran back into compliance with the nuclear deal that was brokered by the Obama administration and scrapped by the Trump administration.

The deal already was teetering toward collapse despite Biden's efforts to revive it. But the administration has not given up all hope for a turnaround via indirect talks with the Iranian leadership. The pact, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or JCPOA, would provide Tehran with billions in sanctions relief in exchange for the country agreeing to roll back its nuclear program to the limits set by the 2015 deal. The deal includes caps on enrichment and how much material it can stockpile and limits the operation of advanced centrifuges needed to enrich.

Chances for a return to the deal have come tantalizingly close since the beginning of this year, but have been derailed by Iranian demands that the U.S. maintains are outside the scope of the original agreement. And now, prospects for a resumption in negotiations are bleak at least until later this fall.

Critics of the nuclear deal argue that the administration should break off all consideration of a renewed deal. They say the sanctions relief windfall that Iran would enjoy would be used to further repress its own people and fund proxies that would exacerbate broader threats in the region.

“The White House faces an internal strategic contradiction: How can you claim to be holding the regime accountable for internal repression while offering that same regime sanctions relief in Vienna?” said Richard Goldberg, an analyst at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a policy institute focusing on foreign affairs and national security.

But the administration has so far held to Biden’s initial campaign position: A deal with Iran will make the world safer. That strongly held viewpoint creates an unusual split-screen dynamic for Biden, who speaks frequently about the need to stand firm in the battle of democracies vs. autocracies.

His administration has insisting on keeping nuclear talks with Iran on a separate track — even while condemning Tehran’s selling drones to Russia for its war in Ukraine; persistent attacks against U.S. allies in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Syria and Iraq; holocaust denialism by Iran’s president and supreme leader; the wrongful detention of American citizens; and now a brutal effort to squelch the voices of Iranian women speaking out for basic rights.

“Look, I mean … we have concerns with Iran; we have said that before,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said earlier this week. “But the JCPOA is the best way for us to address the nuclear problem that we see. As long as we believe pursuing JCPOA talks is in the U.S. national security interest, we will do so."

Officials say they are still convinced of the central argument the Obama administration made when it negotiated the original nuclear deal in 2015: An Iran with a nuclear weapon is more dangerous than an Iran without one, no matter what the circumstances.

There have been other moments when pent-up anger has convulsed the Islamic Republic only to peter out. In 2009, millions took to the streets in what was known as the Green Movement after the government declared the victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in a hotly contested presidential election.

Tens of thousands of frustrated Iranians protested in 2017 and 2018 against the country’s stunted economy and seeking greater social freedoms. Hundreds of protesters were killed in protests in late 2019 spurred by skyrocketing fuel prices and government policy writ large.

But Amini’s death has galvanized a measure of outrage that’s caused reverberations far beyond Iran’s borders. Videos spreading on social media show school girls marching in the streets without hijabs and college-aged students chanting for independence, freedom, and death for Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

The White House says the administration’s support of the protesters has been robust.

Biden spoke of the protesters at U.N. General Assembly last month. The United States moved quickly last week to impose sanctions on the country’s morality police and more sanctions are expected in coming days.

Yet, some analysts argue that thus far the administration has offered only a tepid response to the crackdown on the demonstrations. The most significant support the administration has provided to protesters thus far has been easing restrictions on the export of software and hardware to make it easier for Iranians to communicate with each other and the outside world.

Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said it's time for the administration to think bigger.

“The Biden administration should broaden its Iran strategy to focus not only on countering the destructive aspirations of the Iranian regime, but also to champion the constructive aspirations of the Iranian people to live in a free society at peace with the world,” Sadjadpour said.

Original Article

Republican Lake Even Money to Win Arizona Governor’s Race

Republican Lake Even Money To Win Arizona Governor's Race Kari Lake Kari Lake (Getty Images)

By John Gizzi | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 03:31 PM EDT

With five weeks to go before Arizonan voters choose a successor to termed out GOP Gov. Doug Ducey, no one is predicting a winner.

The latest polls show a standoff between Democrat Katie Hobbs and Republican Kari Lake, who won the GOP primary over the candidate endorsed by Ducey.

According to a just-completed CBS New/You Gov survey among likely voters in the Grand Canyon State, Secretary of State Hobbs and former TV newscaster Lake are tied with 49% each. According to a Marist College poll of the same voters, Lake ekes out the lead over Hobbs by 46% to 45%.

A third statewide poll conducted by Fox News showed Hobbs with the edge over Lake 44% to 43%.

"Lake is going to win," former State Republican Chairman Randy Pullen told Newsmax without hesitation, "She is outworking Hobbs, doing four to five events a week."

Pullen, like Gov. Ducey and former Vice President Mike Pence, supported Lake's primary opponent, developer Karrin Taylor Robson. But with Donald Trump's blessing. Lake won 48% to 43%.

It was widely thought by pundits and pollsters that, given her record as a protester of the 2020 election results and her strong pro-life stand, Lake was doomed to disaster in the fall. But with the state Republican Party united behind her, this is not the case.

"I look at a lot of polls," said Pullen, "When you look at the polls you see, Kari has been gaining steadily. It's all about momentum."

Pullen and others see the fear of a border invasion by illegal immigrants as helping to fuel Lake's momentum. The Republican hopeful has taken a hard line against illegal immigration. In addition, repeated surveys have shown that inflation is hurting Democrat hopefuls such as Hobbs.

Another issue that strongly resonates with Arizona voters is that of education reform. Taking a page from the winning campaign book of Virginia's Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin, Lake has campaigned hard on greater parental control over local education and parents' power over that of school boards.

In addition, her strong endorsement of school vouchers differs sharply with that of teachers union favorite Hobbs and recently won her the endorsement of the Wall Street Journal.

John Gizzi is chief political columnist and White House correspondent for Newsmax. For more of his reports, Go Here Now.

Original Article

NYC Dem Rose: ‘Sick, Tired’ of Biden ‘Being in Power,’ ‘Move On’

NYC Dem Rose: 'Sick, Tired' of Biden 'Being in Power,' 'Move On' (Newsmax)

By Eric Mack | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 03:19 PM EDT

The old "generation" has even a New York Democrat bailing on President Joe Biden for 2024, saying it is time to "move on" to younger presidential candidates.

"I do not think that Joe Biden should run in 2024," Max Rose, who is running against Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., in New York's 11th Congressional District, told Fox-5 N.Y. "I'm sick and tired of that generation being in power. We've got to move on."

Rose does not want former President Donald Trump to "run in 2024," but the fact Rose is breaking with his party's incumbent is noteworthy.

Biden has already been the oldest president elected and the oldest sitting president, and he would be 82 at the start of a second term.

"We have to turn the page not just on this politics of ineffectiveness but also this politics of division and vitriol," Rose added. "It's time to move on as a nation."

Despite speculation Democrats will ultimately break from Biden for a 2024 reelection campaign, the White House contends Biden is going to run again.

"The president has said this himself: He intends to run in 2024," White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Tuesday.

Rose was in Congress 2019 and 2020 before losing his seat to Malliotakis. They are in a rematch again this November.

The seat is "likely Republican," according to the latest nonpartisan Cook Political Report projection.

Original Article

Devin Nunes to Newsmax: Trump Won’t Return to Twitter Even If Musk Buys It

Devin Nunes to Newsmax: Trump Won't Return to Twitter Even If Musk Buys It (Newsmax/"National Report")

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 02:37 PM EDT

Even if Elon Musk's latest offer to buy Twitter at his original price quote goes through, former President Donald Trump won't be going back because of all the problems that are still there, Devin Nunes, the CEO of Trump Media and Technology Group, said on Newsmax Wednesday.

"Can all these big tech companies go in and start to cancel him," Nunes, a former GOP representative from California, told Newsmax's "National Report." "We've built our systems from the ground up, so we're not reliant on any big tech at all. Twitter I'm sure is using a lot of the big tech companies."

First Musk will have to come up with the cash to spend $44 billion on the purchase, and after that, he'll have to figure out which tech companies can cancel Twitter "if he doesn't operate the platform the way the Democrats and the left in this country want him to operate it," said Nunes.

"Third, he's got thousands of employees there who hate conservatives, hate anybody that is center-right and are very extreme, so Musk has to deal with that problem, too," he added.

But while Trump has supported Musk's takeover bid, "he's not going to go back to the past…we have established Truth Social against big tech…we're not going to go back to the past for the reasons that I was explaining just a few seconds ago…they can't take us down. They've tried."

Meanwhile, there have been some issues with the Truth Social app not being approved for Android phones, but now Samsung is allowing the app on its Samsung Galaxy models, said Nunes.

"The good part about that is now roughly about 80% of the phones in the United States can download the Truth Social app," said Nunes. "This is the first time I'm talking about it on TV."

Nunes also on Wednesday talked about Trump's multimillion-dollar lawsuit filed against CNN, and said he believes Trump can win.

"Even though I think the courts have become very, very biased, but it really just depends on what judge you get," said Nunes. "Hopefully this lawsuit that the president filed will get a good judge who understands that the only way we're going to stop this bifurcation of America, the splitting of America. The temperature has to be lowered, and you can't have news organizations that are out there that are spewing hatred."

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Original Article

US Appeals Court Hands Trump Setback in Mar-a-Lago Documents Case

US Appeals Court Hands Trump Setback in Mar-a-Lago Documents Case US Appeals Court Hands Trump Setback in Mar-a-Lago Documents Case (Jeff Swensen/Getty Images)

Sarah N. Lynch Wednesday, 05 October 2022 02:09 PM EDT

A U.S. appeals court Wednesday granted the Justice Department's request to expedite its appeal of a lower court order appointing a special master to review records the FBI seized from former President Donald Trump's Florida estate.

The decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to fast-track the government's appeal represents a setback for Trump, who had opposed the request.

Last week, the Justice Department had asked the 11th Circuit to address concerns it still has with U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon's appointment of Senior Judge Raymond Dearie, who is tasked with reviewing more than 11,000 records the FBI found inside Mar-a-Lago in order to weed out anything that may be privileged.

Cannon's order blocks the Justice Department from relying on those records for its ongoing criminal investigation until Dearie's review is complete.

In its filing, the Justice Department said this prohibition is hampering its probe, and that it needs to be able to examine non-classified records that may have been stored in close proximity to classified ones.

Those non-classified records, the department said, "may shed light" on how the documents were transferred to or stored at the Mar-a-Lago estate, and who might have accessed them.

Original Article

Reagan Biographer Shirley to Newsmax: Book Highlights Trump’s Greatest Speeches

Reagan Biographer Shirley to Newsmax: Book Highlights Trump's Greatest Speeches (Newsmax/"National Report")

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 01:48 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump ranks among the greatest presidential speech makers in American history, so it made sense to pull together some of his top addresses into a new book, Craig Shirley, a presidential historian and biographer for late President Ronald Reagan who also wrote the book's introduction, said on Newsmax Wednesday.

"It was a mutual agreement by Humanix and myself, and they eventually came to me and said 'we think there's a book here,' " Shirley said on Newsmax's "National Report" about the book, "The Greatest Speeches of Donald J. Trump," which came out this week.

Shirley said he and his wife, Zorine, went through about 100 of Trump's speeches and ended up picking 27 to go in the book.

And, he added that while he wouldn't put Trump in the ranks of Reagan or late Presidents John F. Kennedy or Franklin Delano Roosevelt, he'd rank him right behind them.

"With all his speeches, there's a general patriotic message, the pro-American message," said Shirley. "There's a unity message … looking forward to a future of prosperity, of the future, of hope for future."

However, Trump's speeches are often "smothered" by the liberal national media, and that's why a focus needs to be put on them, said Shirley.

"They are quite good, and they almost uniformly called for the unity of the American people," said Shirley. "You can't help but think of the contrast with Joe Biden's nervous speech a couple of weeks ago, where he castigated the American people."

The book includes Trump's July 4 address at Mount Rushmore and his inauguration speech, and Shirley called the Rushmore address "one of the great patriotic speeches by an American president."

He called the inauguration speech "courageous."

"For him to go into the belly of the beast and castigate them and tear them apart, to say you are the problem with America. I thought it was that that was gutsy," said Shirley. "I thought it was eloquent and I thought it hit the nail on the head with what's wrong with America, with the elites running America to the ground just as the elites are running America into the ground today."

Trump, Shirley added, "is one of the few members of the Republican Party willing to call the establishment what they are, which is corrupt."

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GOP Highlights Gaffes to Target Biden’s Competence

GOP Highlights Gaffes to Target Biden's Competence (Newsmax)

By Theodore Bunker | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 11:40 AM EDT

President Joe Biden's recent gaffes have become fodder for Republicans looking to cast doubt on his competence ahead of the upcoming midterms and the 2024 presidential election, The Hill reports.

The Republican National Committee recently picked up on a slip Biden made last week when he asked if a recently-deceased congresswoman, Indiana Republican Jackie Walorski, was attending an event. The RNC included the moment on a list of Democrat fails from that week and criticized the White House for not confirming whether he apologized, though reports say that he did apologize to Walorski's family later after signing a bill honoring her.

"It's not a great look," an unnamed Democratic strategist told the Hill. "And we all know it only feeds into the criticism of the president and his age. [Biden] has to be really careful to not give the other side easy fodder."

GOP lobbyist Bruce Mehlman, who served in former President George W. Bush's administration, said that "Biden gaffes are mostly exploited by opponents as evidence of senescence rather than for the substance of the statements themselves."

Republican strategist Doug Heye told the Hill, "Part of the challenge with what Biden said about Walorski is that it was just completely mishandled by the White House. It's very easy and it's the obvious thing to do to just say, 'he misspoke' and then you move on. But by continuing to do the 'front of mind' thing, it stretched any credibility and made it a bigger issue than it was."

Some Democrat strategists dismissed Biden's gaffes as overblown, saying that they won't have a sizable impact on voters.

"The RNC may have some fun with it, they may be giving themselves high fives, but in the end I don't think it makes much of a difference at all," said Democratic consultant Jim Manley. "Everyone knows he has a habit of misspeaking from time to time."

Another unnamed Democrat strategist said, "It's already baked in. People elected Joe Biden knowing he can put his foot in his mouth. It's like pointing out that Donald Trump lies. People know this about him and I don't think it makes much difference."

They added, "Sure, Republicans will use this against him and they should. But it won't matter."

Original Article

Gallup: FBI, CIA Job Approval Ratings Improve

Gallup: FBI, CIA Job Approval Ratings Improve (Newsmax)

By Charlie McCarthy | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 11:05 AM EDT

Americans look upon the FBI and CIA more favorably than in recent years, a new Gallup poll found.

The CIA received an excellent or good job approval rating from 52% of respondents, and the FBI earned the same from 50%, Gallup survey results showed.

Last year, 41% said the CIA was doing a good or excellent job, and 44% said that of the FBI — the lowest job approval rating of the bureau in at least 19 years, and the CIA’s second-lowest rating ever recorded.

Gallup in 2021 documented double-digit declines since 2019 in positive job ratings of eight government agencies and departments, including the CIA and FBI.

The FBI's approval rating in the new survey differed sharply among partisan groups.

Only 29% of Republicans said the FBI was going an excellent or good job, while 79% of Democrats agreed. Just 47% of independents said likewise.

The poll results announced Wednesday come after the FBI’s raid of former President Donald Trump’s Florida home in connection with a federal investigation into his handling of documents.

Many Republicans also resent the FBI’s investigation into alleged ties between Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and the Russian government, as well as a probe into the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack that has led to the arrests of hundreds of defendants.

Gallup indicated Republicans and Democrats both increased their approval rating for the CIA, which was saw jumps of 13 points (GOP) and 14 points (Dems).

The IRS (34%) and Justice Department (35%) received the lowest ratings for an excellent-good job approval among government agencies in the poll.

A total of 41 percentage points separate Democrats (65%) and Republicans (24%) excellent-good ratings for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The latest Gallup survey also showed that Americans have soured on the Federal Reserve Board as it tries to battle inflation. Positive views of the Fed has deteriorated this year, falling to 37% from 44% last year.

The Postal Service (60%) and NASA (56%) received the best overall scores among government agencies in the poll.

The Gallup poll was conducted Sept. 1-16 through telephone interviews with 812 U.S. adults. The margin of error is 4 percentage points.

Original Article

Judge: Durham Can’t Use Danchenko’s Alleged Russian Intel Links at Trial

Judge: Durham Can't Use Danchenko's Alleged Russian Intel Links at Trial (Newsmax)

By Charlie McCarthy | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 09:12 AM EDT

A federal judge dealt several blows to special counsel John Durham in the case against Igor Danchenko, the alleged principal source of the discredited Steele dossier.

Judge Anthony Trenga on Tuesday night ruled that Durham's evidence cannot include details from the FBI's earlier counterintelligence investigation into the main source for British ex-spy Christopher Steele's discredited dossier, the Washington Examiner reported.

With the trial set to begin Tuesday, Durham sought to use evidence about Danchenko, a Russian-born lawyer, including his alleged links to Russian intelligence.

Durham previously said Danchenko was the subject of an FBI counterintelligence investigation as a potential national security threat from 2009-11. The special counsel wanted findings from that investigation to be used at trial.

"The Court will exclude the details of the investigation," Trenga ruled Tuesday. "The probative value of these unproven allegations, i.e., Danchenko sought to facilitate the sale of classified information and that he had contact with Russian intelligence services, which would have to be established through multiple levels of hearsay, is of only marginal relevance in terms of proving the materiality of Danchenko's allegedly false statements. The evidence's low probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice and confusion of the issues."

The judge, a George W. Bush appointee who sits on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, also denied Durham's request to provide other evidence, including showing that Danchenko allegedly misled about the sourcing for the unfounded "pee tape" claims that Steele put into his dossier.

Danchenko has been charged with five counts of lying to the FBI as part of Durham's probe into the origins of the original investigation into the 2016 Trump campaign's alleged collusion with Russian agents during the presidential race.

Durham said Danchenko, hired by the FBI In March 2017, remained a "confidential human source" (CHS) during special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into the accusations against the Trump campaign.

The special counsel accused Danchenko of anonymously sourcing a fabricated claim about Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort to Hillary Clinton ally Chuck Dolan, who spent years working for Russian businesses and the Russian government.

Danchenko also was accused of lying to the FBI about a phone call he claims he received from Sergei Millian, an American citizen born in Belarus.

Danchenko said Millian told him about a conspiracy of cooperation between former President Donald Trump and the Russians.

Trenga said that both "the government and Danchenko agree that the fact of a prior counter-intelligence investigation should be admitted at trial," but the defendant "wishes to exclude the details of the investigation," the Examiner reported.

The special counsel's team last week argued that simply mentioning the probe's existence and its closure would be misleading.

Prosecutor Michael Keilty said "the FBI closed the investigation because they mistakenly believed" Danchenko had left the United States, "but it wasn't because they hadn't found anything on Mr. Danchenko."

Original Article

Republican-Led House Would Probe Biden’s Woke Military

Republican-Led House Would Probe Biden's Woke Military the u.s. capitol building (Dreamstime)

By Charlie McCarthy | Wednesday, 05 October 2022 09:03 AM EDT

A Republican-controlled Congress would investigate the Biden administration's wokeness in the military, conservative House members said.

Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., said the administration's woke defense policies will be a focus if the GOP regains control of the House in the midterms.

"I think it's one of our very top priorities to clean up the mess the administration has made with the excessive and dangerous COVID mandates on our troops at a time where we have historically low recruitment," said Banks, chairman of the Republican Study Committee, Military.com reported.

Banks was asked whether the GOP would block diversity and equity initiatives, such as critical race theory.

"Those are issues that we've been very passionate about in the minority, and I guarantee we'll be just as passionate about them when we get the majority," Banks told Military.com.

House Armed Services Committee ranking member Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., in line to be chairman of the committee if Republicans regain the majority, told the website: "All this wokeness in the military, we are going to be aggressively trying to root that stuff out."

Republican efforts to roll back a vaccine mandate or other administration initiatives probably would be futile because President Joe Biden likely wouldn't sign GOP-sponsored bills.

Also, Democrats could maintain control of the Senate – something that could prevent such bills from even reaching Biden's desk.

However, Republicans controlling the House could result in messaging bills, as well as hearings and investigations concerning vaccine mandate, diversity initiatives, and anti-extremism efforts, Military.com reported.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., announced the party's "Commitment to America" agenda last month, though it was vague on the party's plans for defense policies.

Regarding defense, the GOP plan promises to:

  • Support our troops.
  • Invest in an efficient, effective military.
  • Establish a Select Committee on China.
  • Exercise peace through strength with our allies to counter increasing global threats.

"When it comes to the posture hearings and the legislative process of the NDAA [National Defense Authorization Act], I think you can expect more of the same from what you've seen the last couple of years," said Banks, an Armed Services Committee member, Military.com reported.

NBC News reported last month that lawmakers who are allies of former President Donald Trump plan to question the Joint Chiefs of Staff chair, Gen. Mark Milley, if Republicans regain control of Congress.

Milley, a critic of the former president, would face grilling about several issues, including the chaotic U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, the military becoming too "woke," and military readiness, sources told NBC News.

Original Article

Biden to Focus on Hurricane Victims in Florida, Not Politics

Biden to Focus on Hurricane Victims in Florida, Not Politics (Newsmax)

JOSH BOAK Wednesday, 05 October 2022 07:47 AM EDT

President Joe Biden will visit hurricane-ravaged Florida with a pledge that federal, state and local governments will work as one to help rebuild homes, businesses and lives — putting politics on mute for now to focus on those in need.

Hurricane Ian has resulted in at least 84 people confirmed dead, including 75 in Florida, as hundreds of thousands of people wait for power to be restored. Ian’s 150 mph winds and punishing storm surge last week took out power for 2.6 million in Florida. Many people are unable to access food and water.

Biden planned to meet Wednesday with residents and small business owners in Fort Myers, Florida, and to thank government officials providing emergency aid and removing debris.

With the midterm elections just a month away, the crisis had the potential to bring together political rivals in common cause at least for a time.

Joining Biden in Florida will be two of his most prominent Republican critics: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Rick Scott, according to the White House and Scott's spokesman. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre suggested Tuesday that it would be inappropriate for them to focus on political differences.

“There will be plenty of time, plenty of time, to discuss differences between the president and the governor — but now is not the time,” Jean-Pierre told reporters at a White House briefing. “When it comes to delivering and making sure that the people of Florida have what they need, especially after Hurricane Ian, we are one. We are working as one.”

Biden typically waits to visit the scene of a natural disaster, to ensure his presence and the fleet of vehicles that accompany him will not hinder the rescue efforts.

Before the storm hit, the president had intended to visit the Florida cities of Orlando and Fort Lauderdale last week, where he planned to stress his efforts to strengthen Social Security and Medicaid. Biden has accused Scott of wanting to end both programs by proposing that federal laws should expire every five years, although the Florida senator has said he wants to preserve the programs.

Biden and DeSantis have had a multitude of differences in recent years over how to fight COVID-19, immigration policy and more. In recent weeks, they tussled over the governor's decision to put migrants on planes or buses to Democratic strongholds, a practice that Biden has called “reckless.”

The hurricane changed the purpose and tone of Biden's first trip to Florida this year.

DeSantis confirmed Tuesday he'd be meeting with Biden in the hurricane zone and he praised the administration's Federal Emergency Management Agency for declaring an emergency before Ian made landfall.

“That was huge because everyone was full steam ahead. They knew they had the ability to do it," DeSantis said. "We appreciate it. I think FEMA’s worked very well with the state and local.”

The White House message of bipartisan unity marks a difference from Biden's predecessor, Donald Trump, who at times threatened to withhold aid to Democrat officials who criticized him, including Govs. Gavin Newsom of California and Andrew Cuomo of New York.

Trump threatened to withhold federal money from California after wildfires, saying its state officials were to blame for the deadly conflagrations, tweeting in 2018: “Billions of dollars are given each year, with so many lives lost, all because of gross mismanagement of the forests. Remedy now, or no more Fed payments!”

Politicians’ responses to natural disasters have the power to make or break political careers.

As Florida's governor for eight years, Jeb Bush maintained a steady response to a parade of hurricanes and was rewarded with sky-high approval ratings. President George W. Bush and Louisiana lawmakers’ more troubled response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005 still hangs over their legacies.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, the Republican who welcomed President Barack Obama to his state to survey Hurricane Sandy damage just days before the 2012 general election, said that during natural disasters “the best political strategy is to have no political strategy, to do your job.”

Christie ended up the target of some in his own party who believed that his warm welcome for Obama helped cement the Democrat’s reelection, but he has no regrets.

“At core this is what government is there for, it’s to protect the safety and the welfare of the people,” Christie said in an interview Tuesday. “The only thing that should be on the president’s mind, on Gov. DeSantis’s mind, on (Sen.) Marco Rubio’s mind is the turmoil and the tragedy that’s happened to people’s lives and how we can make it better.”

Christie noted that the comparisons to Sandy aren’t exact — Biden is two years away from being a candidate himself, and DeSantis is weeks, not days, from facing voters in his reelection bid. But Christie said any attempts to score political points would be admonished at the polls.

“Playing games is not what this is about,” Christie said. “This is a pretty transparent time and people will get it — that’s not what they want, and they’ll punish you for it.”

Original Article

Tudor Dixon to Newsmax: Michigan’s ‘Quiet Republicans’ Can Bring Victory

Tudor Dixon to Newsmax: Michigan's 'Quiet Republicans' Can Bring Victory (Newsmax/"Prime News")

By Eric Mack | Tuesday, 04 October 2022 10:04 PM EDT

Noting a discrepancy among polling results in the Michigan gubernatorial race, GOP nominee Tudor Dixon tells Newsmax there are "quiet Republicans out there" who know another term for Democrat Gov. Gretchen Whitmer would be "devastating."

"If we have another four years of Gretchen Whitmer, it will be devastating," Dixon told Tuesday's "Prime News" with Jenn Pellegrino, pointing to The Trafalgar Group poll Sept. 30 that had Dixon trailing by mere points outside the margin of error.

"We trust what they do over at the Trafalgar polling group. We understand that they know how to find those quiet Republicans, and we know those quiet Republicans are out there."

Dixon touted her positions on crime, the economy, parental rights in education, and damage done during Whitmer's COVID-19 shutdowns on business, including holding children outside of schools and Whitmer advocating for teaching inappropriate sex and gender indoctrination.

"It should be the basics reading, writing and math, get the sex and gender talk out of our schools," Dixon, emphatically endorsed by former President Donald Trump, said. "We want to protect our kids. It's got to be first and foremost, but we know Gretchen Whitmer won't."

As far as making up the ground in the final weeks before the Tuesday, Nov. 8 midterm, Dixon said the silent minority is ready and willing to rise up against Democrats in the key battleground state of Michigan.

"I have had so many people come and whisper in my ear: 'I'm voting for you,'" Dixon told Pellegrino. "I've been telling that story around the state and now I have people coming up to me after we have rallies, and we have events, saying, 'I'm not going to whisper anymore: I'm voting for you.'

"So as long as we all stick together and we are strong together, I believe we will be a mighty force in November."

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Trump Asks SCOTUS to Intervene in Special Master, Mar-a-Lago Case

Trump Asks SCOTUS to Intervene in Special Master, Mar-a-Lago Case (Newsmax)

By Nick Koutsobinas | Tuesday, 04 October 2022 06:43 PM EDT

On Tuesday, former President Donald Trump's legal team requested the Supreme Court intervene in the legal battle concerning the review documents seized from his Mar-a-Lago home.

Trump's lawyers, in their argument, request the Supreme Court vacate the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals' ruling that said the Justice Department could continue using classified documents seized from the president's home for their investigation.

"This unwarranted stay should be vacated as it impairs substantially the ongoing, time-sensitive work of the Special Master," Trump's lawyers wrote in their filing on Tuesday. "Moreover, any limit on the comprehensive and transparent review of materials seized in the extraordinary raid of a President's home erodes public confidence in our system of justice."

Trump's lawyers continued to argue that last month's unanimous ruling by the three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit compromised "the integrity of the well-established policy against piecemeal appellate review" and ignored "the District Court's broad discretion without justification," NBC News reported.

But in the 11th Circuit's ruling, they stated that the Justice Department could access the classified records. Their decision also included a reversal from a Florida district judge's decision who sided with Trump to grant the former president's request for a special master to review all records seized at Mar-a-Lago — including intelligence records.

​​"Plaintiff has not even attempted to show that he has a need to know the information contained in the classified documents. Nor has he established that the current [Biden] administration has waived that requirement for these documents," the appeals court judges wrote, according to The Hill.

Additionally, the 11th Circuit cast doubt on whether Florida District Judge Aileen Cannon could grant the appointment of a special master.

The request from Trump's team comes on the heels of the Justice Department's move to expedite its appeal in challenging the appointment of a special master.

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