WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Wednesday said it would not grant a quick, pre-election review to a new Republican appeal to exclude absentee ballots received after Election Day in the presidential battleground state of Pennsylvania, although it remained unclear whether those ballots will ultimately be counted.

The court’s order left open the possibility that the justices could take up and decide after the election whether a three-day extension to receive and count absentee ballots ordered by Pennsylvania’s high court was proper.

The issue would take on enormous importance if Pennsylvania turns out to be the crucial state in next week’s election and the votes received between Nov. 3 and Nov. 6 are potentially decisive.

The Supreme Court ruled hours after Pennsylvania’s Department of State agreed to segregate ballots received in the mail after polls close on Tuesday and before 5 p.m. on Nov. 6.

President Donald Trump’s campaign suggested that those ballots will never be counted.

“We secured a huge victory when the Pennsylvania Secretary of State saw the writing on the wall and voluntarily complied with our injunction request, segregating ballots received after the Nov. 3 deadline to ensure they will not be counted until the Supreme Court rules on our petition,” Justin Clark, a deputy campaign manager, said in an interview.

The court, Clark said, deferred “the most important issue in the case, which is whether state courts can change the time, place and manner of elections, contrary to the rules adopted by the Legislature.”

Pennsylvania’s Department of State could not immediately say Wednesday night whether it would revise its guidance to the counties about whether to count those ballots.

The Alliance for Retired Americans, which had sued in Pennsylvania state courts for an extended deadline, said the ruling means that ballots arriving during the three-day period after Election Day will be counted.

“This is an enormous victory for all Pennsylvania voters, especially seniors who should not have to put their health at risk during the pandemic in order to cast a ballot that will be counted,” Richard Fiesta, the alliance’s executive director, said in a statement.

New Justice Amy Coney Barrett did not take part in the vote “because of the need for a prompt resolution of it and because she has not had time to fully review the parties’ filings,” court spokeswoman Kathy Arberg said in an email.

Justice Samuel Alito, writing for three justices, indicated he would support the high court’s eventual review of the issue. But, he wrote, “I reluctantly conclude that there is simply not enough time at this late date to decide the question before the election.”

Last week, the justices divided 4-4, a tie vote that allowed the three-day extension ordered by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to remain in effect.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/election-2020-pennsylvania-amy-coney-barrett-elections-courts-57d6c7a32284071f36986006e37ee2d3

In dissent, Judges J. Harvie Wilkinson and G. Steven Agee, joined by Judge Paul V. Niemeyer, said the majority’s ruling had endorsed a pernicious trend.

“It takes no special genius to know what this insidious formula is producing,” they wrote. “Our country is now plagued by a proliferation of pre-election litigation that creates confusion and turmoil and that threatens to undermine public confidence in the federal courts, state agencies and the elections themselves.”

In the Supreme Court, the Trump campaign urged the justices to intercede.

“This case involves an extraordinary attempt by an unelected state board of elections to rewrite the unambiguous terms of a statute enacted in June by a bipartisan state legislature to set time, place, and manner requirements for absentee voting in response to the Covid-19 pandemic,” the brief said.

The board responded that it had the statutory authority to act. A state law gave it emergency powers to be used when elections are disrupted by natural disasters.

“In the past three years alone, the board has twice extended the absentee-ballot receipt deadline after hurricanes hit the state’s coast,” its brief said. “No one challenged those extensions.”

Justice Thomas said he would have granted the stay sought by the Republicans, but he gave no reasons.

Justice Gorsuch, joined by Justice Alito, criticized “the board’s constitutional overreach.”

Its actions, Justice Gorsuch wrote, “do damage to faith in the written Constitution as law, to the power of the people to oversee their own government, and to the authority of legislatures.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/28/us/supreme-court-pennsylvania-north-carolina-absentee-ballots.html

President Trump campaigned with Sen. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., in Prescott, Ariz., this month. McSally is a top target of Senate Democrats, who are hoping to flip her seat blue on Election Day.

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President Trump campaigned with Sen. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., in Prescott, Ariz., this month. McSally is a top target of Senate Democrats, who are hoping to flip her seat blue on Election Day.

Alex Brandon/AP

Republicans hold the Senate 53-47. (There are two independents — Angus King of Maine and Bernie Sanders of Vermont — but they caucus with Democrats and therefore should be counted that way in the math for Senate control.) To flip the Senate, Democrats would need to net-gain four seats outright or three seats and control of the White House, because in a 50-50 Senate — which is possible this year — the vice president breaks the tie. Republicans can lose up to three seats and hold the majority, as long as President Trump wins reelection.

Democrats are forecast to gain two to six seats. Control of the Senate remains a jump ball days out from Election Day. These are the races that will decide it:

Democratic-held seats (Republicans favored to gain one seat)

Alabama: Sen. Doug Jones is the only Democratic incumbent in a tough race this year. He is expected to lose to former Auburn University football coach Tommy Tuberville, the Republican challenger. President Trump remains wildly popular in Alabama, and it would be very difficult for Jones to overcome that advantage in a nationalized political climate. A Republican pickup here would mean Democrats would need to pick up four GOP-held seats and win the White House for Senate control.

Republican-held seats (Democrats favored to gain two to six seats)

Arizona: GOP Sen. Martha McSally is running against Democrat Mark Kelly, the popular and well-known former astronaut turned gun control advocate after the 2011 Tucson shooting of his wife, then-Rep. Gabby Giffords, D-Ariz. Kelly has led in all but one public poll in 2020. Kelly has also significantly outraised McSally.

Colorado: Republican Sen. Cory Gardner is running against former Gov. John Hickenlooper, a former 2020 Democratic presidential candidate. Hickenlooper initially indicated he was not interested in a Senate run but jumped in after his presidential campaign faded. He has run a lackluster campaign, but the overall Democratic pull of the state is probably enough to carry Hickenlooper to victory.

Iowa: First-term GOP Sen. Joni Ernst is running against real estate developer Theresa Greenfield. This race has gotten increasingly competitive in the closing months of the campaign. Ernst had been the early favorite for reelection, but the race has become a toss-up in the close.

Maine: Republican Sen. Susan Collins is running against Democrat Sara Gideon, the state’s House speaker. Few others have seen their political stock fall as fast as Collins has. Once one of the most popular senators in the U.S., she now ranks at the bottom. The polarization of the Trump era has done no favors for centrist moderates. Collins is a savvy campaigner and knows her state and how to win, but Gideon has been able to capitalize on Collins’ sinking political clout and anti-Trump sentiment.

Montana: Republican Sen. Steve Daines is running against term-limited Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock, arguably the only Democrat who could make Montana competitive for the party. Bullock is well-known and has generally been given decent marks by voters for his handling of the coronavirus pandemic. Montana is a red state that wants to stay that way, and that helps Daines. A Bullock victory would be a telling sign of a broader Democratic wave.

North Carolina: Republican Sen. Thom Tillis is running against attorney Cal Cunningham, a former state senator. This is widely viewed as the tipping-point race — whoever wins here will likely represent the party in control of the Senate. Cunningham had all the advantages, but late-breaking reports of marital infidelity will test whether old-school political scandals still register with voters.

Potential election night surprises

Alaska: GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan is running against orthopedic surgeon Al Gross, who is technically an independent but will appear on the ballot as a Democrat. Trump won Alaska by 16 points in 2016, and Sullivan should be able to pull out a win. But Gross has run a surprisingly strong campaign aided by waves of grassroots Democratic fundraising, including after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. There isn’t regular or reliable polling in this race.

Georgia 1: Republican Sen. David Perdue is running against Democrat Jon Ossoff, best known for running and losing a high-profile 2017 special election for a U.S. House seat. Perdue has been a Trump loyalist in a state that is increasingly more purple than red. Republicans are bullish that Perdue can win reelection, but the risk of a Jan. 5 runoff is real unless a candidate wins at least 50%. A third-party candidate, Libertarian Shane Hazel, is complicating that path.

Georgia special election: Appointed GOP Sen. Kelly Loeffler is running to serve out the term of former Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson, who retired early for health reasons. Loeffler is a wealthy businesswoman. If no candidate gets at least 50% — which is unlikely — the top two vote-getters go to a Jan. 5 runoff. Loeffler has to fend off both a Republican challenge from Rep. Doug Collins and the top expected Democratic vote-getter, Raphael Warnock. Warnock is a civil rights leader and pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, the same church where Martin Luther King Jr. served. If control of the Senate comes down to Georgia, it might not be known until January 2021.

Kansas: This is an open-seat race because Republican Sen. Pat Roberts is retiring. Republican Rep. Roger Marshall is running against doctor and state Sen. Barbara Bollier. Marshall is the GOP establishment’s pick and is favored to win. Bollier is a Republican turned Democrat who has focused on her medical background during the pandemic.

South Carolina: Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham is running against former Democratic congressional aide Jaime Harrison. Trump won South Carolina by 14 points in 2016, and Graham has transformed from Trump critic to Trump champion since then. Harrison has been able to turn a long-shot bid into a well-funded campaign that is polling competitively. The conservative roots of the state keep Graham as favored to win. A loss could be an indication of a massive Democratic-wave election.

Texas: Republican Sen. John Cornyn is favored against Democratic challenger MJ Hegar and has consistently led in public polling. A Democratic victory here would be a major upset and would likely be contingent on a surprise Joe Biden win in the state. Texas is also seeing a surge in voter turnout across the state, fueling Democratic hopes that the polls are wrong and 2020 is the year Texas goes blue.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/29/927878184/the-13-races-that-will-determine-senate-majority

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Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-federal-civil-servants/2020/10/28/86f9598e-122a-11eb-ba42-ec6a580836ed_story.html

Democratic nominee Joe Biden continues to lead President Trump in national polling, although the race has tightened to a seven-point lead for Biden, down from 10 points earlier in October, according to Real Clear Politics’ polling average.

More than 59 million total ballots cast as of Monday morning suggested a record turnout for this year’s race compared to the 47.2 million early votes cast in the 2016 election, according to data from the United States Elections Project.

The number of early ballots cast so far represents 43.1% of the total national voter turnout in 2016.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvania is one of a handful of states where the ballot counting process cannot begin until the morning of Election Day.

Follow below for more updates on the 2020 presidential race. Mobile users click here.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/live-updates-election-2020-polling-average-shows-biden-leading-trump-nationally-with-just-days-left

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2020/10/28/google-ceo-sundar-pichais-name-pronounced-incorrectly-senators/6061597002/

White House adviser Stephen Miller on Wednesday warned of a policy of “nationwide catch and release” if Democratic nominee Joe Biden is elected to the White House — painting a stark contrast with the Trump administration’s stance on immigration.

Miller, who has played a key role in forming the administration’s immigration policy, ripped into Biden’s immigration plan in a call with reporters and described what she sees as a radical agenda that would flood the U.S. with illegal immigrants.

BIDEN WOULD RETURN TO OBAMA-ERA IMMIGRATION POLICIES IF ELECTED, REPORT SAYS

“The Biden plan would implement nationwide catch and release for every nationality, 100 percent of people from 100 percent of countries will be released pending a court date,” he said. “Within a week of that happening there would be a rush on the border on a global scale.” 

He went on to predict catastrophe for the U.S. if Biden’s plan was implemented, warning of an “influx of low-wage workers [that] will drive down wages, deplete the middle class, bankrupt Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, overcrowd every school in the middle of a pandemic.”

The Trump administration has taken a wide range of measures to end “catch and release” — a process in which immigrants caught crossing the border were briefly detained, processed and then released into the interior to await their court date.

The administration claimed that such a process acted as a pull factor, bringing migrants north, and led to the 2019 border crisis. The administration took steps including making asylum cooperative agreements with Northern Triangle countries and expanding the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP.)

MPP, known as the “Remain in Mexico” policy, keeps migrants in Mexico as they await their hearing, and officials have credited it as a “gamechanger” in bringing apprehensions and border traffic down.

Biden has said he will end a number of Trump-era policies including “Remain-in-Mexico” and will also end the travel restrictions to certain nations that has been called a “Muslim ban.” 

The former vice president has proposed other more liberal immigration measures too, including increasing the refugee cap, expanding a number of legal immigrant pathways, and imposing a moratorium on deportations.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION MOVES TO BAR CONVICTED FELONS, GANG MEMBERS FROM ASYLUM 

Biden has also criticized Trump’s handling of the border crisis, pointing to the “zero tolerance” policy that resulted in some children being separated from their parents.

“Their kids were ripped from their arms and separated,” Biden said last week’s presidential debate.

Miller on Wednesday pushed back against that criticism: “I will also make the point that Joe Biden will be the best friend that child smugglers and child traffickers has ever had in the White House.” 

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“His policies would incentivize child smuggling and child trafficking on an epic global global scale. It would reward some of the most evil criminal organizations in the world,” he added.

Fox News’ Matt Leach contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/stephen-miller-nationwide-catch-and-release-biden

The Supreme Court declined to hear a case that sought to shorten the window of time that North Carolina voters had for submitting mail-in absentee ballots from nine days to three days.

The Court’s decision represents a loss for the re-election campaign of Republican President Donald Trump which has largely opposed mail-in ballots over unsupported fears of widespread voter fraud.

Though the court did not release a breakdown of the votes, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Samuel Alito penned a dissent. According to Gorsuch’s dissent, Justice Clarence Thomas would have joined. Newly seated Justice Amy Coney Barrett did not weigh in on the decision.

This last summer, the state’s General Assembly maintained pre-existing rules requiring mail-in ballots to be received no more than three days after Election Day. However, the State Board of Elections extended the deadline by six days, pushing the absentee ballot receipt deadline back to November 12.

Republicans plaintiffs argued that the board had overridden the General Assembly’s authority, “causing voter confusion and chaos.” But lawyers for the Democratic board said that laws passed by the assembly gave the board power to adjust election rules based on unique circumstances, like a pandemic.

In a statement, Democratic North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein called the court ruling a “huge win,” adding, “The Court upheld the State Board of Elections’ effort to ensure that every eligible vote counts, even during a pandemic.”

Newsweek contacted the North Carolina Republican party for comment.

Although North Carolina has chosen a Republican president every election for over 60 years, a Gravis Marketing poll released Wednesday showed Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden beating Trump 49 percent to Trump’s 46 percent. However, Biden’s lead fell within the poll’s 4 percent margin of error.

On October 19, the court ruled similarly on a case in which Republicans sought to overturn part of a Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision allowing ballots postmarked by November 3 to be counted three days after Election Day.

Trump has repeatedly attacked mail-in voting as potentially allowing widespread voter fraud despite the fact that he has voted by mail in Florida in past elections. Studies have repeatedly shown little to no evidence of widespread voter fraud stemming from mail-in voting.

Many states have expanded mail-in voting options to allow citizens to cast ballots in the national elections without risking possible COVID-19 exposure during the ongoing pandemic.

During a March 30 episode of Fox & Friends, Trump said of mail-in voting, “If you ever agreed to it, you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again.” On April 8, Trump tweeted that mail-in voting “doesn’t work out well for Republicans” despite studies showing that mail-in voting does not favor either party.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/trump-campaign-suffers-north-carolina-setback-supreme-court-rejects-mall-ballot-case-1543081

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2020/10/28/google-ceo-sundar-pichais-name-pronounced-incorrectly-senators/6061597002/

By Wednesday, Trump, who is trailing Biden by 4 to 5 percentage points in Pennsylvania, cast the blame squarely on Democratic Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney: “It’s a terrible thing, what I’m witnessing is terrible, and frankly that the mayor or whoever it is that’s allowing people to riot and loot and not stop them is also just a horrible thing. I saw the event, everybody did — it was on television, it was a terrible event, I guess that’s being looked at very strongly.”

“You can’t let that go on. Again — a Democrat-run state, a Democrat-run city, Philadelphia,” he said, adding that Biden “doesn’t want to condemn them.”

Democrats — both nationally and locally — are well aware of the high stakes of responding to the civil unrest in the biggest city in one of the most important swing states. Throughout the last few months, Biden has maintained the same response to police shootings and civil unrest regardless of where it happens: He has decried the killings and upheld protesters’ right to speak out peacefully, while also condemning any looting or violence that follows.

His approach has been no different this week. The day after Wallace’s death, Biden issued a statement with his running mate Kamala Harris that read, “Our hearts are broken for the family of Walter Wallace Jr., and for all those suffering the emotional weight of learning about another Black life in America lost. We cannot accept that in this country a mental health crisis ends in death.”

While on the campaign trail Wednesday, he added, “What I say is that there is no excuse whatsoever for the looting and the violence. None whatsoever. I think to be able to protest is totally legitimate.”

In the wake of the shooting in Philadelphia, Biden’s team consulted with local elected officials, including state Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta, who is close to the campaign.

“I know Congressman [Cedric] Richmond is reaching out to people on the ground to hear directly from them about what they need and to talk about some of the things that the V.P. wants to do” to reform policing, Kenyatta said, referring to Biden’s campaign co-chair. “When there are moments of trauma, I think the first thing you need to do is listen. And I think that is what they’ve been seeking to do.”

Trump’s campaign and state Republicans plainly believe looting following protests against police brutality — and Biden’s response to it — works in their favor. Earlier this year, Matthew Wolfe, GOP ward leader in Philadelphia, he said, “Every time a looter smashes a window on Chestnut Street, Trump picks up some votes.”

So far, though, Trump’s hardline approach and months-long attempts to frighten suburban voters have fallen flat. National polls have found that voters trust Biden more to handle public safety and race relations. And a majority of Americans think Trump has encouraged white supremacists, according to a survey by the Public Religion Research Institute.

A recent Monmouth poll in Pennsylvania also showed that Biden is narrowly more trusted here than Trump to manage law and order. Women, people of color and white college-educated voters are especially likely to put their faith in Biden on the issue.

“There are a couple reasons why the message isn’t resonating so much. Part of it I think is just a fundamental misunderstanding: It’s an outdated view of urban-suburban relationships in Philadelphia,” said J.J. Balaban, a Democratic strategist in Pennsylvania. “Trump is making something that would have been a very powerful appeal in the late 1980s, but just has much less of an appeal right now.”

Madeleine Dean, a Democratic congresswoman representing neighboring Montgomery County, said her suburban constituents don’t view police shootings the way Trump does.

“My suburban voters, my constituents don’t see it that way,” she told POLITICO. “They see it as a problem of a Black man should not be gunned down by police, whether it is in the city or the suburbs. And then they also see that the blame game is inappropriate.”

Most Democratic elected officials in Philadelphia have sought to avoid responding directly to Trump’s incendiary remarks about them, treating them as if they’re bait.

“I don’t comment on Donald Trump’s stuff,” Kenney said Wednesday. “We have enough to do in the city. We have enough issues that we have to tackle and he brings no positive help to any situation.”

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s administration likewise sidestepped the question when asked to respond to the Trump administration’s remarks it might send federal law enforcement to the city. Wolf later mobilized the Pennsylvania National Guard following the request of the city government.

One exception is Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner, who in a scorching statement accused the Trump administration of throwing “gasoline on a long-burning fire in order to provoke further unrest and violence ahead of an election he is terrified to lose.”

Wolf’s decision to request the Pennsylvania National Guard has led to some disagreement among state Democrats. Isaiah Thomas, a Philadelphia city councilman, questioned whether it is necessary.

“I just think we have to be careful with the message we’re sending to people,” he said. “I think it’s important to recognize that when you look at some of the negative activity and the unrest that happened, there’s often a distinct difference between people who are outside at civil protests and people who are looting and destroying property.”

But Thomas said he is not concerned that the National Guard will affect voters’ ability to cast a ballot or go to satellite election offices: “I don’t think anything is going to deter the citizens of Philadelphia who plan to exercise their right to vote.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/28/trump-walter-wallace-shooting-philadelphia-433550

Ms. Merkel, who has overseen a broad set of stimulus measures to support struggling businesses and workers, said the government would compensate small- and medium-sized businesses affected by closures for up to 75 percent of losses.

The measures aim to ease the strain on the country’s hospitals, where the number of patients has doubled in just 10 days, and halt the rapid spread of the virus before the coming holidays, without bringing the economy to a complete standstill.

Ms. Merkel was laughed at when she predicted last month that if people didn’t change their behavior, the country would face 19,000 infections per day by Christmas. Now, it looks like that number will be reached in November.

“Within weeks we will reach the limits of our health system,” Ms. Merkel said at a news conference, after agreeing with Germany’s 16 governors on the nationwide measures.

“The selection was carefully made, knowing that it will be hard and knowing that many people have developed ways to stay safe and acted responsibly,” she said. “But deciding how to reduce the number of contacts, without affecting the economy and schools, we made these decisions and think they are reasonable and politically acceptable.”

As the chancellor held a video meeting with the governors on Wednesday, several thousand people employed in the entertainment business marched through the heart of Berlin, decrying the measures that have left them out of work since early March.

More people have been protesting against restrictions, and Ms. Merkel acknowledged that introducing new measures two weeks earlier would have helped, but the political acceptance for such a move wasn’t there.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/28/world/europe/france-germany-coronavirus-covid.html

The Biden campaign is “taking advantage” of the media bias against President Trump to keep the controversy surrounding former Vice President Joe Biden’s son Hunter out of the spotlight, former White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer claimed Wednesday.

“It doesn’t bring me any happiness to say they just ignore it because they can,” Fleischer said on “Outnumbered Overtime“.

“The saddest thing about this to me, as somebody who used to believe that the press’s first and worst bias was a bias in favor of conflict, that’s no longer the case,” Fleischer said. “Their first and worst bias is a bias against Donald Trump at all costs, and so they have abandoned their mission, they’ve abandoned their duty to cover the news.”

The former press secretary added that the “media has broken down and Joe Biden can take advantage of it.” He added that technology had changed the way people consume news, making information “a lot harder to get out, though it is getting out.”

‘PLAUSIBLE DENIABILITY’: BOBLINSKI CLAIMS BIDEN FAMILY SHRUGGED OFF CONCERNS ABOUT RISK TO 2020 BID

“Even when the news is direct, on the record, [and] comes from a person involved, they stifle it, they muzzle it, they censor it, they will not cover it,” Fleischer went on. “And this is after four years worth of them covering any little spurious, incorrect information that came from anonymous sources against Donald Trump.”

On Tuesday, Tony Bobulinski, a former business associate of Hunter Biden, told “Tucker Carlson Tonight” in an exclusive interview that Joe Biden‘s denials of knowledge or involvement in his son’s foreign dealings are “a blatant lie.”

Bobulinski, a Navy veteran and the former head of SinoHawk Holdings —  which he described as a partnership between the CEFC China Energy conglomerate and two Biden family members — told Carlson that he almost walked out of last week’s second presidential debate when Biden discussed the topic.

“In that debate, he made a specific statement around questions around this from the president,” recalled Bobulinski, who attended the debate as Trump’s guest. “And I’ll be honest with you, I almost stood up and screamed ‘liar’ and walked out because I was shocked that after four days or five days that they prep for this, that the Biden family is taking that position to the world.”

Text messages obtained by Fox News last week include an exchange between Bobulinski and James Biden, the Democratic nominee’s younger brother, in which Bobulinski asks James to “thank Joe for his time”.

Fleischer’s co-panelist Leslie Marshall responded that Americans do not care about Hunter Biden’s laptop and his emails and “it won’t matter.”

“I think I’ve agreed twice in my lifetime with Ted Cruz and yesterday was one of those days when he said the voters don’t care about Hunter Biden, his laptop, and his emails,” Marshall said. “Look, here is the problem with this, Harris. It is six days before the election. There are a lot of people that say, ‘Well, where was this guy before, why didn’t he say it?’ Why don’t we have other people that worked with him and surrounding him saying, ‘Yeah, I was there for that conversation’?” 

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Marshall added that in declining to respond to Bobulinski, the Biden campaign is  “saying with their silence, ‘We’re not going to give credence to this by not responding to this.'”

Marshall went on to say that Joe Biden’s tax returns do not reflect any of the evidence cited by Bobulinksi.

“Quite frankly, I think the Biden campaign six days out is smart to be silent on this and, sadly, the voters pretty much have already made up their minds and have already voted and this won’t matter.”

Fox News’ Charles Creitz contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ari-fleischer-biden-taking-advantage-broken-down-media

Former Department of Homeland Security chief of staff Miles Taylor, pictured in March 2018, announced he is behind the scathing anti-Trump op-ed and book published under the pen name “Anonymous.”

Tim Godbee/Department of Homeland Security via AP


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Former Department of Homeland Security chief of staff Miles Taylor, pictured in March 2018, announced he is behind the scathing anti-Trump op-ed and book published under the pen name “Anonymous.”

Tim Godbee/Department of Homeland Security via AP

Miles Taylor, the former chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security, has revealed himself to be “Anonymous,” the author of a New York Times op-ed and book critical of the Trump presidency.

“To be clear, writing those works was not about eminence (they were published without attribution), not about money (I declined a hefty monetary advance and pledged to donate the bulk of the proceeds), and not about crafting a score-settling ‘tell all’ (my focus was on the President himself and his character, not denigrating former colleagues),” Taylor wrote in a Medium post.

“Nevertheless, I made clear I wasn’t afraid to criticize the President under my name.”

Taylor, in media interviews as recently as August, denied being “Anonymous.”

Throughout his post, Taylor was explicit about his commitment to the Republican Party and asserted he “wanted this President to succeed” when he joined the administration alongside John Kelly, Trump’s first Homeland Security secretary who later became the White House chief of staff.

But Taylor went on to say, “Too often in times of crisis, I saw Donald Trump prove he is a man without character, and his personal defects have resulted in leadership failures so significant that they can be measured in lost American lives. I witnessed Trump’s inability to do his job over the course of two-and-a-half years.”

He said the president’s flaws were evident to “everyone” but that most were “were hesitant to speak up for fear of reprisals.”

Taylor has appeared in ads for Republican Voters Against Trump, a group that is supporting Joe Biden in the presidential contest. He also wrote an op-ed in The Washington Post in August detailing what he said were actions by the president that made the country “less secure.”

But it was his anonymous op-ed in The New York Times in September 2018 in which he declared he was “part of the resistance inside the Trump administration” that delighted the president’s critics and added to fears within the administration of a “deep state” that was acting against Trump’s orders. He parlayed that into a book, A Warning, a year later.

In his Medium post, Taylor defended his works under the cover of anonymity, explaining that he “wrestled” with the decision and that ultimately it helped hold Trump’s feet to the fire.

“Issuing my critiques without attribution forced the President to answer them directly on their merits or not at all, rather than creating distractions through petty insults and name-calling,” Taylor wrote.

The White House responded to the revelation in a statement by spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany.

“This low-level, disgruntled former staffer is a liar and a coward who chose anonymity over action and leaking over leading. He was ineffective and incompetent during his time as DHS Chief of Staff which is why he was promptly fired after only serving in this role for a matter of weeks,” McEnany said.

“It is appalling a low-ranking official would be granted anonymity and it is clear The New York Times is doing the bidding of Never-Trumpers and Democrats.”

Minutes later the Trump campaign released a statement, also unleashing a litany of insults at Taylor.

“He’s just another standard-issue arrogant, Washington, DC swamp bro who loved President Trump until he figured out he could try to make money by attacking him,” officials wrote.

The campaign also noted that Taylor denied being “Anonymous” in a CNN interview with Anderson Cooper.

During the interview, Cooper asks about Anonymous and says, “Are you aware of who that is?”

“I am not . … I’ve got my own thoughts of who that might be,” Taylor replies.

Cooper later asks more pointedly, “Are you Anonymous?”

Taylor replies, “I only wear a mask for two things Anderson: Halloweens and pandemics. So no.”

Taylor served at DHS from 2017 to 2019 and was chief of staff to Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen as well as Chad Wolf, now the acting DHS chief.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/28/928816691/ex-homeland-security-official-outs-himself-as-anonymous-anti-trump-author

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2020/10/28/google-ceo-sundar-pichais-name-pronounced-incorrectly-senators/6061597002/

Multiple North Carolina counties are under a Tropical Storm Watch as the state prepares for impacts from Hurricane Zeta.

Tropical Storm Watches have been issued for Gaston, Catawba, Lincoln, Cleveland, Rutherford and Polk counties.

As of 2 p.m. Wednesday, the National Hurricane Center says Zeta was about 145 miles southwest of the mouth of the Mississippi River and 155 south-southwest of New Orleans. The storm is moving north-northeast at 28 mph.

Maximum wind speeds clocked in at 100 mph, making Zeta a Category 2 hurricane.

Already the NHC says conditions are deteriorating along parts of the northern Gulf Coast.

“Life-threatening storm surge and damaging winds likely in the warning areas later today,” the NHC said.

Forecasters expect the storm to pick up pace as it moves north and makes landfall in southern Louisiana Wednesday afternoon.

“Zeta is expected to reach the northern Gulf Coast as a hurricane before weakening over the southeastern United States on Thursday,” the hurricane center said.

On Thursday, the storm is expected to move even faster towards the northeast as it crosses the southeastern and eastern United States.

Kate Garner of the FOX8 Max Weather Center said that heavy rain is likely at times, mainly in the foothills. Flooding is more likely in the mountains and foothills, but there is a low risk for the Triad.

“A cold front will move through tomorrow night and could bring strong/severe storms with it,” Garner said. “We are currently under a Level 1 Marginal Risk for storm severity.

SUMMARY OF WATCHES AND WARNINGS IN EFFECT:

A Storm Surge Warning is in effect for:

* Mouth of the Atchafalaya River to Navarre Florida
* Lake Borgne, Lake Pontchartrain, Pensacola Bay and Mobile Bay

A Hurricane Warning is in effect for:

* Morgan City Louisiana to the Mississippi/Alabama border
* Lake Pontchartrain, Lake Maurepas, and Metropolitan New Orleans

A Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for:

* Mississippi/Alabama border to Walton/Bay County Line Florida

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