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Ohio’s certification deadline is August 7 and Alabama’s is August 15. The Biden campaign has called on Ohio and Alabama officials to follow past precedent. The Biden campaign has insisted that it “will be on the ballot in all 50 states.”It has proposed several options. Ohio and Alabama could push back their deadlines or accept provisional certifications that would be confirmed after the conventions – as Alabama did in 2020 for Republicans. In Alabama, Democratic lawmakers in the state House and state Senate introduced legislation Thursday to push back the certification deadline to August 23.
Persons: Joe Biden, Frank LaRose, Wes Allen, Biden, Alabama’s, , Washington, Harris, Chris Redfern, , Sen, Doug Jones, ” Jones, state’s, Mike Jones, , Barry Ragsdale, Allen, ” “, Donald Trump Organizations: CNN, Democratic, Ohio, Convention, Republican National Convention, Democratic National Committee, Biden, Republicans, Ohio Democratic Party, Republican, Trump, GOP, US Locations: Alabama and Ohio, Alabama, Ohio, In Ohio, Colorado
CNN —Four candidates have qualified for the fourth GOP presidential primary debate taking place Wednesday night in Alabama, the Republican National Committee and debate broadcaster NewsNation announced Monday. Chris Christie will face off in Tuscaloosa in what will be the smallest debate stage lineup so far this year. To make the Tuscaloosa stage, candidates had to meet higher donor and polling criteria set by the Republican National Committee. None of their debate criteria relate to the qualifications related to actually doing the job of the president. Asa Hutchinson remains in the GOP race, though he has not qualified for any primary debates since his appearance at the first face-off in Milwaukee in August.
Persons: NewsNation, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Vivek Ramaswamy, Chris Christie, Donald Trump, Haley, Doug Burgum, , Burgum, Asa Hutchinson, Joe Biden’s, Alabama Sen, Doug Jones, Biden Organizations: CNN, Republican National Committee, Florida Gov, South Carolina Gov, New, New Jersey Gov, GOP, Trump, RNC, eventual GOP, North Dakota Gov, Heartland, Former Arkansas Gov, Alabama, MAGA Republicans Locations: Alabama, New Jersey, Tuscaloosa, Florida, Iowa, Iowa , New Hampshire, South Carolina, Nevada, New Hampshire, Miami, Washington, Milwaukee
GOP Senator Tuberville compared his work as a football coach to that of top US Marine Gen. Eric Smith. Smith, a Purple Heart recipient, had a heart attack Sunday after complaining for weeks of being overworked. Tuberville's ongoing block on military promotions has left hundreds of positions vacant, forcing officers like Smith to work two or three jobs. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy .
Persons: Tuberville, Eric Smith, Smith, , Tommy Tuberville, Jack Reed, Reed, Doug Jones, hasn't, Smith —, Roe, Wade, Adm, Lisa Franchetti, David Allvin, Chris Mahoney, Mahoney, it's, Tuberville's Organizations: Service, US Marine, Capitol, Marine Corps, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Marine Corp, Army, Armed Services Committee, Democratic, Auburn University and Texas Tech University, Department of Defense, Senate, Naval Operations, Staff, Air Force, Pentagon Locations: Alabama, Iraq
After a 36-year college football coaching career, Sen. Tommy Tuberville joined the Senate in 2021. According to his latest financial disclosure, his wealth is estimated to be at least $4.5 million. AdvertisementAdvertisementAccording to a recent Washington Post report, Tuberville has sold his land in Alabama for close to $1.1 million and the condo for $850,000. When asked about his reported investments, Tuberville's press secretary told Insider that he has financial advisors do his day-to-day trading for him. While it's not listed on his financial disclosure, Tuberville earns $174,000 each year from the government as a current US Senator.
Persons: Sen, Tommy Tuberville, Tommy Tuberville's, he's, Suzanne, Tuberville, Johnson, it's, trouncing, Jeff Sessions, Doug Jones, Tuberville's Organizations: Senate, Service, United States Steel Corporation, Apple, Agriculture, Nutrition, Pfizer, Johnson, Alabama —, University of Miami, Warner Bros, American Express, GOP, Senate Armed Services Committee, Pentagon Locations: Wall, Silicon, Dadeville , Alabama, Florida, Washington, Alabama, Forestry
Lieberman, a former U.S. senator and unsuccessful vice presidential candidate, said No Labels hopes to offer a legitimate "third choice" candidate. "We're not in this to be spoilers," Lieberman told ABC's "This Week" program. Former Democratic Senator Doug Jones said a third-party No Labels candidate could not secure the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win. But he said a No Labels candidate could help Trump regain the White House he lost to Biden in 2020. Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie rejected the group's approach outright on Sunday.
Persons: Joe Lieberman, Lieberman, We're, ABC's, we're, John Hope Bryant, Benjamin Chavis Jr, Larry Hogan, Pat McCrory, Joe Manchin, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Ross Perot, Bill Clinton, Ralph Nader, George W, Bush, Doug Jones, Trump, Jones, Chris Christie, Al Gore's, David Morgan, Howard Goller Organizations: Democratic, Republican, North Carolina, Democrats, Former Democratic, Electoral, Biden, ABC, U.S . Capitol, New, Senate, Thomson Locations: U.S, New Hampshire, New Jersey
Republican Katie Britt is running against Democrat Will Boyd to represent Alabama in the US Senate. Britt has outraised and outspent Boyd by leaps and bounds, and is strongly favored to win. Alabama's Senate race candidatesBritt, who is endorsed by former President Donald Trump, worked on Shelby's 2015 reelection campaign as his deputy campaign manager and communications director. The money raceAccording to OpenSecrets, Britt has raised $10.6 million, spent $9.1 million, and has $1.5 million cash on hand, as of October 19. What experts sayThe race between Britt and Boyd is rated as "solid Republican" by Inside Elections, "solid Republican" by The Cook Political Report, and "safe Republican" by Sabato's Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia Center for Politics.
“Tim Ryan is running the best Senate race in the country and having to do it all by his lonesome,” said Irene Lin, an Ohio-based Democratic strategist who managed Tom Nelson’s Senate primary campaign in Wisconsin this year. After losing two presidential campaigns and a race for governor in the state since 2016, national Democrats are wary about spending in Ohio, once a quintessential battleground. The barrage includes a spot attacking Ryan, who has portrayed himself as a moderate, as a party-line voter beholden to Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer. Other national Democrats have tipped their hat to Ryan, noting how his moderate message has put the seat within striking distance, if not higher on the party’s list of priorities. “The national Democrats have walked away from Ohio prematurely,” Griffin said.
Young's death triggered an unprecedented series of three statewide votes — a special primary, a special general election held along with a regular primary, and a regular general election — within five months. The Alaska special election is just one of the more than 120 congressional special elections conducted over the past two decades, an Insider analysis found. Special elections bombard votersSpecial elections routinely attract special attention. Rebecca Blackwell/APIn 2022, special elections are 'a perfect storm of confusion'Special congressional elections are, on balance, less democratic than regular elections. "We knew from the beginning that it would be harder to win a special election," McCready said of his September 2019 special election.
A seemingly dormant Mehmet Oz campaign has struggled to unify the MAGA base in Pennsylvania. "Since Dr. Oz's victory remarks on June 9th, he has been to over 75 events," Oz campaign spokesperson Brittany Yanick told Insider in a statement. The Oz campaign would not say when it has plans to launch new TV ads. The Vance campaign responded to Insider's request for comment by attacking Rep. Tim Ryan. "It's why Democrats have a chance of holding onto the Senate," he told Insider, "is just the horrible class of candidates they've nominated."
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