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CNN —Republican former Rep. Liz Cheney will campaign with Vice President Kamala Harris in Wisconsin on Thursday, touting her endorsement of the Democratic presidential nominee in the crucial battleground state, a senior campaign official told CNN. Cheney, who previously told CNN she was committed to doing what was necessary to stop Trump from returning to the White House, endorsed Harris last month in North Carolina, another swing state. She later said she expected to campaign against Trump in battleground states throughout the fall. Broader push to win over Republican votersThe campaign’s efforts to win over Republicans voters will extend beyond the Cheney event. Harris-Walz is spending significant money in this space as part of a more than seven figure paid media strategy, the campaign official said.
Persons: Liz Cheney, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Cheney, Harris, ” Cheney, Ripon –, Republican Party – Harris, Ripon, Trump, , Elise Stefanik, Dick Cheney, Adam Kinzinger, Gov, Geoff Duncan, Arizona Sen, Jeff Flake, Kari Lake, Mark Finchem, Walz, , , Austin Weatherford, Ruwa Romman, ” Romman, CNN’s Veronica Stracqualursi Organizations: CNN, Republican, Democratic, Trump, White, Duke University, Republican Party, GOP, New York, Illinois Rep, Arizona, Democrats, Republicans, Labor, YouTube, Biden Locations: Wisconsin, Wyoming, North Carolina, Ripon, Georgia, Arizona, Pennsylvania , Michigan, Arizona , Nevada , Georgia
Some of the ads feature doctors speaking passionately about abortion and saying that Republican candidates shouldn't represent "us" or "our" communities in Congress. But in at least four instances, House Majority PAC, a super PAC aligned with House Democratic leadership, featured Republican-blasting doctors in their ads who did not live in the district where they were advertising. The path to the House majority runs through all four of the districts where these ads ran. Since then, both doctors and patients have often become key personal messengers on abortion for Democrats. But Republicans blasted House Majority PAC over the ads, calling them misleading and accusing the group of spreading falsehoods about GOP incumbents and candidates.
Persons: Gabe Evans “, Lori Chavez DeRemer, Emily Schneider, Evans, Michelle Berlin, Lowe, Chavez, Destinie Marquez, Yvette Herrell, ” Marquez, Joe Biden’s, Melanie Stansbury, Juan Ciscomani, Sen, Kirsten Engel, Dr, Sigrid Williams, , Roe, Wade, Williams, Amy Walter, here’s, Hakeem Jeffries ’, Will Reinert, Marquez, Schneider, Lori Chavez, Gabe Evans, Janelle Bynum, Jeff Potts, Susan Wild, ” Potts, Potts, Mike Eby, Vasquez, Gabe Vasquez, , ” Eby, Luna County Sheriff Raymond Cobos, Derrick Anderson, Anderson Organizations: PAC, House Democratic, Republican, New, Colorado GOP, , GOP, OB, University of Colorado, University of New, University of New Mexico Hospital, Democratic, NBC, Republicans, House, National Republican Congressional, NBC News, HMP, Congressional, Fund, House Republican, New York Post, Post, Congress, Luna County Sheriff, New York Times, Army Green Locations: New Mexico’s, Arizona’s, Colorado’s 8th, Oregon’s 5th, Colorado, Oregon, Colorado ’, Oregon’s, New Mexico, Arizona, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, Joe Biden’s State, Arizona’s 6th, Arizona’s 7th, Berlin, Colorado’s 6th, state’s, Pennsylvania’s, Luma County, Washington, Luna County, Virginia
Disputes across the country are brewing over the role of local election boards and how much power they have to question – or even throw out – election results. In Georgia, for instance, Trump-backed members of the state election board recently passed controversial rules that could allow local election boards responsible for certifying results to conduct investigations that threaten to delay certification. One of the Georgia rules, the “Reasonable Inquiry Rule,” would allow election officials to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” before certifying election results. The petitioners in the case argue that the rule would give partisan board members a wide ability to cast doubt on, or even reject, election results. In some cases, the threat of legal action has been enough to deter officials from pursuing challenges to the certification process.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, , Ben Berwick, ” “, ” Berwick, , Mike Pence, Robert Froman, Joe Biden, Froman, ” Froman, State Francisco Aguilar, Aguilar, Gideon Cohn, Postar, “ It’s, ” Cohn, Trump, Ronna McDaniel Organizations: CNN, Capitol, Trump, Democratic National Committee, Georgia Democratic Party, Democratic, Democracy, Republicans, Georgia Republicans, Republican National Committee, Republican, Michigan Department of State, Detroit News, ACLU, State, Arizona voters, Institute for Responsive Government, Republican National, Commonwealth and Pennsylvania Department of State Locations: Georgia , Michigan, Nevada, Wisconsin, Georgia, Kalamazoo County , Michigan, Michigan, canvassers, Washoe, Washoe County, Reno, Arizona, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, North Carolina, Michigan’s, Wayne County, Detroit, Otero County , New Mexico
Which Battleground State Voters Could Sway the Election? It says that in order for Democrats to win, Black voters must make up 30 percent of all voters and at least 30 percent of white voters must vote Democratic. Black voters, who cast nearly a third of the ballots in 2020, overwhelmingly favored Mr. Biden — by almost 90 percent. That’s because educational attainment divides mostly white voters, and many of Nevada’s less-educated voters are not white. Even so, that wasn’t enough for him to overcome the coalition of white voters with a college degree and voters of color who delivered Mr. Biden a victory.
Persons: they’ve, Biden, Biden’s, Donald J, Trump, , Mark Kelly, , Samara Klara, Charles S, Bullock, Kamala Harris, Andra Gillespie, , “ There’s, Matt Grossmann, David Damore, suburbanites, Chris Cooper, Trump’s, Charles Franklin Organizations: Hispanic, The New York Times, White Hispanic, Democratic Senate, Mr, Biden, University of Arizona ., White, University of Georgia, Democratic, Black, Georgia, Emory University . Georgia, Suburban, Arab American, Michigan, , Michigan State University, Israel, Democratic Party, University of Nevada, Rural, Voters, North, Western Carolina University, Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin ., Marquette Law Locations: The, Arizona, U.S, University of Arizona . Georgia, Georgia, Michigan, Detroit, American, Gaza, Nevada, Las Vegas, , Carolina, North Carolina, Greensboro, Asheville, Trump, ” Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania’s, Philadelphia, Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Madison, University of Wisconsin . Wisconsin, Dane County
In today’s edition, we break down how panels of undecided voters in Arizona and Pennsylvania responded to the debate. A handful of Arizona voters previously turned off by both Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald expressed interest in the Democratic nominee in an NBC News panel after the debate. Read more →Harris avoids some big questions, but Trump’s lack of control costs himBy Chuck ToddIn many ways, Tuesday’s debate was quite familiar. Just like our politics for the last nine years, the entire debate revolved around one person: Donald Trump. Read more →That’s all from the Politics Desk for now.
Persons: Chuck Todd, Donald Trump, Harris, Emma Barnett, Alex Tabet, Kate Snow, Jacob Soboroff, Kamala Harris, Donald, Lynne Kelleher, Kamala, , , I’m, ” Hannah Reed, Trump, Joe Biden, Reed, Denise Lewis, she’s, isn’t, here’s Trump, who’s, Lewis, Read, → Harris, Don’t, Joe Biden’s, Biden, Chuck →, ove Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Democratic, Trump, Libertarian, Biden Locations: Arizona, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Bucks, Scottsdale, Harris
All three undecided voters assembled for a similar exercise in the Philadelphia suburbs remained on the fence, with Harris getting a look from two and former President Donald Trump from one. Undecided voters only account for a few percentage points of the electorate right now, according to public polls, with a closely divided country getting behind Trump and Harris. “Finally, we have someone who’s a woman who gets that it’s about us.”But Lewis said Harris didn’t fully seal the deal with her last night. Herr also saw a contrast between how Trump and Harris conducted themselves on the debate stage. After the debate, Navarro said he’s still leaning toward Trump, but Harris has given him more to think about.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Donald Trump, , ” Lynne Kelleher, Kamala, , Donald, I’m, Kelleher, Trump, Hannah Reed, Joe Biden, Reed, ” Reed, Andrew Wallace, Biden, Wallace, Denise Lewis, she’s, Lewis, we’ve, We’ve, ” Lewis, Harris didn’t, here’s Trump, who’s, Jeff Herr, “ McCain, “ McCain Republican ” didn’t, he’s, ” Herr, Herr, GOP Sen, John McCain, McCain’s, “ That’s Trump, “ Harris, Romeo Navarro, Navarro, there’s, didn’t, ” Navarro, Emma Barnett, Kate Snow, Alex Tabet, Jacob Soboroff Organizations: NBC, ABC, Trump, Democratic, Biden, “ McCain Republican, Capitol, GOP, Phoenix Locations: Pa, , Arizona, Philadelphia, Bucks County, Phoenix, Scottsdale, Tucson, Churchville
The secretary of state's office estimates that 577,971 valid signatures were turned in by Arizona for Abortion Access, a coalition of reproductive rights organizations that includes the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona and Planned Parenthood Advocates of Arizona. The Arizona for Abortion Access Act will go before voters under the title "Proposition 139." “This is a huge win for Arizona voters who will now get to vote YES on restoring and protecting the right to access abortion care, free from political interference, once and for all,” Cheryl Bruce, campaign manager for Arizona for Abortion Access, said in a statement. In a video shared by the Arizona secretary of state's office, Secretary of State Adrian Fontes acknowledged the legal hurdles the ballot proposal is likely to face. "This is going to certify that the initiative has made the ballot," said Fontes.
Persons: JP Martin, ” Cheryl Bruce, it’s, ” Chris Love, Dobbs, Roe, Wade, Katie Hobbs, Adrian Fontes, , Fontes Organizations: NBC, Abortion, American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona, Arizona, U.S, Supreme, Democrats, Democratic, Republican Locations: Arizona
Arizona voters will decide in November whether to establish a right to abortion in the state constitution, a measure that could strongly influence turnout in a battleground state that is critical to the presidential election as well as control of the Senate. In the two years since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, which had established a right to abortion in the United States Constitution, abortion rights groups have prevailed in all seven states where the question of abortion has been put directly before voters. Similar measures on abortion rights are already on the November ballot in six other states, but only two are battleground states — Arizona and Nevada. (The others are Florida, South Dakota, Colorado, New York and Maryland.) And Democrats are hoping that support for abortion rights will drive higher turnout in their favor.
Persons: Roe, Wade Organizations: Senate, United Locations: Arizona, Nevada, Florida, South Dakota , Colorado , New York, Maryland
Arizona voters will decide on Election Day whether to establish a right to abortion in the state Constitution. The ballot measure is a major victory for Democrats, who have used the issue of abortion to energize their voters. “Poll numbers for abortion rights are higher than poll numbers for Kamala Harris,” my colleague Kate Zernike, who covers abortion, told me. “In Arizona, Democrats think this ballot measure can really help them draw more voters.”A similar question will appear on the ballot in Missouri, state officials there said today. If voters pass the measure, Missouri would become the first state where voters overturned a near-total ban, radically reshaping access for millions of residents.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Kamala Harris, , Kate Zernike, , Kate, Harris Organizations: Democrats Locations: Arizona, Missouri
Arizona lawmakers voted on Wednesday to repeal an abortion ban that first became law when Abraham Lincoln was president and a half-century before women won the right to vote. A bill to repeal the law passed, 16-14, in the Republican-controlled State Senate with the support of every Democratic senator and two Republicans who broke with anti-abortion conservatives in their own party. The vote was the culmination of a fevered effort to repeal the law that has made abortion a central focus of Arizona’s politics. The issue has galvanized Democratic voters and energized a campaign to put an abortion-rights ballot measure before Arizona voters in November. On the right, it created a rift between anti-abortion activists who want to keep the law in place and Republican politicians who worry about the political backlash that could be prompted by support of a near-total abortion ban with no exceptions for rape or incest.
Persons: Abraham Lincoln, Katie Hobbs Organizations: Republican, Senate, Democratic, Republicans, Gov, Democrat, Arizona Locations: Arizona
Arizona lawmakers voted on Wednesday to repeal an abortion ban that first became law when Abraham Lincoln was president and a half-century before women won the right to vote. A bill to repeal the law passed 16-14 in the Republican-controlled State Senate with the support of every Democratic senator and two Republicans who broke with anti-abortion conservatives in their own party. The vote was the culmination of a fevered effort to repeal the law that has made abortion a central focus of Arizona’s politics. The issue has galvanized Democratic voters and energized a campaign to put an abortion-rights ballot measure before Arizona voters in November. On the right, it created a rift between anti-abortion activists who want to keep the law in place and Republican politicians who worry about the political backlash that could be prompted by support of a near-total abortion ban with no exceptions for rape or incest.
Persons: Abraham Lincoln, Katie Hobbs Organizations: Republican, Senate, Democratic, Republicans, Gov, Democrat, Arizona Locations: Arizona
As Representative Ruben Gallego campaigned for Arizona’s vital Senate seat last week, he did something that might seem unusual to those who know him as a fierce liberal combatant: He struck a moderate tone. Speaking to retirees in Goodyear, a politically divided Phoenix suburb, Mr. Gallego, a Democrat, addressed the surge of migrants at the border, suggesting that the asylum system was “being abused” and calling for more support for Border Patrol agents so they could “really focus on those bad guys.”It was a shift from the Ruben Gallego of years past, when he slammed former President Donald J. Trump’s border wall plans as “stupid” and accused him of “scapegoating immigrants.” The new message — stemming in part from an intensifying crisis under a far different president — represented a tacit acknowledgment that winning over Arizona voters may require a slide toward the middle. Delicately turning to the political center is a time-honored tradition for candidates of both parties. But Mr. Gallego, who represents a liberal district in Phoenix and has a long history of identifying as a progressive, could face a tougher challenge than most in redefining himself in a battleground state with a decades-old conservative bent — even after a major court decision on abortion this week put Democrats firmly on offense in the state.
Persons: Ruben Gallego, Gallego, , Donald J, , Organizations: Border Patrol, Arizona Locations: Goodyear, Phoenix
They’ll also have a chance to vote directly on the abortion ban the court has revived – abortion rights groups are currently in the signature gathering process, which has gained a new level of urgency. He added that he would not sign a federal abortion ban if one was passed through Congress. Katie Hobbs to “come up with an immediate common sense solution that Arizonans can support.” She also said she’s opposed to a federal abortion ban. Since then, abortion rights have proven to be a driving issue nationwide. Arizona is one of nearly a dozen states that could have an abortion rights measures on the November ballot.
Persons: Donald Trump, They’ll, , Barrett Marson, “ It’s, Trump, ” Trump, Juan Ciscomani, Kari Lake, Ruben Gallego, Katie Hobbs, , she’s, Gallego, Lake, Roe, Wade, Doug Ducey, Weeks, Hobbs, Stacy Pearson, , Joe Biden, Biden, Kamala Harris, ” Harris, , ” Biden, Harris, ” Hobbs, CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Marjorie Dannenfelser, “ We’ve, Chris Love, we’ve, ” CNN’s Kate Sullivan, Ebony Davis, Ali Main Organizations: CNN, Donald Trump . Arizona, Senate, Arizona GOP, Hartsfield, Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Republicans, GOP, Democratic Rep, Democratic, Republican, Biden, Trump, Arizona, SBA, , Abortion Locations: Arizona, Hobbs, Tucson
A near-total abortion ban from 1864 will soon take effect in Arizona. GOP Senate candidate Kari Lake bashed the law as "out of step with Arizonans." AdvertisementKari Lake, the Trump acolyte and Arizona GOP Senate candidate, says she does not support a near-total ban on abortion that's set to take effect soon in the crucial battleground state. Related storiesIn June of that year, Lake said in a local radio interview that she supported the 1864 law, according to Politifact. In a statement, Gallego also bashed the court's ruling while tying it to "extremist politicians like Kari Lake."
Persons: Kari Lake, , Lake, Kris Mayes, Katie Hobbs, Lake's, that's, Roe, Wade, she's, Donald Trump, Ruben Gallego, Gallego, Republican who's, Juan Ciscomani, Dave Schweikert, Hobbs Organizations: GOP, Service, Trump, Arizona GOP Senate, Arizona Supreme, Democratic, Democratic Rep, Republican, Reps, Arizona Republicans Locations: Arizona
CNN —Former Republican Rep. Liz Cheney said Tuesday that she’s committed to doing what’s necessary to stop former President Donald Trump from returning to the White House, as she continues to mull a third-party presidential run in 2024. Throughout her book, Cheney detailed how she saw her Republican colleagues fall in line to support his claims of election fraud following the 2020 election. In one instance, Cheney recalls GOP members reluctantly signing their names on electoral vote objection sheets for the states Republicans were contesting. Cheney has split with the Republican Party during previous elections. She also crossed party lines to stump for two moderate Democrats in competitive House races last year.
Persons: Liz Cheney, she’s, Donald Trump, , Donald Trump’s, , CNN’s Anderson Cooper, ” Cheney, Trump, “ can’t, Dick Cheney, wouldn’t, Cheney, Cooper, ” “, “ Trump, Jan, Mark Green of, Green, sheepishly, ’ ”, Kari Lake, Mark Finchem, CNN’s Ryan Brooks, Jamie Gangel, Jeremy Herb, Elizabeth Stuart Organizations: CNN, Former Republican, White, Republican Party, Trump, Washington Post, Republican, , Orange Jesus, Democrat, Independent, Arizona, GOP Locations: mull, Wyoming, Mark Green of Tennessee
The idea that either party could pick up six Senate seats in a single election seems crazy today, when only a handful of seats are viewed as truly competitive. The country and West Virginia changed around ManchinJust before Manchin arrived in the Senate, there were two Democrats representing West Virginia and two Republicans representing Arizona. One person who is running to replace Manchin, West Virginia Gov. While they are on defense in key races across the country, Democrats’ two remotely plausible pickup opportunities, in Florida and Texas, are also states that went for Trump. Meanwhile, now that he’s not running for reelection, Manchin wants to take his brand on the road.
Persons: Sen, Joe Manchin, Manchin, There’s, there’s, Jim Justice, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, CNN’s Simone Pathe, Kyrsten Sinema, , What’s, codifying Roe, Wade, , ” Manchin, He’s Organizations: CNN, Republicans, Senate, Republican, Democrats, Dakotas, West, Arizona, West Virginia Gov, Democratic, GOP, White House, Trump, Democratic Party, , The, House, Biden, White Locations: Kentucky, West Virginia, Massachusetts, Arkansas, Arizona, Manchin, Montana and Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, In Arizona, Florida, Texas, Alabama, Georgia, New York, North Carolina, Washington, America
Circuit Court of Appeals sent the case back to a lower court to consider the doctors’ request for a court order blocking the law. A court blocked enforcement of the 1864 law shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court issued the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973. But after the Supreme Court overturned the decision, then-Republican Attorney General Mark Brnovich succeeded in getting a state judge in Tucson to lift that court order. This past summer, abortion rights advocates began a push to ask Arizona voters to create a constitutional right to abortion. The proposed constitutional amendment would guarantee abortion rights until a fetus could survive outside the womb, typically around 24 weeks of pregnancy.
Persons: Douglas Rayes, gynecologists, Wade, Rayes, don’t, Warren Petersen, Ben Toma, Kris Mayes, Mayes, Petersen, Toma, hadn’t, Erin Hawley, ” It's, can’t, Roe, Mark Brnovich Organizations: PHOENIX, , U.S, Circuit, Appeals, District, Supreme, Arizona, Republicans, Democrat, Center for Life, Defending, Arizona Supreme, Republican Locations: Arizona, U.S, Rayes, Tucson
Rep. Ruben Gallego is running for the Democratic nomination, setting up a potential three-way race if Sinema runs as an independent. But polling shows that Sinema and Gallego would not simply divide the Democratic vote, handing the race to GOP firebrand Lake. But if former Democrat Sinema runs as an independent, Gallego still prevails in the poll, getting 41% of the vote. In a three-way race, Gallego is ahead in Noble's polling, with 34% support, compared to 26% for Sinema and 25% for Lake. But once Kennedy said he was running as an independent, Republicans rushed to separate themselves from him.
Persons: Republican Kari Lake, Sen, Kyrsten Sinema, Ruben Gallego, Sinema, Gallego, Lake, Donald Trump –, Democrat Sinema, Mike Noble, Joe, Biden, Fred Solop, Solop, Katie Hobbs, hasn't, Trump, Robert F, Kennedy, Jr, , , Hillary, won’t, Ronna McDaniel, he's, Hans Noel Organizations: Republican Party, Republican, U.S, Senate, Rep, Democratic, U.S . Senate, GOP, Democrat, Northern Arizona University, Trump, Democratic Gov, Lake, Quinnipiac University, , Republicans, RFK Jr, Green, Deal, Keystone Pipeline, Republican National Committee, Georgetown University Locations: Arizona, Arizona's
I really do,” Lake told an adoring crowd of Michigan Republicans gathering last month on Mackinac Island. Lake will launch a U.S. Senate campaign for an Arizona seat in a splashy Scottsdale rally on Tuesday, having never conceded that she lost last year's race for Arizona governor. She is trying out new messages and courting the support of national Republicans she’s insulted in the past. That worries some Republicans who fear she will cost them a race that could decide control of the Senate. But Lake became a national figure on the far right with her television appearances and her defense of Trump's election falsehoods.
Persons: — Kari Lake, Who's, ” Lake, Republicans she’s, Donald Trump, Kari Lake, , Chris Baker, Kentucky Sen, Mitch McConnell, Lake, she's, Sen, Kyrsten Sinema, Sinema, Ruben Gallego, Steve Daines, Daines, Trump, Steve Bannon, John McCain, Katie Hobbs, Stephen Richer, Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb, Lake demurred, , McConnell, Chuck Schumer, Schumer, It’s, Ted Cruz, , Steve Peoples, Linley Sanders Organizations: PHOENIX, Michigan Republicans, U.S, Senate, Arizona, Republicans, Kentucky, National Republican, GOP, U.S . Rep, Democratic, National Republican Senatorial Committee, , Associated Press, AP VoteCast, Trump, Arizona Supreme, Republican, Arizona Republicans, Pinal County Sheriff, September's Republican, Democrats, AP, McConnell Locations: Michigan, Mackinac, Arizona, Scottsdale, an Arizona, Montana, Washington, California, America, , Phoenix, Iowa, Maricopa County, Pinal County, Ted Cruz of Texas, New York
PoliticsTrump needs Arizona voters; some are done with himPostedArizona is one of six presidential swing states that will have a large say in who wins next November's election. Troubling in the long term for Donald Trump, who is the front-runner by a wide margin in the race for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, is the reaction among some of the state's independent voters to his legal troubles. This report produced by Jillian Kitchener.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jillian Kitchener Organizations: Trump Locations: Arizona
Tempe voters rejected a referendum that may decide the future of Arizona's NHL team. The Arizona Coyotes, which are currently playing in a college arena, are grasping for answers. "We are very disappointed Tempe voters did not approve Propositions 301, 302, and 303. For the time being, the Coyotes have played in Arizona State's hockey arena, sharing space with the college team. As for the team's future, if history is any indication this setback could finally send the team out of Arizona.
Kyrsten Sinema’s Party of One
  + stars: | 2023-05-01 | by ( Robert Draper | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
Katie Hobbs, who received almost 11 percent of the Republican vote in her 2022 victory over the far-right Kari Lake. Sinema, even before she left the party in December, had become the Democrat whom Democrats love to hate. In January 2022, after her refusal to pass voting rights legislation by discarding the Senate filibuster that stood in the way, Sinema was censured by Arizona’s Democratic Party. “The decision was really a no-brainer,” a former state party official told me, adding that the censure resolution was supported by more than 90 percent of Arizona’s Democratic precinct committee members. Hobbs, on the other hand, relied heavily on the turnout of a progressive base that might have reacted poorly to Sinema’s presence on the stump.
Representative Ruben Gallego, a Democrat from Arizona, speaks during a House Armed Services Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S, on Thursday, July 9, 2020. Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego of Arizona on Monday launched a 2024 campaign for the U.S. Senate seat held by Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, who recently left the Democratic Party and faces an uncertain political future. "I will be challenging Kyrsten Sinema for the United States Senate, and I need all of your support," the 43-year-old Gallego said in a video posted Monday morning. In an interview with the Associated Press, Gallego said Sinema "clearly has forgotten where she came from." Arizona was one of the battleground states that helped Biden secure his 2020 presidential win over former President Donald Trump.
Specter’s switch from the Republican to the Democratic Party briefly gave Democrats a filibuster-proof majority and allowed them to pass the Affordable Care Act. Joe Lieberman, the moderate Democrat and former longtime senator, lost a Democratic primary in Connecticut in 2006, largely over his support for the Iraq war. A defection without a differenceArizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema appears to be different as she becomes the 22nd senator to change party affiliation while in office. A Senate independence trioSinema will be the first independent senator who isn’t from New England in more than a generation. The most complete political evolution may be that of Lincoln Chafee, the Rhode Island politician who was a Republican senator, independent governor and failed Democratic and Libertarian presidential candidate.
Facebook shared a tally of the total registered voters in the United States as part of a voting information campaign in 2020. An Instagram user shared a post that reads, “9,871,525 IS THE NUMBER OF REGISTERED VOTERS IN AZ ACCORDING TO FB. According to the Arizona Secretary of State’s website, there was a total of 4,143,929 registered voters as of November 2022 for the midterm election (here). The post does not specify when or where on Facebook the number of registered voters in Arizona was said to be 9,871,525. As this state-specific information is right above the (higher) number showing registered voters in the entire United States, a user might incorrectly assume this number may be for registered voters only in his or her state.
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