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Search resuls for: "Democrat Challenger"


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ATLANTA — Georgia state Rep. Devan Seabaugh is accused of driving under the influence after authorities say he ran into a bicyclist who was riding in the bike lane of an Atlanta street. Seabaugh faces seven charges, including driving under the influence of alcohol, and driving under the influence of drugs, Atlanta Municipal Court records show. The Cobb County politician was arrested Thursday night in the Grant Park neighborhood of Atlanta by a Georgia State Patrol task force that targets drunken drivers. Seabaugh, a Republican, was elected to the Georgia House in a special election in the summer of 2021, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. Seabaugh faces Democrat challenger Karl Gallegos in the Nov. 5 general election.
Persons: Devan Seabaugh, I’m, ” Seabaugh, Karl Gallegos Organizations: Atlanta Municipal Court, Georgia State Patrol, Atlanta City, Republican, Georgia, Atlanta Locations: ATLANTA — Georgia, Atlanta, Cobb, Grant, Cobb County, Marietta, Kennesaw
Trump has been lasering in on Vice President Kamala Harris in the weeks following Biden's stumbling performance at their debate on June 27. "I got him out the race, and that means we have Kamala," Trump said in the clip. "Respects to our potentially new Democrat Challenger, Laffin' Kamala Harris," Trump said, using a new nickname for the vice president. AdvertisementIn fact, "Laffin' Kamala Harris" isn't the only nickname he's coined for her. Trump has applied his penchant for name-calling to his Democratic rivals too, dubbing Hillary Clinton "Crooked Hillary" and Joe Biden "Sleepy Joe."
Persons: , Joe Biden, Donald Trump doesn't, Trump, Kamala Harris, Harris, Biden, Kamala, Laffin, he's, Crooked Joe Biden, Chris LaCivita, Susie Wiles, Joe, Copilot Kamala Harris, Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Marco, Lyin, Ted, Ron DeSantis, Ron DeSanctimonious, Hillary Clinton, Hillary, Sleepy Joe Organizations: Service, Democratic, Business, Democrat Challenger, Biden, Washington Post, BI Locations: Iowa, Florida, California, United States
States have taken the lead on climate in recent years in the absence of federal policy. But voters in some states are now worried about rising energy costs, while other states must reckon with poor air quality and higher emissions. If it flipped, it could increase renewable energy power generation, said Troy Rule, faculty director at Arizona State University's Program on Law and Sustainability. "That could open the door for an increase in the state’s Renewable Energy Standard, which at 15% renewables by 2025, now lags far behind most neighboring states," Rule said. If Republicans win, it would "effectively eliminate the prospect of any meaningful progress on Arizona renewable energy policy over the next couple of years," Rule said.
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