Kathianne
08-26-2023, 02:25 PM
My take is that just bashing Biden probably isn't wise, it's too easy. Instead the whole 'weaponization' of executive offices and catering to the left by DOJ in court AND the persecution of Trump should be brought up again and again. How would the candidate dismantle this phenomena?
The crisis of cities, most of which are Democrat led, but contain many millions of Americans. These cesspools and the Soros DAs must be addressed. I want to know HOW and how fast.
Parents rights are under attack by both executive offices and increasingly from state courts. How will the candidate work with governors and state legislatures to address these issues, not in education curriculum, but in application of first amendment? This is also an area where we need to hear about police and also voting reform! I want more cooperation, fewer dictates from fed to state to locals.
https://thefederalist.com/2023/08/24/gop-primary-debate-was-a-dud-for-americans-worried-about-leftist-destruction-of-the-nation/
POLITICSGOP Primary Debate Was A Dud For Americans Worried About Leftist Destruction Of The Nation
BY: JORDAN BOYD
AUGUST 24, 2023
Americans don’t want to hedge their 2024 bets on performative politicians. They want to elect problem-solvers who will solve problems.
Author Jordan Boyd profile
JORDAN BOYD
Concerned Americans looking for pledges that Republicans will do everything in their power to stop the left’s destruction of the country did not find them at the GOP primary debate on Wednesday.
Fox News Hosts Martha MacCallum and Bret Baier kicked off the night by asking candidates to analyze why Oliver Anthony’s hit song “Rich Men North Of Richmond” resonated with Americans. From there, the moderators’ line of questioning quickly deteriorated.
When it came time for a question on abortion, Fox News host and debate moderator Martha MacCallum inaccurately framed Republicans’ pro-life priorities as a “losing issue … since the Dobbs decision.”
Moderators gave the Republicans plenty of time to toot their fiscal horns and posture about funding the war in Ukraine. Noticeably missing from the debate stage, however, were key questions about problems facing voters every day, like attacks on their religious liberty, the pervasion of radical gender ideology, the integrity of the Supreme Court, and the rampant corruption clutching all of the country’s major bureaucratic institutions.
By the end of the evening, voters heard more about candidates’ opinions on extraterrestrial life, climate change, and January 6 than top GOP issues like the weaponization of the FBI and DOJ and Democrats’ ongoing indictment scheme against former President Donald Trump.
A majority of Americans recognize a two-tiered system of justice governs the U.S. Another 56 percent say they understand the Trump indictments are “interference by the Department of Justice in the 2024 election” instead of a “fair application of the law.”
Despite the concerns it elicits from voters across the board, the corruption of the nation’s top federal law enforcement arm did not even make the list of “most-discussed topics” on Wednesday night.
...
The crisis of cities, most of which are Democrat led, but contain many millions of Americans. These cesspools and the Soros DAs must be addressed. I want to know HOW and how fast.
Parents rights are under attack by both executive offices and increasingly from state courts. How will the candidate work with governors and state legislatures to address these issues, not in education curriculum, but in application of first amendment? This is also an area where we need to hear about police and also voting reform! I want more cooperation, fewer dictates from fed to state to locals.
https://thefederalist.com/2023/08/24/gop-primary-debate-was-a-dud-for-americans-worried-about-leftist-destruction-of-the-nation/
POLITICSGOP Primary Debate Was A Dud For Americans Worried About Leftist Destruction Of The Nation
BY: JORDAN BOYD
AUGUST 24, 2023
Americans don’t want to hedge their 2024 bets on performative politicians. They want to elect problem-solvers who will solve problems.
Author Jordan Boyd profile
JORDAN BOYD
Concerned Americans looking for pledges that Republicans will do everything in their power to stop the left’s destruction of the country did not find them at the GOP primary debate on Wednesday.
Fox News Hosts Martha MacCallum and Bret Baier kicked off the night by asking candidates to analyze why Oliver Anthony’s hit song “Rich Men North Of Richmond” resonated with Americans. From there, the moderators’ line of questioning quickly deteriorated.
When it came time for a question on abortion, Fox News host and debate moderator Martha MacCallum inaccurately framed Republicans’ pro-life priorities as a “losing issue … since the Dobbs decision.”
Moderators gave the Republicans plenty of time to toot their fiscal horns and posture about funding the war in Ukraine. Noticeably missing from the debate stage, however, were key questions about problems facing voters every day, like attacks on their religious liberty, the pervasion of radical gender ideology, the integrity of the Supreme Court, and the rampant corruption clutching all of the country’s major bureaucratic institutions.
By the end of the evening, voters heard more about candidates’ opinions on extraterrestrial life, climate change, and January 6 than top GOP issues like the weaponization of the FBI and DOJ and Democrats’ ongoing indictment scheme against former President Donald Trump.
A majority of Americans recognize a two-tiered system of justice governs the U.S. Another 56 percent say they understand the Trump indictments are “interference by the Department of Justice in the 2024 election” instead of a “fair application of the law.”
Despite the concerns it elicits from voters across the board, the corruption of the nation’s top federal law enforcement arm did not even make the list of “most-discussed topics” on Wednesday night.
...