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Joe Biden

These GOP governors saw their approval plummet after fighting vaccine requirements: report

Some Republican MAGA governors have not only been slamming President Joe Biden for his vaccine/COVID-19 testing mandate — they have also been forbidding school districts or private businesses from having vaccine or mask requirements for their adult employees. That type of thing plays well with the MAGA crowd, but in Politico, reporter Lisa Kashinsky stresses that some GOP governors are seeing their poll numbers fall after fighting vaccine requirements.

"From Florida to Texas to South Dakota, GOP governors have been on the front lines of the war against vaccine mandates, barring immunization requirements in their states and threatening to fight President Joe Biden's federal vaccine mandate in court," Kashinsky explains. "Just last week, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott flat-out banned vaccine requirements, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis followed up by vowing to sue the Biden Administration. But new research shows governors in states without vaccine mandates — or where they've outright prohibited such a requirement — have 'significantly lower' approval ratings for their handling of COVID-19.

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Kamala Harris shames reporter for trying to 'politicize' Colin Powell's death with COVID question

Landing in Nevada on Monday, Vice President Kamala Harris spoke about the role of Gen. Colin Powell as the first Black chairman of the Joint Chiefs, first Black National Security Adviser, and first Black Secretary of State and how his service brought the United States into a modern era of representation. One reporter, however, wanted to talk about the fact that Powell died of COVID-19 complications despite being vaccinated.

"What is your message for Americans who know that he was fully vaccinated with COVID, who now remain skeptical about getting the vaccine, despite the fact that yes, did he have the cancer diagnosis as well?" the reporter asked.

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Trump's claim of executive privilege over Jan 6 documents is designed to 'run out the clock on a legislative inquiry': op-ed

Former President Donald Trump is suing to stop the Biden administration from making public documents that could show evidence of his intent in regards to efforts to undermine the results of the 2020 election.

Even if Trump's lawsuit fails, the simple act of filing it could delay things long enough to push back any revelations into 2022 or beyond. "By the time of any resolution, the Democrats may have lost Congress and the matter could simply vanish," POLITICO's Aziz Huq writes.

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Immigrants implore Democrats to 'keep their promises' on immigration

In September, Fransis Garcia traveled all the way to the nation's capital from Las Vegas to call on Congress to pass comprehensive immigration reform through the budget reconciliation process. But before she could join a scheduled march, the U.S. Senate parliamentarian rejected the effort.

On the night of Sunday Sept. 19, Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough determined the Democrats' proposal to provide legal status to roughly 8 million people fell outside the boundaries of what can be done through budget reconciliation, a process that allows a simple majority to pass a bill instead of having to meet the usual 60-vote threshold.

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WATCH: Jen Psaki flips Peter Doocy's question to remind Fox News viewers about Trump's insurrection

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki used a question from Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy to remind the public that former President Donald Trump had incited an insurrection with his attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

During a White House press briefing on Monday, Doocy suggested that President Joe Biden had broken a promise not to interfere with the Department of Justice because he had spoken about the prosecution of Trump supporters who attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

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Trump’s obsession with 2020’s election could lead to a 'disaster' for Republicans -- according this GOP governor

Almost a year after President Joe Biden's decisive victory over former President Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election, Trump continues to make the false and debunked claim that the election was stolen from him because of widespread voter fraud. Most Republicans are afraid to publicly disagree with Trump's bogus claim, and some are outright promoting it. But one right-wing conservative Republican who believes that Trump's claims could hurt the GOP in the 2022 midterms is Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson.

Trump, in an official statement, recently said, "If we don't solve the Presidential Election Fraud of 2020 (which we have thoroughly and conclusively documented), Republicans will not be voting in '22 or '24." And Hutchinson believes that such talk could prove to be a "disaster" for his party in next year's midterms.

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The 'Colin Powell Republican' no longer exists: op-ed

In the wake of Colin Powell's death of complications from COVID-19, Chris Cillizza penned an op-ed for CNN saying that with the death of the four-star general and 65th United States Secretary of State, his particular brand of Republican no longer exists.

"Powell's personal journey from potential -- and much-coveted -- Republican presidential candidate in the mid-1990s to pariah within the Trump-ified GOP tells the story of how the party went from one that recognized the changing face of America and the need to adapt its policies as a result to one organized around the often-intolerant views of a single man who, it's worth noting, spent less time as a Republican than Powell did," Cillizza writes.

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Popular QAnon leader accused of pushing followers into adopting neo-Nazism: report

Ever searching for fringe positions to adopt, one of QAnon's most popular leaders and influencers -- unwittingly or not -- tried to introduce his followers to neo-Nazism, reports Vice's David Gilbert.

With interest in Donald Trump's loss of the 2020 presidential election fading, and "Q's" promise of the "Storm" where Joe Biden would be ousted and Trump would be restored to the Oval Office failing to materialize, Gilbert reports that John Sabal, who goes by "QAnon John," pushed a neo-Nazi film that he linked to on Sunday night to his 70,000 followers.

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'Indefensible': US billionaires became $2.1 trillion richer in 19 months of pandemic

American billionaires grew in number and expanded their collective fortunes by $2.1 trillion since Covid-19 sparked a worldwide pandemic nineteen months ago, according to a new analysis unveiled Monday.

"Targeted tax increases on billionaires, including the proposed Billionaire Income Tax, would rebalance the tax code and reduce these glaring abuses in who pays for the services we all depend on."

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'Enough's enough': tight U.S. job market triggers strikes for more pay

By Ben Klayman

(Reuters) - Thousands of workers remain on strike across the United States demanding higher pay and better conditions despite Hollywood make-up artists and camera operators reaching a deal over the weekend to avoid a walkout, and the tight jobs market has only emboldened them.

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Here's an election slogan you won’t hear in Texas in 2022

Democrats won't be rallying voters with claims they can flip control of the Texas Legislature in the general election a year from now.

The redistricting maps nearing approval in the current special legislative session make that a near impossibility.

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Three white Americans go on trial in death of black jogger Ahmaud Arbery

Washington (AFP) - Three white men in the US state of Georgia will go on trial Monday in the high-profile shooting death of a Black jogger that sparked a national outcry and helped fuel last summer's social justice protests.

Gregory McMichael, 65, his son Travis, 35, and their neighbor William Bryan, 52, have been charged with murder and aggravated assault after chasing 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery and shooting him during a confrontation in February 2020.

The father and son followed Arbery in a pickup truck, while Bryan trailed them in his own vehicle and filmed the scene. After an altercation, Travis McMichael opened fire and killed Arbery.

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Trump, the Big Lie and Jan 6 is now being mainstreamed by the GOP and interest groups that support them: columnist

In a column by Fred Hiatt, the Washington Post writer explained that Trumpism and all that it entitles is now being mainstreamed by not just the GOP but interest groups like The Japan-American Society of Washington, D.C.

His Sunday column cited the group's embrace of Donald Trump's former Japanese ambassador-turned-senator, Bill Hagerty (R-TN), who was a "featured guest" and "honorary chairman" of the Japan-American Society event gala this week.

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