In The American Spectator, Dov Fischer explains how, while Americans were laser-focused on recounts and challenges in Florida and Georgia, Democrats were somehow creating miraculous come-from-behind wins in California...
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Traffic. Lots of it, especially in Boston, NYC, and San Fran. Air travel also will reach historic levels, with predictions of a record 30.6 million passengers flying on U.S. airlines ...
Gun control advocates have been cheering that 15-House Republicans with “A” ratings from the NRA lost in the midterms to ones with “F” ratings explains IBD. But what isn’t being told is that Second Amendment advocates won in the Senate, namely Josh Hawley in Missouri who defeated Claire McCaskill ...
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Reuters’ Bernie Woodall reports that with the victory of Rick Scott, Republicans will control both Florida Senate seats for the first time since the 19th century: Rick Scott, Florida’s outgoing governor, was
declared the winner on Sunday of his hard-fought U.S. Senate race against incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson following a hand recount of ballots...
“The masters of our social media and Internet universe are the most insidiously partisan,” writes Victor Davis Hanson in American Greatness. Open your laptop or power on your smartphone, and you meet their shadow
personas nonstop ...
The Trump White House handed down a deserved time-out to CNN’s White House correspondent Jim Acosta. Since when did the West Wing briefing room become a Constitutional right? “Is Trump obligated to provide access to whomever CNN chooses to represent the network ...
In a powerful essay at The American Conservative, Pat Buchanan rips into French President Emmanuel Macron for his insulting speech at the recent Armistice Day ceremonies in Paris ...
Tucker Carlson believes that it is not just Democrats who should have learned something from the recent elections. There were lessons for Republicans too. Here’s one: voters care about campaign promises. If you don’t fulfill them, they’ll notice...
The debate over “shall issue” and “may issue” is an ongoing battle in many states. D.C. was forced to accept “shall issue” in the court decision Wrenn vs. D.C.. The city didn’t appeal because if the Supreme Court upheld the decision it could have undone the “may issue” laws in states around the country ...
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