Finally, The Right Gets To Ask Republican Presidential Candidates Some Questions
And top Republicans refuse to fight for female soldiers' babies.
In Tucker Carlson’s interviews of GOP presidential candidates last week in Iowa, it was so refreshing to hear questioning of candidates from the right, a rare thing. Steve Deace tweeted more details. The event also proved Republicans can have big-impact campaign events with high production values without going to CNN.
His own colleagues and some right media are treating Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville as if he’s crazy for blocking military promotions until the military stops using taxpayer dollars to fund abortions — and travel to them — for female soldiers.
The vast majority of Americans oppose using taxpayer dollars to fund abortion, and so does the Republican Party platform.
The Biden administration has openly admitted it makes military promotions based on identity politics. So even besides the abortion issue, why should Republicans think it’s a problem to hold up potentially low-quality promotions?
Byron York notes that Democrats held 1,123 military promotions hostage for political gain, and got what they wanted.
The Hill pushed the Russian collusion conspiracy theory for years. Today it highlights Senate Republicans treating their voters’ 2020 election integrity and other concerns as conspiracies.
If you don’t love unsupervised mass mail-in balloting, two standards of justice from federal agencies, and your president’s family receiving millions from Communist Party-connected foreigners, you’re a conspiracy theorist, according to Mitt Romney, Lisa Murkowski, Todd Young, John Cornyn, and more.
The Secret Service had two choices on the White House cocaine: disclose whose it was and allow him to face the law, or look like they can’t protect the president from an anthrax attack. They chose the latter, which sure makes Hunter look guilty.