Joe Biden is now POTUS

Nzinga

Lover of Africa
BGOL Investor
This thing is getting away from Trump

Biden tops Trump by 12 points in new national survey
Morgan Gstalter 8 hrs ago

Biden tops Trump by 12 points in new national survey

© Getty Images Biden tops Trump by 12 points in new national survey
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden leads President Trump by 12 points nationally among likely U.S. voters, according to a new poll.

The Reuters-Ipsos poll found that 52 percent of likely voters plan to cast their ballots for Biden, compared to 40 percent who plan to vote for Trump.
Three percent said they would vote for another candidate, and just 5 percent said they are undecided with fewer than 60 days until the Nov. 3 election.
The survey showed the percentage of voters who have not yet backed a major-party candidate to be less than half of what it was at this point in 2016.
Biden's lead is so substantial that he would still win the popular vote even if the remaining undecided voters threw their support behind Trump, the survey noted.
However, Trump could still win reelection through the Electoral College like he did four years ago against Hillary Clinton - a fear leaving Democratic Party activists and operatives with a looming sense of déjà vu.
This is the first time the Reuters-Ipsos poll measured support for the 2020 candidates among likely voters.
When measured by registered voters who include those less likely to vote, Biden leads Trump by 8 points.
The Sept. 38 poll was conducted online among 823 likely voters, including 390 who identified as Democrats and 351 who identified as Republicans. The survey has a margin of error of roughly 4 percentage points.
 

Nzinga

Lover of Africa
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Now the desperation:
_______________________________


Trump mocks Harris' name, says having her as president would be 'insult' to country
3 hrs ago

Trump mocks Harris' name, says having her as president would be 'insult' to country


Using some of his harshest language and maybe his most mocking tone yet, President Donald Trump attacked Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris on Tuesday night, saying Harris as the first female president would be an "insult to our country" while repeatedly mispronouncing her name.
© Sean Rayford/Getty Images President Donald Trump addresses the crowd during a campaign rally at Smith Reynolds Airport on Sept. 8, 2020, in Winston Salem, NC.
"People don't like her," the president said at a rally in North Carolina, recounting her falling poll numbers on the Democratic primary trail. "Nobody likes her. She could never be the first woman president. She could never be. That would be an insult to our country."
MORE: Justice Department seeks to defend Trump in E. Jean Carroll defamation lawsuit
Calling her primary performance "like a free fall," the president also claimed Harris is "further left than Crazy Bernie Sanders."
"You know who's further left than Crazy Bernie? Kamala. Kamala. Kamala," Trump said, mispronouncing and stretching out each syllable of her name each time he said it.
© Sean Rayford/Getty Images President Donald Trump addresses the crowd during a campaign rally at Smith Reynolds Airport on Sept. 8, 2020, in Winston Salem, NC.
The Biden campaign told ABC News it is not commenting on Trump's comments right now.

An ABC News/Washington Post poll found last month that more Americans approve than disapprove of Harris on the ticket by a 25-point margin, 54-29%. Harris' net favorability rating has polled higher than both presidential candidates.
MORE: 54% approve of Harris selection, including 1 in 4 Republicans: POLL
Trump launched a similar attack on Harris and the prospect of her assuming the presidency two weeks ago at a New Hampshire rally, saying that while he hoped to see the first woman as president in his lifetime, it shouldn't be Harris because the "she's not competent."
"You know, I want to see the first woman president also, but I don't want to see a woman president get into that position the way she'd do it -- and she's not competent. She's not competent. They're all saying, 'We want Ivanka.' I don't blame you," Trump said.
MORE: Biden to ABC's David Muir on Trump's Harris attacks: 'No president has ever used those words'
Harris, who served as California's attorney general for seven years before being elected to the U.S. Senate in 2016, is the first woman of color to compete on a major party's presidential ticket.
Trump made the remarks Tuesday to a crowd of more than 15,000 supporters, according to the campaign, at an airport hangar in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The crowd was packed in and many supporters were unmasked, photos show.
© Sean Meyers/ZUMA Wire via Newscom Fans cheer during a Make America Great Again Rally for President Trump at the Smith Reynolds Regional Airport in Winston-Salem, NC., Sept. 8, 2020.
There, the president continued to rail against Democratic nominee Joe Biden who he said "has now formed an unholy alliance" with Harris.
But since Biden chose Harris as his vice presidential pick last month, the Trump campaign has struggled to find an effective line of attack against Harris.
After the Biden campaign announced the selection, the Republican National Committee sent out an email about the Harris pick with the headline "liberals revolt against Biden." But at nearly the same exact time, an RNC national spokesperson tweeted claiming Harris was "completely controlled by radical left."
Trump has previously called Harris "nasty," "disrespectful," "the meanest," "the most horrible" and a "madwoman."
© Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images, FILE Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris greet supporters outside the Chase Center in Wilmington, Del., at the conclusion of the Democratic National Convention, Aug. 20, 2020.
Harris is a U.S. citizen, born in Oakland, California, but when Trump was asked about a Newsweek op-ed questioning her constitutional qualifications to be vice president, he told a reporter he would "take a look" at whether Harris was eligible to serve.
"I just heard it today that she doesn't meet the requirements and by the way the lawyer that wrote that piece is a very highly qualified, very talented lawyer," Trump said of the op-ed's author. "I have no idea if that's right."
MORE: Democrats in Pennsylvania hope to see diversity reflected in 2020 election
Bernadette Meyle, a law professor at Stanford Law School, told ABC News last month that the author's argument had "no basis in constitutional law," saying it's been settled law since the Supreme Court decided the issue in 1898 -- though it's not the first time Trump entertained such theories.
"Trump in his 2016 campaign tried to make the argument that the Newsweek article is making, then later seemed to drop it. It has been a claim brought up several times by right-wing thinkers over the past decade or so. It has, however, no basis in constitutional law," she said.
MORE: Trump floats false, racist birther theory about Kamala Harris
Trump amplified debunked conspiracy theories of former President Barack Obama's eligibility to run for president, with many experts noting the birther questions are generally raised against people of color.
© Alex Wroblewski/Reuters Democratic vice presidential nominee Senator Kamala Harris arrives at General Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 7, 2020.
When asked about Trump potentially amplifying a false birther theory at the time, Harris said she expected the "dirty tactics."
"They're going to engage in lies," Harris told TheGiro last month. "They're going to engage in deception. They're going to engage in an attempt to distract from the real issues that are impacting the American people. And I expect that they will engage in dirty tactics. And this is going to be a knockdown, drag-out. And we're ready."
Harris, a former prosecutor, has attempted to make the case against the president on the campaign trail. She recently went after Trump's credibility regarding his rosy timeline for a coronavirus vaccine ahead of the election when she said she would not trust Trump's word alone on the safety of a vaccine.
"I will say that I would not trust Donald Trump, and it would have to be a credible source of information that talks about the efficacy and the reliability of whatever he's talking about," she told CNN Sunday.
MORE: Kamala Harris tells ABC's David Muir she would have 'certainly picked' Biden as her vice president
She said that if the past is any indication she believes health experts and scientists "will be sidelined because he's looking at an election coming up in less than 60 days, and he's grasping for whatever he can get to pretend he has been a leader on this issue when he has not."
Trump on Monday dismissed her comments as "reckless anti-vaccine rhetoric" before stepping up his attacks Tuesday.
© Jonathan Ernst/Reuters Supporters cheer as U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign event at Smith Reynolds Regional Airport in Winston-Salem, N.C., Sept. 8, 2020.
The president is not the first conservative voice to mispronounce Harris' name. A clip of Fox News host Tucker Carlson went viral last month after a guest corrected Carlson over his pronunciation of "Kamala."
"So what?" Carlson said, before mispronouncing her name again.
Fatima Goss Graves, president of the National Women's Law Center Action Fund, told The Associated Press last month the mispronunciations of "Kamala" is "an effort to diminish her" and "designed to signal difference."
"When people are running for the highest levels of government, there's an expectation they will be afforded with dignity and respect," she said.
ABC News' Ben Gittleson, Will Steakin and Averi Harper contributed to this report.
 

Quek9

K9
BGOL Investor
Now the desperation:
_______________________________


Trump mocks Harris' name, says having her as president would be 'insult' to country
3 hrs ago

Trump mocks Harris' name, says having her as president would be 'insult' to country


Using some of his harshest language and maybe his most mocking tone yet, President Donald Trump attacked Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris on Tuesday night, saying Harris as the first female president would be an "insult to our country" while repeatedly mispronouncing her name.
© Sean Rayford/Getty Images President Donald Trump addresses the crowd during a campaign rally at Smith Reynolds Airport on Sept. 8, 2020, in Winston Salem, NC.
"People don't like her," the president said at a rally in North Carolina, recounting her falling poll numbers on the Democratic primary trail. "Nobody likes her. She could never be the first woman president. She could never be. That would be an insult to our country."
MORE: Justice Department seeks to defend Trump in E. Jean Carroll defamation lawsuit
Calling her primary performance "like a free fall," the president also claimed Harris is "further left than Crazy Bernie Sanders."
"You know who's further left than Crazy Bernie? Kamala. Kamala. Kamala," Trump said, mispronouncing and stretching out each syllable of her name each time he said it.
© Sean Rayford/Getty Images President Donald Trump addresses the crowd during a campaign rally at Smith Reynolds Airport on Sept. 8, 2020, in Winston Salem, NC.
The Biden campaign told ABC News it is not commenting on Trump's comments right now.

An ABC News/Washington Post poll found last month that more Americans approve than disapprove of Harris on the ticket by a 25-point margin, 54-29%. Harris' net favorability rating has polled higher than both presidential candidates.
MORE: 54% approve of Harris selection, including 1 in 4 Republicans: POLL
Trump launched a similar attack on Harris and the prospect of her assuming the presidency two weeks ago at a New Hampshire rally, saying that while he hoped to see the first woman as president in his lifetime, it shouldn't be Harris because the "she's not competent."
"You know, I want to see the first woman president also, but I don't want to see a woman president get into that position the way she'd do it -- and she's not competent. She's not competent. They're all saying, 'We want Ivanka.' I don't blame you," Trump said.
MORE: Biden to ABC's David Muir on Trump's Harris attacks: 'No president has ever used those words'
Harris, who served as California's attorney general for seven years before being elected to the U.S. Senate in 2016, is the first woman of color to compete on a major party's presidential ticket.
Trump made the remarks Tuesday to a crowd of more than 15,000 supporters, according to the campaign, at an airport hangar in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The crowd was packed in and many supporters were unmasked, photos show.
© Sean Meyers/ZUMA Wire via Newscom Fans cheer during a Make America Great Again Rally for President Trump at the Smith Reynolds Regional Airport in Winston-Salem, NC., Sept. 8, 2020.
There, the president continued to rail against Democratic nominee Joe Biden who he said "has now formed an unholy alliance" with Harris.
But since Biden chose Harris as his vice presidential pick last month, the Trump campaign has struggled to find an effective line of attack against Harris.
After the Biden campaign announced the selection, the Republican National Committee sent out an email about the Harris pick with the headline "liberals revolt against Biden." But at nearly the same exact time, an RNC national spokesperson tweeted claiming Harris was "completely controlled by radical left."
Trump has previously called Harris "nasty," "disrespectful," "the meanest," "the most horrible" and a "madwoman."
© Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images, FILE Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris greet supporters outside the Chase Center in Wilmington, Del., at the conclusion of the Democratic National Convention, Aug. 20, 2020.
Harris is a U.S. citizen, born in Oakland, California, but when Trump was asked about a Newsweek op-ed questioning her constitutional qualifications to be vice president, he told a reporter he would "take a look" at whether Harris was eligible to serve.
"I just heard it today that she doesn't meet the requirements and by the way the lawyer that wrote that piece is a very highly qualified, very talented lawyer," Trump said of the op-ed's author. "I have no idea if that's right."
MORE: Democrats in Pennsylvania hope to see diversity reflected in 2020 election
Bernadette Meyle, a law professor at Stanford Law School, told ABC News last month that the author's argument had "no basis in constitutional law," saying it's been settled law since the Supreme Court decided the issue in 1898 -- though it's not the first time Trump entertained such theories.
"Trump in his 2016 campaign tried to make the argument that the Newsweek article is making, then later seemed to drop it. It has been a claim brought up several times by right-wing thinkers over the past decade or so. It has, however, no basis in constitutional law," she said.
MORE: Trump floats false, racist birther theory about Kamala Harris
Trump amplified debunked conspiracy theories of former President Barack Obama's eligibility to run for president, with many experts noting the birther questions are generally raised against people of color.
© Alex Wroblewski/Reuters Democratic vice presidential nominee Senator Kamala Harris arrives at General Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 7, 2020.
When asked about Trump potentially amplifying a false birther theory at the time, Harris said she expected the "dirty tactics."
"They're going to engage in lies," Harris told TheGiro last month. "They're going to engage in deception. They're going to engage in an attempt to distract from the real issues that are impacting the American people. And I expect that they will engage in dirty tactics. And this is going to be a knockdown, drag-out. And we're ready."
Harris, a former prosecutor, has attempted to make the case against the president on the campaign trail. She recently went after Trump's credibility regarding his rosy timeline for a coronavirus vaccine ahead of the election when she said she would not trust Trump's word alone on the safety of a vaccine.
"I will say that I would not trust Donald Trump, and it would have to be a credible source of information that talks about the efficacy and the reliability of whatever he's talking about," she told CNN Sunday.
MORE: Kamala Harris tells ABC's David Muir she would have 'certainly picked' Biden as her vice president
She said that if the past is any indication she believes health experts and scientists "will be sidelined because he's looking at an election coming up in less than 60 days, and he's grasping for whatever he can get to pretend he has been a leader on this issue when he has not."
Trump on Monday dismissed her comments as "reckless anti-vaccine rhetoric" before stepping up his attacks Tuesday.
© Jonathan Ernst/Reuters Supporters cheer as U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign event at Smith Reynolds Regional Airport in Winston-Salem, N.C., Sept. 8, 2020.
The president is not the first conservative voice to mispronounce Harris' name. A clip of Fox News host Tucker Carlson went viral last month after a guest corrected Carlson over his pronunciation of "Kamala."
"So what?" Carlson said, before mispronouncing her name again.
Fatima Goss Graves, president of the National Women's Law Center Action Fund, told The Associated Press last month the mispronunciations of "Kamala" is "an effort to diminish her" and "designed to signal difference."
"When people are running for the highest levels of government, there's an expectation they will be afforded with dignity and respect," she said.
ABC News' Ben Gittleson, Will Steakin and Averi Harper contributed to this report.
What that dumb fuck doesn't realize is we dislike his dumb ass even more. Ms Piggy or Sarah Palin could be on Joe's ticket and he would still win. The sooner this scum is gone, the better. The only person I hate more in this country is Zimmerman.
 

Spectrum

Elite Poster
BGOL Investor
"On May 24, Ice Cube tweeted, “Hold the Black vote hostage until one of ’em comes with A Black Agenda that we’re satisfied with."

This was stupid then and it's stupid now.

Why the fuck play mind games vs spelling out what the fuck you youn waht?

Put a list together with at least 5 things, with 2 to 3 being top priorities to get down.
Lets be clear. You can just elect a president and not elect representatives/lawmakers to help that president get what you want passed.

The "hold my own vote hostage" mentality makes no sense. The way to guarantee that you get nothing is not to vote. There is no possible scenario where black people end up in a better position if Trump wins.
 

HeathCliff

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
The "hold my own vote hostage" mentality makes no sense. The way to guarantee that you get nothing is not to vote. There is no possible scenario where black people end up in a better position if Trump wins.
But...but...but...opportunity zones
But...but...but...criminal justice reform
But...but...but...record lowest unemployment
But...but...but...HBCUs
 

BigDaddyBuk

still not dizzy.
Platinum Member
POLITICS
Michael Cohen Predicts Trump Plan To Save Himself If He Loses The Election

"My suspicion is that he will resign as president,” he told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow on Tuesday night. “He will allow Mike Pence to take over, and he will then go ahead and have Mike Pence pardon him.”


Then them states gonna tear his ass up.
 

Quek9

K9
BGOL Investor
POLITICS
Michael Cohen Predicts Trump Plan To Save Himself If He Loses The Election

"My suspicion is that he will resign as president,” he told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow on Tuesday night. “He will allow Mike Pence to take over, and he will then go ahead and have Mike Pence pardon him.”


Then them states gonna tear his ass up.
State DAs waiting like...
tumblr_mnmk4uUhrf1rdaw8bo1_500.gif
 

praetor

Rising Star
OG Investor
POLITICS
Michael Cohen Predicts Trump Plan To Save Himself If He Loses The Election

"My suspicion is that he will resign as president,” he told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow on Tuesday night. “He will allow Mike Pence to take over, and he will then go ahead and have Mike Pence pardon him.”


Then them states gonna tear his ass up.

Him resigning after losing seems too good to be true.
 

4 Dimensional

Rising Star
Platinum Member
POLITICS
Michael Cohen Predicts Trump Plan To Save Himself If He Loses The Election

"My suspicion is that he will resign as president,” he told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow on Tuesday night. “He will allow Mike Pence to take over, and he will then go ahead and have Mike Pence pardon him.”


Then them states gonna tear his ass up.

That’s kind of my fear.

If Pence becomes interim President before the election, makes this race much different than it is now.
 

Dark19

Zod's Son
BGOL Investor
POLITICS
Michael Cohen Predicts Trump Plan To Save Himself If He Loses The Election

"My suspicion is that he will resign as president,” he told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow on Tuesday night. “He will allow Mike Pence to take over, and he will then go ahead and have Mike Pence pardon him.”


Then them states gonna tear his ass up.
Exactly..... None of That Shit Is Gonna Save Him From Those State Charges.... His Ass Is Cooked
 

praetor

Rising Star
OG Investor
Florida will be close as always and it'll take days to find out who won with all of the mail in ballots.
 

HeathCliff

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
This is a really good thread


I fucks with Rachel hard. Not because I like her projections, but she was the only one who precisely predicted the 2018 elections particularly the six district GOP flip in Orange County. Those seats been red since Regan and nobody called those like she predicted in her model.



Stuff like that lends a lot of credibility with me.
 
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HeathCliff

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I kinda feel what @therealjondoe is saying. Florida is going to be a difficult one. I know during the 2018 election, Gillum and Bill Nelson were polling good. They looked like the favorites even towards the end. But somehow the GOP pulled it out. They usually have the mail in ballot advantage in Florida.

I kid you not, the other week I heard Tom Perez say they now have a 600k mail in vote advantage on the GOP this year :oops:

I'm still in I'll believe it when I see it mode with FL :smh:
 
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