Common is remembering Ahmaud Arbery while also helping out those less fortunate.
01.12.2020 - 22:29 / foxnews.com
The executive director of a San Francisco-based nonprofit that was tapped by Georgia’s secretary of state to assist in the state’s audit has a history of anti-Trump tweets, but has insisted that he does not “bring them to work.” Ben Adida, the director at VotingWorks, tweeted in 2018, “F—k Donald Trump and all his enablers,” and, in the same year, called the Republican Party “rotten to its core.” He said he read some posts from the GOP at the time and said it is clear that “they’re willing to
.Common is remembering Ahmaud Arbery while also helping out those less fortunate.
For Vice President Mike Pence, it’s a delicate balance on the Georgia Senate runoffs campaign trail. At a rally in Columbus, Ga., on Thursday, the vice president acknowledged that the Republicans need to "hold the line" in the twin Jan.
Georgia Sec. of State Brad Raffensperger suggested Tuesday that failures related to his party’s campaign strategy contributed to President-elect Joe Biden’s surprise victory over President Trump in the state.
While Democratic electors in Pennsylvania and Georgia cast their states' electoral votes for Joe Biden on Monday, slates of Republican electors in those states cast votes for President Trump just in case legal challenges succeed.
Michigan state Republicans went “too far” in saying they would pull committee assignments from a state Democrat who threatened Trump supporters in a viral video, the state’s Democratic governor said Thursday. “Make them pay,” state Rep.
Georgia Harrison in a now-deleted video after denying allegations that he secretly recorded her on CCTV cameras at his home.Georgia, 25, burst into tears on her Instagram story as she accused the Ex on the Beach and Celebrity Big Brother star of distributing the clip without her consent – with some fans even claiming it was posted on X-rated website OnlyFans.Bear dismissed the allegations as “silly rumours” and although he told fans he was taking a break from social media “for his mental
It has now been a month and two days since Joe Biden won the U.S. presidential election, and Donald Trump has yet to concede the election.
The chief investigator from Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office filed a sworn statement in federal court claiming that video presented last week at a state Senate meeting does not show voter fraud, as was alleged by President Trump’s attorney Rudy Giuliani. The video contains footage from the State Farm Arena in Atlanta, where votes were counted on election night.
A number of high-profile Republicans -- including GOP Sens.Ted Cruz, Mike Lee and Tim Scott -- are expected to campaign in Georgia this month as part of a Club for Growth bus tour in support of GOP Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler ahead of the Jan.
here, and here.For those who don’t know, “Antivaxxer” is a portmanteau describing people who adhere to a broad range of unfounded conspiracy theories about vaccinations (anti-vaccine).
Fox News contributor Mollie Hemingway on Thursday said President Trump's stance on election integrity "unites the Republican Party" because their concerns predate the 2020 presidential election. “It’s been interesting to see some of this testimony and whistleblowers in states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona, Georgia.
The final ten episodes of Michael Hirst’s historical drama Vikings is moving from History to Amazon for its first-window.
Several GOP Senators were bombarded with dozens of bodybags at their homes on Tuesday by angry protesters pushing for COVID-19 relief after months of gridlock over negotiations in Congress. Activists hauled the black body bags out of the back of a rented truck and lined them up in front of the Washington residences of Republican Sens.
Monty Python, is facing backlash over a series of inflammatory anti-trans tweets.Cleese, 81, reiterated his support for author J.K.
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger accused President Trump of throwing him "under the bus" in a column published Wednesday. Georgia had a "smooth" and "successful" November election, Raffensperger wrote in the piece published by USA Today, noting the state "finally defeated voting lines." "This should be something for Georgians to celebrate, whether their favored presidential candidate won or lost," he asserted.
Following weeks of butting heads with fellow Republicans, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger accused President Trump of throwing him "under the bus" in a column published Wednesday. Georgia had a "smooth" and "successful" November election, Raffensperger wrote in the piece published by USA Today, noting that the state "finally defeated voting lines." "This should be something for Georgians to celebrate, whether their favored presidential candidate won or lost," he asserted.
Tyler Perry donated food and money to thousands of needy people in his community of Atlanta, Ga.