Bmej Obama And The Press
Trump, guns and health care were the main themes struck by Kamala Harris, as she made her pitch across Iowa this week in her new camp
stanley cup aign bus, hoping to regain some lost ground in recent polls.A tan lab-mix named Angel stood at the middle of the stone driveway and watched as the large, black bus with giant letters spelling KA-MA-LA in bright yellow, purple and fuchsia crept past leafy green trees and shrubbery to Coyote Run Farm. The California senator popped out in Timberla
stanley cup nd boots, a blue shirt and jeans to make a lap around the farm with the owner as a wall of photojournalists bumped and stepped on one another trying to capture the 2020 candidate s every movement and utterance.This was day four of Harris 3AM Agenda bus tour through the Hawkeye state, and it landed her in rural Lacona, Iowa. Harris 3AM pitch addresses the kitchen-table concerns that wake people up at night. The hundreds who came to see Harris were excited and cheered her on and she slammed President Trump s Oval Office tenure. Still, many were hesitant to throw their support to Harris, whom they view as a newcomer to the national stage, as well as to Iowa. Harris, until this bus tour had spent little time in the state, making just six stops here since she announced her presidential bid in January.Her recent five-day bus tour, which wr
stanley water bottle apped up Monday, took Harris through 16 stops and 11 counties in the first caucus state. She has faced some criticism for not prioritizing Iowa after she cancelled a late Quew Supreme Court won t hear challenge to assault weapons ban
President Obama speaks to a group Sept. 8, 2010, at Cuyahoga Community College West Campus in Parma, Ohio. Getty Images COLUMBUS, Ohio -- With a persistently high unemployment ra
stanley cups uk te and little reason for optimism, voters in Ohio seem on the verge of taking out revenge on the party in power, the Democrats.Special Section: Campaign 2010Even though it was a Republican administration that was in power when the economic collapse took place, voters here are increasingly impatient, according to Ohio State University political scientist Paul Beck. I think people are frustrated, he told CBS News during an on-campus interview.Nor is there much hope that young, first-time voters who turned out in droves for Barack Obama in 2008 will repeat the act in 2010. I think most of them in 2010 will sit on the sidelines, Beck said. The Obama drama is missing from this mid-term, of course. The president is not on the ballot.Poll: Dogfight in Ohio Governor s RaceNew Ratings: Dem Odds Up in Senate, Down in HouseInteractive Map with CBS News Election RatingsBut all across Ohio, Obama i
stanley termoska s casting a long shadow. As Beck points
stanley mug out, Obama could energize the base, but independents, whom endangered Democrats need this year in tough congressional races, might be turned off.A new CBS News-New York Times poll provides a few answers as to why people in Ohio feel that way