pocketfullofshells
Well-Known Member
If the Dems get 3 wins and hold both recalls next week...they retake control of the Senate..also keep in mind that one Republican had a soul and voted against walker the first time.
If the Dems get 3 wins and hold both recalls next week...they retake control of the Senate..also keep in mind that one Republican had a soul and voted against walker the first time.
Yes, that would be great. But some Democrats are also being recalled and may lose seats . . .when is it? Next week?
next week, but I think if they picked up 2 and nearly 3 ( the third sounds like its going to be investigated for fraud now so not sure when we will know) but if they picked up them in Republican areas...I think its going to be very tough for Republicans to win against dems when not in heavy republican areas.
Poor Pockets. A whole bunch of "SOUL-LESS" people just next door. Lol. Tell your GF to pull out her hello-kitty rifle. It's just not safe out there. Lol.
Poor Pockets. A whole bunch of "SOUL-LESS" people just next door. Lol. Tell your GF to pull out her hello-kitty rifle. It's just not safe out there. Lol.
It was a good day for playing "horseshoes" on the dem side.
Republicans held the Senate in Wisconsin...despite millions of union dollars pouring into their opponents races.
Millions poured in BOTH camps' races! The difference is that "small people" through individual donations AND their Unions participations gave to the Democrats
Big business (especially Koch Brothers) gave largely to the Republicans.
Darling spent over $8millions dollars!
I will have to pull up their respective campaign finance reports to determine the validity of those statements.
That said, I saw one report that said Unions alone spent $35 million on the recall elections.
I have said all along that special interest money ultimately cancels each other out..this appears to be no different.
The $31 million spent on the recalls—the six August 9 elections and two more targeting Democratic state senators on August 16—splits evenly between left- and right-leaning groups. Where the spending is lopsided, McCabe says, is between the candidates and outside spending groups. In-state and out-of-state independent advocacy groups have dropped five times more than the candidates