It's like the Tim Kaine commercial with two old women and three unattractive women talking about abortion remaining legal. As if any of them will need an abortion. |
Damn you, Poe's Law. |
She owes us tax money, so we need her gainfully employed so she can pay it. Duh. |
Riigght, believe the orange man. Gotcha. |
Let me guess, you’re a dude! Oh the irony. If you are a dude, as I suspect, you shouldn’t discuss or vote on abortion issues ever since you’ll never have one, |
Because Republicans are sitting around waiting to surprise you? Your level of political analysis is stunning. |
Last I checked, abortion rights were being stripped back by republican led states immediately after the stacked supreme court threw out roe. can't trust a single one of them on this issue. you are damn right they would pass a national ban if they could. anything to stick it to the libs and impose their "moral code" on the rest of us. |
| The boundary between DC and MD is not as solid as many people like to pretend. There are plenty of DC residents with MD plates on their cars and they may very well be registered to vote there also. |
Wild she does her own taxes is the most wild part of that story. Homestead act, weird she couldn't use it. |
All of a sudden Republicans care about taxes. Can we review Trump's? |
It’s hilarious that Republicans think this is a disqualifier. Hilarious. |
We don’t want abortion restrictions anywhere in America and reject the premise that this is a state-by-state decision. |
Or Hogan's? https://time.com/7081664/exclusive-as-governor-larry-hogan-approved-millions-in-awards-to-his-firms-clients/ Over Hogan’s eight years in office, nearly 40% of the competitive affordable housing awards overseen by the governor went to developers listed as clients on HOGAN’s website, according to a TIME review of public records. Those awards were concentrated among six developers who competed against more than 60 other companies during that time. As one of three members of the Board of Public Works, an administrative body that determines how taxpayer money gets spent, Hogan voted on five occasions to issue additional loans or grants to four of those same developers, according to public records. All the while, Hogan continued to hold regular meetings with his company’s leaders, according to his official meeting calendar, which was obtained by the Washington Monthly via a FOIA request in 2019. "It's definitely a serious conflict of interest," says Richard Painter, chief White House ethics lawyer in the George W. Bush Administration. "He should have stayed away from it." |
to be fair, it takes the DC government forever, to change the homestead deduction and the senior discount to real property. I understand Alsobrooks has renumerated the city. Total non-issue. |
Sheesh, Fetch isn't going to happen here, and particularly in light of the fraud and crimes committed by Trump and Hogan. the media never really covered the crony grift executed while Hogan was governor. |