|
On October 31 2010 12:54 Meapak_Ziphh wrote:I <3 Christine  Best thing to happen to the dems since McCain picked Palin. Like Sarah, everytime Christine opens her mouth an attack ad ready sound bite pops out.
Sad thing is Sharon Angle is even more batshit crazy and gaffe-prone than O'Donnell and Palin combined.
Sadly, Harry Reid is so disliked that he may probably end up losing.
|
On October 31 2010 13:19 Adila wrote:Show nested quote +On October 31 2010 12:54 Meapak_Ziphh wrote:I <3 Christine  Best thing to happen to the dems since McCain picked Palin. Like Sarah, everytime Christine opens her mouth an attack ad ready sound bite pops out. Sad thing is Sharon Angle is even more batshit crazy and gaffe-prone than O'Donnell and Palin combined. Sadly, Harry Reid is so disliked that he may probably end up losing.
i was hanging out with my friends today, and all of them are republican... and they are all talking about voting Reid, as the lesser of 2 evils, as well as just to keep senate majority in the seat, anyone else in that seat that isn't senate majority is a major blow to the importance of Nevada in Washington.. and we need serious help here... serious help...
It's turning in to a ghost town here in Henderson, so many empty houses/entire shopping centers abandoned(my family lost their house as well). Rumors are major hotels are closing down entire floors of hotel space. and trying to keep it quiet. their are still people coming to Vegas, but the fact is, they have ALWAYS lost money on hotel rooms, they just got it back in the casino, but nobody is spending money in the casinos, not even going to talk about unemployment.. It's sad how dependent this place is on everyone else, I need to get out of here .
Also I already voted, I know Im being optimistic, but I have to be.
|
I think it's a safe bet to assume that Republicans in D.C. are praying that Reid wins and not Angle as all it will take is her to talk on the house floor using her regular rhetoric for it to be national headlines and have that (R) by her name.
|
I'd rather have evil than stupid. Reid better win.
|
Everyone afraid of radical Muslims should open their eyes and behold the true beast. I know we criticize Iran for being radically religious under Shariah Law and stuff, but I am absolutely certain that if we let radical christians have the same kind of power, then we would be in a similar situation if not worse.
I seriously oppose religion mixing with politics. And I seriously oppose anyone who hates Darwin and the Flying Spaghetti Monster...
|
On October 31 2010 16:21 DocM wrote:
I seriously oppose religion mixing with politics...
So did our founders, but some people seem to forget or not believe that.
|
According to CNN, O'Donnell is losing 61%-39% with 56% of the polls reporting in. Looks like she's gonna lose! :D
|
WILMINGTON, Del. — Democrat Chris Coons easily won Delaware's Senate race Tuesday over Republican Christine O'Donnell, a tea party favorite who struggled to shake old cable-show footage in which she spoke out against masturbation and talked about dabbling in witchcraft as a teenager.
With 99 percent of the precincts reporting, Coons had 57 percent of the vote to 40 percent for O'Donnell, an evangelical outsider whose stunning upset in the September GOP primary likely cost Republicans the race. Her opponent in the primary, congressman and former governor Mike Castle, had been considered a shoo-in to win Vice President Joe Biden's old seat.
|
Just a bump not about the election but about O'Donnell herself, might be nothing:
BALTIMORE — Federal authorities have launched a criminal investigation to determine whether failed U.S. Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell broke the law by using campaign money to pay personal expenses, according to a person familiar with the investigation.
O'Donnell, the Delaware Republican and tea party favorite who scored a surprise primary victory this year only to lose badly in the November general election, denied the charges and suggested they were being driven by her political opponents on the right and left, including Vice President Joe Biden.
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to protect the identity of a client who has been questioned as part of the probe. The case, which has been assigned to two federal prosecutors and two FBI agents in Delaware, has not been brought before a grand jury.
One former O'Donnell staffer, Kristin Murray, recorded an automated phone call for the Delaware Republican Party just before the primary, accusing O'Donnell of "living on campaign donations – using them for rent and personal expenses, while leaving her workers unpaid and piling up thousands in debt."
Another former aide, David Keegan, said he became concerned about O'Donnell's 2008 campaign finances as she fell behind on bills and had no apparent source of income besides political contributions. He submitted an affidavit to CREW alleging that she used campaign money to cover meals, gas, a bowling outing, and rent to a landlord, Brent Vasher.
Source
|
What's the penalty for that?
|
Wasn't there already talk of this while she was running?
Either way not suprised. She will be in jail soon enough.
|
it ain't nothin' but thug politics yo
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/12/30/odonnell-spending-accusations-thug-tactics/
+ Show Spoiler +WASHINGTON – Failed U.S. Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell said Thursday that accusations she misspent campaign funds are politically motivated and stoked by disgruntled former campaign workers.
The Delaware Republican appeared on several network morning shows to defend herself a day after The Associated Press reported federal authorities have launched a criminal probe to determine whether she broke the law by using campaign money to pay personal expenses.
"There's been no impermissible use of campaign funds whatsoever," O'Donnell told ABC's "Good Morning America."
O'Donnell, the tea party favorite who scored a surprise primary victory before losing in the general election, suggested the accusations are driven by political establishments on the right and left, including Joe Biden. He represented Delaware in the Senate for decades before he became vice president.
"You have to look at this whole thug-politic tactic for what it is," she said Thursday.
A person familiar with the investigation confirmed it to The AP, speaking on condition of anonymity to protect the identity of a client who has been questioned as part of the probe. The case, which has been assigned to two federal prosecutors and two FBI agents in Delaware, has not been brought before a grand jury.
O'Donnell, who set a state record by raising more than $7.3 million in a tea party-fueled campaign this year, has been dogged by questions about her personal and campaign finances.
At least two former campaign workers have alleged that she routinely used political contributions to pay personal expenses including her rent as she ran for the Senate. She has run three consecutive times, starting in 2006.
O'Donnell has acknowledged paying part of her rent with campaign money, arguing that her house doubled as a campaign headquarters.
On Thursday, she told NBC's "Today Show" that people making the spending allegations include a fired former staff member and a former volunteer, both of whom she described as disgruntled. She says many other workers who spent longer with her campaigns have defended her.
Her contention that the accusations were politically motivated echoed a written statement she released the day before, which singled out Biden.
"Given that the king of the Delaware political establishment just so happens to be the vice president of the most liberal presidential administration in U.S. history, it is no surprise that misuse and abuse of the FBI would not be off the table," she said.
The vice president's office declined to comment.
O'Donnell's campaign also has criticized the nonpartisan watchdog group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which filed a complaint about O'Donnell's campaign spending this fall and asked Delaware's federal prosecutor to investigate.
O'Donnell says the group is part of a liberal effort to kill her career, noting that the organization is run by Washington attorney Melanie Sloan, who worked under Biden as a lawyer for the Senate Judiciary Committee in the early 1990s.
Sloan dismissed the criticism Thursday, emphasizing that the allegations originated with conservatives who worked for O'Donnell.
"I don't see how anybody can say that those people are part of the liberal machine," Sloan said. "What CREW did was look at what they were saying and say, 'Wait a minute, that's against the law.'"
The U.S. Attorney's office in Delaware has confirmed it is reviewing CREW's complaint. But officials in the office and the FBI declined to say whether a criminal investigation was under way.
Federal law prohibits candidates from spending campaign money for personal benefit. FEC rules state that this prohibition applies to the use of campaign money for a candidate's mortgage or rent "even if part of the residence is being used by the campaign," although O'Donnell's campaign has maintained that it was told otherwise by someone at the agency.
O'Donnell drew national attention in September when she upset U.S. Rep. Mike Castle for the GOP Senate nomination. She was handily defeated in November by Democrat Chris Coons following a campaign that focused largely on past controversial statements, including that she'd "dabbled into witchcraft" when she was young.
One former O'Donnell staffer, Kristin Murray, recorded an automated phone call for the Delaware Republican Party just before the primary, accusing O'Donnell of "living on campaign donations — using them for rent and personal expenses, while leaving her workers unpaid and piling up thousands in debt."
O'Donnell told NBC that Murray was fired from her 2008 campaign after less than two weeks because of incompetence.
Another former aide, David Keegan, said he became concerned about O'Donnell's 2008 campaign finances as she fell behind on bills and had no apparent source of income besides political contributions. He submitted an affidavit to CREW alleging that she used campaign money to cover meals, gas, a bowling outing and rent.
In a message sent last week to AP, Keegan said he had not been questioned as part of a criminal investigation, and that he considers himself only a "catalyst" in a case in which several people must be questioned to scrutinize O'Donnell's accounting practices and alleged misuse of campaign funds.
O'Donnell has run through numerous treasurers over her three campaigns, many of whom left abruptly after brief stints. At one point O'Donnell was acting as her own treasurer, and her current treasurer is former campaign manager Matt Moran.
O'Donnell, who announced just after Election Day that she had signed a book deal, hasn't held a full-time job in years and has struggled to explain how she makes a living.
|
"Given that the king of the Delaware political establishment just so happens to be the vice president of the most liberal presidential administration in U.S. history, it is no surprise that misuse and abuse of the FBI would not be off the table," she said.
I stopped reading there because it was too funny.
Edit: She got a book deal?!
|
What do you expect Joe Biden to do? As a good Christian, he must hunt down and persecute witches.
|
O'Donnell, who announced just after Election Day that she had signed a book deal, hasn't held a full-time job in years and has struggled to explain how she makes a living.
Boy that really makes me trust her credentials. Hasn't she been railing against out-of-work aid? I guess not everyone is lucky enough to have a rich husband.
|
Can't take anything from Fox News seriously. I wonder how many people there believe what gets said and how many people are pulling a Colbert and dying of laughter inside every day.
Cue "ignorance is not a defense" for her, as well.
On December 31 2010 01:41 Ferrose wrote: Edit: She got a book deal?! Why are you surprised by this? The more outlandish and sensationalist you are, the more something will sell.
|
United States22883 Posts
On December 31 2010 02:06 tnkted wrote:Show nested quote +O'Donnell, who announced just after Election Day that she had signed a book deal, hasn't held a full-time job in years and has struggled to explain how she makes a living. Boy that really makes me trust her credentials. Hasn't she been railing against out-of-work aid? I guess not everyone is lucky enough to have a rich husband. I have to listen to old people on Medicare bitch about universal health care all day. >.> There's hypocrites all over.
|
|
|
|
|