1moretimeagain
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Don’t only think about Laura Loomer. Remember she was describing Marjorie Taylor Greene.Sorry, but all I think of now when I see Arby’s ads are Laura loomers recent roast beef comments .![]()
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Don’t only think about Laura Loomer. Remember she was describing Marjorie Taylor Greene.Sorry, but all I think of now when I see Arby’s ads are Laura loomers recent roast beef comments .![]()
Thank you. And this is the exact example I was referring to, but there are others.They chowed down on Al Franken.
Mar … the Robinson guy
Does North Carolina have an anti-SLAPP law? That could put him on the hook for CNN’s likely 7 figures attorneys fees. And Robinson apparently is low on funds. That could be a detriment to suing.I'm actually surprised he hasn't already filed a lawsuit against CNN merely for PR purposes.
We're 6 weeks out from the election and, if he filed suit, nothing of substance would happen regarding the suit before the election. Filing a suit makes you appear to be an aggrieved party and shifts a bit of the spotlight away from whatever you are said to have done toward the party making the claim. And after the election (win or lose) he could quietly drop the lawsuit with very little in the way of repercussions.
According to Google, no.Does North Carolina have an anti-SLAPP law? That could put him on the hook for CNN’s likely 7 figures attorneys fees. And Robinson apparently is low on funds. That could be a detriment to suing.
That would be the smart move if minisoldr still had a campaign staff, $ coming in, and a prayer of winning. But, now his campaign is cooked no matter what and he knows it. Why file a lawsuit and challenge the media to rehash one the most personally embarrassing stories ever? There's nothing to salvage, politically.I'm actually surprised he hasn't already filed a lawsuit against CNN merely for PR purposes.
We're 6 weeks out from the election and, if he filed suit, nothing of substance would happen regarding the suit before the election. Filing a suit makes you appear to be an aggrieved party and shifts a bit of the spotlight away from whatever you are said to have done toward the party making the claim. And after the election (win or lose) he could quietly drop the lawsuit with very little in the way of repercussions.
I dunno. Maybe the NC Supreme Court will decide that the legislature intended an implied exception when the candidate has a Nazi problem. Or some similarly plausible theory. When the final court is nakedly partisan, it is probably a mistake to put too much reliance on the actual wording of the statutes.Again, I'm not understanding what they mean by "step aside." GS 163-113 is very clear: "A person who has been declared the nominee of a political party for a specified office . . . shall not be permitted to resign as a candidate unless, prior to the first day on which military and overseas absentee ballots are transmitted to voters under Article 21A of this Chapter, that [the] person submits to the board of elections which certified the nomination a written request that person be permitted to withdraw."
That did not happen. He won't be permitted to resign as a candidate, so he can't be replaced by anyone.
Fair enough, I suppose. This gets to the question we've debated so many times before: in MAGA world, do courts have any limits as to how far they will stoop, and if so, what are they (it might very well vary by court)?I dunno. Maybe the NC Supreme Court will decide that the legislature intended an implied exception when the candidate has a Nazi problem. Or some similarly plausible theory. When the final court is nakedly partisan, it is probably a mistake to put to much reliance on the actual wording of the statutes.
I'd think the logic wouldn't be to win, but to avoid being a down-ticket and up-ticket drag. You could take any generic white Republican and put him in that slot.Fair enough, I suppose. This gets to the question we've debated so many times before: in MAGA world, do courts have any limits as to how far they will stoop, and if so, what are they (it might very well vary by court)?
I don't think we're going to get a test of this, though. What GOPer in their right mind would step into MRob's shoes here? He'd have to run with Robinson's name on the ballot. He'd be taking over a race where Stein is leading by 15-20 points. Stein doesn't have any obvious flaws as a candidate that would make a purely negative campaign viable (except in the sense that the DOP is always negative). He'd have no money and no campaign infrastructure. And how would they decide who to run?
Right. But what generic white Republican wants to eat such a shit sandwich taking it for the team?I'd think the logic wouldn't be to win, but to avoid being a down-ticket and up-ticket drag. You could take any generic white Republican and put him in that slot.