Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Stories For Election Day

On a sunny but cool Tuesday after the first Monday in November, now that I've watched a lunar eclipse and voted within an eight-hour period, here are some things going on:

From National Review, 20 percent of voting centers in Maricopa County, Arizona are having technical difficulties.

From FrontpageMag, Democrats protect the alleged Pelosi home attacker from being deported.

From Townhall, on election day, President Biden calls a lid.

From The Washington Free Beacon, what the polls are really saying so far.

From the Washington Examiner, when government and Big Tech collude to censor Americans.

From The Federalist, the "red mirage" narrative from the left is just a cover for election-rigging.

From American Thinker, the real "deniers" are Democrats.

From CNS News, Biden takes a while, but finally congratulates former and reelected Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.

From Red Voice Media, Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R) says "no" to coronavirus amnesty and "yes" to accountability.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, a CBS panel flips out after former Trump acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney points out election denial by Democrats.

From Canada Free Press, Democrats won't be able to hide tonight's expected defeat forever.

From TeleSUR, Presidents Nicolas Maduro (Venezuela), Gustavo Petro (Colombia) and Chan Santoki (Suriname) commit to protecting the Amazon rainforest.

From TCW Defending Freedom, Brexit never stood a chance because of the spineless U.K. Tories.

From Free West Media, Turkish President Erdoğan bemoans the "failure of international security institutions".

From EuroNews, Ukrainian military forces continue to move slowly toward the city of Kherson.

From Euractiv, europarliamentcritters learn that some E.U. governments use spyware.

From ReMix, according to Czech Interior Minister Vít Rakušan, taking migrants across the border with Slovakia wasn't right, but it happened only once.

From Balkan Insight, the mass resignation of ethnic Serb parliamentcritters causes a constitutional dilemma in Kosovo.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco makes some major diplomatic wins at the Arab summit.

From The New Arab, dozens of Egyptians are detained ahead of protests planned for this coming Friday.

From the Star Tribune, an American aid worker is shot dead in Baghdad, Iraq.

From Gatestone Institute, France slides toward chaos.

From The Stream, a prediction that democracy will still exist tomorrow.

From ITR Economics, what's the difference between recession and depression?

From The Daily Signal, uncovering the true origin of the coronavirus is just one question about the pandemic that Congress needs to answer.

From Space War, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson tries to win Turkey over on Sweden's bid to join NATO.

From The American Conservative, when you vote, "remember what the Democrats did".

From The Western Journal, more on the technical difficulties in Maricopa Country, Arizona.

From BizPac Review, a Pennsylvania court rules against Republicans by allowing ballots with incorrect dates to be counted.

From The Daily Wire, the DeSantis administration rebuffs the Biden administration's attempt to send election monitors to Florida.

From the Daily Caller, Guam elects its first Republican congressional delegate since 1990.  (Guam is one of several U.S. areas which send a delegate to Congress, who can vote as committee members but not on the House floor as a whole.)

From the New York Post, Florida braces for Tropical Storm Nicole, which could strengthen into a hurricane.

From Breitbart, left-wing personalities on Twitter "lose their minds" as the Chief Twit calls for Americans to vote for Republicans to take Congress.

From Newsmax, according to a Rasmussen report, an endorsement from former President Obama carries more weight than one from either Biden or Trump.

From CBS12, former President Trump votes to reelect Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R).  (via Newsmax)

And from Huffpost, a Tyrannosaurus rex skull found in South Dakota is expected to sell for at least $15 million at auction in New York next month.

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