abortion, which obviously is activating democrats, there are far fewer people saying it s their top issue. same thing here with voting rights i want to pause here for a moment. both of these staes are very close, these races are very close. nevada, 44%, almost half the electorate say the economy is the top issue. if we pop back up to the match-ups here, what you re seeing in nevada are really, these are the dead heats. these are essentially tied races in a state that democrats thought for a little while would be a little bit more blue, frankly, than arizona. yes. but this is where you also get at candidate quality. let s stay here because i want to stress to people, you re noting 44% in nevada say economy and inflation is important. overwhelmingly the voters who say so want to vote republican in the midterms. that s the problem for democrats.
policy report showed that the more gas that could be invested in the uk, the more it will cost to the consumer. so we also have to take that into consideration. consideration. 0k. really interesting consideration. 0k. really interesting to consideration. 0k. really interesting to get - consideration. 0k. really. interesting to get analysis. thank you. thank you. let s stay here thank you. thank you. let s stay here in thank you. thank you. let s stay here in the thank you. thank you. let s stay here in the uk - thank you. thank you. let s stay here in the uk because j thank you. thank you. let s - stay here in the uk because the pound has resumed its slide against the dollar, falling back towards $1.11. in government bond prices, they fallen sharply. it almost two weeks since chancellor kwasi kwarteng s taxcutting mini budget caused terminal in the markets, forcing the bank of england to step in to stop a pension fund crisis. it did that by buying up government bonds. the me
incumbent to almost barely scrape by in the primary. laura: a couple years ago they said beto o rourke will be at the forefront of flipping texas to blue. i think we saw that headline so many times. they are still doing think pieces. now we have mandela barnes. laura: let s stay in south texas. g.o.p. congresswoman is battling a democrat congressman in the 34th district. she is running for her first full term after she won the special election. this really does seem like a hispanic wave in some sections of the country for republicans. the first mexican-american woman elected to congress for a special term. she s the first republican in history elected to her own congressional seat because of rewriting, these two incumbents are forced to face off against each other and i think she s got a real shot.
on. it s going to fail. he s not going to get the 60 votes he needs. he knows that. that is satisfying the left-wing constituency in the democrat party. and i ve got to say, maria with, we are a long, long way from when bill clinton was president mt. state of the union he said he wanted abortion safe, legal and rare. now, i didn t agree with that saint then, but he was at least recognizing that abortion was something he wanted rare. today s democratic party doesn t believe that. they openly celebrate abortion as a wonderful thing. maria: yeah. i mean, look, you go back to what andrew cuomo, former golf governor of new york, did by saying no restrictions whatsoever, could happen until, you know, the ninth month. you also heard a similar sentiment this past week from tim ryan in ohio. since we re on the substance issue here, let s stay here because i want you to explain what this draft opinion says. it by no means says that awe