Back to Neutral Coalition Aims to Remove the Woke from Big Business humanevents.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from humanevents.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Facebook blocks President Trump from platform indefinitely; Independent Women s Forum senior policy analyst Patrice Onwuka reacts.
Millions in Mark Zuckerberg-financed election grants to Democratic-leaning South Florida counties made last year will likely carry over to the 2022 election, when Gov. Ron DeSantis is on the ballot for reelection.
Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, and his wife Priscilla Chan bankrolled $350 million for Center for Tech and Civic Life (CTCL) grants to jurisdictions with the stated purpose of making elections safer during the COVID-19 pandemic. At least two major jurisdictions have not spent all the money and will be using it for future elections, according to an analysis by Public Interest Legal Foundation, a government watchdog group.
Leftwing pundits have long predicted the demise of the Republican Party owing to demographic changes. They are quite sure they know what the weather will be in 50 years, so why not claim the same about politics? Unfortunately, panicky types on the right sometimes take the bait, predicting doom and gloom unless their fellow conservatives adopt some less-than-conservative policy position.
This is the sales pitch made to conservatives for the National Popular Vote interstate compact (NPV), which would have states give away their electoral votes based on the national popular vote result. The NPV campaign is run and funded by the left, but is desperate to find anyone on the right willing to give them a bipartisan veneer. Their argument is that Texas is sure to go blue and then, unless we shift to a direct election, Republicans will never win another presidential election. This argument is foolish, insulting, and incorrect.
PRO Act Could Mean US Will Determine Winners of Unionization Drives
More than 70 percent of the employees of Amazon’s Bessemer, Alabama, facility voted against joining a union, but that’s not the last word by far, especially if the Democrats’ PRO Act becomes law.
A total of 3,215 of the Amazon warehouse’s 5,800 employees cast mail-in ballots in the April 9 election, with 1,798, or 70.9 percent, voting against unionizing under the banner of the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union (RWDSU). The union needed 50 percent plus one to win.
The vote was closely watched by political observers as it represented an effort to achieve a union breakthrough in the Big Tech industry, which is largely nonunion.
States pursuing laws to curb Zuckerberg spending on elections foxnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from foxnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.