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Make extra money at home

  VANCOUVER Are you looking to make a few bucks without leaving your home? There may be a solution. It costs practically nothing and doesn’t take up much of your time. In fact, it can actually help cut down on waste and global warming. You may not realize some of your old stuff that’s sitting around collecting dust – like tools, skis, bikes or anything else that someone else could use but doesn’t want to buy – could be earning money for you. The Gorman family of Coquitlam has already cashed in by renting out old snowshoes. “They were just kind of gathering dust and I said to the boys, you know, they wanted to go out and get work and I said, ‘Why don’t we try just renting out some of the stuff in the garage?’” said Matt Gorman.

Cory Gardner shifts from reelection loss to heading new GOP super PAC

Trump has $105 million in the bank to influence intra-GOP battles

(Pete Marovich – Pool/Getty Images) Former President Donald Trump has $105 million in the bank among four political committees he controls, a massive sum he could use to influence intraparty battles over the future of the Republican Party. Trump continued to ask his supporters for campaign cash long after he lost the Nov. 3 election. Trump’s new leadership PAC, Save America, raised around $31 million between Nov. 24 and Dec. 31, according to a new Federal Election Commission filing released Sunday. While Trump’s group told supporters it was raising money to fight election fraud and help Republicans win the Georgia runoffs, the PAC made its only expenditures on fundraising fees. 

Republican operatives sweat Trump s role in upcoming Senate primaries

Republican operatives sweat Trump s role in upcoming Senate primaries CNN 1/30/2021 By Dan Merica, CNN © BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images US President Donald Trump(R) speaks to the press alongside Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell as he arrives on Capitol Hill on March 26, 2019 before joining Senate Republicans for lunch in Washington,DC. Republicans tasked with taking back the Senate in 2022 are preparing for a contentious primary season, fearful that former President Donald Trump could use his popularity inside the party to back candidates who could struggle in statewide races. Trump has long been drawn to backing candidates who have shown unending allegiance to him and Republican operatives believe that desire, especially after losing the presidential election in 2020, will be unchanged two years later. But the fear among some operatives is that Trump will be even more of a free agent outside of the White House, less willing to bow to pressure

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