it s also an issue in many races around the nation. we are 35 days out from these midterms, and right now the scandal engulfing republican herschel walker in one race, but tells a similar story. he follows a report that states he has backed abortion in his own personal life, specifically funding an abortion for a woman in 2009. that was before the supreme court recently allowed states to ban abortions outright. and it is that personal act that is exactly what walker also claims to be run against. the beast, as you see here, documents what he allegedly did to support abortion in his personal life, including an account of the woman involved, while he publicly claims the opposite and wants to take away that right from others. it is running he is running on this plan to ban abortion while he has been allegedly caught supporting it. so in its own personal scandal louse way it is an echo about who makes the larger decisions, whether this is about what they say, or whether this is
Of office with a trumpet hijacks the lefts Bloodbath Hoax. Rather than the probability, they maybe the problem, is he . And they know what they want to say but they dont have the balls to say it to do they really hate ddi thursday. This is for when youre being harassed, he had somebody else and it gave them instructions on how they can help you. Jesse San Francisco has anyway to fight crime, playing cards. Plus, shes back [ ] [ howls ] jesse fake news, you heard it, you love it, who claimed it . It wasnt donald trump, it was hillary. It is not clear that socalled fake news can have realworld consequences. Its not about politics or partisanship. Lives are at risk. Jesse hillary was in a saleswoman, you dont trump turned those two words into a campaign slogan. Go ahead. No, not you. Not you. Your organization is terrible. The organization is terrible. Let me ask the question. Mr. Trump quiet. Dont be rude. Can you they are attacking as, and you give us a question . Mr. Trump i will not g
terms this week by the supreme court and how the fight to preserve voting rights in the country moves forward from here on out. well, the thing that i m doing to preserve voting rights moving this point forward is i filed a suit in texas, in corpus christi, to make sure this law is never implemented. as you stated earlier, this law was found to be discriminatory. the fact just because section 4 was struck down that you would move to make a law that a court has found to be discriminatory is absolutely nonsense. and it sends the wrong message about texas. we are a great state and and don t want to send a message to businesses and companies and people that are moving to the state of texas in records, mostly latino and african-american, that discrimination is okay. we need to stop. i believe this law, this voter i.d. law passed by republicans, when i was still in the legislature in 2011, that it s discriminatory and violates section 2. do you think texas still
we re seeing news like this in arkansas, in ohio, in montana, in north dakota, in michigan, in wyoming. all these places you wouldn t necessarily expect it, but it s happening at a homegrown grassroots level. this is now a state-by-state fight in every state for the right to marry. just as it is a state-by-state fight in every state for the right to vote. yesterday in texas, a democratic congressman sued the state of texas over the voter i.d. law that until a few days ago was too racist for the federal government to let it go forward. he is now asking the court to block that law again. joining us now is marc veasey, congressman from ft. worth, texas. he s a new plaintiff in veasey v. texas, texas governor rick perry. congressman, thank you very much for being here. it s nice to have you here. thank you, rachel, for having me on the show. your overall reaction to the idea of the voting rights act, damage done on civil rights
that the right to marry shall not be abridged or denied on account of sex or sexual orientation, not even in arkansas. we re seeing news like this in arkansas, in ohio, in montana, in north dakota, in michigan, in wyoming. all these places you wouldn t necessarily expect it, but it s happening at a homegrown grassroots level. this is now a state-by-state fight in every state for the right to marry. just as it is a state-by-state fight in every state for the right to vote. yesterday in texas, a democratic congressman sued the state of texas over the voter i.d. law that until a few days ago was too racist for the federal government to let it go forward. he is now asking the court to block that law again. joining us now is marc veasey, congressman from ft. worth, texas. he s a new plaintiff in veasey v. texas, texas governor rick perry. congressman, thank you very much for being here. it s nice to have you here. thank you, rachel, for having me on the show. your overall reaction to th