like most times in trump world, his endorsement of purdue boils down to loyalty. backing only those who follow line. the washington post says that reality this way, angry that camp refused to help him overturn the election results in a key battleground state, trump set out to topple it, he called him a turn corked, a coward, and a complete in total disaster. he pumped two point $6 million from his political action committee and efforts to unseat camp, far more than the former president has spent any other race. that is just because he loves you today, it doesn t mean guarantee he will still love you tomorrow. after millions of dollars and trump cash, trump seems to be given perdue the cold shoulder. sources tell nbc news, trump believes perdue is running a lackluster campaign, as of today he has no plans to in georgia before tuesday s contest. given we know how much trump loves making phone calls to georgia, he will voted in tomorrow, holding a tele-alley for supporters u
the role that state legislatures play and so many facets of our lives is not a thing that often gets it often gets overlooked and broader civic discourse in the way that this country works. but it does not get overlooked on the conservative movement and far-right edges of american politics. going back to 2010, one of the most important, most significant legacies of the tea party movement was flipping a huge number of state legislatures, both individual bodies, almost every state legislature models, washington and has two different chambers, but individual bodies and taking control even star tate legislatures as a whole. first the tea party was a total failure when he came to trying to repeal the affordable care attack. but in the act of those legislative leave those changes has shaped a host of policies including perhaps most importantly, abortion laws
wounded in a suicide bombing in a market and other attacks. the struggle for people of southern syria worsening by the hour. we have jomana with more. reporter: dave, this was a care attack in the country in the province. that area has been spared of much of the violence we have seen in syria over the past few years. it was a brazen attack. coordinat coordinated and complex. this was not a number of suicide bombers that targeted the scity of suwayda. you have others who stormed the villages around the area and hearing reports that they went into homes and killed families while they were sleeping. majority of the 216 killed are local fighters and regime
putting it back on track and this does nothing. ezra, were you surprised about the end of the medical device tax repeal? as you said, tim and others are doing a good job of mobilizing against it. the people aren t getting anything. this began as a sort of anti-obama care attack. and the fundamental problem, the reason this has always been so hard to solve is that at this point you re seeing a war that s not really over policy anymore. it s over kind of negotiating principle of whether or not you can extort concessions in order to keep the government and go to the debt ceiling. it s part of the reason this thing wasn t going to go anywhere anyway. is that senate democrats weren t going to help. house democrats were going to oppose so they couldn t go to them for votes. the one thing i will say when