10-26-2022, 05:23 PM
Hicks served in multiple senior roles in Trump's White House for much of his presidency. She left the White House six days after the Jan. 6 insurrection, on Jan. 12, after serving as a counselor to the president. She had previously served as White House communications director as well as director of strategic communications. Prior to her stints at the White House, Hicks worked for Trump's presidential campaign, the Trump Organization and Ivanka Trump’s fashion brand. In his remarks Tuesday, Alito referred to the charges against Nicholas John Roske, of Simi Valley, California, who was armed with a handgun, a knife, pepper spray and burglary tools when he was arrested in June near Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s home, between the release of the leaked draft and the court's eventual ruling. Roske has pleaded not guilty to trying to kill Kavanaugh. Ryan and his allies have voiced frustration over the lack of spending. At a campaign event last week in the working-class city of Mansfield, halfway between Columbus and Cleveland, Ryan attacked a Democratic strategist’s recent argument to The Washington Post that North Carolina was more worthy of investment because the state has more college graduates. The Vance-Ryan race is closer than many observers had expected given that Trump twice won the state by 8 points. Ryan has tailored his message to appeal to independent and GOP voters, and his campaign has far outraised Vance’s. Combined, a few outside groups have spent a little more than $5 million on the race. But top-spending national Democratic groups have avoided the race, seeing other paths to maintaining and expanding their Senate majority. And Vance, has benefited from more than $25 million in outside money, some of it from groups aligned with Trump and Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, according to AdImpact, an ad-tracking firm.
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"Why are 1 in 5 Republican voters saying no to J.D. Vance?" the group asks in an ad that will be placed in newspapers serving small rural towns. "There are many reasons." WelcomePAC, a Democratic-funded group that aims to reach ticket-splitting voters this fall, has launched a six-figure advertising campaign against Republican J.D. Vance in Ohio’s competitive and increasingly hostile Senate race. Neil Gray, the minister responsible for Ukrainian refugees, said more than three-quarters of those arrivals had been through its super sponsor scheme.
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"Why are 1 in 5 Republican voters saying no to J.D. Vance?" the group asks in an ad that will be placed in newspapers serving small rural towns. "There are many reasons." WelcomePAC, a Democratic-funded group that aims to reach ticket-splitting voters this fall, has launched a six-figure advertising campaign against Republican J.D. Vance in Ohio’s competitive and increasingly hostile Senate race. Neil Gray, the minister responsible for Ukrainian refugees, said more than three-quarters of those arrivals had been through its super sponsor scheme.
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