Tues/Med AM ~ TheFrontPageCove

The Front Page Cover
~ Featuring ~
THERE IS NO GOP CIVIL WAR
by DAVID LIMBAUGH
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Tuesday Top Headlines
PlaZDgsN7MKbUxmCQFcSWNMXzmsRjsIKXC2Q_XFdKnEpc31YD9irsyWBBbU2OgNnXDK9TI5zIdxGpmIltP6nyOjmTGN8CE2YTiKzroXVcs5KFfeFISyECw_7bKZ7KDc=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=?width=500Trump vows justice after suspected Benghazi attacker captured by U.S. forces in Libya (The Washington Free Beacon)
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Tony Podesta stepping down from lobbying giant amid Mueller probe (Politico)
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Former Trump adviser pleads guilty to lying to FBI in Russia probe (CNS News)
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Judge halts Trump’s transgender troop ban (The Washington Times)
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House GOP tax plan would now allow Americans to deduct property taxes (The Washington Post)
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FBI says all JFK assassination files cleared for release (CBS News)
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The danger behind Google’s free speech monopoly (Washington Examiner)
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liar-nObamaCare on shaky ground as re-enrollment begins (Washington Examiner)
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Netflix cancels “House of Cards” after allegation against Kevin Spacey (Hot Air)
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Another hate crime hoax: Racist graffiti, arson at south KC church were cover-up for theft by employee (The Kansas City Star)
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Policy: Is it time to break-up big tech? (Hudson Institute)
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Policy: What nation has reduced carbon emissions more than any other? (American Enterprise Institute
 ~The Patriot Post
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Putin Defends Trump Battling Enemy 
Within – Blasts Disrespect, Obstructionists
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{rickwells.us} ~ Russian President Vladimir Putin addressed the audience at the 14th annual meeting of the Valdai Discussion Club, a gathering of over 130 participants from 33 countries... In characterizing President Trump, Putin was more fair and objective than our own media propagandists and many in his own Republican Party.  Putin took a question from one audience member which was interlaced with anti-Trump rhetoric throughout and seemingly intended to elicit an attack. He asked, “Among all of the major powers, Russia, United States, China, India, Japan or Germany or Great Britain, all most every major power has a competent and a capable leaders [sic] like yourself.” The questioner continued, “Except the number one power, the United States. We happen to have a President, unfortunately, that needs to be managed, although it remains to be seen if he’s manageable or not. And you have been very successful as a senior in terms of presidency.”...  https://rickwells.us/putin-defends-trump-respected/
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Frank Stephens Congressional
Testimony: A Rebuke of “The Final Solution”
{theconservativetreehouse.com} ~ Speaking on behalf of a goal for continued funding for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), this opening statement by Frank Stephens might very well be the best testimonial made to a congressional committee since the incredible Catherine Engelbrecht speech. “Happiness is worth something”…  Yes, Mr. Stephens, yes it is.  https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2017/10/29/frank-stephens-congressional-testimony-a-rebuke-of-the-final-solution/
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Nunes’ investigating digs up trove 
of Democrat connections to Russia dossier
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by Rowan Scarborough
{washingtontimes.com} ~ On two fronts, Rep. Devin Nunes has shifted the Russia debate in Washington further away from President Trump and closer to Democrats... He exposed the practice of “unmasking” by liar-nObama aides and flushed out the source of payments for the scandalous anti-Trump dossier that drove the Russia collusion narrative. The committee subpoenaed documents concerning Ms. Power, former National Security Adviser Susan E. Rice and former CIA Director John O. Brennan. All deny that they were spying on Mr. Trump. Mr. Nunes‘ second tactic brought the most immediately result: He flushed out the identities — long kept secret — of some of the financial backers for the notorious Trump dossier that has fed the Democrats’ Russia collusion charges for months. He did it by signing a subpoena for the bank records of Fusion GPS, the liberal opposition research firm that hired the dossier writer, former British spy Christopher Steele...  http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/oct/29/devin-nunes-shifts-russia-dossier-focus-from-donal/
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Tom Steyer - The man behind the impeachment ad
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by Joe A. Gilbertson
{punchingbagpost.com} ~ Most Americans may not have heard of a guy named Tom Steyer.  His ubiquitous ads calling for the impeachment of President Trump may be his ascendancy out of political anonymity... He is spending a minimum of $10 million on television ads calling for the impeachment of President Trump.  Incidentally, we should stop referring to the New York/DC media cabal as “mainstream media.” They are not. They are the media outlets for the left-wing establishment – the elitist media. In his ads, Steyer presents himself as some sort of traditional average American – just a guy in a blue shirt talking to the nation from in front of the living room hearth – if the setting is his home and not a studio creation...Steyer is a sick person.   http://punchingbagpost.com/horist-tom-steyer---the-man-behind-the-impeachment-ad/?pb_list=pb_list
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The Battle Over The Government’s 
Massive Surveillance Powers Has Arrived
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by ERIC LIEBERMAN
{dailycaller.com} ~ A significant provision in a contentious surveillance law is set to expire at the end of the year... and a number of lawmakers are scrambling to either re-enact the legislation permanently or find its statutory replacement. Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which was created through congressional amendments to a prior bill, allows federal intelligence agencies to collect data on foreigners suspected of crimes. But due to the broad powers enumerated in the law and the inherent nature of surveillance, the electronic communications of law-abiding Americans are often scooped up as well...  http://dailycaller.com/2017/10/29/the-battle-over-the-governments-massive-surveillance-powers-has-arrived/?utm_medium=email
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THERE IS NO GOP CIVIL WAR
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by DAVID LIMBAUGH
{wnd.com} ~ Despite the unrequited longings of the left and certain vocal Republicans, there is no civil war in the Republican Party, and there is not even widespread disaffection with President Donald Trump among rank-and-file GOP voters.

But this is not what you would assume listening to Democrats and the mainstream media or frequenting the Twitter accounts of a number of high-profile Trump-disdaining conservatives.

Sen. RINO-John McCain has been in a public feud with President Trump, as have Sens. RINO-Bob Corker and RINO-Jeff Flake, who both have announced that they will retire, lamenting the decline in dignity and manners Trump has allegedly ushered in. And no less a Republican well-wisher than liar-Hillary Clinton has declared that the GOP is imploding.

President Trump, for his part, obviously perceives matters differently, tweeting, “The meeting with Republican Senators yesterday, outside of RINO-Flake and RINO-Corker, was a love fest.” Even sometime Trump critic Lindsey Graham praised the luncheon, saying that Trump was “upbeat,” “lighthearted” and “funny as hell.”

With the liberal media gleefully showcasing these intramural squabbles and obsessing over Trump’s every tweet and phone call, it’s no wonder some might infer that Republicans are in hopeless disarray and headed for extinction. But outside their echo chamber and that of the denizens of NeverTrumpistan, I think we’ll be fine.

Victor Davis Hanson, in a piece for National Review Online, cited data showing that despite perceptions to the contrary, Trump received roughly the same percentage of Republican votes as other previous GOP presidential candidates. Additionally, my own experience tells me that the overwhelming majority of fellow Republicans and conservatives are supportive of Trump, even if they don’t wholeheartedly embrace everything he may tweet or say.

Indeed, very few conservatives I’ve run into are that concerned about Trump’s tweets – even those who would prefer he dial them down a notch – because they appreciate that he is speaking their language instead of the guarded language of the typical politician. Columnist Salena Zito offered a fascinating insight on this, saying, “The press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally.” Though certain conservative Trump critics cringe at this, I dare say the rank-and-file Republican voter understands the difference and isn’t sweating the small stuff – provided we can move forward on policy and dismantle the liar-nObama agenda.

Trump supporters don’t dispute that Trump’s bombastic style provides fodder for his critics, but they also understand that the political left has mercilessly savaged every other Republican president for decades. They believe that Trump is the first one, at least since Ronald Reagan, who gives the left a taste of its own medicine. This may be cringe-worthy to the Emily Posts of the conservative chattering class, but many of the rest of us are willing to overlook some of the distasteful in exchange for someone in our corner fighting back.

This is not to say that the Republican Party enjoys the greatest reputation these days, but that’s more the fault of the recalcitrant moderates and the establishment wing than it is of Trump. Trump’s most ardent conservative critics are the very ones who contributed to his rise in the first place – partly because they didn’t perceive liar-nObama’s agenda as urgently destructive or they weren’t willing to oppose him vigorously enough. And let’s never underestimate the level of angst generated by the open-border advocates on the right who besmirched good-faith immigration hawks as nativists and racists. It’s also hard to take seriously some and I truly mean some, not all never-Trumpers’ insistence that they are the true conservatives when you often see them obsessing over Trump and you rarely see them criticizing the left; in fact, they frequently retweet liberals with approval.

What these critics don’t grasp is that the Trump movement transcends Trump. It preceded him and will survive him. This does not necessarily mean in my view that populism will replace constitutional conservatism. But it does mean that rank-and-file conservatives are tired of their politicians talking a good game during their campaigns and losing their nerve in office and will now hold their candidates accountable.

As most recognize, Trump is not primarily ideological, though he does have a set of strong ideas on certain policies. I disagree with his protectionist bent, and I don’t believe he should cater to the class warriors in promoting his otherwise attractive tax proposal. I also believe he could have been much more successful on liar-nObamacare reform if he’d have tried to placate the bleeding hearts less via pre-existing conditions and mandated coverage and implement truly constructive market solutions.

But I am not fretting those differences. I am trying to speak up about them and hoping in my small way to influence the movement in a conservative direction.

Precisely because Trump is not a rigid ideologue, the policies of the so-called Trump movement – with certain exceptions, such as immigration – are not set in stone. Even on foreign policy, Trump has not shown himself to be a pure isolationist as some feared. He’s a strong nationalist and patriot, but so are most constitutional conservatives. In many areas, Trump is governing as a mainstream conservative.

So no, the GOP is not imploding; it is experiencing a realignment whose parameters have yet to be fully drawn, so let’s quit panicking and be constructive forces to shape this movement into one that’s conservative, dynamic and determined to fight the left with the same amount of energy it uses to fight us. If we do that, we have every reason to expect to hold on to our governing majority. 
   
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