10-26-2022, 03:04 PM
At a brief regularly scheduled Board of Education meeting Tuesday evening, board president Matt Davis read a joint statement apologizing and calling for changes that would bring an end to school shootings. But the organisation said he was not suitable for the job because the processes had to be explained in a lot of technical detail. The segment on the topic was particularly brutal for Fetterman. WelcomePAC, which is heavily funded by LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, according to Federal Election Commission records, has been active in Ohio, previously organizing media events featuring Republicans who have banded together to campaign against Vance. The group’s ads direct voters to a website, WhyNoJD.com, and seek to paint Vance as a political two-face who is as unpalatable to a Trump voter as he is to a Portman or John Kasich voter. Kasich, Ohio’s former governor, became a prominent anti-Trump Republican after he lost the GOP presidential nomination in 2016. The strategy, shared first with NBC News, targets opposing wings of the GOP: those who dislike Donald Trump, whose endorsement helped Vance win the primary, and those who love Trump but might distrust Vance, who once was an unsparing critic of the former president.
5918 4045 9584 4154 1188 3255 6096 481 7269 6910 1183 9561 5599 8943 5047 4646 8088 2267 5760 2858 3665 622 6564 6768 4748 740 1476 6743 993 271 2770 2501 168 1452 6446 4787 8476 2247 4259 315 5202 8767 3422 4068 8995 6412 7569 9041 5655 7625 5071 2012 9746 9841 3295 8723 4911 6250 9906 5760 185 6579 4813 3681 2202 7775 8822 5193
WelcomePAC’s print, radio and digital ads — pricier TV spots are not part of the plan — represent a small fraction of what others are spending on the contest. But it is a rare outside investment in behalf of Vance’s Democratic opponent, Rep. Tim Ryan, who has kept the race closer than expected with little help from national Democrats who have prioritized other states. Ruslan Sapiha, 35, has been living in Montrose with his wife Anna and their 12-year-old son, Kiril, after fleeing Melitopol, in south-eastern Ukraine. The government is providing ?10,500 per person involved in the sponsorship scheme to councils to help them provide support. He said that if the Kakhovka hydropower plant was destroyed, hundreds of thousands of people would be in danger of flooding. Russia has denied planning to blow up the dam and said Ukraine was firing missiles at it.
.
.
.
5918 4045 9584 4154 1188 3255 6096 481 7269 6910 1183 9561 5599 8943 5047 4646 8088 2267 5760 2858 3665 622 6564 6768 4748 740 1476 6743 993 271 2770 2501 168 1452 6446 4787 8476 2247 4259 315 5202 8767 3422 4068 8995 6412 7569 9041 5655 7625 5071 2012 9746 9841 3295 8723 4911 6250 9906 5760 185 6579 4813 3681 2202 7775 8822 5193
WelcomePAC’s print, radio and digital ads — pricier TV spots are not part of the plan — represent a small fraction of what others are spending on the contest. But it is a rare outside investment in behalf of Vance’s Democratic opponent, Rep. Tim Ryan, who has kept the race closer than expected with little help from national Democrats who have prioritized other states. Ruslan Sapiha, 35, has been living in Montrose with his wife Anna and their 12-year-old son, Kiril, after fleeing Melitopol, in south-eastern Ukraine. The government is providing ?10,500 per person involved in the sponsorship scheme to councils to help them provide support. He said that if the Kakhovka hydropower plant was destroyed, hundreds of thousands of people would be in danger of flooding. Russia has denied planning to blow up the dam and said Ukraine was firing missiles at it.
.
.
.