Translation. Joe thinks that rich donors are afraid of Biden getting a veto proof majority in November. If he can get a few fat cats interested, he can raise enough to retire comfortably.
He’s probably in for a shock when he leaves the safety of his home state voters.
Yeah. A man who is hated by both parties outside of WV thinks he can win the presidency? As an independent?!
Manchin, you are no Teddy Roosevelt.
Teddy Roosevelt shat bigger than Joe Manchin
He would be more likely to upend trump. Maybe Manchin will finally officially switch parties.
Not just outside.
Isn’t CNN one of Rupurt Murdoch’s family of propaganda machines these days?
No, the Murdoch family is:
Fox News
Sky News Australia
Wall Street Journal
Harper Collins
New York Posthttps://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/083115/how-rupert-murdoch-became-media-tycoon.asp
CNNs two biggest shareholders (only double digit % holders) are T Rowe price and Vanguard. Blackrock does have a close to 5%. And John Malone is a person of heavy involvement and is on their board of directors.
LOL… no Joe.
Biden needs to get Manchin’s balls in a proverbial vise and explain what happens when you don’t have party loyalty.
Also needs to give abott the same treatment, but more just…. Loyalty in general…you know what mean.
Party loyalty is expected only from voters.
Manchin is technically a voter too
Yeah, I’m pretty sure the only Democrat he votes for is himself. He’s the perfect centrist Democrat.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Privately, the West Virginia Democrat has told people that a Joe Biden health scare or a Donald Trump conviction could give him an opening to run as an independent this year.
The group has set a mid-March deadline to decide whether to back a presidential “unity ticket,” but with about a month and half to go and amid internal turmoil, multiple top No Labels leaders tell CNN they remain in the dark about the path forward.
But they know that a Democratic senator traveling the county warning that Biden has been pulled too far to the political left would be a problem, particularly as the president and his aides try to stitch back their 2020 coalition that ranged from Sanders supporters to anti-Trump Republicans.
Larry Hogan, the Republican former governor of Maryland, quit the No Labels board last month over frustration that power and information were being hoarded by group leadership – and not to, as reported elsewhere, clear the way for a presidential run of his own.
All of this is rooted in polling about Americans being generally dissatisfied with their existing 2024 options compiled by Mark Penn, the husband of No Labels founder and CEO Nancy Jacobson, who is seen as perhaps the one who could decide the answers to the outstanding questions.
On his trip earlier this month, the signs he was pointing to were for Americans Together, the new group started by his daughter, Heather Bresch, the former CEO of pharmaceutical giant Mylan, who has been hitting up the same donor base of largely business types who bemoan the state of politics over rounds at their high-priced clubs.
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