2020年美国选举:众议院选举,民主党获得222席,共和党获210席,佩洛西再次当选众议院议长;参议院选举,形成民主党50:50共和党局面;国会正式认证,拜登以选举人团306票当选总统

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奥巴马给拜登助选,但和Trump阵营比起来,显得有点儿“寒酸”。。。

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Mitt Romney says he did not vote for Trump in the 2020 election

By Manu Raju and Paul LeBlanc, CNN

Updated 4:48 PM ET, Wed October 21, 2020

(CNN)Sen. Mitt Romney said Wednesday he did not vote for President Donald Trump's reelection, the latest break between the GOP's 2012 presidential nominee and the leader of his party.

The first-term Republican senator, who already voted in Utah, declined to say if he voted for Democratic nominee Joe Biden or wrote in another candidate. But he made clear that Trump did not get his vote.

"I did not vote for President Trump," Romney told CNN on Capitol Hill.

Asked whom he voted for, Romney said: "That's something I'm keeping private at this stage."

Romney has made his distaste for Trump known for years -- dating to the 2016 campaign -- but he tried to make amends with Trump briefly after the real estate mogul's victory and when he was briefly being considered for secretary of state. Ahead of Romney's 2018 Senate run, Trump endorsed his election bid.

But since becoming a senator, Romney has been a lone GOP voice on Capitol Hill raising deep concerns about Trump and his character -- and was the only Republican to vote to remove Trump from office over a charge of abuse of power during his impeachment trial earlier this year. Trump, for his part, has hurled insult after insult at Romney while his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., has called on Senate Republicans to boot him from their conference, something that the GOP has all but ignored.

Yet despite his criticism of Trump, Romney has been a loyal GOP vote and plans to vote to confirm Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court despite furious opposition from Democrats.

In an interview earlier this week, Romney made clear that he believes that Trump has eroded the GOP brand.

"I think our party is in trouble with young people, increasingly with older people, with minorities," Romney told CNN. "And those young people we were in trouble with five years ago are now voting, and so we've got some real work to do."

While most Republicans are giving Trump their full-throated endorsement, other GOP senators have yet to fall in in line.

Vulnerable Maine Sen. Susan Collins, struggling to win reelection in a blue state, has pointedly refused to say if she'd back the President's reelection or if she voted for him in the GOP primary in her state. Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska, who launched a scathing attack about the President's treatment of women and flirtation with White supremacists, has also not said if he planned to vote for Trump.

But Romney has been by far the most vocal in his criticism of Trump -- particularly as he became the first US senator in history to support removing a president from his own party from office.

"I am aware that there are people in my party and in my state who will strenuously disapprove of my decision, and in some quarters, I will be vehemently denounced. I am sure to hear abuse from the President and his supporters," Romney said on the Senate floor at the time announcing his vote to remove Trump from office.

"Does anyone seriously believe I would consent to these consequences other than from an inescapable conviction that my oath before God demanded it of me?"

The President responded by attacking Romney as a "failed presidential candidate."
 
Mitt Romney says he did not vote for Trump in the 2020 election

By Manu Raju and Paul LeBlanc, CNN

Updated 4:48 PM ET, Wed October 21, 2020

(CNN)Sen. Mitt Romney said Wednesday he did not vote for President Donald Trump's reelection, the latest break between the GOP's 2012 presidential nominee and the leader of his party.

The first-term Republican senator, who already voted in Utah, declined to say if he voted for Democratic nominee Joe Biden or wrote in another candidate. But he made clear that Trump did not get his vote.

"I did not vote for President Trump," Romney told CNN on Capitol Hill.

Asked whom he voted for, Romney said: "That's something I'm keeping private at this stage."

Romney has made his distaste for Trump known for years -- dating to the 2016 campaign -- but he tried to make amends with Trump briefly after the real estate mogul's victory and when he was briefly being considered for secretary of state. Ahead of Romney's 2018 Senate run, Trump endorsed his election bid.

But since becoming a senator, Romney has been a lone GOP voice on Capitol Hill raising deep concerns about Trump and his character -- and was the only Republican to vote to remove Trump from office over a charge of abuse of power during his impeachment trial earlier this year. Trump, for his part, has hurled insult after insult at Romney while his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., has called on Senate Republicans to boot him from their conference, something that the GOP has all but ignored.

Yet despite his criticism of Trump, Romney has been a loyal GOP vote and plans to vote to confirm Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court despite furious opposition from Democrats.

In an interview earlier this week, Romney made clear that he believes that Trump has eroded the GOP brand.

"I think our party is in trouble with young people, increasingly with older people, with minorities," Romney told CNN. "And those young people we were in trouble with five years ago are now voting, and so we've got some real work to do."

While most Republicans are giving Trump their full-throated endorsement, other GOP senators have yet to fall in in line.

Vulnerable Maine Sen. Susan Collins, struggling to win reelection in a blue state, has pointedly refused to say if she'd back the President's reelection or if she voted for him in the GOP primary in her state. Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska, who launched a scathing attack about the President's treatment of women and flirtation with White supremacists, has also not said if he planned to vote for Trump.

But Romney has been by far the most vocal in his criticism of Trump -- particularly as he became the first US senator in history to support removing a president from his own party from office.

"I am aware that there are people in my party and in my state who will strenuously disapprove of my decision, and in some quarters, I will be vehemently denounced. I am sure to hear abuse from the President and his supporters," Romney said on the Senate floor at the time announcing his vote to remove Trump from office.

"Does anyone seriously believe I would consent to these consequences other than from an inescapable conviction that my oath before God demanded it of me?"

The President responded by attacking Romney as a "failed presidential candidate."

特朗普不是骂过他么。:D
 
55 min ago
Trump again claims the mute button for tomorrow's debate is "unfair"

From CNN's Jason Hoffman

In a newly released clip from tonight’s town hall with Sinclair Broadcasting host Eric Bolling, President Trump again called the mute button at the debate unfair and called NBC News' Kristen Welker and her parents biased.

“Well that’s not fair, plus they changed the topics which isn’t fair, just happened. Plus Kristen Welker is a heavily biased person with her parents being fundraisers and having supported the Democrats and she’s a Democrat, I know her well,” Trump claimed.

Trump also attacked the moderator of the first debate, Chris Wallace, calling him “very biased” and saying he had to “leave in disgrace.”

Trump said he may let Joe Biden speak uninterrupted in Thursday’s debate, though his strategy might change as the debate goes on.

“Some people think let him talk because he loses his train, he just loses it, he doesn’t speak the train of thought but we’ll see what happens,” Trump said. “But the fact is I find you always have to just wait. You have a strategy but all of a sudden you change your strategy. We’ll see what it is. Whatever it is, it is.”
 
这上面说:
“Some have also suggested that many of those who were polled simply were not honest about whom they intended to vote for,” Pew Research Center stated. “The idea of so-called ‘shy Trumpers’ suggests that support for Trump was socially undesirable, and that his supporters were unwilling to admit their support to pollsters.”
好像不是这样吧,美国川普支持者狂热的很,CFC支持者也很热烈,让人感觉到不支持川普才socially undesirable
 
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