Washington Times ForAmerica: Road to 2024
Tune in for a discussion between The Washington Times' Tim Constantine and ForAmerica's David Bozell as they examine the keys to winning in 2024.
Washington Times Opinion contributor Tim Constantine goes one-on-one with the people you want to hear from in Washington. Get the real story, directly from the source, on The Capitol Hill Show.
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Tune in for a discussion between The Washington Times' Tim Constantine and ForAmerica's David Bozell as they examine the keys to winning in 2024.
Tune in for a discussion on what part the government plays in the production and sales of motor vehicles, the lack of infrastructure in the United States for EVs, and overall problems with these type of cars.
For 49 years, Republicans campaigned against Roe v Wade. Now that it is no longer the law of the land, conservatives are losing election after election when it is turned into a referendum against abortion bans. Here to discuss, The Washington Times' Tim Constantine and ForAmerica's David Bozell.
He was the Republican presidential nominee in 2016. He was the nominee again in 2020 and he is far and away the leader for the GOP nomination in 2024. But what is Donald Trump's path to victory? Washington Times' Tim Constantine and ForAmerica's David Bozell examine the unprecedented challenges Trump faces, the alternatives for the party and how the other candidates line up against the frontrunner.
How did we get here? Washington Times' Tim Constantine and ForAmerica's David Bozell look at the path to naming Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana Speaker of the House.
Imagine a wildly successful businessman who moonlights as a politician. Imagine that same man is elected to office and serves one tumultuous four-year term, perpetually under suspicion of wrongdoing amid apparent Russian connections. Picture this same politician constantly clashing with the media and with the political party in charge.
As the 2024 Presidential race kicks into gear, so does polling season. It seems every organization has its own pollster and its own statistics. Major newspapers, broadcast networks, and even social media influencers must find that poll numbers get attention because all seem to use them. Would-be presidential candidates use polling, too, in an effort to gauge not only support for their candidacy but also what issues may resonate with voters.
On December 18, 2019, Donald J. Trump, the 45th President of the United States, was impeached by the U.S. House of Representatives. The impeachment was literally based on a third-hand conversation between an intelligence officer working in the White House as an Obama holdover and two men who, shortly after telling their story to the intel officer, took jobs with Adam Schiff, one of the Democrats' chief prosecutors in the impeachment hearings.
I was driving through my childhood home state of Maine on a rainy June day this year when I spotted a large field filled with solar panels. Not 20 minutes later, I noticed another. As I neared my destination, I spotted a third solar field, this one still under construction. "How odd." I thought to myself.