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O’Reilly Talking Points Memo: ‘I’ve Never Seen America Weaker Than It Is Today’

During his Talking Points Memo Monday night on “The O’Reilly Factor,” Bill O’Reilly laid out the case for why American weakness has grown under President Obama.

From weakness in civil society to America’s standing on the world stage; from individual ignorance to collective selfishness; to the porous border that presents a grave threat to the health and safety of Americans to the complete and total collapse of U.S. security interests abroad, the signs suggesting that the U.S. is headed down a path to ruin are everywhere.

“I’ve been in the media business for about 40 years now. I have never seen America weaker than it is today,” O’Reilly said.

During Monday's Factor Talking Points memo on

Israeli Amb Ron Prosor UN United Nations

July 20, 2014: Israeli U.N. Ambassador Ron Prosor speaks during an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council on the worsening situation in Gaza at United Nations headquarters. (Photo: AP Photo/John Minchillo)

After debating whether to pull out of the Gaza Strip without a deal, Israel accepted a 72-hour cease-fire with Hamas that is set to begin Tuesday.

A senior Israeli official said the cease-fire will begin at 8 a.m. local time (1 a.m. ET) and Fox News reported a Palestinian delegation in Cairo confirmed it has accepted the truce.

An Israeli delegation will travel to Egypt with the hope to hatch out a long-term truce in the next three days, though Hamas previously said it would not consider ending the rocket fire even in such a case.

Israeli officials, however, remain skeptical that Hamas is sincere, since the terror group has violated multiple previous cease-fire agreements over the duration of the conflict.

Over the weekend, Israel began scaling back its ground operation while still conducting heavy aerial, offshore and artillery bombardments of terror sites in the Gaza strip. The latest conflict in Gaza, which began after three Israeli teenagers were kidnapped by Hamas and found in a shallow grave in the West Bank, entered its fourth week. The conflict has left more than 1,800 Palestinians and 60 Israelis dead. However, it is unclear how many of the Palestinian dead are civilians.

On Monday, an Israeli soldier in a tunnel in Jerusalem’s Mount Scopus was shot and seriously wounded by a gunman on a motorcycle before the end of a previously negotiated seven-hour humanitarian cease-fire. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said law enforcement officials are currently searching for the shooter in east Jerusalem.

“Multiple shots were fired, one man was hit in the stomach and rushed to the hospital in serious condition,” he told the Jerusalem Post.

Prior to the attack on the soldier, the temporary quiet in the Gaza Strip was shattered by an attack in Jerusalem, during which a man slammed the front end of a construction excavator into an Israeli bus.

Police described the incident as a “terrorist attack,” indicating Hamas was responsible.

After debating whether to pull out of

2014 hawaii governor race

Hawaii governor race candidates from top-left clockwise: Incumbent Gov. Neil Abercrombie, state Sen. David Ige, former Lt. Gov. Duke Aiona and former Honolulu mayor Mufi Hannemann. (Photo: Khon 2)

Former Lt. Gov. Duke Aiona, a Republican, is leading both Democratic challengers and the independent in the latest survey of the Hawaii governor race. Due to the deep Blue political leanings in the state, PPD is cautiously moving the status of this race to a “Toss-Up” rather than outright forecast a likely Aiona victory.

Polling in Hawaii, as is the case with another state outside of the continental U.S., is notoriously difficult to poll. However, Aiona has consistently polled strong since February of this year and, at this point, the outcome of the race appears to hinge upon the outcome of the Democratic primary, which will take place on Saturday, August 9.

Gov. Neil Abercrombie is deeply, deeply unpopular, and whatever early lead he had over state Sen. David Ige, has evaporated. That said, PPD is holding our “Toss-Up” rating in the Democratic primary, though sources say they believe the polling is fairly close to political reality.

Poll Date Sample Ige Abercrombie Spread
Honolulu Civil Beat/MRG 7/24 – 7/28 895 LV 51 41 Ige +10
Honolulu Star-Advertiser 7/21 – 7/29 458 LV 54 36 Ige +18
Honolulu Civil Beat/MRG 6/7 – 6/9 729 LV 48 37 Ige +11
Honolulu Civil Beat/MRG 2/12 – 2/15 643 LV 37 37 Tie
Honolulu Star-Advertiser 2/1 – 2/11 528 RV 38 47 Abercrombie +9

The last time we examined the Hawaii governor race, Aiona had a larger lead over Ige than Abercrombie. But, now, the roles are reversed. Aiona has widened his lead over Abercrombie by 9 points, and in a three-way race the former lieutenant governor earns 45 percent of the vote, while Abercrombie earns just 30 percent.

Poll Date Sample Aiona (R) Abercrombie (D) Hannemann (I) Spread
Honolulu Star-Advertiser 7/21 – 7/29 612 LV 45 30 14 Aiona +15
Honolulu Civil Beat/MRG 6/7 – 6/9 1078 RV 33 27 18 Aiona +6

The independent in the race is making it difficult for either Democratic candidate to pull together a majority or even plurality of voters. Meanwhile, as Ige has seen his support increase, Hannemann has seen his support decrease. And if we can infer anything at all from the polling, it is that Ige is winning over voters who were apt to support the independent earlier this year.

Poll Date Sample MoE Aiona (R) Ige (D) Hannemann (I) Spread
Honolulu Star-Advertiser 7/21 – 7/29 612 LV 4.0 41 34 15 Aiona +7
Honolulu Civil Beat/MRG 6/7 – 6/9 1078 RV 3.0 31 31 17 Tie

The 4-point drop in support seen in Aiona’s numbers is identical to the number of voters who would support Ige, but not Abercrombie. That could very well be unrelated, but it’s unlikely.

The PVI, or Partisan Voting Index according to Cook, is an almost-insurmountable partisan trend for any Republican opponent (D+12 in 2010 and D+20 in 2012). Similarly, Gallup recently released their new party ID by state survey, which showed a 24-point Democrat advantage in the state of Hawaii, though that is a stagnant number after years of increases.

However, Duke Aiona won in the statewide election when the Democrat advantage was still very significant, and since its adoption as a state, Democrats have run the statehouse for 44 out of the 55-year duration. Except, however, during a brief period when Aiona was Lt. Gov. Aiona. He is also widely credited for implementing moderate programs to crackdown and decrease the production and use of methamphetamine.

Drug use was and still is a huge issue in Hawaii.

The Hawaii Governor race is a winnable race for the Republican Party, almost akin to how Democrats feel about their chances of defeating a Republican governor in Kansas. Under the right conditions, with all of the political stars in alignment, it is certainly possible.

Former Lt. Gov. Duke Aiona, a Republican,

2014 Senate predictions

The PPD 2014 Senate predictions model favors a upper chamber controlled by the Republican Party after November, wave or no wave. (Photo: AP)

There are less than 100 days left before the American people decide which party will control the U.S. Senate for the remainder of President Barack Obama’s second term, potentially more considering the very real possibility of a run off in at least the state of Louisiana. We thought we’d wait to release updated analysis for PPD’s 2014 Senate Predictions Map until readers had a chance to digest the slew of prognostications and predictions last week.

Before we get to the 2014 Senate Map, itself, let’s first recap a bit about the variables used in PPD’s model. By all means, feel free to skip ahead to the map, analysis, and commentary if you aren’t interested.

Race ratings on our 2014 Senate Predictions Map are determined by a comprehensive model that includes polling (weighted to value based on past pollster accuracy), state demographics and its political leanings (including Partisan Voting Index, or PVI, and trends in party ID/registration), candidate recruitment and strength (sometimes referred to as “the talent gap”), GOTV and campaign organization (including fundraising), national political sentiment, the ever-important variables of the economy (both state and national) and presidential approval rating (both state and national, as well).

So, if you see polling in our expanded analysis articles or below that doesn’t necessarily comport with the rating assigned, then these variables would be the reason why. While we assign the following ratings to races — Toss-Up, Leans, Likely and Safe — they represent actual numerical values that reflect a probability or likelihood of outcome. On the election projection model, a race that scores a likelihood from 45 – 55 percent is assigned a “Toss-Up” rating; 56 to 64 percent is assigned a “Leans” ratings; 65 to 84 percent is assigned a “Likely” rating; 85 to 100 percent is assigned a “Safe” rating.

Now, let’s take a look at the map and talk more about the ratings assigned. Spoiler alert: There has been a lot of talk that largely and falsely assumes control of the Senate rests on whether the 2014 midterm election cycle will be a GOP wave akin to 2010, but, in reality, the Republican Party is favored to take back control of the Senate in November (possibly December if Louisiana goes to a run off), with or without a wave election.

[show-map id=’1′]

LEGEND: SAFE DEM | LIKELY DEM | LEANS DEM | TOSS-UP | LEANS GOP | LIKELY GOP | SAFE GOP

(Above is the 2014 Senate map, which includes individual senate races and their ratings determined by People’s Pundit Daily Senior Editor and Political Analyst, Richard D. Baris. Polling is provided when available, but polling in and of itself is not enough to determine a credible race rating.)

Worth noting, before we get to the states that will be most competitive, hence, will decide party control of the Senate, you might notice that the map has more purple and red than most other prognosticators, save for Monkey Cage and the model developed jointly by CBS News/New York Times/YouGov. But I cannot stress enough that it is a fact — not a boast — that the PPD model has been way ahead of all the other prognosticators this cycle. It is the only model that predicted David Jolly would defeat Alex Sink in the FL-13 special election, and our ratings have been out in front in states such as West Virginia, Montana, Iowa, Arkansas and Colorado.

Going, Going, Gone Goodbye

Montana, South Dakota and West Virginia are “Safe Republican” pick-ups. These are three states where the “big picture” fundamentals and “All politics is local” considerations strongly favor the Republican candidates.

In Montana, which has been rated “Safe Republican” for some time now, appointed Democrat incumbent Sen. John Walsh plagiarized his Army War College thesis, but never had much of a chance to hold the seat to begin with. Rep. Steve Daines represents Montana’s sole congressional district and has a large base of support. There was little to zero chance he would implode in the same manner other Republican candidates have in the past, and there is absolutely no emprical evidence to support the Democrats’ claims that his appointment would give him an edge.

SAFE GOP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 98 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

The retirement of Democratic Sen. Tim Johnson had Democrats focused on two candidates: ex-Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin and U.S. Attorney Brendan Johnson, the son of the senator. Unfortunately for them, however, both of them declined to run, leaving Rick Weiland, a former unsuccessful House candidate who is close to former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle. Daschle’s backing of Weiland apparently chapped the pants of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who preferred the more conservative (and probably more electable) Sandlin.

Weiland started off as an underdog to ex-Governor Mike Rounds, who handily won the GOP primary in June. The PPD model depicts an environment that is extremely hostile toward Democrats. In fact, it was sheer incumbency that kept this seat in Democratic hands, and it’s simply time to pay the piper. In polling, Mr. Rounds has a commanding lead, and it will likely never tighten.

SAFE GOP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 89 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

The Mountain State hasn’t been represented by a Republican in the U.S. Senate since 1959, which is the longest Republican Senate shutout in the country. Republican Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, a 7-term congresswoman and the daughter of former Gov. Arch Moore, has an easy path to the seat and appears to be the one to shatter the Democrat’s winning streak. Interestingly, Capito’s father was just one point away from ending what would have been a short-term shutout in 1978, when he narrowly lost to Sen. Jennings Randolph 50.5 – 49.5. Democrats have a credible candidate in Secretary of State Natalie Tennant, the former co-anchor of “Good Morning, West Virginia,” but it won’t overcome the state’s realignment. A majority of polling has found a double-digit polling gap from the start of this thing, and Tennant is no Joe Manchin.

SAFE GOP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 89 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

All Alone Between A Little Rock And A Hard Place

Despite what other pundits are claiming, the Arkansas Senate race is in a league all its own. It’s certainly not a lock to be a Republican pick-up, but Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor has been between a rock and hard place since he decided to run for reelection. PPD’s 2014 Senate Map Predictions model has always favored Cotton in the Arkansas Senate race to varying degrees and, now, polling is beginning to catch up to both the fundamentals of the state and the political reality facing Pryor this election cycle. Republican Rep. Tom Cotton has been pulling away from Pryor in a series of recent polls, which he has led in since May 27, even breaking the 50 percent threshold in two polls conducted by accurate pollsters, Gravis Marketing and YouGov.

I would strongly suggest reviewing this past expanded analysis article, but for now, I will summarize.

Pryor’s challenge will be to run stronger than typical Democrats in the only swing region of the state — the South — which is compounded by the fact he must outperform Democratic candidates in Arkansas’s 4th Congressional District, and you may have already guessed that it happens to be represented by Rep. Tom Cotton. Just to put the state’s political leanings into context, if we were to actually lower the “candidate strength” variable by one degree on Pryor’s end, then the chance of a GOP victory increases 15 full percentage points.

LEANS GOP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 64 Percent (Read Past Analysis, Latest Polls)

True Toss-Ups And Truly Hanging By A Thread, Maybe

There are five states that we grouped together, which actually have considerable differences in variable input, including Iowa, Louisiana, Colorado, North Carolina and Alaska. Let’s begin with Iowa, which is teetering on the verge “Leans Republican.”

Democrat Rep. Bruce Braley has single-handedly thrown what little advantage he had out the window. First, he was caught on video trashing Iowa’s favorite senator in the same breathe he trashed Iowa farmers. Then, he was caught on video saying he was a farmer, which he isn’t, and also caught lying about why he hasn’t been attending  hearings for the Veteran’s Affairs Committee.

Meanwhile, Joni Ernst, as we predicted she would, absolutely dominated a crowded GOP field by putting together a complete party coalition consisting of conservative super PACs and big establishment names, including 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney. From the beginning, we had contended that Braley wasn’t particularly well-liked, but built an early lead largely on name recognition. Now, he has only led in one poll out of the five conducted since Ernst won the nomination.

The reason is simple: Other pundits missed the trend, plain and simple, which clearly demonstrated that Iowa voters have shown a propensity to favor a Republican-controlled Senate since the onset of the cycle, and Ernst isn’t the second-tier candidate everyone claimed she was. We fully expect this race to move to “Leans Republican” by the end of the summer.

TOSS-UP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 55 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

In Louisiana, incumbent Sen. Mary Landrieu, the daughter of former New Orleans Mayor Moon Landrieu, is in deep, deep trouble. SMOR tracking, a pollster with an impressive record in the Pelican State, finds Landrieu bleeding support among white Democrats and Democrat women, and her support among white voters in total is now in the low 20s. She simply cannot win with those levels of support, regardless of how much her brother — the current mayor of New Orleans — can run up her margin among black voters.

The jungle primary may force this race to run off in December, as polls show a clear advantage for Rep. Bill Cassidy in a one-on-one contest, but he isn’t the only Republican in the race. Sarah Palin recently endorsed Rob Maness from Madisonville, a retired Air Force officer. Cassidy is — by far — the most popular among Republicans statewide. At this point, Landrieu can hope a fractured party works to her benefit, but Cassidy still has enough wiggle room to pull it off when undecideds and uncommitted voters make up their minds.

Interestingly, Landrieu hasn’t been any easier to beat in run off elections, as you will hear many pundits claim. Historically, she has increased her margin each time. Yet, even though she won in 2002 by three points and in 2008 by seven, it was largely due to the Democratic wave election and massive turnout among black voters. This time, however, it is becoming increasingly difficult to imagine Landrieu finds a path to a winning coalition.

TOSS-UP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 54 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

Colorado, along with Iowa, had been on PPD’s election model radar months before any of the other prognosticators even began paying attention. Since the disastrous rollout of ObamaCare, Colorado voters have consistently reported low approval ratings for incumbent Sen. Mark Udall, well as President Obama. They’ve repeatedly said he doesn’t deserve reelection, and voter registration trends are very concerning to Democrats.

Also, as we’ve previously explained, the entrance of Cory Gardner to the race was a game-changer, because he closed the ever-important talent gap, which sent this race into competitive territory.

PPD’s election projection model has warranted two rating changes since the entrance of Rep. Cory Gardner in February, both of which clearly show this race slipping away from incumbent Democratic Senator Mark Udall. The Democrat has already spent roughly $7,000,000 out of his $13,000,000 war chest, mostly on attack ads aiming to define Gardner early. Yet, despite these efforts, the latest survey conducted by Quinnipiac found Udall in the most vulnerable position he has been since the cycle began.

Polls, on average, still show Udall holding a statistically insignificant lead over Gardner. However, an NBC News/Marist poll — which has a terrible track record for accuracy — is throwing off the average, and most surveys show Udall stuck in the low to mid 40s. The Colorado Senate race is one of the closest “Toss-Up” races as far as probability on our 2014 Senate Map Predictions model.

TOSS-UP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 53 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

The Tar Heel State is a true “Toss-Up” this cycle, though it actually leans slightly toward Republican State House Speaker Thom Tillis, who secured the GOP nomination in one try back in early May. Given incumbent Sen. Kay Hagan’s abysmal approval ratings and lack of accomplishment, the race is likely to move into “Leans Republican” territory pretty soon. Because Tillis is the face of a controversial state legislature, Hagan has been moderately successful thus far at remaining competitive. However, the fundamentals of this race are against her.

President Obama is even more unpopular than Hagan, which is quite a feat, and Republicans were still able to flip North Carolina regardless of the heavy black turnout in 2012. In 2008, Hagan ran ahead of Obama, but polling suggests the voters will not return. Her task, unsurprisingly, will be turning out her base, who reportedly will hold their nose and vote for her, at best.

Aside from the usual stipulation around midterm electorates being older and whiter, Census data show increases in eligible voting population among demographics who tend to vote Democrat (i.e. black voters) from 2010 to 2014, aren’t significant enough to expect the 2014 midterm electorate will resemble anything other than a slightly less Republican electorate than in 2010.

TOSS-UP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 54 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

In my last look at the Alaska Senate race, entitled “Alaska Senate Race Rating And Analysis Bodes Bad For Begich,” I gave a general assessment of the race and the political landscape, as well as laid out how completely unreliable Alaska polling has been in past elections. It’s worth a read in case you didn’t know or you still need to be convinced, but I concluded that it is more likely than not that election night is going to be a miserable night for incumbent Sen. Mark Begich.

The incumbent, to be sure, is a strong campaigner, not to mention a smart politician. Unlike the majority of his party, he has no problem laying in bed with Alaska’s oil industry and somehow manages to balance his support for oil at the same time he advocates against manmade global warming.

However, the “big picture” data are pretty clear. According to Gallup, Alaska is now the 6th most conservative state in the union, with Democrats losing ground by 20 points over the last year alone. That trend is backed up by voter registration data, consequently. In a deeply red state with a PVI of R+12, which Mitt Romney easily won by 13 points, Begich boasts defeating scandal-laden Sen. Ted Stevens in 2008 — a Democratic wave election no less — by under just 4,000 votes.

Do the math.

As far as the GOP primary is concerned, Natural Resources Commissioner Dan Sullivan and Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell have been vying for the establishment vote. The Republican Establishment, itself, has lined up behind Sullivan, and he has been endorsed by The Club For Growth. Yet, people in Alaska like Treadwell, who is an outstanding retail politician.

Speaking of which, a recent round of polling by CBS News/NYT/YouGov inexplicably excluded 2010 Republican nominee Joe Miller. That’s a mistake that even Begich concedes. Miller, by far, has the most energized, dedicated group of supporters who will turn out for him on Election Day. In “Why Joe Miller Could Pull Off An Upset Against The GOP Establishment, Again,” I put aside the superficial punditry too oft-heard from prognosticators, and focused only on the data. The bottom line is that — if the establishment doesn’t rally behind either Treadwell or Sullivan — Miller has a very clear path to victory.

But, as of now, with so much still uncertain, the Alaska Senate race is more competitive than it otherwise should be. Further, recent indicators suggest Sullivan is losing steam and popularity. He made some awful mistakes, including skipping out on grassroots-hosted debates, and refusing to respond or clarify charges from Miller that he believes in manmade global warming and would be soft on illegal immigration.

LEANS GOP | Chance Of GOP Victory: 53 Percent (Read Past General Election Analysis, Primary Analysis)

Four races in New Hampshire, Minnesota, Michigan, and Oregan should all be grouped together as potential GOP pick-up opportunities.

In New Hampshire, it was no secret that incumbent Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and her team were scared of a challenge from former Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown. So, the bombardment of negative attack ads hoping to define Brown as a carpetbagger came on early and hard.

And it has worked. After closing the double-digit gap to under five points, Brown now trails Shaheen again by a low-double-digit margin in the PPD average of recent polls. Politico recently reported that “Brown needs to be within 5 to 7 percentage points of Shaheen by mid-September or national money won’t come.” We heard the same rumblings in early June, so it’s safe to say they are serious. We moved the New Hampshire Senate race back to the “Likely Democrat” rating it was assigned before Brown announced his bid in early July, which you can read here.

Still, Republicans have reason to remain optimistic about New Hampshire, a state that has a propensity to decide elections late, give pollsters erroneous responses and move with nationwide trends. But unless Brown steps up his game soon, it will be a lost opportunity. For now, the rating should be considered accurate, but volatile.

LIKELY DEM | Chance Of GOP Victory: 40 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

In Michigan, Republican Secretary of State and U.S. Senate candidate Terri Lynn Land has seen her lead over Democratic Rep. Gary Peters deteriorate. Republicans have won just 1 of the past 12 Senate races in Michigan, but that 1994 win was also the last time the Michigan Senate race was an open seat contest, and the national political environment is more than favorable enough for the Republican Party to flip this seat.

But Land has made a big mistake. Land has chosen to lay low in a Blue-leaning state rather than hammer Peters on ObamaCare and, a far more powerful issue in the state, the Detroit bankruptcy. When now-Gov. Rick Snyder defeated Democrat Virg Bernero in 2010 by a blow-out 19-point margin, which helped Republicans build historically large majorities in the state legislature, Snyder was not only aggressively campaigning, but he campaigned aggressively against one-party, Democratic dominance.

And that was when Detroit going bankrupt was still just a theoretical prediction. Now, it’s a reality, and voters were and remain outraged. But Land’s lay-low campaign strategy has prohibited her from harnessing that outrage, and it has been a big mistake, allowing Peters to avoid the big issues and instead distract voters with the trivial.

LEANS DEM | Chance Of GOP Victory: 43 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

Virginia and Oregon, as well as Michigan, are three states where Republicans should be far more competitive than they currently are. Honest or not, the charges against Monica Wehby have done damage to her image, and incumbent Sen. Jeff Merkley is now favored to retain his seat.

Incumbent Sen. Mark Warner had a terrible debate against Ed Gillespie last week, but unfortunately for the GOP, the mainstream media didn’t even cover it. If the national condition deteriorates further for Democrats, Warner’s reelection position could very well be compromised. However, for now, the power of the incumbency and gigantic war chest gives Warner the edge.

LIKELY DEM | Chance Of GOP Victory: 39 Percent (Read Past Analysis)

But another state is turning out to be a sleeper state that both sides argue is far closer than the polls suggest.

Incumbent Sen. Al Franken would not have already spent $10 million on his race if he thought the polling in this race was accurate. Republican businessman Mike McFadden has begun to coalesce the party after pulling off a miracle at the state GOP convention in late May. And there is something else in play here.

Franken defeated incumbent Republican Sen. Norm Coleman by just 312 votes in a wave election for Democrats, and that was only after a lengthy recount process that suspiciously ended after someone “found” a few thousand more votes for Franken in their trunk. Did Franken and the Democrats steal the election? I don’t know, most likely. In fact, it sure looks like it. But it doesn’t matter what I think, only what the voters in the state think, and there are many who still feel robbed.

While Republicans tend to sink a ton of money into Michigan with the hope of turning the Wolverine State Red, Minnesota has actually been nearly two points more Republican in the last four presidential elections. This was on full display when we translated the Obama-Romney rematch poll into electoral votes. If the election were held again today, Romney would carry Minnesota, but still lose Michigan.

LEANS DEM | Chance Of GOP Victory: 42 Percent

It Was Always A Dream, But Now It’s A Nightmare

Despite Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s low approval rating in Kentucky, and Democrats’ hopes the minority vote would flip the Peach State, both Alison Lundergan Grimes and Michelle Nunn are on their way to defeat. No serious pundit has ever given any of these Democratic candidates the edge.

McConnell is now beginning to pull away from Tennant, who has made more than a few mistakes along the way.

LIKELY GOP | (Read Past Kentucky Analysis) | (Read Past Georgia Analysis)

Bottom Line

Regardless of whether the 2014 midterm elections turn out to be a wave or historic “shellacking” as was the case in 2010, the political landscape is one in which Democrats will once again be defending many more Senate seats than Republicans, with 20 Democratic seats up compared to 14 for Republicans. As far as state dynamics, 7 Democratic-held seats are up in red (or purple) states carried by Mitt Romney, while another 7 are from swing states. Because the 2008 election was a wave election for the Democratic Party, in 2014 the party will have a ton of exposure, or in other words, they are forced to defend seats that would otherwise be Republican.

If the election was held today, the PPD 2014 Senate Map Predictions model forecast Republicans are likely to have a net gain of 6 seats — the number needed to win a majority — and are less likely to have a net gain of 8 seats.

With less than 100 days to go

White House advisor Dan Pfeiffer said Sunday on “This Week” that President Obama will issue an executive order granting half of all illegal immigrants in the U.S. amnesty, an unprecedented move that Republican Representative Steve King (R-IA) warned will throw America into “a constitutional crisis.”

Republicans have been critical of the president’s failure to enforce immigration policy and charge that the current border crisis was created by Obama’s policy. That claim was bolstered by a leaked intelligence report that concluded that the border crisis is being caused by illegals seeking amnesty and misunderstanding U.S. immigration policy, not violence in Central America.

The 10-page report conducted on July 7 by the El Paso Intelligence Center (EPIC), which is headed up by the DEA and includes the Department of Homeland Security, shattered the administration’s entire narrative. “Of the 230 migrants interviewed, 219 cited the primary reason for migrating to the United States was the perception of U.S. immigration laws granting free passes or permisos to UAC (unaccompanied children) and adult females OTMs (other than Mexicans) traveling with minors,” the report said.

The House voted on a border crisis bill late last week, but the Democratic-controlled Senate had already left for vacation. Even if the Senate stayed in D.C. to take up the bill, President Obama said he would’ve vetoed it, regardless. Now, the president’s advisor says the president will just act without Congress, despite not having the constitutional authority to do so, which even he conceded several times in the past.

“But White House officials now say, and they really have been teeing this up, now it looks like the president will take some major executive action over the course of the summer or right after Labor Day and may even consider deferring the deportations of millions of more illegal immigrants,” Chris Wallace said on “Fox News Sunday” this weekend. “Congressman King, if he does that, if he goes ahead and unilaterally decides to defer deportations of millions of immigrants, what are you going to do about it?”, Wallace asked.

“None of us want to do the thing that’s left for us as an alternative, but if the president has decided that he simply is not going to enforce any immigration law or at least not against anybody except the felons which potentially he has done already,” Kind responded. “I think Congress has to sit down and have a serious look at the rest of this constitution and that includes that “i-word” we don’t want to say.”

Up until now no in-power Republican lawmaker, to include the Iowa congressman, has expressed even remote support for a move to impeach Obama. Following the first reports of the border crisis, calls for such an action have been limited to the realm of Sarah Palin and Rush Limbaugh.

“This suicidal idea has been duly ignored by the Senate Republican leadership, the House leadership, and every potential 2016 GOP presidential candidate,” Carl Cannon of RCP said Sunday. “It has been rejected out of hand, really, by almost every prominent Republican in the country, including the never-shy Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.”

Still, the unilateral move to grant amnesty to roughly 8 million illegal immigrants seems to be a game-changer for some lawmakers, and would truly be an unprecedented overreach of executive power. However, without a GOP takeover of the Senate, impeachment would have zero chance to succeed regardless of how unpopular amnesty is among the American public.

“And I only say that now on this program because I want to encourage the president please don’t put America into a constitutional crisis,” King added. “Please don’t do that. There’s too much at stake in this country to be decided that you can take over the constitution and write it at will.”

House Republicans voted to move forward with Speaker John Boehner’s lawsuit that specifically focuses on Obama’s countless executive orders to change, alter or delay the Affordable Care Act, and recently a powerful D.C. court of appeals ruled the administration broke the law when they order the IRS to extend subsidies to those receiving coverage through the federal exchange, which is clearly prohibited in the law.

However, the federal lawsuit was always to be used as a tool outside of impeachment that House Republicans could use to attempt to reign in Obama’s overreaching presidency. Rep. King held hearings in the House several months back, which starred liberal law professor Jonathan Turley, who warned the lawlessness during Obama presidency was bringing the nation to a constitutional tipping point. But even those hearings concluded impeachment wasn’t a valid course of action at the time.

“But you’re saying if he were to do that then impeachment would be on the table?” Wallace followed up.

“I think that we have to start, sit down and take a look at that. Where would we draw the line otherwise?” King questioned.

“If that’s not enough to bring that about then I don’t know what would be.”

On "Fox News Sunday" with Chris Wallace,

Mosab Hassan Yousef, the son of one the founders of the terror group Hamas, has been speaking out about the current Middle East crisis. He said there will never be a lasting peace between Israel and Palestine as long as the Palestinians keep ties to Hamas.

“Peace between Israel and Hamas is not going to happen,” Yousef said on the “Kelly File” on Fox News. “Israel is a democracy, Hamas is terror organization.”

His father, Sheik Hassan Yousef, one of the terror group’s founders, was arrested in connection with the kidnapping of three Israeli teens, one of which had duel U.S. citizenship, which sparked the current conflict. The three teens, were found in a shallow grave in the West Bank.

Yousef, who is featured in the documentary, “The Green Prince,” told his story about how he was brought up to hate Israel before he realized that his father and the group Hamas were being used by regional power to stir up violence for other power-broker’s political ends.

Yousef says he has been speaking out because the way to defeat Hamas is to “unmasked Hamas.” He said the terror group “hijacked the Palestinian cause and infiltrated their society,” but that they are not acting in the interest of the Palestinian people.

“Hamas doesn’t care about the lives of Palestinians. Don’t think for a second please that Hamas cares for the children’s blood,” he added. “They want the children of Gaza to die.”

Israel has long charged that Hamas is intentionally firing and storing rockets and other weapons in and around civilian areas in order to raise the civilian death toll. Another recent video of Palestinian youth showed that Hamas wasn’t allowing civilians, including women and children, to leave and find safer grounds when Israeli warnings were send out.

“That is their game and they are happy about it,” Yousef said.

Mosab Hassan Yousef, the son of Hamas

Israeli soldier Hadar Goldin

This undated photo shows Israeli Army 2nd. Lt. Hadar Goldin, 23, from Kfar Saba, central Israel. (Photo: AP/YNET News)

Officials announced early Sunday that Hadar Goldin, the Israeli soldier believed to have been abducted by Hamas, has been declared dead by the Israeli military.

The 23-year-old’s death was announced after Israel’s defense minister, along with the chief rabbi, met with the soldier’s family at their home in the town of Kfar Saba. Military officials said that the Goldin, of the Givati infantry brigade was killed in battle on Friday.

There were hundreds of people from around the country gathering outside their home, praying and showing their support. An outpouring of grief could be heard when the military’s announcement was made public.

“Prior to the decision, all medical considerations, religious observances, as well as additional relevant issues were taken into consideration,” the military said.

The Israeli military previously believed the soldier was kidnapped by Hamas during an ambush that took place just one hour after an internationally brokered cease-fire took effect Friday morning. The alleged capture prompted widespread international condemnation, including a statement from President Obama that called for Goldin’s unconditional and immediate release on Friday.

Haaretz reported Saturday that Hamas’ military wing said it had no knowledge of the soldier’s whereabouts, but that he could have been killed in an Israeli bombing after being kidnapped by Hamas.

“We lost contact with the group of combatants that took part in the ambush, and we believe they were all killed in the bombardment,” the statement said. “Assuming that they managed to abduct the soldier during combat, we assess that he was also killed in the incident.”

On Saturday, Israel scaled back its military operation in Gaza and said its objective to destroy the vast network of cross-border terror tunnels was nearly accomplished. Israeli officials also said they will not be participating for now in any cease-fire negotiations in Cairo with Hamas, and the Islamic terror group has stated it won’t hold its fire even in the case of a unilateral Israeli pullout.

In a televised address, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that once the tunnels are demolished, “the military will prepare for continuing action in according to our security needs,” emphasizing that all options remain on the table.

In his speech, Netanyahu addressed the rising death toll, but promised to “bring back the quiet” and use “as much power as needed.” He said the timeframe is only “as long as it will take.”

“We promised to return the quiet to Israel and that is what we will do. We will continue to act until that goal is reached, however long it will take and with as much force needed,” Netanyahu said. “Hamas needs to understand that it will pay an intolerable price as far as it is concerned for continuing to fire.”

Earlier in the day, Cabinet Minister Yuval Steinitz said Israel would not be sending a delegation to the so-called truce talks in Cairo. Speaking to Israel’s Channel 10 television station, he said that Hamas repeatedly violated previous cease-fire deals.

“That leads us to the conclusion that with this organization there is no point in speaking about an agreement or a cease-fire because we have tried it too many times,” Steinitz said.

“We will continue to resist until we achieve our goals,” Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said after Netanyahu’s speech, characterizing the Israeli leader’s remarks as “confused.”

Israel has said that the main purpose of its Gaza operation is to seek and destroy tunnels dug by Hamas that stretch into the Jewish state. Israel views the tunnel network as a strategic threat intended to commit mass killing and kidnappings on its civilians and soldiers.

Hamas militants who have made failed attempts to sneak into Israel have been found with sedatives and handcuffs, a clear attempt to kidnap soldiers and civilians, while several soldiers have been killed in the current round of fighting by Hamas militants emerging out of underground tunnels near Israeli communities along the Gaza border.

The Israeli military said it struck 200 targets over the previous 24 hours. It said it attacked five mosques that concealed weapons and that the Islamic University targeted was being used as a research and weapons manufacturing site for Hamas.

Meanwhile, Hamas fired about 90 rockets at Israel since midnight, according to the Israeli military, seven of which were intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome rocket defense system. However, a mortar attack seriously injured a 70-year-old Israeli civilian.

Officials announced early Sunday that Hadar Goldin,

Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi charged Rep. Tom Marino after he called her out on her failure to act on immigration reform during her time as speaker. From 2009 to 2010, the Democrats had supermajority control of both Houses of Congress and the presidency, yet did not act on immigration, breaking countless campaign promises to Hispanic voters.

“Under the leadership of the former speaker … when in 2009 and 2010, they had the House, the Senate and the White House, and they knew this problem existed,” Marino said. “They didn’t have the strength to go after it back then. But now are trying to make a political issue out of it now.”

Then, like a bull to a Matador, Pelosi charged Rep. Marino shaking her finger at him and calling the congressman an “insignificant person” on the House floor. Marino scoffed at Pelosi on Twitter later in the day.

Pelosi thought she would shut the Pennsylvania representative up, but Marino fired back immediately.

“It’s true, madam leader, I did the research on it,” Marino said. “You might want to try it. You might want to try it, madam leader. Do the research on it. Do the research. I did it. That’s one thing that you don’t do.”

Reps. Ted Poe, R-Texas, Joe Barton, R-Texas, and Kay Granger, R-Texas, who were all seated behind Marino, looked absolutely shicked at Pelosi’s outburst. The presiding officer, Rep. Randy Hultgren, R-Ill., told Marino to direct his comments through the chair and not at a fellow member.

“Well, it works both ways,” says Marino.

After things seemed to calm down, Marino said, “Apparently I hit the right nerve.”\

Apparently.

It is well-known on the Hill that Pelosi loathes the charge she didn’t have the political stomach to pass immigration reform before the 2010 midterm elections. It is also well-known that she pushed ObamaCare knowing full-well that she would lose the political capital needed to push such a bill.

Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi charged Rep. Tom

Hamas fires rockets from Gaza Strip

Rockets are fired from Gaza Strip towards Israel, July 31, 2014. (Photo: AP)

On the 26th day of “Operation Protective Edge,” Israel pounded the southern Gaza town of Rafah Saturday as troops raid above and below looking for 2nd. Lt. Hadar Goldin, 23, from Kfar Saba, who was captured by Hamas in an ambush that violated a humanitarian cease-fire. Israeli army spokesman Lt. Col. Peter Lerner said one Hamas fight detonated a suicide vest in the attack.

The Israeli Security Cabinet decided after a five-hour meeting Friday night that Israel will no longer attempt to reach a cease-fire with Hamas, adding further that they will not send a delegation to the Cairo truce talks due to the repeated cease-fire violations by Hamas. An official in the prime minister’s office said Israel “expects the United States and the international community to respond strongly to a terror organization that so blatantly defies them.”

The official, who spoke anonymously because there was no official Israeli announcement, said “Hamas and other terror groups will bear the consequences of their actions.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the White House after the incident not to force a truce with Palestinian militants on Israel. Netanyahu told senior U.S. officials, including Secretary of State John Kerry, that the Obama administration “not to ever second guess me again” on Hamas. The source also said Netanyahu told them he should be “trusted” regarding the unwillingness of Hamas to enter into talks and abide by cease-fire terms.

The Israeli military has said it believes the soldier was grabbed roughly one hour after an internationally brokered cease-fire took effect Friday morning. Two other soldiers were killed in the attack, raising the number of Israeli military fatalities to 63.

With such heavy heat coming down on them, the terror group Saturday not only dened involvement in the soldier’s capture, which has even prompted widespread condemnation by the increasing pro-Palestine international community, but also blamed Israel for his death.

“We believe all members of this group have died in an (Israeli) strike, including the Zionist soldier the enemy says disappeared,” a Hamas spokesman said.

Yet, Hamas first said it was “not aware until this moment of a missing soldier or his whereabouts or the circumstances of his disappearance,” and also that the clash began about an hour before the start of the 8:00 a.m. (0500 GMT) cease-fire.

Hamas could be using a tactic long used by them and other Middle East terror groups. Withholding information about the soldier could very well be a ploy to garner concessions from Israel, a strategy used in the past by the Lebanese Hezbollah group, which did not disclose whether two Israeli soldiers it seized in 2006 were alive or dead until their remains were handed over in a prisoner exchange.

Even President Barack Obama and U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon accused Hamas of violating the cease-fire and have called for the soldier’s immediate and unconditional release. Also, the July 8 Israeli bombardment of Gaza began after another kidnapping incident, which involved three Israeli teenagers, who were later found buried in a shallow grave in the West Bank.

Meanwhile, a senior IDF officer said Saturday morning that the Israeli army was “very close to completing” its mission of destroying tunnels in the Gaza strip, and that four tunnels have been destroyed in the past 24 hours. The IDF released a video showing Israeli Defense Forces blowing up tunnel networks near the location the soldier was kidnapped.

Since fighting began, Hamas has fired more than 3,000 rockets into Israel, with nearly 200 falling short and landing in Gaza, itself. A U.N. school, which was first blamed on an Israeli strike, was a causality of one of the Hamas rockets that fell short. Many have been reaching most major cities and forcing millions to seek cover. Hamas has also infiltrated Israel through the terror tunnel network multiple times and killed 63 Israeli soldiers.

Early Saturday morning, militants from Gaza fired missiles at Israel’s largest population centers, including Tel Aviv. Several rockets were successfully intercepted by the Iron Dome defense system.

Since fighting began on July 8, more than 1,650 Palestinians — mostly civilians — have been killed and more than 8,000 wounded, according al-Kidra. Israel has lost 63 soldiers and three civilians, its highest death toll since the 2006 Lebanon war.

The prospect of an abducted soldier struck a particularly raw nerve in Israel and looked to further escalate the fighting.

Israel has shown a strong willingness to get their captured soldiers back in the past. In 2011, it traded hundreds of Palestinian prisoners for just one Israeli soldier who had been captured by Hamas five years earlier. Hezbollah’s capture of the two soldiers in a cross-border operation back in 2006 that started a 34-day war between the Iran-backed Shiite group and Israel. Israel later traded Lebanese prisoners for their dead bodies.

Outside the home of the soldier’s family, which is located just a block away from the city’s military cemetery, family and friends gathered and later went to an adjacent synagogue to pray for the soldier’s safe return. The town has already seen one funeral for a Kfar Saba soldier from the fighting in Gaza at the cemetery.

Goldin, who was recently engaged to get married, also has a twin brother in the military on the Gaza front-lines.

The officer’s father, Simha Goldin, said he expects Israel to “not stop before it turns over every stone in Gaza and returns Hadar home safe and sound.”

Israel pounded the southern Gaza town of

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