@SwebWulf53543@RealSKeshel I don't think it's baseline competitive but yeah the guy having the same name and their weird system is the wildcard. I think all the other races listed there are even less competitive.
If Alaska voters can write-in Murkowski surely they can tell the difference?
@RealSKeshel Of those four really only Alaska is the one potential. In the rest they're working with an R+5 or greater deficit with candidates that aren't stellar.
@AndrewCurtice@ElxMapping Yep, I also think if you inverse this result (Jackson+1.3%) Ossoff still wins by 5-6.5%.
Dems could be looking at the low to mid 220s. Then again, Georgia is a weird state electorally.
@ElxMapping Definitely not a suburban blue wave. Ossoff still wins in this scenario.
Not the ideal result for republicans because KLB is widely considered a 'weak candidate'. But looking at Fayette, there could be state seats in other southern states if suburbs slow in trending D.
Shocking to learn an ethnically homogenous petrostate with a $2 trillion sovereign wealth fund and restrictive immigration policies is able to provide its citizens with a generous social safety net
Under the Nationality Act of 1940, Americans could lose their citizenship for various acts deemed inconsistent with exclusive allegiance, including:
1. becoming naturalized in another country,
2.taking an oath of allegiance to another state,
3. serving in certain foreign militaries,
and
4. even voting in a foreign election
In 1967, the Supreme Court ruled that the Fourteenth Amendment prevents Congress from involuntarily stripping a person of U.S. citizenship, related to Beys Afroim, a US citizen who moved to Israel and voted in an Israeli election.