Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government
will drive many voters to the polls across the country this election cycle, but there is nowhere in the United States where they are more pertinent than in battlegroundwould guarantee abortion rights in the wake of controversy over an 1864 law banning most abortions in the state.
The Border Patrol Union endorses Former President Donald Trump’s campaign at a rally in Prescott Valley, Arizona. last week to hire an extra 10,000 Border Patrol agents if he is reelected, calling on Congress to provide money for a 10% pay bump and a $10,000 retention and signing bonus. Sen. J.D. Vance made a stop at the Tucson Speedway racetrack on Oct. 9, telling supporters there that the southern Arizona town is “facing a historic border crisis and a historic increase in crime and fentanyl and drug trafficking and sex trafficking.”
“In Arizona, people feel the immigration problem maybe more profoundly than in the interior states,” Jones said. “I’m not suggesting bussing migrants into small communities isn’t impactful. It is, but because immigration has been a focus in Arizona for such a long time, I can’t imagine any candidate not focusing on it if they’re running for a federal office,” Jones said.
Crystal Tyler, who also went to the Vance rally in Tucson, said she experiences the border crisis directly as an emergency room nurse. In August, the Arizona secretary of state’s office said it had certified 577,971 signatures, far more than was needed to put the proposal before voters on the ballot. The Arizona for Abortion Access coalition said it has more validated signatures than have been collected for any other citizens’ initiative in state history. in April that a 160-year-old law remained valid, banning most abortions except if a mother’s life was in danger.
“No one has to abandon their faith or their deeply held beliefs to agree that the government shouldn’t be telling women what to do,” the first lady said, using the same language as Harris at the appearance in downtown Phoenix. “We have to meet this moment as if our rights are at stake because they are.”
“It’s extremely, extremely important. I have two daughters and a granddaughter, and I believe that they should have the same rights I had. Never in my life — I fought for a lot of things, healthcare, gay rights — I did not think I would have to fight for this, yet here we are,” she said.
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