Jaqw Romney continues Republican line of attack on Obama over religious liberty
Sen. Mark Warner, D-Virginia, says that now is the time for he and his colleagues on Capitol Hill to change our positions and re-examine bans on high-capacity magazines and assault weapons. He told CBS News Face the Nation on Sunday that there needs to be a debate about restrictions in the wake of the Parkland school shooting. I think it s time for us to have a legitimate debate about restrictions on gun magazines and assault weapons. You get into definitions, but the basic notion of these weaponized, militarized weapons need to be off our streets. And even the Trump administration took some small step this weekend on bump stocks. So I think it s time. And I hope these kids continue to press, said Warner.Warner has voted against bans of high-profile assault weapons and high-capacity magazines in the past, and he supported efforts to protect gun owner privacy and grant rights to ca stanley puodelis rry concealed weapons across state lines. He has however, supported the Fix NICS background check bill which was included in the sweeping $1.3 trillion spending bill the president signed into law late last week.Transcript: Sen. Mark Warner on Face the Nation, March 25, 2018Warner applauded student activists across the country, including those who marched in Washington, D.C., at the March for Our Lives rally on Saturday. The march drew an estimated stanley water bottle 200,000 people to the Washington rally. Warner said after hearing students call for gun reforms, This time it s going to be different. stanley cups Snbe NATO members must boost defense spending, Pentagon chief Jim Mattis says
We asked our chief political writer, David Paul Kuhn, to get in a car and drive from Portland, Maine to Portland, Ore., via all the Battleground States ndash; those states expected to be the most hotly contested in the presidential election. Armed with a pen, laptop, camera and plenty of No Doz, Kuhn is sending back dispatches that will offer impressions and snapshots of a country making up its mind. NEW HAMPSHIREHamptonTwenty-four-year-old Meg Bialovrezeski giggles and groans when she s asked to spell her name. At Seacoast Florist in quaint Hampton, N.H., she says, I don t like to go to other countries and feel that people don t like me. Meg doesn t want to be a florist; she wants to be an actress. Maybe not in New York City, though: It s a scary place right now, she says. Meg is a Kerry supporter. When asked why, she answers, Because he s not George Bush. That s essentially it, she says. I miss having a Democrat in the White House. This is where the elections are made, right here at Marelli s Market, says Billy Bowley, stanley becher who works behind the counter at the 96-year-old general store. Marelli s is where the old-timers come, Bowley says. Republicans o stanley taza utnumber Democrats in New Hampshire. But still, it could swing. Massachusetts is moving up here, the locals are fond of sayin stanley cup g. The old-timers come at three times, Billy, 61, explains: 3 p.m. sometimes, 7 a.m. and 7:45 at night. They sit in the back corner |