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Top pro-Senate Democrat super PAC spending big bucks to blast GOP challenger in key swing state over abortion

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Top pro-Senate Democrat super PAC spending big bucks to blast GOP challenger in key swing state over abortion

NEWNow you can hearken to Fox Information articles!

FIRST ON FOX: The main tremendous PAC supporting Democratic senators and candidates is taking purpose on the Republican difficult Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan this November in New Hampshire with a serious advert blitz on the flamable concern of abortion.

The TV business from the Senate Majority PAC, which was shared first with Fox Information on Thursday, spotlights a remark by former Military Gen. Don Bolduc, the GOP nominee within the small however essential common election battleground state, the place he praised the blockbuster transfer by the Supreme Court docket’s conservative majority to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling. Democrats have been focusing on Republicans operating within the midterm elections over the difficulty within the three months because the excessive courtroom opinion despatched the battle over legalized abortion again to the states. 

The advert by the group aligned with Senate Majority Chief Chuck Schumer makes use of an audio recording of Bolduc, on the day of the June 24 Supreme Court docket ruling, saying “why don’t we simply rejoice that one proper now,” which elicited cheers from the conservative viewers the candidate was addressing.

The spot additionally highlights a clip from Bolduc throughout a radio interview a few days later stressing that “you don’t compromise on the difficulty of life,” as properly an audio recording of Bolduc talking at a neighborhood Republican committee assembly final December saying “I’m not going to vote opposite to pro-life.”

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ABORTION SHOWDOWN: HASSAN TARGETS BOLDUC IN BATTLEGROUND NEW HAMPSHIRE

The business ends with a video clip of Bolduc in a neighborhood TV interview saying “recover from it” as he commented on Hassan’s full courtroom press towards him over the abortion concern.

Senate Majority PAC tells Fox Information it’s spending a large $3.7 million to run the TV spot statewide in New Hampshire, on the Boston, Manchester, Portland, Maine, and Burlington, Vermont media markets. 

CHECK OUT THE LATEST POLL IN NEW HAMPSHIRE’S SENATE BATTLE 

Republicans view Hassan, a former governor, as weak as she seeks a second six-year time period within the Senate, in a race that’s one in all a handful throughout the nation that can doubtless decide if the GOP wins again the chamber’s majority within the midterm election. Hassan, on the marketing campaign path and in her advertisements, has been spotlighting the difficulty of abortion.

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Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan, after voting on main day in New Hampshire, in Newfields, N.H. on Sept. 13, 2022
(Fox Information)

Hours after Bolduc narrowly received the Senate GOP nomination in New Hampshire’s Sept. 13 main, Hassan’s marketing campaign went up with a TV advert charging that “if Don Bolduc and Congressional Republicans take management of the U.S. Senate they might push for a nationwide ban on abortion — a ban with no exceptions.”

And the narrator within the new Senate Majority PAC advert claims that “Bolduc would give [Senate Republican Leader] Mitch McConnell the ability to ban abortion nationwide.”

THE BOLDUC-SUNUNU HUG THAT GRABBED NATIONAL ATTENTION

However Buldoc instructed Fox Information instantly after capturing the GOP nomination that if he have been within the Senate, he wouldn’t assist a proposal, unveiled earlier this month by Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, to implement a 15-week federal abortion ban.

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“No, I’m not going to assist it as a result of it is senseless. The Supreme Court docket has already determined that it is a state concern. The states have it. That’s the place it must be. Girls on each side of the difficulty will getter a greater voice on the state degree,” Bolduc stated.

Former Army Gen. Don Bolduc, the Republican Senate nominee in New Hampshire, speaks at a New Hampshire GOP unity breakfast, on Sept. 15, 2022 in Concord, N.H.

Former Military Gen. Don Bolduc, the Republican Senate nominee in New Hampshire, speaks at a New Hampshire GOP unity breakfast, on Sept. 15, 2022 in Harmony, N.H.
(Fox Information )

Whereas that is the primary time Senate Majority PAC has launched advertisements within the common election marketing campaign in New Hampshire, it did meddle within the Republican Senate main. The group spent over $3 million to run advertisements focusing on state Senate President Chuck Morse, whom many Democrats seen as a stronger common election candidate than Bolduc, who has struggled with fundraising throughout his 2020 and 2022 runs for the Senate.

Bolduc, who ran within the main as a populist and an outsider, edged the extra mainstream conservative Morse by a razor-thin margin in a crowded discipline of Republican Senate candidates.

New Hampshire is simply one of many many battleground states the place Senate Majority PAC is spending massive bucks to launch advertisements. The group’s reserved almost $140 million to run spots within the Granite State in addition to Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and North Carolina.

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The Senate is cut up 50/50 between the 2 main events, however the Democrats management the bulk due to the tie breaking vote of Vice President Kamala Harris, by way of her constitutional position as president of the Senate. Meaning the GOP wants a internet achieve of only one seat in November to win again the bulk it misplaced when it was swept in Georgia’s twin Jan. 5, 2021 Senate runoff elections.

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Melania Trump says US 'must unite' ahead of Mar-a-Lago Log Cabin Republicans event

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Melania Trump says US 'must unite' ahead of Mar-a-Lago Log Cabin Republicans event

Former first lady Melania Trump stressed the importance of unifying the nation, telling Fox News Digital that “equality” needs to be the “everyday experience of every American.” 

The former first lady is expected to headline an event at Mar-a-Lago on Saturday, hosted by the Log Cabin Republicans — a pro-LGBT group. The event will focus on the group’s “Road to Victory,” a voter-turnout program planned for gay voters in swing states. 

MELANIA TRUMP RETURNS TO CAMPAIGN TRAIL WITH PRO-LGBT REPUBLICAN EVENT APPEARANCE: REPORT

“We must unite in our effort to establish a society where equality is the everyday experience of every American,” the former first lady told Fox News Digital. “Individual freedom provides a unifying set of principles, and ultimately establishes our American way.” 

“Together, we must nourish and safeguard the seeds of liberty,” she continued. “Because, when successful, America blossoms into a magnificent place where everyone can practice their beliefs, share new ideas, and express individualism — this is when we are our best.” 

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FLASHBACK: RNC ANNOUNCES ‘PRIDE COALITION,’ PARTNERSHIP WITH LOG CABIN REPUBLICANS AHEAD OF MIDTERMS

The former first lady is working alongside former Amb. Ric Grenell for the event. Grenell, who served during the Trump administration as the ambassador to Germany and the acting director of national intelligence, was the first openly gay member of the presidential Cabinet in U.S. history. However, Grenell said that “means absolutely nothing in terms of special treatment.” 

Melania Trump and former President Trump. (Getty Images)

“It simply means that the American dream is alive and well — if you work hard and have a little bit of luck and God’s grace, you can do anything you want in America regardless of your skin color, socio-economic situation, or sexual orientation,” Grenell told Fox News Digital. “We want what every American wants, to be treated equally not differently.” 

Grenell told Fox News Digital that the Republican Party has grown “increasingly welcoming of gay conservatives over the last 20 years.” 

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“But we made the most progress when Donald Trump and Melania Trump moved into the White House,” Grenell told Fox News Digital. 

Grenell said that, “Gays and lesbians are no longer reflexively leftist.” 

“They realize they have incredible liberties in America and that they are not opposed,” he explained, noting there are more than 80 Log Cabin chapters across the country that have seen an “explosion of membership.”

“The gay left continues to try and convince America’s gays and lesbians that they don’t have personal freedoms — it’s absurd,” Grenell said.

He added, “Gays and lesbians around the world are literally dying to come to America. We live in the greatest country in the world and Log Cabin members are proud to say it.” 

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MELANIA FULLY BEHIND TRUMP’S 2024 CAMPAIGN, SAYS IT WOULD BE A ‘PRIVILEGE’ TO SERVE AS FIRST LADY AGAIN

Grenell told Fox News Digital that the 2024 election is “about the elites in D.C. versus the rest of America.” He told Fox News Digital that the media and Democrats are “shamelessly defining support for trans kids as a litmus test for supporting gay rights, and it infuriates gay conservatives.” 

As for unity, Grenell said it is Democrats and far-left activists who are to blame for separating Americans. 

Former first lady Melania Trump receives the Lincoln Award at the Log Cabin Republicans event at Mar-a-Lago in November 2021.

“Gay, Inc, and the far-Left activists who control Gay, Inc are spending millions of dollars to separate gays in America,” Grenell said. “They tell young people they must step away from the rest of society because they are oppressed in America. They work hard to make gays angry, weird, separated, and fringe. They want separate flags, pronouns, bakeries, and bathrooms. It’s crazy.” 

Grenell said the left “won’t admit that the equality fight is largely over in America but just beginning in the 69 countries around the world that criminalize gays.” 

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MELANIA TRUMP TO SPEAK TO NEW AMERICAN CITIZENS ABOUT RESPONSIBILITY OF ‘GUARDING OUR FREEDOM’

“But gay conservatives know this is the greatest country in the world to be who you are — We are welcomed in every community,” he said. “We aren’t oppressed in America.” 

The former first lady told Fox News Digital that the Log Cabin Republicans’ overarching mission is “important” and “rooted in respect.” 

“Based on this central value, people thrive and exist together in a world where all are honored and celebrated,” she said.   

The former first lady was given the Lincoln Award at a Log Cabin event at Mar-a-Lago in 2021. 

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Former first lady Melania Trump and former Amb. Ric Grenell at the Log Cabin Republicans event in November 2021.

Meanwhile, Fox News Digital asked the former first lady what her plans would be for a second term in the White House, should her husband, former President Trump, win the 2024 election. 

“The safety and well-being of American families remains my top priority,” she told Fox News Digital. “Our children are our future leaders, tomorrow’s innovators.” 

She told Fox News Digital that it is “essential we provide the highest level of care to our next generation; to insure they not only thrive but reach their full potential.” 

“In turn, our nation will sustain for generations,” she said. 

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During her time as first lady, Trump hosted virtual roundtables on foster care as part of her “Be Best” initiative, and focused on strengthening the child welfare system. She worked with members of Congress on legislation that secured funding for grants awarded to youth and young adults currently or formerly in foster care to help pay for college, career school or training. The bill ultimately was signed by then-President Trump in December 2020.

Since leaving the White House, the former first lady has also created special edition Non-Fungible Tokens. A portion of those proceeds went toward her initiative “Fostering the Future” to secure educational opportunities and scholarships for children in the foster care community.

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Opinion: Is Arizona's abortion ban a return to the 19th century? No, it's actually worse

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Opinion: Is Arizona's abortion ban a return to the 19th century? No, it's actually worse

Arizona’s Supreme Court opened a new front in the war on women’s reproductive rights last week when it resurrected an obscure 1864 law that bans abortion in almost all cases. Critics of the ruling say the court has thrown Arizona back into the 19th century.

That isn’t entirely fair to the 19th century.

The irony of last week’s reactionary ruling is that the author of the original law, William T. Howell, was a progressive by the standards of his time. The politics of Arizona’s current justices bear little resemblance to the 19th century antecedent upon whom their ruling relies.

Although many of Howell’s views have aged poorly, he argued against the era’s prevailing patriarchal dogma and in favor of women’s property rights. Even his abortion law was guided by concerns about maternal health, not the right-wing, religious orthodoxy that animates much of the antiabortion movement today.

If 19th century legal precedent is important, so is historical context. As today’s lawyers and politicians battle over the future of abortion rights, they should understand how and why the original Arizona law came to be. The statute emerged from the upheaval of the Civil War and its little-known front in the West.

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As a history professor and the author of a book on this subject, I never expected Howell to become a posthumous standard-bearer for the modern American right. If he’s known at all, it’s as an agent of Abraham Lincoln’s campaign to stamp out slavery in the Southwest and secure Union control of the region.

That story began in the spring of 1861, when a band of migrants from neighboring Texas seized power in southern New Mexico. Proclaiming their affinity for the slave-holding South, they broke from the Union and threw their allegiance behind the newly formed Confederacy. They named their new rebel territory “Arizona.”

Several months later, the Confederacy launched its first invasion of the war — into the Southwest. The rebel invaders routed U.S. troops in several battles, secured military control over Arizona and seized Santa Fe, New Mexico’s capital. Then they planned to march on the gold fields of California.

They never made it. In the spring of 1862, Union troops sabotaged the Confederates’ supplies and finally sent them scrambling back to Texas.

Congress then divided the region into a western half (Arizona) and an eastern half (New Mexico), splitting the erstwhile Confederate Arizona Territory. To strengthen the Union’s tenuous hold, Lincoln poured federal troops and agents into the region. One of them was Howell, newly appointed as an associate justice of Arizona’s territorial Supreme Court.

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A veteran jurist and former Michigan legislator, Howell got to work on a new code of laws for Arizona. The final document, now known as the Howell Code, ran to nearly 500 pages. One of its primary purposes was to ensure that slavery would never again take root in Arizona.

Buried within it was the now-infamous abortion ban. The provision was no outlier. In fact, it was copied from California’s legal code, one of many such laws passed by states and territories in the 1860s and ’70s.

From the colonial era into the early 19th century, abortions had been commonly administered and rarely criminalized. Benjamin Franklin even included a recipe for an abortifacient in a math textbook, of all places. Abortions before “quickening” — within roughly the first four or five months of pregnancy — were considered “the purview of women” rather than the law, according to the historian Sarah Handley-Cousins. Even the Catholic Church “implicitly accepted” abortions before quickening, the historian Leslie J. Reagan has noted.

The Howell Code, then, marked a departure from a more permissive approach to abortion. Even so, the antiabortion laws of the mid-19th century were generally born of a sincere concern for women’s health that is absent from today’s legislation. Tellingly, Arizona’s original antiabortion clause appeared within a provision on poisoning. The underlying premise was that abortions posed health risks to women, who were seen as victims and not held legally liable for the medical procedures performed on them.

Howell himself had a woman’s health on his mind at the time. Shortly after drafting the code, he rushed back to Michigan to be at the bedside of his ill wife. She survived, and Howell remained in Michigan, never seeing his code put into practice.

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The judge had previously defended women’s right to property in their own name rather than subsumed under her husband’s. He also advocated free public schools and opposed capital punishment (though executions were allowed for certain crimes under the Howell Code).

Howell is no progressive poster child by today’s standards. He was in many ways a man of his time. And his code, written hastily in his provisional courtroom — an adobe shack adjoining a horse corral — reflected some of the prevailing prejudices of the early American frontier, imposing numerous restrictions on people who weren’t white.

But Howell is nevertheless an awkward antecedent for today’s antiabortion movement. If Arizona’s 21st century Supreme Court justices wish to exhume an obscure 19th century predecessor from the recesses of history, that’s their prerogative. But they should understand that even he is misaligned with their extreme politics.

Kevin Waite is an associate professor of history at Durham University and the author of “West of Slavery: The Southern Dream of a Transcontinental Empire.”

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Israel hits Iran with 'limited' strikes despite White House opposition

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Israel hits Iran with 'limited' strikes despite White House opposition

Despite the White House voicing its opposition against Israel striking back at Iran, the Jewish state issued “limited” strikes early Friday.

Fox News Digital has confirmed there have been explosions in Isfahan province where Natanz is located, though it is not clear whether it has been hit.

A well-placed military source has told Fox that the strike was “limited.”

The news came after President Joe Biden warned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the U.S. would not take part in a counter-offensive against Iran.

ISRAEL STRIKES SITE IN IRAN IN RETALIATION FOR WEEKEND ASSAULT: SOURCE

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Democrats have expressed concern that President Biden has ruined his standing among progressives with his support for Israel. The president criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over Israel’s conduct during its war with Hamas.  (Getty Images)

John Kirby, the White House’s top national security spokesperson, told ABC’s “This Week” program on Sunday, April 14 that the United States will continue to help Israel defend itself, but does not want war with Iran.

Kirby said “our commitment is ironclad” to defending Israel and to “helping Israel defend itself,” after being asked if the U.S. would support retaliation. 

John Kirby

John Kirby, White House national security communications advisor, during a news conference in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, April 15, 2024. (Bonnie Cash/UPI/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Kirby doubled-down on the fact that Biden does not “seek” war with Iran.

“And as the president has said many times, we don’t seek a wider war in the region. We don’t seek a war with Iran. And I think I will leave it at that,” Kirby added.

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ISRAEL’S ADVANCED MILITARY TECHNOLOGY ON FULL DISPLAY DURING IRAN’S ATTACK

“We don’t seek escalated tensions in the region. We don’t seek a wider conflict,” Kirby said.

Pentagon Press Secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder

Pentagon Press Secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder holds a press conference at the Pentagon on October 19, 2023 in Arlington, Virginia. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Pentagon Press Secretary Major General Pat Ryder echoed Kirby’s sentiments, sharing in a press briefing that the U.S. does “not want to see a wider regional war.”

“As I’ve highlighted, we do not seek escalation in the region, but we will not hesitate to defend Israel and protect our personnel,” he said during the question and answer segment of the briefing.

“Again, we do not want to see a wider regional war,” he added. “We don’t seek conflict with Iran, but we won’t hesitate to take [the] necessary actions to protect our forces.”

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Iran missile launch

Iran’s medium-range ballistic missile called Hayber (Hurremshahr-4) is seen after the launch during the promotional program organized with the participation of high-ranking military officials in Tehran, Iran on May 07, 2023.  (Iranian Defense Ministry/Hanodut/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Reports of Israel’s “limited strike” against Iran came following a retaliatory strike over the weekend. 

Iran attacked Israel over the weekend in retaliation for Israel’s deadly strike on Iran’s consulate in Syria earlier this month that killed a dozen people, including a top general. 

The weekend attack by Iran marked a major escalation of violence. Despite decades of hostilities between the two nations, Iran has never directly attacked Israel, instead relying on proxy forces in Iraq, Lebanon and elsewhere. 

Fox News’ Bradford Betz and Jennifer Griffin contributed to this report.

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