The 2022 Midterms are Finally Over

by Chris Black

We now can sketch out the shape of Congress for the next two years.

Both parties remain in a state of deadlocked equilibrium, which allows Democrats to run on populist economics and Republicans to run on nationalist social issues—but when they get into office, neither party has the votes to deliver on their promises.

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Instead, they are only able to come together on “bipartisan” issues such as denying railroad workers paid sick leave, sending billions to prop up the Jewish junta in Ukraine, or codifying gay and interracial marriage into federal law.

What so far has attracted little attention about the future Democrat leader Hakeem Jeffries is that, if anything, he’s even more pro-Israel than Nancy Pelosi.

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