‘A Man of Honor, Integrity’: More High School Female Friends Defend Kavanaugh

 
 
Sep 24, 2018
 

It's fall in Washington, where Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's accuser prepares to tell her story to a Senate committee and he awaits an opportunity to respond. Kavanaugh enters the week buoyed by the support of more women who have known him since high school, as Rachel del Guidice reports. Plus: Jason Snead on a case of vote-buying, Justin Bogie on the ongoing spending binge in Congress, Rachel Greszler on how to keep the tax cuts without adding debt, del Guidice on a big day for the #WalkAway movement, and veteran White House correspondent Major Garrett on covering a different sort of president.

 
 
 
News
Photo
"Those of us who know Brett best, now and in high school, know that he is a man of honor, integrity, and compassion. He has always been a good person and is a true friend," says Meghan McCaleb.
Commentary
Photo
Lizaida Camis allegedly offered voters $50 in exchange for applying to receive mail-in ballots and then casting them in favor of candidates for whom Camis worked.
Commentary
Photo
This spending bill fails to address border security funding, one of President Trump's top priorities, and it ignores the cuts he recommended in his budget. Instead, it would continue Washington's cycle of irresponsible spending and pile on more debt.
News
Photo
The founder of the movement that showcases stories of why people are walking away from leftist ideology and the Democratic Party is bringing a march and rally to Washington next month to send a message he hopes the mainstream media won't be able to ignore.
News
Photo
"A few days later, they were suing me again. Same thing, just different cake," recalls Jack Phillips of finding out he was now in legal trouble for refusing to make a cake celebrating transgenderism.
Analysis
Photo
CBS News' Chief White House Correspondent Major Garrett, who has covered the White House for three different news outlets during the past four administrations, shares about his personal interactions with President Trump and what he thinks the future holds for the administration.
Commentary
Photo
The root problem is not low taxes. After all, the IRS collected record revenue in fiscal year 2018. The problem is excessive government spending, and no amount of tax increases can fix that.
Commentary
Photo
"If you are Republican and accused, you are guilty, no matter how outrageous and unlikely the accuser," writes Anthony Alafero.
 
     
 
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

The Daily Signal is brought to you by more than half a million members of The Heritage Foundation.

How are we doing?
We welcome your comments, suggestions, and story tips. Please reply to this email or send us a note at comments@dailysignal.com.

The Daily Signal
214 Massachusetts Avenue, NE
Washington, DC 20002
(800) 546-2843

 
 

Add morningbell@heritage.org to your address book to ensure that you receive emails from us.

You are subscribed to this newsletter as johnmhames@comcast.net. If you want to receive other Heritage Foundation newsletters, or opt out of this newsletter, please click here to update your subscription.

 
-

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

FOLLOW THE MONEY - Billionaire tied to Epstein scandal funneled large donations to Ramaswamy & Democrats

Breaking: Left-Wing Black History Children’s Book Distributed by Simon & Schuster Is Heavily Plagiarized

Adam Schiff & Gavin Newsom are about to get vetted by Peter Schweizer…