WORKING CLASS COSPLAY
Trump's Embarrassing McDonald's Playdate, GOP's Failed Attempt To Limit Overseas Voting And More Election Updates
We're just two weeks away from election day, and the sheer amount of nail-biting on social media has become insufferable. If you're feeling anxious, your best bet is to go volunteer for a local candidate. Don't let your nerves get the best of you.
McDonald's workers hated Trump's little working class cosplay
This Sunday’s photoshoot of the former president captured him in a white button-down shirt, ketchup-colored tie and a blue apron with yellow stripes — but without gloves or a hairnet while working at the McDonald’s stop in the swing state [...]
Workers for the fast food chain shared their opinions in the Reddit thread r/McDonaldsEmployees and were quick to point out that Trump did not seem to meet the chain’s typical requirements.
GOP loses another attempt at invalidating votes in a purple state
A judge in Michigan on Monday rejected an effort by the Republican Party to block some Americans who are living overseas from voting in the battleground state.
The Republican National Committee filed a lawsuit earlier this month arguing that election laws in the state improperly allowed U.S. citizens living abroad who had never lived in Michigan — but whose relatives had — to vote there.
Michigan Court of Claims Judge Sima Patel said in a ruling that the language being challenged by Republicans was consistent with federal and state law. "There is no ground to invalidate it," Patel wrote.
[Reuters]
Trump's infamous Central Park Five ad comes back to bite him
Five men who were wrongfully convicted as teenagers in the so-called Central Park Five jogger rape case sued Donald Trump on Monday, saying the Republican presidential nominee defamed them by falsely claiming they killed someone and pleaded guilty.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Philadelphia, cites several statements Trump made about the men during his Sept. 10 debate with Democratic nominee Kamala Harris, after she blasted Trump for taking out an ad in 1989 calling for the then-teen defendants to be executed.
[CNBC]
Here's a look at some of the most recent national polls (Thanks to 538).
[Image: AP]