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October 20, 2020

Election 2020: When Push Comes to Poll
by Tony Perkins
Most Americans don't trust the media -- but should they trust the media's polls? The only firm who got the 2016 election right says no. Trafalgar's Robert Cahaly has made the bold claim that Donald Trump is ahead, and after his stellar forecast four years ago, only a skeptic would doubt him. "They call me a polling industry disrupter," he said in a lengthy sit-down with National Review. And with his 92 percent accuracy rate, he could be on the verge of stunning America again.
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Two Candidates, 15 Issues, Two Minutes
Every election is pivotal, but the 2020 presidential election stands to put America on two very different paths. Know the facts. Share the facts.
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Civil Rights Don't Stop for COVID
by FRC's David Closson
For over six months Americans have been forced to adjust their lives because of the coronavirus. Aspects of everyday life, including the enjoyment of constitutionally protected rights, were temporarily set aside, or abridged while the nation worked to flatten the curve and slow the spread of the virus. While most states and entities worked in good faith with churches, certain jurisdictions and groups have used the virus as an excuse to infringe on basic religious liberty protections.
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Today's show features: Mike Braun, U.S. Senator from Indiana, on this week's Judiciary Committee vote on the Amy Coney Barrett nomination, Wednesday's vote on a COVID relief bill, and on Senate Republicans' healthcare proposal "The Fair Care Act"; Andy McCarthy, Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York and Senior Fellow at the National Review Institute, on the significance of the Hunter Biden emails; Luke Rosiak, Investigative reporter for whataretheylearning.com, on what his investigative reporting has uncovered about what children are learning in public schools; David Cortman, Senior Counsel and Vice President of U.S. Litigation with Alliance Defending Freedom, on a Christian school suing Oregon Governor Kate Brown over her policy threatening fines and jail time if private schools resume in-person instruction, while allowing public schools to resume in-person classes.

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