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November 9, 2020

Media's Early Call: Dancing on the Stealing?
by Tony Perkins
No one expected the media to play fair, but Saturday was still an agonizing experience for tens of millions of Americans. Watching the networks declare Joe Biden the winner of a race that's still unresolved in key states was not only difficult -- but frustrating for fans of the democratic process. Just 48 hours earlier, the former vice president had urged "patience." "Democracy sometimes is messy," he admitted.
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Press's Premature Biden Celebration Fuels American Mistrust
by Joshua Arnold
When residents in Washington, D.C. heard the media call the election for Joe Biden, they erupted in celebration--whooping and hollering, banging pots together on their front steps, honking car horns, and generally behaving as if Munchkin Land had been freed from the wicked witch.
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Election FAQs: Where Do We Go from Here?
by Travis Weber
The media may be acting like Joe Biden has already won the 2020 election, but that's not necessarily true. The reality is, there are a number of steps -- under the Constitution, as well as federal and state law -- that still have to occur before anyone is formally declared the winner.
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Today's show features: Louie Gohmert, U.S. Representative for the 1st district of Texas and a former district judge, on his view from the ground in Pennsylvania on possible voter fraud and whether he believes the president has a solid legal case; Ken Blackwell, FRC's Senior Fellow for Human Rights and Constitutional Governance, Chairman of the Board for the International Foundation for Electoral Systems, and former Ohio Secretary of State, on the contested election of 2000 and what Americans can expect 20 years after Bush v. Gore; John Stemberger, President of Florida Family Action, on how the media covered the 2000 presidential election results compared to its dangerous bias in 2020; Brent Keilen, Vice President of FRC Action, on the positive election gains in states for conservative messages and policies.

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