‘Bulo’s Fave Tunes: March, 2019
If you're seeking musical diversity, this is the month for you. We've got pretty much everything but death metal and show tunes. Presented, as almost always, in alphabetical order by…
The National Rifle Association is preparing to punish lawmakers for voting to protect women from their stalkers and domestic abusers.If it isn't already, the NRA should now be more toxic than a half pound of ham, wrapped in an ebola monkey's diaper & left in a car trunk for the month of July. In a sane world, any Delaware elected official that still takes the blood money and remains beholden to the NRA should be instantly unelectable. And that goes double for Democrats in safe D districts like Johnson and Bennett.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Teresa Tomlinson is a former mayor of a mid-sized city with no national profile. Yet she hopes she’ll be national Democrats’ top recruit to run for the Senate from Georgia next year — if one of the party’s rising stars, Stacey Abrams, takes a pass. “I feel comfortable I’ll be their Plan B,” says Tomlinson, 54, the first female mayor of Columbus, a minority-majority community and one of Georgia’s largest cities. Nineteen months from Election Day, a political eternity during which plenty can change, Democrats are looking at Plan B in Senate races around the country. Even in a campaign cycle that looks far more promising than last year’s, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., who heads the party’s Senate campaign arm, have struggled to recruit candidates who are battle-tested statewide.