Anonymous ID: 984d9a July 9, 2020, 12:42 p.m. No.9908002   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Just now checking in here - wow, mayor of Seoul South Korea reportedly found dead

 

Have read several stories - most include phrases "outspoken liberal" and "alleged sexual harassment"

 

For Asians, the final straw of saving face is to an hero, I reckon

 

https://www.syracuse.com/us-news/2020/07/park-won-soon-dead-missing-seoul-mayors-body-found-in-south-korea.html

 

The AP story says he'd been considered a potential presidential candidate in South Korea's 2022 elections.

 

Somewhere, there are a shit-ton of people who are shaken way up over this.

Anonymous ID: 984d9a July 9, 2020, 12:55 p.m. No.9908140   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8179

Trump to Visit Atlanta Next Week to Tout His Transportation Agenda

 

https://www.ajc.com/blog/politics/trump-visit-atlanta-next-week-tout-his-transportation-agenda/qLxdh5Zla5bgbPnxRowkXJ/

 

President Donald Trump is planning to visit metro Atlanta next week to tout his administration’s transportation agenda and announce a policy change designed to speed infrastructure projects, according to senior White House officials.

 

He’s set to make the announcement on Wednesday at the UPS airport hub in Hapeville where he’ll highlight a process that the White House said will accelerate environmental reviews for roads, bridges and highway projects, such as an I-75 expansion.

 

Unlike recent trips to Tulsa and Mt. Rushmore, Trump’s trek to Atlanta is an official visit rather than a campaign-style event, which means it will likely involve a handful of party officials rather than a large-scale showcase.

 

The visit, Trump’s ninth trip to Georgia since taking office, is the latest sign that Republicans are increasingly concerned about keeping Georgia in the GOP column in November.

 

A spate of polls show Trump deadlocked or trailing presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden in Georgia, which has voted for a Republican in every presidential election cycle since 1996.

 

Democrats far outvoted Republicans in the June primaries, smashing a state turnout record, and Trump’s campaign began reserving TV spots in Georgia and other swing states within the last two weeks.

 

So have national GOP groups, which recently announced plans to shell out more than $21 million to defend Republican-held Senate seats in Georgia.

 

Trump has shaped Georgia’s two U.S. Senate races and competitive U.S. House races. U.S. Sen. David Perdue has aggressively tied himself to the president, while Democratic nominee Jon Ossoff has cast the Trump and Perdue as corrupt Washington hacks.

 

In Georgia’s other Senate contest, a 21-candidate special election held in November, U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler and U.S. Rep. Doug Collins have both jockeyed over which is more loyal to Trump. The Rev. Raphael Warnock, the leading Democrat, is framing himself as a “moral voice” to counter Trump.

 

The visit could make for an awkward reunion between Trump and Gov. Brian Kemp, a top ally who found himself the target of the president’s disdain in April as Georgia began rolling back coronavirus restrictions.

 

Back then, the president said repeatedly that he “strongly” opposed Kemp’s plan and urged the governor not to defy White House pandemic guidelines. He later reversed himself, and Vice President Mike Pence made two visits in a week in May to praise Georgia’s response to the disease.

 

Trump’s last visit to Atlanta came on March 6, when he visited the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as the pandemic worsened.