| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012-01-01 | N/A | Republican Presidential Primary/Campaign involving Rick Santorum. | United States | View |
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or political essay found within House Oversight materials (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019103). The text offers a satirical and critical commentary on the 2012 US election, specifically targeting Republican figures Todd Akin, Richard Mourdock, Mitt Romney, and Rick Santorum for their views on abortion, contraception, and religion. It concludes with the mention of Barack Obama's re-election.
This document is a slide (page 10) from a Deutsche Bank Global Public Affairs presentation stamped 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026804', likely produced during a congressional investigation. It analyzes the field of candidates for the 2016 US Presidential election, categorizing them by party and striking through names of individuals who had suspended their campaigns or declined to run (such as Joe Biden, Scott Walker, and Rick Perry). The slide poses the question of whether it will be a 'multi-billion dollar race' and lists Francis J. Kelly as the Deutsche Bank contact.
This document appears to be a page (page 310) from a manuscript or book draft, possibly written by Jeffrey Epstein or a ghostwriter, given the 'House Oversight' stamp often associated with the Epstein investigation documents. The text discusses the separation of church and state, criticizing the intrusion of religious 'values' into politics, specifically regarding abortion and gay rights, and referencing the 1984 and 2012 elections. It also includes a personal reflection on the author's upbringing, admitting to past homophobia that was cultural rather than religious, and contrasting it with the attitudes of modern youth.
This document is a screenshot of a social media post containing a bar chart titled 'Who Lies More: A Comparison.' The chart utilizes data from PolitiFact to rank political figures (primarily from the 2016 US election cycle) based on the truthfulness of their statements. The document bears the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026851', indicating it is part of a discovery production for the House Oversight Committee.
Two opinion columns from November 9, 2012, analyze the aftermath of the recent presidential election. Gail Collins satirically discusses the "fiscal cliff" and the Republican reaction to losing, while Nicholas D. Kristof argues that the Republican party must adapt to changing demographics (Hispanic voters, women) or risk becoming irrelevant.
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