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Bdme Delayed State Tax Refunds Spark Outrage
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, says the U.S. needs a  cultural revolution  to change the way women are treated, reiterating his call for the resignation ofSen. Al Franken, D-Minnesota, over new sexual misconduct allegations. He spoke about why he now believes Franken should step down on  CBS This Morning  on Thursday.Sanders joined the chorus of more than 30 lawmakers calling for Franken to resign from the Senate after previously saying it should be up to the people of Minnesota to decide his fate. Asked about his change of heart, Sanders said,  I think the additional evidence that came forward but I think what we have got to recognize as a nation, that this is a problem impacting not only high profile men.  What I worry about right now as I speak is that in restaurants, in offices all over  <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.us>stanley cup website</a> this country where you have bosses that are not famous, there is harassment, women are being intimidated, and we need a cultural revolution in this country,  he  <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.es>stanley cup spain</a> said.                                        Sanders said the current national conversation should include a  woman s right to control her own body,  saying that the U.S. has  a lot of work to do to protect women s equality in this country. When pressed on the possibility of Alabama Judge Roy <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cup</a>  Moore joining the Senate amid numerous allegations of sexual misconduct against minors, Sanders delivered a stern warning to President Trump instead.         Let me take it a little step further. We have a president of the United States who a Tbpf Obama: U.S.  hugely vulnerable  to foreign cyberattacks
  CBS News  President Obama is not letting up on his attacks against Mitt Romney s record as governor of Massachusetts, unveiling on Tuesday a television ad noting the Bay state s debt under Romney was the highest per capita in the nation. At the same time, Massachusetts fell to 47th in job creation, one of the worst economic records in the country. First in debt. Forty-seventh in job creation. That s Romney Economics. It didn t work then. It won t work now,  the narrator intones.The Obama campaign, which called its purchases of advertising time  significant,  said the television ad would run in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Virginia.An accompanying press release said Romney added $2.6 billion in state debt as governor to bring the total debt to $18 billion.                                        The ad is part of an increasingly heated battle between the two campaigns to define each rival s economic record in unflattering terms.Romney on Monday unveiled a web video hitting the president for telling reporters last week  <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.de>stanley cup</a> that  the private sector is doing fine,  one week after the Labor Department s <a href=https://www.stanleycup.com.se>stanley sverige</a> aid the economy added 82,000 priva <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.uk>stanley quencher</a> te sector jobs in May and lost 13,000 public sector jobs.         Has there ever been a president so out of touch with the middle class   reads the text on the screen. The Romney ad is reminiscent of a September 2008 spot from the Obama campaign which mocked Sen. John McCain for saying  the fund
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