IPSE'S AUTHORS LAST 24h
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IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Igor Grosu
    Igor Grosu “The plebiscite is a chance for Moldovans to show loudly and clearly that we are Europeans. ... We are not entering Europe, we are returning to it.” 12 hours ago
  • Maia Sandu
    Maia Sandu “Joining the EU is the best thing we can give this and future generations.” 12 hours ago
  • Igor Dodon
    Igor Dodon “We are categorically opposed to this referendum. We are not saying 'no' to talks with the EU and we are not opposed to the EU. We oppose Sandu using it as an instrument for her own interests and those of her party. We are therefore asking voters during the campaign not to take part in the referendum.” 12 hours ago
  • Ben Hodges
    Ben Hodges “Since the fall of Avdiivka in Ukraine's east on February 17 [2024], its forces have oozed forward, swallowing several villages, as Ukrainian forces have performed tactical retreats. Here we are in April [2024], and [the Russians] are oozing out. Why is that? I think it's because that's the best the Russians can do. They do not have the capability to knock Ukraine out of the war. Russia lacked the ability to equip large armoured formations that could move rapidly, with supporting artillery, engineers and logistics. I don't think it exists. That's why I feel fairly confident that the mission for [Ukrainian] general Oleksandr Syrskyi for the next several months is to stabilise this as much as he can to buy time for Ukraine to grow the size of the army, to rebuild the defence industry of Ukraine, as well as give us time to find more ammunition for them. I think of 2024 as a year of industrial competition. So the army has got to buy time.” 14 hours ago
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#Republican

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive with the tag #Republican linked to them.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“Certainly by historic standards, this is really an incredible night for the Democrats. There has not been a majority party in the White House and in the Congress that has done so well in the midterms. Even if the Democrats lose the House, and they appear to be on track to do that, [Republican] Speaker Kevin McCarthy's majority would be very narrow - and that would be a win for the Democrats.”

author
Political science professor at George Washington University
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“For decades, Democrats and Republican administrations alike believed the market would manage supply. We live in the wreckage of that worldview. But it held for so long that the U.S. government has lost both the muscle and the confidence needed to manage supply, at least when it comes to anything other than military spending. So Biden's task now is clear: to build a government that can create supply, not just demand.”

author
American journalist, political analyst, New York Times columnist, and the host of The Ezra Klein Show podcast
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“The main thing I want to say...the way you all come together, the way people just come out of nowhere to help, as a community, that is what you are supposed to be doing. That's what America's supposed to be. There are no red tornadoes or blue tornadoes. There are no red states or blue states when this stuff starts to happen and I think, at least in my experience it either brings people together or takes them apart.”

author
President of the United States
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“The race [between Democrat Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin] is a statistical dead-heat and that was not expected. Youngkin has been a stronger candidate than many had predicted. The Democratic brand is suffering right now, under the weight of Biden's declining popularity, what happened in Afghanistan, and the perception that Democrats in Washington can't get things done right now. This will send shockwaves through the Democratic Party if they lose Virginia, because Republicans will take this to mean that, if they can win in a blue trending state, they can win in a lot of other places they've been told they can't win in 2022.”

author
Dean of the Schar School of Public Policy and Government at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia
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“The Afghan imbroglio and the Aukus row betrayed a tin ear. Biden truly believes in alliances. But when the chips are down, like his predecessors he acts in America's self-interest, deaf to the consequences for others. Likewise at home, he truly believes in reform. But try as he will, he cannot drown out the reality of a divided nation or the pernicious, still potent legacy of Trump - who daily plots his downfall from the extra-large seat of his Florida golf buggy. Latest poll trends and the political dynamic in Washington point to a Republican takeover of Congress next year, the thwarting of much of Biden's agenda, and a failing, one-term presidency. This gloomy scenario may change. Hopefully it will. But the democratic world can only watch America's unfolding Lear-like drama and, fearing a recurring nightmare in 2024, mutter all-a-tremble: 'Please, not Trump again!'.”

author
Columnist for The Guardian newspaper and an assistant editor of the publication
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“The discovery that he [Donald Trump] has not in fact gone, but is still lurking on the internet disseminating conspiracy theories about the election, brings on the sick feeling you get two-thirds of the way into a horror movie, when a sense of calm is introduced prior to the biggest jump scare. Unlike the first time around, there is no possibility of laughing Trump off or assuming his idiocies won't find a sympathetic audience. At the rally last week, two Republican congressional candidates addressed the group. A recent CNN poll found that 78% of Republicans didn't believe that Biden legitimately won the presidency. Rightwing America, and therefore America as a whole, has yet to shake this guy off.”

author
British author and a contributor to The Guardian and The New York Times
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“Plenty of members of the [Republican] conference are still in perpetual skeptic mode. When you talk to younger conservatives, the issue of climate is No 1 or 2, but for older generations that's not the case. It's important for the future of our country and the party we stop viewing it as a partisan issue. It's moving a very large ship a matter of degrees. It won't happen overnight. Climate is one of the areas I was concerned about in terms of the long-term trajectory of the party. We are seeing first steps in messaging and proposals. There's a recognition that we have not been on the right side of this and we need to get on the right side of this.”

author
Member of the Republican Party - U.S. Representative for Michigan
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“If you have got the evidence of fraud, present it. Quite frankly, the conduct of the President's legal team has been a national embarrassment. I have been a supporter of the President's. I voted for him twice, but elections have consequences, and we cannot continue to act as if something happened here that didn't happen. If you are unwilling to come forward and present the evidence, it must mean the evidence doesn't exist. The country is what has to matter the most. As much as I'm a strong Republican and I love my party, it's the country that has to come first.”

author
Former Governor of New Jersey
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