Buried in the news of the first US Senate debate over the weekend, was another piece of big news: the National Rifle Association (NRA) apparently gave liberal Gov. Steve Bullock (D-MT) an "F" rating.
Let's be honest. We all like to watch the Cats and the Griz play, but this time, both coaches got "played." And now the Big Sky Conference is reportedly canceling the Fall college football season altogether.
Even though we all know Barack Obama sat down with Bullock to try and force him to run for the Senate, Obama is now too scared to publicly endorse Bullock because they know it will hurt his campaign.
"Bullock's campaign is being bankrolled by the liberal mob. That's why Bullock's been silent while left-wing radicals try to defund our police, erase our history and turn America into a socialist country."
"We’ve seen Bullock retaliate and strip his former female Lt. Governor Angela McLean of her duties, eventually forcing her out of her job, due to issues that he refuses to discuss to this day."
Are you ready to wear Bullock's Burqas?
Liberal Gov. Steve Bullock just announced a statewide mandatory mask order (w/ some caveats). You're about to witness mass civil disobedience. The public went with the first shutdown. They're now losing the consent of the governed.
We need to protect the most vulnerable, but get the rest of our economy back up and running. That's what I've been saying consistently here in Montana. So why is it that the governor was lifting restrictions on the most vulnerable, while keeping restrictions in place on the rest of us?
Here's my reaction to the news. Using taxpayer resources to promote their campaign- why would that be a surprise? Cooney works for a liberal governor who used the state-owned airplane to fly to a Paul McCartney rock concert in Missoula. Liberal Gov. Steve Bullock also wasted more than $300,000 in taxpayer dollars during his presidential run that never really took flight.
Liberal Governor Steve Bullock (D-MT) is getting national attention for stocking his Coronavirus Task Force full of campaign donors. The governor has already taken criticism for being slow to issue out the $1.25 billion in federal aid that Montana's Congressional delegation helped send his direction.