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Harris gets big boost in shocking last-minute swing state predictions

Harris gets big boost in shocking last-minute swing state predictions

Instead, lawyer Chris Gober argued that the money paid out every day since early October to a registered voter in a battleground state who signed a pledge to uphold the First and Second Amendments is a salary that the recipients supposedly “deserve” to be speakers of the Constitution to be PAC. Eligible voters are registered in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania or Wisconsin and are not selected at random but based on their personal history and their “fitness for office,” Gober said.

“The $1 million recipients are not chosen at random,” Gober said said. “We know exactly who will be announced as the $1 million recipient today and tomorrow.”

In response, attorneys from the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office responded sue Musk and the PAC for operating an illegal lottery in the Keystone State argued that this was a “full admission of liability,” especially since Musk said so in his first attempt announced the raffle that the recipients would be selected “randomly”. To make their point, the prosecution's lawyers showed the judge Musk's statement. In response, Gober tried to argue that “random” and “random” were two different things, in his case that Musk's giveaway was not an illegal lottery.

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