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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zBAQmLsDXew

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the United Nations General Assembly today that “ISIS and Hamas are branches of the same poisonous tree.” He slammed Hamas sympathizers in the U.N. Human Rights Council, who condemned Israel’s handling of the latest Hamas aggression, and offered photographic evidence to prove Hamas uses human shields to defend themselves from Israeli bombs.

“I’ve come to speak on behalf of my people, the people of Israel,” Netanyahu said. “I’ve come here to expose the brazen lies spoken at this podium against my country, and against the brave soldiers who defend it.”

The Israeli prime minister wasted little time in criticizing the United Nation’s for ignoring evidence, enabling the terror group’s tactics and even contributing to the rise of anti-Semitism around the world.

“By investigating Israel rather than Hamas for war crimes, the UN Human Rights Council has betrayed its noble mission to protect the innocent,” Netanyahu stated.

The latest Israeli-Palestian conflict began in June when officials made a grim discovery, locating the bodies of three previously kidnapped Israeli teens in shallow graves in the West Bank. The kidnapping is now largely believed to be a provocation by Hamas, who was suffering financially from a joint Israel-Egypt crackdown on a blockade in the Gaza Strip. The network had been used by Hamas to smuggle weapons and human trafficking aimed at raising ransom money, among other activities. In July, Israel launched an offensive to end what became a constant barrage of rocket fire from the Gaza Strip and even Lebanon into Israeli cities.

Israel took an unprecedented amount of criticism over the attacks, despite taking enormous measures to limit civilian casualties. PPD also confirmed in July that the Gaza interior minister, as well as Hamas itself, had told Palestinians to ignore Israeli evacuation warnings in an effort to run up civilian casualties.

“By granting international legitimacy to the use of human shields, the UN’s Human Rights Council has thus become a Terrorist Rights Council,” he said.

Prime Minister Netanyahu criticized what is either hypocrisy or equally dangerous global ignorance to the nature of the threat from Islamic extremism, and to what would be a more serious threat from a nuclear Iran.

“Last week, many of the countries represented here rightly applauded President Obama for leading the effort to confront ISIS,” Netanyahu said. “And yet weeks before, some of these same countries, the same countries that now support confronting ISIS, opposed Israel for confronting Hamas. They evidently don’t understand that ISIS and Hamas are branches of the same poisonous tree.”

Netanyahu also spoke to the rise of anti-Semitism across Europe that was on full display during the conflict. Swastikas, the abhorrent symbol of the Jew-purging Nazi regime, could be seen at protests throughout France, Britian and even a rally in Washington D.C.

“The Human Rights… that’s an oxymoron, the UN Human Rights Council, but I’ll use it just the same, the Council’s biased treatment of Israel is only one manifestation of the return of the world’s oldest prejudices,” Netanyahu said. “We hear mobs today in Europe call for the gassing of Jews. We hear some national leaders compare Israel to the Nazis. This is not a function of Israel’s policies. It’s a function of diseased minds. And that disease has a name. It’s called anti-Semitism.”

The Israeli people, quite strikingly, overwhelmingly supported the prime minister’s handling of the Hamas conflict. The discovery of a vast network of “terror tunnels” has been a game-changer for Israeli public opinion.

“The people of Israel pray for peace. But our hopes and the world’s hopes for peace are in danger,” Netanyahu said.

He went on to warn that even though Islamic extremists “all share a fanatic ideology,” Iran remains a greater threat than the Islamic State. He said a nuclear Iran “would pose the gravest threat to us all.”

“Iran’s President Rouhani stood here last week, and shed crocodile tears over what he called ‘the globalization of terrorism.’ Maybe he should spare us those phony tears and have a word instead with the commanders of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, the prime minister said.

Iran has long been a leading state sponsor of Islamic terrorism, supplying much of the rocket inventory to Hamas, while sending in al-Qaeda militants to fight and kill U.S. troops in Iraq, which have now evolved into the ISIS threat Rouhani now supposedly weeps over.

“That’s your moderate,” he said. Netanyahu issued an eery warning to nations who are “fooled by Iran’s manipulative charm offensive,” and may be persuaded to “lift the sanctions and remove the obstacles to Iran’s path to the bomb.”

“Once Iran produces atomic bombs, all the charm and all the smiles will suddenly disappear. They’ll just vanish,” he warned. “It’s then that the ayatollahs will show their true face and unleash their aggressive fanaticism on the entire world.”

“To defeat ISIS and leave Iran as a threshold nuclear power is to win the battle and lose the war.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7y8nSRK55Do

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the U.N. General Assembly that a nuclear Iran is a greater threat than the Islamic State, otherwise known as ISIS.

“To defeat ISIS and leave Iran as a threshold nuclear power is to win the battle and lose the war,” Netanyahu said.

Watch the full speech and coverage of PM Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the

paypal ebay split

Ebay Paypal Split Desk. (Photo: AFP/Josep Lago)

EBay Inc. (NASDAQ:EBAY) said it would spin off PayPal, its fast-growing payments business, into a publicly traded company in the second half of 2015. The move marks a complete turnaround for the company, which sent eBay’s shares up 10 percent to $58.15 in pre-market trading.

EBay Chief Executive John Donahoe had previously resisted demands by activist investor Carl Icahn to offer the tax-free spinoff to shareholders, saying PayPal and eBay had dependent business models.

Icahn, eBay’s sixth-largest shareholder with a 2.48 percent stake as of June 30, withdrew his demand in April. He also withdrew his two nominees to eBay’s board, but in a concession, the company added a 10th independent director.

In an interview with the New York Times on Tuesday, Donahoe said that eBay was following Icahn’s strategy to some extent, but also that the decision was made through “a deliberate process” and not by reacting to outside pressure.

“A thorough strategic review with our board shows that keeping eBay and PayPal together beyond 2015 clearly becomes less advantageous to each business strategically and competitively,” Donahoe said in a statement.

EBay said revenue in its marketplaces and enterprise businesses increased 10 percent to $9.9 billion in the last four quarters, while PayPal’s revenue rose 19 percent to $7.2 billion.

The new eBay is to be run by Devin Wenig, president of eBay marketplaces and former head of the markets division of Thomson Reuters Corp.

PayPal’s chief executive after the spinoff will be Dan Schulman, former head of American Express Co’s online and mobile payment business, while EBay’s CEO Donahoe and Chief Financial Officer Bob Swan will oversee the separation and serve on the boards of both companies.

PayPal is no longer alone in their market, as competition from Google Inc’s Google Wallet and a number of other vendors increased substantially over the past 5 years. Apple Inc is also slated to open their own online payments market next month with its newly unveiled service, Apple Pay.

“On PayPal, investors will still contemplate the risk of PayPal directly competing with Apple Pay and Google Wallet, which will likely add some uncertainty to PayPal’s standalone valuation,” Piper Jaffray analysts said.

PayPal was founded in the late 1990s and went public in 2002. It was acquired by eBay soon afterward for $1.5 billion, and now has more than 152 million active users and accounts grew 15 percent last quarter.

EBay had a market value of $65.36 billion as of Monday’s close.

EBay Inc. (NASDAQ:EBAY) said it would spin

home sales and home prices

(Photo: REUTERS)

U.S. single-family home prices rose in July on a year-over-year basis but fell short of expectations, the S&P/Case Shiller composite index reported Thursday. The survey of 20 metropolitan areas increased 6.7 percent in July year over year, missing economists’ expectations of a 7.5 percent gain.

On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, prices in the 20 cities actually fell 0.5 percent in the month of July. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the reading would hold steady.

Non-seasonally adjusted prices rose 0.6 percent in the 20 cities on a monthly basis, also a disappointing miss of expectations for a 1.1 percent rise.

“The broad-based deceleration in home prices continued in the most recent data,” David Blitzer, the chairman of the index committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices said in a statement.

“While the year-over-year figures are trending downward, home prices are still rising month-to-month although at a slower rate than what we are used to seeing over the past couple of years.”

A new, supposedly broader measure of the housing market that S&P/Case-Shiller is now releasing on a monthly basis rose at a slower pace year over year. The reading came in at 5.6 percent.

The seasonally adjusted 10-city gauge dropped 0.5 percent in July compared to a 0.2 percent decline in June, and the non-adjusted 10-city index ticked up 0.6 percent in July juxtaposed to a 1.0 percent rise in June.

Year over year, the 10-city gauge rose 6.7 percent.

U.S. single-family home prices rose in July

Hannity’s Anjem Choudary interview was the first since the London imam was released from jail. The radical Muslim cleric was released on bail Friday after being arrested on suspicion of encouraging terrorism.

Immediately after his release, he said Britain’s vote to join air strikes against ISIS extremists in Iraq will lead to attacks on the UK’s streets.

“I think that David Cameron has plunged Britain into a very bloody war, which will manifest itself on the streets of London,” Choudary said.

“We saw it before with 7/7 [attacks on London on 7 July 2005], 9/11 [attacks on the US on 11 September 2001], it’s inevitable, if they are going to attack Muslims abroad.”

Choudary, 47, was questioned at Southwark Police Station in London, said his arrest was politically motivated and that he opposed terrorist attacks against Britain. However, he is a former spokesman for the banned Islamic extremist group al-Muhajiroun, which the government says reinvented itself under various names, which were also proscribed.

“I’m not involved in any terrorism. I have and will continue to expose the British government for their foreign policy,” Choudary said. “I fight ideas with ideas.”

But Mr. Choudary is responsible for the radicalization of scores of British-born and foreign Islamic terrorists. He has made those ideas plain and clear in a series of tweets before his arrest, as well as during the last interview with Sean Hannity.

In the heated exchange, he expressed his support for the terror army ISIS and justified the actions of Hamas and other terror groups.

Two men, aged 33 and 42, who were arrested in the early hours of Friday on the M6 motorway near Rugby, remain in custody at a central London police station. Scotland Yard said that three of the searches conducted are ongoing and that

Hannity's Anjem Choudary interview was the first

Tracy Morgan Accident

FILE – In this April 9, 2014 file photo, actor Tracy Morgan attends the FX Networks Upfront premiere screening of ‘Fargo’ at the SVA Theater in New York. (Photo: Greg Allen/Invision/AP)

In a court filing Monday, Walmart said actor-comedian Tracy Morgan and other passengers are at least partly to blame for their injuries because they weren’t wearing seat belts.

Morgan’s limousine was hit from behind by a Walmart truck on a highway back in June, an accident in which his friend James McNair was killed as the group traveled back from a show in Delaware. Morgan spent several weeks in rehab with rib and leg injuries.

Walmart Stores Inc., based in Bentonville, Arkansas, submitted the brief in response to a lawsuit Morgan filed in July over the accident, and argues that the passengers’ injuries were caused “in whole or in part” by their “failure to properly wear an appropriate available seatbelt restraint device.” The claim argued this constitutes unreasonable conduct.

An attorney representing Morgan and the other plaintiffs called Walmart’s court filing “surprising and appalling.”

“It’s disingenuous,” attorney Benedict Morelli said. “It’s not what they said they were going to do initially, which was take full responsibility. I’m very upset, not for myself but for the families I represent.”

The lawsuit seeks a jury trial, punitive and compensatory damages. The plaintiffs contend the retail giant should have known that its truck driver had been awake for more than 24 hours before the crash and that his commute of 700 miles from his home in Georgia to work in Delaware was “unreasonable.”

They also allege the driver fell asleep at the wheel.

Walmart spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan said in an email that the company “continues to stand willing to work with Mr. Morgan and the other plaintiffs to resolve this matter.”

The plaintiffs in the case include Ardley Fuqua, Jeffrey Millea and Millea’s wife, Krista Millea, though Krista Millea was not actually in the limousine when the crash occurred took place. She claims she has a related loss-of-services lawsuit stemming from the crash.

Truck driver Kevin Roper, of Jonesboro, Georgia, pleaded not guilty to death by auto and assault by auto charges in state court. A criminal complaint also accuses him of not sleeping for more than 24 hours before the crash, a violation of New Jersey law.

A report by federal transportation safety investigators said Roper was driving 65 mph in the minute before he slammed into the limo van. Though often higher in most stretches, the speed limit on that particular stretch of the New Jersey Turnpike is 55 mph, but was lowered to 45 mph on the night of the accident due to construction.

Roper had been on the job about 13 1/2 hours at the time of the crash, the report concluded. Federal rules permit truck drivers to work up to 14 hours a day, with a maximum of 11 hours behind the wheel.

In a court filing Monday, Walmart said

Obama 60 minutes intel 'underestimated' isis

Steve Kroft interviews President Obama on CBS News for ’60 Minutes’ on Sept. 29, 2014.

In an interview with Steve Kroft Sunday on “60 Minutes,” President Obama blamed U.S. intelligence officials who he claimed “underestimated” the threat posed by the Islamic State, otherwise known as ISIS or ISIL, and overestimated the Iraqi army’s capacity to defeat the militant group.

“Well I think, our head of the intelligence community, Jim Clapper, has acknowledged that I think they underestimated what had been taking place in Syria,” Obama said.

Kroft pushed back on the first claim completely and made a respectful attempt to clarify the second. However, neither of President Obama’s claims are completely accurate, nor does this represent the first time the commander-in-chief has thrown a weary intelliegnce community under the bus for his failure to make the correct decision or even a decision at all.

In a move that added to what had already been a strained relationship between U.S. intelligence agencies and the White House, the president blamed bad intel for the failed attempt to rescue American journalist James Foley, an operation that only went public after the White House leaked it to the media with the hopes of stopping the president’s free-falling poll numbers. Just minutes after he made a statement on the beheading of 40-year-old Foley from his vacation at Martha’s Vineyard, Obama could be seen giving high fives at a high-end gulf course with an ear-to-ear grin. When he came under fire for more-than bad optics, the White House leaked the story to the media.

Multiple sources from U.S. intel agencies pushed back on the president’s claim, and stated the threat from ISIS and rise of Islamic radicalism was made perfectly clear to President Obama by members of both the intelligence and defense communities. A report from the West Point counterterrorism center concluded the Obama administration consistently ignored actionable intelligence suggesting the Islamic State was rising over a four-year period, a time period that directly paralleled the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq.

“ISIL did not suddenly become effective in early June 2014,” the report stated. “It has been steadily strengthening and actively shaping the future operating environment for four years.”

A senior Pentagon official said that President Obama was given “detailed and specific intelligence” regarding the rise of the Islamic State during his daily briefing at least a year before the group began seizing vast amounts of territory in Iraq and Syria over the summer. The dueling reports painted a very dim pictures about the president’s ability to carry out his duties as commander-in-chief, and raised numerous questions surrounding his actions over the past few years.

The president, however, offered a vastly different explanation.

“Well, here’s what happened in Iraq. When we left, we had left them a democracy that was intact, a military that was well equipped, and the ability then to chart their own course,” Obama told Kroft. “And that opportunity was squandered over the course of five years or so because the prime minister, Maliki, was much more interested in consolidating his Shiite base and very suspicious of the Sunnis and the Kurds, who make up the other two-thirds of the country.”

The tension between al-Maliki and the minority populations in Iraq was also not a new development. President George W. Bush dealt with the same dynamic, which is part of the reason why he correctly warned early withdrawal of U.S. troops would thrust Iraq into chaos, a sentiment shared by military commanders in both administrations. The difference was in Bush’s willingness to hold al-Maliki’s hand while ground troops continued to stabilize the baby democracy.

“During the chaos of the Syrian civil war, where essentially you have huge swaths of the country that are completely ungoverned, they were able to reconstitute themselves and take advantage of that chaos,” Obama said.

That was largely the case in Syria, but in an interview following the president’s address to the nation, during which he laid out his strategy for dealing with ISIS, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) blamed his decision to overrule his entire national security team on the issue of arming the moderate Syrian rebels. There is little consensus over whether the Syrian rebels are still moderate or capable, but McCain says arming them now will be “extremely difficult” due to how long the president has waited.

Despite comments made on the very same program just two weeks ago by Leon Panetta — the president’s own former defense secretary — which blamed the president’s decisions for the rise of ISIS, Kroft offered no challenge.

The uncertain Syrian rebels are a group that President Obama on August 8 — just a few short weeks before his speech — disregarded as “an opposition made up of former doctors, farmers, pharmacists, and so forth.” Yet, they are now an intricate plank of Obama’s strategy to defeat the terror army.

In order to sell that strategy and justify failing to seek congressional approval for the air campaigns and arming of shady groups, the White House is attempting to recreate the narrative.

“On the other hand, in terms of immediate threats to the United States, ISIL, Khorasan Group — those folks could kill Americans,” he said.

Andrew C. McCarthy, a former U.S. Attorney and expert in Islamic terrorism, wrote a blistering op-ed over the weekend claiming the president made up the new threat known as the Khorasan Group as an answer for two problems.

“There is a reason that no one had heard of such a group until a nanosecond ago, when the ‘Khorosan Group’ suddenly went from anonymity to the ‘imminent threat’ that became the rationale for an emergency air war there was supposedly no time to ask Congress to authorize,” McCarthy says.

“You haven’t heard of the Khorosan Group because there isn’t one. It is a name the administration came up with, calculating that Khorosan — the –Iranian–​Afghan border region — had sufficient connection to jihadist lore that no one would call the president on it.”

The president did spend his entire first term ending what he perceived to be a threatening U.S. troop presence in the Middle East, while subsequently trying to convince the American people the threat from Islamic terrorism — which he won’t name — has receded.

Now, Obama wants to make it clear to Americans and our enemies that he will not send a major U.S. ground presence beyond the 1,600 American advisers and special operations troops he already has ordered to Iraq, or anywhere else for that matter.

“We are assisting Iraq in a very real battle that’s taking place on their soil, with their troops,” the president said. “This is not America against ISIL. This is America leading the international community to assist a country with whom we have a security partnership.”

Earlier Sunday, House Speaker John Boehner questioned Obama’s strategy to destroy the Islamic State group. Boehner said on ABC’s “This Week” that the U.S. may have “no choice” but to send in American troops if pinprick U.S.-led airstrikes are not enough to ensure Iraqi, Kurdish and rebel Syrian ground forces can defeat ISIS.

“These are barbarians. They intend to kill us,” Boehner said. “And if we don’t destroy them first, we’re going to pay the price.”

In an interview with Steve Kroft Sunday

The National Association of Realtors reported Monday that signed contracts to buy previously-owned homes fell 1 percent in August, a far steeper decline than the 0.1 percent fall Wall Street anticipated. The report ends four consecutive months of gains, as sale increases in the Northeast and Midwest were weighed down by larger-than-expected declines in the South and West.

“There was a marked decline in all-cash sales from investors,” said Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist. “On the positive side, first-time buyers have a better chance of purchasing a home now that bidding wars are receding and supply constraints have significantly eased in many parts of the country.”

Total sales of existing-home sales, a measurement of completed transactions that include single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, fell 1.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.05 million in August. For the prior months of July, the same measure was downwardly-revised 5.14 million. While sales were clocked in at the second-highest rate in 2014, they remain 5.3 percent under the 5.33 million-unit level from August of last year.

Existing-home sales in the Northeast increased 4.7 percent to an annual rate of 670,000, but also remain 4.3 percent below sales measured a year ago. The median price in the Northeast was $265,800, which is 0.8 percent lower than a year ago.

In the Midwest, existing-home sales increased 2.5 percent to an annual level of 1.24 million in August, but remain 3.9 percent below August 2013. The median price in the Midwest was $173,800, an increase of 5.9 percent from a year ago.

However, existing-home sales in the South fell 4.2 percent to an annual rate of 2.03 million in August, bringing them down 4.2 percent from August 2013. The median price in the South was $186,700, up 4.7 percent from a year ago.

Meanwhile, existing-home sales in the West fell 5.1 percent to an annual rate of 1.11 million in August, and now measure down 9.8 percent from a year ago. The median price in the West was $301,900, or 5.4 percent above measurements from the prior year.

Still, despite the dim news, the NRA’s chief economist remains optimistic.

“As long as solid job growth continues,” Yung adds, “wages should eventually pick up to steadily improve purchasing power and help fully release the pent-up demand for buying.”

The National Association of Realtors reported Monday

consumer spending

(Photo: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The Commerce Department said on Monday consumer spending rose 0.5 percent last month after being unchanged in July. The growth in August was slightly higher than forecast in a Reuters poll of a 0.4 percent gain.

Even after adjusting for inflation, spending was 0.5 percent higher, which is the biggest increase measured since March of this year. Growth in personal income also increased to a 0.3 percent gain, meeting economists’ forecasts. However, unfortunately much of the strength in spending came from a decrease in the saving rate, which pulled back from a 1-1/2-year high in July.

The impact of the Fed’s bond-buying program is negative on the ability of average, working Americans to save, as the interest rates in savings return zero to little.

Still, the new reports suggests the U.S. economy will finish this year stronger than the last, and the dollar has at least for now stopped its free-fall in the wage of the report.

Most investors expect the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates next year to keep inflation in check, though Monday’s data gave little sign of growing price pressures.

The Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation was up 1.5 percent in August from a year earlier, down slightly from the reading in July, while a measure of underlying price pressures that exclude food and energy remains unchanged at 1.5 percent.

Data on Friday showed the U.S. economy grew at its fastest pace in 2-1/2 years in the second quarter with all sectors showing positive signs. But concerns over lacking consumer spending, which contributes to the vast majority of gross domestic product, were growing.

Now that the data show signs of strong consumer spending during that period, optimism is growing.

The Commerce Department said on Monday consumer

ersnt braley iowa senate debate

Democrat Rep. Bruce Braley spent most of the first Iowa Senate debate on his heels, forced to defend his skipping out of hearings on veterans’ affairs, votes on healthcare and past gaffes.

Republican Joni Ernst, an Iowa state senator who potentially could become the first female senator elected by Iowans, too had to explain her positions on social issues, minimum wage and Social Security. The heated debate tool place just one night after an Iowa poll showed the Republican up by six points.

Ernst came on swinging on ObamaCare, immigration and Braley’s record, stating that he is running a negative campaign because he cannot defend against his positions and record.

“Every Iowan deserves access to affordable healthcare. But ObamaCare is not the answer in this case,” Ernst said on ObamaCare. “We are seeing it cost jobs,” she added, noting studies of layoffs among insurance workers and physicians. “It’s also an increased tax on Iowans and Americans, $1.2 trillion.”

Braley, who is a member of the Veterans Affairs’ Committee, also found himself defending his dedication to veterans. Enrst noted that Braley missed 75 percent of the hearings with the panel.

“I’ve been there for veterans,” he said “I’ve made 97 percent of the votes at the VA hearing to stand up for veterans and I fight for them every day.”

Not only did Braley attend just 4 out of 19 hearings of the full Veterans’ Affairs Committee from 2011 to 2012, according to minutes from the U.S. Government Printing Office, but subsequent explanations for why he missed a whopping 78 percent of those hearings are turning out to be false.

A report from the Des Moines Register claimed Braley attended three fundraisers for his own campaign on Sept. 20, 2012, a day the committee was slated to address VA backlogs and a gross lack of oversight at the Veterans Administration. The DMR poll showed two-thirds of Iowans say Braley skipping those meetings were a real problem.

However, Braley came back at Ernst on issues such as the minimum wage, which she does not believe should even exist. Braley charged that Ernst did not want to raise Iowa’s wage. Instead of responding directly, Ernst said Braley’s proposal to raise the minimum wage would not improve the economy.

“If 300,000 Iowans would get a pay raise simply by raising the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, that tells me that a lot of Iowans are missing out on this booming economy that Sen. Ernst is talking about,” Braley said.

The vast amount of economic data come to a consensus that minimum wage increases do cost jobs. A recent CBO report says the plan by President Obama and fellow Democrats to increase the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour would cost at least 500,000 jobs. Outgoing Sen. Tom Harkin, whose seat the two candidates are racing to fill, authored the Senate legislation that would raise the minimum wage.

“And as the CBO report affirms, an increase in the minimum wage will help lift families out of poverty,” he said. But the CBO didn’t support that position.

A Des Moines Register poll released Saturday found Ernst pulling ahead in the race, 44 percent to 38 percent. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee was forced to release internal polling showing the race was tied, but internals are dubious at best.

The Iowa Senate race is rated a “Toss-Up” by PPD’s 2014 Senate Map Predictions model.

Democrat Rep. Bruce Braley spent most of

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