Arizona U.S. Senate candidate Blake Masters has been put through the ringer in recent weeks, being falsely maligned as changing his views on abortion and being a white nationalist among other smears.
But he’s still standing.
According to a new poll conducted by the Trafalgar Group from Aug. 24-27, it shows that Masters is within three points of incumbent Democrat Senator Mark Kelly. This is practically within the margin of error.
The results can be seen here:
Big League Politics has reported on the tremendous intellect of Masters as he speaks about the myriad of reasons behind American decline:
“Arizona Senate candidate Blake Masters is pointing to declining rates of homeownership, marriage and birthrates as evidence of the unraveling of the American social fabric, pledging to work to ameliorate the pervasive blocks to family formation and prosperous communities if elected. Mr. Masters made reference to the set of problems in a Tuesday interview with American Moment, a national populist think tank…
Republicans who emphasize family values have at times proven unwilling to offer solutions for America’s declining birthrate and social-economic dysfunction, problems abetted by an economy increasingly structured exclusively to generate profits for massive global corporations and corrupt oligarchs.
Both American birthrates and the rate of marriage in the United States hit all-time lows during the coronavirus epidemic, amounting to a disaster for social, economic and political stability in the country. Ever-increasing percentages of single-family homes available on the real estate market have been gobbled up by Wall Street hedge funds such as Blackrock, with home prices rising monumentally. The economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic has resulted in the greatest transfer of wealth to the wealthiest American oligarchs in history, with Americans increasingly divided into rich and poor as the middle class disappears…
Masters proposes rebuilding a middle-class American economy through reducing immigration, placing the interests of small and medium businesses over those of global corporations, and stringent pro-American trade policies. The Thiel Capital executive has emerged as a prominent voice among new generations of Republicans willing to criticize corporate domination over the US economy, at times hearkening back to authentic and pro-American ‘progressivism’ as it was known in the era of Teddy Roosevelt.”
Masters is not a traditional politician and he scares the establishment of both parties. This is why the Republican machine is denying him $8 million in an ad buy this year. Nevertheless, Masters remains competitive, and the America First movement must rally around him to get him in the Senate where the country desperately needs him.