ReportWire

Tag: 2024 elections

  • Eric Holder Says It Would Be ‘Absurd’ For Trump To Serve As President If Convicted

    Eric Holder Says It Would Be ‘Absurd’ For Trump To Serve As President If Convicted

    Eric Holder, who served as attorney general under President Barack Obama, on Sunday said it would be “simply absurd” for Donald Trump to serve as president again if he is found guilty of mishandling classified documents.

    The former president, who is currently the front-runner for the 2024 Republican nomination, was indicted on 37 counts over keeping top secret documents after he left the White House in January 2021 and allegedly obstructing government efforts to recover them.

    Despite the damning charges, which include willful retention of national defense information and conspiracy to obstruct justice, Trump has continued to claim he’s innocent and appears determined to stay in the 2024 presidential contest.

    “The notion that you could have a trial, defend it, be convicted, somehow win the election, be sworn in as a president, or whenever it happens, that seems inconsistent with our notion of fairness, of the rule of law,” Holder said on MSNBC’s “Inside with Jen Psaki.”

    Holder added that he would hope that an impeachment proceeding would be triggered if Trump were to be found guilty while in office, and that he would ultimately be removed from the role.

    “The notion that a convicted felon … would serve as president of the United States is absurd, is simply absurd,” Holder said.

    But Trump has said he has no intention of stepping aside.

    “I’ll never leave,” Trump told Politico Saturday. “Look, if I would have left, I would have left prior to the original race in 2016. That was a rough one. In theory that was not doable.”

    Holder also expressed concern about Aileen Cannon, the judge who will preside over the case, saying she doesn’t have the “legal acumen” to oversee a case of this importance.

    Cannon, who was appointed by Trump in 2020, was criticized over her decision to grant the former president’s request for a special master to review the documents the FBI obtained during a search of Mar-a-Lago in August. Her ruling was overturned by a federal appeals court.

    “I would hope that she would see within herself, or that somehow, some way, she is convinced that she should get off the case and some other judge should handle this matter,” Holder said. “I don’t have confidence in her abilities to be fair, or to be seen as fair.”

    He added that Cannon as a presiding judge would have the power to affect the case in a number of ways.

    “But the one that concerns me the most is the notion of delay, and pushing this case, you know, past the general election, certainly well into the primary season, just by the way in which she schedules things,” Holder added.

    Source link

  • DeSantis Opts Not To Take On Trump Over Secret Documents Indictment

    DeSantis Opts Not To Take On Trump Over Secret Documents Indictment

    GREENSBORO, N.C. — Despite an indictment packed with details of Donald Trump’s alleged schemes to hold on to top secret files in defiance of a grand jury subpoena, Trump’s leading GOP rival, Ron DeSantis, didn’t once mention the 37-count document that could send the former president to prison during a Friday night speech to North Carolina Republicans.

    The Florida governor barely alluded to the issue at all and introduced the topic by returning to the old standby of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s private email server, which wound up hosting some classified documents.

    “Gee, as a naval officer, if I had taken classified on my phone, I would have been court-martialed in a New York minute,” he said. “And yet, they seem to not care about that. Is there a different standard for a Democrat secretary of state versus a former Republican president? I think there needs to be one standard of justice in this country.”

    DeSantis, who has been happy to attack Trump for his handling of COVID, his failure to build a wall along the U.S. southern border and other hot-button issues for the Republican primary voting base, appears unwilling to mention an issue that could make Trump unelectable in a general election.

    After Trump was indicted in March in New York City on charges of falsifying business records to hide a $130,000 payoff to a porn star, DeSantis at first remarked that he had no expertise in the area of hush-money payments. But after receiving criticism for not joining in the general Republican condemnation of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, DeSantis got in line and announced that he would refuse to turn Trump over for prosecution had he been asked to.

    “Florida will not assist in an extradition request given the questionable circumstances at issue with this Soros-backed Manhattan prosecutor and his political agenda,” De Santis wrote in a Twitter post.

    On Thursday night, two hours and 32 minutes after Trump announced on his personal social media platform that he had been indicted, DeSantis joined the chorus of pro-Trump voices complaining about unequal justice.

    “Why so zealous in pursuing Trump yet so passive about Hillary or Hunter? The DeSantis administration will bring accountability to the DOJ, excise political bias and end weaponization once and for all,” the Florida governor wrote.

    Republican presidential candidate Gov. Ron DeSantis delivers remarks June 9, 2023, in Greensboro, North Carolina.

    DeSantis was the guest speaker at Friday’s “Old North State Dinner” at North Carolina Republicans’ annual convention. Former Vice President Mike Pence is set to speak Saturday afternoon, and Trump is scheduled to speak Saturday night.

    Taking no questions from the 900 or so people filling the Greensboro Sheraton’s main ballroom, DeSantis instead spent his 45 minutes onstage running through his now-familiar stump speech. He bragged about his “wins” in Florida, including a six-week abortion ban, a ban on “diversity, equity and inclusion” programs at state universities and his more general “war on woke.”

    His only standing ovation came when boasting of his attack on the Walt Disney Co. for criticizing him and his parental rights in education bill. “There will be no compromise,” he said.

    The closest DeSantis came to criticizing Trump, who leads him by double digits in polls, was alluding to the bad election results the party has suffered since the former developer and game show host won the White House in 2016.

    Republicans lost the House in 2018, both the White House and the Senate in 2020, and, notwithstanding expectations of a “red wave,” barely won back the House while actually losing another seat in the Senate in 2022.

    “We have a task in front of us to shake the culture of losing that has infected the Republican Party in recent years,” he said. “We have to stop frittering away winnable elections.”

    Trump is facing two other criminal investigations on top of the two he is already under indictment for: a second probe by the DOJ for his Jan. 6, 2021, coup attempt; and a Georgia state investigation for his attempt to overturn the election there.

    He is nevertheless seeking the presidency again and leads most polls of the 2024 GOP field.

    Source link

  • Newt Gingrich Makes Shameless Election Fraud Claims Enabled By Maria Bartiromo

    Newt Gingrich Makes Shameless Election Fraud Claims Enabled By Maria Bartiromo

    Fox News host Maria Bartiromo on Sunday set the table for guest Newt Gingrich to spew infuriating falsehoods about Democrats and elections. (Watch the video below.)

    “Democrats have a passion for stealing them,” the Republican former House speaker said without a hint of shame.

    Gingrich, a Fox News contributor, also claimed without evidence that union workers railroaded nursing-home residents to vote for Democrats, and that fair elections are now impossible.

    Bartiromo was a prominent figure in Dominion Voting System’s defamation lawsuit against Fox News in which it said the network falsely claimed machines were rigged in 2020. The channel agreed to pay $787.5 million in its settlement of the suit.

    But there she was on Sunday throwing obvious setup questions to Gingrich so he could spout more right-wing claptrap about election “integrity.” Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump continues to use his 2020 defeat as a campaign platform, encouraging the likes of Bartiromo to extend the conversation on the air. However, Mediaite noted that Bartiromo and Gingrich were careful to make no specific allegations.

    “Are the Republicans doing enough to ensure a free and fair election in 2024?” Bartiromo asked Gingrich.

    “I think it’s probably almost impossible under current law to ensure an accurate election,” Gingrich replied. “And I think the only Republican strategy in the long run is to pick issues and win by margins so big that they can’t steal it. If you have a very close election, Democrats have a passion for stealing them.”

    And then this unsubstantiated doozy from the former lawmaker:

    “When you have the local union, which takes care of people in a nursing home going in to vote, the people who literally don’t cognitively know what they’re doing, you know that that union is going to vote every single one of them for a Democrat no matter what their personal beliefs were,” Gingrich said, perhaps referring to Trump claims that have been debunked.

    “In states dominated by Democrats, like New York, Illinois, California, you just have to assume that the machine will steal as much as it can,” he added.

    “Wow!” Bartiromo said.

    Bartiromo has been named as a defendant in Smartmatic’s pending suit that claims Fox News repeated falsehoods that Smartmatic voting machines tilted the election in President Joe Biden’s favor.

    Trafalgar voting group pollster Robert Cahaly got the ball rolling in the segment by stoking fears of “untraceable” votes.

    Source link

  • Ron DeSantis To Announce Presidential Bid On Twitter With Elon Musk

    Ron DeSantis To Announce Presidential Bid On Twitter With Elon Musk

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) is expected to announce he is running for president on Wednesday evening during a livestreamed conversation with Twitter CEO Elon Musk.

    Musk shared the update, which was first reported by NBC News and Fox News, on his own Twitter page Tuesday.

    Prior reports suggested DeSantis would launch his bid for the White House this week.

    Source link

  • Ron DeSantis Outlines Vision To Remold Supreme Court, Takes Subtle Jab At Trump

    Ron DeSantis Outlines Vision To Remold Supreme Court, Takes Subtle Jab At Trump

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis offered conservative Christians a two-term plan to shove the Supreme Court even further to the right on Monday.

    DeSantis has yet to officially announce his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination. But he was in full campaign mode, hoping to rouse the party’s religious base with the prospect of a 7-2 conservative advantage in the high court over eight years. The time span reference was likely a veiled dig at his potential rival for the White House, former President Donald Trump, who is only eligible to serve one more four-year term.

    “I think if you look over the next two presidential terms, there is a good chance that you could be called upon to seek replacements for Justice Clarence Thomas and Justice Samuel Alito and the issue with that is, you can’t really do better than those two,” DeSantis told the National Religious Broadcasters convention in Orlando, per The Washington Post.

    DeSantis warned of a jurist replacement in the mold of John Roberts, a conservative who is perceived by many to be a centrist.

    “If you replace a Clarence Thomas with somebody like a Roberts or somebody like that, then you’re gonna actually see the court move to the left, and you can’t do that,” he said.

    DeSantis suggested that Roberts and liberal Sonia Sotomayor might also retire in the near future.

    “So it is possible that in those eight years, we’d have the opportunity to fortify Justices Alito and Thomas, as well as actually make improvements with those others. And if you were able to do that, you would have a 7 to 2 conservative majority on the Supreme Court that would last a quarter-century,” the governor said to cheers, per Florida Politics.

    Trump picked three judges ― the most by any president since Ronald Reagan, according to Pew Research. All of them ― conservatives Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett ― are in their 50s. The three are likely to enforce more conservative rulings such as the recent overturning of Roe v. Wade’s federal abortion protections.

    Source link

  • GOP Presidential Hopeful Nikki Haley: ‘Not Realistic’ To Push Federal Abortion Ban

    GOP Presidential Hopeful Nikki Haley: ‘Not Realistic’ To Push Federal Abortion Ban

    Republican presidential hopeful Nikki Haley said Sunday it’s “not realistic” for candidates to commit to a federal abortion ban, saying any GOPer who pledges to enact one is “not being honest with the American people.”

    Haley made the comments in an interview on CBS’ “Face the Nation” Sunday after host Margaret Brennan pressed her to clarify her stance on abortion. The former South Carolina governor called for the country to reach a “national consensus” on abortion last month, but has not espoused a specific cut-off period from which the procedure should be banned.

    “For a national standard, I think we have to tell the American people the truth,” Haley said. “In order to do a national standard, you would have to have a majority of the House, 60 Senate votes, and a president. We haven’t had 60 pro-life senators in 100 years.”

    “So the idea that a Republican president could ban all abortions is not being honest with the American people,” she added.

    Brennan noted that Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), another presidential hopeful, has pushed a 20-week federal abortion ban, which is the legal cut-off in the state of South Carolina. Haley signed that measure into law when she led the state in 2016.

    “I’m not going to lie to the American people,” Haley responded. “Nothing’s going to happen if we don’t get 60 votes in the Senate. We’re not even close to that on the Republican or the Democrat side.”

    She went on: “Why try and divide people further? Why not talk about the fact that we should be trying to save as many babies as possible and support as many mothers as possible? I think the media has tried to divide them by saying we have to decide certain weeks. In states, yes. At the federal level, it’s not realistic.”

    Trump himself has largely avoided abortion during his reelection bid, while other potential Republican nominees have pushed their strong anti-abortion records, including former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and former Vice President Mike Pence.

    Haley, who also served as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, launched her bid for the White House in February, the first Republican to challenge former President Donald Trump.

    “Republicans have lost the popular vote in seven out of the last eight presidential elections,” Haley said in her announcement. “That has to change. …It’s time for a new generation of leadership.”

    Source link

  • Trump’s Still Stuck In 2020, And Other Takeaways From His CNN Town Hall

    Trump’s Still Stuck In 2020, And Other Takeaways From His CNN Town Hall

    Donald Trump is still running like it’s 2020.

    It’s been well over two years since Trump lost the last presidential election, but we might as well still be binging “Tiger King” and washing our groceries.

    During a CNN town hall filled with New Hampshire voters who planned to vote in the state’s first-in-the-nation GOP presidential primary ― the audience seemed to side more often with Trump than the network’s Kaitlan Collins, the moderator who fought an unwinnable battle to fact-check Trump in real time — the former president seemed frozen in time.

    Even Trump’s insult of moderator Collins, calling her a “nasty person” for her fact checks, harkened back to the insults he’s used against other women. He famously called his then-opponent Hillary Clinton a “nasty woman” during a presidential debate in 2016.

    The event made clear that Trump doesn’t intend to refine his approach at all to capture the votes that clearly eluded him in 2020. He’s still hellbent on talking about unpopular issues and acting as if he’s already the GOP nominee, despite the swelling GOP primary field and the opposition he’ll likely soon face from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

    Here are the takeaways from a bizzaro 2024 town hall.

    Trump in 2024 is very much Trump in 2020.

    Trump Acted Like He’s Already The GOP Nominee

    Except for a mention or two of DeSantis — whom Trump has anointed with the clumsy nickname “DeSanctimonious” — the former president didn’t speak much about his possible opponents, undercutting the idea the town hall was for the primary.

    Even though polls show Trump with a healthy early lead in the primary, he is acting as if his main opponent right now is President Joe Biden and ignoring the Republican rivals, declared or likely, who might ascend over the next year. Those include former UN ambassador Nikki Haley, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy.

    Trump spent relatively little time going after Biden, either, despite his campaign releasing a statement that claimed Trump “laid out his vision to reverse the Biden Decline.”

    Trump alluded to the polls that show him beating his next closest rival, DeSantis, after Collins asked him whether his recent loss in the civil case brought by the writer E. Jean Carroll, who accused Trump of rape, might lose him votes. “My poll numbers just went up,” Trump said, to audience applause.

    Trump Is Still Talking About Unpopular Issues

    The town hall did not go well for CNN. But that doesn’t mean it went well for Trump.

    While the former president declined to give a straight answer on a federal abortion ban — “what I will do is negotiate so that people are happy” — he took credit for the Supreme Court’s unpopular reversal of Roe v. Wade, giving Democrats a fresh soundbite when he called it a “great victory.”

    The GOP needs to toe a delicate line after the 2022 midterms and subsequent special elections revealed the backlash to the elimination of abortion rights was far more intense than they expected. Polls consistently show a majority of the country is upset about the reversal of Roe, a ruling Trump enabled with the appointment of three of the Supreme Court justices who struck down the decades-old precedent.

    Trump and the rest of the GOP presidential primary field are in a tricky spot: They need to woo conservative evangelicals in the presidential primary while not staking out an extreme position that would alienate moderates in the general election.

    The former president has yet to moderate any of the previous stances that are similarly duds for voters. He opened the town hall harping on the 2020 election and his enduring lie that it was stolen, deflected blame for the Jan. 6 attack and the ensuing violence at the Capitol, and refused to condemn Russia and ensure military aid to Ukraine.

    Democrats were excited by Trump’s performance. “It’s simple, folks,” Biden’s reelection campaign wrote on Twitter, providing a link to donate to the incumbent. “Do you want four more years of that?”

    Source link

  • Ron DeSantis Was Concerned He Could ‘Piss Off’ Trump Base Back In 2018

    Ron DeSantis Was Concerned He Could ‘Piss Off’ Trump Base Back In 2018

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis appeared to be worried about alienating Donald Trump’s base long before the road to 2024.

    DeSantis openly debated how to handle his Trump problem in 2018 when he was running for governor of the Sunshine State.

    Video of mock debate sessions released by ABC News on Sunday shows the politician wondering about how to walk the line between moderate appeal and MAGA zealotry.

    Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) helped prep DeSantis in the video, asking him, “Is there any issue upon which you disagree with President Trump?”

    The then-congressman sighed as he admitted, “I have to figure out how to do this.”

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at a press conference on May 1, 2023.

    Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

    Tracing out a strategy, DeSantis continued, “Obviously there is because, I mean, I voted contrary to him in the Congress. I have to frame it in a way that’s not going to piss off all his voters.”

    The Florida Republican settled on a hazy answer, telling Gaetz he would “do what I think is right,” and “support [Trump’s] agenda.”

    “If I have a disagreement, I talk to him in private,” he concluded.

    While DeSantis has yet to officially launch a presidential campaign, insiders say he is skipping the customary exploratory committee phase. They expect an announcement to come before June, according to The Washington Post.

    Sources close to DeSantis also say debate prep is already underway.

    A CBS News-YouGov poll released Monday found Trump leading the pack of actual and potential Republican presidential candidates with 58% of likely Republican voters backing the former POTUS. DeSantis followed with 22% support.

    Source link

  • A Diminished Donald Trump Unleashes 3rd Presidential Campaign In Texas

    A Diminished Donald Trump Unleashes 3rd Presidential Campaign In Texas

    WACO, Texas — Thousands of Donald Trump’s most devoted fans gathered for a rally at Waco Regional Airport Saturday, hoping to lift the scandal-plagued and increasingly isolated candidate back to the top of the Republican Party and into the presidency.

    The Trump campaign has billed the appearance in Waco as the first official rally of the former president’s third White House bid.

    It’s a favorable location for Trump. Back in the 2020 election, he trounced Democratic rival Joe Biden by more than 23 percentage points in McLennan County, which includes Waco. And the symbolism of appearing in the city, the site of the federal government’s 1993 siege on the gun-hoarding Branch Davidian religious group that left scores of people dead, jibes with Trump’s fierce anti-establishment streak.

    Waving banners reading “Take America Back” and sporting American-flag striped clothes, supporters dismissed the long string of allegations threatening to land Trump in legal trouble.

    Vendors sell Trump souvenirs ahead of a 2024 campaign rally by former US President Donald Trump in Waco, Texas, March 25, 2023. Trump held the rally at the site of the deadly 1993 standoff between an anti-government cult and federal agents.

    SUZANNE CORDEIRO via Getty Images

    Texas native Manuel Flores flew home from California to attend the rally with his family.

    “It’s an amazing crowd,” Flores told HuffPost. “Aside from all the controversy going on with Donald Trump, I’m glad that we have a really good energy going on here… Hopefully, this rally comes to fruition, and we get a good president again.”

    But Trump faces a long battle to rekindle the devotion he once enjoyed in Texas, as he stumbles through several high-profile investigations while trying to fight his way through a tough primary.

    The Manhattan district attorney’s office is conducting a grand jury probe into hush-money payments to an adult film star that Trump said will soon end in an indictment.

    The former president also faces a federal probe into his handling of classified documents at his Florida home, an investigation into his role in the riot at the U.S. Capitol in 2021, a criminal inquiry in Georgia for allegedly interfering with the 2020 presidential election, and a civil lawsuit that could result in the revocation of his right to do business in New York.

    However, none of that diminished Trump’s stature in the eyes of his most enthusiastic supporters.

    Supporters of Trump arrive for a 2024 election campaign rally in Waco, Texas, on March 25, 2023.
    Supporters of Trump arrive for a 2024 election campaign rally in Waco, Texas, on March 25, 2023.

    SUZANNE CORDEIRO via Getty Images

    “If they had some serious charges, it might change my mind,” said Craig Cantrell, who drove in with his wife from nearby Rockdale.

    “They’ve been after this poor man for one thing after the other,” Austin resident Colleen Ford told HuffPost. “Do I think he’s polarizing? Yes. And he is kind of an asshole, the way he talks to people. But if I’m going to hire a supervisor, I’m not going to do it based on their personality… I’m going to pick the best person for the job.”

    Several said the looming threat of criminal charges only strengthened their resolve to send him back to the White House.

    “It makes you want to vote for him more,” Scott Pierce, 50, told HuffPost. “[Democrats] don’t want him to run because they’re scared he’ll win.”

    Few Texas politicians of stature planned to attend the rally, with no members of the state’s congressional delegation confirming attendance as of Thursday, according to Insider.

    That’s partly because Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — already Trump’s most formidable primary challenger in the 2024 presidential race, even though he hasn’t officially declared his candidacy — is now currying favor with Texas conservatives.

    The few polls conducted in recent months show DeSantis running neck and neck with Trump. Meanwhile, Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) has endorsed DeSantis in the primary. And the Florida governor’s signature culture war agenda has served as a model for Republicans in the Texas Capitol.

    Source link

  • Small-Government Conservative Or Authoritarian — Will The Real Ron DeSantis Please Stand Up?

    Small-Government Conservative Or Authoritarian — Will The Real Ron DeSantis Please Stand Up?

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A Florida governor vetoed a bill that would have blocked cities and counties from banning plastic straws, arguing that it was an overreach and that citizens bothered by such bans could instead vote out the local officials implementing them.

    A Florida governor also got so irritated by a private company’s criticism of him that he rammed through laws specifically to punish the company and said that perhaps, now, it would behave more in accordance with his wishes.

    As it happens, the two examples describe the same governor — Ron DeSantis, separated in time by just three years and nine months. So as national attention focuses on the 44-year-old as he prepares a likely run for the GOP presidential nomination, a major question presents itself: Which one is he?

    “I don’t know if anyone knows who the real Ron DeSantis is,” said Jennifer Horn, a former chair of the New Hampshire Republican State Committee. “The Republican Party has become very authoritarian. … He is feeding the beast. He is intentionally becoming what the party base wants.”

    While the laws punishing The Walt Disney Co. for criticizing the “Don’t Say Gay” bill are probably the best-known examples of DeSantis’ use of state power to impose his will and hurt his perceived enemies, they are hardly the only ones. DeSantis has suspended Tampa’s elected prosecutor for declaring that he would not go after people under a new abortion law. He attacked the state’s public liberal arts college as part of his war on “woke” and replaced its board, which then installed a DeSantis ally as president. He has pushed legislation consolidating his control over Florida’s executive branch by stripping some power from members of the elected Cabinet.

    And this year, he is behind a measure that would make it easier for him and other elected officials to sue news organizations for publishing stories they don’t like. It would, among other things, afford plaintiffs the presumption that anonymous sources are simply fabricated.

    “I don’t recognize why people don’t realize how dangerous this is, one man deciding what’s OK,” said a former GOP lawmaker who, like most Republicans who agreed to be interviewed for this story, spoke on condition of anonymity because of DeSantis’ history of vindictiveness. “He’s willing to punish anybody.”

    DeSantis’ staff did not respond to HuffPost queries for this story.

    A former senior official in Donald Trump’s White House, though, said DeSantis’ approach seems designed to win over Trump supporters — and that it appears to be working.

    “He’s picking fights in Florida. He’s picking fights with the right people. DeSantis can run on the record he’s generating as we speak,” the former official said on condition of anonymity. “DeSantis knows how to go about winning over Trump voters, and he’s doing it.”

    From Small Government To The Nanny State

    Unlike the previous three governors of Florida, DeSantis was born in the state, in Jacksonville, before his family moved to Dunedin on the Gulf of Mexico side of Tampa Bay.

    He became a local celebrity at age 12, when his team went to the Little League World Series in 1991. That baseball talent wound up taking him to Yale University on a full scholarship. After a year teaching high school history in Georgia, he went back to New England, this time at Harvard Law School, from where he entered the Navy as a judge advocate general officer.

    After serving in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and a yearlong deployment to Iraq, he joined the U.S. attorney’s office in Orlando as a federal prosecutor before running for an open congressional seat in his northeastern Florida hometown in 2012.

    It was during this period that DeSantis penned his first book, “Dreams From Our Founding Fathers” — a rebuke to then-President Barack Obama, whose memoir “Dreams From My Father” had come out 16 years earlier and whose election had sparked the Tea Party movement.

    DeSantis criticized Obama for pushing a “transformational” agenda and relying on executive authority to do. He argued for a return to “Madisonian” democracy and “limited government.”

    Eight years later, following three terms in the U.S. Congress and a successful run for governor, that philosophy appeared intact when a bill arrived on his desk that would have prohibited local bans on plastic straws — at the time an active front in the culture wars.

    To the shock of many Floridians of both parties, DeSantis killed it. In his May 10, 2019, veto message, DeSantis said that local government straw bans were not in any way hurting the state. “The State should simply allow local communities to address this issue through the political process,” he wrote. “Citizens who oppose plastic straw ordinances can seek recourse by electing people who share their views.”

    That first year in office, in fact, surprised many who assumed he would govern in the model of the man whose endorsement won DeSantis the GOP nomination a year earlier: Trump.

    DeSantis moderated both his tone and his policies. He backed a pardon for the Groveland Four, the African American men who in 1949 were wrongly convicted of raping a white woman and whose families have been seeking to clear their names ever since. He followed through on a commitment to increase funding to restore the Everglades.

    A year in, though, came COVID-19, and with the coronavirus came a snap back to his old, Republican primary campaign persona. As Trump began to downplay the disease, so did DeSantis, and he — using the exact opposite justification as he had with the plastic straw bans — fought cities and counties that were trying to impose restrictions on indoor businesses to slow down transmission.

    Then, when COVID-19 vaccines first became available, DeSantis aggressively pushed them, setting up immunization clinics around the state and making numerous personal visits. But as anti-vaccine voices began dominating the Trump voter base, DeSantis backed off his efforts, largely shutting down the newly created vaccination infrastructure as the shots became generally available to more age groups.

    Horn, the New Hampshire conservative, said she watched him carefully in 2020 and saw a clear evolution as the year progressed. “That was a very transformational year for him,” she said.

    On Feb. 27, 2023, exactly 1,389 days after his plastic straw veto, DeSantis signed a bill giving him the authority to hand-pick the board overseeing Disney’s taxing district. He told his audience that the company had lost its way in recent years. “I think that all of these board members very much would like to see the type of entertainment that all families can appreciate,” he said.

    In his new book, “The Courage To Be Free,” DeSantis brags about conspiring with Republican legislative leaders to sneak the Disney bill through quickly, before the company could react.

    The evolution from limited-government conservative to the-government-will-tell-you-what-kind-of-movies-to-make populist was complete.

    “Did the base follow DeSantis, or did DeSantis follow the base?” Horn said. “I would suggest it’s the latter.”

    Trump Without The fatigue

    Governing philosophy aside, there are real-world consequences for Floridians who cross DeSantis and face his wrath.

    The Walt Disney Co. must now deal with a politically hostile board in charge of a taxing district governing Disney’s — and pretty much only Disney’s — land in central Florida. The suspended Hillsborough County prosecutor, Andrew Warren, is in the middle of litigation to get back the job that even a federal judge has said DeSantis had no just cause to take from him.

    Disney, of course, can turn to its many lawyers and lobbyists in its battles with DeSantis, and Warren has the connections to pursue his challenge, as well. But DeSantis has also upended the lives of people without the wherewithal to stand up for themselves.

    Last year, his “election integrity” squad arrested 20 former felons, most of them Black, on suspicion of illegally voting — even though local and state elections officials had approved their voter registrations.

    He also made false offers of housing and jobs to trick Venezuelan asylum-seekers in Texas into traveling to Martha’s Vineyard, using Florida taxpayer money to charter their planes. And he alerted Fox News so it could exclusively film their arrival at the Massachusetts vacation spot.

    “When someone shows you who they are, believe them. And the governor has shown who he is,” said Warren. “He’s focused on being a carnival barker willing to break the law to promote his political agenda.”

    “All of DeSantis’ victims are collateral damage in his culture war offensives,” added Mac Stipanovich, once the chief of staff to former GOP Gov. Bob Martinez. “Their lives are radically altered for the worse because he has chosen them as extras in one performance or another, but that has no more impact on him than a BB bouncing off a boxcar. … He cares only about the ephemeral applause from the right-wing peanut gallery and nothing about the lasting hardship that results.”

    DeSantis, meanwhile, has ramped up an unofficial presidential campaign that began last summer when he toured the country in support of Republican candidates.

    In Arizona on Aug. 15, DeSantis spoke mainly about himself and his Florida record, rather than the GOP candidates running for statewide office there. “What we did in Florida was we really led the nation,” he said about his pandemic response.

    “Hello, western Pennsylvania,” he said four days later to a crowd in Pittsburgh before giving a speech that was far more about his own background and accomplishments than the virtues of Doug Mastriano, the gubernatorial nominee there.

    This month, DeSantis has done fundraising events for local parties in Texas, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in California and county committees in Iowa. All are technically part of a tour following the release of his new book, with attendees receiving copies as a gift for their donation to the hosting group. This has provided intense news coverage of a still-unannounced presidential campaign while bringing in substantial personal income that, one top state Republican said, DeSantis has never made before despite his Ivy League law degree.

    “People don’t realize. He wants the money and needs the money,” the supporter said on condition of anonymity. “He can do it in a way that advances his campaign without campaigning.”

    According to his latest available financial disclosure filed with the state ethics commission, DeSantis at the end of 2021 had a net worth of $318,987 with an income of $134,181 from his salary as governor.

    Regardless of his approach and timing strategy, the things DeSantis is doing are definitely working, said the former Trump White House official, adding that there is clear “Trump fatigue” among Republicans generally. “This far out from ’24, he’s very well positioned. It all comes down to how he comes across in the big game,” the former official said.

    Horn, who worked to defeat the coup-attempting former president, said that at this point, DeSantis has not descended to Trump’s level. “He hasn’t led a deadly insurrection against the government,” she said. “So, so far, he’s better than Trump.”

    Source link

  • N.H. Governor Thinks Trump Will Lose 2024 GOP Nomination: ‘Just Not Going To Happen’

    N.H. Governor Thinks Trump Will Lose 2024 GOP Nomination: ‘Just Not Going To Happen’

    New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu said on Sunday that he expects fellow Republicans to choose someone other than Donald Trump as the party’s 2024 presidential nominee, despite the indicted former president continuing to rally his followers ahead of the next election.

    The moderate Republican, who himself is expected to announce a presidential run, told Chuck Todd on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that he is a “lifelong Republican” who will support the GOP nominee. But when asked if that would change should Trump win the nomination, Sununu said that is “just not going to happen.”

    “Obviously he’s in the race. He’s not going to be the nominee. That’s just not going to happen,” the governor said of Trump, adding that there is “a lot of opportunity” to bring the Republican Party forward without “yesterday’s leadership … or crying about what happened in November of ’22.”

    “I’m really confident that whoever comes out of the Republican nomination process is going to lead this country and will be able to deliver a win in ’24 and I’ll back them.”

    Former President Donald Trump walks out to speak on the third and final day of the Conservative Political Action Conference held at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center on Saturday in Fort Washington, Maryland.

    Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

    Sununu has previously predicted that Trump would not be the GOP presidential nominee, saying last month that the 2024 race is just “not going that way” for Trump. On Saturday, the twice-impeached former president took the stage at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference to repeat his usual list of lies and grievances — the closest thing to a campaign rally since announcing his 2024 candidacy in November.

    During his speech, Trump promised he would take revenge on people who didn’t respect his followers should he win reelection. Todd framed the efforts by the former president — who is a major voice for the party and tried to incite an insurrection to keep himself in power — as an attempt to position himself as the outsider candidate in what’s expected to be a crowded pool of 2024 hopefuls.

    “I think the former president has his own lane. He doesn’t need to carve anything,” said Sununu, who is also trying to carve out a position as the outsider. “He’s an absolute known commodity to every American in this country, right. There’s very few people that are on the fence, whether they’re with him or not with him, or whatever it might be.”

    In addition to Trump, over a dozen Republicans have either announced a 2024 run or are likely to enter the race — though only three attended CPAC over the weekend, including onetime United Nations ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, one of Trump’s strongest critics in the party, confirmed on Sunday that he will not run for president.

    In CPAC’s straw poll of declared and likely candidates, 62% of respondents said they would support Trump if the 2024 presidential primary were held today. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is expected to be a top GOP contender, received the second highest votes.

    “Right now, if the election were today, Ron DeSantis would win in New Hampshire, there’s no doubt about that in my mind. I think Ron DeSantis would win in Florida. So, I think the former president is trying to find a path to be back to that leading voice of the party,” said Sununu, a change of support from earlier comments in which he threw shade at the governor.

    “I think a lot of us that potentially may get in the race want to have something to say about the direction of that conversation. But look, again, thank you for your service. We’re moving on,” he continued. “I just don’t believe the Republican Party is going to say that the best leadership for America tomorrow is yesterday’s leadership. That doesn’t make any sense. That is not in our DNA as Americans. It’s kind of the antithesis of the American spirit to settle for yesterday’s news. We want the next generation, the next big idea, and that’s what we’re going to deliver.”

    Sununu said it would be detrimental for the party to “stay in this ultra-conservative extreme lane” because the GOP needs independent voters in order to win the race.

    The New Hampshire governor declined to say if he is any closer to announcing his own run for president, stressing that he wants to focus on moving the party as a whole forward.

    Source link

  • Longtime GOP Fundraiser Issues Withering Assessment Of ‘Loser’ Trump’s 2024 Chances

    Longtime GOP Fundraiser Issues Withering Assessment Of ‘Loser’ Trump’s 2024 Chances

    Attorney and longtime Republican fundraiser Eric Levine spelled out what he believes will be the devastating consequence for the GOP should Donald Trump’s 2024 run for president continue.

    The former president “is a metastasizing cancer who if he is not stopped is going to destroy the party,” Levine told Politico in an article published Thursday.

    “Donald Trump is a loser,” he added. “He is the first president since Hoover to lose the House, the Senate and the presidency in a single term.”

    Furthermore, Levine suggested Trump is “probably the only Republican in the country, if not the only person in the country, who can’t beat Joe Biden.”

    Source link

  • Rep. Adam Schiff Jumps Into California Senate Race

    Rep. Adam Schiff Jumps Into California Senate Race

    Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) announced his candidacy for Senate on Tuesday, joining Rep. Katie Porter (D-Calif.) in the 2024 primary race to fill a California seat that hasn’t even been vacated yet.

    “We’re in the fight of our lives for the future of our country,” Schiff said in a statement. “Our democracy is under assault from MAGA extremists, who care only about gaining power and keeping it. And our economy is simply not working for millions of Americans, who are working harder than ever just to get by.”

    “And at this moment, we need a fighter for our democracy and our families, which is why I’m launching my campaign to be the next U.S. Senator for California,” he added.

    Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, 89, is up for reelection, but she hasn’t announced yet whether she plans to seek another term. She is widely expected to retire, however.

    Schiff, a former Trump impeachment manager, has been a top GOP target. Earlier this week, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) announced he was kicking Schiff off the House Intelligence Committee in retaliation for Democrats’ decision to boot far-right GOP members off committees in the last Congress.

    Source link

  • Fox Business Host Drops Hard Truths In Trump-Bashing Segment

    Fox Business Host Drops Hard Truths In Trump-Bashing Segment

    Varney ― a former Trump ally who once insisted the then-president had never told the American people a lie ― devoted a segment Tuesday to criticizing Trump for backing dud candidates in the recent midterms. He also took issue with Trump’s attempt to take back remarks he made over the weekend calling for parts of the Constitution to be terminated to accommodate his desire to be re-installed as president.

    “He was talking about terminating parts of the Constitution. That plays right into the Democrats’ hands,” Varney said. “He’s trying to walk it back today but the damage has been done.”

    Varney also said Trump “appears to be losing what used to be his iron grip on the GOP,” noting candidates he endorsed in key midterm races in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania had all lost.

    And with Georgians voting Tuesday for the runoff election between Republican Herschel Walker and Sen. Raphael Warnock (D), Varney noted that there is a lot at stake: “More than just the balance of power in the Senate. It’s about the state of the Republican Party and Trump’s role in it.”

    Varney predicted Trump would not take responsibility for the outcome unless it was favorable.

    “If Walker wins, Trump will take all the credit, guaranteed. If Walker loses, Trump will blame Walker for not inviting Trump into the state,” he said.

    To cap it off, Varney quoted from a Wall Street Journal editorial that warned Republicans they’ll effectively be “terminating” the GOP should they choose Trump as their nominee for president in 2024.

    Varney has repeatedly criticized Trump in recent weeks. After Trump announced his intention to run in 2024, Varney said the speech lacked some of the “old magic.” He has also accused Trump of “dragging the Republican Party into the mud” with his attacks on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, his potential rival for the party’s nomination.

    The host’s segment comes amid reports that Rupert Murdoch and news organizations in his right-wing media empire are backing away from Trump and turning instead to DeSantis in 2024. While Trump still has allies and former surrogates at Fox News, he’s increasingly attracted friendly fire from Murdoch-owned media, including the New York Post, Fox networks and, in particular, the Wall Street Journal.

    Source link

  • John Bolton Floats 2024 Presidential Run To Prevent Trump From Winning GOP Nomination

    John Bolton Floats 2024 Presidential Run To Prevent Trump From Winning GOP Nomination

    John Bolton, former national security adviser to Donald J. Trump and longtime foreign policy hawk, said Monday he was prepared to jump into the 2024 presidential contest if he did not see enough pushback within the Republican Party to Trump’s recent call to scrap the U.S. Constitution.

    Speaking on NBC’s “Meet The Press Now,” Bolton said he was worried by Trump’s post on his social media platform over the weekend in which the losing candidate in the 2020 election said he should be reinstalled as president or get a do-over election because he felt there was fraud.

    “A Massive Fraud of this type and magnitude allows for the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution,” Trump posted. He reposted the statement later in the day.

    The U.S. Constitution contains no provisions for reinstalling a losing presidential incumbent in the White House or allowing a do-over of the quadrennial general election, and experts have said there was no widespread fraud in the 2020 election.

    “I think to be a presidential candidate, you can’t simply say, ‘I support the Constitution.’ You have to say, ‘I would oppose people who would undercut it,’” Bolton told NBC News’ Kristen Welker.

    He then approvingly invoked the since-disbanded House Un-American Activities Committee, seen by many historians as the epicenter of anti-Communist Red Scare paranoia following World War II and a precursor to Sen. Joe McCarthy’s demagogic rise in the early 1950s.

    “You know, we used to have a thing in the House of Representatives called the House Un-American Activities Committee. I think when you challenge the Constitution itself the way Trump has done, that is un-American.”

    Bolton served under Trump as his national security adviser for a little over a year, from spring 2018 to fall 2019. But his tenure may best be known for how it intersected with the first effort to impeach and remove Trump from office, stemming from Trump’s attempt to withhold aid from Ukraine to pressure the country’s president to announce an investigation of Joe Biden.

    Bolton was asked to testify at the impeachment trial about what he knew about the plan but declined to, citing an ongoing dispute between him and the National Security Council over whether his then-unpublished memoir contained classified information. Critics saw his move as a dodge, and when the book came out, it included Bolton saying he and other top officials had tried to convince Trump several times to release the aid but that Trump had refused.

    Bolton’s decision not to testify was heavily criticized as a cash grab to boost sales of his book.

    Bolton was also a key figure in the George W. Bush administration’s decision to go to war in Iraq in 2003 while he was serving as an undersecretary of state for arms control and international security. He also flirted with a presidential run in 2012 but ultimately passed on it.

    “I actually think most Republican elected officials in Washington disagree with Trump on this, but they’re intimidated. This is the time where there’s strength in numbers. The more people who tell the truth, the easier it is for everybody else,” he told Welker on Monday.

    Bolton said he’d look for “Shermanesque” statements of opposition to Trump’s stance from potential 2024 GOP nominees before making up his mind on whether to run.

    “If I don’t see that, then I’m going to seriously consider getting in,” he said. “This is serious business.”

    Source link

  • Rep. Madison Cawthorn Pledges Fealty To Trump With 1 Curious Exception

    Rep. Madison Cawthorn Pledges Fealty To Trump With 1 Curious Exception

    Far-right Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-N.C.), who is getting booted from Congress after losing his primary, has released a new video pledging allegiance to former President Donald Trump.

    But he has one exception.

    “I will follow this man ’til the day I die,” Cawthorn vowed, before adding: “Y’know, barring some terrible information.”

    Cawthorn did not elaborate about what would else would pass as “terrible information” given what’s already known about Trump, including numerous sexual assault accusations, two impeachments and the active investigations into his election lies which fueled a violent assault on the U.S. Capitol.

    Cawthorn also scolded Republicans who weren’t standing behind Trump.

    Cawthorn said Trump “made the world fear us” and added: “I want a president who people are terrified of.”

    Source link

  • Win Or Lose, Tim Ryan Is The Future Of Democratic Senate Campaigns

    Win Or Lose, Tim Ryan Is The Future Of Democratic Senate Campaigns

    Key figures in the Democratic Party increasingly view Rep. Tim Ryan’s campaign in Ohio this cycle as an important test case for a slew of critical and challenging 2024 Senate races — even if many remain skeptical Ryan can actually pull off a victory on Tuesday.

    Ryan’s U.S. Senate campaign, which has kept him neck and neck with Republican venture capitalist J.D. Vance despite Ohio’s conservative lean, the poor overall political environment and a massive outside spending advantage for the GOP, has already become an object of fascination for key operatives and donors. They’re hoping to replicate his economic-focused strategy and his approach to breaking with the national party and progressives.

    Vance has opened up a clear but small lead in public polling over Ryan, though the Democrat is persuading a significant number of voters to split their tickets: Polls typically show him running 5 percentage points or more ahead of former Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, the party’s gubernatorial nominee.

    That skill is going to be crucial for Senate Democrats in 2024, when they will have three incumbents — Sen. Jon Tester of Montana, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio — running for reelection in states Donald Trump won by more than 8 percentage points in 2020. The party has another four incumbents running in states Trump won in 2016 before losing four years later. And it has few obvious pickup opportunities, with Republican-leaning Florida and Texas hosting the most vulnerable senators.

    Politics in Ohio, like almost all of Democrats’ tough Senate seats in 2024, is dominated by white working-class voters, who have moved sharply toward the GOP during the Trump era. Their prevalence in key presidential swing states and dominance of the nation’s less-populated states has put Democrats at a significant disadvantage in the Electoral College and Senate.

    “We can’t write off big areas of the country and expect to win the Senate,” said former Montana Gov. Steve Bullock (D), who ran 5 points ahead of President Joe Biden as a Senate candidate in 2020 but lost regardless. “I think people are excited about what Tim has been doing.”

    Rep. Tim Ryan, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Ohio, speaks during a Souls to the Polls rally at Mount Hermon Baptist Church on Nov. 5 in Columbus, Ohio. Key figures in the Democratic Party increasingly view Ryan’s campaign as an important test case for a slew of critical and challenging 2024 Senate races.

    Drew Angerer via Getty Images

    Ryan has also won admirers among almost the entire Biden-era Democratic coalition, from Never Trump figures such as Republican Accountability Project founder Sarah Longwell to the major labor unions who funded a super PAC backing Ryan to progressives in the orbit of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). The donor network that’s built up around LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman has been particularly intrigued by Ryan’s campaign, three Democratic sources said.

    It amounts to a massive personal political turnaround for the Youngstown, Ohio, native, who long seemed to have far more star potential than actual political direction. A challenge to Nancy Pelosi for leadership of the Democratic caucus fell flat on its face; his presidential run in 2020 fizzled, its most noteworthy moment potentially a misplaced phone call in which he told a reporter Biden was “declining”; he looked and repeatedly passed on statewide bids; and his ideology was difficult to pin down — he once appeared at confabs for the progressive Netroots Nation and the moderate group Third Way in the span of the same month.

    All Economics, All The Time

    If you’re looking for a quick way to separate Ryan from every other major Democratic Senate candidate this cycle, try this: His campaign never aired a TV ad focused on abortion rights.

    That isn’t to say it shied away from the issue. Ryan targeted liberal and persuadable voters with digital ads on the topic, and Republicans have attacked him for not outlining what abortion restrictions he would support in interviews. But for the messages his campaign was quite literally broadcasting to Ohioans, he stuck to economic issues, attacks on Vance and pledges of independence.

    “Lots of people have bet on abortion as their get-out-of-jail-free card, and Tim didn’t,” said Irene Lin, a Cleveland-based Democratic strategist who now works for Welcome PAC, which is wooing Republicans on Ryan’s behalf. “He knew kitchen table issues were the winner here.”

    His opening ad of the general election is a classic example: Walking through the Youngstown neighborhood he grew up in, Ryan boasts of voting against a trade deal supported by former President Barack Obama and with Trump on trade deals.

    “I don’t answer to any political party,” he says in the 30-second spot. “I’ll work with either party to cut costs and pass a middle-class tax cut, because you deserve some breathing room.”

    To some Democrats, Ryan’s simple acknowledgment of economic struggle goes a long way, especially in comparison with attempts by many leading members of the party to spin the economy as stronger than how Americans perceive it to be.

    “You need to show respect for the economic plight of the working class,” said Bullock, who is now the co-chair of the Democratic super PAC American Bridge. “If you don’t show up and talk about kitchen table issues, there’s a vacuum. And if there’s a vacuum, voters will go for the GOP’s culture war issues every time.”

    Breaking With Biden

    Ryan has been a steadfast supporter of Biden’s legislative agenda, voting for the bipartisan deals on gun safety and infrastructure, Democrats’ failed attempt to overhaul voting laws, and the Inflation Reduction Act.

    But he’s also broken with him on key issues, most recently and notably Biden’s move to cancel $10,000 or more of student debt for borrowers who make less than $125,000 a year. While the administration worked to make sure nearly all of the benefits went to people making less than $75,000 a year, Ryan nevertheless agreed with critics who said it amounted to a slap in the face to working-class voters who would not benefit.

    “I think a targeted approach right now really does send the wrong message,” Ryan said on CNN at the time. “There’s a lot of people out there making $30,000 or $40,000 who didn’t go to college, and they need help as well.”

    Ryan wants Democrats to talk more about vocational education and bringing back manufacturing jobs — ideas that are regularly featured in Democratic campaign ads in the Midwest, but not as frequently by the party-aligned pundits on MSNBC or CNN.

    And some of Ryan’s past missteps have aided him in breaking with the party: Linking him to Pelosi, a favorite Republican tactic, is harder when he challenged her for party leadership. His suggestions Biden shouldn’t run for reelection seem more authentic when he first raised issues around Biden’s mental acuity in 2020.

    “If you don’t show up and talk about kitchen table issues, there’s a vacuum. And if there’s a vacuum, voters will go for the GOP’s culture war issues every time.”

    – Former Montana Gov. Steve Bullock (D)

    As important as any break with Biden, however, may be Ryan’s decision to ignore criticism from some liberal and Asian American groups after he aired an ad sharply criticizing the impact free trade with China had on manufacturing communities in Ohio. The groups argued the ad was xenophobic and risked inflaming violence against Asian Americans. (Ryan noted he spoke out against violence against Asian-American communities in 2020, and supported a House resolution

    “It is us versus China,” Ryan says in the ad, which aired in April and was a compendium of his speeches. “And instead of taking them on, Washington is wasting our time on stupid fights.”

    Lin, who is Asian American, said Ryan’s ads were not perfect — he should have specified the Chinese Communist Party rather than simply condemning the country — but said his decision showed seriousness about standing up both to China and to the left wing of the Democratic Party.

    “The fact that most Democrats have allowed Trump to have a monopoly on being anti-China is political malpractice,” Lin said. “And it’s maddening to see suburban wine moms and some of my fellow Asian Americans lecture Tim on xenophobia and racism instead of taking seriously all the Ohio towns that have been hollowed out thanks to jobs moving overseas.”

    Replicating Ryan

    The ability, and desire, of Democratic senators up for reelection in 2024 to replicate what Ryan has done will vary from race to race. Manchin, for instance, does not need to take lessons on how to separate himself from the national Democratic brand. Wisconsin Sen. Tammy Baldwin, on the other end of the spectrum, has a more progressive voting record than Ryan and experience selling it to the Badger State electorate.

    And while Republicans’ struggles to nominate high-quality candidates are likely to continue, not every Democrat will get to face a Republican as troubled as Vance — a gaffe-prone millionaire who left Ohio for an extended period of time and seems to be incapable of raising money for his campaign — as their opponent.

    Still, 2024 has long loomed over Democrats as a zero year for their problems with the white working class, a year where Republicans could assume long-term control of the Senate. David Shor, the internet-controversial Democratic data scientist, once suggested Republicans could easily win a filibuster-proof 60-seat Senate majority that year while earning a minority of the vote.

    Manchin, who has made his affection for Ryan clear by campaigning with him, is already getting started on his reelection, demanding Biden apologize for suggesting coal plants around the country would soon shut down.

    “Being cavalier about the loss of coal jobs for men and women in West Virginia and across the country who literally put their lives on the line to help build and power this country is offensive and disgusting,” Manchin said. “The president owes these incredible workers an immediate and public apology.”

    Source link

  • Ex-Bill Clinton Strategist Paul Begala Decries ‘Pain-In-The-Ass White Liberals’

    Ex-Bill Clinton Strategist Paul Begala Decries ‘Pain-In-The-Ass White Liberals’

    Democratic strategist Paul Begala took aim at “pain-in-the-ass white liberals on Twitter” for being potential roadblocks to President Joe Biden’s reelection. (Watch the video below.)

    Begala, a CNN contributor, debated former presidential and New York City mayoral candidate Andrew Yang on the network Tuesday over Biden’s viability to win again in 2024.

    Yang also suggested Biden would shrink from debates and questioned his vigor during the 2020 primary process. “All of a sudden he developed it,” Begala snapped back.

    Begala, who helped orchestrate former President Bill Clinton’s winning presidential campaign in 1992 and advised a super PAC that helped get former President Barack Obama reelected in 2012, launched an impassioned defense of Biden.

    “You’re missing the most important thing, Andrew,” Begala said. “The early states are full of white liberals. They don’t like Joe. Then when we move to real Democrats, African Americans in the south, they loved him and he steamrolled everybody. Because in my party, the heart and soul of the party are people of color, not pain-in-the-ass white liberals on Twitter. I’m sorry to use bad language.”

    About 9 in 10 Black voters cast their ballot for Biden in the 2020 election. Black voters’ support for Biden dipped since he took office, but remains relatively high. A recent NPR-Marist poll found that 71% of Black voters approved of Biden’s job performance, vs. 43% of white voters and 39% of Latino voters.

    Biden’s overall approval rating among Democrats is 87%, according to the poll.

    Source link