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Tag: caucus

  • Biden, Trump trounce competition in Super Tuesday contests; inch closer to November rematch

    Biden, Trump trounce competition in Super Tuesday contests; inch closer to November rematch

    The Super Tuesday primaries are the largest voting day of the year in the United States aside from the November general election.Voters in 16 states and one territory are choosing presidential nominees. Some states are also deciding who should run for governor, senator or district attorneys.Party primaries, caucuses or presidential preference votes are being held in Alabama, Alaska, American Samoa, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Virginia.Read below for the latest from Super Tuesday:12:44 a.m. ETFormer Trump presidential campaign adviser Katrina Pierson advances to a Republican primary runoff in Texas for a legislative seat in the Dallas suburbs.Pierson’s opponent in the May 28 runoff for the Texas House seat is Rep. Justin Holland. He was one of dozens of Republicans who voted last year to impeach Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Trump ally.It’s not the first time Pierson has run for office in Texas. She lost a run for Congress in 2014 before becoming a spokesperson for Trump’s presidential campaign.12:27 a.m. ETNikki Haley’s national campaign spokesperson Tuesday that the Republican candidate was honored to be the first GOP woman to win two presidential primary contests. Despite her win in Vermont on Tuesday and her primary win in Washington, D.C. on Sunday, Trump was notching more victories.On the other side of the political aisle, Jason Palmer, 52, of Baltimore, told AP he knows he’s a longshot for the Democratic presidential nomination even after he won four delegates in American Samoa on Super Tuesday.12:02 a.m. ETRepublican Steve Garvey is advancing to a November election to fill the California U.S. Senate seat held for three decades by the late Dianne Feinstein, a rare opportunity for the GOP to compete in a marquee statewide race in this Democratic stronghold. Garvey also advances to a special election to complete the unexpired term of Feinstein.Garvey will compete against Democrat Adam Schiff, who is currently a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.11:59 p.m. ETTwo Democrats advanced to a primary runoff election in the newly-drawn 2nd Congressional District in Alabama.Anthony Daniels and Shomari Figures emerged from the crowded field Tuesday. The district is closely watched by Democrats as a potential pickup opportunity in the U.S. House.11:35 p.m. ETU.S. Rep. Colin Allred has secured the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in Texas. Allred will face U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz in November.11:30 p.m. ETAP projects that Democratic U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff will advance to the U.S. Senate general election in California, fending off fellow Democratic representatives Katie Porter and Barbara Lee after a heated campaign.Schiff is projected to face Republican and former MLB player Steve Garvey in November.11:15 p.m. ETThe biggest prize of the night. President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are projected to win their primaries in California, which carries the largest delegate count of all Super Tuesday states for both parties.11 p.m. ETPolls have closed in California, leaving Alaska as the lone state still with residents filling out Super Tuesday primary ballots.10:35 p.m. ETHanding former President Donald Trump his only blemish of Super Tuesday, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley has won the Vermont Republican primary, according to AP.This is the second contest Haley has won so far, the first being Washington D.C.’s primary.10:25 p.m. ETFormer President Donald Trump took the stage at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, to speak to supporters after a successful Super Tuesday night for the GOP frontrunner.10:05 p.m. ETLittle-known candidate Jason Palmer has defeated President Joe Biden in the American Samoas Democratic caucuses, AP and CNN project. Out of 91 ballots cast, Palmer won 51 and Biden won 40, according to the local party.The massive upset prevents Biden from a clean sweep of the Super Tuesday contests.Meanwhile, Biden is projected to win the Democratic primary in Utah.10 p.m. ETPolls have closed in Utah, leaving just California and Alaska with polls still open.9:45 p.m. ETAP projects that Sarah Stewart has won the GOP nomination to replace the retiring chief justice on the Alabama Supreme Court, which recently drew national attention for its ruling recognizing frozen embryos as children.Stewart, a current associate justice on the court, was a part of the majority opinion that threatened access to IVF in the state.She will face Democrat and Circuit Judge Greg Griffin in November.Video below: Alabama Supreme Court rules frozen embryos are children; White House reacts9:30 p.m. ETOnly three states still have polls open; Utah, California and Alaska. It’s been a near-flawless night for both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, who will look to finish out strong in the remaining states.9:25 p.m. ET In Minnesota, President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are both projected to win their primaries, according to AP.Biden defeated longshot candidate U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips, who represents Minnesota’s 3rd Congressional District. 9:10 p.m. ETMinutes after President Joe Biden was projected as the winner of his primary in Colorado, AP also said former President Donald Trump won the state’s GOP primary.Video below: Experts weigh in on Supreme Court’s decision to allow Donald Trump on ballots9:05 p.m. ETAlmost as soon as the polls closed in Colorado, President Joe Biden was tabbed as the winner of the Democratic primary, AP projected.Additionally, in Texas, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz is projected to win the GOP primary for his seat in the Senate.9 p.m. ETPolls have closed in Colorado and Minnesota, leaving just a handful of states with polls still open. Also, President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are projected to win their respective primaries in Texas, according to AP. Additionally, Trump has been declared the winner in the GOP primary in Arkansas. Biden took Arkansas earlier in the night.8:55 p.m. ETWhile it’s been mostly smooth sailing for the two frontrunners, President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, one state is providing Trump a little trouble: Vermont. At the time of this update, Trump is only up on former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley by less than 800 votes, holding a 49.3% to 46.9% lead with less than half of the vote counted.8:50 p.m. ETFormer President Donald Trump has won the Republican primary in Massachusetts, according to AP.8:45 p.m. ETPresident Joe Biden is projected to win the Arkansas Democratic primary, according to AP. Biden is also projected to win in Alabama, as is former President Donald Trump in the state’s GOP primary.8:40 p.m. ETNorth Carolina House Speaker Tim Moore is projected to win the House Republican primary in the state’s 14th District, a top target for the GOP to flip in November thanks to redistricting. Video below: Some Massachusetts voters use Super Tuesday to send message to frontrunners8:30 p.m. ETAP is projecting that President Joe Biden is the winner of the Massachusetts and Maine Democratic primaries, meanwhile, former President Donald Trump is projected to win the Maine GOP primary8:20 p.m. ETNeither candidate has missed a state yet as Biden and Trump are projected to win their respective primaries in Oklahoma, according to AP.8:10 p.m. ETAP is projecting that President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump will win the Tennessee Democratic and Republican primaries, respectively. The night is going as well as could be expected for the two candidates who will likely face off in a rematch this November.Video below: Large rally urging ‘no preference’ primary vote shuts down Massachusetts road8:05 p.m. ETPresident Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have been declared the winners of their respective primaries in North Carolina, according to AP.Additionally, AP projects that Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson has won the Republican primary for governor in North Carolina, and Josh Stein, the state’s attorney general, has won the Democratic primary, setting up a showdown in November that will garner many eyes nationally. 8 p.m. ETThe biggest round of states has closed the polls, including Alabama, Maine, Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Texas and Tennessee.7:55 p.m. ETNearly two-thirds of North Carolina primary voters say that they’d consider former President Donald Trump fit for the presidency if he’s convicted of a crime, according to the initial results of CNN’s exit poll of Republican primary voters in the state, with slightly over half of GOP primary voters in Virginia saying the same.Roughly 4 in 10 primary voters in North Carolina describe themselves as part of the MAGA, or “Make America Great Again,” movement, compared to about one-third in Virginia. That’s below the 46% in Iowa’s caucuses who identified with the MAGA slogan. In South Carolina, about 41% of GOP primary voters described themselves as identifying with MAGA, with about one-third of New Hampshire GOP primary voters saying the same.Roughly 6 in 10 North Carolina GOP primary voters baselessly deny that President Joe Biden’s 2020 election win was legitimate, as do close to half of Virginia voters. Across all of the states of the GOP primary this year where entrance and exit polls have been conducted – including Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina – none has seen a majority of the GOP electorate willing to acknowledge the results of the 2020 election.Exit polls are a valuable tool to help understand primary voters’ demographic profile and political views. Like all surveys, however, exit polls are estimates, not precise measurements of the electorate. 7:45 p.m. ETNikki Haley has pegged her Republican presidential campaign to the biggest day of the primary season, crossing the country over the last several days to visit Super Tuesday states.But the former U.N. ambassador and former South Carolina governor is not holding any public events Tuesday night. And she has no future campaign rallies listed on her website.Haley’s campaign says she’s spending election night in the Charleston, South Carolina, area and watching results come in with her staff.7:40 p.m. ETPresident Joe Biden remains undefeated as AP projects that he will win the North Carolina Democratic primary.7:30 p.m. ETPolls have closed in North Carolina, the third state to begin counting votes on Super Tuesday.Video below: Trump hails Supreme Court decision to keep him on the ballot as a ‘great day’ for the country7:25 p.m. ETFormer President Donald Trump is projected to win the Virginia GOP primary, according to AP and CNN. It is his first win of the night.7:20 p.m. ETThe AP is projecting that President Joe Biden won the Vermont Democratic primary. Biden has gone a perfect three-for-three so far tonight, also notching victories in Virginia and Iowa.7:10 p.m. ETPresident Joe Biden is the projected winner of the Virginia Democratic presidential primary, according to AP. Biden was also declared the winner of the Iowa caucuses earlier in the night.7 p.m. ETPolls have closed in Vermont and Virginia, the first states of Super Tuesday. The next state to close its polls is North Carolina at 7:30 p.m. ET.

    The Super Tuesday primaries are the largest voting day of the year in the United States aside from the November general election.

    Voters in 16 states and one territory are choosing presidential nominees. Some states are also deciding who should run for governor, senator or district attorneys.

    Party primaries, caucuses or presidential preference votes are being held in Alabama, Alaska, American Samoa, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Virginia.

    Read below for the latest from Super Tuesday:

    12:44 a.m. ET

    Former Trump presidential campaign adviser Katrina Pierson advances to a Republican primary runoff in Texas for a legislative seat in the Dallas suburbs.

    Pierson’s opponent in the May 28 runoff for the Texas House seat is Rep. Justin Holland. He was one of dozens of Republicans who voted last year to impeach Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Trump ally.

    It’s not the first time Pierson has run for office in Texas. She lost a run for Congress in 2014 before becoming a spokesperson for Trump’s presidential campaign.

    12:27 a.m. ET

    Nikki Haley’s national campaign spokesperson Tuesday that the Republican candidate was honored to be the first GOP woman to win two presidential primary contests.

    Despite her win in Vermont on Tuesday and her primary win in Washington, D.C. on Sunday, Trump was notching more victories.

    On the other side of the political aisle, Jason Palmer, 52, of Baltimore, told AP he knows he’s a longshot for the Democratic presidential nomination even after he won four delegates in American Samoa on Super Tuesday.

    12:02 a.m. ET

    Republican Steve Garvey is advancing to a November election to fill the California U.S. Senate seat held for three decades by the late Dianne Feinstein, a rare opportunity for the GOP to compete in a marquee statewide race in this Democratic stronghold.

    Garvey also advances to a special election to complete the unexpired term of Feinstein.

    Garvey will compete against Democrat Adam Schiff, who is currently a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.

    11:59 p.m. ET

    Two Democrats advanced to a primary runoff election in the newly-drawn 2nd Congressional District in Alabama.

    Anthony Daniels and Shomari Figures emerged from the crowded field Tuesday. The district is closely watched by Democrats as a potential pickup opportunity in the U.S. House.

    11:35 p.m. ET

    U.S. Rep. Colin Allred has secured the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in Texas. Allred will face U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz in November.

    Emil Lippe

    U.S. Rep. Colin Allred (D-TX) speaks to reporters following a special service on Jan. 17, 2022, in Southlake, Texas.

    11:30 p.m. ET

    AP projects that Democratic U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff will advance to the U.S. Senate general election in California, fending off fellow Democratic representatives Katie Porter and Barbara Lee after a heated campaign.

    Schiff is projected to face Republican and former MLB player Steve Garvey in November.

    11:15 p.m. ET

    The biggest prize of the night. President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are projected to win their primaries in California, which carries the largest delegate count of all Super Tuesday states for both parties.

    CULVER CITY, CA, UNITED STATES - FEBRUARY 21: US President Joe Biden pays a visit to Culver City for his campaign at Julian Dixon in Los Angeles, California, United States on February 21, 2024. (Photo by Grace Yoon/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    Anadolu

    U.S. President Joe Biden pays a visit to Culver City for his campaign at Julian Dixon in Los Angeles, California, United States on Feb. 21, 2024.

    11 p.m. ET

    Polls have closed in California, leaving Alaska as the lone state still with residents filling out Super Tuesday primary ballots.

    10:35 p.m. ET

    Handing former President Donald Trump his only blemish of Super Tuesday, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley has won the Vermont Republican primary, according to AP.

    This is the second contest Haley has won so far, the first being Washington D.C.’s primary.

    10:25 p.m. ET

    Former President Donald Trump took the stage at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, to speak to supporters after a successful Super Tuesday night for the GOP frontrunner.

    10:05 p.m. ET

    Little-known candidate Jason Palmer has defeated President Joe Biden in the American Samoas Democratic caucuses, AP and CNN project. Out of 91 ballots cast, Palmer won 51 and Biden won 40, according to the local party.

    The massive upset prevents Biden from a clean sweep of the Super Tuesday contests.

    Meanwhile, Biden is projected to win the Democratic primary in Utah.

    10 p.m. ET

    Polls have closed in Utah, leaving just California and Alaska with polls still open.

    9:45 p.m. ET

    AP projects that Sarah Stewart has won the GOP nomination to replace the retiring chief justice on the Alabama Supreme Court, which recently drew national attention for its ruling recognizing frozen embryos as children.

    Stewart, a current associate justice on the court, was a part of the majority opinion that threatened access to IVF in the state.

    She will face Democrat and Circuit Judge Greg Griffin in November.

    Video below: Alabama Supreme Court rules frozen embryos are children; White House reacts

    9:30 p.m. ET

    Only three states still have polls open; Utah, California and Alaska. It’s been a near-flawless night for both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, who will look to finish out strong in the remaining states.

    9:25 p.m. ET

    In Minnesota, President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are both projected to win their primaries, according to AP.

    Biden defeated longshot candidate U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips, who represents Minnesota’s 3rd Congressional District.

    9:10 p.m. ET

    Minutes after President Joe Biden was projected as the winner of his primary in Colorado, AP also said former President Donald Trump won the state’s GOP primary.

    Video below: Experts weigh in on Supreme Court’s decision to allow Donald Trump on ballots

    9:05 p.m. ET

    Almost as soon as the polls closed in Colorado, President Joe Biden was tabbed as the winner of the Democratic primary, AP projected.

    Additionally, in Texas, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz is projected to win the GOP primary for his seat in the Senate.

    9 p.m. ET

    Polls have closed in Colorado and Minnesota, leaving just a handful of states with polls still open.

    Also, President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are projected to win their respective primaries in Texas, according to AP. Additionally, Trump has been declared the winner in the GOP primary in Arkansas. Biden took Arkansas earlier in the night.

    8:55 p.m. ET

    While it’s been mostly smooth sailing for the two frontrunners, President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, one state is providing Trump a little trouble: Vermont.

    At the time of this update, Trump is only up on former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley by less than 800 votes, holding a 49.3% to 46.9% lead with less than half of the vote counted.

    8:50 p.m. ET

    Former President Donald Trump has won the Republican primary in Massachusetts, according to AP.

    8:45 p.m. ET

    President Joe Biden is projected to win the Arkansas Democratic primary, according to AP. Biden is also projected to win in Alabama, as is former President Donald Trump in the state’s GOP primary.

    8:40 p.m. ET

    North Carolina House Speaker Tim Moore is projected to win the House Republican primary in the state’s 14th District, a top target for the GOP to flip in November thanks to redistricting.

    Video below: Some Massachusetts voters use Super Tuesday to send message to frontrunners

    8:30 p.m. ET

    AP is projecting that President Joe Biden is the winner of the Massachusetts and Maine Democratic primaries, meanwhile, former President Donald Trump is projected to win the Maine GOP primary

    8:20 p.m. ET

    Neither candidate has missed a state yet as Biden and Trump are projected to win their respective primaries in Oklahoma, according to AP.

    8:10 p.m. ET

    AP is projecting that President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump will win the Tennessee Democratic and Republican primaries, respectively. The night is going as well as could be expected for the two candidates who will likely face off in a rematch this November.

    Video below: Large rally urging ‘no preference’ primary vote shuts down Massachusetts road

    8:05 p.m. ET

    President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have been declared the winners of their respective primaries in North Carolina, according to AP.

    Additionally, AP projects that Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson has won the Republican primary for governor in North Carolina, and Josh Stein, the state’s attorney general, has won the Democratic primary, setting up a showdown in November that will garner many eyes nationally.

    8 p.m. ET

    The biggest round of states has closed the polls, including Alabama, Maine, Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Texas and Tennessee.

    7:55 p.m. ET

    Nearly two-thirds of North Carolina primary voters say that they’d consider former President Donald Trump fit for the presidency if he’s convicted of a crime, according to the initial results of CNN’s exit poll of Republican primary voters in the state, with slightly over half of GOP primary voters in Virginia saying the same.

    Roughly 4 in 10 primary voters in North Carolina describe themselves as part of the MAGA, or “Make America Great Again,” movement, compared to about one-third in Virginia. That’s below the 46% in Iowa’s caucuses who identified with the MAGA slogan. In South Carolina, about 41% of GOP primary voters described themselves as identifying with MAGA, with about one-third of New Hampshire GOP primary voters saying the same.

    GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA - MARCH 02: Supporters of Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald Trump hold up signs as he speaks during a campaign event at Greensboro Coliseum on March 2, 2024 in Greensboro, North Carolina. President Trump continue to campaign for his re-election bid prior to Super Tuesday.   (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Alex Wong

    Supporters of Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald Trump hold up signs as he speaks during a campaign event at Greensboro Coliseum on March 2, 2024, in Greensboro, North Carolina.

    Roughly 6 in 10 North Carolina GOP primary voters baselessly deny that President Joe Biden’s 2020 election win was legitimate, as do close to half of Virginia voters. Across all of the states of the GOP primary this year where entrance and exit polls have been conducted – including Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina – none has seen a majority of the GOP electorate willing to acknowledge the results of the 2020 election.

    Exit polls are a valuable tool to help understand primary voters’ demographic profile and political views. Like all surveys, however, exit polls are estimates, not precise measurements of the electorate.

    7:45 p.m. ET

    Nikki Haley has pegged her Republican presidential campaign to the biggest day of the primary season, crossing the country over the last several days to visit Super Tuesday states.

    But the former U.N. ambassador and former South Carolina governor is not holding any public events Tuesday night. And she has no future campaign rallies listed on her website.

    Haley’s campaign says she’s spending election night in the Charleston, South Carolina, area and watching results come in with her staff.

    7:40 p.m. ET

    President Joe Biden remains undefeated as AP projects that he will win the North Carolina Democratic primary.

    7:30 p.m. ET

    Polls have closed in North Carolina, the third state to begin counting votes on Super Tuesday.

    Video below: Trump hails Supreme Court decision to keep him on the ballot as a ‘great day’ for the country

    7:25 p.m. ET

    Former President Donald Trump is projected to win the Virginia GOP primary, according to AP and CNN. It is his first win of the night.

    7:20 p.m. ET

    The AP is projecting that President Joe Biden won the Vermont Democratic primary. Biden has gone a perfect three-for-three so far tonight, also notching victories in Virginia and Iowa.

    7:10 p.m. ET

    President Joe Biden is the projected winner of the Virginia Democratic presidential primary, according to AP. Biden was also declared the winner of the Iowa caucuses earlier in the night.

    Voters cast their ballots at the Philomont firehouse, on primary election day in Philomont, Virginia on March 5, 2024. Americans from 15 states and one territory vote simultaneously on "Super Tuesday," a campaign calendar milestone expected to leave Donald Trump a hair's breadth from securing the Republican Party's presidential nomination. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP) (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

    ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images

    Voters cast their ballots at the Philomont firehouse, on primary election day in Philomont, Virginia, on March 5, 2024.

    7 p.m. ET

    Polls have closed in Vermont and Virginia, the first states of Super Tuesday. The next state to close its polls is North Carolina at 7:30 p.m. ET.

    Source link

  • Jimmy Kimmel Openly Fantasizes About Death Of Donald Trump

    Jimmy Kimmel Openly Fantasizes About Death Of Donald Trump

    Opinion

    Source YouTube: Jimmy Kimmel Live, PBS Newshour

    The radically liberal late night host Jimmy Kimmel has long been one of the most anti-Donald Trump people in the entertainment world. However, he hit a new low during his show on Thursday night when he openly fantasized about Trump dying.

    Kimmel Fantasizes About Trump’s Death

    Kimmel spent much of his opening monologue attacking Trump, touching on his legal battles as he showed once again just how obsessed he is with the former president.

    “Let me tell you something — if those three judges he appointed to the Supreme Court take this case and rule against him, he is going to blow a whale-sized windmill out of his a**. I mean, it might actually kill him,” Kimmel said.

    “Sometimes I wonder, once Trump is dead and and gone and buried on the 18th hole of one of his golf courses, will things get better?” he continued. “Or will we have a whole new crop of MAGA brains to deal with?”

    Kimmel also talked about Trump being photographed with red splotches on his hands earlier this week, saying that this is “a common symptom of syphilis.” Referring to Trump once saying that avoiding STDs was his “personal Vietnam,” Kimmel added, “but if he has syphilis, that would mean the only Vietnam he avoided was Vietnam.”

    Related: Jimmy Kimmel Shamelessly Uses Oscars To Push His Own January 6 Footage Agenda

    Kimmel Brings Up Melania And Barron

    Sinking even lower, Kimmel said that the former First Lady Melania Trump wouldn’t be in danger of getting syphilis if her husband has it because the couple “hasn’t slept in the same bed since… how old is Barron?”

    “It’s probably ketchup,” Kimmel stated. “He probably got his hands in a container of curly fries or something.”

    Kimmel went on to speculate how Trump would handle it if one of his political opponents was pictured with red splotches on their hands.

    “He’d be all over it. He’d talk about it for years. He’d be posting in all-caps about ‘Meatball Ron DeSyphilis’ and ‘Nikki Herpes,’” Kimmel said. “But they haven’t brought it up.”

    Check out this full monologue in the video below.

    Related: Jimmy Kimmel Calls For Trump To Be Arrested For ‘Despicable And Incoherent Attack On Democracy’

    Kimmel’s Meltdown Over Iowa Caucus

    Earlier this week, Kimmel had a full meltdown over Trump’s massive victory in the Iowa Caucus.

    “Even though he barely spent any time in Iowa, he somehow made voters love him more,” Kimmel said, according to Newsweek. “It’s the same strategy he used raising [his sons] Eric and Don Jr.”

    Kimmel then played a clip in which Trump celebrated his victory by saying, “These caucuses are your personal chance to score the ultimate victory over all of the liars, cheaters, thugs, perverts, frauds, crooks, freaks, creeps and other quite nice people.”

    “It’s like he’s reading his own LinkedIn résumé,” Kimmel said in response. “I mean, seriously. It’s no self-awareness whatsoever.”

    After playing a clip of insults that Trump had leveled at his detractors, Kimmel concluded by saying, “Yeah, that’s him. That’s exactly him. That’s the guy.”

    Check out that monologue in the video below.

    Kimmel’s latest below-the-belt attacks on Trump shows just how afraid the media is of the former president coming out victorious in this year’s presidential election. He can rant against Trump all he wants to, but in the end, he’s not going to sway any voters, as the few people who still watch Kimmel are just as crazily liberal as the late night host is.

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    An Ivy leaguer, proud conservative millennial, history lover, writer, and lifelong New Englander, James specializes in the intersection of… More about James Conrad

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  • Piers Morgan Melts Down – Attacks Trump Supporter Laura Loomer And Bans Her From TV

    Piers Morgan Melts Down – Attacks Trump Supporter Laura Loomer And Bans Her From TV

    Opinion

    Source YouTube: Piers Morgan Uncensored, Laura Loomer

    Piers Morgan has banned the pro-Donald Trump media personality Laura Loomer from his show, branding her a “total loony” as he did so.

    Loomer Sounds Off

    Loomer took to social media on Tuesday to sound off after she was bumped from Morgan’s show the day before.

    “I JUST GOT CENSORED BY @piersmorgan for his show called ‘UNCENSORED’! Wow. This is absurd,” she wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter. “Yesterday @piersmorgan’s producer contacted me and asked me to come on his show today at 3 pm EST to talk about the Iowa Caucus results.”

    “This morning we made arrangements for them to send a TV crew to record me live in Iowa,” she continued. “5 minutes ago, his producer called me and said they had to cancel me today because they wanted to interview Anthony Weiner instead. That was a lie, because they bumped me for @RonDeSantis surrogate Bill Mitchell … to talk about the Iowa Caucus, and I’m sure they will trash me on the interview. Here’s the screenshots to prove it!”

    “This is so unprofessional @kieronmirch, and it is proof that @piersmorgan is too scared to have me on his show, so he invited a deranged DeSantis supporter on instead,” Loomer added. “Maybe Piers will grow a pair of balls and have me on to speak truth about Iowa and President Trump. But, he clearly is scared of getting LOOMERED on LIVE TV. RECEIPTS!”

    Related: Piers Morgan Exposed For Misleading Trump Interview

    Morgan Bans Loomer

    Less than an hour later, Morgan fired back at Loomer by having a full meltdown as he banned her from his show.

    “Hi Ms Loomer, I pulled your hit because I think you’re a complete loony,” he wrote. “And now you’ve broken my golden rule.. publicly attack my brilliant team & print screenshots to embarrass them, and you get a lifetime ban from the show. Bye!”

    Loomer, however, refused to back down.

    “If you think I am a “complete loony”, then why did you have your staff ask me to stay in Iowa to do a LIVE hit on your show at 3 pm EST today?” she wrote. “@piersmorgan Stop being so disingenuous. You just don’t want me on your show because you’re a Trump hater, and you know I come prepared with the facts and receipts to call you out on your s***.”

    “I don’t give a f*** about you or your staff,” she later added. “I care about Donald Trump and I care about defending his impeccable record. You’re a fraud. Donald Trump made you the Winner of his show ‘The Apprentice’ on Season 7, and you used to love him!!!”

    Related: Piers Morgan Reveals Scary Reason Why President Trump Covers His Water

    Morgan Reacts To Trump’s Iowa Caucus Win

    Morgan reacted to Trump’s victory in the Iowa Caucus on Monday by admitting that his win “was so overwhelming it makes him odds-on favorite to be the Republican nominee.”

    “What happened in Iowa cannot be overstated,” Morgan wrote for The Sun. “Trump won 51% of the vote, the biggest win in Iowa caucus history.”

    Morgan went on to say that “the more the times he’s been dragged into court, the more popular he’s become with even Trump-critical Republicans who believe it’s an unfair liberal witch-hunt designed to stop him becoming President again.”

    “Trump has painted himself into an oppressed martyr, and his followers have bought into his victimhood status with extraordinary enthusiasm,” Morgan acknowledged. “In Iowa, 71% of his supporters told pollsters they believe him fit to be president again even if he’s convicted of a crime.”

    What do you think about Morgan banning Loomer from his show? Let us know in the comments section.

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    The Political Insider ranks #3 on Feedspot’s “100 Best Political Blogs and Websites.”

    An Ivy leaguer, proud conservative millennial, history lover, writer, and lifelong New Englander, James specializes in the intersection of… More about James Conrad

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  • Whoopi Goldberg Panics Over Trump's Massive Iowa Win – 'Don't Get Suckered'

    Whoopi Goldberg Panics Over Trump's Massive Iowa Win – 'Don't Get Suckered'

    Opinion

    Source: The View Twitter

    During Tuesday’s episode of her ABC talk show “The View,” Whoopi Goldberg went into panic mode over Donald Trump’s massive victory in the Iowa caucus on Monday.

    ‘Don’t Get Suckered’

    Despite harsh weather conditions and ongoing efforts from the left to take him down, Trump secured a 30-point win in the Iowa caucus that took place on Monday, according to Decider.

    “This seems par for the course,” Goldberg said. “You know, it’s early days and none of us are going to know what happens until it happens.”

    “So don’t get suckered,” she continued as the super liberal co-host Joy Behar chimed in to add, “Don’t get complacent!”

    “Don’t get suckered,” Goldberg added. “This is yours. This belongs to the United States of America, all the people sitting here and at home, this is your election. We can’t tell you who to vote for, we’re just telling you what we’re seeing. Keep that in mind.”

    Related: Whoopi Goldberg Claims Trump Will ‘Disappear’ Journalists And ‘Gay Folks’ If He’s Reelected

    Behar’s Meltdown

    During this same segment, Behar had a full meltdown over the caucus results.

    “This is what the 5 percent voted for,” Behar said, according to Entertainment Weekly. “They voted for a guy who, today, had to come to New York to show up in court in a case against a woman that a federal judge has already said he raped. That’s who you voted for.”

    Behar went on to claim that Trump has lost “so many times” as she made an L-sign on her forehead.

    “You voted for a guy who said, come, risk your lives for the grand wizard,” she continued, referring to the title of the national leader of the Ku Klux Klan. “Come in the snow and the sleet, because I am more important than your life. That’s who the 5 percent voted for.”

    Check out this full segment in the video below.

    Related: Whoopi Goldberg Accuses Republicans Of ‘Torturing’ Women By Blocking Abortion

    Trump’s Victory Speech

    Trump responded to his victory on Monday by calling for Americans to “come together.”

    “I really think this is time now for everybody, our country, to come together,” Trump said, according to The Daily Signal. “We want to come together, whether … Republican or Democrat or liberal or conservative.”

    “I want to congratulate Ron and Nikki for having a good time together. We are all having a good time together. And I think they both actually did very well, I do. They both did very well,” Trump added, referring to his opponents Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley.

    Trump then referenced Vivek Ramaswamy, saying, “I also want to congratulate Vivek. He did a hell of a job, going from zero, and he’s getting about 8%.”

    Trump was not so positive towards President Joe Biden, however.

    “I don’t want to be overly rough on the president, but I have to say that he is the worst president that we have had in the history of our country,” Trump said. “He’s destroying our country. … I thought to myself, Jimmy Carter is happy now. Because he will go down as being a brilliant president by comparison to Joe Biden.”

    A shameless liberal like Goldberg really should be panicking about Trump’s caucus win because it shows that leftists have failed in their quest to destroy him. In the end, nobody should be surprised if Trump is back in the White House at this time next year!

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    An Ivy leaguer, proud conservative millennial, history lover, writer, and lifelong New Englander, James specializes in the intersection of culture and politics.

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    James Conrad

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  • The Congressional Fragrance Caucus is Recertified for the 118th Congress

    The Congressional Fragrance Caucus is Recertified for the 118th Congress

    For half a decade, the Congressional Fragrance Caucus has served as the voice of the fragrance industry on Capitol Hill

    Today, Fragrance Creators announced the recertification of the Congressional Fragrance Caucus.  Originally created in 2018, the Congressional Fragrance Caucus provides a bipartisan platform for Congress to focus on issues that matter to the fragrance value chain – from sustainability and stewardship, to innovation, to modernized regulations and more. The Caucus will once again be co-chaired by Congressman Barry Loudermilk (R-GA) and Congresswoman Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-NJ). 

    “I have been proud to serve as co-chair of the Congressional Fragrance Caucus since its inception,” said Congresswoman Bonnie Watson Coleman. “The fragrance industry is a critical economic presence in New Jersey, providing thousands of jobs and producing innovative materials used in products that people rely on every day. It’s an industry built on science, inspired by nature, and committed to stewardship. I am delighted to continue to lead this bipartisan group on Capitol Hill.” 

    “I am happy to continue serving as Co-Chair of the Congressional Fragrance Caucus,” said Congressman Barry Loudermilk. “I’ve seen first-hand the impact the fragrance industry has had in the state of Georgia and appreciate the expertise that goes into the creation of each scent.  Since the Caucus’ creation in the 115th Congress, we have focused on issues important not only to the fragrance industry but to the economy as well. I look forward to continuing to work to advance priorities that improve the U.S. economy and the lives of our citizens.”   

    The Congressional Fragrance Caucus will focus on a multitude of high-priority issues during the 118th Congress, including the implementation of the Lautenberg Chemical Safety Act as well as the new Modernization of Cosmetics Regulation Act. The association intends to center its engagement efforts around forward-leaning regulatory pathways and policy approaches that foster innovation and a diverse marketplace—both critical prerequisites for the fragrance industry to advance environmental sustainability, newer, greener chemistries, consumer and worker safety and wellbeing, jobs and economic contributions, and more.

    “Thank you to Rep. Watson Coleman and Rep. Loudermilk for their leadership, we are thrilled to continue our ongoing efforts with you,” said Farah K. Ahmed, President & CEO of Fragrance Creators. “The Congressional Fragrance Caucus gives our members an active platform to empower Congressional decisionmakers with high-quality information including our best-in-class science, growing research on the important well-being benefits fragrance delivers, and other positive contributions our industry delivers for people, perfume, and the planet.” 

    ###

    Fragrance Creators Association is the trade association representing the majority of fragrance manufacturing in North America. We also represent fragrance-related interests along the value chain. Fragrance Creators’ member companies are diverse, including large, medium, and small sized companies that create, manufacture, and use fragrances and scents for home care, personal care, home design, fine fragrance, and industrial and institutional products, as well as those that supply fragrance ingredients, including natural extracts and other raw materials that are used in perfumery and fragrance mixtures. Fragrance Creators established and administers the Congressional Fragrance Caucus, ensuring ongoing dialogue with members of Congress and staff. Fragrance Creators also produces The Fragrance Conservatory, the comprehensive digital resource for high-quality information about fragrance—www.fragranceconservatory.com. Learn more about Fragrance Creators at fragrancecreators.org—for people, perfume, and the planet.

    Source: Fragrance Creators Association

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  • Letting Go of the Iowa Caucus

    Letting Go of the Iowa Caucus

    My father was a registered independent for most of my childhood because he resented having to choose. But choosing was not hard for my mother. She was an MSNBC devotee, a liberal Pennsylvania transplant who took her adopted role as an Iowa Democrat seriously. She wanted me to take politics seriously, too.

    Which is why, on a freezing January night in 2000, Mom zipped up our coats, buckled 7-year-old me into our white Toyota Previa, and drove us along five miles of gravel to the nearest town: Danville, population 919. It would be my very first Iowa caucus, with New Jersey Senator Bill Bradley and Vice President Al Gore vying for the Democratic nomination. Mom thought Bradley had more personality, so she stood, with me at her side, in his corner of the Danville Elementary School gymnasium. When Bradley was considered not “viable,” per caucus rules, Mom walked us over to Gore’s group, and he was soon declared the winner. Mom recounted all of this recently; I remember little from that night, except the outlines of bulky puffer jackets and a general tingliness at being the only kid in a room full of adults doing something that seemed important.

    Accuse me of harboring a pro-caucus bias and you’d be right; I love them and I always have. A caucus is like a primary, but not: There’s no secret ballot. You demonstrate your preference for a candidate by physically moving your body to a different chair or another corner of the gym. Only a few states do it this way, and “this way” looks different everywhere.

    After that night in 2000, Mom took me with her at each opportunity. Every four or eight years, we held hands and navigated icy sidewalks after dark. We explored student-less school hallways and cozy church luncheon rooms. We stood under basketball hoops and listened to neighbors argue about candidates as though their opinions really mattered, because that night they actually did.

    Over the past half century, Iowa’s prominence in politics became part of its identity—something the state was known for besides its acres of corn and millions of hogs. Iowa doesn’t have any major-league teams to root for, or the kind of glittering cities that draw visitors from all corners of the world. But the caucuses helped make Iowa special—and on the national political stage, they made it relevant.

    Still, it’s possible to hold two truths in tension. The caucus is part of Iowa’s identity, and deeply rooted in my own, yet the process has never really been fair—not to many Iowans, and not to other Americans. So, even though I felt a sharp pang of sorrow earlier this month when President Joe Biden suggested that my home state should give up its spot on the early-voting roster, I wasn’t surprised. Most Iowans have seen this day coming. Some are more prepared than others.

    Thanks to the caucus, I never thought it was strange that I’d met Barack Obama twice before I turned 20. Nothing seemed shocking about Newt Gingrich showing up to speak at the restaurant where my parents have happy hour on Fridays. I was only slightly unsettled to discover that my high-school friend was having a summertime fling with a political reporter I knew from D.C.

    For 50 years, these meet-cutes and history-making appearances have been normal, tradition. Iowans heard Howard Dean make the animalistic roar that supposedly ended his campaign. They sheltered in place with Elizabeth Warren during a tornado. They watched Fred Thompson rolling around the state fair in style, and bore witness to John Delaney’s sad ride down the Giant Slide.

    Iowa’s prominence in the process dates back to the 1970s, when the caucuses helped put George McGovern, and later Jimmy Carter, on the proverbial map. State law requires that Iowa holds its caucuses eight days before the first primary happens, hence the quadrennial Iowa–New Hampshire pairing. Most people know this by now; it’s the process they don’t get—the appeal of the thing. The magic.

    That’s how many Iowans see the caucus: a messy, intimate project that represents politics in its most sublime form—a dose of pure democracy smack-dab in the middle of Iowa’s fields and farms. I’m not sure about all that. But the caucuses are intimate. You discuss electability with your legs wedged beneath a lunch table designed for children. You look your neighbor in the eye and tell him why he’s wrong. On a school night! During one of his first-ever caucuses, my father, sitting at Senator Bernie Sanders’s table, was approached by a neighbor from Hillary Clinton’s. “Didn’t you hear that Sanders was a conscientious objector?” the man asked. Dad replied that he didn’t realize it was a liability for a presidential candidate to have a conscience. I remember thinking that this was a good comeback.

    As a sophomore in college, I viewed the caucus as a noble process, probably because I was reading a lot of Hannah Arendt for class. The German philosopher wrote often about the polis—from which politics is derived—and in The Human Condition she defined it as “the organization of the people as it arises out of acting and speaking together.” The caucus, I thought. How romantic. But at the time, I was unaware—being young and able-bodied and generally self-absorbed—that caucuses don’t allow all people to act and speak together.

    Mailing in your candidate preferences has never been an option in the caucuses. And many Iowans are not free at seven on a weeknight in January or February. That includes people working shift jobs, people working late, people with little kids, people with relatives to take care of, people with disabilities, people who don’t drive at night, people who have important plans, people who are simply out of town. Over the summer, state Democratic officials, in a bid to keep their place, finally did propose an absentee option. The DNC was apparently unimpressed.

    The other most common criticism of the caucus is that Iowa is too white to make a decision that sets the political tempo for the rest of the country. Iowans would counter that their state proved to be the launching pad for America’s first Black president, but the point is well taken. In 2020, Biden finished fourth in mostly white Iowa, and it took the Black voters of South Carolina to push him to the front of the pack.

    Iowa’s critics were vindicated that year, when the caucus became synonymous with chaos. The actual process went relatively smoothly, but a faulty new app and jammed phone lines disrupted the reporting of the results. That year, I’d invited my boyfriend to come to my hometown while I covered the caucuses. I’d wanted him to be charmed by the quaint small-town-ness of it all; instead, I was embarrassed. The entire state was. That was the final straw. This summer, a Democratic National Committee panel required every state to make the case for going early in the primary season. Earlier this month, with Biden’s support, the committee passed a proposal that would reorder which states vote first: South Carolina would start, and Michigan and Georgia would be part of the first five. Iowa was not on the list.

    Long-time party activists are suffering varying degrees of disappointment at the news. Some lean more toward acceptance. “We’ve taken our role seriously. I think that it was probably time to move on,” Kurt Meyer, a retiree who’s led caucuses for years in northeast Mitchell County, told me. “As an Iowan who cares about such things, I’m sorry to see it go … but it’s okay.” Then he chuckled: “It’s like an aging ball player saying, It was a good run and I enjoyed those World Series games, but now I’m ready to watch from the comfort of the den with a drink in my hand.”

    Others are left with a bitter taste. They have some arguments in their favor, after all: Candidates with no money can travel across Iowa easily and purchase ads cheaply. The caucus process itself allows people to rank their preferences and enables coalition-building among supporters of different candidates. “I don’t think people understood the nuance that was there, and that might be the party’s biggest failure,” Sandy Dockendorff, a longtime caucus leader in the southeast, told me. The result, she said, is that people in flyover country will feel even more neglected than they already do.

    “That’s telling a lot of rural folks—a lot of the breadbasket—that we don’t matter,” Dockendorff said. “That’ll be felt for generations.”

    Three years ago, I wrote a story about the Iowa Democratic Party’s plan to offer “satellite” caucuses that would let some people with work commitments or disabilities participate remotely. I was critical of the proposal because it wouldn’t solve all of the caucus’s inclusivity problems. After my article ran, a well-known Iowa labor leader emailed me. “I can tell you really dislike Iowa!” he wrote. The note was short, and I was crushed. My chest hurt. Had I betrayed my state with a single, 1,300-word article? But I think I understand how he was feeling. I get it now.

    Americans outside the Midwest may soon forget about the Butter Cow. Iowa will take an economic hit if the state doesn’t go first in the Democrats’ nominating process. The restaurants serving tenderloins and chicken lips to eager-to-please politicians won’t make as much; the hotels and bars frequented by the national press corps will suffer. But the real reason these changes will be hard for many Iowans to accept is that a whole lot of pride is tied up in this thing. I hear it when I’m talking on the phone with my parents, and when I’m listening to people like Dockendorff and Meyer reminisce. Caucus advocates claim that Iowans are perfectly suited for the part because they are a particularly discerning people. I don’t think that’s true. But Iowans do take the role seriously—at least the ones who participate.

    Iowa Democrats have invested decades of effort into hosting bright-eyed, young campaign staffers from California and Massachusetts in their homes. They’ve given rookie candidates with few resources the space to make a case and a name for themselves. That all of this might soon be ripped away by a faceless group of people in D.C.—who seem to harbor, if not ill will, then at least a light disdain toward Iowa—is hard to swallow. Identity is a tricky thing.

    No one is totally sure what happens next. The DNC will vote on the new order in February, and this summer, states will submit plans for the upcoming election. Iowa will have to decide how to play it. If state Democrats agree to move the caucus, in theory that breaks state law; the state attorney general could sue them. Some party leaders seem eager to say “Screw it!” and hold a first-in-the-nation caucus anyway, which could mean that Iowa’s delegates aren’t counted at the national convention. Candidates who campaign for such an unsanctioned event could face repercussions. But whatever happens, after committee members vote and state leaders draw their line in the sand, the Iowa caucus probably won’t look the same.

    I don’t get to decide what the best outcome would be, for the state or for the process itself. But for all of my life and 20 years before that, Iowa has enjoyed a very particular feeling—a heady mix of relevance and attention—that has become enmeshed, irrevocably, into Iowans’ sense of their home and themselves. I learned to cherish that feeling as a 7-year-old. Maybe it’s time for other people, in some other state, to feel it, too. It will be hard to let go.

    Elaine Godfrey

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