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Tag: Donald Trump president

  • Say What? Waka Flocka Goes Viral After Sharing A Request For Donald Trump

    Say What? Waka Flocka Goes Viral After Sharing A Request For Donald Trump

    Social media users are sharing their reactions after Waka Flocka Fame made a viral request for former President Donald Trump.

    RELATED: They Outside! Waka Flocka’s Girlfriend Melanie Shares Video Montage Of Their Quality Time

    Waka Flocka’s Viral Request

    On Saturday, January 20, the rapper took to X, formerly known as Twitter, with a message that started with “Dear Trump.” As he continued, Waka made a request of the former president, who is now seeking reelection.

    Waka asked for Trump to “abolish” the October holiday, Christopher Columbus Day.

    Additionally, the 37-year-old rapper referred to the holiday as an insult to Black men.

    “Dear Trump abolish Christopher Columbus Day… As a what’s called Blackman in United States this holiday is a spit in our faces… Thanks from Waka Flocka Flame and the People!!!” he wrote.

    To note, Waka Flocka previously expressed his endorsement of Trump for the upcoming election via X in October 2023.

     

    Social Media Reacts

    Social media users entered The Shade Room’s comment section to share their reactions to Waka’s request for Trump. Many appeared confused as to why he would make a request to someone who does not currently have presidential authority.

    Instagram user @whoisfrankpierce wrote, Odd request to a person who is not the sitting president.”

    While Instagram user @jazzeradiochica added,Is he asking a regular citizen to change a holiday?! 😩”

    Instagram user @aspinnickela remarked, “He’s not even the president baby!! Go back to the drawing board and try again.”

    While Instagram user @4everdanni added, Waka with respect please don’t speak for me, thanks.”

    Instagram user @kelly_824 remarked, We celebrate Indigenous Peoples’ Day now Flocka. You’re a lil late.”

    While Instagram user @shademarshelenewyork added, OUT OF ALLLLL THE THINGS….”

    Instagram user @blazemom1115 wrote, Waka you’re late! It’s now called Indigenous Peoples’ Day! Christopher Columbus has been canceled!! 🙄🤣”

    Joe Biden Also Went Viral On Social Media

    Meanwhile, as Waka pulled Trump into headlines this past weekend, President Joe Biden also garnered his own attention. On Friday, January 19, TikToker @christiandior.1 took to the platform to share a video of Biden “just chillin” in his home.

    The young man captioned the clip, “dinner with POTUS.” 

    In the video, Christian explained that Biden visited his residence the day before. The visit was executed in true presidential style, with many Secret Service agents and photographers on location.

    Ultimately, Christian gave viewers a look at Biden touring his home and eating a meal with his family.

    Check out the clip below.

    On Friday, Biden also took to X to share his own recap of his visit with the family. As seen in Christin’s TikTok, the president’s visit appeared to be part of a larger initiative around student debt.

    Check out his sentiments below.

    RELATED: #TSRPolitics: Democrats Push For President Biden To Forgive $50,000 In Student Debt For All Borrowers By Executive Action

    Jadriena Solomon

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  • Alvin Bragg Is Known as a Sharp, Methodical Prosecutor. Can He Handle the Politics of a Trump Indictment?

    Alvin Bragg Is Known as a Sharp, Methodical Prosecutor. Can He Handle the Politics of a Trump Indictment?

    Donald Trump’s attacks on Alvin Bragg were escalating as the former president grew increasingly panicked that he was soon to be indicted by the Manhattan district attorney. So a friend sent Bragg a text, expressing concern for his well-being. The DA’s response was short, self-effacing, and utterly serene. It was only a text, but Bragg seemed unfazed by the maelstrom the former president was ginning up and aiming straight at him.

    Bragg’s temperament under pressure has never been in doubt—not when he was a kid traveling from Harlem each day to study at a wealthy, predominantly white Upper West Side private school, not when he was a Harvard freshman trying to bridge tensions between Black and Jewish students, not when the front page of the New York Post was (misleadingly) blaming Bragg for a decrease in convictions. “Alvin was at the center of many high-profile, challenging cases,” says Amy Spitalnick, a colleague during Bragg’s time as New York State’s chief deputy attorney general. “He brought a levelheadedness that translated to the entire team.” Bragg’s legal skills draw similarly consistent praise, including his work as a federal prosecutor under former United States attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet Bharara. What is in question is Bragg’s political judgment—something that the Trump case is now severely testing.

    Bragg, a 49-year-old father of two and a longtime Sunday school teacher, made his rookie run for public office in 2021. He announced early that he was going to challenge incumbent DA Cyrus Vance Jr.; after Vance decided not to run for reelection, Bragg won a sharply contested primary that, in heavily Democratic Manhattan, was tantamount to winning the general election. Upon taking office, Bragg found himself almost immediately engulfed in controversy. A memo to his new staff laid out his plans: With some exceptions, the office would no longer prosecute low-level offenses such as fare evasion and prostitution, and it would seek lesser charges for certain robberies in which the accused did not “create a genuine risk of physical harm.” These positions were consistent with Bragg’s campaign platform, but when the memo leaked, the Post declared it akin to a get-out-of-jail-free card. As a result of the memo, along with Bragg’s defense of bail reform and the city’s climbing postpandemic crime rate, the new DA spent his first year on the defensive. Bragg tinkered with some of the policy changes, and by the end of 2022, Manhattan’s shooting and homicide numbers were declining; other major crime categories have also been trending down in 2023. He also followed through on progressive initiatives, such as financing mental health care services for people arrested in Manhattan and funding multiple organizations with programs to prevent youth gun violence. But Bragg had allowed himself to be caricatured as soft on crime, something Trump and his allies are now trying to exploit.

    Bragg inherited a Trump investigation from Vance. In February 2022, two special prosecutors hired by Vance quit, with one of them, Mark Pomerantz, blasting Bragg on his way out the door, claiming the DA was committing “a grave failure of justice” by not charging Trump with felonies related to his allegedly falsifying financial statements (Trump denies any wrongdoing). Pomerantz subsequently wrote a book detailing his argument. Now, about a month and a half after the book was published, Bragg appears to be on the verge of indicting Trump after all, having refocused his investigation on the hush money payment (Trump denies any wrongdoing in this case as well). “Did he see the light or feel the heat?” asks Tristan Snell, who helped lead the investigation into Trump University at the New York State attorney general’s office. “They slammed the brakes and a couple of people got out of the car and started yelling at him. That’s what changed. I think it’s very clear that the public reaction to not pursuing it really caught them off guard, and he realized he was out of step with his constituency.”

    People who have worked with Bragg find this interpretation implausible. Instead, they believe it was completely in character for the DA to have slowed down the Trump investigation while methodically evaluating the evidence. His team may also be incorporating valuable new witnesses and fresh evidence, including Trump’s tax returns. And even Snell wholeheartedly backs Bragg against the critique that linking the murky payment to Stormy Daniels with an alleged violation of federal election regulations—something necessary to charge the former president with a felony—is a novel, tenuous legal strategy. “I think that criticism is ridiculous,” Snell says. “It’s not a novel legal theory to simply apply the plain letter of the law. Just because you haven’t had a situation where that law was paired with a particular crime before does not make it a weird, far-out legal theory. It just means that this permutation of laws has never occurred before. If people are going to say that this combination of statutes is uncharted—well, yeah, the combination of offenses is uncharted too.”

    Chris Smith

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  • Donald Trump seeks White House again amid GOP losses, legal probes

    Donald Trump seeks White House again amid GOP losses, legal probes

    Former President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he will mount a third White House campaign, launching an early start to the 2024 contest. The announcement comes just a week after an underwhelming midterm showing for Republicans and will force the party to decide whether to embrace a candidate whose refusal to accept defeat in 2020 pushed American democracy to the brink.

    “I am tonight announcing my candidacy for president of the United States,” Trump said to an audience of several hundred supporters, club members and gathered press in a chandeliered ballroom at his Mar-a-Lago club, where he stood flanked by more than 30 American flags and banners that read, “MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

    Trump enters the race in a moment of political vulnerability. He hoped to launch his campaign in the wake of resounding GOP midterm victories, fueled by candidates he elevated during this year’s primaries. Instead, many of those candidates lost, allowing Democrats to keep the Senate and leaving the GOP with a path to only a bare majority in the House.

    Far from the undisputed leader of the party, Trump is now facing criticism from some of his own allies, who say it’s time for Republicans to look to the future, with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis emerging as an early favorite White House contender.

    The former president is still popular with the GOP base. But other Republicans, including former Vice President Mike Pence, are taking increasingly public steps toward campaigns of their own, raising the prospect that Trump will have to navigate a competitive GOP primary.

    He’s launching his candidacy amid a series of escalating criminal investigations, including several that could lead to indictments. They include the probe into dozens of documents with classified markings that were seized by the FBI from Mar-a-Lago and ongoing state and federal inquiries into his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

    Another campaign is a remarkable turn for any former president, much less one who made history as the first to be impeached twice and whose term ended with his supporters violently storming the Capitol in a deadly bid to halt the peaceful transition of power on Jan. 6, 2021.

    But Trump, according to people close to him, has been eager to return to politics and try to halt the rise of other potential challengers. Aides have spent the last months readying paperwork, identifying potential staff, and sketching out the contours of a campaign that is being modeled on his 2016 operation, when a small clutch of aides zipping between rallies on his private jet defied the odds and defeated far better-funded and more experienced rivals by tapping into deep political fault lines and using shocking statements to drive relentless media attention.

    Even after GOP losses, Trump remains the most powerful force in his party. For years he has consistently topped his fellow Republican contenders by wide margins in hypothetical head-to-head matchups. And even out of office, he consistently attracts thousands to his rallies and remains his party’s most prolific fundraiser, raising hundreds of millions of dollars.

    But Trump is also a deeply polarizing figure. Fifty-four percent of voters in last week’s midterm elections viewed him very or somewhat unfavorably, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 94,000 voters nationwide. And an October AP-NORC poll found even Republicans have their reservations about him remaining the party’s standard-bearer, with 43% saying they don’t want to see him run for president in 2024.

    Trump’s candidacy poses profound questions about America’s democratic future. The final days of his presidency were consumed by a desperate effort to stay in power, undermining the centuries-old tradition of a peaceful transfer. And in the two years since he lost, Trump’s persistent — and baseless — lies about widespread election fraud have eroded confidence in the nation’s political process. By late January 2021, about two-thirds of Republicans said they did not believe President Joe Biden was legitimately elected in 2020, an AP-NORC poll found.

    VoteCast showed roughly as many Republican voters in the midterm elections continued to hold that belief.

    Federal and state election officials and Trump’s own attorney general have said there is no credible evidence the 2020 election was tainted. The former president’s allegations of fraud were also roundly rejected by numerous courts, including by judges Trump appointed.

    But that didn’t stop hundreds of midterm candidates from parroting his lies as they sought to win over his loyal base and score his coveted endorsement. In the end, many of those candidates went on to lose their races a sign that voters rejected such extreme rhetoric.

    While some Republicans with presidential ambitions, like former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, have long ruled out running against Trump, others have said he would not figure into their decisions, even before his midterm losses.

    They include Pence, who released a book Tuesday, and Trump’s former secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, as well as former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who ran against Trump in 2016. Other potential candidates include Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, and Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin. Trump is also likely to face challenges from members of the anti-Trump wing of the party like Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan and Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, vice chair of the House committee that has been investigating Jan. 6.

    But the person who has most occupied Trump and his allies in recent months is DeSantis, whose commanding reelection as governor last week was a bright spot for Republicans this cycle. The former congressman, who became a popular national figure among conservatives during the pandemic as he pushed back on COVID-19 restrictions, shares Trump’s pugilistic instincts and has embraced fights over social issues with similar zeal.

    Even some enthusiastic Trump supporters say they are eager for DeSantis to run, seeing him as a natural successor to Trump but without the former president’s considerable baggage.

    Trump has already begun to lash out at DeSantis publicly. On Tuesday, the Florida governor shot back.

    “At the end of the day, I would just tell people to go check out the scoreboard from last Tuesday night,” DeSantis told reporters.

    A crowded field of GOP rivals could ultimately play to Trump’s advantage, as it did in 2016 when he prevailed over more than a dozen other candidates who splintered the anti-Trump vote.

    Trump’s decision paves the way for a potential rematch with Biden, who has said he intends to run for reelection despite concerns from some in his party over his age and low approval ratings. The two men were already the oldest presidential nominees ever when they ran in 2020. Trump, who is 76, would be 82 at the end of the second term in 2029. Biden, who is about to turn 80, would be 86.

    If he is ultimately successful, Trump would be just the second U.S. president in history to serve two nonconsecutive terms, following Grover Cleveland’s wins in 1884 and 1892.

    But Trump enters the race facing enormous challenges beyond his party’s growing trepidations. The former president is the subject of numerous investigations, including the monthslong probe into the hundreds of documents with classified markings found in boxes at Mar-a-Lago.

    Meanwhile, Trump is facing Justice Department scrutiny over efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. In Georgia, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is investigating what she alleges was “a multi-state, coordinated plan by the Trump Campaign” to influence the 2020 results.

    And in New York, Attorney General Letitia James has sued Trump, alleging his namesake company engaged in decades’ worth of fraudulent bookkeeping by misleading banks about the value of his assets. The Trump Organization is also now on trial, facing criminal tax fraud charges.

    Some in Trump’s orbit believe that running will help shield him against potential indictment, but there is no legal statute that would prevent the Justice Department from moving forward — or prevent Trump from continuing to run if he is charged.

    It wasn’t any secret what he had been planning.

    At a White House Christmas party in December 2020, Trump told guests it had “been an amazing four years.”

    “We are trying to do another four years,” he said. “Otherwise, I’ll see you in four years.”

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