ReportWire

Tag: donaldtrump

  • Chris Christie fires back at Donald Trump as the Republican race heats up in New Hampshire

    Chris Christie fires back at Donald Trump as the Republican race heats up in New Hampshire

    [ad_1]

    ‘Keep it coming, Donald.’

    That’s Republican presidential candidate and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie responding to recent attacks against him by former President Donald Trump, the leading Republican contender in the 2024 race.

    In an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Thursday, Christie faulted Trump for not agreeing to appear at the Republican presidential debates, where Christie said Trump would have the opportunity to confront his fellow candidates in person.

    “If he had any guts, he’d get on the debate stage,” Christie said, adding that the former president was hiding behind his “failed” Truth Social site.

    In a series of Truth Social posts that went up late Wednesday, Trump accused Christie of being a “grifter” and pointed to issues with his tenure as New Jersey governor, noting Christie’s low approval rating at the end of his two terms. Trump’s posts also included the now-infamous pictures of Christie sitting at a New Jersey beach in 2017 during a time when such spaces were closed due to the state’s government shutdown.

    Christie has generally trailed in the 2024 presidential polling, but has been making a strong effort to establish himself in New Hampshire, a key early state.

    According to a recent CNN/University of New Hampshire poll, Trump still leads in the state by a wide margin (39%), but Christie (11%) is essentially in a four-way tie with tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy (13%), former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (12%) and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (10%) for second place. DeSantis had been considered Trump’s closest rival in the state, but he’s seen his poll numbers drop considerably of late.

    Christie said on CNN that his rise in New Hampshire has likely prompted Trump’s recent accusations.

    “He has stopped attacking Ron DeSantis and he started attacking me,” Christie said.

    Christie also jokingly questioned if Trump’s late-Wednesday Truth Social posts were a result of indigestion.

    “Maybe he had some bad Chinese food or something,” Christie said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Lindsey Graham, Nearly Indicted in Trump Election Case, Claims He Was Just Doing His Job by Asking Georgia About Throwing Out Ballots

    Lindsey Graham, Nearly Indicted in Trump Election Case, Claims He Was Just Doing His Job by Asking Georgia About Throwing Out Ballots

    [ad_1]

    Remember when Lindsey Graham phoned up a top Georgia official after the 2020 election and suggested, according to that official, that mail-in ballots be thrown out—which would have coincidentally benefited his good pal Donald Trump, who made a similar, even more incriminating call just weeks later? Well, on Friday, we learned that a special grand jury had recommended Graham be charged as part of the RICO case against Trump. His response? I was just doing my job! Note: None of what the senator did is actually part of his job.

    Nevertheless, Graham boldly claimed that he made a “responsible decision” when he rang up Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger in November 2020 for a chat about mail-in ballots. “What I did was consistent with my job as being a United States senator, chairman of the Judiciary Committee,” Graham told reporters today. “I think the system in this country is getting off the rails, and we have to be careful not to use the legal system as a political tool.” He added that he was shocked to learn that a special grand jury that met from June to December of last year—and made charging recommendations to Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis—had voted 13-7 that he should be prosecuted. “I was totally surprised,” Graham said, adding, “I never suggested anybody set aside the election. I never said, ‘go find votes.’ I never said anything other than trying to find how the mail-in balloting system worked.”

    X content

    This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

    Of course, according to Raffensperger, Graham did not merely phone him up for a primer on how “how the mail-in balloting system work[s].” Rather, Raffensperger has said, Graham suggested throwing out all mail-in ballots in counties with high rates of nonmatching signatures. Speaking to The Washington Post in 2020, Raffensperger said he was stunned by the proposal. Luckily for Graham, his calls to the Georgia official were not recorded—a factor that The New York Times notes, “probably figured in the decision not to charge” him. As for Graham’s emphasis on the fact that he never told anyone to “go find votes,” that’s not actually something he’s been accused of. But if he thinks such a demand sounds very bad and possibly illegal, he should be extremely worried about Trump, who was, in fact, recorded saying that. (Editor’s note: Trump is on tape telling Raffensperger, “I just want to find 11,780 votes,” which is actually a lot worse given that it’s the precise number he needed to overturn his loss in Georgia.)

    Graham is not the only person the special grand jury recommended charging who ultimately got off scot-free. Others on the list, which was unsealed by a judge on Friday, included former senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler; disgraced national security adviser Michael Flynn; and former Trump lawyers Boris Epshteyn, Cleta Mitchell, and Lin Wood.

    Just to be clear, Graham will not be removing his head from Trump’s ass

    X content

    This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

    [ad_2]

    Bess Levin

    Source link

  • With Trump’s Presence Far From Assured, RNC Releases First Debate Guidelines

    With Trump’s Presence Far From Assured, RNC Releases First Debate Guidelines

    [ad_1]

    The Republican National Committee (RNC) finally released its guidelines for its first primary debate, which will be hosted by Fox News and held in Milwaukee on August 23. Hoping to stave off embarrassment for the party, GOP participants, expected to be in the double-digits, must pledge their support for the eventual nominee—which Trump infamously refused to do during the 2016 primary—and agree to forgo any unsanctioned debates.

    In order to qualify for the debate stage, candidates must poll over one percent in either three national polls or two national polls and one state poll, and also boast at least 40,000 unique campaign donors spread across 20 states and territories. 

    The RNC said that a second debate could be held the following day if a high number of candidates qualify, but so far has not explained how they would divide up the field. In 2016, the party gave the ten top polling candidates spots on the main debate stage and relegated the stragglers to an undercard debate.

    “Debates are not a vanity project but a critical opportunity to find the next President of the United States,” RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel told The Washington Post. “If you can’t find 40,000 unique donors to give you a dollar and at least 1 percent of the primary electorate to support you, how can you expect to defeat Joe Biden?”

    The debate rules are a long time coming. “By this time in 2015,” Vanity Fair’s Charlotte Klein wrote Friday, “the date and venue for the first debate had already been reported, and the GOP, after streamlining the debate schedule, was wrestling with how to fit the robust 2016 field onstage.” 

    Still, there’s much we don’t know about how the debate will unfold, and the main question mark is whether the stage will even include the former president and current Republican frontrunner, Donald Trump. Early last month, The New York Times reported that Trump was likely to bail on at least one of the first two debates, and The Washington Post revealed that Trump had spoken privately with Tucker Carlson about the prospect of having the former Fox News host moderate a separate, non-RNC sanctioned debate, which would disqualify Trump under the current RNC rules. 

    Trump could play a will-he-won’t-he game for months, as he doesn’t need to make a decision until August 21st, which is the deadline for candidates to submit their qualifications and pledge to support the nominee. 

    The qualification requirements may prove prohibitive for a number of current and likely candidates. In a collection of recent national polls compiled by Real Clear Politics, only Trump, Ron DeSantisNikki HaleyMike PenceVivek Ramaswamy, and Tim Scott averaged over one percent. One likely candidate who could struggle to qualify is former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who is expected to enter the race next week and has pledged to directly attack Trump for his attempt to overturn the 2020 election. Christie struggled to attract small donors when he ran for president in 2016, and is hovering just around one percent in Real Clear Politics’ polling compilation. 

    There is at least one candidate, however, who wishes the standards were even stricter. The New York Times reported that two Republicans familiar with the DeSantis campaign said the candidate’s team was hoping for a higher qualification threshold, “which would have been likely to thin out the stage,” giving the Florida Governor more opportunities to directly challenge his main rival, who is currently clobbering him in the polls. 

    Trump addressed the prospect of a DeSantis debate showdown last week. “They say he’s not a very good debater, but maybe he is,” he said. “We’ll find out. Maybe we’ll find out. Because unless he gets close, why would anybody debate?”

    [ad_2]

    Jack McCordick

    Source link

  • Biden and Trump’s Memorial Day Commemorations Surprise No One

    Biden and Trump’s Memorial Day Commemorations Surprise No One

    [ad_1]

    On a day meant to remember and honor U.S. military veterans who made the ultimate sacrifice, the current and former president took very different approaches. 

    President Joe Biden offered a solemn message Monday morning to commemorate the 155th annual Memorial Day observance at Arlington National Cemetery. “We must never forget the price that was paid to protect our democracy. We must never forget the lives these flags, flowers, and marble markers represent,” Biden said. “Every year, we remember, and every year, it never gets easier.” 

    Biden’s message was a sharp contrast to his chief Republican counterpart, former president Donald Trump, who took to his social media app Truth Social to offer a Memorial Day rant/statement in his signature all-caps logorrhea to “those who gave the ultimate sacrifice” and those “stopping the threats of the terrorists, misfits and lunatic thugs who are working feverishly from within to overturn and destroy our once great nation.”

    Trump went on to warn that the United States “has never been in greater peril than it is right now” and demand his supporters “stop the communists, Marxists, and fascist ‘pigs’ at every turn and make American great again!” 

    The juxtaposition comes as Biden and Trump are the current front-runners for their respective parties for the nomination for the 2024 presidential election, as both have officially declared their candidacy.

    During his speech, Biden mentioned that Tuesday marks the 8th anniversary of the death of his late son, Beau Biden, who served in Iraq and died of cancer in 2015. “As it is for so many of you, the pain of the loss is with us every day, but particularly sharp on Memorial Day,” he said, speaking to Americans whose relatives served and died in the armed forces.

    In a widely-clipped moment during a presidential debate in September 2020, Biden criticized Trump for calling military members “losers” and “suckers” and raised the story of his late son. “I don’t know Beau, I know Hunter,” Trump replied. 

    Trump has escalated his attacks on so-called “wokeness” in the armed forces as his legal quagmires worsened over the past few months. The military, he said in an April speech following his indictment in New York, “has now gone woke at the top levels by trying to indoctrinate everyone down to the lowest ranking patriot, but now they have really stepped up their efforts by indicting the 45th president,” referring to himself in the third person (Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg indicted Trump).

    [ad_2]

    Jack McCordick

    Source link