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Tag: vivek ramaswamy

  • Vigils for Charlie Kirk planned by Turning Point USA chapters at UC and Miami University

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    Memorials for activist Charlie Kirk are planned at Miami University and the University of Cincinnati Sept 16.

    Vigils have been happening around the country in the wake of the Sept. 10 fatal shooting of Kirk in Utah. Kirk’s non-profit, Turning Point USA, has a presence at over 3,500 universities, according to its website.

    Ohio Republican gubernatorial candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, U.S. Sen. Jon Husted and Attorney General Dave Yost all spoke at a vigil in Columbus Sunday.

    Most vigils have been peaceful, but some videos have gone viral of racist groups demonstrating in Kirk’s memory. Videos from a march in Los Angeles show masked individuals chanting, “White man. Fight back.”

    Several vigils have already been held in the Greater Cincinnati region including a Clermont County event in Union Township that drew hundreds of people, according to social media posts.

    The Miami University chapter announced its memorial on its Instagram page, which has over 900 followers, saying that Kirk’s assassination was devasting, but would not stop the movement Kirk started.

    “This is country is not so much divided by Republicans and Democrats anymore, it’s divided by those who love the United States of America and those who seek to destroy it,” chapter president Cooper LeMaster said in video on the post. “We need you to join us in this battle for our country.”

    The Miami University event is scheduled for Sept. 16 at 8 p.m. at the Farmer School of Business.

    The University of Cincinnati event is scheduled at 8 p.m. on Sept. 16 on campus at the Bearcat Commons.

    On campuses across the country, Turning Point USA has promoted conservative causes. The nonprofit states its mission is to “restore traditional American values like patriotism, respect for life, liberty, family, and fiscal responsibility.”

    More events for Kirk are planned. On Sept. 17, Kentucky Rep. TJ Roberts is hosting a candlelight vigil at Burlington Commons in Boone County at 8 p.m.

    This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Charlie Kirk vigils in Ohio planned at UC and Miami University

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  • Trump’s Big New York Rally Has Been A Racist, Sexist, Freak Show

    Trump’s Big New York Rally Has Been A Racist, Sexist, Freak Show

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    Trump’s vanity Madison Square Garden rally has been a collection of the sort of racist and sexist freak show that is orbiting his presidential campaign.

    First, there was a racist comedian who made racist comments about Puerto Ricans, black people, and Latinos.

    Later came a parade of New York House Republicans all there to proclaim that New York, where Trump got 37% of the vote in 2020 is Trump country.

    Speaker Mike Johnson showed to unconvincingly promise victory:

    Vivek Ramaswamy claimed that woke and believing in climate change makes millennials depressed and suicidal:

    We’ve also had appearances from Tulsi Gabbard and RFK Jr.

    Tucker Carlson showed up to continue his obsession with young girls:

    JD Vance, the other half of the weirdest ticket in presidential election history, spoke.

    Trump was originally thought to have been speaking about 90 minutes ago, as this event is well into its third hour.

    This was supposed to be Trump’s big event to show how much much New York loves him. Instead it has been an oddball circus that Democrats how extreme and out of step MAGA is the the American mainstream.

    Instead of holding a full day of multiple events as Kamala Harris has done in Pennsylvania, Donald Trump is throwing a party for himself in a state that he has no chance of winning as he doubles down on extremism.

    To comment on this story, join us on Reddit.

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    Jason Easley

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  • Elon Musk Meets With Donald Trump in Florida as 2024 Election Looms: Report

    Elon Musk Meets With Donald Trump in Florida as 2024 Election Looms: Report

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    Elon Musk met with Donald Trump in Florida this past Sunday, according to a new report from the New York Times. And while it’s not clear what the two men discussed, news of the meeting comes as Musk has ratcheted up his rhetoric against illegal immigration and Trump looks for new sources of cash.

    The Times report doesn’t name a source for the meeting but cites “three people briefed on the meeting.” An account that tracks Musk’s jet on the social media platform BlueSky shows he landed in West Palm Beach on Saturday, March 2, and left the next day.

    Musk previously claimed that he’d never voted for a Republican before 2022, which heavily suggests he never voted for Trump either in 2016 or 2020. But Musk has fully embraced Republican politics in recent years, even if he’s kept Trump at an arm’s length at times.

    Musk was an early advocate for Vivek Ramaswamy to become the Republican nominee for president, though Ramaswamy dropped out of the race back in mid-January. Ramaswamy, an entrepreneur and long-shot candidate, never put up much of a fight against Trump and has since endorsed the former president.

    The billionaire SpaceX CEO may not love Trump personally, but the two men have many shared interests. Trump, for example, wants to unleash U.S. troops on American streets to round up anyone who might look like they’re in the country illegally, a plan that Musk might just agree with.

    Musk has created a steady drumbeat of xenophobic nonsense on X in recent months, insisting that illegal immigration is the biggest issue facing the country—an overwhelming potential threat that’s become a fixation for Musk. Oddly, Musk didn’t seem to care much about immigration until about 2023, judging solely from his tweets and public comments. And Musk’s new pet issue puts him at odds with President Joe Biden, who’s not exactly a dove on immigration policy.

    “This administration is both importing voters and creating a national security threat from unvetted illegal immigrants,” Musk tweeted late Monday in a tone that’s become typical of the billionaire.

    To be clear, non-citizens aren’t allowed to vote in the U.S., so Musk’s insistence that Biden is “importing” voters is flat wrong. But Musk went on to say immigration could create a threat as serious as the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.

    “It is highly probable that the groundwork is being laid for something far worse than 9/11. Just a matter of time,” Musk continued.

    It should be noted that none of the terrorists that carried out the attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center in New York were in the country illegally. They all entered on completely legal visas.

    Biden has said he’d like to “close” the border if Republicans can get him a bill that addresses the issue. Sen. James Lankford, a Republican from Oklahoma, spent months negotiating a bipartisan bill that’s widely viewed as the toughest immigration reform in a generation. But that legislation was torpedoed by Republicans after Trump made it clear he wants the border to be an issue he can campaign on in the lead-up to November’s presidential election.

    And that’s the problem the U.S. now faces. Trump, who’s currently leading Biden in several national polls, thrives in a world of chaos. And Musk might be signing up for precisely that kind of chaotic mission if he starts to support Trump financially.

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    Matt Novak

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  • How Donald Trump Became Unbeatable

    How Donald Trump Became Unbeatable

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    Not too long ago, Donald Trump looked finished. After the January 6 attack on the Capitol, the repeal of Roe v. Wade, and a poor Republican showing in the 2022 midterms, the GOP seemed eager to move on from the former president. The postTrump era had supposedly begun.

    Just one week after the midterms, he entered the 2024 race, announcing his candidacy to a room of bored-looking hangers-on. Even his children weren’t there. Security had to pen people in to keep them from leaving during his meandering speech.

    Today, thanks to Trump’s dominant performance in South Carolina, the Republican primary is all but over. Trump’s margin was so comfortable that the Associated Press called the race as soon as polls closed. How did we get here? How did Trump go from historically weak to unassailable?

    I talk with Republican-primary voters in focus groups every week, and through these conversations, I’ve learned that the answer has as much to do with Trump’s party and his would-be competitors as it does with Trump himself. Most Republican leaders have profoundly misread their base in this moment.

    The other candidates hoped to be able to defeat Trump even as they accommodated his behavior and made excuses for his criminality. They even said they would support his reelection. By doing so, they established a permission structure for Republican voters to return to Trump, all but ensuring his rise.

    My focus groups over the past few years can be seen as a travelogue through the GOP’s journey back to Trump. Three key themes emerged that help explain why Trump’s opponents failed to gain traction.

    First, you can’t beat something with nothing. The Republican field didn’t offer voters anything new.

    Nikki Haley and Mike Pence cast themselves as avatars of the pre-Trump GOP. Ron DeSantis and Vivek Ramaswamy did their best to imitate Trump, presenting themselves as younger and more competent stewards of the same MAGA agenda. None of them offered a viable alternative to Trump; instead, they spent their resources trying not to anger his supporters.

    But Republican voters don’t want Reagan Republicanism. Old-school conservatives may pine for a return to balanced budgets, personal responsibility, and American leadership in the world (guilty). But a greater share of Republican voters prefer an isolationist foreign policy and candidates who promise to punish their domestic enemies.

    “The feds, both parties, the elites … want everything to go back to the way it was before Trump got elected,” said Bret, a two-time Trump voter from Georgia. “And that would be the wrong direction, in my opinion.”

    And voters aren’t interested in Trump-lite when they can have the real thing. Trump’s supporters see in him a leader who’s willing to fight for them. No other candidate proved they could do that better than Trump.

    “We need a man that is strong as hell, a brick house,” said Fred, a two-time Trump voter from South Carolina, in May 2023. “He is that man.”

    Larry, an Iowa Republican, called Trump “a disruptor. In the business world, you bring in a disruptor when everybody’s stuck in groupthink. That’s what I hired him to do: blow stuff up.”

    Contrast that with how Republican voters saw his opponents. “If you want to be president, you’ve got to be hated by half the country,” said Dakota, a two-time Trump voter from Iowa, adding, about Nikki Haley: “I don’t think she can do it.”

    “Does it kind of feel in a sense that he just kind of gave up?” Ashley, another Iowa Republican, asked about DeSantis before he dropped out of the race.

    Pence, Chris Christie, and the other also-rans came in for much worse criticism. “I don’t know if anyone would vote for him, just his family at this point,” Justin, a two-time Trump voter from Texas, said of Pence. “I think he’s alienated everyone.”

    The second theme: Trump’s competitors declined to hit him on his 91 felony counts, despite the fact that voters say they have serious concerns about them. Instead, most of them (with the honorable exception of Christie and Asa Hutchinson) actively defended Trump.

    DeSantis called the charges the “criminalization of politics.” Haley said the charges were “more about revenge than … about justice.” And Ramaswamy promised to pardon Trump “on day one.”

    By the time Haley started attacking Trump in recent weeks, it was already too late. She can call him “diminished,” “unhinged,” “weak in the knees,” and “incredibly reckless,” but voters saw her raise her hand six months ago when asked whether she would support him if he became the nominee.

    If Trump’s primary opponents weren’t going to hold his indictments against him, why should GOP voters? “It’s all a witch hunt,” Dennis, a two-time Trump voter from Michigan, said of the charges. The Department of Justice and state prosecutors bringing the cases “are terrified of Trump for whatever reason … because they’re afraid he will run and they’re afraid he will win.”

    Lastly, Trump started to be seen as electable. This represented a big shift from a year ago, when voters had concerns about Trump’s ability to beat President Joe Biden in a rematch.

    In February 2023, Isaac, a Pennsylvania Republican, said of Trump: “I just feel he is unelectable. I think you could put him up there against fricking Donald Duck and Donald Duck will end up coming out ahead. He just ticks too many people off.”

    But as they got a better look at the alternatives—and as they came to believe that Biden was too frail, weak, and senile to be competitive in the general election—GOP voters came around.

    “I’m convinced that he is in the final stages of dementia,” Clifton, an Iowa Republican, said of Biden. “I mean, yeah, Trump’s an asshole and he doesn’t have a filter and he says stupid things, but it doesn’t matter.”

    These voters have come to believe that the election is a choice between senility and recklessness. And they’ve decided they prefer the latter.

    DeSantis’s rise and fall is the clearest demonstration of how we got here. For a time, he looked like the greatest threat to Trump, leveraging culture-war issues to gin up the base while projecting an image of being, as one voter put it to me, “Trump not on steroids.”

    He sent refugees to Martha’s Vineyard, went after Disney, banned books—and the base loved him for it. “For the most part, from what I hear, he’s doing a good job in Florida,” said Chris, a Republican voter from Illinois, in March 2023. “He stands for a lot of the same values that I think I do.”

    But over time, DeSantis’s star began to fade. The more retail campaigning he did, and the more voters were exposed to him, the less they liked what they saw.

    “I think he was a strong candidate before he was actually a candidate,” said Fred, a two-time Trump voter from New Hampshire in December 2023. He cited “things he’s done in Florida and how big he won his last governor’s election.” But now, he said, “I think he got a little too into the social issues.”

    By the time DeSantis dropped out, skepticism had turned to contempt among the Republican voters I spoke with. Sean, a two-time Trump voter from New Hampshire, put it succinctly last month: “He has a punchable face, and I just don’t like him.”

    This time last year, DeSantis had a real shot at consolidating the move-on-from-Trump faction of the GOP while making inroads with the maybe-Trumpers—each of which constitutes about a third of the party. Instead, he tried to wrestle the former president for his always-Trump base, a doomed effort. He couldn’t get traction with the always-Trumpers and he alienated the move-on-from-Trumpers. It was a hopeless strategy for a flawed candidate.

    Haley may hold out for a few more weeks, even though she has virtually no chance of beating Trump outright. Her only real incentive for remaining in the race is to be the last person standing in the event that he is imprisoned or suffers a major health event. Barring either of these scenarios, Trump’s path to the nomination is clear.

    This outcome wasn’t inevitable; Trump was beatable. His opponents had real opportunities to cleave off his support, but they squandered them.

    The reason is simple: Republican elites don’t understand their voters. They spent eight years making excuses for Trump and supporting him at every turn, sending the clear signal that this is his party. They spent nearly a decade saying that he was a persecuted martyr—and the greatest president in history. It’s frightening, but not surprising, that their voters think he’s the only man for the job.

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    Sarah Longwell

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  • ‘Chicken Fingers And Pudding Cups’: Trump Campaign Hammers Ron DeSantis Over Private Call Saying He Won’t Be VP

    ‘Chicken Fingers And Pudding Cups’: Trump Campaign Hammers Ron DeSantis Over Private Call Saying He Won’t Be VP

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    Opinion

    Screenshot: WYFF News 4

    The Donald Trump campaign put Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on blast after comments he made on a private call surfaced indicating that he had no interest in serving as Vice President.

    NBC News reported on the phone conversation with supporters in which DeSantis urged Trump to avoid “identity politics” in choosing a running mate while dismissing calls for him personally to join the ticket.

    “I would want somebody that, if something happened, the people that voted us in would have been pleased to know that they’re going to continue the mission,” DeSantis said.

    “I have heard that they’re looking more in identity politics. I think that’s a mistake,” he added. “I think you should just focus on who the best person for the job would be, and then do that accordingly.”

    That’s actually a reasonable concept and something Republicans have complained drives Democrats in their every decision – race and gender.

    RELATED: Trump Releases Wild New Campaign Ad Attacking ‘Pudding Fingers’ DeSantis

    DeSantis On Being Trump’s Veep: ‘I Am Not Doing That’

    According to the NBC report, DeSantis also squashed the idea of joining Trump’s campaign as his Vice President.

    “People were mentioning me. I am not doing that,” he said.

    DeSantis has long insisted that he would not join the Trump ticket even after leaving the presidential race. He also predicted that Trump would staff his White House with “yes men” who would do his bidding.

    “I think that how he staffs the White House, how he staffs the administration, will be really, really significant,” DeSantis said. “I think he likely is going to find people that are going to be more kind of yes men, rather than folks that are going to be pushing back.”

    RELATED: Donald Trump Teases Tim Scott As Running Mate

    Trump Campaign Fires Back

    To say the Trump campaign didn’t appreciate DeSantis’ comments would be a massive understatement.

    Campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt responded, “Ron DeSantis failed miserably in his presidential campaign and does not have a voice in selecting the next vice president of the United States.”

    “Rather than throw cheap shots from afar, Ron should focus on what he can do to fire [President] Joe Biden and Make America Great Again,” she added.

    Leavitt’s response was far more measured than that of one of Trump’s other aides, senior advisor Chris LaCivita.

    “Chicken fingers and pudding cups is what you will be remembered for you sad little man,” LaCivita wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

    Daily Beast report from last year claimed that DeSantis had a peculiar eating habit regarding pudding.

    Two unnamed sources for the leftist tabloid claimed that once, four years ago, “DeSantis enjoyed a chocolate pudding dessert—by eating it with three of his fingers.”

    Trump’s campaign turned it into a bizarre political ad against the Florida governor.

    Trump has offered up a few names to his list of vice presidential candidates, including Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, Florida GOP Rep. Byron Donalds, and South Carolina Gov. Kristi Noem.

    He did, actually also include DeSantis on that list during a Fox News town hall event earlier this week.

    During the private call, DeSantis refused to rule out another run for the White House in 2028.

    “Oh, I haven’t ruled anything out,” he said. “I mean … we’re still in this election cycle. So it’s presumptuous to say, you know, this or that. I think a lot happens in politics.”

    Let’s hope that he learns from the mistakes that he and his inept campaign strategists made throughout this past year.

    Follow Rusty on X

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    Rusty Weiss

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  • First in the Nation—And Last?

    First in the Nation—And Last?

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    Donald Trump shares an essential trait with the voters of New Hampshire: a craving for flattery and affirmation.

    Residents here are accustomed to parades of candidates trekking up every four years to tell them how sacred their first-in-the-nation primary is, how discerning their famously “independent” and “contrarian” voters are. Politicians strain endlessly to convey how vital New Hampshire is to the process.

    But things feel precarious and a bit upside down here these days—more final whimper than first salvo.

    I landed in Manchester on Friday afternoon and found the place almost numb with abandonment. Elm Street, the “main drag” of New Hampshire’s biggest city, which is usually good for a few candidate sightings and media scrums, was quiet. Once the marquee stopover on the presidential tour, this original colony felt neglected in the final weekend before today’s primary, and well past its glory.

    “Where is everyone?” I asked the woman next to me at the counter of the downtown Red Arrow Diner on Friday. The century-old greasy spoon on Lowell Street has served as a landmark for visiting political hacks and as a reliable backdrop for candidate photo ops.

    “Ryan Binkley was just here,” my stool-neighbor informed me. I Googled Ryan Binkley. He is a pastor from Texas who says he is running for president because God called him to. Who is Ryan Binkley? the yard signs say (good enough to finish fifth in Iowa, apparently).

    You can see why the once-pandered-to populace of the Granite State might feel unloved. Last year, the Democrats—led by the current president of the United States—dumped New Hampshire in favor of South Carolina as the party’s official first primary. The scorned New England mainstay scheduled its primary anyway, even though the Democratic National Committee said it would not recognize the results or award any delegates derived from this unholy action. President Joe Biden has not campaigned in the state, and his name is not on the ballot.

    Now Republicans keep dropping out, leaving the GOP race down to Trump, who routed the field in Iowa last week, and the former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley (plus Binkley and a few others). Campaign events were still occurring in New Hampshire in this final week, but far fewer than usual; Trump, and to a lesser extent Haley, drew most of the attention and the biggest crowds.

    The former president seemed both rambling and serene. “When I fly over a blue state, two days later, I get a subpoena,” Trump said at the start of a rally in Concord on Friday night. Technically, New Hampshire is itself a blue state, or at least it has been in the past several presidential elections; Trump lost it in both 2016 and 2020. But things were feeling quite safe here for Trump in the primary. Recent polls showed him with double-digit leads over Haley and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who was still in the race heading into the weekend but barely bothered with New Hampshire.

    “DeSantis, God bless him. He’s a remainder at this point,” New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu, a Republican, told me at a Haley event in a Milford restaurant on Friday afternoon. “What happened to this guy?” Trump asked of DeSantis a few hours later in Concord. “One of the great self-destructions I think I’ve ever witnessed.”

    At the very least, DeSantis understood that the prevailing dynamic of the Republican Party over the past eight years has stayed intact. “You can be the most worthless Republican in America,” he said in one of his final campaign stops in Iowa, discharging a few nuggets of clarity as he approached the end. “If you kiss the ring, he’ll say you are wonderful.” The governor quit the race on Sunday and, yes, kissed the ring on the way out, endorsing Trump.

    This followed a week’s procession of white flags. Former Trump “opponents” kept endorsing the former president—Vivek Ramaswamy last Monday; the governor of North Dakota, whoever that was, the day before; Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina on Friday, joining Trump in Concord. By Sunday, New Hampshire felt like the last stand of a battle that had never started.

    Throughout the weekend, Trump tried to assure his supporters that he knows how important the state is, even though he would almost certainly rather spend his time elsewhere; he described New Hampshire as “a drug-infested den” in a 2017 phone call with the then-president of Mexico. He has been holding nightly rallies across the state since Friday, telling everyone how special they are, and the admiration is of course mutual.

    “I’m thrilled to be back in the home of first-in-the-nation,” Trump said at his Concord rally. Any candidate who comes to New Hampshire cannot utter those four words—first in the nation—enough. And Trump did, four times in the space of a few sentences.

    “You know who kept you first in the nation?” Trump asked the crowd.

    “Trump!” he said, uttering his own name along with some in the audience.

    “But I just want to tell you, you’re first in the nation,” he said. “You’re always going be first in the nation!”

    For her part, Haley has been intent on convincing everyone that New Hampshire is still a race at all. A two-person race, to be precise. “Between Nikki and Trump,” Sununu repeated, like a fleece-wearing parrot, as he accompanied Haley across the state, four or five stops a day. He and Haley kept contrasting this particular two-person race with the one most Americans are dreading, between Trump and Biden.

    “People don’t want two 80-year-olds running for president,” Haley said in a brief press conference Friday at a diner in Amherst (Trump is 77; Biden is 81). She devoted much of the session to scolding the media for not properly correcting the false things Trump says about her. “Y’all need to call him out,” she urged. She also theorized that although 70 percent of Americans don’t want to be subjected to a Trump-Biden rematch, “70 percent of the media does want a rematch.”

    This is dubious, for what it’s worth. If anything, “the media” wanted a competitive primary campaign—some genuine uncertainty and drama, and a reason beyond obligation to keep tuning in.

    Like Trump, Dean Phillips is happy to fill the vacuum of love for New Hampshire. “We’ve got to practice democracy,” the Democratic representative from Minnesota said at a Nashua senior center on Saturday afternoon. Phillips, a wealthy former gelato baron, is waging a long-shot campaign against Biden—actually, a write-in version of Biden, who, because he’s not on the ballot, can be voted for only that way by New Hampshirites willing to overlook the president’s ghosting of their state.

    “Why write in Biden?” Phillips asked at the event, if Biden is “writing off New Hampshire?” Polite chuckles, maybe a moan or two. Phillips also suggested that Biden was “taking the Granite State for granted.” (Dean Phillips: The Dad Joke candidate!)

    Back in Concord, Trump had gone even further in conveying his admiration for his host and its traditions—reaching all the way back to the Civil War. Uh-oh. Haley did this last month, and it didn’t go well. But Trump—student of history that he is—had an important lesson to share. “They said the people from New Hampshire were very tough fighters,” Trump said. “Did you know that?” (No one seemed to.) He said he had read that somewhere. “History,” he continued. “Very tough fighters.”

    “You won a lot of battles. That was a nasty war.”

    He later proceeded with a strange flurry of comments about Haley, ridiculing her failure to protect the U.S. Capitol on January 6—wait, did he mean Nancy Pelosi, then the speaker of the House? Maybe, but Trump kept saying Haley’s name, over and over.

    “They,” he said, don’t want to talk about how Haley was in charge of security on January 6.

    He also said that Haley—this time he apparently did mean Nikki Haley, the one he’s running against—was not “capable,” “tough,” “smart,” or “respected” enough to be president and handle Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, or Kim Jong Un. “Very fine people,” Trump called them.

    In a different time, this would be the kind of weird front-runner face-plant that could turn a New Hampshire primary on its head. Haley did her best to keep Trump’s bizarre comments aloft over the weekend. But mostly they were met with the usual resignation of a party with little will to fight, drifting toward the inevitable.

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    Mark Leibovich

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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'

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    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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  • Vivek Ramaswamy  Never Had a Chance Even Though Elon Musk Pushed Him on X

    Vivek Ramaswamy Never Had a Chance Even Though Elon Musk Pushed Him on X

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    Elon Musk tried to utilize the power of his social media platform to push Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, posting that he believed the Republican would “exceed the polls” when the votes were counted. Yet, Ramaswamy suspended his campaign after winning only 7.7% of the votes and just three delegates in the Iowa caucuses.

    Ramaswamy ran as a more rabid version of Donald Trump in an attempt to appeal to Trump voters, but they remain true to their Chosen One — the man indicted on 91 criminal counts, who was also found liable for both rape and fraud recently.

    Ramaswamy, who defended his repetition of debunked conspiracy theories about January 6th and the great replacement theory, claimed his campaign had been about “truth” in his statement:

    “This entire campaign is about speaking the TRUTH. We did not achieve our goal tonight & we need an America-First patriot in the White House. The people spoke loud & clear about who they want. Tonight I am suspending my campaign and endorsing Donald J. Trump and will do everything I can to make sure he is the next U.S. President. I am enormously proud of this team, this movement, and our country.”

    Ramaswamy had promised to pardon Trump if elected president and posed with fans wearing “Save Trump, Vote Vivek” t-shirts.

    Ramaswamy is said to share “values” with Elon Musk and said in August of 2023 that if elected in 2024, he would run the government like Musk runs his companies.

    Elon has since been in the news being accused of doing illegal drugs and told major advertisers to “Go f*ck yourself” during The New York Times’ annual DealBook Summit after they left his social media platform due to its inability to ensure brand safety due to the proliferation of neo-Nazis and other hate accounts.

    Musk referred to advertisers choosing to spend money elsewhere as “blackmail.” (It’s actually capitalism in action, but given that Elon Musk’s companies take advantage of taxpayer-funded subsidies, he might not understand the concept as much as his Libertarian supporters would like to believe.)

    The billionaire owner of X/Twitter, who sees himself as some kind of political pundit now, has amplified racist attacks on Black people in recent days after creating a scandal for amplifying antisemitic posts on his embattled social media platform “X” (actually known as Twitter). Musk opined in response to low poll numbers for Ramaswamy several days ago: “My guess is that Vivek will far exceed the polls when the votes are counted.”

    Elon didn’t leave it there. He also wrote on Sunday “I think you’re right” to an account posting: “I truly believe this Monday @VivekGRamaswamy is going to shock the world. This is going to be a major win for the country.”

    Previously, Elon Musk amplified Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis, who launched his campaign on Musk’s platform, in what turned out to be an embarrassing fail tech-wise.

    The fact is Vivek Ramaswamy never had a chance with Trump supporters, because of his name and the color of his skin. But his message of ruling the country like a ruthless business person who maybe does illegal drugs and gets by on taxpayer subsidies while trying to sue the labor board (NLRB) after being accused of trying to silence critical employees and paying off a flight attendant $250,000 for something Musk claims he didn’t do didn’t seem to resonate, either. To be fair, that message just sounds better to the fascist-inclined when coming from a white man who has established a history of getting away with criminal behavior.

    Success in technology does not, it turns out, have any relationship to understanding voters. However, it’s instructive that Elon Musk can’t move the needle, let alone even guess how less than 100,000 of his favored White people will vote, yet thinks he can drive a diverse country made up of 330 million plus people to vote as he sees fit, all because he bought Twitter.

    While the pro-fascist experiment of X pushing far Right propaganda is working to silence democratic movements and collective awareness of injustices, it is not working in terms of picking candidates.

    A Special Message From PoliticusUSA

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  • Iowa caucus 2024 live updates: CBS News projects Trump will win Iowa caucuses

    Iowa caucus 2024 live updates: CBS News projects Trump will win Iowa caucuses

    [ad_1]

     

    Trump speaks as results come in, showing him with comfortable edge

    As precinct results began to trickle in showing former President Donald Trump with a comfortable edge, he spoke briefly to Iowans. 

    He listed a number of things he thinks were better under his presidency than under Mr. Biden’s presidency.

    “We didn’t have China threatening to take Taiwan; we didn’t have ships being blown up all over the Middle East like happened today,” he said, adding, “and everybody was doing much better in this room.”

    “I was better for the farmers, they say, than any president in the history of our country,” Trump said, adding, “I stood up for ethanol like nobody has ever stood up for it.”

    “But we had a country like we’ve never had,” Trump claimed. 

    The former president also boasted about how well he is doing in the polls against Mr. Biden, and claimed the current president is destroying the country. 


    By Kathryn Watson

     

    CBS News entrance poll tell us half of caucus-goers consider themselves part of the MAGA movement

    Early entrance polls tell us half of caucus-goers consider themselves part of the MAGA movement. 

    And a big majority of Iowa Republican caucus goers do not believe President Biden was elected legitimately in 2020.

    And roughly nine in 10 of those who say they are backing Trump today don’t think Mr. Biden won in 2020.

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    — Jennifer De Pinto and Fred Backus   


     

    CBS News entrance poll results: Immigration is the biggest issue

    Immigration is what’s most motivating Iowa Republicans to the caucuses today, based on early interviews conducted with voters heading into the Iowa caucuses. 

    Throughout the campaign, immigration and the economy have been top concerns for Republicans in Iowa as well as nationwide. 

    pasted-image-0-2.png

    Beyond issues, what are Iowa Republican voters most looking for in a candidate? 

    Someone who shares my values is a candidate quality they were most looking for. 

    For Iowa GOP caucus goers, the most important candidate quality they want is someone who shares their values, followed by someone who would “fight’s for people like me.”

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    Most Iowa Republican voters are dismissing his legal woes. Six in 10 say if Trump was convicted of a crime he would still be fit to be president. 

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    — Jennifer De Pinto and Fred Backus 


     

    CBS News projects that Trump will win the 2024 Iowa GOP caucuses

    CBS News projects that former President Donald Trump will win the 2024 Iowa GOP caucuses.


    By Jake Miller

     

    CBS News currently rates the 2024 Iowa GOP caucuses as “Lean Trump”

    As of 8 p.m. ET as the caucusing begins, CBS News currently rates the 2024 Iowa GOP caucuses as “Lean Trump.” 


    By Jake Miller

     

    Iowa GOP Chairman touts “transparent” process ahead of voting

    Iowa GOP chair Jeffrey Kaufmann outlined the voting process to members of the media ahead of the caucuses on Monday, touting its transparency and urging that the results of every one of the 1,657 precincts will be “triple, quadruple checked for the accuracy of those numbers.”

    Kaufmann explained that the votes will be counted in front of the crowd that cast the vote, with opportunities for the candidates to have someone observe the counting, pledging that if the candidates believe that they “had a fair process,” then “we will have done our job before any votes even come in.”

    “You will find no other place in the entire country, I don’t mean that as a metaphor, that is more transparent than what’s going to happen here tonight,” he said. 

    Kaia Hubbard and Sarah Barth 


     

    GOP candidates face first primary season test in Iowa


    GOP candidates face 1st primary season test in Iowa

    11:01

    Iowa GOP Chairman Jeffrey Kaufmann outlined the voting process to members of the media ahead of the caucuses on Monday, touting its transparency and urging that the results of every one of the 1,657 precincts will be “triple, quadruple checked for the accuracy of those numbers.”


     

    Some Iowans see “breath of fresh air” in Vivek Ramaswamy

    Though polls show Vivek Ramswamy in fourth place in Iowa heading into the caucuses, some Iowans are touting the entrepreneur – the youngest in the race – as a “breath of fresh air.” 

    Rich Lee of Iowa, 69, told CBS News campaign reporter Shawna Mizelle that Ramaswamy “speaks the truth with a smile,” giving him “a lot of hope for our children and grandchildren.”

    “There’s a lot of chaos out there surrounding Trump and Vivek doesn’t have that baggage with him,” Lee explained. “And I think if people will just take the time to listen to him, they’ll be more inspired with every talk he gives.”

    Ramaswamy dismissed the polls ahead of the caucuses, telling his supporters to brave the weather as he continued his campaigning in the final hours before the first-in-the-nation contest.

    “We come rain or shine, snow or sleet,” Ramaswamy said.


    By Caroline Linton

     

    “There are two tickets out of Iowa,” Haley campaign spokesperson says

    Olivia Perez-Cubas, a Haley campaign spokesperson, says “the expectations are largely on the two other fellas,” referring to Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis. 

    “We’ve got Donald Trump, who said repeatedly that he’s going to win by 60 points. We’ve got Ron DeSantis, who has invested over $150 million into Iowa. He has put all of his eggs into the Iowa basket. He has the endorsement of the governor. I mean, Iowa is do or die for him,” she told CBS News’ chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett. 

    Perez-Cubas said the Haley campaign is confident it will have a strong showing in Iowa, but said the pressure is on Trump and DeSantis. 

    “There’s a very large pressure on Trump and DeSantis to over-perform,” she said. “And ultimately, I think there are two tickets out of Iowa. I think one will go to Donald Trump and the next is going to go to Nikki Haley, and this is quickly becoming a two-person race.” 


    By Caitlin Yilek

     

    DeSantis spokesperson says he’s the “underdog” in Iowa

    A spokesperson for the DeSantis campaign tried to tamp down expectations for the Florida governor, selling him as the “underdog” against Donald Trump and Nikki Haley. 

    “I think when you think about the expectations of this race, they are sky high for Donald Trump and they are sky high for Nikki Haley,” Andrew Romeo told CBS News’ chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett ahead of the caucuses. “The reality is if she doesn’t have that strong second, it’s going to be a major letdown for her campaign. Trump has sky high expectations. Ron DeSantis comes in to tonight as the underdog, but that’s exactly how we like it.” 

    Romeo said the campaign is confident about their standing in the race, adding that “everyone has written our political obituary almost every week,” but “we’re still here.” 

    “We’re still fighting and we value this underdog position that we’re in, and we feel strongly about where we’re going to end up tonight,” he said. 


    By Caitlin Yilek

     

    Iowa Democrats are voting by mail


    Iowa Democrats are voting by mail-in ballots

    10:00

    While Republicans are caususing on Monday night, Democrats are conducting mail-in ballots. The results will be released on March 5, Super Tuesday.

    “This gives us an opportunity to have everyone participate who wants to as an Iowa Democrat in who the next president should be,” Iowa Democratic Party chair Rita Hart told CBS News. 

    Watch more of Lilia Luciano’s interview with Hart in the player above, as well as CBS Minnesota’s Caroline Cummings report on the weather. 


     

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker campaigns in Iowa for Biden

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker was in Iowa Monday as a surrogate for the Biden-Harris campaign. He said the three leading Republican candidates are all the same, just in different packaging. 

    Biden-Harris 2024 Campaign Hold News Conference Ahead of Iowa Caucus
    Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks during a news conference hosted by Biden-Harris 2024 National Advisory Board members in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2024. 

    Rachel Mummey/Bloomberg via Getty Images


    “Tonight’s contest is simply a question of whether you like your MAGA-Trump agenda wrapped in the original packaging or with high heels or with lifts in their boots,” Pritzker said. “Instead their real decision will be made in the general election where the stakes couldn’t be higher.

    Read more here from CBS Chicago. 


     

    Trump adviser says “our people are going to show up” despite frigid weather

    Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller said he and his team are “feeling good” about the night. 

    Miller told CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett the campaign is “confident, not cocky” about Trump’s prospects. Miller said Trump supporters are used to camping out overnight for rallies, and chilly weather won’t deter them.

    “Our people are going to show up,” Miller said. 

    During a Sunday rally in Indianola, Iowa, Trump urged his supporters to get out and caucus for him, even at the expense of their health and life. 

    “If you’re sick as a dog, you say, ‘Darling, I gotta make it,’” Trump told his rally-goers. “Even if you vote and then pass away, it’s worth it.”


    By Kathryn Watson

     

    What to watch in the Iowa caucuses

    The CBS News political team is on the ground in Iowa as voters are about to kick off the 2024 presidential election. “CBS Mornings” co-host Tony Dokoupil is joined by Ed O’Keefe and Robert Costa to break down what’s at stake in the Iowa caucuses.


    What to watch in the Iowa caucuses

    03:15


     

    Trump’s court cases overshadowing Iowa caucuses

    The Iowa caucuses are Monday night. But this year, the presidential campaign trail runs through courthouses.

    In Washington this past week, attorneys for former President Donald Trump argued in federal court that an ex-president should be immune from prosecution, arguments that seemed to get little love from the judges.

    On Tuesday, Trump told reporters, “I feel that as a president, you have to have immunity. Very simple.”

    A ruling could come in days, though it could be appealed to the Supreme Court. Read more here.


    By Robert Costa

     

    Ahead of the Iowa caucuses, Republican candidates tap voters’ economic frustrations

    Republican presidential candidates are seeking to tap into voters’ discontentment with the U.S. economy as Americans hope for relief that eases their money concerns.

    CBS News polling shows that a majority of Americans think the economy is in bad shape, despite many strong economic measures, such as low unemployment and a growing U.S. economy. 

    But many voters are focused on the impact of inflation, which is rising at a slower pace than a year earlier amid the Federal Reserve’s interest rate-hike campaign. Even so, prices remain higher than prior to the pandemic, and millions of Americans say they are struggling to pay their basic household bills. 

    Read more here.


    By Megan Cerullo

     

    How many delegates does Iowa have, and how will today’s caucuses impact the 2024 presidential nominations?

    A candidate must receive the majority of delegates to win the nomination. For Republicans, this means securing 1,215 of the over 2,400 delegates. For Democrats, there are about 3,900 pledged delegates, and 1,969 are needed to win.

    Read more here


    By Ellen Uchimiya

     

    Heading into Iowa caucuses, DeSantis says “a lot” of Iowans “haven’t made up a final decision”

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, once widely viewed as the favorite to challenge former President Donald Trump for the GOP nomination, but who now appears to be battling Nikki Haley for second place, said his campaign feels “really good” heading into Monday night’s Iowa caucuses

    After months of extensive time and money spent on the Hawkeye State by his campaign and super PAC, DeSantis is hopeful about his return on investment, even as polls show Trump maintaining a dominant lead.

    “When people take a poll, they can push someone one way or other, but there’s a lot of people that still haven’t made up a final decision,” DeSantis told “CBS Mornings” anchor Tony Dokoupil. “So I think we’re in good situation to be able to capture that.”

    Read more here and watch Tony Dokoupil’s full interview with DeSantis:


    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis previews 2024 Iowa caucuses

    06:47


    By Ellen Uchimiya

     

    What is a caucus? A guide to tonight’s Iowa caucuses

    Iowa Republicans will be voting for their preferred presidential candidate tonight in caucus precincts across the state after months of evaluating the candidates. A caucus is a political meeting, as opposed to a primary, which is an election. There are 1,670 precincts across Iowa that will be holding caucus meetings this evening.

    A representative from each campaign is allowed to give a short speech in support of its candidate, and then ballots are handed out to the caucusgoers, who vote by secret ballot. The ballots are then collected and counted in open view of the caucus. A campaign representative is allowed to view the counting, but members of the press are not. 

    After the results are tabulated, they’re recorded on a form by the caucus secretary and announced by the precinct chair and then submitted electronically to the Iowa Republican Party.  

    Read more here.


    By Caroline Linton

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  • Iowa And Marijuana

    Iowa And Marijuana

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    The current governor, Kim Reyonlds is not a fan and has been a roadblock.  Reynolds has stated “I believe marijuana is a gateway drug that leads to other illegal drug use and has a negative effect on our society.”

    Cannabis in Iowa is illegal for recreational use but hemp products including CBD products are legal for consumers to possess and registered retailers to sell. Possession of even small amounts of marijuana is still a crime. The state’s medical marijuana program for patients with qualifying debilitating health conditions allows for the legal sale and possession of no more than 4.5g of THC per patient every 90-day period.

    RELATED: Science Says Medical Marijuana Improves Quality Of Life

    According to a 2021 Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll, 54% of Iowans support legalizing recreational marijuana. But with firm resistance from the Governor, it will be hard ot have progress.  Despite public acceptance, the Governor believe she knows what is better for the population.

    In the meantime, Missouri and Illinois will benefit from consumers and taxes.

     

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  • 'Get the hell out': Vivek Ramaswamy removes comedians who interrupted him and Ron DeSantis

    'Get the hell out': Vivek Ramaswamy removes comedians who interrupted him and Ron DeSantis

    [ad_1]

    Presidential hopefuls aren’t the only ones working hard on Iowa caucus weekend.

    Political comedy group “The Good Liars” interrupted a speech by GOP candidate Vivek Ramaswamy in Ankeny on Sunday, a day after trying to hand “a participation trophy” to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

    It’s unclear what the duo, comprised of Jason Selvig and Davram Stiefler, told the entrepreneur. However, video shows Stiefler saying, “I love you. I love all of you, that’s the thing about me.”

    Ramaswamy asked the pair to sit down and wait for their turn to speak. He added that they were were welcomed to stay if they respect “our norms” and if they didn’t, then to “get the hell out.”

    “You want to let these people know what you think of them,” Ramaswamy said as the crowd began to boo at the duo and security escorted them out of the event. “This is why we need to get the super PAC out of American politics. End the super PAC and end the corruption. We’re sick and tired of it. The other candidates are threatened.”

    Iowa Caucus 2024 live updates: Why does the contest matter for Trump, Haley and other Republicans?

    Group interrupted Ron DeSantis with ‘a participation trophy’

    At a campaign event in Atlantic, Iowa, Selvig and Stiefler tried to give DeSantis a “participation trophy” and told him that he would not become president. Video of awkward incident and the crowd’s seemingly nervous laughter went viral.

    “Real quick before we get started, thank you everyone,” Stiefler said, drawing the crowd’s attention. “Governor DeSantis, I want to present to you this participation trophy.”

    A person tries to give Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis a 'participation trophy' during a campaign stop on Jan. 13, 2024 in Atlantic, Iowa. DeSantis did not take the trophy and the person was escorted out of the room. Iowa Republicans will be the first to select their party's nomination for the 2024 presidential race when they go to caucus on Jan. 15, 2024.

    “Now, probably not gonna win the election, right? But we’re proud of you for trying,” he said while patting DeSantis’ arm. “He’s special, he’s unique, and he’s our little snowflake.”

    DeSantis refused to grab the trophy. Stiefler was later removed from the event with security guard on each arm as he carried the award.

    The Good Liars did not respond to USA TODAY’s request for comment.

    “The Good Liars,” which started making content in 2011, are known for trolling candidates at political events. In October 2020, Stiefler addressed President Biden, then just a candidate, in Iowa while wearing a “Settle For Biden” T-shirt.

    Ramaswamy’s previous protester interruptions

    Ramaswamy has already dealt with several protestor exchanges over the past week.

    On Wednesday, protesters with the climate revolution group Sunrise Movement were removed after interrupting a Ramaswamy event in the Iowa State Capitol Rotunda.

    More Sunrise Movement protesters appeared in West Des Moines on Friday night while Ramaswamy delivered a speech and were removed on three separate occasions.

    Contributing: Kinsey Crowley & Phillip Joens

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Vivek Ramaswamy’s Iowa speech interrupted by ‘Good Liars’ comedians

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  • Vivek Ramaswamy explains the cause of the Civil War at a rally amid Nikki Haley blowback

    Vivek Ramaswamy explains the cause of the Civil War at a rally amid Nikki Haley blowback

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    Presidential candidate Nikki Haley faced blowback earlier this week from both Republicans and Democrats on how she answered a question about the Civil War during a town hall event in New Hampshire. Fellow presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy answered the same question during a campaign event in Iowa on Thursday, prompting a different response online.

    When asked on Wednesday, “What was the cause of the United States Civil War?” Haley responded, “I think the cause of the Civil War was basically, how government was going to run — the freedoms and what people could and couldn’t do.”

    Republican Florida Rep. Byron Donalds responded to Haley’s answer on X Thursday morning, “1. Psst Nikki… the answer is slavery PERIOD. 2. This really doesn’t matter because Trump is going to be the nominee. Trump 2024!”

    President Joe Biden also chimed in through an X post on Wednesday, “It was about slavery.”

    Even Haley attempted to walk back her comments on Thursday.

    Related

    At the campaign event in Iowa, an audience member asked Ramaswamy the same question that was posed to Haley the day before and asked for thoughts on “if we’re headed to another one, possibly.”

    Ramaswamy laughed and said, “You know, you have a governor of South Carolina who doesn’t know much about the history of her own state.”

    Ramaswamy says slavery caused the Civil War ‘to boil over’

    He said, “But South Carolina in 1832 — it’s one of the things we learned in history class in 11th grade — they actually were gonna secede from the Union. We’re talking nearly a couple decades before the Civil War.”

    “This comes back to the present,” he continued. “Our history isn’t about our past, it’s about our understanding of our future. So they actually, in 1832 were about to secede. Back then it was about tariffs between the North and South, but ultimately the thing that boiled us over was slavery.”

    The presidential candidate explained how even though the United States was one single country at the time, the North and the South had value systems that were fundamentally different. “So the powder keg was in the air, slavery was the match that we lit that caused it to boil over,” he said.

    Ramaswamy compared the differing value systems to what he believes exists in the U.S. today. He ended his response by explaining the necessity of having a president “from the outside” who isn’t “susceptible to the special interests that got us to where we are.” He also added that the future president should be someone from the next generation.

    One X user responded to Ramaswamy’s answer, saying, “@VivekGRamaswamy is making more sense than the others and he does it in a civil tone, and logical manner. Regardless if you support his candidacy or not, we as a nation, as a society, need more of this. Two thumbs up.”

    Chris Christie says Haley’s response is an indicator for future confrontation

    Another Republican presidential candidate, Chris Christie, commented on Haley’s response at a campaign event in New Hampshire on Wednesday, saying it indicates she prioritizes appeasing different political constituents over “telling the truth.”

    He said, “If she is unwilling to stand up and say that slavery is what caused the Civil War because she’s afraid of offending constituents in other parts of the country … what’s going to happen when she has to stand up to Vladimir Putin and President Xi?”

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  • Straw Poll Shows Young Trump Voters Want Carlson Or Vivek As VP

    Straw Poll Shows Young Trump Voters Want Carlson Or Vivek As VP

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    Opinion

    Screenshot: Donald J Trump YouTube Video

    By Philip Wegmann for RealClearWire

    Young Republican voters overwhelmingly want Donald Trump to be the GOP nominee in 2024, and they only disagree on whether he should choose Tucker Carlson or Vivek Ramaswamy as his running mate, according to a straw poll of participants who attended Turning Point Action’s annual AmericaFest.

    Obtained exclusively by RealClearPolitics, the results provide a snapshot of the youth vote just weeks before the Iowa caucuses. The online poll was conducted by Turning Point Action Dec. 17-18 and surveyed 1,113 attendees at the TPUSA conference in Phoenix, Ariz.

    The results show Trump as the clear favorite with 82.6% of respondents choosing the former president as their first choice. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis finished second with 7.6%, while Vivek Ramaswamy followed closely in third with 5.8%. Nikki Haley, the former South Carolina governor who has garnered national media attention and a recent bump in momentum, finished fifth.

    Barely more than 1%, or 12 voters, at the Trump-friendly event said they preferred Haley compared to the 2.5% who remained “undecided.”

    The topline results are not surprising given that the founder of Turning Point USA, Charlie Kirk, remains an ardent ally of the former president and previously served as the CEO of Students for Trump. But the survey sheds light on a question currently dominating Trump world.

    When asked whom Trump should choose as his vice president if he wins the nomination, 35%, a plurality, settled on former Fox News personality Tucker Carlson. Another 25.7%, meanwhile, preferred Ramaswamy. Both men made headlines with their remarks at the conference.

    Related: Tucker Carlson Finally Reveals If He’d Be Willing to Run As Trump’s Vice President

    Ramaswamy responded from the main stage to criticism from CNN host Van Jones, who called him a demagogue earlier this month. “Just shut the f–k up,” the businessman-turned-politician said to applause. For his part, Carlson downplayed the idea of entering politics himself.

    “It’s like the weather,” the pundit replied when asked about joining the ticket with Trump. “I can’t control it,” Carlson said after floating Ramaswamy instead for VP. “I don’t think I’d be that great at that.”

    On the eve of the primary, the results reflect the policy appetites of the right-leaning youth. Attendees ranked border security and “deporting Biden-era illegal immigrants” as their top priority ahead of “election integrity” and “defunding the deep state,” which ranked second and third. Meanwhile, ending diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives from the government, which has been a calling card of the DeSantis campaign, ranked as their lowest priority.

    Mirroring a larger shift on the right, the survey also shows a youth vote increasingly skeptical of foreign aid to Ukraine but largely supportive of Israel’s war with Hamas. A clear majority, 55.4%, backed giving lethal aid to Tel Aviv, less than 1% supported sending the same to Kyiv, and 39.4% responded that the United States shouldn’t provide such supplies to either Israel or Ukraine.

    Congress generally earns poor approval ratings, but the young Republicans seemed to like newly minted House Speaker Mike Johnson, with 57% either somewhat or strongly approving of his job performance. They were somewhat split, meanwhile, on whether the House should have expelled former New York Rep. George Santos, who made numerous false representations about himself during the previous election.

    While 32% approved of the Santos expulsion, 47% disapproved of the history-making move which had only occurred five times previously.

    Related: Congress Expelled George Santos – Now He’s Spilling The Beans On His Colleagues

    The same week that the House approved an impeachment inquiry of President Biden, 49.6% said that they supported removing him from office. Another 24.3% reported that Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas should be impeached, while 15.2% wanted Attorney General Merrick Garland gone.

    As both parties court the youth vote, the survey found that young Republicans in the Turning Point orbit are unsatisfied with RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel. An overwhelming 87% said that she should step down, and 56% reported that her departure would make them “more likely” to donate to the party. Charlie Kirk supported Harmeet Dhillon in her unsuccessful challenge of McDaniel earlier this year.

    Syndicated with permission from RealClearWire.

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  • New Poll Shows Trump's Lead Has Widened

    New Poll Shows Trump's Lead Has Widened

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    Opinion

    Gage Skidmore/Flickr/Creative Commons

    In early November, a New York Times poll showed Donald Trump leading in toss up battleground states that are crucial to Joe Biden. Another poll released last week showed Trump still outperforming Biden.

    And yet another poll shows that Trump’s lead has widened even further.

    RELATED: Democrat Narrative That Border Is ‘Not A War Zone’ Blown Up After 10 IEDs Found

    He’s On a Roll

    Fox News reports:

    Former President Donald Trump keeps gaining ground in the Republican presidential nomination contest, as fewer than one third of GOP primary voters now back all his rivals combined, according to the latest Fox News survey.

    Trump’s support stands at 69% in the primary race. That’s up 7 points since November and fully 26 points since February.

    Ron DeSantis receives 12% support (down 1 point since November), Nikki Haley gets 9% (-1), Vivek Ramaswamy 5% (-2), Chris Christie 2% (-1), and Asa Hutchinson 1% (steady).  

    When asked their second choice, the top picks among Trump supporters are DeSantis 50%, Ramaswamy 20%, and Haley 14%.  

    In hypothetical general election matchups against President Joe Biden, Haley is ahead by 6 points, while Trump is up by 4 (neither advantage is statistically significant). DeSantis and Biden tie. As recently as August, Biden was narrowly ahead of all three of them.

    The report added, “When third-party candidates are included, Trump’s edge over the president remains at 4 points, with Biden getting 37% to Trump’s 41%.  Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. gets 14%, Jill Stein 3%, and Cornel West 2%.  That’s mostly unchanged since last month.”

    RELATED: CNN Reporters Throw Temper Tantrum Over Their Own Network’s Vivek Ramaswamy Town Hall

    Trump’s Popularity Shows No Signs of Stopping

    Some believe that Democrats will fall into freak out mode if Trump’s poll numbers continue to perform so well. Many seem to be pinning their hopes on the former president’s multiple indictments leading to legal trouble that could prevent Trump from going to the White House.

    Time will tell on that front, but one thing time has already told us is that if Democrats thought that trying to lock up their presidential opponent was a good campaign strategy – it isn’t working.

    Because the only result so far is Trump continues to grow in popularity with every new poll.

    Trump Celebrates

    During a campaign stop in Coralville, Iowa last week, Trump celebrated the success of his recent polling numbers while also criticizing his fellow Republican candidates.

    “We are leading by a lot, but you have to go out and vote,” Trump said, according to the Iowa Capital Dispatch. “Sometimes when you’re leading by a lot, everyone says, ‘Oh, why should I go and vote?’ The margin of victory is so important — and frankly, bad things are going to be happening if you don’t.”

    Trump went on to dismiss rumors of a “Haley surge,” claiming that the only person that she is “surging” against is DeSantis.

    “They’re talking about the Haley surge, where she goes up 2 points, I go up, I think 10 points — under 10 points,” Trump said. “They (should) say, ‘That’s a Trump surge,’ but they don’t want to say that. … These are the most dishonest people ever in our country.”

    What do you think about all of this? Let us know in the comments section.

    Melania Trump Delivers Powerful Speech About Becoming An American Citizen

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  • CNN Reporters Throw Temper Tantrum Over Their Own Network's Vivek Ramaswamy Town Hall

    CNN Reporters Throw Temper Tantrum Over Their Own Network's Vivek Ramaswamy Town Hall

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    Opinion

    Screenshot YouTube : CNN

    This week, embattled and struggling 24/7 news network CNN hosted a town hall for GOP Presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy. Mr. Ramaswamy is not one to turn down a media appearance, including one guaranteed to be hostile, so no doubt CNN felt it was an easy way to try to attract viewers they so desperately need.

    Even with the writing on the wall that CNN is quickly losing its foothold in the all-day, all-night news arena, their reporters voiced their displeasure at the network’s decision to host Mr. Ramaswamy.

    After all, it’s not the news media’s job to provide balanced coverage of elections and those candidates hoping to cinch the support of the American public, at least not according to Oliver Darcy.

    Taxes the imagination

    Wednesday, CNN hosted an hour-long town hall for GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy. CNN’s senior media reporter Oliver Darcy was none too happy about the decision, writing about his frustrations with his own employer in his CNN newsletter.

    Mr. Darcy wrote:

    “The notion that the infotainer, who CNN has reported ‘struggles for relevance’ as he polls in the low single digits and remains exceedingly unlikely to be the Republican Party’s nominee, deserves an hour-long national platform to sell his personal brand and insidious talking points to the masses taxes the imagination.”

    It taxes the imagination how such outrageous, open, and hostile bias still manages to garner a paycheck from CNN. But perhaps he has a point; maybe it doesn’t make sense for CNN to provide so much air time to someone who isn’t in the top two positions in most polls for the GOP nomination.

    RELATED: Tucker Carlson Announces He’s Launching His Own Streaming Service

    In that case, it would square with Mr. Darcy’s argument that CNN provide an hour for former President Donald Trump, who by every measure is the front-runner and more than likely will be the Republican nominee. However, when CNN did just that in May, Mr. Darcy also railed against that.

    Is there anything that would make Mr. Darcy happy at CNN, or perhaps, like the famous Jane Austen character by the same name, he is too prideful or prejudiced? It’s hard to recall which.

    Not so iconic

    Mr. Darcy seems particularly incensed that his employer would want to attach their brand to the ideas Mr. Ramaswamy espouses, writing:

    “Handing Ramaswamy a microphone and putting him on a stage affixed with CNN’s iconic branding to answer audience questions helps validate him and provides oxygen to the menacing wildfire of delusions he has pushed into the public discourse.”

    Delusions such as stricter immigration policies, elevating concepts like patriotism and faith, and thinning out the administrative branch of government that no citizen ever voted into power, or that there were FBI informants in the crowd at the Capitol riot.

    The best part of the above statement is Mr. Darcy’s assertion that the CNN “iconic” brand means anything anymore.

    Before the terrorist attacks by Hamas, CNN was raking in only about 55,000 viewers for their weekend lineups, including for their shows State of the Union with Jake Tapper and Dana Bash and Fareed Zakaria GPS. Their Sunday numbers were even worse, only bringing in about 43,000 viewers for The Whole Story with Anderson Cooper and Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy.

    Those ratings are the worst CNN has ever had since the dawn of tracking viewership in 1991. Since the war in Israel began, CNN has only attracted roughly 619,000 viewers as of mid-November Monday tracking.

    Compare that to two million that tuned into Fox News on that same tracked Monday and 1.7 million that switched on MSNBC. Maybe tossing the millennial conservative provocateur on a stage with a microphone and the beleaguered CNN brand is a good idea.

    RELATED: Vivek Ramaswamy Gets Praise For Promise To Release Epstein Client List: ‘Every Candidate Should Commit To This’

    Missing the point

    In response to Oliver Darcy’s tirade, a CNN spokesperson explained that Vivek Ramaswamy is a legitimate guest for a town hall given that he is a:

    “…significant candidate for the GOP nomination, having made every debate stage thus far.”

    A true statement, however, is still missing the reason why Vivek should get a town hall appearance. Mainstream news networks like CNN should have newsmakers on their networks because the idea behind claiming they report the news would indicate including those who generate news.

    But that’s not really what employees at CNN want to do; they want to drive public discourse and shape American opinions. Legacy news isn’t about and hasn’t been about reporting facts and presenting engaging, compelling counterarguments for a long time.

    Legacy news is about entertainment and power. Dialing into the most extreme viewer’s most basic needs and controlling the group-think of the agreed upon audience.

    It taxes the imagination why legacy news media and print keep wondering why American viewership and readership have plummeted in the last few years, and reliance on citizen journalists on social media has increased.

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  • Vivek Ramaswamy Slams Nikki Haley: I'm the Only 'Non-Neocon' In The Race

    Vivek Ramaswamy Slams Nikki Haley: I'm the Only 'Non-Neocon' In The Race

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    2024 Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy came out swinging against fellow candidate Nikki Haley in Wednesday’s GOP debate..

    Ramaswamy said he was the only candidate on stage who was not as “neocon,” meaning a hawkish Republican who holds the foreign policy vision of George W. Bush or Dick Cheney.

    RELATED: Ramaswamy Torches Chris Christie: ‘Enjoy a Nice Meal And Get The Hell Out Of This Race’

    ‘Haley = Corrupt’

    “A real distinction, I think, is that I’m the only candidate who is a non-neocon,” Ramaswamy said in Milwaukee. “I believe in asserting American interests, but only where it advances the U.S. interest. I’m very different from other candidates who would sooner send troops to defend invasion across somebody else’s border than the invasion on our own southern border in this country.”

    The term “neocons” arose in the 1960s to describe hawkish, “peace through strength” conservatives who favor military intervention and preventative action. The label peaked with President George W. Bush and his advisers, who pushed the War on Terror in the early Aughts.

    “I worry that many in the neocon establishment are quietly marching us into World War III, serious armed conflict with other nuclear powers, including the combination of the Russia-China alliance,” Ramaswamy continued. “I am the only candidate in the race who has pointed out the alliance and the threat it poses, and the clear plan to pull them apart from each other.”

    “This is a woman who would send your kids to die so she can buy a bigger house,” he later added, speaking of his belief that Haley is interested in involving the U.S. in new wars.

    At one point, Ramswamy held up his notepad revealing that his notes only said “Haley = Corrupt” in giant letters.

    RELATED: Nikki Haley Ridiculed For Claim Watching TikTok Videos Makes You ‘17% More Antisemitic’ Every 30 Minutes

    Trump Still the Frontrunner

    Haley responded, “There’s nothing to what he’s saying,” drawing audience applause.

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie also took part in the debate.

    The debate was shown on NewsNation whose own poll showed last week that while Donald Trump was by far the frontrunner, DeSantis was second with 11 percent and Haley registered 10 percent.

     Trump’s 2020 campaign press secretary Hogan Gidley told News Nation before the debate that if the former did attend, he would “suck all the oxygen out of the room.”

    “It’s fascinating to watch in politics,” Gidley said. “I’ve been doing this for 25 years, and I’ve never seen somebody with a stranglehold on a movement or on the base like Donald Trump has.” 

    Trump has made it clear that he sees no upside in taking part in one of the Republican presidential debates.

    “The public knows who I am & what a successful Presidency I had,” Trump wrote on social media back in August. “I WILL THEREFORE NOT BE DOING THE DEBATES!”

    RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel has still expressed her support for Trump, should he secure the nomination.

    “If the voters choose him [Trump], [he] is going to be our nominee and the party will be behind our nominee,” McDaniel said.

    What do you think about this? Let us know in the comments section.

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  • Republican candidates clash in heated presidential primary debate in Alabama

    Republican candidates clash in heated presidential primary debate in Alabama

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    Republican candidates clash in heated presidential primary debate in Alabama – CBS News


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    With just 40 days until the Iowa caucuses, former President Donald Trump’s four chief rivals, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis, Chris Christie and Vivek Ramaswamy, took the stage in the fourth primary debate in Alabama. CBS News’ Robert Costa reports from the University of Alabama.

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  • The Nikki Haley Debate

    The Nikki Haley Debate

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    Produced by ElevenLabs and NOA, News Over Audio, using AI narration.

    Anyone watching the fourth Republican primary debate tonight would be forgiven for thinking that Nikki Haley was the favorite to win the GOP presidential nomination next year.

    Ron DeSantis and Vivek Ramaswamy sure were acting like it. Neither man had finished answering his first question before he began attacking the former South Carolina governor and U.N. ambassador. “She caves any time the left comes after her, anytime the media comes after her,” warned DeSantis, the Florida governor. Ramaswamy went much further. He called Haley “corrupt” and “a fascist” for suggesting that social-media companies ban people from posting anonymously on their platforms.

    The broadsides continued throughout the two-hour debate in Tuscaloosa, Alabama: DeSantis and Ramaswamy used every opportunity to go after Haley, even when they were prodded to criticize the Republican who is actually dominating the primary race, Donald Trump.

    “I’m loving all the attention, fellas,” Haley said at one point. What she’d love even more is about 30 additional points in the polls. As well as Haley has been doing lately, she is capturing just about 10 percent of Republican voters nationwide, according to the polling average. Time is running out for her—or any other GOP candidate—to catch Trump. He skipped this meeting of the Republican also-rans, just as he did the three previous debates. This debate narrowed to four Trump alternatives, but the evening devolved into a familiar dynamic: Most of the challengers largely declined to criticize—or even discuss—Trump.

    Chris Christie was the exception, as usual. The former New Jersey governor lit into Trump and mocked his rivals for being too “timid” to do the same. “I’m in this race because the truth needs to be spoken: He is unfit,” Christie said. Acting the part of pundit as much as candidate, Christie noted ruefully how little Haley, DeSantis, and Ramaswamy wanted to talk about Trump and how fearful they seemed to be of angering him. DeSantis tiptoed toward criticism of Trump when he warned Republicans not “to nominate somebody who is almost 80 years old.” “Father Time is undefeated,” DeSantis said. But when he danced around the question of whether Trump was mentally fit to serve again as president, Christie bashed him. “This is the problem with my three colleagues: You are afraid to offend.”

    Ramaswamy was next to speak. Instead of contradicting Christie and confronting Trump, he held up a handwritten sign that read, NIKKI=CORRUPT.

    The reluctance of Trump’s rivals (aside from Christie) to attack the former president has frustrated Republicans who are rooting against his renomination. But on some level it makes sense. Haley, DeSantis, and Ramaswamy aren’t actually running against Trump—at least not yet. The best way to think of these Trump-less debates is as a primary within a primary. The four Republicans on stage tonight were battling merely for the right to face off against Trump. In sports terms, these preliminary matchups are like the divisional round of the NFL playoffs, except that Trump has already earned a bye to the conference championship. (The general election would be the Super Bowl.)

    The all-important question is whether one of these four can break away from the others in time to wage a fair fight against Trump. The window for doing so is closing fast, but it is not shut completely. Although Trump is capturing nearly 60 percent of Republican primary voters in the national polling average, he remains below 50 percent in Iowa and New Hampshire, the early states where his challengers are campaigning most aggressively. A majority of Republicans in both Iowa and New Hampshire are backing someone other than Trump at the moment, suggesting at least the possibility that Haley or DeSantis could consolidate the anti-Trump vote and overtake him in one or both states. Trump’s lead has been consistent—and it has actually grown since the debates started without him—but historically, primary races are most volatile in the final few weeks before voters begin casting ballots.

    The debate stage has shrunk by half since the first GOP primary forum in August, when eight candidates met the Republican National Committee’s criteria for participation. Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina ended his bid after appearing in last month’s debate in Miami, as did North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum, who did not qualify.

    Yet four candidates might be as small as it gets. No more RNC-sanctioned debates are scheduled before the Iowa caucuses on January 15 or the New Hampshire primary eight days later. If Trump wins both states against a divided field—as polls suggest he will—his nomination would probably seem unstoppable.

    The most likely path to preventing Trump’s nomination is the same as it was when the primary began: for anti-Trump Republicans to agree on a single candidate to go up against him one-on-one. Nikki Haley is making her move. But if tonight’s debate revealed anything, it’s that her Republican competitors aren’t ready to let her have that chance.

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  • What Republicans said about the southern border during debate

    What Republicans said about the southern border during debate

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    During the fourth Republican Party debate on Wednesday night, the candidates present in Alabama were asked how they would address “the crisis on the southern border.”

    National polls show immigration and migrants entering the United States illegally as among the top issues in the country. Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie wasn’t able to answer the question when it was posed by the moderators, but Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, ex-South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley and tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy discussed the topic at length.

    DeSantis spoke passionately about going after those who bring fentanyl into the country.

    “The drug cartels are invading our country and they are killing our citizens,” DeSantis said.

    GOP presidential candidates former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, left, and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, right, on Wednesday participate in the Republican primary debate in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. The candidates were asked what they would do about the “crisis at the southern border.”
    (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    The Florida lawmaker went on about the dangers of fentanyl in the U.S., relating a story about the drug’s residue being on the floor of an Airbnb rental, which he said resulted in the death of a baby.

    “Is this acceptable in this country? I know the elites in D.C., they don’t care. They don’t care that fentanyl is ravaging your community. They don’t care that illegal aliens are ravaging our community and overwhelming our community,” DeSantis said. “The commander-in-chief not only has a right, you have a responsibility to fight back against these people. And it means you’re going to categorize them as foreign terrorist organizations.”

    He then advocated for continuing construction of a wall along the southern border.

    “Here’s the thing: If we had a wall across the southern border, which I support, this would not have happened. We need to build a wall across the southern border. I’ll get it done,” DeSantis told the audience, as he parroted Trump’s promise from years ago by saying that he’d make Mexico pay for it.

    Before Haley discussed the issue, she was asked about comments she made regarding catching and deporting illegal migrants. Haley clarified that she would at first deport “all of the seven or eight million illegals that have come [into the U.S.] under [President Joe] Biden’s watch.”

    “We have to stop the incentive of what’s bringing them over here in the first place,” she added, noting temporary protective status given to Venezuelans.

    Haley said migrants who have been in the country longer should be examined if they’ve been “vetted” and “paid taxes.”

    Regarding illegal drugs, she called for “special operations” to deal with cartels. Haley also said China should be punished for producing fentanyl.

    “Look at where fentanyl came from. Let’s go to the heart of the matter. It came from China. That’s why we need to end all normal trade relations with China until they stop murdering Americans with fentanyl,” she said. “I promise you they need our economy. They will immediately stop that.”

    Ramaswamy said, “The easy part is talking about how we’re going to use our military to secure the border. I will, and I believe that everybody else wants to do the same thing.”

    He also supported action against China but said the “harder part” is addressing the “mental health epidemic raging across this country like wildfire” rather than hitting the “the demand side of it.”