Potential Trump running mate rips Biden's outreach to Black voters: 'Always pandering' Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida, an ally of Donald Trump who's on the former president's running mate short-list, charges that Biden's weekend of Black voter outreach is 'pandering' by the Democrats ... 05/17/2024 - 8:12 am | View Link
Trump's testing out a new campaign strategy: horror politics Donald Trump and his propagandists are masters of the politics of pain and horror. They intimately know the MAGA people and their pain points, anxieties, wants, and insecurities. In that way, Trump ... 05/16/2024 - 10:45 pm | View Link
Why isn’t Trump on the campaign trail on his trial’s off-days? The more Trump chooses not to bother with campaign events on his trial’s off-days, the easier it is to dismiss his “I’d like to be campaigning” complaints. 05/9/2024 - 8:38 am | View Link
From his trial to the campaign trail: Trump's day off from court The former president hit the campaign trail in Wisconsin and Michigan before his trial in New York resumes tomorrow. The judge will consider whether Trump violated the gag order--again. Meanwhile, ... 05/1/2024 - 4:38 pm | View Link
Away from his New York trial, Donald Trump's campaign rallies are business as usual In Wisconsin and Michigan, Donald Trump largely avoided the hush money trial that has mostly sidelined his campaign efforts as he tried to woo voters with a familiar speech in two major swing states. 05/1/2024 - 1:49 pm | View Link
“Democratic senators who represent presidential battlegrounds agree with President Biden — polls showing him trailing former President Trump in those key states are wrong,” Axios reports.
“The skepticism is especially notable because a number of Democrats from those states have a polling lead over their Republican opponents in pivotal Senate races.”
Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL), without evidence, accused President Biden in a Fox News interview of being “jacked up” and using “injections” in order to appear “coherent.”
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), who has been floated as a possible running mate for Donald Trump, refused to commit to accepting the results of the 2024 presidential election and repeated conspiracy theories about the 2020 election, the New York Times reports.
He deflected follow-up questions by falsely claiming that Hillary Clinton had denied her loss in 2016.
Sen. J. D. Vance (R-OH), rumored to be one of Donald Trump’s vice-presidential contenders, told CBS News that the U. S “could learn from” some decisions made by authoritarian Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, including controversial policies related to dealing with dissidents at universities.
Said Vance: “On the university principle, the idea that taxpayers should have some influence in how their money is spent at these universities, it’s a totally reasonable thing, and I do think that he’s made some smart decisions there that we could learn from in the United States.”
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) brushed off the recent polls showing President Biden’s slight lead over former President Trump in his home state of Wisconsin, noting he does not trust early polling, The Hill reports.
Said Johnson: “Well, as somebody who has run statewide three times and seeing polls wildly incorrect, all three times, I just would not trust the early polls.