I haven't watched Hannity since the 2020 election.. Could be wrong , but I don't remember citing Hannity, maybe a couple times I can't recite.I thought you were a big fox viewer? What happened? Just curious
You always used to cite Hannity, etc and not too long ago.
I like Tucker, but even he's often late to the party. Like all the anti-Covid movement stuff, well after others had done the heavy lifting.I haven't watched Hannity since the 2020 election.. Could be wrong , but I don't remember citing Hannity, maybe a couple times I can't recite.
Only program I watch with Fox is Tucker.. Once in awhile , I will turn into Maria on Sunday mornings.
Tucker doesn't know the full story out there, whether it's being controlled , or he actually knows what is happening behind the scenes and just not talking about it, which I believe is a possibility,,I like Tucker, but even he's often late to the party. Like all the anti-Covid movement stuff, well after others had done the heavy lifting.
Hannity is worse than useless - anti-Putin, pro-Zelenskyy... like all the other media puppets.
Fox News is, for all intents and purposes "controlled opposition"
He's controlled, no question. If the higher ups deem a certain subject untouchable it won't be allowed in his monologues.Tucker doesn't know the full story out there, whether it's being controlled , or he actually knows what is happening behind the scenes and just not talking about it, which I believe is a possibility,,
I haven't watched Hannity since the 2020 election.. Could be wrong , but I don't remember citing Hannity, maybe a couple times I can't recite.
Only program I watch with Fox is Tucker.. Once in awhile , I will turn into Maria on Sunday mornings.
Lol, no comments of ANY kind on this subject for well over 2 weeks. I guess that "action" and the following have answered the threat title question, lol:
Trump in trouble: Republican support for his 2024 bid falls amid political, legal setbacks
Susan Page, USA TODAY
Tue, December 13, 2022 at 5:57 AM·4 min read
Republican support for Donald Trump's presidential bid in 2024 has cratered, an exclusive USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds, as the former president is beleaguered by midterm losses and courtroom setbacks.
By 2-1, GOP and GOP-leaning voters now say they want Trump's policies but a different standard-bearer to carry them. While 31% want the former president to run, 61% prefer some other Republican nominee who would continue the policies Trump has pursued.
They have a name in mind: Two-thirds of Republicans and those inclined to vote Republican want Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to run for president. By double digits, 56% to 33%, they prefer DeSantis over Trump.
"Republicans and conservative independents increasingly want Trumpism without Trump," said David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center.
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The findings are a red flag for Trump, whose core support has held remarkably solid through firestorms over his personal behavior, his provocative rhetoric, and his most controversial actions in the White House. But he has become increasingly embattled over his role in fueling the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, his alleged mishandling of sensitive documents when he left the White House, and investigations into efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
Some Republican strategists blame Trump and his influence for the GOP's failure to win control of the Senate in November. Candidates he helped recruit and support in Arizona, Georgia and Pennsylvania lost races that independent analysts thought might have been won by more traditional candidates.
The poll of 1,000 registered voters, taken by landline and cell phone Wednesday through Sunday, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points. The sample of 374 Republicans and independents who lean to the Republican Party has an error margin of 5.1 points.
Trump's legal fights: Judge tosses Trump's lawsuit, ending special master review of Mar-a-Lago documents
Former President Donald Trump after announcing a third run for president at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., on Nov. 15, 2022.
Biden's lead widens over Trump in a head-to-head race
Enthusiasm for Trump's third bid for the White House within the GOP has significantly ebbed in recent months, the USA TODAY/Suffolk survey finds.
In July, 60% of Republicans wanted Trump to run again. In October, that number had dipped to 56%. Now it has fallen to 47%, an almost-even split with the 45% who don't want him to run for a third time.
The polls taken in July and December were of registered voters. The poll in October was of likely midterm voters.
Trump is viewed less favorably by his partisans as well. The percentage of Republicans who see him favorably has dropped from 75% in October to 64% in December. His unfavorable rating has risen to 23% from 18%.
Among all voters, Trump has fallen further behind President Joe Biden in a hypothetical head-to-head. Now, Biden would win a general-election matchup by 47% to 40%. (Because of the effects of rounding, Biden's margin is a bit wider than that indicates, at 7.8 points.) In October, Biden also led but by a narrower margin, 46%-42%.
In case you missed it: Donald Trump announces his 2024 presidential campaign as GOP debates future: recap
Biden sees slippage among Democrats as DeSantis rides high in the GOP
Biden hasn't seen his political standing get much worse, but it also hasn't gotten much better.
Since October, his favorable rating has ticked up a percentage point, to 46%, and his unfavorable rating down a point, to 50%. But support among Democrats for him to seek a second term has declined, to 40% from 45%. Among all voters, just 23% want him to run again.
While Biden now leads Trump, he trails DeSantis in a head-to-head race, with DeSantis at 47%, Biden at 43%.
The Florida governor, who last month sailed to a second term in the Sunshine State, has significant standing nationwide. Two-thirds of Republican and Republican-leaning voters, 65%, want him to run for president in 2024. Just 24% hope he doesn't.
DeSantis' success may depend on having a one-on-one contest with Trump, Paleologos cautioned. "Add in a number of other Republican presidential candidates who would divide the anti-Trump vote and you have a recipe for a repeat of the 2016 Republican caucuses and primaries," he said, "when Trump outlasted the rest of the divided field."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Donald Trump support in GOP craters for presidential 2024 race: poll
Lol, a stupid photo shopped photo and irrelevant lies is ALL you got, because you are, and will forever be, brain dead Nazi Scum. How is that "voter fraud" investigation coming along? Oh, and, Yer Boy seems to be flailing, lol:
Keep posting Abandoned threads u Nazi nut sucking low life pedo voting maggotLol, a stupid photo shopped photo and irrelevant lies is ALL you got, because you are, and will forever be, brain dead Nazi Scum. How is that "voter fraud" investigation coming along? Oh, and, Yer Boy seems to be flailing, lol:
What is Donald Trump even doing?
Rafi Schwartz, Staff writer
Tue, December 13, 2022 at 2:16 AM
Donald Trump. Illustrated | Getty Images
It's been one month since Donald Trump somberly rejected the stigma of his dual impeachments to declare his candidacy for the 2024 presidential election, predicting during an announcement speech at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida that Americans would "overwhelmingly" back a second Trump presidency. Between then and now, Trump has had a turbulent few weeks, punctuated by a flurry of legal setbacks, reputational blows, and rising political headwinds in the face of his re-election bid. What he has not had, however, is anything resembling a traditional campaign rollout — or much of a campaign rollout to speak of. In fact, despite having initially bucked his advisers' recommendation to hold off on announcing his candidacy until later in this election cycle, Trump has largely eschewed the impression that he's running for office to begin with.
What has he been doing?
The travel-averse former president has largely stayed put at Mar-a-Lago, entertaining guests as the headliner at the American Freedom Tour Winter Gala — a for-profit organizer of Trump's non-campaign rallies — and inviting notorious antisemites to dinner. To the extent that the former president has made appearances outside the comfort of his private estate, it's been by video conferencing, pre-recorded messages, and Fox News interviews. Despite having been welcomed back to Twitter for the first time since his account was suspended in the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, Trump has kept his social media musings to his Truth Social site, where he recently called for — then denied calling for — the termination of the United States Constitution. According to The Washington Post, Trump's campaign claims it will begin holding events in earnest in the new year. One official from the former president's team told the paper that "We're still two years out. There'll be a time to do events and a time to do rallies."
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Speaking with The Daily Beast, another Trump campaign official suggested that the delay in public-facing events is a deliberate decision by the team as it works behind the scenes to assemble staff.
"They're being methodical, looking at the numbers, planning the campaign, and recruiting the right team to execute the plan," the unnamed official explained. "Why would an announced candidate travel to a state where there is no leadership in place? Selecting and publicizing a cadre of key leaders in vital early primary states would be a significant accomplishment before Christmas."
Are Republicans satisfied?
While Trump's team may be hoping to project an image of deliberate planning, some in the GOP have taken the former president's relative absence as a baffling misstep and even a sign of weakness from the candidate himself.
"I think at this point in his nascent re-election campaign, they need to stop and regroup over the holidays," former senior Trump campaign adviser David Urban told Politico shortly after Herschel Walker's electoral defeat in Georgia's run-off election. "Since the announcement for his re-elect, I don't think that by any measurable standard you can say it's been going well. You've had unforced error after unforced error."
"The former president announced his 2024 run against the wishes of most of the GOP and his close advisers, largely out of frustration with momentum shifting to Ron DeSantis," Trump's onetime White House communications director Alyssa Farah Griffin told The Daily Beast. "Now he's several weeks into a presidential run with no real apparatus, zero message, and no events. So far, it's a spite-run and it's being received as poorly as one could expect."
Nevertheless, Trump campaign officials and backers have repeatedly insisted the delay between the announcement and actual campaigning is a deliberate choice by the former president.
"This is a marathon and our game plan is being implemented even though the presidential primary calendar hasn't been set yet and the 2022 midterm cycle just ended," campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung told The Daily Beast, while MAGA Inc. super PAC boss Taylor Budowich echoed the same sentiment to The Washington Post:
"President Trump entered the race three weeks ago ready to win and he is going to do exactly that — no amount of wishful thinking from the media or consultant class will change it," he explained. "He's building one of the most ruthless and talented teams in American politics, and he is the only person in the country who is ready and capable of reversing America's decline."
But if that's the case, why announce his candidacy as early as he did? Why not wait until things were set, before telling the world of his intent to run?
Why now?
As multiple pundits and Republican insiders have theorized, Trump's campaign announcement may have been preempted by two separate, if congruent, factors. Writing in The Washington Post, longtime conservative activist George Conway — husband of perennial Trump White House adviser Kellyanne Conway — theorized that Trump's decision was prompted in large part by the former president's fear of criminal prosecution and his belief that running for, and achieving high office, will shield him. Moreover, Conway writes, Republican party delegate math means that "Trump can only be bested for the GOP nomination in a contest that's one-on-one from the outset." In essence, by declaring his candidacy early, Trump is hoping to scare off any potential rivals unwilling, as Conway put it, to risk their political futures by taking "a brutal mud bath" with Trump this time around.
Democrats seem to be of a similar mind. In a statement, Democratic National Committee spokesperson Ammar Moussa noted that "the list of reasons why this three-week-old campaign should contend for one of the worst launches in history is simply too long" to enumerate. Nevertheless, "Donald Trump's stranglehold on the MAGA party hasn't loosened. Trump's potential primary competitors' refusal to condemn Trump for breaking bread with antisemites or wanting to terminate the Constitution is a reminder the Republican Party remains firmly beholden to Trumpism and his extreme positions."
Suck cock, Nazi scum, and stop deflecting. How's that "voter fraud" investigation going, cocksucker, ROTLFMAO!!!! Yer boy is sinking like an anvil hurled off of a skyscraper, BITCH:Keep posting Abandoned threads u Nazi nut sucking low life pedo voting maggot
that meme has more truth than anything u ever posted ??????????
0-114
abandoned thread king
You stupid cunt, Ben Meislas, the attorney owner of the site correctly predicted EVERY single BUTT fucking that your Fuhrer has suffered in D.C. since his dumb ass got raided, plus a few in NY (that his company would be found guilty, and that he would eventually have to do a deposition with AG James, and even that he'd take the Fifth numerous times, like the gutless, cowardly, daughter diddling douchebag that he is), so, stick an acid smeared dildo up your dumb ass, and read about Blubber Boy Bitchin' over his latest buggering:?????? Midas Touch. Keep being you my Nazi maggot Fake posting abandoned thread bitch
Trump now siccing his posse on DeSantis...
My Pillow Pumper Mike Lindell announced he is heading to Florida to audit last month's vote for Governor because "there is no way he (RD) did as amazing as he did"
The grift is strong in these fellas
Trump Hasn't Been This Unpopular Since He Announced His First Presidential Run
The last time that Donald Trump was as unpopular as he is today is when he first announced that he was running for President in 2015. The reason that particular date is important is because people had no idea what kind of candidate - let alone president - Trump would be. But now that they've gotten to know him, they can't stand what they see, and that means his third run could already be doomed. Ring of Fire's Farron Cousins discusses this.
*This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Donald Trump's poll numbers continue to just get worse and worse. And I gotta tell you, I'm loving every second of it. But as it stands right now today, Donald Trump has not been more unpopular than he is right this second than when he first announced his presidential run in 2015. When he came down that escalator, which might be the most American thing ever announced, he was running for president. At that moment, Donald Trump was super unpopular, but then things rebounded. He started doing well in the debates. He did well in the early primaries. Went on to kind of sweep the whole thing. His approval rating went up, although it was still not great in uh, 2016, and then it just kind of went to hell from there until now when it finally bottomed back out to the lowest it's ever been. Not only that his approval rating within the Republican party is the lowest it has ever been. Here's the numbers. Right now, only 31% of registered voters have a favorable view of Donald Trump. So less than a third of the country views him favorably. He has around a 70% favorability rating within the Republican party, which is his lowest since 2016. So he's got less than a third of the, uh, general public registered voters at large and a little over two thirds of the Republican Party itself. Those are numbers that tell you you cannot win a general election. Not just that you're gonna struggle, but that you can't win. But the reason I think it's important to look at those early numbers, right, the 2015 numbers, is because when he came out and he was super unpopular, he was unpopular for different reasons, he was unpopular because most people at the time, myself included, viewed this as a little bitty vanity project. He was gonna run for president for a couple months. Oh, he was gonna do maybe a debate or two, and then he was gonna leave, right? We all kind of thought, yeah, this is stupid. He's an idiot. Whatever. We didn't know what kind of leader he would be because we didn't have to think about it because none of us thought it was ever gonna happen. But then he won, and at that point people got to see what kind of leader he was gonna be. People got to see the corruption. We heard from more than 20 different women who claimed that he had, uh, in one way or another, either assaulted or harassed them. We heard the Access Hollywood tape, and all of this was after that historically low approval rating. So we already didn't like him before, but then We found out who he is. And the more we learned over these last six years, the worse his behavior became. His numbers dropped back down, but this time they dropped back down for good reason. Not saying it wasn't good reason to begin with, but I'm saying that nobody knew who he was or what he would be as president. We knew who he was, but you know what I'm saying? We didn't know who he would be back then. Now we do. And now everybody's looking at this, most of the country saying, hell no, we're not going back to that. And as I said, that's not just bad news for his campaign. It's effectively a death sentence for the campaign.