The Stormy Daniels case is basically a felony charge for a clerical error. The Left continues their witch hunt.
Undercover Video Exposes Judge Arthur Engoron’s ‘Creepy’ Gym Behavior https://trendingpoliticsnews.com/br...dge-arthur-engorons-creepy-gym-behavior-mace/ The investigation, initiated after multiple sources contacted the investigative team, revealed footage and accounts suggesting that Judge Engoron’s behavior at the gym was unsettling to some gym-goers. One particular video clip showed a woman visibly annoyed, gesturing for Engoron to back off. James O’Keefe found out that Engoron frequents the Equinox gym as early as 5 a.m., where he has been observed engaging in what has been described as “creepy” behavior towards female patrons. O’Keefe, seeking to verify these claims, decided to observe Engoron’s behavior firsthand by working out alongside him at the gym.
WHO REALLY WON THE 2020 ELECTION? https://heartland.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Feb-24-2020-Election-Analysis-vWeb_Final.pdf
LOL... the Heartland Institute. A leading spreader of false election conspiracy nonsense. There is a reason you put the url in such small text. You know the source is complete crap.
Just matching the signatures on file with that in the ballot would have disqualified a lot of the fraudulent votes. We are not even counting all the dead people voting in US elections.
LOL, isn't this the same think tank that used to defend smoking? Must have used the same statistical techniques.
! TAKE THIS, MAGATARDS ! https://www.koha.net/en/look/412011/why-trump-can't-win/ Why Trump can't win By Reed Galen 9 March 2024, 10:00 Trump lost the 2020 election and then incited an uprising. Since then he has moderated neither his rhetoric nor his behavior; on the contrary, it has become even more extreme. If this shrinks Republican voter turnout even a little bit, then Trump is on the brink of a major defeat. There simply aren't enough American voters willing to put him back in the White House Donald Trump was the most similar among American presidents. When he launched the campaign in 2016, the closest he came to executive authority was pretending to fire contestants on a business-themed reality show. As ludicrous as it may sound, the sight of Trump sitting behind the ballroom table and uttering his catchphrase — "You're fired" — convinced millions of American voters, including many who had never voted before, that he was the man who knew how to get things done. That impression, along with good timing and good fortune, enabled Trump to defeat political icon Hillary Clinton in a race that seemed tailor-made for him. But contrary to what Trump might claim, his victory was extremely narrow. In fact, he lost the popular vote by 2.8 million votes – the largest margin of any other president of the United States in history. Trump has since proven toxic at the ballot box. In the 2018 midterm elections, Democrats crushed Trump's Republican Party. In the 2020 presidential election, Trump suffered a narrow loss in the Electoral College, as well as a significant slide in the popular vote. In the 2022 midterm elections, Trump's handpicked candidates were swept all over the country, while Democratic candidates either held their seats or swept Republican seats in key states — including Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin — on a regular basis. with deep margins. While all these failures may inspire some Republican grumbling, Trump ended up firmly in control of the entire party apparatus, its leadership and even its most extreme members. It's a pattern Republicans will regret later in the year, when both Trump and the Republican Party face what is expected to be a devastating election defeat. Trump's erratic behavior, anti-democratic rhetoric and threats against his rivals will contribute to his defeat in November's presidential election. But it is America's demographic makeup that will eventually send Trump into permanent retirement. The old wisdom that "demography is destiny" — coined by the French philosopher Auguste Comte — could easily be more important to the outcome than any previous presidential election. Between the 2016 and 2024 elections, about 20 million older voters will have to die and about 32 million younger Americans will reach voting age. Many young voters despise both parties, while Republicans are actively recruiting (mostly white men) on college campuses. But the issues most close to Gen Z's heart — such as reproductive rights, democracy and the environment — will push most of them to vote Democratic. The reality is that since Trump entered the US political scene in 2016, the Republican Party has become older, whiter, more male and more extreme. It's also gotten smaller, while Trump's unwillingness to reach out to his base is making it harder, if not impossible, to attract moderates and independents. The American president, Joe Biden, has more voters at his disposal than Trump does. That doesn't mean victory will be easy, but it does mean he can outlast more stay-at-home voters. If Trump is to win, then he will need every possible voter in his party to go to the polls, and he will also need to pick up the votes of undecided Americans, who may have long been embittered with him, not only because of his personal conduct, but also because of his policies. The Republican Party is on the wrong side of every major issue facing the American people. Reserve the right to reproduce. The US Supreme Court, captured by Republicans, decided in 2022 to overturn Roe v. Wade, which guaranteed abortion rights for half a century. Ultraconservative state legislatures made abortion illegal even in cases of rape or incest. And the Alabama Supreme Court recently issued a ruling that equated frozen embryos with children. This trend has pushed women and moderates even more firmly toward Democrats — or, at least, toward undecideds or "any other camp but Trump." On the national security front, Trump has often aligned himself with America's traditional adversaries, upsetting, angering or confusing a key constituency. Many older Republicans still hold the spirit of Ronald Reagan in their hearts and see America as a "shining city on a hill," a beacon of freedom and democracy for peoples around the world. For those old enough to remember the Cold War, Russia is America's enemy. These Republicans view Russia's invasion of democratic Ukraine as unacceptable: an earlier survey showed that 43 percent of Republicans believe the United States is providing either too little or the right amount of aid to Ukraine. They certainly do not approve of Trump's threats to withdraw from NATO and even braving Russian aggression against members who do not meet their military spending obligations. Trump's attraction to authoritarian states - from Russia and Hungary to Saudi Arabia - is anathema to them. Until this week, Republicans had another option: Nikki Haley, the former US ambassador to the United Nations. Haley's escalating attacks on Trump's political record appear to have had an impact. In primaries in New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina, she garnered about 30 percent of the vote. But Haley has now ended her presidential campaign after losing Super Tuesday votes in 14 states. However, Haley has so far refused to endorse Trump, saying it is up to him to secure the support of her voters. And there is pretty good reason to doubt its success. In fact, instead of voting for Trump in November, many of Haley's supporters are expected to stay home or vote for Biden. In Iowa, 49 percent of self-identified Haley supporters said they would do just that. Trump lost the 2020 election and then incited an uprising. Since then, he has moderated neither his rhetoric nor his behavior; on the contrary, it has become even more extreme. If this shrinks Republican voter turnout even a little bit, then Trump is on the brink of a major defeat. There simply aren't enough American voters willing to put him back in the White House. (Reed Galen is the co-founder of The Lincoln Project, a pro-democracy organization founded by Republican strategists with the goal of defeating Donald Trump, and the moderator of The Lincoln Project Podcast. This review was written exclusively for the World Wide Web. of "Project Syndicate" journalism, of which "Koha Ditore" is also a part)