Piece of shit Joe Hits another new low Bidens approval 5 points lower than Trumps,over 20 points lower than Obama.
Trump Can Only Think of Himself After Fans Collapse at Town Hall Just days after 11 people collapsed of heat exhaustion at an Arizona town hall, the former president kvetched about how little attention people had paid to his own well-being. https://www.thedailybeast.com/trump-bellyaches-after-fans-collapse-at-rally-what-about-poor-old-me
There are still contractors who don't know to get paid first when delivering services to Trump? Trump fumes over tech problems at his Las Vegas rally, threatens not to pay the crew https://thehill.com/homenews/campai...as-vegas-rally-threatens-not-to-pay-the-crew/
Donald Trump Suffers Quadruple Polling Blow https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-polls-2024-joe-biden-1910443 Former President Donald Trump has been stung by a number of polls in recent days, including those suggesting his hush money felony conviction may be harming his 2024 election chances. With less than five months to go, Trump and President Joe Biden still appear to be neck-and-neck in the race, although results of recent polls suggest that Biden may be ahead. Newsweek has compiled at least four results from recent surveys that may be concerning for Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee. Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung told Newsweek in reaction to some of the polls: "President Trump continues to lead Crooked Joe Biden across polling averages nationally and in battleground states." Biden Ahead in Swing States A CBS News/YouGov survey released Sunday showed Trump narrowly ahead of Biden overall (50 percent to 49 percent). However, when the results were broken down into the seven swing states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin—which likely will prove vital in determining who wins the 2024 election—the results were reversed and Biden came out on top (50 percent to 49). The poll was conducted among 2,063 U.S. adults from June 5-7, just days after Trump was found guilty in a New York City court on 34 counts of falsifying business records related to trying to conceal hush money payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election. The survey included an oversample in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The margin of error was 3.2 percentage points among all adults and 3.8 points among registered voters. Trump Trailing Among Independents The same CBS News/YouGov poll found that Trump is slightly behind Biden in terms of support from the potentially key demographic of independent voters. The survey found that Biden is preferred by independents over Trump by two points (50 percent to 48 percent). CBS News noted in its analysts of the data that there is some anti-Trump sentiment among the independents who are now backing Biden and that "a larger majority of them are doing so now to oppose Trump." Elsewhere, a Yahoo News/YouGov poll conducted from June 3-6 found that 41 percent of independents said they would support Biden in November, compared to 38 percent supporting Trump. Ten percent said they weren't sure who they'd vote for, with 11 percent saying they wouldn't vote at all. Independents and undecided voters could prove pivotal come November, especially in the swing states where the margin of victory could be minimal. The Yahoo News survey was conducted among 1,854 U.S. adults. The margin of error was 2.8 percent. Biden Records Highest Score in 10 Months In the same Yahoo News/YouGov poll, Biden (46 percent) overtook Trump (44 percent) to lead the race for the first time since October 2023. The 46 percent score for Biden is his highest in Yahoo News/YouGov surveys since August 2023. The results suggest that Trump's conviction may be putting some voters off the prospect of backing a convicted felon in November. Trump accused the criminal case of being a politically motivated "witch hunt" that sought to hinder his chances of winning in November. Voters Leaning More Toward Biden on Economy A Financial Times/University of Michigan's Ross School of Business poll found that an increasing number of voters are saying they trust Biden to better handle the U.S. economy. While Trump (41 percent) still leads Biden (37 percent) in what is widely considered the election's biggest issue, the Democrat has clawed back some of the Republican's lead from 11 points in February to just four in June. "The Trump campaign should be worried about his shrinking lead on who voters trust with the economy because the economy is voters' biggest issue," said Erik Gordon of the Ross School of Business. "Voters are more concerned with the economy than with other campaign issues like immigration and foreign policy. To win the election, you have to convince voters that you will do the best job with the economy." The Financial Times/University of Michigan's Ross School of Business poll was conducted between May 30 and June 3 among 1,000 registered voters. The results have a margin of error of +3.1 percentage points.
Undecided voters offer surprising reactions to Trump's hush money trial After Donald Trump was found guilty on 34 criminal counts in his hush money/falsified business records trial, Frank Luntz hosted a focus group featuring 11 undecided voters. And the veteran GOP pollster, according to the New York Times, asked them, "How the heck can you be undecided at this point?" Luntz is a conservative, but he didn't mean that question in a MAGA-friendly way. The 62-year-old Republican has had some major health problems, including suffering multiple strokes. And he has attributed them to severe stress, saying that not speaking out more forcefully against Trump took a severe toll on his health. During the focus group, the undecided voters weighed in on the Trump verdict — and how it might affect their vote in the 2024 presidential election. Wendy, a 57-year-old New Yorker, told Luntz, "To me, this is the worst of democracy. The fact that a felon can actually run for president hurts the general population." Chantel, a 33-year-old California resident, told Luntz, "'How is he going to run the presidency from jail?' is what I’m thinking. It kind of doesn't make sense to vote for him." Seven of the participants told Luntz they thought the trial was fair, while John, a 58-year-old Pennsylvania resident, believed the trial was "rigged." And three were "not sure" if the trial was fair or unfair.
Let's check out what the attendees are up to at the Trump rally... Was there a queue outside to make her great again?
A huge number of christian religious nutters will be voting for Trump, somehow they equate him to ficticious jesus. It all makes a lot of sense when you think about it.
Trump tells Christian conservatives ‘You just can’t vote Democrat’ Republican presidential candidate, former President Donald … more > By Seth McLaughlin The Washington Times Monday, June 10, 2024 https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2024/jun/10/donald-trump-tells-christian-conservatives-you-jus/ Looking to shore up his Christian conservative support, former President Donald Trump pledged to stand “side-by-side” with pastors and faith leaders in the fight for “our values and our freedoms.” Mr. Trump said too much is at stake in the election this fall for religious and social conservatives to sit on the sidelines. “You just can’t vote Democrat,” Mr. Trump said in taped comments to attendees of a Life and Liberty forum hosted Monday by the Danbury Institute in Indianapolis. “They are against religion and they are against your religion in particular.” “We have to defend religious liberty, free speech, innocent life and the heritage and tradition that built America into the greatest nation in the history of the world,” he said. Mr. Trump has forged an unlikely political marriage with the religious right that he hopes will help him send President Biden packing this fall. The strength of that support derives from Mr. Trump’s nomination of three conservative justices who shifted the balance of the Supreme Court and led to the overturning of Roe v. Wade — the landmark 1973 ruling establishing a constitutional right to abortion. SEE ALSO: MTG likens Trump to Jesus at rally