12
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
hightor
 
  5  
Reply Mon 12 Dec, 2022 03:26 pm
@McGentrix,
Quote:
You are actually condemning someone for something they said in March 2020... Did anyone know in March 2020 what the future would be?

No, but most people left the authoritative speculation to medical professionals instead of pretending to know anything about epidemiology and spouting off like fools.
Quote:
Don't you think the constant TDS has run its course yet?

Not by the looks of it. He still has deranged followers and deranged people will still vote for him. There are even deranged people on this site who go out of their way to defend him. And given what we know about the loser now, their continued faith in him is even more deranged now than it was in '16.

There's a thread about the guy, you know. It's called, "How Stupid is Trump":
somebody wrote:
As hideous as he is, as disastrous as his presidency was, news about the sore loser will continue to surface, and rather than pollute the Biden thread, or any others, we'll have our own special "Trump Dump" for accounts of this toxic wretch in his declining years. Stories about his decaying MAGA movement, the conspiracies he promoted, his legal troubles, and declining mental condition of his dead-end supporters — all here in one easy-to-find septic tank!

McGentrix
 
  -1  
Reply Mon 12 Dec, 2022 03:30 pm
@hightor,
Yay? Pretty sure your side covers Trump a lot more than anyone else. It's all about ignoring what your guy does because "look! Trump!"

It's Pavlovian in the Lefts response to anything.
hightor
 
  5  
Reply Mon 12 Dec, 2022 03:48 pm
@McGentrix,
Quote:
It's all about ignoring what your guy does because "look! Trump!"

Democrats don't ignore what Biden does. They are pleased with his accomplishments and generally relieved to see some measure of moderation and sanity in the White House and in Washington.

Quote:
It's Pavlovian in the Lefts response to anything.

No, not to "anything". Only to the lies and smears of deranged MAGAtards. For something truly Pavlovian, we have "What about her emails?"
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Mon 12 Dec, 2022 04:09 pm
@McGentrix,
Quote:
your side covers Trump a lot more than anyone else.


Says Mr Lockherup, Mr Behghazibenghazibenghazi, Mr Hunterslaptop.

Please. There will be no more Florida Man discussion once he's in prison orange.

Who is this "anyone else" stuff? You got a frog in your pocket.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  4  
Reply Mon 12 Dec, 2022 06:38 pm
It might seem to folks on the right that we write (negatively) about Trump a lot. And that seems a correct observation. I think we do. But it's why we do that's important.

(1) He actively attempted a coup
(2) He has a history of repeated falsehoods for which there is no precedent in US history nor anything or anyone close
(3) He is running for President again
(4) Though many conservatives have spoken out against Trump's destructive behaviors to the body politic, with no small number even leaving the party, he still remains a or the key figure in contemporary Republican politics
(5) And even after all of the deeply serious damage he as done to his party and to America, the great majority of GOP politicos still refuse to reject him or even to consistently criticize what he's done
(6) And finally, I'm sure that almost all on the modern right in America do wish we would all forget the above dropping it into a Orwellian memory hole and facilitating another rebranding of a party which now has nothing but disdain for honesty, integrity and democracy.
(1) again... He actively attempted a coup
BillW
 
  5  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 01:22 am
@blatham,
One very important addition Bernie:
"Former President Donald Trump called for the termination of the Constitution to overturn the 2020 election and reinstate him to power."
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 04:13 am
Quote:
Today the leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) met virtually and reiterated their staunch support for Ukraine in its war against Russian aggression. The G7 is a political organization of the world’s most advanced economies and liberal democracies: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine joined the meeting.

The leaders issued a statement saying they would continue to back Ukraine “for as long as it takes.” That means continued military support for Ukraine as well as continuing sanctions against Russia, especially Russian oil, and aid to countries, especially those in Africa, suffering from the shortages caused by the war. They condemned Russia’s war crimes, including attacks on critical infrastructure, particularly energy and water facilities. They pledged to help civilians in Ukraine through the winter and promised to set up a donor program to funnel money to rebuild the country quickly. 

But, they noted, Russia will have to pay to repair the damage it has done with its illegal war. 

Also today, the foreign ministers of the European Union met in Brussels and pledged another 2 billion euros to Ukraine’s military support, signaling the E.U.’s continued support for Ukraine.

After reiterating their support for Ukraine, the G7 leaders reaffirmed their more general commitments to liberal democracy. They promised to take “urgent, ambitious, and inclusive climate action in this decade to limit global warming,” bolster biodiversity, realize gender equality, and improve “our capacity to prevent, prepare for and respond to future global health emergencies and to achieve universal health coverage.”

Taken together, the G7 and its international partners, the statement says, are demonstrating their resolve to work together to address both major systemic challenges and immediate crises. “Our commitments and actions,” they say, “pave the way for progress towards an equitable world…[and] a peaceful, prosperous, and sustainable future for all.”

Meanwhile, Russian president Vladimir Putin has canceled his traditional end-of-the-year news conference in which reporters can ask him questions on live television. Despite his tight control of the media, it appears he is unwilling to risk questions about the war or the suffering economy in front of an audience.

Democracy is at risk in the U.S. as well as in Ukraine, of course, and as we wait for the report of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, there have been some revealing developments. 

On Saturday night, at the annual gala of the New York Young Republican Club in New York City, whose attendees included a number of far-right figures, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) deflected accusations that she and Trump ally Stephen Bannon were behind the events of January 6 by saying: “I want to tell you something, if Steve Bannon and I had organized that, we would have won. Not to mention, it would’ve been armed.” 

White House spokesperson Andrew Bates condemned the statement, saying: “It goes against our fundamental values as a country for a Member of Congress to wish that the carnage of January 6th had been even worse, and to boast that she would have succeeded in an armed insurrection against the United States government.”

Greene then backed away from her statement, saying it was “sarcasm.” 

We already know that Greene worked hard to get then–Georgia Senator Kelly Loeffler on board with the attempt to challenge the legitimate electors for Biden, attended meetings about the challenges, and—according to Cassidy Hutchinson, an aide to Trump’s chief of staff Mark Meadows—asked for a presidential pardon. 

Greene’s downplaying her statement after criticism from the White House suggests she is getting nervous about her role in the attack on the Capitol, or at least trying to distance herself from it. 

She is not the only one. Today, Talking Points Memo began an explosive series covering texts to and from Meadows in the time around the 2020 election and its aftermath. These are texts Meadows voluntarily turned over to the January 6 committee, although we know they are not the entire catalog of communications because he stopped cooperating after an initial period. 

The series, by Hunter Walker, Josh Kovensky, and Emine Yücel, examines texts not previously available to the public as well as some we have already seen. They show that 34 members of Congress wrote to Meadows as part of the attempt to install Trump back in the White House by counting out Biden’s legitimate electors. 

The congress members identified in the texts include the ones we have come to expect to see leading the MAGA Republicans in the effort to steal the election: Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX), for example, Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH), and Representative Mo Brooks (R-AL), whom Trump advisor Jason Miller identified as “the ringleader on the Jan 6th deal.” 

But those implicated either explained away their participation—unconvincingly—or refused to respond to inquiries from the Talking Points Memo reporters. Representative Brian Babin (R-TX) wrote to Meadows: “Mark, When we lose Trump we lose our Republic. Fight like hell and find a way. We’re with you down here in Texas and refuse to live under a corrupt Marxist dictatorship. Liberty!” Babin did not respond to a request for comment. Neither did Representative Ralph Norman (R-SC), who wrote on January 17, three days before Biden’s inauguration: “Our LAST HOPE is invoking Marshall [sic] Law!! PLEASE URGE TO PRESIDENT TO DO SO!!”

MAGA Republicans have hitched their political identity to Trump, and his star is falling after his candidates did so poorly in the 2022 election. 

On Saturday the executive committee of the Texas Republican Party voted 62–0 for a resolution calling for the replacement of Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, who has allied closely with Trump.

The former president is also in trouble as the investigation of the stolen national security documents proceeds. Today, Judge Aileen Cannon formally dismissed the special master she allowed Trump to claim, after the Eleventh Circuit decided she had no jurisdiction to take on the case. Philip Rotner in The Bulwark cut to the chase in the title of an article about the documents: “It’s Time to Indict Donald Trump.”

And then there is the January 6th investigation. Special counsel Jack Smith has sent a grand jury subpoena to Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger. Smith took office just before Thanksgiving and has already sent requests for information to five states—all of which were 2020 battlegrounds– asking for any communications officials there had with Trump, his allies, and his campaign. 

And the report of the January 6 committee is scheduled to go to the printer this week.

hcr

"Marshall Law"...
0 Replies
 
Frank Apisa
 
  3  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 05:31 am
@blatham,
blatham wrote:


It might seem to folks on the right that we write (negatively) about Trump a lot. And that seems a correct observation. I think we do. But it's why we do that's important.

(1) He actively attempted a coup
(2) He has a history of repeated falsehoods for which there is no precedent in US history nor anything or anyone close
(3) He is running for President again
(4) Though many conservatives have spoken out against Trump's destructive behaviors to the body politic, with no small number even leaving the party, he still remains a or the key figure in contemporary Republican politics
(5) And even after all of the deeply serious damage he as done to his party and to America, the great majority of GOP politicos still refuse to reject him or even to consistently criticize what he's done
(6) And finally, I'm sure that almost all on the modern right in America do wish we would all forget the above dropping it into a Orwellian memory hole and facilitating another rebranding of a party which now has nothing but disdain for honesty, integrity and democracy.
(1) again... He actively attempted a coup


It does seem incredible that there are people here arguing that we should just forget about Trump...even though Trump actively attempted a coup.

(You did mention that, right?)

Gotta laugh at people advising others to just let something go...when they harp and harp and harp and harp and harp and harp and harp and harp endlessly on things that are puny compared with the grievances we have with that clown.
izzythepush
 
  5  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 05:40 am
@Frank Apisa,
Trump hasn't gone away, he's not gone off to paint bad pictures like Dubya.

He's still taking an active role in politics, continuing to spread the big lie, endorsing far right candidates, threatening Republicans who do not promote his horseshit and he has announced another presidential run.

Not to mention his nazi coup supporters are still on trial.
Frank Apisa
 
  6  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 05:51 am
@izzythepush,
izzythepush wrote:

Trump hasn't gone away, he's not gone off to paint bad pictures like Dubya.

He's still taking an active role in politics, continuing to spread the big lie, endorsing far right candidates, threatening Republicans who do not promote his horseshit and he has announced another presidential run.

Not to mention his nazi coup supporters are still on trial.


Yup.

Trump, and his moronic supporters, are still a serious threat to the US, and by extension to the world...so best we keep that POS in focus for as long as possible. (I do not blame them for wanting us to just forget about him! He is a ****-stain on world politics.)
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 06:28 am
Special counsel Jack Smith is already 'moving fast' on Trump criminal probes much differently than Robert Mueller: report

Tom Boggioni
December 12, 2022

https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/11/politics/jack-smith-special-counsel-high-profile-moves-trump-criminal-investigations/index.html

Newly-appointed special counsel Jack Smith is moving fast on a pair of criminal probes around Donald Trump that in recent months have focused on the former president’s state of mind after the 2020 election, including what he knew about plans to impede the transfer of power, people familiar with the matter tell CNN.

Though he remains in Europe recovering from a biking accident, Smith has made a series of high-profile moves since he was put in charge last month, including asking a federal judge to hold Trump in contempt for failing to comply with a subpoena ordering him to turn over records marked classified.

Since Thanksgiving, Smith has brought a number of close Trump associates before a grand jury in Washington, including two former White House lawyers, three of Trump’s closest aides, and his former speechwriter Stephen Miller. He has also issued a flurry of subpoenas, including to election officials in battleground states where Trump tried to overturn his loss in 2020.

Smith takes over a staff that’s already nearly twice the size of Robert Mueller’s team of lawyers who worked on the Russia probe.  A team of 20 prosecutors investigating January 6 and the effort to overturn the 2020 election are in the process of moving to work under Smith, according to multiple people familiar with the team.

Smith will also take on national security investigators already working the probe into the potential mishandling of federal records taken to Mar-a-Lago after Trump left the White House.

Together, the twin investigations have already established more evidence than what Mueller started with, including from a year-long financial probe that’s largely flown under the radar.

“Mueller was starting virtually from scratch, whereas Jack Smith is seemingly integrating on the fly into an active, fast-moving investigation,” said Elie Honig, a former federal prosecutor and senior CNN legal analyst.

Smith also won’t be constrained in the same way as Mueller, who deferred decisions on whether to charge Trump because he was a sitting president.
View inside Trumpworld

While Trump lambasted Smith’s appointment on social media, some of the former president’s attorneys think it could’ve been worse, according to people familiar with the matter. Those lawyers maintain the former president is unlikely to be indicted, according to two sources familiar. They also believe Smith’s appointment is a good thing because he is “not emotionally attached” to the original case and can look at it “dispassionately and factually,” one of the sources said.    

“The fact that they found a guy who has been Europe for the past several years, without his brain marinating in the soup of January 6th coverage, that’s a good thing,” the source said.   

But others on Trump’s team are concerned that Smith’s appointment signals a more aggressive stance from Attorney General Merrick Garland, characterizing him as a “hit man” who is likely to bring a prosecution, people familiar with their thinking said.

On Friday, the Justice Department’s approach in the Mar-a-Lago case hit a small bump, with a federal judge declining to hold Trump in contempt of court and urging DOJ and Trump’s team to work out a resolution as investigators attempt to make sure all national security records are back in the possession of the federal government.

Behind the scenes, in separate sealed proceedings related to January 6, Smith has already told the federal court he is in charge of the investigation, according to some of the sources. And while Trump lawyers on the January 6 probe have not been in touch directly with Smith at this point, according to some of the sources, they anticipate they will eventually speak with him once he returns to the US.

It’s unclear how long Smith may continue to work before deciding on any charges in either probe. While both investigations may result in charges within months, Smith could still spend time organizing and expanding his team, and continuing to pick through information that’s been collected, according to people familiar with parts of the probe.

“It could well be that Jack Smith moves more quickly than Merrick Garland would and forces a decision to Merrick Garland’s desk more quickly than it might have otherwise,” said Honig.

According to a handful of people familiar with the probe, there is still work to be done to centralize all the moving parts of large prosecution teams under the new special counsel’s office.    

Smith is expected to set up a physical office for the two investigative teams away from the downtown Justice headquarters, as Mueller did for his probe and as did John Durham, who is nearing the end of his examination of 2016 Trump-Russia investigation.

According to several people familiar with his appointment, Smith will operate more like a US Attorney – managing an existing team of career prosecutors already working on the cases, and signing off on evidence they bring him – rather than as a de facto-department head like Mueller, who tapped several lawyers from outside the Justice Department to pursue parts of the Russia investigation from scratch.  

Mueller also had his own set of legal advisers akin to a shadow Justice Department appeals and policy team. Smith likely won’t have the same set-up – with lawyers from throughout the Department assisting as needed, according to multiple people familiar with the office’s development.

Garland already turned to a long-time criminal appellate section leader, Patty Stemler, who retired earlier this year from DOJ, to advise as a consultant on the January 6 investigations throughout this year. 

Others from Stemler’s former unit and other sections are likely to shepherd cases and policy issues as needed, in a departure from Mueller’s soup-to-nuts approach of preparing for thorny Constitutional issues and appeals in the Russia investigation, some of the sources said.

Publicly released court filings have already made clear Trump is under investigation for the mishandling of national security secrets after his presidency.    

But the other investigative team, looking at efforts to block the transfer of power from Trump to President Joe Biden after the 2020 election, had even a year ago been given the greenlight by the Justice Department to take a case all the way up to Trump, if the evidence leads them there, according to the sources. Work that’s been led by the DC US Attorney’s Office into political circles around Trump related to January 6 now will move under the special counsel.

Partly led by former Maryland-based federal prosecutor Thomas Windom, DOJ has added prosecutors to the January 6 team from all over the department in recent months. Windom and the rest are also expected to move over to the special counsel’s office. Some, like Mary Dohrmann, a prosecutor who’s worked on several other Capitol riot cases already, appear to be reorienting, according to court records of open Capitol riot cases.   

Another top prosecutor, JP Cooney, the former head of public corruption in the DC US Attorney’s Office, is overseeing a significant financial probe that Smith will take on. The probe includes examining the possible misuse of political contributions, according to some of the sources. The DC US Attorney’s Office, before the special counsel’s arrival, had examined potential financial crimes related to the January 6 riot, including possible money laundering and the support of rioters’ hotel stays and bus trips to Washington ahead of January 6.


In recent months, however, the financial investigation has sought information about Trump’s post-election Save America PAC and other funding of people who assisted Trump, according to subpoenas viewed by CNN. The financial investigation picked up steam as DOJ investigators enlisted cooperators months after the 2021 riot, one of the sources said.

In interviews with people in Trump’s orbit over the past several months, some of the DOJ focus has been on the timeline leading up to January 6 and Trump’s involvement and knowledge of potential events that day, according to a source familiar with the questioning.

Trump allies have consistently maintained that nothing Trump did related to the election and January 6 itself amounts to a crime. They have also suggested that if Trump were to ultimately face an indictment, the bar to prove he committed a crime is extremely high, and that a jury would hear he was getting conflicting advice from different lawyers. For example, Trump allies point out, White House Counsel Pat Cipollone told Trump that Vice President Mike Pence couldn’t block the election certification on January 6, while Rudy Giuliani and others believed he could.

Even earlier this year, federal prosecutors were specifically asking witnesses whether there was a plan to steal the election and for Trump not to concede, according to a source with knowledge of the questions posed during this stage of the DOJ criminal probe.  

The DOJ probe has evolved significantly since that time, but sources familiar with testimony before the grand jury in recent months have told CNN that prosecutors are still focused on the core question of whether there was a plan to steal the election and Trump’s understanding about the relevance of January 6.  

CNN’s Evan Perez and Zachary Cohen contributed to this report



0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  5  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 06:42 am
https://image.politicalcartoons.com/269787/600/the-bottom.png
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 10:46 am
@Frank Apisa,
Quote:
Gotta laugh at people advising others to just let something go...when they harp and harp and harp and harp and harp and harp and harp and harp endlessly on things that are puny compared with the grievances we have with that clown.

And always those complaints carry another over-arching complaint - 'They are victimizing Trump (and us) again!'
0 Replies
 
Rebelofnj
 
  7  
Reply Tue 13 Dec, 2022 05:45 pm
Some bit of good news: there are now federal protections for same sex and interracial marriages, which was forced to happen after the overturning of Roe v Wade.

I find it funny that Senator McConnell voted against this, despite being in a interracial marriage. I guess he hates same sex marriage more than he loves his wife.

Biden signs landmark bill to protect same-sex and interracial marriages

Quote:
President Biden on Tuesday afternoon signed the Respect for Marriage Act into law, granting federal protections to same-sex and interracial couples, and marking a milestone in the decades-long fight for marriage equality.

“Today is a good day,” a jubilant Biden declared on the South Lawn of the White House, where thousands of lawmakers, gay rights activists and guests were gathered for the signing ceremony. “A day America takes a vital step toward equality, toward liberty, justice — not just for some, but for everyone. Toward creating a nation where decency, dignity and love are recognized, honored and protected.”
.....
The Respect for Marriage Act will not force states to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples but will require that people be considered married in any state as long as the marriage was valid in the state where it was performed.

The bill also will repeal the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act. In addition to defining marriage as the union of one man and one woman, that act allowed states to decline to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states. That law has remained on the books despite being declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court’s 2013 ruling in United States v. Windsor and its 2015 ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, which guaranteed same-sex couples the fundamental rights.
.....
Republicans who opposed the bill decried it last week as an affront to “biblical” definitions of marriage. Rep. Bob Good (Va.) warned without evidence that it could lead to the legalization of “polygamy, bestiality, child marriage, or whatever!” in the future. GOP lawmakers also played down the threat to marriage equality and said the bill was unnecessary, despite the Supreme Court’s ruling on abortion rights.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/12/13/biden-same-sex-marriage-interracial-law/
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Reply Wed 14 Dec, 2022 03:49 am
The Republicans Need a Reckoning

The party of Lincoln must end its embrace of sedition.

Tom Nichols wrote:
The Moral Argument

The near miss of the midterms, in which almost all of the most extreme Republicans were defeated, seems to have generated a certain amount of complacency about the ongoing threat to the American system of government. I know, of course, that many of our fellow citizens are well aware of the dangers posed by conspiracy theorists, election deniers, and other assorted enemies of the Constitution. And I cannot blame people for becoming numb: You can watch a Paul Gosar or a Marjorie Taylor Greene spouting off like pinwheels of paranoia only so many times.

But we cannot ignore recent developments. Only a few days ago, Greene took the stage in formal attire at the New York Young Republican Club gala and said, “I want to tell you something, if Steve Bannon and I had organized that”—the January 6 insurrection—“we would have won. Not to mention, it would’ve been armed.” A few days before that, Gosar posted and then deleted a tweet supporting Trump’s call for the “termination” of parts of the Constitution.

These are not examples from the fringe. Dozens of Republicans contacted then–White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows after the 2020 election and right through to Trump’s last days in office with wild theories and desperate ideas about how to keep the 45th president in power. The Meadows texts were obtained by the House January 6 committee and then published by Talking Points Memo. The messages are alternately stomach-turning and comical, in some cases at the same time.

For example, on January 17, 2021, only 11 days after the insurrection and roughly 72 hours before Joe Biden was to be sworn in, Representative Ralph Norman of South Carolina pleaded with Meadows:

Mark, in seeing what’s happening so quickly, and reading about the Dominion law suits attempting to stop any meaningful investigation we are at a point of no return in saving our Republic !! Our LAST HOPE is invoking Marshall Law!! PLEASE URGE TO PRESIDENT TO DO SO!!

This is a member of the U.S. Congress insisting, in a jumble of exclamation points and capital letters, that a sitting president call out the men and women of the United States military to nullify an election and prevent, by force of arms, the constitutional transfer of power. This is sedition, and it is madness. It is also evidence of a shocking inability to spell; if you’re going to advocate for a coup, the least we might expect is that you first learn how to spell martial law.

atlantic
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Reply Wed 14 Dec, 2022 04:14 am
‘Don’t Run Joe’ campaign launches first TV ad in New Hampshire urging Biden not to seek reelection

Quote:
Progressive organization RootsAction launched its first television ad in New Hampshire as part of its “Don’t Run Joe” campaign urging President Biden not to seek reelection.

The 60-second ad is airing statewide on local evening new channels and on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” through the local ABC affiliate.

In the spot, several New Hampshire Democratic voters air concerns about Biden’s low job approval ratings and ability to take on a Republican candidate in 2024.

Voters in the ad also say Biden is representing the “status quo” and slam the president for not pursuing progressive goals, including a greater push to tackle climate change and implement policies such as universal health care.

RootsAction launched the “Don’t Run Joe” campaign in November, one day after the midterm elections and after first announcing the effort in July.

Biden, who recently celebrated his 80th birthday, has not announced his 2024 candidacy but has said he intends to run for reelection. The president last month teased that an announcement could come early next year.

About 70 percent of Americans don’t want Biden to seek reelection, according to a new poll, with many largely citing concerns over his age.

Jeff Cohen, the co-founder of RootsAction, said the campaign is “just getting started” and the advertisements would soon run in more states.

The group’s national director, Norman Solomon, said, “Biden should heed the voters of his party rather than simply declaring watch me run for re-election.”

“His public approval ratings remain dismal, as they have been all year,” Solomon said in a statement. “No amount of bravado from the White House can change the severe vulnerabilities that a Biden 2024 campaign would face.”

Though Biden has shown he can beat former President Trump, who announced his 2024 candidacy last month, some Democrats worry he would face a tougher campaign against a Republican challenger such as popular Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Biden’s job approval rating hovers around 46 percent, an increase from the fall after the Democrats outperformed expectations in the November midterm elections but still lower than when he entered office.

Biden has struggled with a number of crises during his presidency, from the chaotic withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan to supply chain snarls and inflation.

But he has notched several wins in recent months, including signing into law a massive tax, health care and climate spending bill and keeping control of the Senate in the midterms.

Other longtime Democratic leaders, notably House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.), have stepped down from leadership posts to make way for new blood.

New Hampshire may soon see its influence in the presidential primary process diluted, with Biden backing a plan to have South Carolina replace the Granite State as the first primary on the calendar.

thehill
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Wed 14 Dec, 2022 06:21 am
@hightor,
Screw them.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Wed 14 Dec, 2022 06:22 am
0 Replies
 
snood
 
  5  
Reply Wed 14 Dec, 2022 06:26 am
@hightor,
I’ve been avoiding writing a post about supporting the President. Part of the reason I haven’t is I honestly don’t want to contend with all the negativity.
It is disheartening as hell that when you boil it right down to the bones, their argument against Biden comes down to their fear of numbers; his ratings and his age.

It’s disheartening because it seems that numbers are all that matter - what’s the number that describes your net worth, what are the numbers that depict the state of your health, your IQ score, the number of friends, or followers, or fans, how much, how tall, how far, how many, how long… and if you don’t measure up to whatever the number is that had been designated as normal, or acceptable, or superlative, or exceptional… then by God and the edict of man you. do. not. matter.

Joe Biden has made a whole long career out of baffling doubters and exceeding expectations. He has done more things and done them relatively quickly and efficiently, than I even have the heart to list here. In fact, looking at the list of his unlikely accomplishments just makes me more depressed. Because the Democrats look at that list, and look at his age, and conclude that it’s far too risky to believe he could continue to deliver positive outcomes. He’ll lose the primary, and the general. He’ll embarrass us with gaffes and old man mannerisms. He’ll get sick and die. ANYTHING but believe Joe Biden can continue exceeding our expectations.

I said I was too sad to say anything about it, but I guess I couldn’t help myself.
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Wed 14 Dec, 2022 06:45 am
All the Republicans who asked for a pardon admitted their guilt.

This special counsel will hold them accountable. Smith seems to be expanding the investigation to anyone who was part of the planning of the coup. We are talking scores of people including the fake electors, politicians, Whitehouse staff and many Trump lawyers.
Also people who helped fund the planning of the coup.

This investigation is massive and I believe that is why Garland separated the investigation into two parts. Smith is not investigating any of the people who were at the capital which is one of the largest investigations in our history. Roughly 900 people have already been arrested, charged, put on trial. They are still looking for hundreds of more people who attacked the capital. This took massive resources, time to accomplish.

Smith was put in charge of the investigation of the people who planned, funded, supported the coup. I have no idea how many people who planned the coup will be indicted in the end. But the number will be in the dozens.
 

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