Eat Us And Smile
Cenk For America 2024!!
Justice Democrats
"If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992
Don't worry, everything that has gone wrong with Trump's clusterfuck in a clown-car Admin is Jeff Sessions fault apparently....
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/05/u...ions.html?_r=0
His logic presented in the above article is completely bizarre, that Sessions is at fault for the Travel Ban being killed in courts because it was "too politically correct" is a fucking "nutjob" ranting....
Is it any wonder that four top law firms have said "no" to representing Trump on the Russian investigation because their advice would be ignored anyways?
Last edited by Nickdfresh; 06-06-2017 at 01:37 PM.
Nope, it isn't a wonder.
Anymore than it not being a wonder that major NYC-based banks and financial institutions have steadfastly refused to do business with Trump for 2 decades: does anyone think Trump and his sons have been seeking financing by various shady international financiers and lending institutions since the late 1990s because they WANTED to? It was because few formidable, name-brand domestic financiers and institutions would lend to them. And, when one looks at the scope and depth of Trump's business career, rightfully so on their part. Trump has a history of stiffing people. That history applies to law firms as well as business partners.
Character is destiny, and for many in the USA with money to lend, the Trumps have been a bad bet long before even the 2008 collapse.
Scramby eggs and bacon.
Ask Howard Stern. He seems to know her.....
T.marcin,Newsweek Mon, Jul 3 7:37 AM PDT
For a minute there, things were looking up for President Donald Trump. By late last week, his approval rating was hovering around 40 percent, which isn't great but marked an improvement for the former reality TV star. But then Trump spent the holiday weekend railing against the press and blasting off tweetstorms—and the president's approval rating took a plunge.
Gallup's tracking poll pegged Trump's approval at just 37 percent to start off July, while disapproval stood at 57 percent. Last week, Gallup found the president's approval rating had briefly climbed to 40 percent before the fall-off back into the 30s.
The Gallup poll interviewed 1,500 U.S. adults and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. Trump's 37 percent approval rating is dismal, especially for a president so early in his tenure, when the American people typically afford the office a grace period of sorts. Around this point in his first term, for instance, former President Barack Obama had a 60 percent approval rating.
Things have gotten so bad for Trump that far more people support impeaching him than support the job he's doing in the Oval Office. A survey in recent weeks from Public Policy Polling—a firm that does public surveys as well as polling for Democratic candidates—found that 47 percent of voters supported impeaching Trump. Americans could, perhaps, feel that way because 49 percent believed the president had obstructed justice in the ongoing investigation into his ties to Russia, according to the Public Policy Polling survey.
Even Trump's average approval rating is a long ways off from the support for his impeachment. The weighted average from data-focused website FiveThirtyEight pegged his approval rating at just 39.5 percent Monday, while 54.4 percent disapproved. The FiveThirtyEight average adjusts for polls' quality, recency, sample size and partisan lean.
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Despite a dismal approval rating, it was more of the same from Trump Monday morning. He redoubled his efforts to trash the press, tweeting, "At some point the Fake News will be forced to discuss our great jobs numbers, strong economy, success with ISIS, the border & so much else!" This followed numerous anti-press tweets over the weekend, including a bizarre post with a video of him wrestling a person with a CNN logo instead of a head. (This doctored video was harvested from a Trump pro wrestling appearance.)
Meanwhile, calls for Trump's impeachment have surged. Dozens of marches against the president took place in towns across the country over the weekend, including one in Los Angeles. California Representative Brad Sherman, a Democrat who has drafted articles of impeachment against the president, delivered remarks at the end of the march.
"We have to act now to protect our country from abuse of power and impulsive, ignorant incompetence," Sherman said, according to the Los Angeles Times.
"Lock him up," the crowd chanted in response.
Is Mike Pence the Next President? Vice President Distances Himself From Trump’s Camp in New Statement
Harriet Sinclair,Newsweek Tue, Jul 11 11:20 AM PDT
Vice President Mike Pence appears to be distancing himself from the president as Donald Trump’s allies seemingly become further mired in the Russia investigation.
Pence, who started a political action committee in May with the help of his former campaign chairman, Nick Ayers, on Tuesday released a statement that has added to speculation that the former Indiana governor could be breaking away from Trump.
As news emerged that Trump’s son Donald Jr. had been promised damaging information on Hillary Clinton ahead of a meeting with Kremlin-linked Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya, Pence’s press secretary, Marc Lotter, said in a statement shared on social media: “The vice president is working hard every day to advance the president’s agenda.”
He added: “He was not aware of the meeting. He is also not focused on stories about the campaign—especially those pertaining to the time before he joined the campaign.”
The statement fuels the idea Pence has less than full confidence in the Trump team and that he may feel the investigation into Russia’s alleged ties to the Trump campaign will not cease anytime soon.
Over the past few days it has also emerged the vice president has held private meetings with donors and conservative political leaders, The New York Times reported. His press secretary insisted the events are not fundraisers but private events, with one attendee also stating they are in keeping with what is expected of a vice president.
“Mike Pence is the ultimate team player and works every day to help the president succeed,” Indianapolis lawyer Robert T. Grand, who attended a June dinner with Pence, told the Times.
“There were a lot of folks who, if you were vice president, you would want to meet: corporate executives, other government leaders, people from past administrations, not just donors,” he said. “Any administration, past and present, has an interest in getting to know folks. If you’re an incumbent president and vice president, then that’s part of what you do.”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/mike-penc...182048207.html
The Republicans will never impeach Trump.
Who said they had too?
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