Former Vice President Mike Pence denounced populism in a speech at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics at St. Anselm College on Wednesday. Speaking to a modest crowd, Pence warned, “A populist movement is rising in the Republican Party. This growing faction would substitute our faith in limited government, and traditional values with an agenda stitched together by little else than personal grievances and performative outrage,” before adding, “Should the new populism of the right seize and guide our party, the Republican party we have long known will cease to exist.”
Pence argued populism and progressivism “…are fellow travelers on the same road to ruin” while accusing former President Trump of abandoning conservative principles in his 2024 bid to retake the White House. In another swipe at Trump, Pence said: “Truth is, the Republican Party did not begin on a golden escalator in 2015.”
The former Vice President, who served in Trump’s presidential administration, has emerged one of the Republican frontrunner’s harshest critics since declaring his own candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination. Pence has focused his campaign on an aggressive push to restore the Republican Party’s support for pro-globalist policies like free-trade, open-borders, and reckless foreign military interventions.
Newt Gingrich, a former Republican House speaker and Trump ally, questioned Pence’s decision to criticize the populist movement: “Why would you attack populism if you’re trying to be the Republican nominee?… I mean, it’s now the base of the party.” Pence has so far struggled to gain any momentum for his presidential campaign and is yet to consistently poll any higher than single digits.
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Former Vice President Mike Pence denounced populism in a speech at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics at St. Anselm College on Wednesday. Speaking to a modest crowd, Pence warned, "A populist movement is rising in the Republican Party. This growing faction would substitute our faith in limited government, and traditional values with an agenda stitched together by little else than personal grievances and performative outrage," before adding, "Should the new populism of the right seize and guide our party, the Republican party we have long known will cease to exist."show more
Britain is rejoining the European Union (EU)’s flagship Horizon scientific research program, with the European Commission confirming that the nation will once again be forced to make annual £2.6 billion ($2.78bn) financial contributions to the EU budget.
The deal was struck between “Conservative” Prime Minister Rishi Sunak alongside the EU’s Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and permits UK scientists to receive research grants from the EU.
“We have worked with our EU partners to make sure that this is the right deal for the UK, unlocking unparalleled research opportunities, and also the right deal for British taxpayers,” said Sunak in a statement announcing the deal.
The UK will also join the EU’s Copernicus Earth observation program, which forms a key part of the block’s space project. The UK will also contribute another £132 million ($164 million) for its association with Copernicus. The deal must, however, be approved by all other 27 EU member states before it can be adopted.
The deal has already been championed by the virulently anti-Brexit von der Leyen, who argued the deal is a reset moment in relations between both parties: “The EU and UK are key strategic partners and allies, and today’s agreement proves that point.”
Rishi Sunak’s government has similarly failed to seize the opportunity provided by Brexit over immigration, with his government allowing over 1.1 million people to legally enter the country over the past year.
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Britain is rejoining the European Union (EU)'s flagship Horizon scientific research program, with the European Commission confirming that the nation will once again be forced to make annual £2.6 billion ($2.78bn) financial contributions to the EU budget.
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Megyn Kelly regrets getting vaccinated and boosted, saying she doesn’t think she needed it and that a top rheumatologist believes an autommune condition she developed recently could have been caused by the inoculation.
“I regret getting the vaccine even though I’m a 52-year-old woman because I don’t think I needed it, I think I would’ve been fine,” she lamented. “I got Covid many times [anyway], and then for the first time I tested positive for an autoimmune issue at my annual physical. I went to the best rheumatologist in New York and I asked her, do you think this could have to do with the fact that I got the damn booster and then got Covid within three weeks? And she said yes, yes. I wasn’t the only one she’d seen that way.”
A peer-reviewed study published by the Multi-disciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI) in May found that people injected with two or more doses of mRNA-based Covid vaccines had “abnormally high levels of IgG4,” linked to “a group of fibroinflammatory diseases that affect a variety of tissues resulting in tumor-like effect and/or organ dysfunction.”
The study also found that repeat vaccination “could promote unopposed SARS-CoV2 infection and replication by suppressing natural antiviral responses,” and “autoimmune diseases [and] cancer growth and autoimmune myocarditis in susceptible individuals.”
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Megyn Kelly regrets getting vaccinated and boosted, saying she doesn't think she needed it and that a top rheumatologist believes an autommune condition she developed recently could have been caused by the inoculation.
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Scientists are exaggerating the impact of “climate change” on natural disasters to have their research published in prestigious scientific journals, forcing them to intentionally omit other crucial contributing factors.
Dr. Patrick Brown – co-director of the climate and energy team at the Breakthrough Institute, Berkeley, and lecturer at Johns Hopkins University – recently published a paper suggesting climate change was the predominant factor causing a number of wildfires in California. He admitted, however, that he had intentionally omitted other factors, such as the state’s poor forest management, increasing population, and that over 80 percent of U.S. wildfires are started by humans.
The paper was pounced upon by over one hundred news outlets as proof that climate change was causing the wildfires. It was also accessed over 3,000 times online.
“The first thing the astute climate researcher knows is that his or her work should support the mainstream narrative… Why did I focus exclusively on the impact of climate change? I wanted the research to get as widely disseminated as possible, and thus I wanted it to be published in a high-impact journal,” Dr. Brown argued.
It has become “standard practice to calculate impacts for scary hypothetical future warming scenarios that strain credibility while ignoring potential changes to technology and resilience that would lessen the impact,” he added.
Much of the mainstream media’s reporting on European wildfires this summer has failed to mention that many in Greece and Spain were started by arsonists rather than climate change.
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Scientists are exaggerating the impact of "climate change" on natural disasters to have their research published in prestigious scientific journals, forcing them to intentionally omit other crucial contributing factors.
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Episode 22 of Tucker Carlson’s X (formerly Twitter) series is now up, with the latest episode featuring an interview with a man called Larry Sinclair, who claims to have had gay sex and crack cocaine with former president Barack Obama.
WATCH:
Ep. 22 Larry Sinclair says he had a night of crack cocaine-fueled sex with Barack Obama, and that Obama came back for more the next day. Assess for yourself. Here’s our interview. pic.twitter.com/R6CXwKv6gs
Episode 22 of Tucker Carlson's X (formerly Twitter) series is now up, with the latest episode featuring an interview with a man called Larry Sinclair, who claims to have had gay sex and crack cocaine with former president Barack Obama.
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Ron DeSantis was one of Operation Warp Speed’s biggest fans as recently as 2021, The National Pulse can reveal, as the Florida Governor and his team continue to try to ding Donald Trump over his COVID-19 policies.
“I think in terms of the vaccines and the testing… the logistics was really, really good. If you look at how the vaccine’s been distributed – yeah, granted I wish we got more vaccine every week – but I can tell you what, the vaccine is arriving,” DeSantis told Fox News’s Mark Levin, adding that vaccine distribution was a “…very difficult logistical operation and Warp Speed got it done.”
As a 2024 presidential candidate, the Florida Governor has changed his tune on Operation Warp Speed and the COVID-19 vaccines – attempting to use the pandemic response as a wedge issue against the Republican front runner, Trump. Just days before declaring his 2024 candidacy, DeSantis told the Florida Family Policy Council that, “We can never allow ‘Warp Speed’ to trump informed consent in this country ever again.”
Some DeSantis campaign donors are under the impression that the Florida Governor’s attacks on the COVID-19 vaccine and Operation Warp Speed are merely part of the campaign’s strategy to undermine Donald Trump.
“No one believes he actually believes any of the stuff about the vaccine. If you talk to the non-crazy people he’s got working for him, they don’t believe it, either. It’s politics,” The National Pulse previously reported an early DeSantis campaign ‘megadonor’ as saying.
In a post on X (formerly Twitter) from April 8, 2020, Jeremy Redfern – currently Governor DeSantis’s press secretary – was among the first people to recommend Dr. Anthony Fauci for a Presidential commendation:
Actually, you came up with the idea! But dont worry mate, I’m afraid *I* told Ron to run for President “one day” back in a 2016 radio interview. We all make mistakes! pic.twitter.com/TeRcyNQMan
Ron DeSantis was one of Operation Warp Speed's biggest fans as recently as 2021, The National Pulse can reveal, as the Florida Governor and his team continue to try to ding Donald Trump over his COVID-19 policies.
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An inmate at the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey has filed a lawsuit against the NJ Department of Corrections after being sexually assaulted by a biologically male prisoner, alleging guards failed to take “corrective action” against the “sexually aggressive and harassing behavior of the transgenders” in the facility even after two other inmates were impregnated by them.
The plaintiff said she complained to the prison authorities after the assault, but ended up being disciplined herself. She also said biological males were often housed in areas not covered by surveillance cameras, providing them with more opportunities to abuse female inmates.
In a separate lawsuit, the same plaintiff alleges she was abused by a male prison guard. Similar reports of abuse have resulted in NJ Governor Phil Murphy announcing Edna Mahan will be shut down.
Attacks on natural-born women by men claiming to be women have taken place in institutions well beyond New Jersey, with British politician Rory Stewart saying that when he served as government minister responsible for prisons he received of female prison staff being raped by trans inmates, for example.
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An inmate at the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey has filed a lawsuit against the NJ Department of Corrections after being sexually assaulted by a biologically male prisoner, alleging guards failed to take "corrective action" against the "sexually aggressive and harassing behavior of the transgenders" in the facility even after two other inmates were impregnated by them.
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Department of Justice (DOJ) special prosecutor Jack Smith accused former President Donald Trump of making “daily extrajudicial statements that threaten to prejudice the jury pool” in a Washington, D.C. court filing – in an apparent attempt to muzzle the 2024 presidential candidate. At the same time, New York Attorney General Letitia James wants Donald Trump, Eric Trump, and their lawyers fined tens of thousands of dollars for defending themselves against a civil fraud lawsuit she is pursuing, alleging their legal arguments are “frivolous”.
Former President Trump’s defense team is asking for two weeks to review and respond to Smith’s filing before details are made public on the court docket, with the DOJ team arguing that a delay for would “grind litigation in this case to a halt.” The two week response time for a defendant is standard court procedure.
Judge Chutkan asked that both the Trump legal team and Jack Smith submit additional briefs on whether to unseal the Smith filing by next week. The Trump legal team must have their briefs before Judge Chutkan on September 11th, and Smith by September 13th.
Meanwhile, the New York AG claims attorneys for the Trumps and their business associates should not be disputing whether she has standing to bring the case, insisting the question has already been settled. She wants the defendants and their lawyers fined $10,000 each for even trying to make their case.
James’s lawsuit aims to hit Trump’s business with a quarter of a billion dollars in sanctions and effectively prevent it from continuing to operate in the Empire State. The case has been pursued at considerable expense for years now, despite more serious issues such as rising felony assault and grand larceny auto offenses going unchecked.
Newly released data suggests it is almost impossible for Donald Trump to receive a fair trial in Washington, D.C., with two-thirds of residents polled in the nation’s capital say they believe Trump is guilty even though a trial has yet to begin.
Jack Montgomery and Will Upton contributed to this report.
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Department of Justice (DOJ) special prosecutor Jack Smith accused former President Donald Trump of making "daily extrajudicial statements that threaten to prejudice the jury pool" in a Washington, D.C. court filing – in an apparent attempt to muzzle the 2024 presidential candidate. At the same time, New York Attorney General Letitia James wants Donald Trump, Eric Trump, and their lawyers fined tens of thousands of dollars for defending themselves against a civil fraud lawsuit she is pursuing, alleging their legal arguments are "frivolous".
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Former President Donald Trump is planning to introduce stronger protectionist trade tariffs, make deeper tax cuts, and reverse Joe Biden’s regulation policies if he is re-elected to the White House in January 2025, according to a recent Bloomberg report.
The 45th President has suggested retaliatory measures on countries such as India or Brazil if they decide to impose higher tariffs on American exports, a policy which he terms “reciprocity.” He also supports the idea of a “universal baseline tariff” – what he nicknames a “ring around the U.S. economy” – which would see an automatic ten percent tariff placed on imported goods, a move that is “freaking out” European Union diplomats.
Trump has been discussing the expansion of his successful first-term economic policies with a number of campaign aides in recent weeks, as well as former White House National Economic Council director Larry Ludlow and Heritage Foundation fellow Stephen Moore.
Moore has since argued that Trump should adopt a similar line of argument in the next election to that of Ronald Reagan against Jimmy Carter by asking the American people, “are you better off today than you were four years ago?”
“As a businessman, he understands that we are the biggest customer. Therefore, we have the most leverage if we are willing to use it,” stated former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a Trump ally.
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Former President Donald Trump is planning to introduce stronger protectionist trade tariffs, make deeper tax cuts, and reverse Joe Biden's regulation policies if he is re-elected to the White House in January 2025, according to a recent Bloomberg report.
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Grant Shapps, the newly appointed British Secretary of State for Defence, does not know how many ranks there are in the nation’s armed forces, requiring a news presenter to inform him on live television.
Shapps appeared on the Rupert Murdoch-owned Sky News on Wednesday morning, where he was asked by the presenter: “so here’s a question for you: do you know how many ranks there are in the [British] army?”
“Not off the top of my head,” Shapps responded before going on to suggest that it’s somehow uncommon for serving British Defense Ministers to have knowledge about their position: “It’s not usual in democracy where we actually pride ourselves on having civilians run all elements of government, including our military, to have people from military backgrounds.”
The presenter was forced to tell him the number was 12.
Shapps, elected to the British parliament as a “Tory modernizer,” first came to national attention after hiding the fact he used several pseudonyms to sell dodgy computer software while working as a Member of Parliament in the early 2010s.
#KayBurley – There's been a lot of criticism that you got your job because it's a job for the boys, as opposed to knowing anything about the Ministry of Defence… do you know how many ranks there are in the army?
Grant Shapps, the newly appointed British Secretary of State for Defence, does not know how many ranks there are in the nation's armed forces, requiring a news presenter to inform him on live television.
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