Sunday, September 14, 2025

DATA: Trump Surges With Black Voters, Up 15% Since Manhattan Conviction.

President Donald J. Trump is surging with black voters following his New York conviction last week, with a staggering 15-point surge for the 45th President. The numbers from Rasmussen Reports show Biden dropping 14 points.

An April poll fielded by Rasmussen showed Biden receiving 61 percent of the black vote, while his Republican challenger, former President Donald J. Trump, garnered just 21 percent support. However, over just one month, black voter support for Biden has collapsed, falling to just 47 percent in the May poll. Conversely, former President Trump has seen a significant increase in support among the voter demographic, sitting at 36 percent in the latest survey.

The Biden campaign has scrambled outreach efforts to stymie the flight of black and other minority voters from the Democratic Party ahead of November’s presidential election. However, the campaign appears to have found little success, with its emphasis on Biden’s support for diversity, equity, and inclusion—among other policies—falling flat with voters.

Polling data has consistently shown black and other minority voter demographics are breaking with Biden and the Democrats over his handling of inflation, the economy, and the U.S. border crisis. The Biden campaign has, by and large, avoided these topics on the campaign trail.

The National Pulse has extensively reported on the shifting voter trends ahead of the 2024 election. Last week, Biden received significant pushback from several prominent black Democrat leaders, warning him his campaign is not doing enough to retain voters in their communities. At the start of 2024, polling data suggested Biden was facing a potential revolt among key Democrat voter blocs, driven primarily by anger over inflation and illegal immigration.

 

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President Donald J. Trump is surging with black voters following his New York conviction last week, with a staggering 15-point surge for the 45th President. The numbers from Rasmussen Reports show Biden dropping 14 points. show more

Editor’s Notes

Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.

KASSAM: What Else The Data is Showing (It’s Not All Good).

RAHEEM J. KASSAM Editor-in-Chief
Since Friday, the MAGA movement has been caught between two positions: 1) Putting on a brave face and 2) Citing major fundraising numbers in the wake of the historic conviction of President Donald J
Since Friday, the MAGA movement has been caught between two positions: 1) Putting on a brave face and 2) Citing major fundraising numbers in the wake of the historic conviction of President Donald J show more
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Trump Warns of Public Outrage if Jailed: ‘There’s a Breaking Point!’

Former President Donald J. Trump said in an interview on Sunday that if he is sentenced to prison or house arrest following his recent conviction in New York City, it would be “tough for the public.” Responding to Democrats who argue he should be jailed over his politics, Trump insisted that he is the “opposite” of a threat to democracy.

When asked about the possibility of being sentenced to house arrest or jail time, Trump responded, “I’m okay with it,” but also noted, “I think it’d be tough for the public to take. At a certain point, there’s a breaking point.”

Touching on the case against him and the resulting guilty verdict, Trump remarked, “It’s weaponization of the Justice Department, of the FBI, and you know that’s all coming out of Washington. You may think it’s Bragg. Take a look at who opened the case. I’m not allowed to talk about it because I have a gag order.”

Trump mentioned that the situation has been more challenging for his family than for him personally.

Addressing his critics who label him a “threat to democracy,” Trump stated, “It’s their slogan. I’m a ‘threat to democracy.’ I’m the opposite.”

Trump is scheduled to be sentenced for the Manhattan case on July 11, which is just days before the Republican National Convention. The former Republican President, found guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records last week by a Manhattan jury, could face several years in prison. Democrat-aligned Judge Juan Merchan, who presided over the trial, will also determine Trump’s sentencing.

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Former President Donald J. Trump said in an interview on Sunday that if he is sentenced to prison or house arrest following his recent conviction in New York City, it would be "tough for the public." Responding to Democrats who argue he should be jailed over his politics, Trump insisted that he is the "opposite" of a threat to democracy. show more
farage

Farage Stands by Trump After Sham Conviction: ‘The World Will Be a Much Safer Place with Him in the White House.’

Brexit leader Nigel Farage is sticking by his decision to forgo standing in the British election on July 4 in favor of campaigning for Donald Trump, despite the former President’s sham conviction in Manhattan.

“Yes, of course I’m going to stand up and defend Donald Trump,” Farage told British media when asked if he has any regrets. “And I’ll tell you why, because I believe the world, uncertain as it is, will be a much safer place with him in the White House than Joe Biden,” he explained, citing the former president’s record of negotiating peace and trade accords between Arab states and Israel, in particular.

Reacting to Trump’s conviction directly on X, formerly Twitter, Farage wrote that the “verdict is a disgrace” and predicted Trump would “win big” as a result.

Earlier this month, Farage said a “strong America as a close ally is vital for [Britain’s] peace and security” and pledged to “help with the grassroots campaign in the USA in any way I can.”

He campaigned for Trump during the 2016 election. The then-future president, in turn, backed Brexit ahead of Britain’s prior European Union referendum and hosted Farage, National Pulse Editor-in-Chief Raheem Kassam, and other Brexit leaders at Trump Tower after he became President-elect.

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Brexit leader Nigel Farage is sticking by his decision to forgo standing in the British election on July 4 in favor of campaigning for Donald Trump, despite the former President's sham conviction in Manhattan. show more

Power Grab: Dem Rep. Raskin Says Biden DOJ Should FORCE Alito, Thomas to Recuse.

Democrat Representative Jamie Raskin is arguing Joe Biden’s Justice Department can force Supreme Court justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito to step down from cases related to the January 6 protests. The cases in question, Trump v. United States and Fischer v. United States, involve then-President Donald Trump’s supposed role in the Jan 6 disorder.

According to Raskin, U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland can petition other Supreme Court justices to enforce recusal under judicial disqualification statutes and the U.S. Constitution. Raskin emphasizes that these recusal statutes are legally binding and not mere recommendations.

“It seems unfathomable that the two justices could get away with deciding for themselves whether they can be impartial in ruling on cases affecting Donald Trump’s liability for crimes he is accused of committing on Jan. 6,” Raskin whines.

“The U.S. Department of Justice… can petition the other seven justices to require Justices Alito and Thomas to recuse themselves not as a matter of grace but as a matter of law,” he argues.

“The Justice Department and Attorney General Merrick Garland can invoke two powerful textual authorities for this motion: the Constitution of the United States, specifically the due process clause, and the federal statute mandating judicial disqualification for questionable impartiality, 28 U.S.C. Section 455,” he claims.

SEPARATION OF POWERS?

The Biden Justice Department’s attempting to stack the court against Donald Trump while prosecuting him would be a significant attack on the separation of powers, with the Supreme Court being a branch of the U.S. government co-equal with the executive.

However, it is not the only line of attack Raskin has opened against the Supreme Court. He is also pushing for Congress to stack the court with four additional justices and to impose an “ethics code” which would make it easier for Congressmen to impeach justices considered problematic.

Raskin appears willing to thwart Trump’s reelection by any means necessary, drafting legislation to try and prevent him from standing and celebrating his sham conviction in New York as a “victory” for “Democratic politics.”

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Democrat Representative Jamie Raskin is arguing Joe Biden's Justice Department can force Supreme Court justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito to step down from cases related to the January 6 protests. The cases in question, Trump v. United States and Fischer v. United States, involve then-President Donald Trump's supposed role in the Jan 6 disorder. show more

Sen. Mike Lee Declares War on Senate Democrats After Trump Verdict.

Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) is leading a coalition of Republican Senators who say they are “no longer cooperating with any Democrat legislative priorities or nominations” following Thursday’s guilty verdict against former President Donald J. Trump in his Manhattan-based hush money trial. The Utah Republican, in an open letter signed by seven of his colleagues, invited “all concerned Senators to join our stand.”

“The White House has made a mockery of the rule of law and fundamentally altered our politics in un-American ways,” Sen. Lee wrote before adding: “As a Senate Republican conference, we are unwilling to aid and abet this White House in its project to tear this country apart.”  Lee’s letter is joined by Sens. J.D. Vance (R-OH), Tommy Tuberville (R-AL), Eric Schmitt (R-MO), Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), Rick Scott (R-FL), Roger Marshall (R-KS), and Marco Rubio (R-FL).

In a statement exclusive to The National Pulse, Sen. Lee said: “This is a time for choosing. Are Republicans—or any elected officials of any party—going to sit idly by and watch as America’s judicial system is reduced to the legitimacy of a banana republic, or are we going to do something?”

The group of Senate Republicans is pledging to block all non-security-related funding for the Biden government, as well as any appropriations bill that could fund Biden’s partisan lawfare against former President Trump. Additionally, Lee’s coalition says they will vote against confirmation for any future Biden judicial nominees or political appointees and prevent the expedited passage of any non-security legislation in the Senate.

READ:

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Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) is leading a coalition of Republican Senators who say they are "no longer cooperating with any Democrat legislative priorities or nominations" following Thursday's guilty verdict against former President Donald J. Trump in his Manhattan-based hush money trial. The Utah Republican, in an open letter signed by seven of his colleagues, invited "all concerned Senators to join our stand." show more

Biden Lawfare Backlash: GOP Rakes In Cash Following Trump Verdict.

The Republican Party is setting fundraising records following the guilty verdict issued against former President Donald J. Trump in his Manhattan-based hush money trial on Thursday. Small-dollar donors have flocked to the Trump presidential campaign, the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), and the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) in response to the Democrat lawfare efforts against the presumptive Republican nominee.

On Friday, the NRCC announced it had raised $300,000 following Thursday’s verdict, its best fundraising day of the 2024 cycle so far. A spokesman for the NRCC noted that 22 percent of the money raised came from new, first-time donors to the campaign committee. Likewise, the NRSC raised $360,000 in under 24 hours. The committee said online donations tripled after the jury issued the guilty verdict.

Meanwhile, former President Trump‘s 2024 campaign committee raked in nearly $35 million by Friday morning. Fueled by small-dollar donations, Trump’s fundraising haul almost doubled the previous single-day record on the WinRed platform. The Trump campaign highlighted that 29.7 percent of the donors were first-time contributors.

The NRCC’s post-verdict fundraising blew past the $175,000 it raised when Representative Mike Johnson (R-LA) was elected Speaker of the House. The NRSC’s fundraising also edged out the $325,000 it posted on Super Tuesday.

“The American people hate how the justice system was weaponized to convict President Trump,” NRCC spokesman Will Reinert said in a statement announcing the record contribution numbers. He added: “They are opening up their wallets to protest Joe Biden and House Democrats’ kangaroo court, and they will deliver the final verdict with their votes this November.”

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The Republican Party is setting fundraising records following the guilty verdict issued against former President Donald J. Trump in his Manhattan-based hush money trial on Thursday. Small-dollar donors have flocked to the Trump presidential campaign, the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), and the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) in response to the Democrat lawfare efforts against the presumptive Republican nominee. show more

Trump To Hold Town Hall on X With Elon Musk.

Former President Donald J. Trump has agreed to hold a town hall event on X (formerly known as Twitter) with billionaire Elon Musk, the social media company’s owner. While the Trump presidential campaign and Musk have agreed to the event, in principle, a date for the town hall has yet to be set.

The town hall will be live-streamed on Musk‘s social media platform, with former President Trump fielding questions submitted by X users. In addition, the event will be broadcast on NewsNation. The X users participating in the town hall will be required to submit their questions to the event moderators, who are presumably Musk and a representative from NewsNation.

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. has also agreed to a similar event with X and Musk. Meanwhile, Joe Biden, the 81-year-old Democrat incumbent, declined Musk’s invitation to hold a town hall event on his social media platform.

Trump was suspended by Twitter, the predecessor to X, over three years ago following the January 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riots. The planned town hall would mark only the second time Trump has engaged with the platform since his suspension was lifted after Musk purchased Twitter in late 2022. Trump’s first X post since his suspension came on August 24, 2023, following his arrest and processing in Fulton County, Georgia, over alleged interference in the 2020 presidential election.

The National Pulse previously reported that Trump and Musk‘s former chilly relationship has thawed in recent months. Trump, for his part, has even floated the idea of a possible role for Musk in his presidential administration should he retake the White House in November.

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Former President Donald J. Trump has agreed to hold a town hall event on X (formerly known as Twitter) with billionaire Elon Musk, the social media company's owner. While the Trump presidential campaign and Musk have agreed to the event, in principle, a date for the town hall has yet to be set. show more

Illegal Alien Jose Ibarra Who Murdered Laken Riley Pleads NOT GUILTY?!

Illegal Venezuelan immigrant Jose Ibarra, charged with the murder of Augusta University student Laken Riley, entered a not-guilty plea during his arraignment on Friday. Ibarra, 26, is facing a ten-count indictment related to the death of Riley, a 22-year-old nursing student attacked on February 22 while jogging on dirt trails on the University of Georgia campus in Athens.

The arraignment occurred at Athens-Clarke County Superior Courthouse, where Riley’s mother, Allyson Phillips, was visibly emotional — breaking down in tears. The judge has scheduled a status hearing for August, with the trial expected to occur later in the fall.

Ibarra faces multiple charges, including malice murder, two counts of kidnapping with bodily injury, two counts of aggravated assault with intent to rape, two counts of aggravated battery, obstructing or hindering a person from making a 911 call, tampering with evidence, and being a “peeping Tom.”

The indictment alleges that Ibarra caused Riley’s death by blunt-force trauma to her head and asphyxiating her in an unspecified manner. He is also accused of spying on a university staff member in an apartment on the same day of the alleged murder.

Ibarra resided in an apartment complex near the on-campus park where Riley was jogging. University of Georgia Police Chief Jeffrey Clark described the incident as a “crime of opportunity,” noting the proximity of Ibarra‘s apartment to the crime scene.

Records indicate that Ibarra, originally from Venezuela, entered the United States illegally through El Paso, Texas, in September 2022. He was reportedly released into the U.S. on parole, according to sources from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Former President Donald J. Trump has repeatedly blasted the Biden government for its open borders policies, which have allowed murderers like Ibarra to enter the country illegally.

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Illegal Venezuelan immigrant Jose Ibarra, charged with the murder of Augusta University student Laken Riley, entered a not-guilty plea during his arraignment on Friday. Ibarra, 26, is facing a ten-count indictment related to the death of Riley, a 22-year-old nursing student attacked on February 22 while jogging on dirt trails on the University of Georgia campus in Athens. show more

RFK Jr. Accuses ‘Profoundly Undemocratic’ Democrats of ‘Weaponizing’ Courts Against Trump.

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is accusing the Democrats, his former party, of adopting a strategy of trying to “beat President Trump in the courtroom rather than the ballot box.” He argues this is not only “profoundly undemocratic” but “will backfire in November.”

“America deserves a President who can win at the ballot box without compromising our government’s separation of powers or weaponizing the courts,” RFK Jr. wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

“You can’t save democracy by destroying it first. The Democrats are afraid they will lose in the voting booth, so instead they go after President Trump in the courtroom.”

Trump was convicted of dubious charges in a heavily Democrat area in a prosecution brought by a Democratic District Attorney, Alvin Bragg, on Thursday. The judge overseeing the case, Juan Merchan, has strong familial links to the Democratic Party but refused to recuse himself and even imposed a gag order banning Trump from talking about his conflicts of interest.

“This was a disgrace. This was a rigged trial by a conflicted judge who was corrupt,” Trump said following his conviction.

“They wouldn’t give us a venue change. We were at 5 percent or 6 percent in this district, in this area. This was a rigged, disgraceful trial,” he stressed, adding that the “real verdict is going to be November 5th by the people.”

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Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is accusing the Democrats, his former party, of adopting a strategy of trying to "beat President Trump in the courtroom rather than the ballot box." He argues this is not only "profoundly undemocratic" but "will backfire in November." show more

CNN Legal Analyst & Former Bragg Associate: “Case Was An Ill-Conceived, Unjustified Mess.”

Elie Honig — a former federal prosecutor, CNN legal analyst, and associate of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg — says the hush money prosecution of former President Donald J. Trump “was an ill-conceived, unjustified mess.” While the former prosecutor turned corporate media pundit claims the jury’s verdict should be respected, he acknowledged that the legal theory behind Bragg’s prosecution “contorted the law in an unprecedented manner.”

In a lengthy essay for New York Magazine‘s Intelligencer, Honig blasts Bragg and Democrat-aligned Judge Juan Merchan for what he contends was a politically motivated and dubious prosecution. The CNN legal analyst also criticized Judge Merchan for not properly addressing his political conflicts with the case.

MERCHAN’S CONFLICTS.

“The judge donated money… in plain violation of a rule prohibiting New York judges from making political donations of any kind — to a pro-Biden, anti-Trump political operation,” Honig writes, adding that the funds were explicitly “earmarked for ‘resisting the Republican Party and Donald Trump’s radical right-wing legacy.'”

The National Pulse has reported extensively on the personal and political conflicts of Judge Merchan, who refused to recuse himself from presiding over the case. Merchan’s daughter, Loren Merchan, a political fundraiser, has taken millions of dollars from national Democrats who raised campaign funds off of the prosecution. Additionally, Representative Daniel Goldman, a client of Loren Merchan, helped prepare the prosecution’s star witness, Michael Cohen, for his cross-examination.

‘ENTIRELY UNPRECEDENTED.’

Honig additionally writes that “[t]he charges against Trump are obscure, and nearly entirely unprecedented.” He contends that Bragg overreached in using a federal campaign finance violation as a predicate crime to resurrect the falsifying business record charges, which were beyond the statute of limitations.

“In fact, no state prosecutor — in New York, or Wyoming, or anywhere — has ever charged federal election laws as a direct or predicate state crime, against anyone, for anything. None. Ever,” Honig argues, adding: “Even putting aside the specifics of election law, the Manhattan DA itself almost never brings any case in which falsification of business records is the only charge.”

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Elie Honig — a former federal prosecutor, CNN legal analyst, and associate of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg — says the hush money prosecution of former President Donald J. Trump "was an ill-conceived, unjustified mess." While the former prosecutor turned corporate media pundit claims the jury's verdict should be respected, he acknowledged that the legal theory behind Bragg's prosecution "contorted the law in an unprecedented manner." show more