With just under two-weeks to go until the Iowa Republican Caucus the campaigns and supporting SuperPACs are flooding the state’s airwaves making their last-ditch pitch to voters. A total of around $7.5 million will be spent in these closing days, with former-South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley’s making up a bulk of the ad spending with $4.6 million in air-time reserved.
SFA Fund (Pro-Haley SuperPAC): $3.3 million
Haley campaign committee: $1.3 million
Trump campaign committee: $954k
Fight Right (Pro-DeSantis SuperPAC): $705k
Good Fight (Pro-DeSantis SuperPAC): $609k
DeSantis campaign committee: $412.5k
Binkley campaign committee: $176k
Ramaswamy campaign: $29k
Former Governor Haley’s recent surge in polls have kicked off a close fightfor second place in Iowa. The Republican presidential nomination front-runner, former President Donald Trump, continues to maintain a strong first place position.
The Haley campaign and its affiliated SuperPAC has blanketed Iowa with ads primarily focused on her electability versus President Joe Biden. Several recent polls show Haley and Trump are the only two Republicans capable of defeating the incumbent Democrat. In addition, the SFA Fund is also airing ads attacking Gov. DeSantis – who has polled a weak second place position in Iowa. One recent SFA Fund ad compared DeSantis to a dumpster fire.
Both Haley and DeSantis’s closing argument in Iowa has been a mixed of positive messaging for their candidacy and attacks on each other. The pro-DeSantis Fight Right SuperPAC has highlighted Haley’s positive comments towards China. The DeSantis campaign itself – strapped for cash and only recently going up on air in Iowa – has primarily focused its ad on Iowa Gov. Kim Reynold’s endorsement of DeSantis, as well as an emotion ad featuring Casey DeSantis talking about her husband.
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With just under two-weeks to go until the Iowa Republican Caucus the campaigns and supporting SuperPACs are flooding the state's airwaves making their last-ditch pitch to voters. A total of around $7.5 million will be spent in these closing days, with former-South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley's making up a bulk of the ad spending with $4.6 million in air-time reserved.
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The National Pulse’s 4th annual Patriot of the Year is former President Donald J. Trump. Previous award winners include “America’s Mayor” Rudy Giuliani, former White House Chief Strategist Stephen K. Bannon, and the New York Young Republican Club.
The Patriot of the Year title is handed, each winter, to the figure or organization in the conservative movement who draws the most incoming fire, while staunchly representing the nation-first values at the philosophical heart of The National Pulse’s editorial view.
Trump, 77, drew no close competitors for the award this year, especially given the historic and unprecedented targeting of him by the government of the United States, led by Joe Biden.
Born in 1946 in Queens, New York, Trump attended the New York Military Academy followed by the Wharton School of Finance. Taking over his father’s ‘Fred C. Trump Organization’ in 1971 and renaming it The Trump Organization, the future 45th President of the United States would soon become famous globally for his array of successful real estate ventures, perceived playboy lifestyle, and bestselling books. In 1987, he published the record-breaking The Art of the Deal, and 18 other books since.
In 1977, Trump married Ivana Zelníčková, who gave birth to his first three children: Donald Jr., Ivanka Marie, and Eric Trump. The two divorced in 1990. Ivana passed away in July 2022, aged 73.
In 1993, Trump married his second wife, Marla Maples, who gave birth to his daughter Tiffany before the pair divorced in 1999.
In 2000, Trump sought the presidential nomination of the Reform Party, wherein he discussed “beat[ing] that Democrat-Republican apparatus” – a philosophy carried into his infamous 2016 campaign for the Oval Office. Ultimately, he abandoned his 2000 bid, but not before being spotted stumping alongside model Melania Knauss, whom he married in 2005, and who would go on to become the First Lady of the United States and mother to his third son, Barron Trump.
Trump’s third wedding was a star studded event, taking place at the Church of Bethesda-by-the-Sea on Palm Beach island in Florida, which the pair still attend. Noteworthy guests included Heidi Klum, Mayor Giuliani, Bill and Hillary Clinton, and Regis Philbin.
Just one year prior, in 2004, Trump had launched the hit reality TV show The Apprentice, which ran for 15 seasons in America as well as sparking 20 different, localized versions across the world.
In 2016, Trump sought the Republican Party’s nomination for president of the United States, facing up against challengers such as Jeb Bush, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, Chris Christie, and others. He was nominated by the party at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, facing off against Hillary Clinton is what was perceived as an un-winnable election for Trump in November. Ultimately, Trump emerged victorious after a handful of campaign flubs from Clinton, and an outsider campaign with moments of inspiration spurred on in the public mind by Nigel Farage’s Brexit victory earlier that year in the United Kingdom.
Trump ran on his now trademark “MAGA” or “Make America Great Again” philosophy – a populist-nationalist perspective which has drawn the continued ire of the globalist, corporate elite and their politician puppets. His victory was immediately marred by false allegations of “Russian collusion,” followed by a sham impeachment process against him, and a global pandemic which emerged as a result of the U.S. government’s collaboration with Communist China in so-called “gain of function” experiments at the Wuhan lab in the nation’s Hubei province.
During this pandemic, Trump’s leftist and globalist opponents instituted unconstitutional lockdown measures alongside mail-in and “drop box” ballots for his 2020 re-election. While Trump emerged victorious on the night of the election, a series of “ballot drops” and “curing” attempts led his opponent Joe Biden – who scarcely campaigned outside of his home – to “victory”. In challenging the result of the election – much like Democrats did in 2016 – Trump was branded an “election denier” and his allies and lawyers were subsequently persecuted by the state.
When protesters descended on the U.S. Capitol on January 6th 2021 in support of Trump, Capitol Hill police were ordered to fire upon them using rubber bullets, flash bangs, and tear gas. The incitement by the police riled up the crowd, which led to a handful charging into police, breaching the Capitol, and postponing formal election count proceedings occurring inside. As a result, Trump was impeached a second time on charges of inciting an insurrection. Like his first sham impeachment, he was not convicted.
Despite all the attempts to stymie his administration, Trump’s first term was remarkably successful, and featured a booming U.S. economy, a secure southern border, and the renegotiation of deals with America’s key foreign partners – including NATO, Canada, Mexico, and China respectively. His administration even presided over long-elusive Middle East peace deals such as the Abraham Accords, while coaxing manufacturing jobs back to the United States and pushing back against the far-left’s attempts to revise American history through endeavors such as the Marxist-led 1619 Project and Black Lives Matter riots. Critically, Trump’s first term saw America engage in no new wars – a cardinal political sin for which the real-estate mogul will never be forgiven by the political and media class.
Trump announced his second candidacy for a second term in November 2022, wherein The National Pulse provided a full throated endorsement of his vision. Since then, Trump has been persecuted in ways that would make a banana republic blush, with Biden’s special prosecutors and Democrat Secretaries of State attempting to prosecute him on spurious grounds as well as disqualify him from the 2024 ballot – not a strategy you deploy against someone you believe can beat fair and square. Despite it all, Trump has persisted unfazed, amassing more public support than ever, and consolidating his backing amongst Republican primary voters.
Trump’s lifetime of achievements, charity, politics, and resilience is what makes him The National Pulse’s 2023 Patriot of the Year. Frankly, he deserves to win one for every year he has promoted America First conservatism, and breathed life into an otherwise scarcely inspiring Republican Party in the United States.
Congratulations, Mr. President, and thank you for the interview:
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The National Pulse's 4th annual Patriot of the Year is former President Donald J. Trump. Previous award winners include "America's Mayor" Rudy Giuliani, former White House Chief Strategist Stephen K. Bannon, and the New York Young Republican Club.
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
Writing in his Daily Mailcolumn on Friday, former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson blasted the Maine and Colorado decisions to try to keep former President Donald J. Trump off the ballot for the 2024 presidential elections.
Johnson, who has routinely been unkind about Trump, wrote of how the authoritarian attempts to keep Trump off the ballot make it impossible for Western nations to claim the moral high ground against dictatorships when their ruling elite classes act in the very same way:
Can we really say that it is the sovereign people, and the people alone, who get to decide who makes the law? I don’t think we can say that of the United States, today, where another court has just decided that Donald Trump’s name should not appear on the ballot paper for next year’s Presidential election. The judges of Maine have joined the judges of Colorado in effectively banning former President Trump from presenting himself as a candidate. I am amazed that this is not causing more general consternation.
Making clear he thinks Trump lost in 2020 while calling January 6th “dismaying”, the former Mayor of London also insisted that [Trump] did not prevent the peaceful transfer of power, and “has not been convicted of an insurrection, or an attempted insurrection.”
Refering to the former President as “an innocent man,” Johnson explains: “…think how this looks in the eyes of the rest of the world — all the places where they are fed up with being lectured about the joys of Western liberal democracy. Across the world there are dictatorial and sometimes brutal leaders who use a corrupt judicial system to disbar their opponents from seeking elective office.
“That is to say, they fabricate some charge against them at least to tie them up in legal knots — and, if necessary, actually send them to prison.
“It’s what they do in Venezuela — President Nicolas Maduro did it to his opponent. It’s what Putin did to the oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky. It’s what the Tatmadaw in Burma have done to Aung San Suu Kyi. It’s what they used to do in Ukraine — the Kremlin lackey Yanukovich locked up his opponent Yulia Timoshenko.
“Why do they lock them up? Because they are frightened of their potential popularity; because they will do anything they can to stop them appearing before the electorate.”
Johnson concludes: “It is four years since the deplorable events of January 6, 2020. The American public have had lots of time to decide what they think of Trump’s handling of the matter. They, and they alone, should decide whether he is fit for another term.”
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Writing in his Daily Mailcolumn on Friday, former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson blasted the Maine and Colorado decisions to try to keep former President Donald J. Trump off the ballot for the 2024 presidential elections.
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
A Louisiana woman has filed a state lawsuit with the goal of kicking Donald Trump off the state’s March 23rd Republican presidential ballot. Presented simply as a Louisiana citizen by establishment news outlets, Ashley Reeb is, in fact, a self-described “neocommunist” and member of St. Bernard Parish Democrat Executive Committee.
Reeb’s lawsuit, filed on December 22nd, claims: “Both Trump’s actions (engaging in insurrection) as well as his inaction (giving aid and comfort to insurrectionists) on Jan. 6, 2021, disqualify him from holding any office of/under the United States.” Ms. Reeb’s legal claims echo those dismissed by state supreme courts in Minnesota and Michigan.
According to her LinkedIn profile, Ms. Reeb works as seasonal staff with the The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Foundation, Inc. From 1999 to 2005 she served as a part-time Administrative File Clerk with the Louisiana National Guard, and as a Deputy with the St. Bernard Parish Sheriff’s Office from 2001 to 2003.
An examination of Ms. Reeb’s social media account on X (formerly Twitter) reveals she is a follower and reposter of a whose-who of ‘ResistanceLib’ accounts. Reeb herself has pushed the debunked Russiagate conspiracy theory as recently as August 21st, 2023. In addition, she has posted pro-Hamas propaganda on her Facebook page, claiming Israeli hostages were well treated by their Hamas terrorist captors and even ‘thanked’ them – with additional claims it is Israelis who have engaged in mass kidnappings of Palestinians. According to local reports, Ms. Reeb flies both a transgender flag and a Black Lives Matter flag outside her home.
"They KNOW he is a fucking prolific criminal, and they are mostly too chickenshit to call him out for it."
Simple answer: Russian kompromat. The RNC was hacked when the DNC was. Interestingly, that's about the time when they all fell in line 🤔 https://t.co/JzuktoEQag
A Louisiana woman has filed a state lawsuit with the goal of kicking Donald Trump off the state's March 23rd Republican presidential ballot. Presented simply as a Louisiana citizen by establishment news outlets, Ashley Reeb is, in fact, a self-described "neocommunist" and member of St. Bernard Parish Democrat Executive Committee.
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U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has seized 854.07 pounds of crystal methamphetamine, 164.72 pounds of powdered methamphetamine, or speed, and 165.34 pounds of cocaine at the World Trade Bridge in Laredo, Texas.
The narcotics, with an estimated street value of $10,298,520, were uncovered when a CBP officer brought in sniffer dogs to inspect a 2001 Freightliner tractor-trailer, which was supposedly transporting cut flowers.
“CBP is proud of the work our frontline officers do to ensure the safety and wellbeing of our communities. This significant seizure is an example of ongoing operational efforts conducted daily to protect our borders,” commented Port Director Alberto Flores.
The drugs find lends credence to Donald Trump’s warning, first reported by The National Pulse, that America’s southern border crisis is “poisoning the blood of our country.”
While the former president’s enemies have tried to paint the comments as racial, allies such as Senator J.D. Vance have pointed out it is “obvious that he was talking about the very clear fact that the blood of Americans is being poisoned by a drug epidemic.”
The 45th President also highlighted the danger illegal immigration poses to public health in terms of disease, with border officials having already identified the likes of tuberculosis, syphilis, and dengue fever among illegal aliens.
The enormous scale of the border crisis is straining officials’ resources at the frontier, making it less likely drugs shipments like the one intercepted at Laredo will be discovered.
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U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has seized 854.07 pounds of crystal methamphetamine, 164.72 pounds of powdered methamphetamine, or speed, and 165.34 pounds of cocaine at the World Trade Bridge in Laredo, Texas.
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
“Poisoning the blood,” needs to be transfigured from a line of attack by the political and media establishment into a line of attack, by MAGA, towards those who cheerlead for America to become a borderless nation
“Poisoning the blood,” needs to be transfigured from a line of attack by the political and media establishment into a line of attack, by MAGA, towards those who cheerlead for America to become a borderless nation show more
Nationalist and populist political parties will enter 2024 hoping for a bumper election year. Over the course of the year, 40 national elections will occur, representing 41 percent of the global population, and 42 percent of global gross domestic product.
If 2016 seemed like a populist-nationalist year to remember, 2024 could easily surpass it. Here are the most critical elections to watch for in 2024:
European Parliament: June 6-9, 2024
The European Union’s 27 member states will head to the polls in early June, choosing their representation at the supranational, globalist European Parliament. Typically already an election which attracts massive “protest votes,” Europe’s worsening migrant crisis will naturally push voters to the right, a concern already top of mind for European Union (EU) apparatchiks like Josep Borrell.
Recent victories for nationalist and populist parties in Italy, Finland, the Netherlands, and Sweden also underscore a snowballing backlash against European elites over their embrace of open borders. The Identity and Democracy group, a bloc of eurosceptic and nationalist parties from 10 different European nations, appears poised to challenge the Liberals for position as the third largest voting block in the European Parliament. This is no small feat, given how heavily the deck is stacked against them by European Parliamentary authorities.
Continued economic stagnation, discontent over the accelerating migrant crisis, persistent warmongering, and general disenfranchisement could manifest a new, tectonic shift in European Union politics.
America, November 5, 2024.
Former President Donald Trump continues to pull ahead of Democrat incumbent Joe Biden. Much like Europe, the crisis at the U.S. southern border is fueling a voter backlash against Democrats nationally. Alongside a weak economy throughout 2023/24, as well as soaring crime and intensifying culture wars, America is evidently looking for a change. Biden’s approval ratings are lower than Trump’s at the same point in his first term, and nearly eight in 10 Americans say the country is on the wrong track.
Early polling also indicates Trump leads Biden in all but one of the critical 2024 swing states, with Biden yet to faces the additional headwinds from an advancing Congressional impeachment inquiry into his abuses of office and public corruption. Also of great concern for the 81-year old Democrat is growing discontent over the Ukraine-Russia war, the Israel-Hamas War, and indeed his popularity amongst minority voters.
In the hopes of heading off a Trump victory in 2024, the Biden regime has launched an unprecedentedlaw-farecampaign against the near-certain Republican nominee. If elected, Trump has indicated his intent to use his second term to kneecap America’s “deep state” – using tools like the Schedule F designation to remove career federal bureaucrats.
One critical issue facing the U.S. electorate, however, is the integrity of the nation’s ballot processes. Long viewed as the “international observers”, the U.S. has fallen behind other nations in prioritizing election integrity, paper ballots, same day voting, and same day counting. Instead, America’s elections are plagued by weeks of mail-in voting, machine errors, and state-level denialism of such problems. These issues have routinely been exploited, predominantly by the political left, at both a local and national level.
The United Kingdom (by Jan 2025).
Though it will likely occur in 2024, the manner in which the UK holds its elections is somewhat quirky, with the nation having tried the idea of a “fixed term Parliament” before reverting to a looser system whereby the Prime Minister can advise the Monarch to dissolve parliament at any point within a five year period.
Polls indicate the governing “Conservative” Party is likely to lose its functioning majority in Parliament to the Labour Party, which hasn’t been in power since the end of the war-hungry Blair/Brown regime of 1997-2010.
Populists enjoyed great influence in British politics through much of the Conservatives’ years in office, with the Damoclean sword of Nigel Farage’s UK Independence Party (UKIP) forcing then-Prime Minister David Cameron to offer a referendum on leaving the EU – a plebiscite which was won by a 52-48 margin. Farage then went on to set up the Brexit Party, to ensure Britain actually left the EU.
Now reconstituted as the Reform Party, the organization has been a victim of its own success, sinking in the polls, and struggling to cut through outside the viewership of the less-left-wing ‘GB News’ channel.
The Conservatives, meanwhile, have squandered their majority, allowing the public tax burden to increase, boosting mass immigration, and supporting more wars around the world.
Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Party is likely to further promote mass migration, climate change alarmism, and tax-hiking policies, a notion which has led Farage to seriously consider a return to frontline politics in order to stave off the country’s further decline.
Belgium Might Disappear.
The European Parliament elections will be closely followed by a federal election in Belgium, which French wartime leader Charles De Gaulle disparaged as “a country invented by the British to annoy the French.” The nation’s status as the EU institutions’ main center of power grants it outsized importance – and the 2024 elections could set it on a path to breaking up altogether.
Belgium is divided between French-speaking Wallonia to the south and Dutch-speaking Flanders to the north, with the EU and national capital of Brussels a Francophone enclave inside the latter. The country often goes for long periods without an elected parliament, as rival parties from the two regions struggle to hammer out coalition agreements. In Flanders, the populist Flemish independentist party Vlaams Belang (Flemish Interest) is currently prospering at the expense of the establishment right.
Vlaams Belang’s growing appeal is driven by public dissatisfaction over a worsening migrant crisis, in a country already home to notorious no-go zones. Leader Tom Van Grieken has described the Belgian state as a “forced marriage,” and a strong election result could enable him to make good on a pledge to secure an “orderly division” of the country – or, if necessary, unilateral secession.
And So Much More.
With around forty national elections taking place in 2024, nationalist and populist parties will likely be competitive in both national and regional elections in Austria, India, South Korea, Romania, the Czech Republic, Portugal, Slovakia, Finland, Croatia, and further afield.
Taiwan will face a close national election between the liberal Democratic Progressive Party, the nationalist Kuomintang, and the populist Taiwan People’s Party. Russia and Ukraine are poised to face potentially impactful elections too. The National Pulse will be providing further insight as each election grows nearer.
The National Pulse will be here to cover it all. Make sure you have the free app and turn on notifications to stay informed. Will Upton, Jack Montgomery, and Raheem Kassam contributed to this report.
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Nationalist and populist political parties will enter 2024 hoping for a bumper election year. Over the course of the year, 40 national elections will occur, representing 41 percent of the global population, and 42 percent of global gross domestic product.
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Democrats and DeSantis backers alike pounced over the Christmas period, attacking the Trump family over a Christmas picture posted to Instagram (and subsequently X.com). “Where’s Melania?” hundreds of mostly anonymized internet accounts shrieked, many of which contained “#DumpTrump” or “#DeSantis2024” markings in their biographies.
The picture, which also omitted Eric and Lara Trump, as well as a number of other family members, served as poor spirited fodder for those with nothing better to do over the Christmas period besides throw shade on Donald and Melania Trump.
Now, it has emerged that the former First Lady was, in fact, taking care of her ailing mother in hospital, with family friend telling Page Six and Fox News that Amalija Knavs, Melania’s mother, has been very sick in hospital. The former First Lady was reportedly by her side over Christmastide.
“Melania has always been very devoted to her entire family,” a source close to Melania told Fox News Digital. “It should be no surprise that she spent this Christmas with her ailing mother.”
There have so far been no known apologies from the puerile and unthinking social media assailants, despite many of them whining when Jill “Casey” DeSantis and/or Hillary Clinton find themselves in the crosshairs for their active political campaigning and media interviews.
Democrats and DeSantis backers alike pounced over the Christmas period, attacking the Trump family over a Christmas picture posted to Instagram (and subsequently X.com). "Where's Melania?" hundreds of mostly anonymized internet accounts shrieked, many of which contained "#DumpTrump" or "#DeSantis2024" markings in their biographies.
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
Michigan’s Supreme Court has ruled against petitioners seeking to remove former President Donald Trump from the state’s 2024 primary ballot. “Free Speech For People”, a group who ostensibly filed the lawsuit on behalf of a group of Michigan voters, argued Section 3 of the 14th Amendment bars Trump for holding elected office – alleging Trump had lead an insurrection against the United States on January 6th, 2021.
Free Speech For People is a far-left group funded by George Soros’s fund, the Rockefeller Family Fund, the climate alarmism lobby, and the Hamas-linked Tides Foundation.
With dueling rulings from the Michigan and Colorado State Supreme Courts, the urgency for the United States Supreme Court to settle the matter has only increased. It is expected the legal team for former President Trump will appeal the Colorado ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court this week.
Unlike Colorado, Michigan does not have a provision in their stateelection law requiring a presidential candidate to present their qualifications for holding office. Michigan Supreme Court Justice Elizabeth Welch wrote the petitioners “…have identified no analogous provision in the Michigan Election Law that requires someone seeking the office of President of the United States to attest to their legal qualification to hold the office.”
Prior to the state’s Supreme Court order, the Michigan Court of Claims and Michigan Court of Appeals held: “At the moment, the only event about to occur is the presidential primary election. But as explained, whether Trump is disqualified is irrelevant to his placement on that particular ballot.”
JUST IN: The Michigan Supreme Court has rejected consideration of an effort to remove Donald Trump from the 2024 primary ballot, affirming a lower court's ruling that permits a renewed challenge during the general election.
Michigan's Supreme Court has ruled against petitioners seeking to remove former President Donald Trump from the state's 2024 primary ballot. "Free Speech For People", a group who ostensibly filed the lawsuit on behalf of a group of Michigan voters, argued Section 3 of the 14th Amendment bars Trump for holding elected office – alleging Trump had lead an insurrection against the United States on January 6th, 2021.
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
The President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, believes the United States “has lost its ability to lecture any other country about ‘democracy'” after the Colorado Supreme Court removed Donald Trump from its GOP primary ballot.
The all-Democrat court’s decision to kick Trump off the ballot for “insurrection” – an offense he has never been convicted of by a jury of his peers – came in response to a case brought by plaintiffs backed by the George Soros-funded CREW organization. They used Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, devised to keep Confederate rebels out of high office, to advance the case.
Bukele is not alone in criticizing the court’s move to deprive the people of Colorado of the right to decide whether or not they should vote for Trump. Three of its seven justices, including the Chief Justice, voted against the decision, with one warning the 45th President had been denied due process and a fair trial.
Bukele, best known for his draconian but effective crackdown on gangsterism in El Salvador, has been criticized by the Joe Biden regime for imprisoning some 74,000 people with suspected gang affiliations. Biden has also sanctioned officials close to the Central American leader.
The United States has lost its ability to lecture any other country about “democracy”. https://t.co/kvtfas9bcC
The President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, believes the United States "has lost its ability to lecture any other country about 'democracy'" after the Colorado Supreme Court removed Donald Trump from its GOP primary ballot.
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
The United States Supreme Court has denied an expedited hearing regarding Donald’s ‘presidential immunity’ claim in relation to Jack Smith’s ongoing January 6th prosecution of the former President in Washington, D.C. The ruling comes as a major blow to special counsel Jack Smith who had asked the High Court to intervene so his prosecution could proceed to trial in early March. The Supreme Court did not issue any reasoning for its decision, nor did it indicate if there were any dissenting opinions – there is some speculation the ruling may have been unanimous.
Former President Donald Trump’s attorneys have argued Jack Smith’s prosecution in Washington, D.C. should be thrown out on the grounds his actions prior to the January 6th, 2021 riot were official acts of the chief executive to “ensure election integrity” and thus fall under presidential immunity. The Washington D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals has agreed to an expedited hearing on the matter set to begin on January 9th, 2024. U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan previously ruled immunity protections did not apply to Trump’s actions questioning the integrity fo the 2020 presidential election.
Even if the appeals court panel rules against former President Trump, his legal team can then move for an en banc hearing before the full D.C. federal appellate court –a move which would likely push any trial well past the early March target set by Jack Smith. Only after an en banc hearing and subsequent ruling would the appeal then move to the Supreme Court – something that likely would not happen until the late summer of 2024.
The United States Supreme Court has denied an expedited hearing regarding Donald's 'presidential immunity' claim in relation to Jack Smith's ongoing January 6th prosecution of the former President in Washington, D.C. The ruling comes as a major blow to special counsel Jack Smith who had asked the High Court to intervene so his prosecution could proceed to trial in early March. The Supreme Court did not issue any reasoning for its decision, nor did it indicate if there were any dissenting opinions – there is some speculation the ruling may have been unanimous.
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