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2024 Elections

'It’s slightly terrifying': European allies panicked by threat of a Trump re-election

The prospect that Donald Trump could make a return engagement in the Oval Office if he is re-elected in 2024 is not being lost on European diplomats who are expressing fears and making contingency plans should that occur.

According to a New York Times report, one diplomat called the idea of the return of unpredictable and abrasive Trump "terrifying."

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'Crazy-bread MAGA' voters won't be enough to save Trump: Dem strategist

During a panel discussion on CNN early Saturday morning, Democratic strategist Maria Cardona latched onto GOP strategist Alice Stewart's comparison between "crazy-bread" versus "milquetoast" voters who will dictate who will be the Republican presidential nominee in 2024.

Using the aforementioned "crazy-bread" voters who will vote for Donald Trump no matter how many times he is indicted as a reference point, Cardona said there is not enough of them to propel Trump back to the Oval Office.

Pointing out "what Joe Biden is putting on the floor, " she added, "The crazy-bread MAGA extremist agenda that is trying to take away women's rights, that is trying to ban books, trying to rewrite African-American history; that is not something that Americans want in the White House."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"They don't want the crazy-bread in the White House," she continued. "They had it for four years and I don't think you're going to see another independent voter or a suburban woman say, 'Oh, a fourth indictment? Now I'm going to be able to support crazy-bread Trump!' No, I don't think so."

"Frankly no other Republican is adding support right now among the voters that they needed, and I don't see how that's going to happen between now and the election," she concluded.

Watch below or at the link.

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Trump's gamble to wipe out all of his GOP opponents 'probably won't work': analyst

Donald Trump's decision to not participate in the first Republican Party presidential debate may seem to him to be a masterstroke, but one analyst is claiming the historical record may prove him wrong.

On Friday it was reported that the former president will skip the debate and instead have a one-on-one with fired former Fox News personality Tucker Carlson in an effort to deprive his rivals of the chance to share the stage with him.

As Politico's Steve Shepard wrote, that decision could blow up in Trump's face because fortunes can be made and lost at the debates and a standout performance -- with Trump AWOL -- could boost one candidate and make them a serious threat to the former president.

According to the analyst, Trump's gambit "probably won't work."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office

"As presidential primaries have become more national in scope, debates have arguably been all that’s really mattered in the run-up to the early states. Candidates like Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich, Ben Carson and Pete Buttigieg surged in the polls after strong showings," Shepard wrote.

As he explained, "The proof is in the numbers."

"Much of the movement in recent primary fights has been marked in time by the nationally televised debates. Candidates sink or swim based on their debate performances — and the first debate has often been the catalyst for the first real changes in those races," he explained. "Even if Trump doesn’t show, the debates will still command larger audiences than anything else the candidates will do over the next six months."

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‘Slitting throats’ and ‘stone-cold dead’: DeSantis ramps up violent rhetoric

Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, on the presidential campaign trail in New Hampshire in late July pledged to supporters he would root out the deep state from the federal government: “we are going to start slitting throats on Day One.”

Responding to DeSantis' throat-slitting remarks, Professor of Political Science & Public Affairs Mark Copelovitch on August 4 observed, "In an actual serious country, using language like this in re: government employees would result in the man's immediate resignation as governor & the end of national media covering him as a viable presidential candidate."

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'Keep him busy': Trump speculates about reason for criminal charges in late-night post

Donald Trump late Friday night invented a fictional scenario in which Joe Biden ordered the investigation into the former president.

Trump, who is currently facing criminal charges in a variety of jurisdictions, will surrender to face the most recent charges next week. Trump has also recently vowed not to attend the debate for GOP contenders, according to news reports.

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'Suck all the oxygen': Ex-Trump adviser predicts his next move

A former advisor to Donald Trump on Friday said he believes the former president could turn himself in during or just before Wednesday’s scheduled Republican presidential debate in effort to steal the spotlight from his GOP rivals.

Jason Osborne during an appearance on CNN’s “The Source with Kaitlan Collins” said that Trump could be interviewed by former Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

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Not a 'human person': Ex-Trump exec shows how he's changed

Former President Donald Trump's actions and behavior surrounding his indictments and his bid to retake the White House are barely even recognizable as those of a "human person," argued Barbara Res, a former engineer for Trump Construction Projects, on CNN Friday.

"You did work with him for 18 years," said anchor Kaitlan Collins. "When you look at the deadlines he's facing now, on the political front he's saying he's not going to show up on the debate Wednesday night. How do you look at that, based on what you know about him?"

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Bush adviser shows how Republican challengers could sink 'loser' Trump

Donald Trump’s GOP primary rivals who so far have been reluctant to take on the former president could soon take a more aggressive approach, a former Republican strategist said Friday.

Mark McKinnon, who served as an advisor to former President George W. Bush, said during an appearance on CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” that Trump’s ongoing legal troubles appear to be piercing the former president’s aura of invincibility, which could make him vulnerable in the GOP race.

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Trump center stage despite threat to skip Republican debate

Washington (AFP) - All eyes are on Donald Trump as the Republican White House hopefuls prepare to do battle in the first debate of the 2024 race on Wednesday -- with the main attraction threatening not to show up. Five months ahead of the start of primary elections to choose the party's flagbearer, the runaway frontrunner's grassroots support is as strong as ever, but numerous criminal cases have cast a pall over his comeback bid. The 77-year-old former president, who is rarely out of the headlines, has been vocal about possibly skipping the event in the midwesten city of Milwaukee, wary of sh...

Trump is throwing the 'middle finger' at GOP voters: conservative commentator

Donald Trump is throwing a “middle finger” at Republican voters by indicating in recent statements that he plans to skip next week’s GOP presidential debate and won’t sign the party’s so-called “loyalty pledge,” a conservative commentator said Friday.

Former GOP operative Alice Stewart said during an appearance on CNN that Trump’s unwillingness to be a team player essentially tells Republican voters “let's find someone else.”

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Christie slams DeSantis in Florida speech for not representing 'what conservatives have stood for'

Former New Jersey Republican Governor Chris Christie criticized fellow 2024 GOP candidates — including Florida Governor Ron DeSantis — Friday during an appearance in the Sunshine State, Miami Herald reports.

Per Miami Herald, although Christie is "not a leading candidate, one recent poll found that he has managed to catch DeSantis for the second-place spot in New Hampshire."

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DeSantis seizing on Trump weakness in Georgia via private Kemp meeting: report

Ron DeSantis held a private meeting on Friday with Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp in the Florida governor’s apparent effort to build ties with Republicans who have broken with Donald Trump, Politico reports.

The Republican governors met at a Buckhead, Georgia hotel ahead of DeSantis’ scheduled appearance at a presidential candidate forum hosted by conservative talk radio host and Trump critic Erick Erickson, the report said.

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WSJ hands the GOP a roadmap for dumping a weakened Trump

Late Thursday the editorial board of the conservative Wall Street Journal urged the Republican Party to make a concerted effort to make sure that Donald Trump does not get the 2024 presidential nomination.

Noting that the former president is now slipping in the polls due to his myriad legal problems that seem to grow by the day, the editors stated the first step can be taken with the upcoming GOP debate where the candidates who stand no chance of winning the nomination need to be "culled" leading anti-Trump conservatives to coalesce behind one challenger who can take him out.

As they wrote, "It’s not too soon to think about how to narrow the GOP field to give former President Trump a challenge that the party and the country deserve."

Pointing out that the former president is proceeding as if he already has the nomination wrapped up, and his guard appears to be down, the editors pressed for candidates who haven't made any inroads with voters to drop out and not just stay in the race due to their vanity.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"Any announced candidate who hasn’t qualified for the debate based on the Republican National Committee’s criteria isn’t likely to strike political lightning from the sidelines. Staying in longer is essentially a vanity project, or an audition to be a talk-show host," they wrote before adding, "This will be a matter of self-interest as well as the good of the party and conservative cause. GOP voters aren’t likely to look fondly on a candidate who stays in the race merely to get more face time on cable with no chance of winning."

Pointing out that Trump has "fallen somewhat recently in the polls, and about half of his current supporters say they’d consider someone else," they warned, "President Biden is eminently beatable if the election campaign is about his record and obvious decline. But not if the election is about Mr. Trump and his grievances and legal peril. Republicans deserve a real nominating contest, not a third Trump coronation, and that means narrowing the field early."

You can read the whole editorial here.