Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

2024 Elections

Rick Wilson mocks DeSantis for duplicating Ted Cruz's disastrous 2016 presidential campaign

Reacting to a new NBC poll that shows polling numbers for Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) crashing since he announced his 2024 Republican Party presidential nomination bid, former GOP campaign consultant Rick Wilson gleefully compared his campaign to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz's presidential faceplant in 2016.

Speaking with host Chris Jansing, the Lincoln Project co-founder said the DeSantis campaign is going nowhere but down based on the latest poll numbers.

With the NBC poll showing a decline from 31 percent in April to 22 percent in June, while Mike Pence and Nikki Haley show modest increases, Wilson pointed out a massive misstep being made by the DeSantis campaign brain-trust.

Asked whether the debates will be a game-changer for any of Trump's rivals, Wilson explained, "If you're waiting for the debate to be a miracle, where your focus groups and your consultants write you a couple of one-line zingers, and then Trump can proceed and kind of consume the entire stage and wreck you, it's not going to work. Miracles don't work in this business."

"Look,Ron DeSantis is spending over $2 million a month right now in Iowa, maybe more than that, trying to win one primary just like Ted Cruz did," he added. "We see that Ted Cruz is not now and will never be president."

"All of these candidates fundamentally do not understand where the MAGA base is," he elaborated. They think they can say all the things the base likes, but the base wants to hear all those things from Donald Trump. It is not a possibility for any of these people to become Donald Trump."

He then claimed, "DeSantis himself has been probably the worst of the well-funded candidates I've ever witnessed and I've been in politics for over 30 years."

Watch below or at the link.

MSNBC 06 25 2023 10 42 16 youtu.be

Nancy Mace: 'Obscene' Democrats support a man who 'lied' and 'betrayed his oath of office'

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) called Democrats "shameful" because they continue to support Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) after Republicans censured him.

During a Sunday interview on Fox News, Mace recalled how Democrats protested by chanting "shame" on the House floor after Schiff was censured for his role in the Russia election interference investigation.

Keep reading... Show less

Florida Democrats want to stage a comeback. They think DeSantis might be able to help

MIAMI — Florida Democrats are leaning on their biggest adversary as they look to revamp their party ahead of 2024: Gov. Ron DeSantis. After two tough election cycles in a row — including a particularly bruising 2022 midterm year — the state party has begun an aggressive counteroffensive against DeSantis in an effort to claw its way back from the brink of political irrelevance, seeing the top-tier Republican presidential hopeful as the perfect foil to fuel their political resurgence. The animosity between Florida Democrats and the state’s powerful Republican governor isn’t new. What’s changed, ...

The red and blue state divide is growing even wider as 2024 election gets underway — here's why

Next year’s elections are still 16 months away. But for voters, perhaps the most important developments took place during the first half of this year — when states drafted and passed the legislation that will shape how those contests are run.

“The rules that will govern the 2024 election are being written today,” said Megan Bellamy, vice president for law and policy at the Voting Rights Lab, which tracks state elections legislation and works to protect access to the ballot. “Already, based on what we’ve seen, it will look different from the 2020 election for many voters, all the way from how they vote to how their ballots are counted.”

With all but a few state legislatures now having wrapped up their sessions, it’s clear that for voters in some states, it will be easier to cast a ballot, while in others, it will be harder.

Keep reading... Show less

'He banned travel from unsafe nations': Stephen Miller endorses Trump for president

Stephen Miller, a former Donald Trump administration official focusing on immigration matters, announced a formal endorsement of the former president on Twitter and included a list of Trump's accomplishments. Among those wins, Miller said, was that Trump "banned travel from unsafe nations."

Miller was likely referencing the so-called Muslim ban, of which Miller was purportedly a chief architect. The travel ban was significantly narrowed in scope by the courts after its initial inception.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's Georgia loss still causing state GOP officials to be 'locked in a civil war': report

Donald Trump's narrow loss in Georgia in 2020 is still causing the state's Republican lawmakers to be stalled by infighting instead of focusing on 2024, according to a news report.

The dispute is causing damage at a time when the Republican party in Georgia should be incredibly united, according to the Wall Street Journal's piece.

Keep reading... Show less

'I saw one who was booed off the stage': Trump takes swipe at Chris Christie at event

Former president Donald Trump took a swipe at his competitor Chris Christie while speaking at a Christian event on Saturday.

Trump, who also attacked atheists and said the criminal indictments he faces are "a great badge of honor" at the Faith and Freedom Coalition's event, basked in cheers from the audience before turning and asking the event host if other candidates received the same treatment during their visits. It sounded as if many in the audience were yelling, "We love Trump!"

Keep reading... Show less

'I consider it a great badge of courage': Trump welcomes more indictments at Christian event

Former president Donald Trump on Saturday claimed his multiple indictments are "a great badge of courage," essentially welcoming authorities to charge him in other cases while speaking at a Christian event in Washington, D.C., to promote his bid for the Republican nomination for presidency in 2024.

Trump, who is currently facing federal charges in Florida in connection with his alleged hoarding of confidential records from his time in executive office, spoke at the Faith and Freedom Coalition's event, entitled "Road to Majority." Among other things, Trump took aim at atheists and communists, all while promising to "evict crooked Joe Biden."

Keep reading... Show less

'No one in government looked like me': Democrat Ted Lieu slams Nikki Haley's tone-deaf tweet

Democratic Representative Ted Lieu issued a take down Saturday of Nikki Haley's tweet attempting to revise U.S. history.

Earlier on Saturday, Haley, who is currently running for the Republican nomination for the 2024 presidential election, reminisced about the good ol' days in a tweet condemned by many commenters. Haley began by asking her audience if they remember "how easy" life was when they were just little kids.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump could plead guilty in docs case to prevent more harm to his campaign: ex-prosecutor

It's possible that former president Donald Trump could cop a plea deal and claim that he was forced to do so in order to focus on his presidential campaign, according to a former federal prosecutor.

Former U.S. attorney Joyce Vance, who spent 25 years as a federal prosecutor and recently said Jack Smith was providing a "display of strength" in the documents case, compared on Saturday the 2024 campaign of Trump to that of televangelist Pat Robertson, who ran for the Republican nomination in 1988. Vance wrote on her Substack that Robertson was able to evade looking bad by using his campaign to ditch a doomed lawsuit against multiple lawmakers.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's primary fight might be ruined by Jack Smith's requested trial date in docs case: report

Jack Smith recently requested a December date for Donald Trump's criminal trial for allegedly hoarding confidential government records. If that date is accepted by the court, it could throw a wrench into the gears of a primary fight among Republicans, according to a Newsweek report.

The outlet reports:

Keep reading... Show less

'I am going to stay out of it': Michigan GOP lawmakers keeping their distance from Trump campaign stop

When Donald Trump makes a campaign stop in Michigan on Sunday he is not expected to be surrounded by Republican lawmakers from the state who are keeping their distance from the twice-indicted former president.

According to the Detroit News, the former president is making a major campaign stop where he will speak at the Oakland County Republican Party's Lincoln Day Dinner and the report states that there is a definite lack of enthusiasm for the Republican frontrunner for the 2024 presidential nomination.

The report notes, "Only a handful of the 72 Republicans who serve in the Michigan Legislature had publicly endorsed Trump's bid for another term as president by Thursday, a trend that highlights concerns among some GOP leaders in a state that once helped propel him to the White House."

Case in point is Rep. Ken Borton (R-Mich) who explained, "It's a hot-button issue in my district. I supported Trump the first time around. But I am going to stay out of it. Whoever the Republican candidate is who comes out of it, I'll be there for them 100%."

Rep. John Roth (R-Mich) is backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and bluntly stated Trump's obsession with his 2020 re-election loss is a contributing factor.

ALSO IN THE NEWS: Jack Smith seeks to file sealed witness list and to delay Trump's and Nauta's trial to December

“(If) we keep talking about 2020, we lose,” Roth explained. “It’s that simple. We have to go forward and look at the future.”

Rocky Raczkowski, a former state lawmaker, who chaired the Oakland County Republican Party during the 2020 and 2022 elections, explained that Trump has too much baggage to be effective as the 2024 presidential candidate.

"You would be a one-term president with a lot of arrows pointed your way," Raczkowski admitted. "And those arrows hurt our down-ballot candidates, and we need those down-ballot candidates to win races.”

"In 2022, the candidates whom Trump endorsed for governor, attorney general and secretary of state in Michigan all lost. The closest race was for attorney general, in which Democrat Dana Nessel defeated Republican Matt DePerno by 9 percentage points," the report continued before adding, "The problems at the top of the ticket helped Republicans lose control of the state House and state Senate for the first time in nearly four decades. Earlier this year, Trump endorsed DePerno to become chairman of the Michigan Republican Party, a contest he lost to Kristina Karamo, the former secretary of state candidate."

You can read more here.

Former Dem. Rep. Alan Grayson ‘exploring’ potential U.S. Senate race in 2024

Former Central Florida U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson says he is exploring a run for U.S. Senate in 2024 but that if he does run and become the Democratic party’s nominee he’ll spend tens of millions of dollars on voter registration efforts.

“The first $20 million I raise is going to be earmarked for voter registration and turnout,” Grayson told the Phoenix Friday.

Grayson filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission on Thursday to create a federal political “Committee to Elect Alan Grayson.”

Keep reading... Show less