Republican Party

Trump’s premeditated election lie lit the fire – Axios

Off the rails: Trump’s premeditated election lie lit the fire – Axios

or weeks, Trump had been laying the groundwork to declare victory on election night — even if he lost. But the real-time results, punctuated by ox’s shocking call, upended his plans and began his unraveling.

Trump had planned for Americans to go to bed on Nov. 3 celebrating — or resigned to — his re-election. The maps they saw on TV should be bathed in red. But at 11:20 p.m. that vision fell apart, as the nation’s leading news channel among conservatives became the first outlet to call Arizona for Joe Biden. Inside the White House, Trump's inner circle erupted in horror.

Over the next two months, Trump took the nation down with him as he descended into denial, despair and a reckless revenge streak that fueled a deadly siege on the U.S. Capitol by his backers seeking to overturn the election. This triggered a constitutional crisis and a bipartisan push to impeach Trump on his way out the door, to try to cast him out of American politics for good.

But in four years, Trump had remade the Republican Party in his own image, inspiring and activating tens of millions of Americans who weren’t abandoning him anytime soon. He’d once bragged he could shoot another person on ifth Avenue and not lose his voters. In reality, many of them had eagerly lined up to commit violence on his behalf.

Since The Capitol Attack, Trump’s Approval Rating Has Plummeted At A Record Rate | FiveThirtyEight

Since The Capitol Attack, Trump’s Approval Rating Has Plummeted At A Record Rate | FiveThirtyEight

In the wake of the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol, public opinion is souring quickly on President Trump as he enters the final days of his term. Not only do a majority of Americans blame him for the riot at the Capitol and favor removing him from office, but his job approval rating has fallen faster in recent days than at any point in his presidency.

Since The Capitol Attack, Trump’s Approval Rating Has Plummeted At A Record Rate | FiveThirtyEight

Since The Capitol Attack, Trump’s Approval Rating Has Plummeted At A Record Rate | FiveThirtyEight

In the wake of the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol, public opinion is souring quickly on President Trump as he enters the final days of his term. Not only do a majority of Americans blame him for the riot at the Capitol and favor removing him from office, but his job approval rating has fallen faster in recent days than at any point in his presidency.

The Mar-a-Lago Club

The president's high class hotel in Palm Beach, located at the end of US 98.

Trump is obnoxious and he will be gone in 9 days (* or less)

While Congress may be in the process of starting impeachment proceedings, the truth is regardless of what happens, the troubled president will be gone in a little over a week, a memory that most people will want to put behind us. The system worked, the election was held in a fair and reasonable way under our existing laws, a result was decided and Joe Biden will be our president. You can quibble about how we draw districts, count votes, or under what conditions voting exists, but we have to accept what is on the books now — at least until it changes, state by state. But if anything, voting has gotten fairer, as witnessed by the record participation in voting in 2020.

Trump has largely been silenced now he has been retired from Twitter. While I enjoyed read his asinine tweets, most of them were pure trash. It’s unlikely he’s going to be welcomed back to Washington or anywhere else for mass rallies, and they will be a lot harder to organize now that he’s gotten the boot from major social media sites. While he can certainly create his own alternative media services, it’s unlikely that he’ll gain much attraction with his power and clout diminishing. Even the crazy neighbor down the street, with his shrine to all things Donald Trump has dimmed the lights and taken down his Trump banners and flags.

I am glad Trump will be gone. For all of his rhetoric about being a successful business leader, his list of accomplishments in politics are small except for his one-shot election and appointment of three Supreme Court Justices, mostly a result of chance and Mitch McConnell. Trump has shown time and time again, he’s not much of a leader when it comes to a legislative or policy agenda for his country. While some of his people have implemented significant policy shifts in the execution of law, others were poorly thought out and have already been rejected by the courts or will go away with the appointment of new leaders by Biden.

Will Trump be impeached in the next nine days? Probably, it’s a good vote for the Democrats in the house to get the Republicans on. You know it’s a fantastic slogan for campaign mailers and television commercials — the GOP defended the riotous actions of President Trump’s speech. It’s not like Congress is expected to get much work done in the next week, with control in the Senate just waiting for the final certification of the Georgia Senate race. Maybe Trump will resign, if it seems certain that he would lose an impeachment vote in the Senate, but I think it’s more likely that Mitch McConnell will find ways to run out the clock.

I am ready for the nation to move on. Whether or not you have quibbles about Trump’s policies, you have to admit he’s not been good for the image of conservatism. Nothing is all that conservative about a man who has divorced multiple wives, hung out with porn stars and tweets the most vile of things. His policies have been inconsistent at best, more racist, more pro-fascist police state then pro-limited government. And his rejection of reality — on climate change, the election result, the COVID or what is happening on the ground in a thousand different cities — hurts us all. I think the GOP wants to move beyond him. And certainly the Democrats do with all the awful things he’s done to cities and blue states.Β I think we all want some tranquility, some normalcy after the panademic. I think Joe Biden will be an excellent caretaker of the country over the next four years, at which point future presidential candidates will debate and millions of voters will decide what’s the next chapter for that country — at least for those glued to color televisions.

Trump awards Medal of Freedom to three golfers day after Capitol riot

Trump awards Medal of Freedom to three golfers day after Capitol riot

The President Medal of reedom is the nation's highest civilian honor. It recognizes individuals who have made "an especially meritorious contribution to the security or national interests of the United States, world peace, cultural or other significant public or private endeavors."

The three recipients Thursday will join Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Charlie Sifford and Tiger Woods as the only golfers to receive the award, according to NBC's Golf Channel, which first reported Thursday's award ceremony.

Trump is an avid golfer, and his business, the Trump Organization, owns numerous golf club resorts. The president has visited those clubs hundreds of times during his one term in office.