Trump’s GOP governing platform from Hell. 15 promises Donald Trump has made so far in his campaign for a second term

CNN

15 promises Donald Trump has made so far in his campaign for a second term

Piper Hudspeth Blackburn and Abby Turner – March 6, 2024

Former President Donald Trump, now the presumptive Republican nominee, has made a number of promises on the campaign trail, including rolling back car pollution rules, building 10 new cities and appointing a special prosecutor to investigate President Joe Biden and his family.

While some of Trump’s plans are lacking in detail, here are some of the policies he says he would enact if elected for a second term.

Immigration

Trump has made immigration and the border a central campaign issue, successfully pressuring Republicans to reject a major bipartisan border deal last month and making a trip to the southern border on February 29, where he touted his previous hard-line immigration policies.

In a Des Moines Register op-ed published roughly a week before winning the Iowa caucuses in January, Trump vowed to use the “Alien Enemies Act to remove known or suspected gang members, drug dealers, or cartel members from the United States.”

“We will shift massive portions of federal law enforcement to immigration enforcement — including parts of the DEA, ATF, FBI, and DHS,” he wrote.

In a video posted on Truth Social in late February before his border visit, Trump also promised to “carry out the largest domestic deportation operation in American history.”

After the Israel-Hamas war began last October, Trump also promised to terminate the visas of “Hamas’ sympathizers.”

“We’ll get them off our college campuses, out of our cities and get them the hell out of our country, if that’s OK with you,” he added.

Drug cartels

The former president has also made waging “war” on drug cartels a priority for his second term. If elected, Trump said in his November 2022 campaign announcement that he would ask Congress to ensure that drug smugglers and human traffickers can receive the death penalty for their “heinous acts.”

Trump also vowed to “take down” drug cartels by imposing naval embargos on cartels, cutting off cartels’ access to global financial systems and using special forces within the Department of Defense to damage the cartels’ leadership.

Education

Trump announced plans in a September 2023 campaign video to close the Department of Education and send “all education and education work and needs back to the states.”

“We want them to run the education of our children, because they’ll do a much better job of it,” he added.

The former president has also promised to “put parents back in charge and give them the final say” in education. In a January 2023 campaign video, the former president said he would give funding preferences and “favorable treatment” to schools that allow parents to elect principals, abolish teacher tenure for K-12 teachers, use merit pay to incentivize quality teaching and cut the number of school administrators, such as those overseeing diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.

Trump also said in that campaign video that he would cut funding for schools that teach critical race theory and gender ideology. In a later speech, Trump said he would bring back the 1776 Commission, which was launched in his previous administration to “teach our values and promote our history and our traditions to our children.”

The former president said he would charge the Department of Justice and the Department of Education with investigating civil rights violations of race-based discrimination in schools while also removing “Marxists” from the Department of Education. A second Trump administration would pursue violations in schools of both the Constitution’s Establishment and Free Exercise clauses, which prohibit the government establishment of religion and protect a citizen’s right to practice their own religion, he said.

Health care

Last November, Trump promised to replace the Affordable Care Act, known colloquially as Obamacare, in a series of posts on Truth Social. A Trump-backed effort to repeal and replace Obamacare failed in 2017 after three Republicans senators joined with Democrats to vote against the bill.

“Getting much better Healthcare than Obamacare for the American people will be a priority of the Trump Administration,” he said.

“It is not a matter of cost, it is a matter of HEALTH. America will have one of the best Healthcare Plans anywhere in the world. Right now it has one of the WORST!,” he continued. He also doubled down on his vow during a speech in early January.

Trump also vowed in a June 2023 campaign video to reinstate his previous executive order so that the US government would pay the same price for pharmaceuticals as other developed countries. Some of the former president’s pharmaceutical policies were overturned by Biden.

Gender care

“I will revoke every Biden policy promoting the chemical castration and sexual mutilation of our youth and ask Congress to send me a bill prohibiting child sexual mutilation in all 50 states,” Trump said at the 2023 Conservative Political Action Conference last March.

Trump added in a campaign video that he would issue an executive order instructing federal agencies to cut programs that promote gender transitions, as well as asking Congress to stop the use of federal dollars to promote and pay for gender-affirming procedures. The former president added that his administration would not allow hospitals and health care providers to meet the federal health and safety standards for Medicaid and Medicare if they provide chemical or physical gender-affirming care to youth.

Justice system

Trump has promised to use the Department of Justice to attack critics and former allies. In several videos and speeches, the former president also laid out plans to gut the current justice system by firing “radical Marxist prosecutors that are destroying America.”

“I will appoint a real special prosecutor to go after the most corrupt president in the history of the United States of America, Joe Biden, and the entire Biden crime family,” Trump said in June 2023 remarks. “I will totally obliterate the Deep State.”

Trump said in a campaign video last year that he would reinstate a 2020 executive order to remove “rogue” bureaucrats and propose a constitutional amendment for term limits on members of Congress.

To address what he labeled the “disturbing” relationship between technology platforms and the government, the former president said in a January 2023 video that he would enact a seven-year cooling off period before employees at agencies such as the FBI or CIA can work for platforms that oversee mass user data.

Trump added in multiple campaign releases that he would task the Justice Department with investigating online censorship, ban federal agencies from “colluding” to censor citizens and suspend federal money to universities participating in “censorship-supporting activities.”

In a September 2023 speech at the Family Research Council’s Pray Vote Stand Summit in Washington, DC, Trump also touted plans to continue appointing conservative judges.

“I will once again appoint rock-solid conservative judges to do what they have to do in the mold of Justices Antonin Scalia; Samuel Alito, a great gentleman; and another great gentleman, Clarence Thomas,” he said.

Trump has also pledged to “appoint U.S. Attorneys who will be the polar opposite of the Soros District Attorneys and others that are being appointed throughout the United States.”

In a September 2023 speech in Washington, DC, Trump also announced that he would appoint a task force to review the cases of people he claimed had been “unjustly persecuted by the Biden administration.” Trump noted that he wanted to “study the situation very quickly, and sign their pardons or commutations on day one.”

It’s a move that could lead to potential pardons of many rioters from the January 6, 2021, insurrection – which he suggested he would do at a CNN town hall in May 2023.

Crime

Trump said in two February 2023 campaign videos that if “Marxist” prosecutors refuse to charge crimes and surrender “our cities to violent criminals,” he “will not hesitate to send in federal law enforcement to restore peace and public safety.”

Trump added that he would instruct the Department of Justice to open civil rights investigations into “radical left” prosecutors’ offices that engaged in racial enforcement of the law, encourage Congress to use their legal authority over Washington, DC, to restore “law and order” and overhaul federal standards of disciplining minors to address rising crimes like carjackings.

Addressing policies made in what Trump calls the “Democrats’ war on police,” the former president vowed in a campaign video that he would pass a “record investment” to hire and retrain police, strengthen protections like qualified immunity, increase penalties for assaulting law enforcement officers and deploy the National Guard when local law enforcement “refuses to act.”

The former president added that he would require law enforcement agencies that receive money from his funding investment or the Department of Justice to use “proven common sense” measures such as stop-and-frisk.

Foreign policy

Trump has continued his attacks against member countries of NATO, a European and North American defense alliance. At a South Carolina rally last month, Trump said he would not abide by the alliance’s collective-defense clause and would encourage Russia to do “whatever the hell they want” if a member country didn’t meet spending guidelines.

“NATO was busted until I came along,” Trump said. “I said, ‘Everybody’s gonna pay.’ They said, ‘Well, if we don’t pay, are you still going to protect us?’ I said, ‘Absolutely not.’ They couldn’t believe the answer.”

The former president has also previously pledged to end the war in Ukraine, though he’s offered no details on how he would do so. “Shortly after I win the presidency, I will have the horrible war between Russia and Ukraine settled,” Trump said at a New Hampshire campaign event last year, adding in another speech that it would take him “no longer than one day” to settle the war if elected.

Trump further addressed his strategy of stopping the “never-ending wars” by vowing to remove “warmongers,” “frauds” and “failures in the senior ranks of our government,” and replace them with national security officials who would defend America’s interests. The former president added in a campaign video that he would stop lobbyists and government contractors from pushing senior military officials toward war.

In addition, Trump has said he would restore his “wonderful” travel ban on individuals from several majority-Muslim countries to “keep radical Islamic terrorists out of our country” after Biden overturned the ban in 2021.

New cities and flying cars

Trump said in multiple campaign videos that he would spearhead an effort to build so-called “Freedom Cities” to “reopen the frontier, reignite American imagination, and give hundreds of thousands of young people and other people, all hardworking families, a new shot at home ownership and in fact, the American Dream.”

In his plan, the federal government would charter 10 new cities on federal land, awarding them to areas with the best development proposals. The former president said in a campaign video that the Freedom Cities would bring the return of US manufacturing, economic opportunity, new industries and affordable living.

In the March 2023 video, Trump added that the US under a second Trump administration would lead in efforts to “develop vertical-takeoff-and-landing vehicles for families and individuals,” not letting China lead “this revolution in air mobility.” The former president said these airborne vehicles would change commerce and bring wealth into rural communities.

Electric vehicles

Trump has promised to roll back new car pollution rules at the Environmental Protection Agency that could require electric vehicles to account for up to two-thirds of new cars sold in the US by 2032. Biden’s electrical vehicle-related policies, Trump claimed at a Michigan rally last September, “spell the death of the US auto industry.”

“On day one, I will terminate Joe Biden’s electrical vehicle mandate, and I will cancel every job-killing regulation that is crushing American autoworkers,” Trump added.

Energy

Trump has promised to reduce energy prices by increasing domestic production. In several campaign appearances, he has laid out plans to end delays in federal drilling permits and leases.

“We’re going to ‘drill, baby, drill’ right away,” Trump told a crowd of supporters in Des Moines, Iowa, during a victory speech after winning the state’s Republican caucuses in January.

At a South Carolina rally in February, he pledged to remove limits on American natural gas exports.

Trade

At the same rally in South Carolina,Trump pledged to impose “stiff penalties on China and other trade abusers.”

“It’s called you screw us, and we screw you,” Trump said.

Under his proposed “Trump Reciprocal Trade Act,” the former president said if other countries impose tariffs on the US, the country would impose “a reciprocal, identical” tariff right back.

It was the same pledge Trump made in a campaign video in 2023: to impose the same tariffs that other countries may impose on the US on those countries. The goal, the former president said then, is to get other countries to drop their tariffs.

As part of a larger strategy to bring jobs back into the US, Trump also said he would implement his so-called “America First” trade agenda if elected. By setting universal baseline tariffs on a majority of foreign goods, the former president said Americans would see taxes decrease as tariffs increase. His proposal also includes a four-year plan to phase out all Chinese imports of essential goods, as well as stopping China from buying up America and stopping the investment of US companies in China.

Trump also said in February that he would consider imposing a tariff upward of 60% on all Chinese imports if he’s reelected.

The former president has particularly focused on China, vowing in a January 2023 campaign video to restrict Chinese ownership of US infrastructure such as energy, technology, telecommunications and natural resources. Trump also said he would force the Chinese to sell current holdings that may put national security at risk. “Economic security is national security,” he said.

Economy

Trump has promised to extend the cuts from his 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, notably the TCJA’s individual income tax breaks. The former president has also talked about reducing the corporate tax rate from the current 21% to 15%.

“I will make the Trump tax cuts the largest tax cut in history,” the former president said last month at the Black Conservative Federation’s Honors Gala in South Carolina. “We’ll make it permanent and give you a new economic boom.”

Trump has also pledged to repeal Biden’s tax hikes, “immediately tackle” inflation and end what he called Biden’s “war” on American energy production.

Second Amendment

“I will take Biden’s executive order directing the federal government to target the firearms industry, and I will rip it up and throw it out on day one,” Trump said at the 2023 National Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action leadership forum last April.

The former president also promised in the speech that the government would not infringe on citizens’ Second Amendment rights and that he would push Congress to pass a concealed carry reciprocity.

Equity

“I will create a special team to rapidly review every action taken by federal agencies under Biden’s ‘equity’ agenda that will need to be reversed. We will reverse almost all of them,” Trump said in a campaign video.

Trump added in multiple campaign videos that he would revoke Biden’s equity executive order that required federal agencies to deliver equitable outcomes in policy and conduct equity training. If elected, Trump said he would also fire staffers hired to implement Biden’s policy, and then reinstate his 2020 executive order banning racial and sexual stereotyping in the federal government.

CNN’s Tami Luhby, Kate Sullivan and Kristin Holmes contributed to this report.

Maggie Haberman Offers ‘Pretty Brutal’ Prediction For 2024

HuffPost

Maggie Haberman Offers ‘Pretty Brutal’ Prediction For 2024

Lee Moran – March 7, 2024

Maggie Haberman on Wednesday warned what to expect ahead of the 2024 election in November as Donald Trump all but sewed up the GOP nomination following Super Tuesday.

“It’s going to be a very long general election,” The New York Times journalist told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins.

“I think it’s going to be a pretty brutal eight months,” she added.

Haberman noted how Trump will face a criminal trial in his hush-money case later this month. The trial is scheduled to start on Mar. 25.

“That may be the only trial he faces this year. He has three other indictments in three other places but that alone is unprecedented,” she continued. “It is almost unfathomable to me what else could happen this year, but even the next two months are going to be shocking.”

“Yeah, indeed they are,” responded Collins.

Earlier in the interview, Haberman detailed the months-long concerns that Trump’s team has had about campaign cash and the former president’s reported desire to debate President Joe Biden, even though Trump refused to do the same with his Republican primary rivals.

Related…

How Trump’s Crushing Primary Triumph Masked Quiet Weaknesses

The New York Times

How Trump’s Crushing Primary Triumph Masked Quiet Weaknesses

Michael C. Bender – March 7, 2024

Former president Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference gathering at the Gaylord Hotel in National Harbor, Md., Feb. 24, 2024. (Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times)
Former president Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference gathering at the Gaylord Hotel in National Harbor, Md., Feb. 24, 2024. (Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times)

Donald Trump’s daunting level of Republican support helped him vanquish a field of presidential primary rivals in under two months.

But he still hasn’t won over one small but crucial group of voters — the men and women who cost him a second term in 2020.

His overwhelming primary victories, including more than a dozen Tuesday that pushed Nikki Haley from the race, have masked his long-term problems with voters who live in the suburbs, those who view themselves as moderates or independents, and Republicans who backed Joe Biden in 2020.

On Tuesday, Trump lost suburban precincts in Virginia despite carrying the state by a staggering 28 percentage points. In North Carolina, his 51-point victory was tempered by much narrower margins in the highly educated and affluent suburbs around Charlotte and Raleigh.

While many Republican strategists anticipate that most Haley voters will eventually support the party’s nominee, Trump’s failure to bring these voters into the fold less than four years after they helped block him from a second term in the White House raises pressing questions about what he can do in the next eight months to win them over.

He has not seemed especially concerned about this challenge, recently threatening to excommunicate his rival’s donors from his political movement. On Wednesday, he posted on social media that Haley “got TROUNCED last night, in record setting fashion,” even as he invited “all of the Haley supporters to join the greatest movement in the history of our Nation.”

Trump’s inability to broaden his support stands among the biggest threats to his party’s efforts to reclaim the presidency. Notably, Haley appeared to be a stronger November candidate: Polls including a recent New York Times/Siena College survey suggested that she would have had an easier time unseating Biden.

But Republican voters aren’t resisting Trump’s electoral risks. They’re running toward them.

Throughout the Republican primary race and in this week’s Super Tuesday contests, Trump amassed blowout winning margins. Voters rallied around him even as he accumulated 91 felony charges in four criminal cases and looked past their party’s disappointing elections under his leadership in 2018, 2020 and 2022.

His victory last month in Iowa, the first nominating contest, was declared before many caucusgoers had even weighed in, a fitting metaphor for the air of inevitability he proudly carried into the race. The Republican primaries in New Hampshire and South Carolina drew record turnout, thanks mostly to Trump voters, and he swept every Super Tuesday state except Vermont, where Haley won thanks to the tiny state’s large percentage of college-educated voters.

“That’s the big lesson from the primary states so far: There are a significant number of Republican voters who wanted a choice in this primary process, and they are people the former president has to win over by the time November comes around,” said Rob Godfrey, who served as a top aide to Haley when she was governor of South Carolina and as a senior adviser to Gov. Henry McMaster’s reelection campaign in 2022. “He can do it if he runs a disciplined campaign on policy and not personality, and one that focuses on the perceived failures of his opponent.”

Trump’s campaign expects to focus heavily on turning out supporters but will look for ways to reach out to disaffected Republicans. The former president has been looking to again calibrate his position on abortion rights, with Republicans still feeling the backlash of the overturning of Roe v. Wade by a conservative Supreme Court majority he helped usher in.

Two Unpopular Nominees in Waiting

Biden, for his part, is struggling to hold his winning 2020 coalition together. He is significantly less popular than he was four years ago, and polls show that Democrats are skeptical of his second campaign.

Just 83% of voters who backed Biden in 2020 said they would do so again this year, a stark contrast from the 97% of Trump voters planning to stick with the former president, according to the Times/Siena poll released last week.

Biden’s age, his support for Israel in its war in the Gaza Strip and lingering economic unease have chipped away at his support among young Democrats, Black voters and progressives.

“We can learn a little bit from these primaries — for one, Trump has reenergized his base,” said Adam Geller, a longtime Republican pollster who has worked for past Trump campaigns and super political action committees. “But beyond that it remains to be seen, because all the public polls show that moderate general-election voters aren’t ready to give a bouquet of roses to either Trump or Biden quite yet.”

But while many of Biden’s challenges revolve around policy, Trump faces more persistent doubts about his personality and temperament that have trailed him for years.

Cory Barnett, 48, a physician in Nashville, Tennessee, who usually backs Republicans, said he would rather see a second term for Biden than for Trump. He voted Tuesday for Haley even though he knew the former president was on a clear path to the nomination.

“I actually feel like I’m throwing away my vote today,” he said. “It’s just a personal statement, I guess.”

Shying Away From Trump in the Suburbs

Trump has repelled suburban moderates since his takeover of the Republican Party in 2016. He has yet to draw them back.

In the suburbs, Trump split the vote with Haley in Iowa and New Hampshire, even though he won both states with ease. He carried the suburbs in South Carolina, but by a smaller margin than his overall victory in the state.

Those trends continued Tuesday in Virginia, where Haley won suburban precincts by 1.8 percentage points despite losing the state by 28 points.

In North Carolina, where Trump scored an easy victory by 74% to 23%, he finished only 7 points ahead in Mecklenburg County, home to Charlotte and its suburbs. Haley also cut heavily into his edge in Durham, Orange and Wake counties, highly educated, affluent suburban areas where Democrats see an opportunity to compete in the state.

“Trump can’t expand his reach beyond the MAGA base,” two of Biden’s top campaign aides, Jennifer O’Malley Dillon and Julie Chávez Rodríguez, wrote in a memo Wednesday. “In exit poll after exit poll, he has consolidated support only among the most conservative voters.”

In Minnesota, where Trump won by 40 points, Haley finished within 10 points of him in Hennepin and Ramsey counties, which include Minneapolis, St. Paul and the first ring of the cities’ suburbs.

Trump’s loss in 2020 was driven in part by independent voters, who soured on him after helping him win his 2016 campaign. The most recent Times/Siena poll showed independent voters split, 42% to 42%, in a rematch between Biden and Trump, but primary results signal persistent struggles for the former president with these voters.

In New Hampshire in January, Haley won independents by 58% to 39%, according to exit polls. On Tuesday, she narrowly won independents in Virginia by 49% to 48%.

Lillard Teasley, 60, a small-business owner in Nashville who calls himself a conservative, said he was not supporting Trump on Tuesday but suggested that could change in November.

“I’m anybody but Biden,” he said.

Disagreement on Abortion and the 2020 Election

A small yet significant share of Republicans continue to express concerns about Trump’s criminal cases, which remain pending after several financially damaging setbacks for him in civil suits.

CNN exit polls Tuesday found that 1 in 5 Republican primary voters in California and nearly 1 in 3 in North Carolina said Trump would not be fit for the presidency if he were convicted of a crime. An overwhelming majority of these voters backed Haley on Tuesday.

“There are a lot of Republicans and independents voting against Trump, even though they know he’s going to win,” said Sarah Longwell, an anti-Trump Republican pollster. “That tells me there is a real weakness in the party for Trump.”

The Super Tuesday results highlighted other softness for Trump. He lost to Haley among Republican primary voters in Virginia who oppose a nationwide abortion ban, an issue that has driven independents and even some moderate Republicans to Democrats, exit polls show.

The same polls found that she also won Republican primary voters in California, North Carolina and Virginia who said Biden had fairly won the 2020 election and those who said immigrants in the country illegally should be given a chance to apply for legal status. A majority of the party disagreed that Biden’s victory was legitimate and preferred deportation as an immigration solution. Trump carried both groups by overwhelming margins.

Republican strategists expect most of the party’s primary voters to support Trump in the general election, pointing to exit polls that found that 4 in 10 of Haley’s voters in New Hampshire and South Carolina had backed Biden in 2020.

That data point, however, could also underscore Trump’s weaknesses.

In 2020, roughly 9% of Republicans said they had voted for someone other than Trump for president. That was about double the share of Democrats who said they had backed someone other than Biden in that election.

On Tuesday, roughly 1 in 3 Republican primary voters in California, North Carolina and Virginia told pollsters they would not commit to supporting the party’s nominee in November.

Roughly three-fourths of those voters backed Haley.

Nikki Haley exits race with a message Trump may not want to hear:

ABC News

Nikki Haley exits race with a message Trump may not want to hear:

Rick Klein – March 6, 2024

She outlasted the “fellas.” The money behind the mission never dried up. In the end, she won a pair of contests — in Washington, D.C., and Vermont.

Nikki Haley still came nowhere near the Republican nomination. She couldn’t prevent Super Tuesday from becoming a blowout, with former President Donald Trump cleaning up in red states (Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Alabama), blue states (California, Massachusetts, Colorado) and historic and potentially emerging or reemerging battlegrounds (Virginia, North Carolina, Minnesota).

In exiting the race on Wednesday morning, Haley issued a broad call for Republicans to rediscover what the party has previously stood for. She also called on Trump himself to reach out to voters who are not yet convinced that he’s the right choice for their party or for the country.

“It is now up to Donald Trump to earn the votes of those in our party and those beyond it to support him,” Haley said in brief remarks in her home state of South Carolina. “I hope he does that.”

Pretty much at the same time she was speaking, Trump invited Haley supporters to join his campaign. But that was almost an afterthought in a social-media post that also declared that Haley “got TROUNCED last night, in record setting fashion” and alleged that she was secretly funded by “Radical Left Democrats.”

PHOTO: Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley speaks as she announces she is suspending her campaign, March 6, 2024, in Charleston, S.C. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)
PHOTO: Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley speaks as she announces she is suspending her campaign, March 6, 2024, in Charleston, S.C. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)

Contrast that with the statement President Joe Biden released Wednesday morning, praising Haley for the “courage” to run for president and try to defeat Trump.

“Donald Trump made it clear he doesn’t want Nikki Haley’s supporters. I want to be clear: There is a place for them in my campaign,” the president said in a campaign statement.

Words aside, Haley’s campaign served to highlight potential limitations in Trump’s electoral coalition. While he romped across the primary states and even won every single county in giant states like California and Texas, Haley wound up — to use Trump’s choice word — trouncing him in the suburbs and exurbs of Denver, Boston and northern Virginia, outside Washington. Those results closely mirrored prior geographic outcomes in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

Many of those Haley voters have been adamant about what their votes mean. Across the GOP primary states with exit polls, 79% of Haley voters said they would dissatisfied with Trump as the nominee and a similar 79% said Trump would be unfit for office if he is convicted of a crime. (He denies all wrongdoing.)

Evan as Trump continues to spread false claims about the 2020 election, 83% of Haley voters in exit polls said Biden legitimately won the presidency. Those voters appear more moderate across a range of other issues, including immigration and abortion, that are likely to be central to the fall campaign.

Haley said repeatedly on the trail not just that Trump should not win but that he cannot win. She even said that the nation “can’t survive” another four years of the “chaos” that surrounds him.

Haley, of all people — having served as one of Trump’s ambassadors — knows better than to expect a new version of him, much less one who changes course because of nudges from an erstwhile ally. Her shifting reactions to prior versions of Trump are head-spinning, even considering the immensely complicated relationship between Trump and their shared party.

Haley campaigned for a rival Republican in 2016; made amends to serve as Trump’s U.N. ambassador; pronounced herself “disgusted” by Trump’s actions after Jan. 6; came back into the fold to say she wouldn’t challenge him if he ran again; then ran anyway and was the last of a dozen-plus rivals standing in the Republican race.

Even as the campaign grew sharper, as Trump mocked her intelligence, mangled her given name and elevated baseless questions about her eligibility for office, Haley never quite ruled out supporting him in the end — or even potentially serving as his running mate.

PHOTO: Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a Super Tuesday election night party, Mar. 5, 2024, at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla. (Evan Vucci/AP)
PHOTO: Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a Super Tuesday election night party, Mar. 5, 2024, at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla. (Evan Vucci/AP)

In recent days, as the end of the road came into view, Haley cast her campaign as a mission to bring the Republican Party back to its fiscal-discipline and stand-by-our-allies roots. Last Friday, speaking with a group of reporters and columnists in Washington, she rejected the label of “anti-Trump.”

“In all the narratives, everybody pretty much assumes that this is an anti-Trump movement. And it’s actually not. This is a movement where people want to be heard,” Haley said. “I get why Democrats are leaving the Democrat Party, because of how far left they’ve gone. And I get why Republicans are leaving the Republican Party, because we were just always about small government and freedom — economic freedom and personal freedom.”

Shortly after Jan. 6, 2021, in what became an infamous interview, she gave the sharpest critique she ever offered of Trump.

Notably, she also laid some responsibility on Republicans who essentially enabled him by echoing his false rhetoric about the 2020 election.

“He went down a path he shouldn’t have, and we shouldn’t have followed him, and we shouldn’t have listened to him. And we can’t let that ever happen again,” Haley told the journalist Tim Alberta.

In getting out of the race now, Haley sought to put the onus on Trump to listen to Republican voters, particularly those who are hesitating before backing Trump again. But responsibility for action may fall on those same voters — and on prominent party members like Haley — if Trump chooses to hear different messages.

Letters to the Editor: I spent decades in government. ‘Career politicians’ are often the best politicians

Los Angeles Times – Opinion

Letters to the Editor: I spent decades in government. ‘Career politicians’ are often the best politicians

Los Angeles Times Opinion – March 6, 2024

LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 05: Supporters of rodeo on their horses rally outside city hall as L.A. City Council debates banning rodeo in city limits on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2023 in Los Angeles, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Rodeo supporters ride past L.A. City Hall on Dec. 5. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

To the editor: Your editorial defending “career politicians” was spot on. Some are good, some are bad.

I worked for three elected county assessors in my 36-year career in Riverside County. All three were very good — knowledgeable with high integrity and interest in service over recognition.

In that time I also worked very closely with most of the other 57 elected county assessors throughout California. They too were quite good — dedicated to their constituents and not looking for a higher office.

Ironically, when term limits are imposed or people vote in the least-experienced or least-qualified candidates, it’s lobbyists and special interests who often steer the ship, because those who lack background are easily swayed — the very outcome voters hope to avoid by opposing “career politicians.”

Cathy Colt, Beaumont

..

To the editor: “Career politician” is a label that opposing campaigns hang upon persons who have worked in elected offices — usually a decade or more — when they want to suggest that a candidate is not deserving of support when running for their next office.

When an inexperienced aspirant to an office is campaigning against a longtime elected legislator or executive, the “career politician” label is a convenient way to cast some doubt on an old hand’s motivation to run for public office.

Campaigning goons will use whatever they must to tar opponents. There are plenty of very honorable labels for longtime public servants. Those are what ought to be used by honest brokers during election periods, including “experienced legislator,” “experienced public servant” and so forth.

Mark Driskill, Long Beach

Kinzinger blasts Trump for calling US third-world country: ‘Eat dirt scumbag’

The Hill

Kinzinger blasts Trump for calling US third-world country: ‘Eat dirt scumbag’

Lauren Irwin – March 6, 2024

Kinzinger blasts Trump for calling US third-world country: ‘Eat dirt scumbag’

Former Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) took to social media to tell former President Trump to “eat dirt” after Trump called the United States a third-world country in his Super Tuesday victory speech.

“Trump just called America a ‘third world’ country.’ With all due respect (which is none), eat dirt scumbag,” Kinzinger posted on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. “This is the best country on earth. You, are our biggest embarrassment and stain. But you’ll be over in a year.”

In a roughly 20-minute speech from his Mar-a-Lago estate after winning more than 10 primary contests, Trump highlighted a key talking point — border security and immigration — and likened the U.S. to a third-world country.

He argued that the United States is “in some ways … a third-world country,” referencing border security. He later added that “our country is dying,” Forbes reported.

Kinzinger, an outspoken critic of Trump, served on the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack before leaving office. He has warned of the danger Trump will pose if reelected and asserted that the former president does not care about the U.S. Constitution.

In a Wednesday appearance on CNN, Kinzinger acknowledged that Trump’s victory Tuesday is an “impressive political victory.” Still, he said he hates “to normalize” Trump’s wins, especially now that he is the only candidate lined up to take the GOP’s nomination.

“After an insurrection, it’s tough for me to just talk about this horse race as normal, but regardless, it was an impressive victory,” he said, pointing to Trump’s landslide wins in states including Texas.

The former congressman said Trump’s speech “was okay,” though he noted there is a “low bar for him” and took issue with the former president calling America a third-world country. He questioned “in what world” Trump provides the “inspirational leadership” needed in the country.

Kinzinger said he is glad that the GOP primary is now largely over, since former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley announced she would be suspending her campaign, and “now we can kind of go forward” and prepare for the general election.

In the past, Kinzinger said there is “no question” that he would support President Biden in the 2024 election over Trump.

Joe Biden’s Superfans Think the Rest of America Has Lost Its Mind

The New York Times

Joe Biden’s Superfans Think the Rest of America Has Lost Its Mind

Rebecca Davis O’Brien and Katie Glueck – March 4, 2024

Dakota Galban, the chair of the Davidson Democratic Party, before the start of a party meeting in Nashville, Tenn., on Feb. 27, 2024. (William DeShazer/The New York Times)
Dakota Galban, the chair of the Davidson Democratic Party, before the start of a party meeting in Nashville, Tenn., on Feb. 27, 2024. (William DeShazer/The New York Times)

PHILADELPHIA — Andrea Russell is a fixture on Earp Street, the quiet strip of row houses in South Philadelphia where she has lived for 45 years. In the afternoons, neighbors come and go from her living room as her 16-year-old cat, George, sits perched above a television that is usually tuned to cable news.

Russell, a 77-year-old retired legal secretary, thinks President Joe Biden would fit right in. “He’d come on by Earp Street,” she said. “I could picture going up to him and saying, ‘Hi, Joe.’ I can see him here.” She identifies with him, she said, and admires his integrity and his record. She also loves his eyes.

Her friend, Kathy Staller, also 77, said she was as eager to vote for Biden as she was for Barack Obama in 2008. “I am excited,” she said. “I hope more people feel the way I do.”

Russell and Staller are ardent, unreserved supporters of Biden — part of a small but dedicated group of Democratic voters who think that he is not merely the party’s only option against Donald Trump but, in fact, a great, transformative president who clearly deserves another four years in office.

They occupy a lonely position in American politics.

Biden, 81, has never inspired the kind of excitement that Obama did, and he is not a movement candidate, in contrast to his likely 2024 rival, Trump, who is 77. Historically, he has been far more skilled at connecting one to one on the campaign trail than energizing crowds with soaring oratory.

But his poll numbers have been especially rough lately. A New York Times/Siena College poll released this weekend found that just 43% of respondents would vote for him if the election were today, compared with 48% for Trump.

Forty-five percent of Democratic primary voters surveyed said they thought he should not be the party’s nominee — and just 23% of primary voters said they were enthusiastic about Biden being the Democratic nominee. That stands in contrast to the nearly half of Republican primary voters who said they were enthusiastic about Trump’s candidacy.

The Biden campaign dismissed the latest numbers over the weekend, pointing to strong Democratic performances in recent special elections and highlighting Republican divisions and cash problems.

Biden also has a slice of voters who adore him. They wave off concerns about his age and bristle at the suggestion that anyone else could meet the moment.

In interviews with nearly two dozen of these Democrats — many of them older, and most of them women — they sounded by turns beleaguered, bewildered and protective.

“I’m sorry Joe doesn’t know how much I love him, but I do love Joe,” said Constance Wynn, 73, of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. “I don’t even know why people want to pester the man, because the man has things to do.”

A president who could ‘use a little bit of bucking up’

Biden’s superfans say he deserves more credit for a substantive first-term record. Passing an infrastructure bill. Canceling some student loan debt. Protecting the environment with a sweeping climate measure. Capping the cost of insulin and other drugs. Supporting unions and abortion rights. Putting the first Black woman on the Supreme Court. Backing Ukraine and navigating international crises with his deep foreign policy experience.

They praise his personal qualities, describing his devotion to his family, his regular church attendance, his down-to-earth, workingman vibes. They say that they feel as if they know him, and that the swing voters in their lives might relate to him, too.

And sometimes they worry about him.

Susan D. Wagner, a founder of Markers For Democracy, which pushes get-out-the-vote efforts through the writing of postcards, has begun a project to send thank-you notes to Biden for his work — and to show him he has support at a challenging moment.

“It did seem like he was taking his lumps and could use a little bit of bucking up,” said Wagner, 66, who lives in New York City and is heavily involved in grassroots activism. “I wrote that in this day and age, every once in a while somebody needs a smiling face. And I put a little smiling face on it.”

‘He came out of retirement to save the country’

The president does have a following among some younger Democrats — both on social media and among those involved with local politics.

Dakota Galban, 28, has a day job in human resources at a construction company, but he also serves as the chair of the Davidson Democrats, a county party organization based in Nashville, Tennessee.

He loves Biden. “And I feel like I’m the only one,” he said, arguing that the news media had overwhelmingly focused on Biden’s tepid support. “Does anybody care that I exist?”

Galban, like many of Biden’s fans, acknowledges that the president is not a candidate who generates a lot of enthusiasm. But they argue that’s a positive thing — Biden’s strength isn’t in his energy, they say, but his management skills and his understated ability to get things done.

“He came out of retirement to save the country, save our democracy, a fight for the soul of our nation — he didn’t have to run for president,” Galban said. “He made it his mission to take our country back from Donald Trump.”

But when Galban praises the president in committee meetings, his fellow Democrats chuckle. At home, his partner has gently suggested that he keep the life-size cutouts he has of Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris in storage.

It is a familiar dynamic to fans of the TV show “Parks and Recreation,” whose lead character, Leslie Knope — played by Amy Poehler — is obsessed with Biden, much to the confusion of her colleagues and loved ones. (Asked to describe her ideal man, Knope says, “He has the brains of George Clooney, and the body of Joe Biden.”)

Julie Platt, 34, works for a lobbying firm in Philadelphia and serves as a committee member in the city’s 2nd Ward. She describes herself as a progressive “ambassador” for Biden, saying her enthusiasm for him has only grown even as her friends who supported Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren in the 2020 primaries see the president as insufficiently progressive, not exciting enough and too old.

“I don’t see it as a choice between two bad candidates,” she said, referring to a Biden-Trump rematch. “I couldn’t be more honored to vote for him.”

Two years ago, Platt started keeping a list of Biden’s accomplishments in the Notes app on her phone. “He’s done so much,” she said. “It’s driving me crazy that people don’t see it.”

‘Everybody I talk to loves Joe Biden’

Some of Biden’s biggest supporters, unsurprisingly, are in Philadelphia politics. He was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and Jill Biden is a Philadelphia sports fan. The president has visited the city frequently since taking office.

Jim Donnelly, the leader of the 58th Ward, in the city’s conservative-leaning northeast, said he had at least seven Joe Biden signs on his front lawn. He has gotten into fights with his neighbors who have vandalized or stolen them.

Aside from cops, firefighters and his barber, he said, “Everybody I talk to loves Joe Biden.” Among his reasons for supporting Biden, he listed the president’s well-known friendliness to train conductors, his foreign policy experience and his record of job creation.

Some of Biden’s biggest supporters have loudly countered his detractors. After protesters calling for a cease-fire in the Gaza Strip interrupted Biden’s speech in January at a South Carolina church, one woman cried out: “You’re an understanding person. They don’t realize that. You’re a good man.”

That was Tomi Greene, 74, of Charleston, South Carolina. She said that she first met Biden at a town-hall meeting sometime around 2018, and that she had since become friends with Jill Biden.

“He is the right person to take us where we need to be,” Greene said. “He is very compassionate, and he’s smart. He relates to people.”

Of his detractors, she said, “I just wish they could see and feel what I feel.”

Russell, the Joe Biden backer on Earp Street in Philadelphia, said there was only one thing she would change about him — the flip of white hair on the back of his neck, which sometimes sticks out over his suit collar.

“It drives me nuts,” she said. “Just trim it!”

‘Morning Joe’: Trump’s Constant Speech Gaffes Paint Him as ‘Deranged, Demented and Pathetic – Not to Mention Dangerous’ | Video

The Wrap

‘Morning Joe’: Trump’s Constant Speech Gaffes Paint Him as ‘Deranged, Demented and Pathetic – Not to Mention Dangerous’ | Video

Sharon Knolle – March 4, 2024

Morning Joe” hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough and commentator and “How the Right Lost Its Mind” author Charlie Sykes watched incredulously while playing clips from Donald Trump campaign rallies over the weekend that showed the former president appearing lost for words, mixing up Joe Biden and Barack Obama and referring to the country Argentina as “a great guy.”

After wrapping the montage of consistent speech gaffes, Sykes determined Trump to be “deranged, demented and pathetic” and that he “looks lost.”

Scarborough began the Monday segment by playing back a series of clips of Trump from rallies in North Carolina and Virginia where the GOP candidate said Argentina is “a big Trump guy. He loves Trump,” and added, “I took his call. Anybody that loves me, I like them.”

Trump had earlier mentioned Argentina’s president, Nicolás Maduro, by name, but in connection with Venezuela. He struggled to pronounce the name of the South American country. In another speech, Trump said he had spoken with the leader of the Taliban, who, he said, called him, “your highness.”

“He’s reading teleprompters and his mind still blanks out,” Scarborough said, pointing to occasions where Trump mixed up Obama and Biden. “It’s just so pathetic and sad. It’s a sad scene, to me, to see someone up on stage and blanking out.”

Scarborough continued, calling the 77-year-old politician as “an old man who is losing his ability to communicate.”

“Unfortunately, I’m not a psychiatrist,” Sykes chimed in. “What’s on display is, OK, Joe Biden is old, but the other guy is deranged, demented and pathetic, as you point out — not to mention, dangerous. And this is on display.”

The pundit then reflected on Trump being named the likely Republican presidential nominee over Nikki Haley as results for Super Tuesday come in later this week.

“As we’re sitting here talking about this, we’re less than 48 hours away from that guy clinching the Republican presidential nomination. The Republicans have one last out and they’re not going to take it,” he lamented. “They look at this guy — this is the extraordinary thing, is that Republicans look at him — and I don’t have to repeat all of the things, you know, he’s been found viable for rape, he’s facing 91 felony charges — you have this gaseous malice that you get from these gaffe-filled speeches, and they’re looking at him like, ‘Yeah, we’d like four more years of that.’”

“If there’s any upside here, it will be that Joe Biden can say, ‘Yeah, I’m old, I’m very stiff when I walk. But this guy is also old and he’s crazy and he’s dangerous and he is incoherent,’” Sykes added.

March 5 is Super Tuesday, in which 15 states — Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Virginia — hold primaries in the presidential election.

Watch the full “Morning Joe” segment in the video above.

Trump confuses Obama for Biden again at Virginia rally speech

The Guardian

Trump confuses Obama for Biden again at Virginia rally speech

Nina Lakhani – March 3, 2024

Donald Trump confused Barack Obama for Joe Biden at a rally in Virginia on Saturday, triggering further questions about the age of the likely Republican presidential nominee who has made a string of such gaffes.

It also comes at a time of similar concerns about Biden. At 77 and 81 respectively, Trump and Biden are the oldest people to run for the presidency in US history.

Related: Nikki Haley declines to say she would endorse Trump if he wins nomination

“Putin has so little respect for Obama that he’s starting to throw around the nuclear word. You heard that. Nuclear. He’s starting to talk nuclear weapons today,” said Trump, on Saturday night in Richmond.

The crowd reportedly went silent as Trump referenced Obama, who left office more than seven years ago. It’s the third time Trump has made the blunder in the past six months.

The former US president’s other gaffes include confusing his Republican rival Nikki Haley with the former House speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Haley, 52, who has defied Trump and several primary defeats to continue in the race for the Republican nomination, has tried to frame herself as the younger, healthier option – referring to Trump and Biden as Grumpy Old Men in her campaign ads.

Trump’s mistake came the day after Biden, twice confused Ukraine and Gaza as he announced that the US would airdrop humanitarian supplies to Palestinians in Gaza who are dying of starvation due to the Israeli bombardment and blockades.

“In the coming days, we’re going to join with our friends in Jordan and others who are providing airdrops of additional food and supplies into Ukraine,” Biden said on Friday. The US will “seek to open up other avenues into Ukraine, including possibly a marine corridor”, he added.

A White House official later clarified that Biden meant Gaza – not Ukraine. The gaffe had been changed in the transcript of his remarks.

Questions about Biden’s age have intensified in recent months.

The latest lapse came days after was declared “fit for duty” at his annual health check. The White House physician, Dr Kevin O’Connor, said Biden “fully executes all of his responsibilities without any exemptions or accommodations”.

A new New York Times/Siena College poll found that 73% of registered voters polled believe Biden is too old to be an effective president, including 61% of those who voted for him in 2020. Voters seem less bothered about Trump, who is just four years younger, with 42% of those polled saying he “just too old” to be an effective president.

While criticisms of the age issue on both sides are laced with political spin, age-related cognitive decline is real.

As a person gets older, changes occur in all parts of the body including the brain. According to the National Institute on Aging (NIA) certain parts of the brain shrink, including those important to learning and other complex mental activities; communication between neurons may be less effective; and blood flow in the brain may decrease.

Healthy older adults can however learn new skills, form new memories, improve vocabulary and language skills. The NIA is conducting research on so-called cognitive super-agers, the minority of octogenarians and nonagenarians whose memories are comparable to people 20 to 30 years younger.

Trump Is ‘Surrounded Entirely by Enablers’ Eager to Diminish Apparent Cognitive Decline, Jonathan Lemire Says

The Wrap

Trump Is ‘Surrounded Entirely by Enablers’ Eager to Diminish Apparent Cognitive Decline, Jonathan Lemire Says

Benjamin Lindsay – March 4, 2024

MSNBC

Analyzing a series of public Donald Trump gaffes while he campaigned in North Carolina and Virginia over the weekend, Politico’s White House bureau chief Jonathan Lemire said Monday that the former president is “surrounded entirely by enablers” who are just “forging forward” through apparent cognitive decline.

“He’s surrounded entirely by enablers during this campaign and would be again if he were to be in the White House for a second time,” Lemire said on Monday’s “Morning Joe.” “There would be no guardrails, there would be no adults in the room, there would just be people doing what he wants.”

The conversation began with cohosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough relentlessly replaying clips of Trump mixing up Barack Obama and Joe Biden, of him stumbling through the pronunciation of “Venezuela,” of him referring to the South American country Argentina as if it were a person and more.

“There is nobody around Donald Trump that can protect him from himself,” Scarborough said, indicating that even if the gaffes were signs of ailing health, the former president would likely hear nothing of it.

“He’s just not the same guy he was five, 10, even 15 years ago. Nobody’s saying he was a saint then, but we knew him, he’s radically different. You look at him talking radically different,” Scarborough continued. “You look at Jan. 6 — he had every single person in the White House begging him to stop the riot … Didn’t listen to anybody. He’s alone. So as we go through this sad scene, there is nobody that can take him off the stage and say, ‘You’re not well. You need to get checked and taken care of.’”

“To your point, he’s not the same guy,” Lemire added. “You can watch video footage of the 2016 campaign, some of his time in the White House. We played last week a clip from the debate between Trump and Biden back in 2020, and it was striking even then how much Trump has changed, how he’s aged. I mean, he is in his late 70s.”

Lemire then became confounded by the differences in public perception between President Biden’s aged state and Trump’s.

“He’s only a couple years younger than President Biden, and we’re seeing with more and more frequency, even as the media [is] full of polls and obsessions about President Biden’s age, it’s this — it’s Trump who day after day is showing the signs of age, but also pressure,” Lemire said. “Indeed, pressure because he is not getting as much of the share of the Republican vote as he would like — Nikki Haley even posting a win over the weekend. Pressure because of the money he now owes, nearly half a billion dollars in a couple cases in New York City. And pressure that his first criminal case, a case that could theoretically put him in prison, starts in just three weeks.

“We’re seeing it night after night on the rally stage where he seems to even just lose control of the English language … This is something that his team knows, but they’re just forging forward.”