Trump 2024 Run Thread

Claims the evidence he once claimed he saw that proved the affair was true.....under oath now refuses to make that same claim and has changed it to the line “I was speculating and I never witnessed anything. It was speculation,”

Star witness for Trump, Co- defendants in Georgia fails to give damning testimony about Fani Willis and Nathan Wade Relationship.


Lawyers for Donald Trump’s co-defendants charged in Georgia over efforts to overturn the 2020 election were unable on Tuesday to get their star witness to repeat in court what he had previously alleged about the Fulton county district attorney’s affair, as they seek to have her thrown off the case.

“I was speculating and I never witnessed anything. It was speculation,” Terrence Bradley said about text messages he sent to one of the defense lawyers in January that alleged the district attorney Fani Willis and her deputy Nathan Wade were romantically involved earlier than they had claimed.

Bradley’s inability to confirm anything about the affair meant there was no new evidence introduced at the hearing in Fulton county superior court as the presiding judge, Scott McAfee, weighs whether there was a conflict of interest requiring Willis’s disqualification.

Trump and more than a dozen allies were charged last year with violating the Georgia state racketeering statute when they took steps to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia, including by advancing fake slates of electors and pressuring state officials to reverse Trump’s defeat.

The case took a twist in January when Ashleigh Merchant, the lawyer for Trump’s co-defendant Mike Roman, filed a motion to disqualify Willis from the case, complaining that Willis benefited financially from hiring Wade to work on the Trump case in 2021 because he paid for them to go on vacation.

The disqualification motion has been closely watched because if the judge relieves Willis from bringing the case, it could result in the entire district attorney’s office from also being thrown off, upending what remains one of the most legally perilous cases against Trump.

But after more than two hours of testimony from Bradley, the defense lawyers appeared no closer to meeting the high burden to force disqualification than when Bradley initially took the stand last week.

The defense lawyers had been hoping for weeks that Bradley would contradict the testimony from Willis and Wade, who claimed it started months after Wade had been hired to work on the Trump case in November 2021, since that could undercut their credibility in the eyes of the judge.


Bradley’s initial appearance yielded little new information after he repeatedly invoked attorney-client privilege – Bradley was Wade’s lawyer in the divorce proceedings undergirding the affair allegations – to avoid having to answer questions from the defense lawyers.

The judge later determined at a hearing, behind closed doors, that Bradley was using the attorney-client privilege inappropriately when it came to communications Wade had made to him about the affair and had to answer questions on that matter.

On Tuesday, Bradley returned to court but testified he had no personal knowledge about the affair and that he had been purely speculating when he texted Roman’s lawyer that Willis and Wade’s affair had started after they met at a municipal judges’ conference in 2019.

The Trump defense lawyer, Steve Sadow, at one point asked, incredulously, why he had speculated when he knew Roman’s lawyer had been asking him about the affair in order to finalise her motion to disqualify. “I don’t recall,” Bradley replied in a muted tone.


Bradley also testified he could not recall whether Wade had recounted having sex with Willis in her office before she became the district attorney, and that he had never seen or had personal knowledge if Wade had a key to Willis’s garage door around the same time.

To date, there has been no evidence proving Willis hired Wade and renewed his contract specifically to gain a financial benefit through any sort of kickback scheme. And Willis and Wade have both previously testified any expenses were shared equally or reimbursed with cash.

The judge now faces the issue of how much weight to attach to Bradley’s testimony. On the one hand, he could believe that Bradley is now telling the truth having previously lied, or he could believe Bradley was telling the truth when he texted Roman’s lawyer and lied on the stand.

The district attorney’s office has separately tried to impeach Bradley’s credibility by having him acknowledge he was essentially ousted from his previous law practice he shared with Wade over a sexual harassment claim; the suggestion has been that Bradley wanted to damage Wade.
Doesn't matter 1 bit. The lie is alreadey out there, and has been eaten up by the maga's. If it's proven to be false, it's a lie, or the clintons had somebody killed, or it's media bias, etc. etc. effing etc.

As long as the lie is initially accepted, it's done the job.
 
Doesn't matter 1 bit. The lie is alreadey out there, and has been eaten up by the maga's. If it's proven to be false, it's a lie, or the clintons had somebody killed, or it's media bias, etc. etc. effing etc.

As long as the lie is initially accepted, it's done the job.
True, it'll be repeated forever by MAGA, but that doesn't matter to a judge that will be the one to rule on conflict of interest.

The question will be if the GA congress fires her because of it.
 
Supreme Court to finally do their jobs.


heath ledger joker GIF
 
Trump barred from Illinois ballot

An Illinois state judge on Wednesday barred Donald Trump from appearing on the Illinois' Republican presidential primary ballot because of his role in the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, but she delayed her ruling from taking effect in light of an expected appeal by the former U.S. president.

Cook County Circuit Judge Tracie Porter sided with Illinois voters who argued that the former president should be disqualified from the state's March 19 primary ballot and its Nov. 5 general election ballot for violating the anti-insurrection clause of the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment.

The final outcome of the Illinois case and similar challenges will likely be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court, which heard arguments related to Trump's ballot eligibility on Feb. 8.

Porter said she was staying her decision because she expected his appeal to Illinois' appellate courts, and a potential ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court.

The advocacy group Free Speech For People, which spearheaded the Illinois disqualification effort, praised the ruling as a "historic victory" in a statement.
 
Supreme Court to finally do their jobs.


heath ledger joker GIF
NYT arguing that "doing their jobs" is benefitting Trump:

Trump’s delay strategy seems to be working​

The schedules for Donald Trump’s criminal trials are still coming into focus, but one thing seems clear: His strategy of seeking delays is paying off.

The Supreme Court gave him a victory of sorts yesterday by deciding to take up his long-shot argument: that he is all but immune from prosecution for any actions taken while in office. The practical effect was to push back, by several months at least, the start of his federal trial on charges of plotting to overturn the 2020 election. Whether the trial can get underway before Election Day remains uncertain.
....

The Supreme Court weighs in​

By deciding to take up Trump’s immunity claim — a legal theory rejected by two lower courts and one that few experts think has any basis in the Constitution — the Supreme Court bought the former president at least several months before a trial on the election interference charges can start.

It is not out of the question that he could still face a jury in the case, in Federal District Court in Washington, before Election Day. At this point, the legal calendar suggests that if the justices issue a ruling by the end of the Supreme Court’s term in June and find that Trump is not immune from prosecution, the trial could still start by late September or October.

But with each delay, the odds increase that voters will not get a chance to hear the evidence that Trump sought to subvert the last election before they decide whether to back him in the current one.

If Trump is successful in delaying the trial until after Election Day and he wins, he could use the powers of his office to seek to dismiss the election interference indictment altogether. On top of that, Justice Department policy precludes prosecuting a sitting president, meaning that, once sworn in, he could very likely have any federal trial he is facing postponed until after leaving office.


On its surface, the Supreme Court’s ruling last night was a purely logistical decision. The justices decided to keep preparations for the trial on hold while they review a lower court’s rejection of the immunity defense. They set a hearing on the issue for the week of April 22.

As a practical matter, however, the court’s decision slow-walked the process of resolving the immunity debate, validating what had seemed like a last-ditch move by Trump’s legal team to find a way to keep pushing back a trial date.

The election interference case in Washington was supposed to have been the first of Trump’s four criminal proceedings to go in front of a jury. Months ago, the judge overseeing it, Tanya Chutkan, picked a trial date of March 4.

But then Trump filed a motion to dismiss the case, arguing that he enjoyed immunity from the charges because they arose from acts he took as president. While the claim had no precedent and went against basic legal and constitutional principles, it had a powerful attraction to Trump’s lawyers: Once it was lodged, Judge Chutkan was required to put the underlying case on hold until the question of immunity was resolved.

Earlier this month, a federal appeals court in Washington weighed in on the question, rejecting the immunity defense in a unanimous and scathing ruling that found that Trump was subject to federal criminal law like any other American.

He then asked the Supreme Court to keep the trial proceedings on hold while the justices decided whether they wanted to weigh in on the issue, perhaps hoping less that the justices would agree with him on the merits of his claims than that they might take up the question and take their time in reaching a decision.

And that is precisely what the court did.

 
NYT arguing that "doing their jobs" is benefitting Trump:

Trump’s delay strategy seems to be working​

The schedules for Donald Trump’s criminal trials are still coming into focus, but one thing seems clear: His strategy of seeking delays is paying off.

The Supreme Court gave him a victory of sorts yesterday by deciding to take up his long-shot argument: that he is all but immune from prosecution for any actions taken while in office. The practical effect was to push back, by several months at least, the start of his federal trial on charges of plotting to overturn the 2020 election. Whether the trial can get underway before Election Day remains uncertain.
....

The Supreme Court weighs in​

By deciding to take up Trump’s immunity claim — a legal theory rejected by two lower courts and one that few experts think has any basis in the Constitution — the Supreme Court bought the former president at least several months before a trial on the election interference charges can start.

It is not out of the question that he could still face a jury in the case, in Federal District Court in Washington, before Election Day. At this point, the legal calendar suggests that if the justices issue a ruling by the end of the Supreme Court’s term in June and find that Trump is not immune from prosecution, the trial could still start by late September or October.

But with each delay, the odds increase that voters will not get a chance to hear the evidence that Trump sought to subvert the last election before they decide whether to back him in the current one.

If Trump is successful in delaying the trial until after Election Day and he wins, he could use the powers of his office to seek to dismiss the election interference indictment altogether. On top of that, Justice Department policy precludes prosecuting a sitting president, meaning that, once sworn in, he could very likely have any federal trial he is facing postponed until after leaving office.


On its surface, the Supreme Court’s ruling last night was a purely logistical decision. The justices decided to keep preparations for the trial on hold while they review a lower court’s rejection of the immunity defense. They set a hearing on the issue for the week of April 22.

As a practical matter, however, the court’s decision slow-walked the process of resolving the immunity debate, validating what had seemed like a last-ditch move by Trump’s legal team to find a way to keep pushing back a trial date.

The election interference case in Washington was supposed to have been the first of Trump’s four criminal proceedings to go in front of a jury. Months ago, the judge overseeing it, Tanya Chutkan, picked a trial date of March 4.

But then Trump filed a motion to dismiss the case, arguing that he enjoyed immunity from the charges because they arose from acts he took as president. While the claim had no precedent and went against basic legal and constitutional principles, it had a powerful attraction to Trump’s lawyers: Once it was lodged, Judge Chutkan was required to put the underlying case on hold until the question of immunity was resolved.

Earlier this month, a federal appeals court in Washington weighed in on the question, rejecting the immunity defense in a unanimous and scathing ruling that found that Trump was subject to federal criminal law like any other American.

He then asked the Supreme Court to keep the trial proceedings on hold while the justices decided whether they wanted to weigh in on the issue, perhaps hoping less that the justices would agree with him on the merits of his claims than that they might take up the question and take their time in reaching a decision.

And that is precisely what the court did.

IMG_4380.png
 

Trump & 2 Star ANG General Called Out By Veterans For "110% Improper" Photo Op


Former President and GOP presidential frontrunner Donald Trump arrived at the U.S.-Mexico border yesterday in his signature blue suit and spoke to a small crowd while flanked by law enforcement and military personnel.

A widely circulated video of the press event threw up red flags for veterans, as Trump — using rhetoric from a recent appearance at CPAC — said “we have languages coming in to our country, no one even speaks those languages…they’re truly foreign languages, nobody speaks them.”


U.S. Air Force pilot Jahara Matisek, a military professor in the Department of National Security Affairs at the U.S. Naval War College, responded to the video with a question: “Why is there an Air Force 2-star general (probably ANG) in the frame at what appears to be a political event?”

[Note: ANG is Air National Guard.]

Air National Guard Lt. Colonel and former U.S. Representative Adam Kinzinger (D-IL) replied to Matisek’s observation: “Good question. Trump isn’t president so this is by definition a campaign event, and nobody in uniform can participate.”


Matisek, who says it “looks like Major General Thomas Suelzer,” added that his presence in uniform is “110% improper. If President Biden was there instead, it would then be legal. But I'm pretty sure my two decades of annual training about allowed political activities says that you cannot be present in uniform for a campaign speech by a non-elected official.”



Note: According to the National Guard, Suelzer is the senior uniformed Texas National Guard officer and head of the Texas Military Department. Appointed by Texas Governor Greg Abbott in 2022, Suelzer “functions as the Governor's principal adviser on military matters and is responsible for the strategic leadership, training, readiness, operational employment and performance of the Army and Air Force components of the Texas National Guard.”

Bulwark writer Joe Perticone agreed with Matisek: “Not the best look for Maj. Gen. Thomas Suelzer on Trump’s shoulder, nodding along in uniform while a political candidate goes on a racist tirade at a lectern displaying his campaign’s fundraising number.”

Note: Matisek is the co-author of the book Old & New Battlespaces; Society, Military Power, and War, which reveals “how today’s civil society, technology, and military organizations are dramatically transforming warfare-in a world in which war is at once everywhere and nowhere, and nearly everything can be weaponized.”

1709307230960.png
 
Just a never ending stream on Untruths . Remember over turning R v W was about giving all the power to the states to decide. Now Trump is floating a National Abortion Ban.

Trump claims Roe gave mothers right 'to kill the baby after birth'

Former President Donald Trump claimed that Roe v. Wade gave mothers the right 'to kill the baby after birth' when clarifying his views on abortion during an interview Thursday. Trump was speaking to Sean Hannity (pictured left) during his visit to the US-Mexico border in Texas.
The former president's views on the issue have made headlines of late, as Trump called reports he was considering a federal 16-week abortion ban 'fake news.' Earlier this week, he spoke out against the Alabama Supreme Court's ruling against IVF treatments, which he reiterated Thursday, calling it a 'harsh decision.'
When asked by Hannity where he was on the issue, he compared himself to Ronald Reagan, saying he believed in exceptions despite being pro-life and claimed pro-abortion Democrats are radicals on the issue. 'I think it's a very important thing the exceptions,' he said. 'I also think that they are the radicals, because they will kill the baby in eight months, nine months. Under Roe v. Wade, they had the right to kill the baby after birth. I mean, literally, after birth in some cases.'
He claimed that former Virginia Governor Ralph Northam, a Democrat, had been in favor of such a policy. Northam had said in years past that if a fetus was nonviable and a woman were to give birth, the physicians and the mother would have 'a discussion' about its viability. 'We want that, we want people to help, we are on the side of women,' before adding, 'Same thing on the abortion issue. The abortion issue, now, I'm for the exceptions like Ronald Reagan was for the exceptions.'
The New York Times reported that Trump told his advisors that a federal 16-week abortion ban would be suitable, as long as it included exceptions for [sexual assault] and incest, or preserving the life of a mother. 'As President Trump has stated, he would sit down with both sides and negotiate a deal that everyone will be happy with,' National Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement to reporters.
 

Roger Stone still believes that during the Democrat convention in August that they will dump Biden and draft Michelle Obama to run for president. Stone also says that even though vice-president Harris does not have dementia she makes even less sense than Biden. So, in a deal Democrats will get Harris to drop out in return for being placed upon the Supreme Court. For vice president Gavin Newsom will be picked. But Stone has been wrong about Michelle before like when he predicted Democrats would replace Hillary with Michelle in response to Hillary collapsing while getting into a car.

Voters Doubt Biden’s Leadership and Favor Trump, Times/Siena Poll Finds​

https://dnyuz.com/2024/03/02/voters-doubt-bidens-leadership-and-favor-trump-times-siena-poll-finds/
 
Back
Top