US Political News and Trump’s China visit

Well well well...
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


We know the Biden FBI/DOJ were scum and not surprised they hid this but why would Kash Patel not disclose this? :unsure:

Btw I think this is a distraction from the real reason they pretty much buried everything about Cook's past.
 
Even more reason to believe Tucker is a powerful voice in the landscape developing; the post-Trump era. Tucker’s son works for JD Vance, and Trump is supporting Tucker’s free speech. Not sure how much the most influential republicans will fall in line with Tucker’s views though. JD Vance is looking for Tucker’s endorsement come 2028, so maybe they are letting Tucker rebuild the base and hand it off to JD.
 
Even more reason to believe Tucker is a powerful voice in the landscape developing; the post-Trump era. Tucker’s son works for JD Vance, and Trump is supporting Tucker’s free speech. Not sure how much the most influential republicans will fall in line with Tucker’s views though. JD Vance is looking for Tucker’s endorsement come 2028, so maybe they are letting Tucker rebuild the base and hand it off to JD.
The issue here is, JD is not seen as a true MAGA, even after the ticket with Trump; a lot of MAGA people despise JD, which means if Tucker endorses JD in 2028, it will drag down Tucker's stocks within MAGA instead of raising JD Vance.

Unless Trump run again, then he may run JD (That would open a whole new can of worm), otherwise, if Trump is not on the 2028 ticket, he is going to need a MAGA people he can boss with to finish what he started so he can be the shadow president. JD wouldn't make much sense in this case, even Texas's Greg Abbott would have been a better choice.
 
The issue here is, JD is not seen as a true MAGA, even after the ticket with Trump; a lot of MAGA people despise JD, which means if Tucker endorses JD in 2028, it will drag down Tucker's stocks within MAGA instead of raising JD Vance.

Unless Trump run again, then he may run JD (That would open a whole new can of worm), otherwise, if Trump is not on the 2028 ticket, he is going to need a MAGA people he can boss with to finish what he started so he can be the shadow president. JD wouldn't make much sense in this case, even Texas's Greg Abbott would have been a better choice.
True, JD is a fair weather pick, just like Trump’s first VP. Trying to get the middle class middle American vote who had questions on Trump’s character.

Tucker himself might be a stronger Presidential pick.

Btw, here is an interesting EDM-sequel music video (a bit cringe I know, but view it from a political lens) from Mamdani supporters, reviving a vibe of the 2010s. A time many younger Americans felt some amount of prosperity.

Zohran and other Dems promoting themselves amongst soccer fans (especially amongst Latinos who don’t really follow politics) next year at during the World Cup could be smart advertising ahead of the midterms.

Just because the election is over, doesn’t mean social media campaigning has to end. It’s a lesson from Trump and his rallies.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


Millennial nostalgia and Gen. Z wishing to experience this time period.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


This was the vibe of the era. Spontaneous dance party on a New York subway platform. Just as boomers and their influence on the Gen. X shaped a generation of politics. I suspect the 2010s and its nostalgia will shape the next 20-25 years of politics, especially if millennials and gen. Z fail to have something to look forward to. A lot of the current 18-45 crowd want to return to the late 2010s.

The following video is from early 2019.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Last edited:
True, JD is a fair weather pick, just like Trump’s first VP. Trying to get the middle class middle American vote who had questions on Trump’s character.

Tucker himself might be a stronger Presidential pick.

Btw, here is an interesting EDM-sequel music video (a bit cringe I know, but view it from a political lens) from Mamdani supporters, reviving a vibe of the 2010s. A time many younger Americans felt some amount of prosperity.

Zohran and other Dems promoting themselves amongst soccer fans (especially amongst Latinos who don’t really follow politics) next year at during the World Cup could be smart advertising ahead of the midterms.

Just because the election is over, doesn’t mean social media campaigning has to end. It’s a lesson from Trump and his rallies.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


Millennial nostalgia and Gen. Z wishing to experience this time period.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Tucker Carlson had too much baggage to be a President, running him, you will lose almost all female voters, and we are seeing a bunch of young males shift to the more progressive side, that's not a winning combo.

As said before, the key to winning US election is not to appease your base, but simply get more people out to vote. The surge of independent in general after COVID won Biden 2020 election and the surge of young male independent supporting Trump won him 2024, and the surge of young male voter in Blue district won the 3 main race in Novemeber, there are already enough people not liking the current situation, and the only thing you need to do is to rally them and had them come out to vote, whoever can rally more people will win, and at this point, there are more people hating this current admin than liking it, all the dem need is to translate it to vote.
 
Tucker Carlson had too much baggage to be a President, running him, you will lose almost all female voters, and we are seeing a bunch of young males shift to the more progressive side, that's not a winning combo.

As said before, the key to winning US election is not to appease your base, but simply get more people out to vote. The surge of independent in general after COVID won Biden 2020 election and the surge of young male independent supporting Trump won him 2024, and the surge of young male voter in Blue district won the 3 main race in Novemeber, there are already enough people not liking the current situation, and the only thing you need to do is to rally them and had them come out to vote, whoever can rally more people will win, and at this point, there are more people hating this current admin than liking it, all the dem need is to translate it to vote.
Definitely it’s a turnout game, especially among the young and about selling optimism, more so than focusing on demonizing the other side. The economy first and foremost, but at least peace and harmony during downturns, similar to Obama’s early first term.
 
Just going to post this right here. Was all over various (un)social media sites. Now seeing on Fox News. This is is serious. As in seriously serious. I never thought I would see this in my lifetime:

View attachment 160425

What's the big deal ? Officers and soldiers are supposed to refuse illegal and unconstitutional orders.
 

Judge questions Lindsey Halligan's handling of indictment in Comey case​


Washington — The Justice Department's criminal case against former FBI Director James Comey appears to be on shaky ground as a judge Wednesday repeatedly questioned federal prosecutors about the validity of the indictment returned by a grand jury and how it was handled by interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan.

more

During a hearing on Comey's bid to have the charges tossed on the grounds his prosecution is vindictive and selective, U.S. District Judge Michael Nachmanoff pressed government lawyers for clarity about the events that surrounded the grand jury proceedings on Sept. 25, when it voted to indict Comey on two counts related to testimony he provided to Congress in September 2020. He has pleaded not guilty.

All right, former FBI Director James Comey and his lawyers
Video Player is loading.
AAy3mhH.img
CBS News

Justice Department says full grand jury never saw final Comey indictment
Halligan had said in a declaration filed with the federal court in Alexandria on Friday that after she made her presentation to the grand jury, it deliberated for roughly two hours. Halligan said she was then informed by her deputy that the grand jury had rejected one count, but voted to indict Comey on two others.


The indictment was then re-drafted to remove the first count, and listed only the two counts that the grand jury approved, Tyler Lemons, a federal prosecutor working on Comey's case, told Nachmanoff on Wednesday. Lemons said a grand-jury coordinator told prosecutors about the outcome of the vote.

Judge has questions about second indictment​

But Nachmanoff questioned whether the second indictment — with only the two charges — had been presented to the grand jury and voted on, or given straight to a U.S. magistrate judge. That judge, Lindsey Vaala, presided over the return of the indictment and also expressed confusion as to why she was presented with two documents: The indictment with two counts, and a report of the grand jury's failure to concur in an indictment, which lists three counts.

more

Lemons said the second indictment was given straight to the judge, and argued it was not a "new" indictment, but had been edited only to reflect the grand jury's decision to charge Comey with lying to Congress and obstruction of a congressional proceeding.

Nachmanoff pressed Lemons further, asking if the second indictment was never shown to the entire grand jury. The prosecutor said that was correct. Lemons was not at the proceedings before the grand jury in September. Halligan presented the case by herself.

While Lemons answered most of the judge's questions, Halligan briefly appeared before Nachmanoff to tell him that only the foreperson and another grand juror were in the courtroom when the indictment was presented to the magistrate judge.

One of Comey's attorneys, Michael Dreeben, said moments later that the Justice Department had just acknowledged the indictment was never presented to the grand jury and never returned.


"There is no indictment that Mr. Comey is facing," Dreeben said, adding this is a "threshold basis" to dismiss the case with prejudice, which would prohibit prosecutors from re-filing charges. He said there should be no charges against his client because the five-year statute of limitations for Comey's alleged offenses has now expired.

Halligan's presentation before the grand jury and her handling of the indictments have puzzled not only Nachmanoff, but two other judges that have presided over different aspects of Comey's criminal case, which remains in its early stages.

A Justice Department official told CBS News Wednesday evening in a statement that "the Government remains committed to following the law, respecting grand-jury secrecy, and ensuring that judicial decisions rest on facts—not assumptions. The magistrate judge's order does not meet that standard."


Earlier hearing raises questions about transcript of Halligan's grand jury presentation​

During a hearing last week on a separate legal issue involving Halligan's appointment as interim U.S. attorney, U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie raised what she said was a missing portion of the transcript from the grand jury proceedings.

The judge said it appeared no court reporter was present during part of Halligan's presentation, or did not transcribe the period at issue. Halligan later said in her declaration Friday that the missing portion reflects the time when the grand jury was deliberating, which must be done without any other person in the room, including a court reporter.

"There are no missing minutes, contrary to the suggestion raised by the court," Halligan wrote.

Another judge raises questions about grand jury transcript​

But then, on Monday, U.S. Magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick raised his own issues with the "completeness" of the transcript and the manner in which the second indictment was presented to the grand jury.

Fitzpatrick said the second indictment was new, and he concluded after reviewing the grand-jury transcript that Halligan would've presented it to the grand jury for consideration before it was returned in open court.


"It now appears that may not have happened," he wrote.

Citing the timeline that Halligan laid out in her filing, the judge said the short time span between when she learned that the grand jury rejected one count in the initial indictment and when she appeared in court to return the second indictment — which is about seven minutes — "could not have been sufficient" to draft and sign the second document, present it to the grand jury, provide legal instructions and give them a chance to deliberate and render a decision.

"If the prosecutor is mistaken about the time she received notification of the grand jury's vote on the original indictment, and this procedure did take place, then the transcript and audio recording provided to the Court are incomplete," Fitzpatrick wrote in an order. "If this procedure did not take place, then the Court is in uncharted legal territory in that the indictment returned in open court was not the same charging document presented to and deliberated upon by the grand jury."


He ordered federal prosecutors to turn over all grand jury material to Comey's defense team, and criticized the Justice Department for what he described as a "disturbing pattern of profound investigative missteps" in its handling of the case.

Fitzpatrick wrote that there is "the prospect that government misconduct may have tainted the grand jury proceedings."

The Justice Department official told CBS News Wednesday that "the grand jury transcript — which Magistrate Judge Fitzpatrick read — speaks for itself. When read in full, it shows no misstatement of law, no improper instruction, and no basis for the extraordinary remedy of breaching grand-jury secrecy. Partial snippets cannot overcome the actual record."



--------------------------------------------------------------------------


So, Halligan had the grand jury foreman sign the indictment even tho the full panel had not seen it? This is what the DOJ lawyer said at open court today.....

Halligan needs to stop worrying about the Comey Indictment and start worrying about her own career as an ambulance chaser.....That's an illegal indictment; that's prosecutorial misconduct.
 
Definitely it’s a turnout game, especially among the young and about selling optimism, more so than focusing on demonizing the other side. The economy first and foremost, but at least peace and harmony during downturns, similar to Obama’s early first term.
Well, there is definitely dissent, that's why the GOP is willing to break with Trump. Trump was forced his hand to sign that bill, and it was subsequently passed by almost unanimous decision in both houses (only 1 nay in both houses) means GOP House members wanted to keep their job instead of following Trump. If they don't pass this bill or even being a nay-sayer, they would have jeopardised their 2026 bids. That's what the bills tell you: this is not a 217/215 decision in the House, and a 60/40 decision in the Senate, this is a total blowout bipartisan sponsorship on something Trump is still opposing 3 days ago. You can argue Trump had a change of heart, but everyone else sees that he can't sway them; that's why he is now okay with the bill release.

Well, their concern is justified, there is a new poll came out stating the Democrats lead the GOP 14 points in the 2026 generic ballot, even if this is left left-leaning poll, it's a lot, you are talking about 5 + points if we are talking about a neutral source. There is going to be a wipeout if they had the election now.
 
Well, there is definitely dissent, that's why the GOP is willing to break with Trump. Trump was forced his hand to sign that bill, and it was subsequently passed by almost unanimous decision in both houses (only 1 nay in both houses) means GOP House members wanted to keep their job instead of following Trump. If they don't pass this bill or even being a nay-sayer, they would have jeopardised their 2026 bids. That's what the bills tell you: this is not a 217/215 decision in the House, and a 60/40 decision in the Senate, this is a total blowout bipartisan sponsorship on something Trump is still opposing 3 days ago. You can argue Trump had a change of heart, but everyone else sees that he can't sway them; that's why he is now okay with the bill release.

Well, their concern is justified, there is a new poll came out stating the Democrats lead the GOP 14 points in the 2026 generic ballot, even if this is left left-leaning poll, it's a lot, you are talking about 5 + points if we are talking about a neutral source. There is going to be a wipeout if they had the election now.
That’s probably why Trump signed the bill a few minutes ago. Probably hoping it will blow over (or is seen as a nothing burger) long before people make up their minds about the midterms.

14 points is huge. Even 5 points could means many districts and senate seats become competive. GOP lead redistributing will be ineffective if many demographics swing back to the Dems in the midterms.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
So, Halligan had the grand jury foreman sign the indictment even tho the full panel had not seen it? This is what the DOJ lawyer said at open court today.....

Halligan needs to stop worrying about the Comey Indictment and start worrying about her own career as an ambulance chaser.....That's an illegal indictment; that's prosecutorial misconduct.
Sounds similar to a certain FISA warrant application by a certain FBI Director.
 
Sounds similar to a certain FISA warrant application by a certain FBI Director.
FBI director doesn't sign warrant; it HAS TO BE from a judge from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. An FBI director can order surveillance for 30 days without a warrant as per FISA, then you must seek a warrant from FISC after 30 days.

This is an indictment that does not exist in the first place. You can argue whether or not the FBI had abused its power on FISA and spied on the Trump campaign becuase of the secrecy, but you can't argue the fact that the indictment was not seen by the full panel of the grand jury. Hence, there was no indictment to begin with.

I can go ask a friendly judge and sign a warrant if I don't think I have enough for probable cause. That's because probable cause is very subjective; my definition is not the same as your definition, and that is arguable. It is not the same thing as a prosecutor just asking the foreman to sign an indictment and use it to indict anyone; an indictment had to be considered by a full panel of grand jurors and return a majority verdict. The only thing you can argue in this case is whether Halligan did it because she was ignorant or she had done it because she intentionally rushed the indictment.
 
Last edited:
That’s probably why Trump signed the bill a few minutes ago. Probably hoping it will blow over (or is seen as a nothing burger) long before people make up their minds about the midterms.

14 points is huge. Even 5 points could means many districts and senate seats become competive. GOP lead redistributing will be ineffective if many demographics swing back to the Dems in the midterms.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Yes, 14 points is huge, the rest of the poll had it between 5 to 7, that would be enough for a swing to multiple seats toward the Dem. This is the poll by the way


The problem is, Trump isn't really popular right now, even Fox own poll had Trump down by a whopping -17 points and believes the GOP-led Congress and House are being ineffective. That's saying something here.


There will be a wipeout if anyone does not support the Epstein bill yesterday, and even with that, those seats are not safe and you need to think beyond 2026. Because not much is going to change from now til 2026, which means 2028 is now in play, and if this is the number we are looking at, I don't see howthe GOP is going to win 2028, especially when Trump is not on the ticket.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top