The former president emphasized the words “a woman” by sitting up straight and putting both hands in front of him, lightly cupping the air.
(WASHINGTON) — The International Brotherhood of Teamsters declined Wednesday to endorse Kamala Harris or Donald Trump for president, saying neither candidate had sufficient support from the 1.3 million-member union.
The former president “doesn’t just do that like a normal politician," the MSNBC anchor told "Late Show" host Stephen Colbert.
Appearing on Fox News on Wednesday, Trump told a story he’s told before — one in which a politician is threatened by angry Trump boosters and he calls them off.
Sesno believes that anytime Trump speaks or is quoted, journalists need to provide context. “Virtually all of his appearances are filled with invective and accusation and criticism and attack and otherizing,” he said. “And I think that context has to be provided.”
Analysts at the Media Research Center found that media coverage of former President Trump after the second assassination attempt was 95 percent negative.
In remarks this month in Las Vegas, former President Donald Trump accused Kamala Harris, his Democratic presidential opponent, of wanting to bring back
Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump are locked in a statistical tie in Pennsylvania, according to a Washington Post poll of a state that many analysts see as the battleground most likely to determine the outcome of the presidential election.
Now, one of these groups — the 65 Project — is taking a more proactive approach. Starting on Thursday, the group’s organizers are planning to run advertisements in legal journals published in swing states, reminding lawyers that they are ethically barred from bringing false claims on behalf of any client.
Duncan faced Trump’s wrath following the 2020 election after he refused to help overturn the then-defeated incumbent’s loss to President Joe Biden. Duncan initially endorsed Biden’s reelection campaign and has now publicly backed Kamala Harris for the White House.
Former President Donald Trump told a Long Island, New York, rally crowd on Wednesday night that he is going to Springfield, Ohio.