primary

Texas 'Republicans are sweating through their solid gold Trump pins' — here's why

Barbed Wire Editor Brian Gaar says this year’s race for Republican senator in Texas “has everything,” including a “four-term U.S. senator trying to fend off a scandal-slicked attorney general” and “Big-money super PACs unloading cash like it’s an oil boom.”

They’re dumping considerable cash on incumbent Sen. John Cornyn, who’s raised nearly $4 million this quarter and has $8.5 million in cash on hand. Cornyn also has a super PAC with an additional $11 million haul “and a consultant team stacked with senior Trump advisers.”

But “the kicker,” says Gaar, is that despite all that cash, the incumbent is still trailing his controversial opponent Texas AG Ken Paxton by 15 points in the Texas primary.

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“That’s not a polling gap,” says Gaar. “That’s a canyon.”

Another plot twist that Gaar says is probably making Cornyn’s campaign staff “spit … coffee,” is the fact that those same polls showing Paxton with a lead in the primary also show he’s losing to a generic Democrat in the general election.”

“Meanwhile, Cornyn — establishment, suit-and-tie Cornyn — actually beats the Democrat by seven points,” Gaar said. “This has Republicans sweating through their solid gold Trump pins.”

“The problem is nobody with the necessary gravitas seems to be willing to state the obvious: this is shaping up to be a f—————— disaster,” one anonymous aide told Axios.

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Gaar points out that Paxton is the same embattled Texas AG who was recently impeached by the Texas House on bribery and corruption charges and then acquitted by the GOP-dominated Texas Senate.

“And speaking of family values: Angela Paxton, Ken’s wife of 38 years and a state senator, just filed for divorce on “biblical grounds,” Gaar adds. “If you’re wondering what chapter and verse that comes from, it appears to be somewhere between ‘Thou shalt not embarrass me on national television’ and ‘Thou shalt not have a mistress during impeachment hearings.’”

President Donald Trump, meanwhile, is still holding off an endorsement in the primary.

Gaar notes Cornyn told NBC News: “I’ve talked to him about it a number of times. He is not ready to make that endorsement,” which to Gaar looks like “your state’s senior senator refreshing Trump’s texts like a teenager.”

READ MORE: Trump just made a big mistake — and he has no one to blame but himself

“So here we are,” writes Gaar. “A race that should’ve been a Republican layup has turned into a slow-motion implosion. Cornyn’s money might not matter if the base stays glued to Paxton, and Paxton might win a primary only to crash and burn in the general.”

Read the full Barbed Wire report at this link.

Top Trump advisor threatens Republicans to support nominees or face a primary: report

A senior Trump official has issued a threat to Senate Republicans: support and confirm the Cabinet and administration nominees Donald Trump is choosing or face a primary challenge funded by the world’s richest person, Elon Musk, according to a new report from ABC News.

Jonathan Karl, ABC’s Chief Washington Correspondent reports, “the Trump team will play hardball with Republicans who waiver [sic] on any of the president-elect’s nominees.”

“There’s votes coming,” the Trump advisor said, according to Karl. “And if you are on the wrong side of the vote, you’re buying yourself a primary. That is all. And there’s a guy named Elon Musk who is going to finance it.”

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“The president gets to decide his cabinet. No one else. That’s just the way it is,” that advisor added, Karl reports.

The U.S. Constitution requires the Senate to provide its “advice and consent” on a large number of presidential nominees, which is not a rubber stamp. It reads in part: the President “shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate…”

Democratic strategist Matt McDermott responded to Karl’s reporting, observing: “This has never, in the history of American democracy, been ‘just the way it is.'”

Media critic Susan Bordson urged the press “to provide audiences meaningful context.”

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“No journalists covering executive public governance should be skittish about contextualizing these actions, she writes, calling the threats “a TRAIT of authoritarian-style governance.”

Journalist James Surowiecki warned, “Having one super-rich guy exercise massive influence over American politics is a very bad thing. I know Americans don’t really care about the nuts and bolts of democracy, but this is a true corruption of democracy.”

Jesse Lee, a former Biden White House National Economic Council senior adviser declared, “Oligarchy is here.”

ABC’s Selina Wang invoked Matt Gaetz’s name in her report, but Karl stated the threat applied to “any of the president-elect’s nominees.”

Minutes ago, Gaetz withdrew his name from consideration for Attorney General.

Watch ABC News’ report from Thursday below or at this link.

READ MORE: ‘Declaration of War on Expertise’: Experts Explain Danger of Trump ‘MAGA Zealot’ Nominees

House Freedom Caucus chair says he’ll 'still prevail' in tight primary with Trump-backed challenger

Rep. Bob Good (R-Virginia) — one of the most influential members of the House of Representatives' Republican majority — is in the fight of his life, with his primary election still too close to call.

According to longtime Capitol Hill journalist Jamie Dupree, Good feels confident about his chances to maintain his seat, despite being down in a razor-thin vote count in the Republican primary for Virginia's 5th Congressional district.

"We believe we can still prevail," Good told Dupree, adding that the Virginia Republican was roughly 300 votes behind his opponent, Republican state senator John McGuire, who has been endorsed by former President Donald Trump.

READ MORE: Why these 3 MAGA Republicans are backing far-right Freedom Caucus chair's opponent

Even though Good's Republican credentials are not in dispute, given that he chairs the far-right House Freedom Caucus, he's nonetheless found himself in an intense primary contest that could force him out of Congress after two terms. The primary challenge came after Good endorsed Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis in the 2024 GOP primary — even before DeSantis officially launched his campaign.

""Governor Ron DeSantis has shown through action as Florida's chief executive that confronting hard challengers delivers effective results for every man, woman and child," Good said in 2023. "That strength in the face of adversity is needed more today than ever before, and it is why I am unequivocally endorsing and encouraging Governor DeSantis to run for president."

While Good has since endorsed Trump after DeSantis' early exit, Trump still threw his weight behind McGuire's candidacy. Notably, the former president launched an attack on Good after the Freedom Caucus chairman traveled to Manhattan to defend Trump outside of the New York courthouse during his first criminal trial.

"Bob Good is BAD FOR VIRGINIA, AND BAD FOR THE USA,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “He turned his back on our incredible movement, and was constantly attacking and fighting me until recently, when he gave a warm and ‘loving’ Endorsement – But really, it was too late. The damage had been done!”

READ MORE: 'Bad for the USA': Trump unleashes on top GOP rep who defended him outside courthouse

With more than 95% of ballots counted, the New York Times has McGuire slightly ahead of Good by 321 total votes as of 1:20 PM Eastern Time. Whomever ends up winning the primary will face off against Democrat Gloria Witt in November. Republicans outnumber Democrats in the district, however, with the GOP primary drawing more than 62,000 voters in 2024 and Democrats bringing out just over 24,000.

Virginia's 5th Congressional District — which encompasses roughly two dozen counties in a swath of central Virginia between Roanoke and Richmond — is mostly rural. The last time a Democrat held the district was Tom Perriello, who held it for just one term between 2009 and 2011.

Should the thin margin remain until all ballots are counted, it would likely trigger an automatic recount, meaning the winner of the primary may not be known for several more weeks.

READ MORE: Republicans in top GOP rep's district urge Trump to rethink 'ill-advised endorsement' against him

RNC resolution would effectively end GOP primary and launch 'full general election mode'

The Republican National Committee (RNC) is now considering a draft resolution that would bring about a swift end to the 2024 Republican primary and cement former President Donald Trump's status as the de facto nominee.

According to a Thursday report in The Dispatch, the RNC resolution — proposed by Trump ally and Maryland RNC committeeman David Bossie — would be considered as soon as next week at the RNC's winter meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada.

"RESOLVED that the Republican National Committee hereby declares President Trump as our presumptive 2024 nominee for the office of President of the United States and from this moment forward moves into full general election mode welcoming supporters of all candidates as valued members of Team Trump 2024," the resolution reads.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to hold office again?

Under current RNC rules, Trump would have to win 1,215 pledged delegates from the various primaries and caucuses holding their contests this winter and spring in order to become the presumptive nominee ahead of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee this coming July. Currently, Trump leads in the delegate race with 32 pledged delegates to former UN ambassador Nikki Haley's 17.

However, the RNC is within its rights to change those rules. Should it do so, it would effectively nullify the results of all upcoming primaries and caucuses after just two nominating contests in Iowa and New Hampshire. Haley's team pushed back against the resolution, and fired a shot across the bow at RNC chair Ronna McDaniel.

"Who cares what the RNC says?" Haley spokeswoman Olivia Perez Cubas told the Dispatch. "We’ll let millions of Republican voters across the country decide who should be our party’s nominee, not a bunch of Washington insiders. If Ronna McDaniel wants to be helpful she can organize a debate in South Carolina, unless she’s also worried that Trump can’t handle being on the stage for 90 minutes with Nikki Haley."

The next primary will be in Haley's home state of South Carolina in late February, which will also kick off the winner-take-all stage of the Republican primary, in which the candidate who wins a majority of votes will be awarded 100% of that state or territory's delegates.

READ MORE: GOP 'will only have themselves to blame' by nominating 'weak' and 'inept' Trump: Bloomberg

Read the Dispatch's full report here.

Why Didn’t Media See Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Coming? Because She’s a Woman of Color and a Leftist

It quickly became the viral moment of Election Day. Capturing nearly 58 percent of the vote, 28-year-old Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez solidly beat Rep. Joseph Crowley of New York, the fourth-highest ranking member of the House Democratic caucus who had not been challenged in a primary election in more than a decade.

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Outlandish GOP Senate Candidate Launches Racist Attack on Mitch McConnell's 'China Family'

A racist Republican Senate candidate released a repugnant attack on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Thursday, calling the GOP leader "cocaine Mitch" and lambasting his "China family."

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Roy Moore Defeats Trump's Pick Luther Strange in Alabama GOP Primary - Steve Bannon Rejoices

If there were any doubts about where the Republican Party is headed, the Republican Alabama Senate primary erased them. Roy Moore roundly defeated Luther Strange, who replaced Senator Jeff Sessions when he was appointed attorney general.

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A Who’s Who of Trump’s Surrogates

President Obama, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Joe Biden, and hundreds of other elected officials and movement activists will be campaigning for Hillary Clinton.

Some pundits say that Donald Trump has alienated so many people, including other Republicans, that he’ll have problems finding people willing to serve as his surrogates on the campaign trail. Don’t worry. Donald has lots of prominent Americans, representing a broad and diverse spectrum of America, who’ve endorsed him and can be expected to campaign for him.

Here are just a few of those who are likely to stump for Trump. With these folks in his corner, how can he lose?

    

David Duke (KKK), Phil Robertson (Duck Dynasty), Wayne LaPierre (NRA)
 

     

Sheldon Adelson, Ben Carson

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Wayne Newton, Ann Coulter, Chris Christie

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Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, Maine Gov. Paul LePage

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Joe Arpaio, Ted Nugent, Dennis Rodman

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Pete Rose, John Rocker, Bobby Knight

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Hulk Hogan, Newt Gingrich, Jan Brewer

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Mike Tyson, Sen. Jeff Sessions, Clinton Eastwood

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Rupert Murdoch, Sean Hannity, Pat Buchanan

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Dick Cheney, Curt Schilling, Mitch McConnell

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Alex Jones, Phyllis Schlafly, Paul Ryan

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Trump, the GOP and Media Are Trying to Make Trump Seem ‘Normal’

There is no sense in mincing words, even at the risk of sounding alarmist: Donald Trump is an existential threat to American democracy. Andrew Sullivan, in his much-discussed essayin New York Magazine, said as much, calling Trump “an extinction-level event.”

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Democrats Can't Unite Unless Wasserman Schultz Goes

To paraphrase the words of that Scottish master Robert Burns, the best laid plans of mice, men — and women — go often astray, or “gang aft agley,” as they say in the Highlands. No one knows this better than Hillary Rodham Clinton.

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Why Trump Can Lie and No One Seems to Care

Donald Trump is a serial liar. Okay, to be a bit less Trumpian about it, he has trouble with the truth. If you look at Politifact, the Pulitzer Prize-winning site that examines candidates’ pronouncements for accuracy, 76 percent of Trump’s statements are rated either “mostly false,” “false,” or “pants on fire,” which is to say off-the-charts false. By comparison, Hillary Clinton’s total is 29 percent.

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