Predstavnički dom izglasao Trampov opoziv!

pa to i ja kazem...................kapitalisti u lice govore robovima da im deru kozhu sa ledja i krv piju , a roblje stoicki podnosi i jos idu na izbore i glasaju da im oni kapitalisti milijarderi ,koji su im bubrege i krv povadili i unovcili, budu presednici.
stvarno, magarci na kvadrat............mislim na roblje u kapitalizmu.
Ne postoji robovlasništvo u kapitalizmu.

To si nešto pomešao na večernjoj školi
 
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Running on empty: Senate Republicans ponder barring Donald Trump from seeking office again

  • Slide 1 of 10: Though Republicans were united in opposing the first impeachment of Trump in 2019, 10 broke ranks Wednesday when they voted alongside Democrats to impeach the president. They included the third-ranking House Republican, Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming. She was joined by:

    Though Republicans were united in opposing the first impeachment of Trump in 2019, 10 broke ranks Wednesday when they voted alongside Democrats to impeach the president. They included the third-ranking House Republican, Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming.

David Jackson, 11 hrs ago

WASHINGTON – An impeachment trial of Donald Trump isn't about removing him from the presidency – his term ends Wednesday, either way.

It's about preventing him from seeking the presidency again in 2024.

Several senators, including Republicans, have noted that if they vote to convict Trump of inciting last week's attack on Congress, they could then vote to bar him from future public office, effectively nixing another presidential campaign.

"If the president is convicted, there will be a vote on barring him from running again," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., soon to be the new Senate Majority Leader.

Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the chamber's top Republican, made clear he is considering conviction, opening the door to an effective ban on Trump within the Republican Party.

"I have not made a final decision on how I will vote," McConnell said this week. "and I intend to listen to the legal arguments when they are presented to the Senate.”

To be sure, conviction is not guaranteed; House prosecutors would need at least 17 Republican senators to join all Democrats in support of it.

But many Republicans beyond Congress have said it would be a good idea to leave Trump behind, underscoring GOP anxiety over another Trump presidential run in the wake of last week's insurrection by supporters.

Another Trump candidacy would further divide and undermine the Republican Party, making it more vulnerable in future congressional and presidential races, several Republicans have said. Many blame Trump for this month's losses by two Republican senators in Georgia, defeats that cost the party control of the chamber.

Also, some said, Trump did incite riots designed to threaten lawmakers into reversing the results of his election loss to President-elect Joe Biden.

"Republican senators need to protect the republic, public safety, and themselves – both politically and their actual lives, which were seriously threatened thanks to Trump’s behavior," said Republican strategist Liz Mair.

Trump supporters said they do not fear excommunication, and Republicans who support it will only be hurting themselves. They said Trump retains immense Republican support, and would take millions of voters with him if he is run out of the party.

"He's the leader of the Republican Party – end of story," said Trump political adviser Jason Miller.

Banning Trump from running again would be popular with most Americans, but deeply unpopular with those who consider themselves Republicans, according to post-insurrection public opinion polls.

A majority (56%) of Americans overall believe the Senate should remove Trump from office and disqualify him from running again, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll released Friday.

Only 12% of Republicans support such a move, the poll said, and those are the people who decide party primaries.

Trump's approval numbers do appear to be dropping fast, however. A Pew Research Center poll shows Trump's approval rating down to 29% – and at 60% among Republicans who once favored him by more than 90%.

Trump has not decided whether to run again, and his decision will signal the start of a new presidential election cycle for the Republicans.

For weeks after Election Day on Nov. 3, Trump signaled his plans to run again in 2024, telling a crowd of followers at a White House holiday party, "I’ll see you in four years." Allies talked about an announcement and campaign rally on or near the Jan. 20 date for Biden's inauguration.

That talk ended with the insurrection of Jan. 6.

Even if he announces he isn't running for president, Trump is still planning to get involved in the 2022 congressional elections – targeting Republicans who displeased him during the election protest.

The outgoing president has threatened to campaign against Gov. Brian Kemp, R-Ga. and Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., two Republicans who objected to Trump demands that Biden electoral votes be voided. Trump allies are also targeting the ten House Republicans who voted in favor of impeachment.

Trump would face obstacles to another presidential run beyond impeachment. He could face lawsuits over the insurrection and other legal action. Prosecutors in New York are investigating Trump over his private financial dealings.

Brian Kalt, a Michigan State University law professor who specializes in the history of the presidency, said the Senate has the authority to try ex-officials for offenses committed while in office.

After a conviction, the Senate also has the right to approve “disqualification to hold and enjoy any Office of honor, Trust or Profit under the United States," Kalt said, quoting the U.S. Constitution.

If it came to that, he added, Trump could contest the verdict in court: "There is some debate as to whether the disqualification clause covers the presidency, or instead only covers appointed office."

In one important way, disqualification would be the easier vote.

The Senate will soon be split 50-50 between the parties, and a few Republicans have suggested they want to purge Trump from the party.

Lara Brown, director of the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington University, said members of the party like McConnell know "Trump and his insurrectionist brand of politics is destroying the Republican Party and is dangerous for the country."

She added that "responsible conservatives know that this cancerous tumor will not disappear on its own; it needs to excised, so that the body politic may heal."

Alex Conant, a Republican political consultant who worked for Marco Rubio's presidential campaign in 2016, said the Republicans won't be a majority party as long as Trump is a major part of it.

"This entire episode is a complete disaster for the Republican Party," Conant said. "Republicans are left with no good options; there are merely less bad ones."
 
Alex Conant, a Republican political consultant who worked for Marco Rubio's presidential campaign in 2016, said the Republicans won't be a majority party as long as Trump is a major part of it.
izgleda da je taj rino konsultant lazov
trampomrzitelji abc/wapo su fejk njuz -vidi ispod: their lies, koje ameri vise ne slusaju uopste, DONE WITH MEDIA entirely.
A majority (56%) of Americans overall believe the Senate should remove Trump from office and disqualify him from running again, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll released Friday.
The media and the Democrats are dersperate to kill Prsident Trump’s popularity, as evidence by their lies of his involvement in the Capital riot.

These more optimistic polls show that Americans may be done listening to the media entirely.


Coming Up Today:

President Trump's daily presidential job approval % is - unchanged.

Most Voters Oppose Slavery Reparations, But Expect Democrats Will Approve Payments. pic.twitter.com/h9bR7YfVUj
— Rasmussen Reports (@Rasmussen_Poll) January 11, 2021

Trump Approval Remains Stable in New NBC Poll, With Republicans Unmoved After Capitol Violence https://t.co/6SXNNuchJ8
— NBC Los Angeles (@NBCLA) January 17, 2021

NEW POLL: Trump approval rating relatively unchanged in wake of Capitol rioting https://t.co/DrF6lDrVve pic.twitter.com/GayaIgpV55
— The Hill (@thehill) January 17, 2021
 
Poslednja izmena:
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Small far-right groups gather at US statehouses ahead of inauguration

Law enforcement and media outnumber members of ‘Boogaloo Bois’ as only a handful of armed men show up to demonstrations

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Members of the ‘Boogaloo Bois’ protest against the election of Joe Biden in Lansing, Michigan, on 17 January.

Mon 18 Jan 2021 01.21 GMT

At heavily fortified state capitals across the United States on Sunday, law enforcement and media outnumbered protesters, with only a handful of armed men showing up to planned rightwing demonstrations.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...illing-facebook-dave-patrick-underwood-police
Following the pro-Trump insurrection at the US Capitol on 6 January, governors in many states had mobilized the national guard, erected fences around government buildings, and in some cases even cancelled official business, amid warnings from law enforcement agencies of armed protests in all 50 states ahead of Joe Biden’s inauguration.

On Sunday, the only far-right groups that were visible at the protests were the ones who had first promoted the event: members of the “Boogaloo Bois”, an extremist pro-gun and anti-government movement fixated on a coming civil war. Their desire to make the protest happen across all 50 states was not realized, and even in the states where protests took place, they were unable to muster significant numbers.

In Salem, Oregon, where the state capitol was breached in December, and where dozens of far-right protesters clashed with Oregon state police on 1 January, the entire protest consisted of eight heavily armed Boogaloo Bois, compared with more than 20 reporters.

In Lansing, Michigan, where the state’s capitol was also breached by armed men in April, and where men with alleged Boogaloo ties were charged in a plot to kidnap the Democratic governor, Gretchen Whitmer, this fall, about a dozen Boogaloo Bois showed up to protest, according to local news reports. One journalist estimated the Boogaloo Bois stayed for about 30 minutes.


In Ohio, there were about two dozen protesters at the capitol in all, some armed with assault-style rifles and wearing military gear. Several identified themselves as part of the Boogaloo movement. In Colorado, there were a handful of Boogaloo Bois at the state capitol, and in New Hampshire, there were five, the New York Times reported. In Arizona, there were about 10 protesters at the state capitol, the Arizona Republic reported, with two men captured in photographs wearing the Hawaiian shirts paired with a military-style rifle that the Boogaloo Bois chose as their uniform.

Since June, prosecutors have charged multiple Boogaloo Bois in a series of violent incidents, including the alleged murders of a federal security officer and a sheriff’s deputy in California, an alleged plot to set off molotov cocktails at a Black Lives Matter protest in Las Vegas, and the alleged plot to kidnap a Democratic governor of Michigan.

Asked in a text message about the limited success of the protests on Sunday, Southern Poverty Law Center spokesman Michael Edison Hayden said: “Boogaloo adherents voiced quixotic plans for Sunday. They ran up against obstacles in achieving them in the aftermath of the violence on 6 January and lost access to websites they typically use to bring crowds together.”

An influential Boogaloo movement website that analysts said had first advertised the national protests on Sunday was taken offline last week.

And amid fallout from the Capitol riot, Sunday’s protests themselves had become a point of contention in the remaining online platforms that far right activists could access.

In a group dedicated to refugees from Parler, the far-right friendly social media platform whose hosting was yanked by Amazon a week ago, users clashed over the planned protests, with some arguing that the events were a “false flag”, and a trap laid for the movement by antifascists or law enforcement.

A sign reads ‘Warning weapons prohibited’ on a temporary fence outside the state capitol in Sacramento, California, on 17 January.

A sign reads ‘Warning weapons prohibited’ on a temporary fence outside the state capitol in Sacramento, California, on 17 January

Beyond social media, far-right leaders also expressed reservations about joining the actions. Even as the FBI circulated warnings in the past week about new potential armed demonstrations, some prominent leaders of extremist groups who had a presence at the 6 January attack claimed publicly that they did not want their followers to attend protests this week. Some warned that they saw the planned demonstrations as “traps”.

Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the Oath Keepers, one of the country’s most prominent anti-government militias, was captured on video talking to militia members outside the Capitol on 6 January. In an email to supporters Thursday, Rhohdes joined other extremists in asking Trump to declare martial law, but he also told supporters they should not gather at state capitols to protest, warning them of “false-flag traps”.

Enrique Tarrio, the leader of the neo-fascist Proud Boys, told USA Today that his group was not mobilizing as part of inauguration protests. “I feel like this part of the battle is over,” he said.

White nationalist streamer Nicholas Fuentes told his supporters to “steer clear” of the inauguration, warning of an increased military presence.

Jared Holt, a Visiting Research Fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, where he monitors extremist groups online, said that as Boogaloo activists had tried to broaden the appeal of the 17 January protests, they became conflated with the “stop the steal” movement and other strands of pro-Trump protest.

But Holt says that in the wake of 6 January, “the far right has become feverishly paranoid about any events surrounding the inauguration”.

Researchers who monitor extremist groups said that the sweeping bans and takedowns of far-right accounts in the past 10 days have left many groups in disarray, and that the ongoing arrests of people who participated in the capitol attack also appear to be having a deterrent effect.
 

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