I don't know about a majority.From what I've read over the years majority of latinos even before Trump voted republican.
I don't know about a majority.From what I've read over the years majority of latinos even before Trump voted republican.
Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting Throws A Wrench Into Trump’s Campaign Plans
President Donald Trump’s aides are struggling to balance calls for him to play the role of consoler in chief with his more natural inclination to hold raucous rallies and gin up his supporters in the final stretch of midterm campaigning.
According to a Monday Washington Post report, Trump has grown irritated with the many advisers counseling him to hold his tongue and adopt a unifying posture in the wake of the shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue this weekend.
Aides reportedly admit in private that Trump is neither talented at nor comfortable with expressing empathy, a tone he feels his most ardent fans do not like.
The key may just be waiting it out — Trump allies hope that in the rapidly changing media landscape, a new story will emerge soon that allows Trump to hit the campaign trail and thrive in his element again.
Pence Doubles Down On Claims Of ‘Middle Easterners’ In Caravan
Nicole Lafond
Vice President Mike Pence doubled down on President Trump’s claims that a caravan of Honduran immigrants headed to the U.S.-Mexico border is funded by left-leaning Latin American groups and contains “criminals” and people of Middle Eastern descent, despite Trump’s admission that he had “no proof” to support his claims.
“The caravan that’s making its way north was organized in Honduras, according to what the President of Honduras told me, was organized by left-wing groups, political organizations within Honduras. It was likely financed in part by Venezuela,” he told Politico Playbook Tuesday.
“Whatever the motivation of people in the caravan, we happen to know there are people with serious criminal histories in the caravan, we’ve been told by law enforcement in the region that there are individuals from the Middle East in the caravan,” he added. “The simple fact is that human traffickers and politico leftist organizations in Central America are driving this forward.”
Land O’Lakes’ Support Of Steve King Melts After White Nationalist Comments
Faced with a potential boycott of its products, Land O’Lakes, Inc., the agriculture cooperative, announced Tuesday that its political action committee “will no longer support Rep. Steve King moving forward.”
The company announced the decision in a press release on its website, saying it wanted its political giving “to be a positive force for good” and that it sought to ensure “that recipients of our contributions uphold our company’s values.”
That marked a harsher slap on King’s wrist than has been administered by House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) or National Republican Congressional Committee Chair Rep. Steve Stivers (R-OH), who have remained mum on King’s endorsements of white nationalism. Ryan, through a spokesperson, released a vague statementcondemning Naziism that did not mention King by name two weeks after King retweeted a British neo-Nazi.
According to campaign finance filings, Land O’Lakes, Inc. PAC’s last donation to King’s campaign — for $2,500 — occurred on June 21.
In 2015, Land O’Lakes, Inc. PAC donated $1,000 to King in the 2016 election cycle, $3,000 in the 2014 cycle, $3,500 in the 2012 cycle, and so on. PACs associated with Land O’Lakes donated to every one of King’s congressional campaigns, dating back to the 2002 election cycle. The Federal Election Commission does not track many types of spending meant to influence politics, such as so-called “dark money” paid through certain non-profit organizations.
Intel announced in an internal email Thursday that it was ending its financial support of King. Other corporations have continued their support; AT&T’s PAC gave King’s campaign $5,000 on Sept. 30, for example, totalling $10,000 this cycle.
King’s promotion of white supremacist talking points, while always known, has faced extra scrutiny recently. In August, during a trip funded by a Holocaust memorial group in which he toured Nazi death camps, Scalise gave an interviewto a magazine associated with the far-right Austrian Freedom Party, which was founded by a former Nazi.
In line with recent actions aligning himself with white supremacists — including by retweeting and endorsing them — King parroted their talking points in the interview, wondering aloud, “What does this diversity bring that we don’t already have? Mexican food, Chinese food, those things — well, that’s fine. But what does it bring that we don’t have that is worth the price? We have a lot of diversity within the U.S. already.”
Distinguishing the interview with the far-right magazine from the tours of Holocaust sites, King said he wanted a “Polish perspective.”
“I asked them what was worse, was it the Nazis or was it the Soviets?” he told the Washington Post.
King’s discussion with the magazine centered on a conspiracy promoted as a recruiting tool by white nationalists called the “great replacement.”
Robert Bowers, who was charged with killing 11 Jews in Saturday’s shooting of a Pittsburgh Synagogue, repeatedly posted online about his fear of foreigners replacing white Americans.
Mueller Refers to FBI Apparent Plot to Pay Women to Accuse Him of Sexual Harassment
Special Counsel Robert Mueller has reportedly referred to the FBI an allegedly apparent scheme to mount false sexual misconduct allegations against him.
The Atlantic’s Natasha Bertrand reported that journalists were informed about the apparent smear job by a woman claiming she was offered money to fabricate allegations of sexual misconduct against Mueller. The woman, a former paralegal for Mueller, says she was offered tens of thousands to sign a sworn affidavit making the allegation, by a man claiming to be working on behalf of conservative activist and noted Seth Rich conspiracy theorist Jack Burkman:
The special counsel’s office confirmed that the scheme was brought to its attention by several journalists who were told about it by a woman alleging that she herself had been offered roughly $20,000 by a man claiming to work for a GOP activist named Jack Burkman “to make accusations of sexual misconduct and workplace harassment against Robert Mueller.”
Law & Crime has noted how several journalists have been informed of a brewing plot to get Mueller’s former associates on board. Huffington Post’s Yashar Aliposted a tip on Twitter that he received several days ago that appeared to be from the woman:
13 days ago I received this tip alleging an attempt to pay off women to make up accusations of sexual misconduct against Special Counsel Bob Mueller. Other reporters received the same email. Now the Special Counsel’s office is telling us they’ve referred the matter to the FBI
Special counsel spokesman Peter Carr released this statement in response to the news:
When we learned last week of allegations that women were offered money to make false claims about the Special Counsel, we immediately referred the matter to the FBI for investigation.
Burkman claimed on Tuesday on Twitter that he’s holding an event at which Mueller’s first supposed “victim” will come forward.
Trump Jr. And Guilfoyle Release Ad ‘Together’ Targeting The ‘Liberal Mob’
Summer Concepcion
Donald Trump Jr. and former Fox News personality Kimberly Guilfoyle released a new ad titled “Together” Tuesday that targets the “mainstream media and the liberal mob.”
Trump Jr. and Guilfoyle, who are dating, are referred to as “Don & Kim” in the digital ad released by the pro-Trump super PAC America First Policies Guilfoyle currently works for.
Deciphering The Weirdest Episode Yet From The Mueller Russia Probe Saga
An email sent to several reporters claiming that there was a payoff scheme to encourage false allegations against special counsel Robert Mueller has earned a referral to the FBI.
The episode — among the oddest in a sprawling federal investigation that has included a $15,000 ostrich jacket, a bizarre cable TV news blitz by a former Trump advisor promising to fight a Mueller subpoena, and a cameo appearanceby a dog at grand jury testimony — is tough to unpack and not yet fully understood.
As murmurs about the claims of the supposed payoff scheme started to appear on Twitter Tuesday, Mueller’s spokesperson acknowledged the allegations in a statement to TPM and other outlets.
“When we learned last week of allegations that women were offered money to make false claims about the Special Counsel, we immediately referred the matter to the FBI for investigation,” Peter Carr, spokesman for the special counsel, said in a statement to TPM.
In recent days, a number of news outlets, including TPM, were the recipient of an email from someone who claimed to have worked with Mueller while she was a paralegal a law firm in the 1970s. The email, somewhat dramatically, recounted an offer by a mysterious man, who allegedly claimed to be working for GOP lobbyist Jack Burkman (pictured), to pay off the sender’s credit card debt and cut a check worth thousands of more dollars if she signed documents making sexual misconduct and workplace harassment allegations against Mueller.
“I don’t know what these people are looking for, but I’m not going to be part of some kind of Washington DC drama for any price,” the sender said in the email.
So far, no journalist has been able to publicly corroborate with independent reporting the sender’s account. It’s not even clear whether the woman exists.
However, reporters started hinting at the existence of the payoff claims after the pro-Trump Twitter personality Jacob Wohl hyped a coming “scandalous story” about Mueller. Burkman himself then began previewing the assault allegations he was going to reveal against Mueller.
This is not Burkman’s first entanglement with the Mueller’s probe. Last year, while former Trump campaign aide Rick Gates was under house arrest, Burkman hosted a sparsely attended fundraiser to raise money for Gates’ legal defense. A video Gates filmed for the event earned him a tongue-lashing by a federal judge, who had imposed a gag order on Gates’ case. Burkman called the judge “Stalin-esque.”
Now Burkman is promising to “unveil” a “victim” of Mueller’s at a press conference on Thursday at a Holiday Inn just outside of DC — the same hotel that was the site of his ill-advised Gates fundraiser.
Burkman has a habit of inserting himself into whatever the conservative cause célèbre is at any given moment. He promoted unfounded conspiracy theories about the late DNC staffer Seth Rich. He also advocated for demonstrations protesting the Dallas Cowboys’ decision to hire an openly gay football player to its practice squad.
“This isn’t something I take any delight in,” Burkman said in a Facebook video Tuesday. “It’s something I wish I didn’t have to do.”
As if things weren’t already taking a turn towards the deeply strange, later in the day Tuesday, after Carr issued his statement, Jim Hoft — the far-right conspiracy theorist also known as Gateway Pundit — posted allegations against Mueller with the subdued headline:
BREAKING REPORT — **EXCLUSIVE DOCUMENTS** : Special Counsel and Former FBI Director Robert Mueller Accused of Rape By ‘Very Credible Witness ‘
The heavily-redacted “documents” describe an alleged rape at a New York City hotel in 2010. Styled as a dossier of sorts, the documents bear a header “International Private Intelligence.”
Wohl’s role in the whole episode has also become a subject of scrutiny. According to Daily Beast, Wohl said that Burkman had hired to assist with his Mueller investigations someone named “Matthew Cohen,” whose LinkedIn describes him as managing partner at a private intel firm called Surefire Intelligence.
Surefire Intelligence, which has a relatively limited web presence, meanwhile, appears to have some connections to Wohl, though Wohl told NBC News he had not involved “in any investigations of any kind,” while denying any involvement with Surefire. The Surefire website’s domain records, however, list Wohl’s email, according to NBC News, and the phone number on its website led callers to voicemail message providing another phone number. Public records listed that number as belonging to Wohl’s mother, according to NBC News.