Trump to Deliver First State of the Union Address Amid Remarkable Turmoil and Concern
Trump to Deliver First State of the Union Address Amid Remarkable Turmoil and Concernby wpjljron
Tuesday, January 30th, 2018.Trump to Deliver First State of the Union Address Amid Remarkable Turmoil and ConcernBut there is a flip side. Representative Paul Gosar, Republican of Arizona, has called the cops. Today, Congressman Paul Gosar contacted the U.S. Capitol Police, as well as Attorney General Jeff Sessions, asking they consider checking identification of all attending the State of the Union address and arresting any illegal aliens in attendance. Rep. […]
How Trump Steered Supporters Into Unwitting Donations nytimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nytimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Doug Mills/The New York Times President Donald Trump at a campaign event on behalf of Georgia s then Republican senators, Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, at an airport in Valdosta, Ga., Dec. 5, 2020. Trump and the Republican Party raised $255.4 million in the eight-plus weeks following the Nov. 3 election, new federal filings show, as he sought to undermine and overturn the results with unfounded accusations of fraud. By Shane Goldmacher and Rachel Shorey The New York Times
Former President Donald Trump and the Republican Party leveraged false claims of voter fraud and promises to overturn the election to raise more than a quarter-billion dollars in November and December as hundreds of thousands of trusting supporters listened and opened their wallets.
Donald Trump’s future: Tons of cash and plenty of options for spending it
When US President Donald Trump departs the White House, he will have a huge pile of cash to fuel his future ambitions. He can hold rallies, hire staff and even lay groundwork for a potential 2024 run. New York Times
US President Donald Trump (Image: Reuters)
Donald J. Trump will exit the White House as a private citizen next month perched atop a pile of campaign cash unheard-of for an outgoing president, and with few legal limits on how he can spend it.
Deflated by a loss he has yet to acknowledge, Trump has cushioned the blow by coaxing huge sums of money from his loyal supporters often under dubious pretenses raising roughly $250 million since Election Day along with the national party.