President Trump should lead a critical faction for Republicans instead of starting a new political party. He continued the change the Tea Party started.
With President Biden inaugurated, the race to lead the opposition begins now as ambitious Republicans look ahead to 2024 and start taking steps to lay the foundation for a White House bid.
Biden begins presidency caught between GOP opposition and demands of far Left Print this article
President-elect Joe Biden is about to be sworn into office, when he will immediately face the left wing of his party and large Republican minorities in both chambers of Congress pulling him in opposite directions.
Before the Nov. 3 elections, Biden appeared confident that Democrats would sweep the House and Senate. That would have made it possible for him to enact Franklin Roosevelt-esque reform to deal with the public health and economic crises.
Fast-forward to Wednesday, and Biden does have Democratic majorities in both chambers of Congress. The problem is House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is clinging on to power by the narrowest margin since Republicans majority in 2001. The Senate, meanwhile, is split 50-50 seats apiece. Democrats will only control the body from Wednesday, when Vice President-elect Kamala Harris can cast tiebreaking votes.
AP Photo/Susan Walsh
The election is over, so the left’s mask is dropping quickly. Democrats, led by Joe Biden, their corporate masters, and the corporate media are pouncing on the Capitol riots to further divide us according to their preferred narrative. This is necessary because their stated policies hurt people according to their economic status. For example, regulations, mandates, and legislation that lock down small businesses, restrict fracking for natural gas, and require printing more money hurt middle- and working-class families. Defunding the police and selective prosecution hurts the same groups, as well as low-income households.
This was evident to Democrats and their allies in the outcome of the 2020 election. Americans had not soured on Republicans, who made gains in the House and state legislatures. Biden’s White House win was buoyed by massive donations from Mark Zuckerberg’s wife through a non-profit to fund get-out-the-vote activities in blue areas of swing
Republican insiders fear President Trump’s brazen attempt to overturn the November election could haunt the party for years, jeopardizing otherwise excellent GOP prospects for winning control of Congress in 2022.