Donald Trump Announces 2016 White House Bid

spaminator

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Republicans and Democrats are both preparing for long legal battles over the 2024 election results
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Alanna Durkin Richer, Colleen Long And Lindsay Whitehurst
Published Oct 20, 2024 • 5 minute read

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Donald Trump, who still refuses to accept that he lost the 2020 election to Democrat Joe Biden, says he wants a presidential victory Nov. 5 to be so overwhelming that the results are “too big to rig.”


“We want a landslide,” he recently told supporters in Georgia. “We can’t let anything happen.”

No matter the margins, Republicans and Democrats are preparing for a potentially lengthy battle over the results once they come in. Dozens of lawsuits that could set the stage for challenges after the votes are counted are already playing out in courts across the country. Most have been filed by Republicans and their allies. Many of the cases involve challenges to mail-in balloting, ballots from overseas voters and claims of voting by people who are not U.S citizens.

Trump, who faces federal criminal charges over his efforts to overturn his 2020 defeat, has repeatedly declined to state unequivocally that he will accept this year’s results.


Democrats, meanwhile, warn that election deniers installed in key voting-related positions nationwide may refuse to certify legitimate results and prompt litigation.

“In 2020, the election deniers were improvisational. … Now that same election denialist impulse is far more organized, far more strategic and far better funded,” Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice, told reporters during a telephone briefing. “At the same time, the election system is far better able, we believe, to handle something like this.”

While partisan battles over voting rules have long been part of presidential campaigns, election litigation has soared in recent years. With money pouring in for legal fights and the number of outside groups involved in election litigation proliferating, the disputes are not likely slow down anytime soon.


“It’s not even just the parties — it’s outside organizations, and they’re fundraising on how they’re able to protect democracy, how they’re able to preserve the integrity of the election, whatever it might be,” said Derek Muller, an election law expert and professor at the University of Notre Dame Law School. “They have wealthy donors who are backing this litigation. So there doesn’t seem to be any de-escalation in sight.”

With a little over two weeks before Election Day, about 180 voting and election cases have been filed so far this year, according to Democratic lawyer Marc Elias, who founded the election litigation tracking group Democracy Docket.

It comes four years after Trump and his allies flooded the courts with lawsuits claiming fraud. Those filings were roundly rejected by judges nominated to the bench by presidents of both major political parties.


The rate of election litigation has nearly tripled since 2000, when the Supreme Court in a 5-4 vote effectively settled the election in favor of Republican George W. Bush over Democrat Al Gore, election law expert Rick Hasen, now at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Law, wrote in 2022.

The high court’s role in that race supercharged interest in election law, fueling a rise in litigation that accelerated in 2020 because of changes to voting rules during the coronavirus pandemic.

Changes to campaign finance rules a decade ago have allowed donors to give parties huge sums of cash specifically for legal fights. Election litigation these days is not always about winning in court, but also sending a political message to galvanize donors.


“It’s become part of the campaign to sort of show your stuff in court,” said Rebecca Green, a professor at William & Mary Law School and an election law expert. “It’s become common that campaigns will litigate as a matter of sort of headline drawing, getting a message out.”

Trump’s lies about losing the 2020 election have been adopted by many in his own party.

But in 2020, while he started off with a deep bench of sophisticated lawyers, most left the effort as Trump continued to make unfounded claims of voter fraud, even as his own administration insisted the election had been secure and there was no widespread fraud.

The Republican National Committee this spring launched what it described as an “unprecedented” election integrity program, with plans to have 100,000 volunteers and lawyers in key battleground states as part of a “commitment to ensuring transparency and fairness in the 2024 elections.”


“President Trump’s election integrity effort is dedicated to protecting every legal vote, mitigating threats to the voting process, and securing the election. While Democrats continue their election interference against President Trump and the American people, our operation is confronting their schemes and preparing for November,” said Claire Zunk, RNC elections integrity communications director. She said they were prepared to litigate.

Some of the cases currently in the courts appear unlikely to be resolved before Nov. 5, but the claims could come back after the votes are tallied to challenge the results in court, said Jess Marsden, counsel at the group Protect Democracy and director of its program to ensure free and fair elections.


The most important courtroom fights could be over rules for certifying the vote. There’s a new, faster review process for certification disputes under updates to the Electoral Count Reform Act passed by Congress in 2022. Similar to redistricting cases, certification disputes can go before a three-judge court in the state where they originated and be quickly appealed to the Supreme Court.

“I do suspect that might be utilized by losing candidates as a Hail Mary attempt, or in some cases, worse, a way to try to enlist the court in trying to change the outcome of the election,” said Wendy Weiser, vice president for democracy at the Brennan Center. “That said, it’s also a safeguard in case there’s been some shenanigans relating to certification.”


In Georgia last week, a judge declared that seven new election rules recently passed by the State Election Board are “illegal, unconstitutional and void.” That includes one that required the number of ballots to be hand-counted after the polls close. Another required county officials to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” before certifying results, but it did not specify what that means.

Republicans have appealed the judge’s decision invalidating the rules to the state’s highest court.

RNC Chair Michael Whatley called that ruling “the very worst of judicial activism.”

“By overturning the Georgia State Election Board’s common-sense rules passed to safeguard Georgia’s elections, the judge sided with the Democrats in their attacks on transparency, accountability and the integrity of our elections,” Whatley said in a statement. “We will not let this stand.”


There’s no legitimate way for a county or state to refuse to certify election results, but that doesn’t mean they won’t try, Weiser told reporters Wednesday. Even if they’re unsuccessful, those efforts can fuel conspiracy theories and “contribute to chaos and delays,” she said.

“If there are multiple efforts to refuse to certify simultaneously and a huge flurry of lawsuits simultaneously when the margin is very close, that will make it more challenging for election officials,” Weiser said.

___

Associated Press writers Kate Brumback in Atlanta and Christine Fernando in Chicago contributed to this report.
 

nallapati

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It’s wild to think how much the political landscape has changed since Trump first announced his bid in 2015. Now, with the 2024 election looming, we’re seeing both parties gearing up for what could be a messy legal showdown. The fact that Trump still won’t accept the 2020 results is a huge red flag, and it really sets the tone for this election.
 

spaminator

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Central Park Five sue Donald Trump for jogger case remarks made at presidential debate
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Terry Tang
Published Oct 21, 2024 • 2 minute read

The men formerly known as the Central Park Five before they were exonerated filed a defamation lawsuit on Monday against Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.


With Election Day two weeks away, the group accused the former president of making “false and defamatory statements” about them during last month’s presidential debate with Vice President Kamala Harris. The group is asking for a jury trial to determine compensatory and punitive damages.

“Defendant Trump falsely stated that plaintiffs killed an individual and pled guilty to the crime. These statements are demonstrably false,” the group wrote in the federal complaint.

The men are upset because Trump essentially “defamed them in front of 67 million people, which has caused them to seek to clear their names all over again,” co-lead counsel Shanin Specter told The Associated Press in an email.

Specter had no comment when asked if there were concerns some see the lawsuit as purely political because of the group’s support for Harris. “We are seeking redress in the courts,” Specter said.


Trump spokesman Steven Cheung decried the suit as “just another frivolous, Election Interference lawsuit, filed by desperate left-wing activists, in an attempt to distract the American people from Kamala Harris’s dangerously liberal agenda and failing campaign.”


Trump campaign officials did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

Yusef Salaam, Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Raymond Santana and Korey Wise were teenagers when they were accused of the 1989 rape and beating of a white woman jogger in New York City’s Central Park. The five, who are Black and Latino, said they confessed to the crimes under duress. They later recanted, pleading not guilty in court, and were later convicted after jury trials. Their convictions were vacated in 2002 after another person confessed to the crime.


After the crime, Trump purchased a full-page ad in the New York Times calling for the reinstatement of the death penalty. At the time, many in New York believed Trump’s ad was akin to calling for the teens to be executed. The jogger case was Trump’s first foray into tough-on-crime politics that preluded his full-throated populist political persona. Since then, dog whistles and overtly racist rhetoric have been fixtures of Trump’s public life.

In the Sept. 10 debate, Trump misstated key facts of the case when Harris brought up the matter.

“They admitted, they said they pled guilty and I said, ‘well, if they pled guilty they badly hurt a person, killed a person ultimately … And they pled guilty, then they pled not guilty,” Trump said.


He appeared to be confusing guilty pleas with confessions. Also, no victim died.

The now Exonerated Five, including Salaam, who is now a New York City councilman, have been campaigning for Harris. Some of them spoke at the Democratic National Convention in August, calling out Trump for never apologizing for the newspaper ad.

They have also joined civil rights leader the Rev. Al Sharpton for a get-out-the-vote bus tour.

Prior defamation suits involving Trump have led to sizable amounts awarded to the plaintiffs. In January, a jury awarded $83.3 million to advice columnist E. Jean Carroll over Trump’s continued social media attacks against her claims he sexually assaulted her in a Manhattan department store in 1996. In May 2023, a jury found Trump liable for sexually abusing her and issued a $5 million judgement.
 

spaminator

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Laura Loomer sues Bill Maher, HBO after 'malicious' Trump sex joke
'He’s been a dog for too long,' Maher said last month when he accused right-wing pundit of sleeping with Republican presidential nominee


Author of the article:Mark Daniell
Published Oct 22, 2024 • Last updated 2 days ago • 3 minute read

Prominent right-wing personality Laura Loomer has filed a $150-million defamation lawsuit against Bill Maher and HBO for suggesting she “has committed adultery with President Donald Trump”


In a statement shared with Postmedia, Loomer’s attorney Larry Klayman called Maher a “known Trump hater.”

“Ms. Loomer has been a strong advocate for President Donald Trump in her profession as a conservative activist and investigative journalist over the past decade,” Klayman wrote. “Ms. Loomer promotes individual freedoms, strong national security, secure and closed borders, and constitutional conservative values generally, all of which are in league with President Trump’s pro-American policies and agenda.

“Accordingly, she became a target of Bill Maher and Home Box Office, both of whom advocate for Democrat Party officials and values. They attacked Ms. Loomer with defamatory statements as a vehicle to harm President Trump and his campaign for the presidency of the United States, and to harm Ms. Loomer’s credibility.”

The legal filing quotes jokes that Maher made on the Sept. 13 edition of Real Time on HBO in which he said: “I think maybe Laura Loomer is in an arranged relationship to affect the election because she’s very close to Trump. She’s 31, looks like his type.

“We did an editorial here a few years ago … it was basically, who’s Trump f***ing? Because, I said, you know, it’s not nobody. He’s been a dog for too long, and it’s not Melania. I think we may have our answer this week. I think it might be Laura Loomer.”


Klayman called it an “outrage that Maher and Home Box Office would try to destroy a professional woman in their zeal to harm President Trump.”

He went on to add that he asked Maher to retract his statement and “publicly apologize” on Real Time for his comments about Loomer and give her a chance to appear on the show, which he refused.

In the lawsuit, Loomer contends that giving her name as the answer to “who’s Trump f***ing?” amounts to him “falsely and maliciously” implying she “committed adultery with Donald Trump.”

In the lawsuit, Klayman maintains that the comment “is reasonably understood by any reasonable viewer as Defendant Maher making a factual statement of objectively verifiable fact of and concerning Ms. Loomer.”


Back in 2013, Trump sued Maher after an appearance on The Tonight Show, in which the comedian offered to donate $5 million to a charity of Donald’s choice if he could prove his father wasn’t an orangutan.

“The colour of his hair and the colour of an orange orangutan is the only two things in nature of the same colour,” Maher said.

“I hope it’s not true, but unless he comes up with proof … I’m willing to offer $5 million to Donald Trump that he can donate to a charity of his choice – Hair Club for Men; The Institute for Incorrigible Douche-bag-ery. Whatever charity.”

The joke was a dig at Trump’s relentless efforts to uncover facts about then-President Barack Obama’s heritage. In 2012, Trump promised to give $5 million to the politician’s favourite organization if he released his passport records and proved beyond doubt he’s an American citizen.


Trump launched a $5-million legal action after providing Maher with his New York birth certificate that proved his father wasn’t an ape. But he dropped his suit eight weeks later.

In his statement to Postmedia, Klayman said Maher’s quip about Loomer “put her at great risk.”

“Neither Ms. Loomer nor I will entertain politically motivated and unfounded and malicious defamation and threats,” he wrote. “Thus, both Maher and Home Box Office will now have to answer to a jury of their peers. When this is over, Maher, the self-styled political pundit, and his Hollywood network, HBO, will not be laughing.”

Maher has not publicly responded to Loomer’s lawsuit.

mdaniell@postmedia.com
 

spaminator

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Rudy Giuliani ordered to turn over NYC apartment, 26 watches to Georgia election workers
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Dave Collins
Published Oct 22, 2024 • 4 minute read

Rudy Giuliani must turn over sports memorabilia and other prized possessions to two Georgia election workers who won a $148 million defamation judgment against him, including his New York City apartment, more than two dozen luxury watches and a 1980 Mercedes once owned by movie star Lauren Bacall, a judge ruled Tuesday.


But U.S. District Judge Lewis Liman in Manhattan also said Giuliani does not have to give the election workers three New York Yankees World Series rings or his Florida condominium — for now _ noting those assets are tied up in other litigation.

The property Giuliani must relinquish is expected to fetch several million dollars for Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Wandrea “Shaye” Moss. They won the $148 million judgment over Giuliani’s false ballot fraud claims against them related to the 2020 presidential election. They said Giuliani pushed Donald Trump’s lies about the election being stolen, which led to death threats that made them fear for their lives.

Under Tuesday’s order, Giuliani must turn over within seven days his Manhattan apartment, estimated at more than $5 million, as well his interest in about $2 million that he says Trump’s 2020 presidential campaign owes him for his services.


Also on the list of assets that must be given to Freeman and Moss are a 1980 Mercedes-Benz SL 500 previous owned by Bacall, a shirt and picture signed, respectively, by Yankees legends Joe DiMaggio and Reggie Jackson, a signed Yankee Stadium picture, a diamond ring, costume jewelry and 26 watches, including a Rolex, five Shinolas, two Bulovas and a Tiffany & Co.

In court documents filed earlier this year, Giuliani estimated the worth of the Mercedes at about $25,000, and the watches, World Series rings and costume jewelry at about $30,000. He said the value of his sports memorabilia was unknown.

One of those watches was given to Giuliani by his grandfather and he asked that he be allowed to keep it because of its sentimental value. But Liman rejected the request, saying Giuliani could have had it exempted if he proved it was worth less than $1,000 but he did not do so. The judge added, “However painful the circumstances, a party cannot claim that every family heirloom should be exempt.”


Liman wrote that Giuliani’s surrendering of the assets to Freeman and Moss would “ensure that the liquidation of the transferred assets is accomplished quickly and consistently by the Plaintiffs’ chosen counsel, maximizing the sale value of the unique and intangible items and therefore increasing the likelihood of satisfaction of the Plaintiffs’ judgment.”

Lawyers for Giuliani did not immediately return email messages on Tuesday.

To date, Giuliani has not paid Freeman and Moss anything.

“We are proud that our clients will finally begin to receive some of the compensation to which they are entitled for Giuliani’s actions,” Aaron Nathan, a lawyer for Freeman and Moss, said in a statement. “This outcome should send a powerful message that there is a price to pay for those who choose to intentionally spread disinformation.”


Giuliani had asked the judge to bar Freeman and Moss from selling any of his assets until after his appeal of the $148 million judgment is completed. Liman also turned down that request, saying Giuliani could have asked the federal court in Washington, D.C., where Freeman and Moss won their defamation case, to stay any asset sales pending his appeal, but did not.

“The Court also does not doubt that certain of the items may have sentimental value to Defendant,” the judge wrote. “But that does not entitle Defendant to continued enjoyment of the assets to the detriment of the Plaintiffs to whom he owes approximately $150 million. It is, after all, the underlying policy of these New York statutes that ‘no man should be permitted to live at the same time in luxury and in debt.”‘


As for the World Series rings, Giuliani’s son, Andrew, filed court documents earlier this month saying he actually is the rightful owner. He said his father gave him four rings — one for each of the Yankees’ championships in 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000 — as gifts in 2018. Rudy Giuliani received the rings during his tenure as mayor of New York City. The younger Giuliani’s claim is pending in federal court in Manhattan.

Freeman and Moss also asked Liman to order Rudy Giuliani to turn over his condo in Palm Beach, Florida, estimated to be worth more than $3 million. But that property is tied up in other litigation, with Giuliani claiming it should be exempt because it is his primary residence. Freeman and Moss have a lien on the Florida property.

Liman said he would take up the Florida condo at a hearing set for Oct. 28, and he barred Rudy Giuliani from selling the property or taking any action that would diminish its value in the meantime.

After the $148 million verdict, Giuliani filed for bankruptcy, which froze attempts by Freeman and Moss to collect the award. But a judge in July threw out the case citing repeated “uncooperative conduct,” including a failure to comply with court orders and disclose sources of income.
 

spaminator

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Army releases redacted police report on altercation during Trump’s Arlington cemetery visit
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Lolita C. Baldor
Published Oct 25, 2024 • 3 minute read

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Army has released an almost entirely redacted version of the police report describing when a staffer for Donald Trump’s campaign reportedly shoved an Arlington National Cemetery employee who was trying to prevent them from photographing a ceremony to honor service members killed in the Afghanistan War withdrawal.


Federal law prohibits campaign or election-related activities within Army national military cemeteries. The four sentences visible in the executive summary of the report released under court order Friday block out a key word that appears to describe the Trump campaign staffer shoving the cemetery employee out of the way.

It does say the Trump staffer used both hands while trying to move past the cemetery employee. Both the names are redacted, and the sworn statement the cemetery worker gave to police is completely blacked out.

Officials previously said the former president’s staffer pushed the cemetery worker when she was trying to prevent two people from filming and photographing Trump’s visit in August to gravesites in Section 60, a hallowed section where U.S. forces killed in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are buried.


The report says the cemetery worker declined medical treatment and said she did not want to press charges.

A lawsuit demanding the release of the police report was filed by Washington-based government transparency group American Oversight, and a federal judge ordered it be made public by Friday. The group posted the report on its website.

Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, is in a tight race against Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and the altercation raised questions about the politicization of the military by his campaign.

Trump was at the cemetery at the invitation of service members’ families and brought staff to document the visit. He later shared a video from it on TikTok. The video showed scenes of him at the cemetery and includes a voiceover of the Republican presidential nominee blaming the Biden administration for the “disaster” of the withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021.


Chioma Chukwu, interim executive director of American Oversight, said in a statement that the group is pleased it was able to get the report released so that the public can see “that there is still an ongoing federal law enforcement investigation into the August incident at Arlington National Cemetery.”

Chukwu said the conduct of Trump and his staff “aligns with his history of politicizing the military and violating clear ethical boundaries, and it’s time for the public to have all the facts.”

In a letter accompanying the report, Army senior counsel Paul DeAgostino said the redactions were done to protect personal privacy and information compiled for law enforcement purposes. He said the records are part of an ongoing investigation and their release “could reasonably be expected to interfere with ongoing enforcement proceedings.”


The Army echoed DeAgostino’s comment, saying in a statement that it released the report to comply with the court order, adding that the police investigation “remains open and we are therefore unable to provide further information at this time.”

The employee declined to press charges, so it is unclear what law enforcement proceedings are ongoing.

Families of three of the service members killed in a suicide bombing during the chaotic Afghanistan withdrawal had invited Trump to a ceremony marking the third anniversary of the attack. They said the former president knew their children’s stories and have blamed the Biden administration for their deaths.

Some of the families of those service members spoke out in support of Trump at the Republican National Convention in July, in part to blunt criticism that Trump wasn’t supportive enough of veterans.


In previous comments, the Trump campaign has claimed the Republican presidential nominee’s team was granted access to have a photographer, contested the allegation that a campaign staffer had pushed the cemetery official and pushed back on any notion that the cemetery official had been unfairly targeted.

A defense official previously said the Trump campaign was warned about not taking photographs in Section 60 before their arrival and the altercation.

During a campaign event in Michigan several days after the incident, Trump said family members had asked to take a photo with him at the cemetery.

“They ask me to have a picture, and they say I was campaigning,” he complained without addressing the TikTok video.
 

spaminator

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Trudeau's brother says Trump win good for Canada

Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Oct 28, 2024 • Last updated 15 hours ago • 4 minute read

Kyle Kemper, half brother of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, is out on the campaign trail with Bobby Kennedy on the Make America Healthy Again bus pushing for a President Donald Trump win that he says will be good for Canada
Kyle Kemper, half brother of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, is pushing for a Donld Trump win.
Donald Trump may not be counting on the support of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau anytime soon.


But the Republican presidential candidate received an endorsement from Trudeau’s brother Monday.

“Donald Trump, I really believe in my gut, my heart, that he’s a genuine person,” Kyle Kemper said in social media posts from Florida Monday. “He wants to leave a good legacy.”

Even more important, wearing a MAHA (Make American Healthy Again) cowboy hat, Kemper said a Trump presidential win on Nov. 5 will be good for Canada, too.

“What does a Trump presidency mean for Canada?” the son of Justin Trudeau’s mother, Margaret, said in a four-minute video. “In a nutshell, it’s going to mean a shift in the vibration of Canada; it’s going to open up the opportunity for government innovation, within Canada, likely massive tax reform in Canada.”


Kemper, who has been driving around in the Robert F. Kennedy bus for the past year with his wife and six kids, is supporting Trump, as well. Kyle told me he thinks a Republican administration in the United States will help create boom times in Canada.

“There is no question about it,” he told The Toronto Sun.

In the video, Kemper said “the business sector in Canada recognizes how big American business is.” While the media “are going to scare you over the next little bit that it’s all doom and f——- gloom. Guess what guys? It’s not.”

It’s the opposite, he insisted.

“Trump on the Joe Rogan Experience said he’s open to getting rid of income tax,” said Kemper. ”Oh my God, if that happens, that is going to unlock so much wealth. All of a sudden, the need for offshore accounts, Swiss bank accounts, funny money managing to reduce your tax exposure, changes.”


Kemper said ending income tax would be an “unbelievable moment to break free of government slavery tools.”


If it happens in America, could it happen in Canada?

Unlikely, under his brother’s leadership. But Kemper hinted he sees a new government coming in the Great White North, too, and that positive changes could result.


“This (current) corporate government in Canada has no chance of surviving,” he said. “People are over it.”

It is, Kemper said, just a matter of time until his brother moves on to a new career. He loves his brother but has been critical of his strident approach over things like vaccine mandates and the censoring of free speech.

“They are riding it out and all getting their pensions,” he said of the Trudeau Liberals.


In the meantime, with while opinion polls show the American presidential race is too close to call, Kemper said what he has seen with his eyes is new, big thinking on the United States political menu.

Driving all across American on the Kennedy bus, which has been renamed the MAHA bus, Kemper said, he sees massive Trump support everywhere he goes — in red states, blue states, or any state for that matter.


“Trump is way ahead,” Kemper said.

And, he added, if he’s right, his home country will benefit. Holding both Canadian and American citizenship, Trudeau’s younger half-brother said there is going to be a massive rebirth for both countries, and it will start with a Trump win next week.

Kyle Kemper, younger half brother to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, with his wife, Brittany, and their newborn daughter, Ayla, are in Florida campaigning for Donald Trump.
Kyle Kemper, younger half brother to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, with his wife, Brittany, and their newborn daughter, Ayla, are in Florida campaigning for Donald Trump.
“I know so many Canadians that left Canada after becoming successful because the tax regime is crazy in Canada. It’s not a good environment to operate in,” he said. “So, you go where you can retain your wealth. All that money leaves Canada. You fix that tax system, guess what, all that money comes back to Canada and what that means is it’s going to get spent in Canada — on buildings, infrastructure, technology, community.”


Kemper said his message is simple: “Let’s go, guys. The golden age is cometh and doneth. I will say that will not happen underneath a Kamala presidency.”

And “Bobby Kennedy” will be a big part of making all of it happen.

“President Trump trusts Bobby, and he knows he has a wealth of knowledge that will help turn things around,” he said. “If he is successful next Tuesday, Trump will have Kennedy on speed dial.”

While his brother, Justin, may not have commented much during this campaign, Kemper said he will be loud and proud over the next week trying to help Trump regain the White House.

“Let’s go, let’s grow,” said Kemper in his video. “Let’s make America healthy again, let’s make Canada healthy again, make Canada prosperous again and make America prosperous again.”

If it happens, it will be thanks to some help from the brother of Canada’s prime minister.
 

justfred

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Dec 26, 2004
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Drumheller
Well it appears that old Dollie may be the winner of the election, as of late November 5th. With the threats that he has made against his enemies, they would have the authority to defend themselves, with them selves given immunity under the constitution, and of course, the president being able to give pardons. What could that do the protect themselves? Civil War waiting to start, or just continue?