trump
For Trump's Fans, foes, frenemies and Twitter followers.
Trump Delivers Attacks and Deflects Blame for Americans’ Economic Worries. AI-Generated.
As Americans continue to grapple with the high cost of living, former President Donald Trump has returned to a familiar political strategy: aggressive attacks on opponents paired with a sustained effort to deflect blame for economic anxiety. In speeches, interviews, and social media posts, Trump has framed rising prices, housing stress, and job uncertainty as the direct result of his rivals’ leadership, while positioning himself as the only figure capable of restoring economic stability.
By Jameel Jamali4 months ago in The Swamp
The BBC Asked For It.
The BBC, when it doctored Trump's speech, knew exactly what it was doing. When Trump stood at the podium and told his followers, "To fight like hell"! The next moment, his followers stormed the Capitol Building in Washington. This is where the US Congress meets to certify the results of a presidential election. His followers stormed the building to disrupt the certification that Joe Biden had won.
By Nicholas Bishop4 months ago in The Swamp
Trump Says He’s Pardoned Tina Peters — But Colorado Says “Not So Fast”. AI-Generated.
Every few months, the political world gets a story that feels like it was pulled straight from a legal drama. This week’s episode stars former President Donald Trump, a Colorado elections clerk, and a pardon that… well… isn’t actually a pardon.
By Aadil shanawar4 months ago in The Swamp
Eileen Higgins and the New Direction of Miami’s Mayoral Race
Miami’s political landscape shifted dramatically as voters turned out for one of the most closely watched mayoral elections in recent years. With national attention fixed on South Florida, Eileen Higgins, a well-known county commissioner and longtime community advocate, emerged as a central figure in the Miami mayoral race. Her influence, messaging, and policy priorities played an undeniable role in shaping how residents viewed the future of the city.
By KAMRAN AHMAD4 months ago in The Swamp
Is Al-Sharaa’s Syria A Success?
Electricity isn’t something most of us think about. We flip a switch, the lights come on, and that’s that. But in Syria—where infrastructure has spent more than a decade in ruins—48 hours of uninterrupted electricity can feel like a revelation.
By Lawrence Lease4 months ago in The Swamp
Charlie Kirk The Rise Controversy and Influence Behind Americas Viral Conservative Voice
American politics has always moved fast, but sometimes a personality appears that rises far more quickly than the usual pace. In recent years, Charlie Kirk has become one of those names that suddenly enter the national conversation and refuse to leave it. Whether people agree with him or strongly oppose him, one fact is undeniable. Charlie Kirk has become one of the most talked about and most searched conservative figures in the United States.
By Abid Ali Khan4 months ago in The Swamp
Explaining Critical Race Theory
You all know how I feel about uneducated opinions. Right? Opinions in which a person hates something without having ANY knowledge as to what this something is. Doing that is as close to SHEER stupidity as you can get. In this world where we ALL walk around with small mobile COMPUTERS in our pockets, which we can use to GOOGLE things before we speak or post online about it, you NEVER have to look uneducated or stupid... if you put the effort in to actually KNOW what you're talking about.
By Hope Martin4 months ago in The Swamp
Tanking
Introduction Every day, I see memes and posts telling me Trump and Farage's popularity ratings are tanking, and the Tories are a spent party. In the USA, the GOP are still in power, the Democrats are generally in the pockets of big money, same in the UK with the Labour Party.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred - EBA4 months ago in The Swamp
The Cracks in the Coalition: Inside the Unraveling of Trump’s Once-Unstoppable Alliance
When Donald Trump descended that now-legendary golden escalator inside Trump Tower on June 16th, 2015, he launched what most pundits assumed would be a doomed vanity campaign. What followed, of course, was anything but. Trump assembled one of the most unusual political coalitions in modern American history: Rust Belt factory workers and Wall Street donors, rural evangelicals and suburban business owners, border hawks and free-market Republicans. Groups that historically regarded each other with suspicion—or outright hostility—somehow found themselves voting in the same direction.
By Lawrence Lease4 months ago in The Swamp









