Today's News Stories

November 12, 2022
|

On Friday, we featured a reader letter on the future of the Republican Party as it relates to President Trump and the way he’s handling –- or not handling –- this post-election moment. She felt that it’s time for Trump to step back.

Trump has been reacting wildly on social media (Truth Social now instead of Twitter) in the very style that at times has put off even some of his most ardent supporters, and newly incomprehensible as well. He’s coming off as vengeful and bitter, and that’s not a good look if he’s getting ready to announce another run for President.

Certainly the pressure was on him to provide the coattails for the GOP, especially for certain candidates he’d endorsed. And the outcome is turning out to be disappointing and uneven, given the expectations many of us had. Losing the House would have been a disaster in many ways, but at this writing, late Friday, we’re almost sure of taking it. Still, another disappointment has hit, as it was reported Friday that Democrat Sen. Mark Kelly, a reliable Biden rubber-stamper, will keep his seat, with a win over GOP candidate Blake Masters in Arizona.

Note:  In speaking of this apparent win, I’m setting aside for the moment the serious vote-counting issues in Arizona and Nevada, which are addressed elsewhere in the newsletter. On Friday, we also asked questions about the Maricopa County recorder’s office, which it seems has found a loophole in Arizona law to continue taking money from an organization funded by Mark Zuckerberg. There’s no reason to trust the election in Arizona when it’s this partisan and even run by none other than gubernatorial candidate Katie Hobbs, Kari Lake’s GOP opponent!

But, aside from that, it does appear that there was quite a red wave, much more, I'm sorry to say, than is apparent in the appropriation of actual seats. Aaron Kliegman reported for JUST THE NEWS that according to Cook Political Report, Republican actually won 52.3 percent of the total ballots cast, at least as of late November 10, with the Democrats coming in considerably lower at just 46.2 percent. We checked for an update early November 12, and Republicans were still in the lead, though their margin was a little narrower, 51.8 percent.

This report is updated regularly, so you can check here to see how we’re doing.

https://www.cookpolitical.com/charts/house-charts/national-house-vote-tracker/2022

Kliegman wrote: “It’s unclear at this point what explains the glaring incongruity between the GOP’s underwhelming performance in terms of winning seats on the one hand and its significant lead in the popular vote on the other.” That’s something to look at, certainly. But those overall percentages are at least something to celebrate --- and they’re no doubt very concerning to Democrats looking ahead to the next election.  Marc Elias must be lying awake nights coming up with more ideas for putting a thumb on the scale in 2024.

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/red-wave-after-all-gop-winning-popular-vote-wide-margin-despite

Certain races, however, particularly the Senate race in Pennsylvania where Trump-backed Dr. Mehmet Oz lost to cognitively-impaired far-leftist schlub John Fetterman, so irked President Trump that he took to his own social media platform, Truth Social, to say some extremely ill-advised things. The worst of all was his totally nonsensical jab at Virginia GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin, which seems as though it might have been posted while Trump was under heavy medication. (One almost hopes we could find out that it was.) In a rant saying Youngkin wouldn’t have been able to win the governor’s race without him, he referred to the name Youngkin –- “Young Kin” –- as “sounding Chinese.”

This comment, seemingly from the planet Saturn, came on the heels of Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears’ remark that with these midterm election results, Trump should leave GOP politics. “A true leader understands when they have become a liability,” she told FOX NEWS on Thursday. “A true leader understands that it’s time to step off the stage, and the voters have given us that very clear message.”
Yes, that comment was surely upsetting fro Trump to hear.  But he reacted early Friday morning by taking that swipe at Youngkin, perhaps unwittingly proving Sears’ point.

Youngkin stayed above this. “Listen, you all know me,” he told reporters. “I do not call people names. I really work hard to bring people together...that’s not the way I roll and not the way I behave.”

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/all-things-trump/youngkin-responds-trump-dig-thats-not-way-i-roll

The NEW YORK POST spoke to sources who had been around Trump as returns came in, and they didn’t paint a pretty picture. Trump had focused his ire on the increasingly popular GOP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis when DeSantis had said nothing to provoke him, violating President Reagan’s “11th Commandment” about not speaking ill of others in the party. Trump succeeded only in making Republicans long for someone like Ronald Reagan at the helm of our party instead of what we have. And that makes the more measured DeSantis look even better.

https://nypost.com/2022/11/11/donald-trump-is-ranting-and-raving-over-lackluster-midterm-results-sources/

Given what Trump has been put through by his political enemies ever since he first announced he was running for President, it’s amazing he came through it in one piece. He is still standing after attempts on every front to destroy him, and we love him for that. But he needs to demonstrate for us that the saying, “What does not kill us makes us stronger,” is true in his case. (Research has shown that this is not generally true.) Trump needs to be stronger, not flailing. Wiser, not more emotional. More strategic, not more impulsive. If he has been weakened, if he is now more of a political liability, he’ll need to understand that it’s time to embark on another phase of life, outside of politics, for the good of the country he loves.

Given all that the left have done to try to take Trump out, how ironic would it be if they were able to just stand back now and let him do it to himself?

On the other hand, when Dan Bongino addressed this issue during his Friday podcast, he said he’s not worried that a primary contest between Trump and DeSantis will weaken the party. Judging from history, he believes this would strengthen it, no matter how much aggravation and airing of dirty laundry is involved. It’s good, he said, “because by the time you get to the general, all the dirty laundry’s been aired.” He also reminded us how hard Trump campaigned for Ron DeSantis in his first, very close election, saying that’s probably what placed him in the governor’s chair. He credited Trump for Florida’s move to “red.”

But Trump was certainly wrong, Bongino (who lives in Florida) said, to call DeSantis an “average” governor, when he is an excellent governor. “He took what Trump started,” he said, “and ran with it in the state of Florida.”

“The best approach right now is to slow down,” he cautioned. It should be about the party right now, and the races currently at stake. “There’s no rush,” he said; “there’ll be more than enough time to attack each other [on issues].’ He’s confident they’re “not gonna hurt each other” but strongly warns they must NOT make it personal, because voters will be deeply alienated by that. I would say this warning might have come too late for Trump, though, as we’re already seeing him alienate them.

What do you think? Here’s the podcast; his remarks on Trump/DeSantis start about 43 minutes in…

https://bongino.com/ep-1893-about-that-trump-desantis-feud

Leave a Comment

Note: Fields marked with an * are required.

Your Information
Your Comment
BBML accepted!
Captcha

More Stories

A bounce back?

Inconvenient Truth

Comments 341-350 of 403

  • Jody Maas

    11/12/2022 12:47 PM

    Shame on you, Mike Huckabee. Donald Trump is not God Almighty. How many YEARS would you or your family take other spitting on you.

  • Roger Janosek

    11/12/2022 12:46 PM

    I use to be a stanch Trump supporter and loved him as a president. HOWEVER, his personal attacks on other key republicans will give him no transaction and only alienate him from a bid at 2024. I'll vote for him but he has to be the last Republican standing.

  • Larry Garrison

    11/12/2022 12:46 PM

    I think the math makes this simple. 30% of the people will vote for Trump regardless of what he does or says. They are part of the cult following. 25% of the Republicans I know will NEVER vote for him regardless of what he does or says and he is constantly turning away independent voters and any Democrats in the margins. He is simply never going to be elected to anything meaningful again. He has too many issues, too much baggage and is too arrogant to address the areas that are within his control. Need someone (anyone) else. Period dot com.

  • Sandi Linsteadt

    11/12/2022 12:45 PM

    Thank you for expressing so well my own feelings about former president Trump's recent behavior. I had come to respect him for the way he led the country, but have never been a fan of his bragging and name calling. In the past few days he has come across as a petulant child, not someone who can repair the damage done by the current administration and bring our country together. I pray he will have the courage and wisdom to apologize to those he has attempted to demean.

  • Vincent M Tedone MD

    11/12/2022 12:43 PM

    It is time for Trump to step down. He is too divisive and the only way Reps lose in 2024 is if Trump heads the Rep ticket.
    DeSantis will give us good policies without the Trump baggage.
    We will see if Trump is a true patriot by his decision.

  • Diane DeLallo

    11/12/2022 12:43 PM

    Sadly you are right. President Trump had his day and it's time for him to step down, which he will not do. What comes out of his mouth is vengeful and abhorrent. The only problem he was unable to keep was to be presidential if elected. I ignored his mouth and supported his policies because our government needed them desperately and moreover needs them now. Sadly he has become too negative and even more vengeful.
    I hope Governor DeSantis stays out of it this time and waits till 2028. The smart move. Keep Florida red!
    Make America red in 2028.

  • Colette Wagner

    11/12/2022 12:42 PM

    I agree that Trump needs to step back and take a different path right now. He won’t because he’s a narcissist. He could be more of behind the scenes advisor and get more done to help this country. He knows what needs to be done, but he is too much of a distraction as President. Descant is would be a better choice as President. He would get more done without all the personal attacks and conflicts.

  • Susan Specht

    11/12/2022 12:41 PM

    I will not be voting or supporting Trump as I have in the past. He is too erratic and out of control
    with his comments. I do not need to hear another campaign of name calling, which he is so
    good at!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Maria Robles

    11/12/2022 12:41 PM

    I have to say President Trump was a great President but I think its time for him to step aside. Sadly many people do dislike the way he talks and will vote even for a Democrat for the same reason. I know because many friends and family members did not vote for him for the same reason. I think DeSantis would be a great candidate.

  • Alison Worcester

    11/12/2022 12:41 PM

    President Trump has been my 1st pick for the 2024 Presidential Election, however, I'm having second thoughts because of the way he's been putting down other Republicans that I admire such as Governor Ron DeSantis and Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Election 2024 Coverage

November 12, 2022
|

On Friday, we featured a reader letter on the future of the Republican Party as it relates to President Trump and the way he’s handling –- or not handling –- this post-election moment. She felt that it’s time for Trump to step back.

Trump has been reacting wildly on social media (Truth Social now instead of Twitter) in the very style that at times has put off even some of his most ardent supporters, and newly incomprehensible as well. He’s coming off as vengeful and bitter, and that’s not a good look if he’s getting ready to announce another run for President.

Certainly the pressure was on him to provide the coattails for the GOP, especially for certain candidates he’d endorsed. And the outcome is turning out to be disappointing and uneven, given the expectations many of us had. Losing the House would have been a disaster in many ways, but at this writing, late Friday, we’re almost sure of taking it. Still, another disappointment has hit, as it was reported Friday that Democrat Sen. Mark Kelly, a reliable Biden rubber-stamper, will keep his seat, with a win over GOP candidate Blake Masters in Arizona.

Note:  In speaking of this apparent win, I’m setting aside for the moment the serious vote-counting issues in Arizona and Nevada, which are addressed elsewhere in the newsletter. On Friday, we also asked questions about the Maricopa County recorder’s office, which it seems has found a loophole in Arizona law to continue taking money from an organization funded by Mark Zuckerberg. There’s no reason to trust the election in Arizona when it’s this partisan and even run by none other than gubernatorial candidate Katie Hobbs, Kari Lake’s GOP opponent!

But, aside from that, it does appear that there was quite a red wave, much more, I'm sorry to say, than is apparent in the appropriation of actual seats. Aaron Kliegman reported for JUST THE NEWS that according to Cook Political Report, Republican actually won 52.3 percent of the total ballots cast, at least as of late November 10, with the Democrats coming in considerably lower at just 46.2 percent. We checked for an update early November 12, and Republicans were still in the lead, though their margin was a little narrower, 51.8 percent.

This report is updated regularly, so you can check here to see how we’re doing.

https://www.cookpolitical.com/charts/house-charts/national-house-vote-tracker/2022

Kliegman wrote: “It’s unclear at this point what explains the glaring incongruity between the GOP’s underwhelming performance in terms of winning seats on the one hand and its significant lead in the popular vote on the other.” That’s something to look at, certainly. But those overall percentages are at least something to celebrate --- and they’re no doubt very concerning to Democrats looking ahead to the next election.  Marc Elias must be lying awake nights coming up with more ideas for putting a thumb on the scale in 2024.

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/red-wave-after-all-gop-winning-popular-vote-wide-margin-despite

Certain races, however, particularly the Senate race in Pennsylvania where Trump-backed Dr. Mehmet Oz lost to cognitively-impaired far-leftist schlub John Fetterman, so irked President Trump that he took to his own social media platform, Truth Social, to say some extremely ill-advised things. The worst of all was his totally nonsensical jab at Virginia GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin, which seems as though it might have been posted while Trump was under heavy medication. (One almost hopes we could find out that it was.) In a rant saying Youngkin wouldn’t have been able to win the governor’s race without him, he referred to the name Youngkin –- “Young Kin” –- as “sounding Chinese.”

This comment, seemingly from the planet Saturn, came on the heels of Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears’ remark that with these midterm election results, Trump should leave GOP politics. “A true leader understands when they have become a liability,” she told FOX NEWS on Thursday. “A true leader understands that it’s time to step off the stage, and the voters have given us that very clear message.”
Yes, that comment was surely upsetting fro Trump to hear.  But he reacted early Friday morning by taking that swipe at Youngkin, perhaps unwittingly proving Sears’ point.

Youngkin stayed above this. “Listen, you all know me,” he told reporters. “I do not call people names. I really work hard to bring people together...that’s not the way I roll and not the way I behave.”

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/all-things-trump/youngkin-responds-trump-dig-thats-not-way-i-roll

The NEW YORK POST spoke to sources who had been around Trump as returns came in, and they didn’t paint a pretty picture. Trump had focused his ire on the increasingly popular GOP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis when DeSantis had said nothing to provoke him, violating President Reagan’s “11th Commandment” about not speaking ill of others in the party. Trump succeeded only in making Republicans long for someone like Ronald Reagan at the helm of our party instead of what we have. And that makes the more measured DeSantis look even better.

https://nypost.com/2022/11/11/donald-trump-is-ranting-and-raving-over-lackluster-midterm-results-sources/

Given what Trump has been put through by his political enemies ever since he first announced he was running for President, it’s amazing he came through it in one piece. He is still standing after attempts on every front to destroy him, and we love him for that. But he needs to demonstrate for us that the saying, “What does not kill us makes us stronger,” is true in his case. (Research has shown that this is not generally true.) Trump needs to be stronger, not flailing. Wiser, not more emotional. More strategic, not more impulsive. If he has been weakened, if he is now more of a political liability, he’ll need to understand that it’s time to embark on another phase of life, outside of politics, for the good of the country he loves.

Given all that the left have done to try to take Trump out, how ironic would it be if they were able to just stand back now and let him do it to himself?

On the other hand, when Dan Bongino addressed this issue during his Friday podcast, he said he’s not worried that a primary contest between Trump and DeSantis will weaken the party. Judging from history, he believes this would strengthen it, no matter how much aggravation and airing of dirty laundry is involved. It’s good, he said, “because by the time you get to the general, all the dirty laundry’s been aired.” He also reminded us how hard Trump campaigned for Ron DeSantis in his first, very close election, saying that’s probably what placed him in the governor’s chair. He credited Trump for Florida’s move to “red.”

But Trump was certainly wrong, Bongino (who lives in Florida) said, to call DeSantis an “average” governor, when he is an excellent governor. “He took what Trump started,” he said, “and ran with it in the state of Florida.”

“The best approach right now is to slow down,” he cautioned. It should be about the party right now, and the races currently at stake. “There’s no rush,” he said; “there’ll be more than enough time to attack each other [on issues].’ He’s confident they’re “not gonna hurt each other” but strongly warns they must NOT make it personal, because voters will be deeply alienated by that. I would say this warning might have come too late for Trump, though, as we’re already seeing him alienate them.

What do you think? Here’s the podcast; his remarks on Trump/DeSantis start about 43 minutes in…

https://bongino.com/ep-1893-about-that-trump-desantis-feud

Leave a Comment

Note: Fields marked with an * are required.

Your Information
Your Comment
BBML accepted!
Captcha

More Stories

A bounce back?

Inconvenient Truth

Comments 341-350 of 403

  • Jody Maas

    11/12/2022 12:47 PM

    Shame on you, Mike Huckabee. Donald Trump is not God Almighty. How many YEARS would you or your family take other spitting on you.

  • Roger Janosek

    11/12/2022 12:46 PM

    I use to be a stanch Trump supporter and loved him as a president. HOWEVER, his personal attacks on other key republicans will give him no transaction and only alienate him from a bid at 2024. I'll vote for him but he has to be the last Republican standing.

  • Larry Garrison

    11/12/2022 12:46 PM

    I think the math makes this simple. 30% of the people will vote for Trump regardless of what he does or says. They are part of the cult following. 25% of the Republicans I know will NEVER vote for him regardless of what he does or says and he is constantly turning away independent voters and any Democrats in the margins. He is simply never going to be elected to anything meaningful again. He has too many issues, too much baggage and is too arrogant to address the areas that are within his control. Need someone (anyone) else. Period dot com.

  • Sandi Linsteadt

    11/12/2022 12:45 PM

    Thank you for expressing so well my own feelings about former president Trump's recent behavior. I had come to respect him for the way he led the country, but have never been a fan of his bragging and name calling. In the past few days he has come across as a petulant child, not someone who can repair the damage done by the current administration and bring our country together. I pray he will have the courage and wisdom to apologize to those he has attempted to demean.

  • Vincent M Tedone MD

    11/12/2022 12:43 PM

    It is time for Trump to step down. He is too divisive and the only way Reps lose in 2024 is if Trump heads the Rep ticket.
    DeSantis will give us good policies without the Trump baggage.
    We will see if Trump is a true patriot by his decision.

  • Diane DeLallo

    11/12/2022 12:43 PM

    Sadly you are right. President Trump had his day and it's time for him to step down, which he will not do. What comes out of his mouth is vengeful and abhorrent. The only problem he was unable to keep was to be presidential if elected. I ignored his mouth and supported his policies because our government needed them desperately and moreover needs them now. Sadly he has become too negative and even more vengeful.
    I hope Governor DeSantis stays out of it this time and waits till 2028. The smart move. Keep Florida red!
    Make America red in 2028.

  • Colette Wagner

    11/12/2022 12:42 PM

    I agree that Trump needs to step back and take a different path right now. He won’t because he’s a narcissist. He could be more of behind the scenes advisor and get more done to help this country. He knows what needs to be done, but he is too much of a distraction as President. Descant is would be a better choice as President. He would get more done without all the personal attacks and conflicts.

  • Susan Specht

    11/12/2022 12:41 PM

    I will not be voting or supporting Trump as I have in the past. He is too erratic and out of control
    with his comments. I do not need to hear another campaign of name calling, which he is so
    good at!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Maria Robles

    11/12/2022 12:41 PM

    I have to say President Trump was a great President but I think its time for him to step aside. Sadly many people do dislike the way he talks and will vote even for a Democrat for the same reason. I know because many friends and family members did not vote for him for the same reason. I think DeSantis would be a great candidate.

  • Alison Worcester

    11/12/2022 12:41 PM

    President Trump has been my 1st pick for the 2024 Presidential Election, however, I'm having second thoughts because of the way he's been putting down other Republicans that I admire such as Governor Ron DeSantis and Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Message from Mike Huckabee


    Help me fight back against Big Tech censorship. If you would like to subscribe to the daily, advertisement-free version of my newsletter for $5 monthly or $36 annually, on Substack, go here.


    Latest News

    November 12, 2022
    |

    On Friday, we featured a reader letter on the future of the Republican Party as it relates to President Trump and the way he’s handling –- or not handling –- this post-election moment. She felt that it’s time for Trump to step back.

    Trump has been reacting wildly on social media (Truth Social now instead of Twitter) in the very style that at times has put off even some of his most ardent supporters, and newly incomprehensible as well. He’s coming off as vengeful and bitter, and that’s not a good look if he’s getting ready to announce another run for President.

    Certainly the pressure was on him to provide the coattails for the GOP, especially for certain candidates he’d endorsed. And the outcome is turning out to be disappointing and uneven, given the expectations many of us had. Losing the House would have been a disaster in many ways, but at this writing, late Friday, we’re almost sure of taking it. Still, another disappointment has hit, as it was reported Friday that Democrat Sen. Mark Kelly, a reliable Biden rubber-stamper, will keep his seat, with a win over GOP candidate Blake Masters in Arizona.

    Note:  In speaking of this apparent win, I’m setting aside for the moment the serious vote-counting issues in Arizona and Nevada, which are addressed elsewhere in the newsletter. On Friday, we also asked questions about the Maricopa County recorder’s office, which it seems has found a loophole in Arizona law to continue taking money from an organization funded by Mark Zuckerberg. There’s no reason to trust the election in Arizona when it’s this partisan and even run by none other than gubernatorial candidate Katie Hobbs, Kari Lake’s GOP opponent!

    But, aside from that, it does appear that there was quite a red wave, much more, I'm sorry to say, than is apparent in the appropriation of actual seats. Aaron Kliegman reported for JUST THE NEWS that according to Cook Political Report, Republican actually won 52.3 percent of the total ballots cast, at least as of late November 10, with the Democrats coming in considerably lower at just 46.2 percent. We checked for an update early November 12, and Republicans were still in the lead, though their margin was a little narrower, 51.8 percent.

    This report is updated regularly, so you can check here to see how we’re doing.

    https://www.cookpolitical.com/charts/house-charts/national-house-vote-tracker/2022

    Kliegman wrote: “It’s unclear at this point what explains the glaring incongruity between the GOP’s underwhelming performance in terms of winning seats on the one hand and its significant lead in the popular vote on the other.” That’s something to look at, certainly. But those overall percentages are at least something to celebrate --- and they’re no doubt very concerning to Democrats looking ahead to the next election.  Marc Elias must be lying awake nights coming up with more ideas for putting a thumb on the scale in 2024.

    https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/red-wave-after-all-gop-winning-popular-vote-wide-margin-despite

    Certain races, however, particularly the Senate race in Pennsylvania where Trump-backed Dr. Mehmet Oz lost to cognitively-impaired far-leftist schlub John Fetterman, so irked President Trump that he took to his own social media platform, Truth Social, to say some extremely ill-advised things. The worst of all was his totally nonsensical jab at Virginia GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin, which seems as though it might have been posted while Trump was under heavy medication. (One almost hopes we could find out that it was.) In a rant saying Youngkin wouldn’t have been able to win the governor’s race without him, he referred to the name Youngkin –- “Young Kin” –- as “sounding Chinese.”

    This comment, seemingly from the planet Saturn, came on the heels of Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears’ remark that with these midterm election results, Trump should leave GOP politics. “A true leader understands when they have become a liability,” she told FOX NEWS on Thursday. “A true leader understands that it’s time to step off the stage, and the voters have given us that very clear message.”
    Yes, that comment was surely upsetting fro Trump to hear.  But he reacted early Friday morning by taking that swipe at Youngkin, perhaps unwittingly proving Sears’ point.

    Youngkin stayed above this. “Listen, you all know me,” he told reporters. “I do not call people names. I really work hard to bring people together...that’s not the way I roll and not the way I behave.”

    https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/all-things-trump/youngkin-responds-trump-dig-thats-not-way-i-roll

    The NEW YORK POST spoke to sources who had been around Trump as returns came in, and they didn’t paint a pretty picture. Trump had focused his ire on the increasingly popular GOP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis when DeSantis had said nothing to provoke him, violating President Reagan’s “11th Commandment” about not speaking ill of others in the party. Trump succeeded only in making Republicans long for someone like Ronald Reagan at the helm of our party instead of what we have. And that makes the more measured DeSantis look even better.

    https://nypost.com/2022/11/11/donald-trump-is-ranting-and-raving-over-lackluster-midterm-results-sources/

    Given what Trump has been put through by his political enemies ever since he first announced he was running for President, it’s amazing he came through it in one piece. He is still standing after attempts on every front to destroy him, and we love him for that. But he needs to demonstrate for us that the saying, “What does not kill us makes us stronger,” is true in his case. (Research has shown that this is not generally true.) Trump needs to be stronger, not flailing. Wiser, not more emotional. More strategic, not more impulsive. If he has been weakened, if he is now more of a political liability, he’ll need to understand that it’s time to embark on another phase of life, outside of politics, for the good of the country he loves.

    Given all that the left have done to try to take Trump out, how ironic would it be if they were able to just stand back now and let him do it to himself?

    On the other hand, when Dan Bongino addressed this issue during his Friday podcast, he said he’s not worried that a primary contest between Trump and DeSantis will weaken the party. Judging from history, he believes this would strengthen it, no matter how much aggravation and airing of dirty laundry is involved. It’s good, he said, “because by the time you get to the general, all the dirty laundry’s been aired.” He also reminded us how hard Trump campaigned for Ron DeSantis in his first, very close election, saying that’s probably what placed him in the governor’s chair. He credited Trump for Florida’s move to “red.”

    But Trump was certainly wrong, Bongino (who lives in Florida) said, to call DeSantis an “average” governor, when he is an excellent governor. “He took what Trump started,” he said, “and ran with it in the state of Florida.”

    “The best approach right now is to slow down,” he cautioned. It should be about the party right now, and the races currently at stake. “There’s no rush,” he said; “there’ll be more than enough time to attack each other [on issues].’ He’s confident they’re “not gonna hurt each other” but strongly warns they must NOT make it personal, because voters will be deeply alienated by that. I would say this warning might have come too late for Trump, though, as we’re already seeing him alienate them.

    What do you think? Here’s the podcast; his remarks on Trump/DeSantis start about 43 minutes in…

    https://bongino.com/ep-1893-about-that-trump-desantis-feud

    Leave a Comment

    Note: Fields marked with an * are required.

    Your Information
    Your Comment
    BBML accepted!
    Captcha

    More Stories

    A bounce back?

    Inconvenient Truth

    Comments 341-350 of 403

    • Jody Maas

      11/12/2022 12:47 PM

      Shame on you, Mike Huckabee. Donald Trump is not God Almighty. How many YEARS would you or your family take other spitting on you.

    • Roger Janosek

      11/12/2022 12:46 PM

      I use to be a stanch Trump supporter and loved him as a president. HOWEVER, his personal attacks on other key republicans will give him no transaction and only alienate him from a bid at 2024. I'll vote for him but he has to be the last Republican standing.

    • Larry Garrison

      11/12/2022 12:46 PM

      I think the math makes this simple. 30% of the people will vote for Trump regardless of what he does or says. They are part of the cult following. 25% of the Republicans I know will NEVER vote for him regardless of what he does or says and he is constantly turning away independent voters and any Democrats in the margins. He is simply never going to be elected to anything meaningful again. He has too many issues, too much baggage and is too arrogant to address the areas that are within his control. Need someone (anyone) else. Period dot com.

    • Sandi Linsteadt

      11/12/2022 12:45 PM

      Thank you for expressing so well my own feelings about former president Trump's recent behavior. I had come to respect him for the way he led the country, but have never been a fan of his bragging and name calling. In the past few days he has come across as a petulant child, not someone who can repair the damage done by the current administration and bring our country together. I pray he will have the courage and wisdom to apologize to those he has attempted to demean.

    • Vincent M Tedone MD

      11/12/2022 12:43 PM

      It is time for Trump to step down. He is too divisive and the only way Reps lose in 2024 is if Trump heads the Rep ticket.
      DeSantis will give us good policies without the Trump baggage.
      We will see if Trump is a true patriot by his decision.

    • Diane DeLallo

      11/12/2022 12:43 PM

      Sadly you are right. President Trump had his day and it's time for him to step down, which he will not do. What comes out of his mouth is vengeful and abhorrent. The only problem he was unable to keep was to be presidential if elected. I ignored his mouth and supported his policies because our government needed them desperately and moreover needs them now. Sadly he has become too negative and even more vengeful.
      I hope Governor DeSantis stays out of it this time and waits till 2028. The smart move. Keep Florida red!
      Make America red in 2028.

    • Colette Wagner

      11/12/2022 12:42 PM

      I agree that Trump needs to step back and take a different path right now. He won’t because he’s a narcissist. He could be more of behind the scenes advisor and get more done to help this country. He knows what needs to be done, but he is too much of a distraction as President. Descant is would be a better choice as President. He would get more done without all the personal attacks and conflicts.

    • Susan Specht

      11/12/2022 12:41 PM

      I will not be voting or supporting Trump as I have in the past. He is too erratic and out of control
      with his comments. I do not need to hear another campaign of name calling, which he is so
      good at!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • Maria Robles

      11/12/2022 12:41 PM

      I have to say President Trump was a great President but I think its time for him to step aside. Sadly many people do dislike the way he talks and will vote even for a Democrat for the same reason. I know because many friends and family members did not vote for him for the same reason. I think DeSantis would be a great candidate.

    • Alison Worcester

      11/12/2022 12:41 PM

      President Trump has been my 1st pick for the 2024 Presidential Election, however, I'm having second thoughts because of the way he's been putting down other Republicans that I admire such as Governor Ron DeSantis and Gov. Glenn Youngkin.