Trump supporters behaving like the bags of ass that they are

How'd that work out for you?

Its gonna be the longest 60 days of her life for sure.

Them crazy ass chicks in there gonna have some fun with her.

If they managed to get a reality show of her going thru the inprocessing and her stay in prison, that shit would break ratings records for sure.
 
Candidates who attended ‘Stop the Steal’ rally win races

By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
November 3, 2021


Del. John McGuire, R-Goochland, speaks against one of a number of gun-related bills during the floor session of the Virginia House of Delegates inside the State Capitol in Richmond, Va., Thursday, Jan. 30, 2020. Three Virginia Republicans who won their state legislative races on Tuesday, including McGuire, had attended former President Donald Trump's “Stop the Steal” rally on Jan. 6 before rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol. (Bob Brown/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP)
At least six state or local political candidates won their elections on Tuesday, less than 10 months after they attended former President Donald Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally on Jan. 6, the day when thousands of rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol.

At least 13 candidates on Tuesday’s ballots for state or local offices were in Washington, D.C., for the rally promoting the lie that the 2020 presidential election had been stolen from Trump, according to a list compiled by BuzzFeed News. None of them have been charged with any crimes in connection with the Jan. 6 riot or accused of entering the Capitol that day.

Five of the 13 were running for seats in the Virginia House of Delegates, which Democrats and Republicans are battling to control. Three of the five, including two incumbent legislators, won their races on Tuesday.

The House remained up for grabs Wednesday, with a handful of competitive races still too early to call.

The list of losing candidates who attended the “Stop the Steal” rally included Oath Keepers member Edward Durfee Jr., who ran for the New Jersey General Assembly. He finished third behind two Democrats. Durfee worked a security detail for the Oath Keepers outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, Gothamist reported, but he isn’t accused of joining other members of the far-right paramilitary group in storming the building.

The three rally attendees who won their Virginia House races were incumbents Del. Dave LaRock and Del. John McGuire and Marie March, who won an open seat. The two losers in Virginia were Philip Hamilton and Maureen Brody. BuzzFeed News reported that Hamilton and Brody were at the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Elsewhere, “Stop the Steal” attendees winning local races included candidates for seats on the City Council in Nampa, Idaho, the Borough Council in Watchung, New Jersey, and the Board of Commissioners in Hunterdon County, New Jersey, according to published reports. Apparent losers included candidates for county executive in Pennsylvania and for the City Council in Mason, Ohio.

March said during an interview Wednesday that she doesn’t regret attending Trump’s Jan. 6 rally with her husband and father. She said they left before Trump finished his speech and the mob breached the Capitol and they didn’t go to the Capitol before returning home.

“We’re in a very conservative district and a lot of people do like Donald Trump,” March said. “He was the sitting president of the United States of America at the time. We went to see him speak.”

March, who owns a restaurant in Christiansburg called Due South BBQ, said she was motivated to run for office in part by an incumbent Democratic lawmaker from a neighboring district who tweeted, “Who wants to start a BBQ joint in the (New River Valley) where the owners don’t participate in an attempted coup?”

“I won and he lost, so it’s kind of poetic justice,” March said of Del. Chris Hurst.

Over 650 people have been charged with federal crimes in the Jan. 6 riot. Several members of the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys, another far-right extremist group, are charged with plotting coordinated attacks on the Capitol to stop Congress from certifying President Joe Biden’s electoral victory.

Trump urged the crowd of his supporters to march on the Capitol, saying, “If you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.” The Democratic-led U.S. House impeached Trump on a charge he incited the riot, but the Republican-led Senate acquitted him.

LaRock told The Winchester Star in January that he saw rioters attacking the Capitol after attending Trump’s speech, but didn’t join them.

“I don’t know what constitutes the Capitol grounds, but I certainly didn’t enter the Capitol,” LaRock told the newspaper.

McGuire told The Washington Post in July that he was at Trump’s rally but didn’t enter the Capitol that day. He later issued a statement saying he had joined thousands of law-abiding citizens at the rally “to voice our support of a free and fair elections process.”

“When I arrived home and saw the news, I was just as shocked and horrified as everyone else to see that people had entered the Capitol. It was a tragic day, and one we won’t soon forget,” his statement said, according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene hit with four more fines for breaking House rule by refusing to wear a mask
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) leaves the Senate chamber July 29 after marching to the Senate with a group of House Republicans who oppose mask mandates. (Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters)
By Mariana Alfaro
Today at 6:27 p.m. EDT


Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) faced four more fines Monday for refusing to wear a mask on the House floor and has racked up at least $15,500 in fines for violating the pandemic-dictacted rule.
Greene has been cited at least seven times for breaking the House rule, which was established in January. Members are fined $500 for their first offense and $2,500 for each subsequent offense. The fines are deducted from their congressional pay of $174,000 annually.
2021 Election: Complete coverage and analysis
According to a Monday news release from the House Ethics Committee, Greene was disciplined four times in late September for failing to wear a mask. The committee had previously made public three earlier occasions in which Greene was fined for breaking the same rule — another time in September, once in August and a first offense in May.

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In a statement Monday, Greene stood by her opposition to masks, which health professionals say can slow the spread of the deadly coronavirus in public settings. Mask-wearing has become highly politicized, especially after former president Donald Trump repeatedly refused to wear a mask.
Greene railed against “communist Democrats” and “tyrannical dictators” with mandates and lockdowns.
“I will continue my stand on the House floor against authoritarian Democrat mandates, because I don’t want the American people to stand alone,” she said.
Nick Dyer, a spokesman for Greene, said the congresswoman has been fined almost two dozen times for not wearing a mask, resulting in $48,000 in fines. An Oct. 28 letter from Sergeant-at-Arms William Walker to Greene reviewed by The Washington Post shows that Greene has been observed not wearing a mask in the House that many times since May 18.

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Last month, Greene tweeted that she had racked up more than $25,000 in mask fines.

Of the seven citations Greene has received listed online by the House Ethics Committee, she has only filed an appeal for one.
House ejects Marjorie Taylor Greene from committees over extremist remarks
The mask rule was established at the recommendation of Capitol attending physician Brian P. Monahan. While it was lifted for a few weeks in mid-June, it was put back in place in July, when the delta variant led to a rise in coronavirus cases. The Senate, meanwhile, has never required masks.
Greene has repeatedly complained online about the House mask fines, tweeting in July that Monahan “has no authority” to fine members of Congress, and saying House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is acting like an “authoritarian.”

The congresswoman has also constantly criticized national mask guidances during the pandemic. Over the summer, she compared mask policies to the Nazi practice of labeling Jews with Star of David badges. She apologized for her statement in June as she faced a House censorship resolution.
During the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, Greene was not wearing a mask while hiding in a secure room with other House members. Some Democrats in that group tested positive for the virus soon after. Greene told Fox News it was “insane” for Democrats to blame those infections on maskless Republicans.
 
January 6 committee issues 6 subpoenas to top Trump campaign associates, including Michael Flynn and John Eastman


(CNN) The House select committee investigating the deadly January 6 riot on Capitol Hill announced Monday it is issuing six additional subpoenas to top Trump campaign associates as it continues to seek testimony and documents from key witnesses in the sweeping probe.

With this round of subpoenas, the committee is targeting top individuals from former President Trump's reelection campaign who the panel says were involved in promoting the lie that the presidential election was stolen.

The six subpoenas are going to:

- Trump 2020 campaign manager William Stepien
- Former senior adviser to the campaign Jason Miller
- John Eastman, an attorney who helped craft Trump's argument that the election was stolen
- Michael Flynn, who was involved in meeting about how the Trump campaign wanted to promote the lie that the election was stolen
- Angela McCallum, national executive assistant to former President Trump's 2020 reelection campaign
- Bernard Kerik, who participated in a meeting at the Willard Hotel centered around overturing election results.

All six individuals are being asked to supply the committee with documents on November 23, with depositions scheduled spanning the last week of November into mid December.

"In the days before the January 6th attack, the former President's closest allies and advisors drove a campaign of misinformation about the election and planned ways to stop the count of Electoral College votes," Select Committee chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson said in a statement. "The Select Committee needs to know every detail about their efforts to overturn the election, including who they were talking to in the White House and in Congress, what connections they had with rallies that escalated into a riot, and who paid for it all."

Thompson added: "The Select Committee expects all witnesses to cooperate with our investigation as we work to get answers for the American people, recommend changes to our laws that will strengthen our democracy, and help ensure nothing like January 6th ever happens again."

This is the first round of subpoenas issued by the committee since the House asked the Department of Justice to pursue criminal contempt charges against Trump ally Steve Bannon for defying his congressional order to appear and provide testimony.

The Justice Department has not yet indicated whether prosecutors will pursue an indictment against Bannon.

On Friday, former DOJ official Jeffrey Clark stonewalled the committee, appearing before the panel pursuant to a subpoena but declining to answer questions posed to him, sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

The committee writes in their subpoena letter to Stepien that his role as Trump's former campaign manager makes him a key player to understanding the Trump campaign's efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election and promote the "Stop the Steal" narrative that rioters who stormed the US Capitol on January 6 echoed.

The committee cites an anonymous interview of a witness with personal knowledge to help back up its claim that Stepien was deeply involved in the messaging behind the campaign's "Stop the Steal" effort. The committee, in its subpoena letter to him, also cites an internal campaign memo from shortly after the election that demonstrated the Trump campaign knew that the claims about the voting machine company, Dominion Voting Systems, were baseless.

Kerik previously confirmed to CNN that he paid for rooms and suites in Washington, DC, hotels that "served as election-related command centers," according to the committee. He also worked with Trump's former attorney Rudy Giuliani "to investigate allegations of voter fraud and promote baseless litigation and 'Stop the Steal' efforts," the committee noted Monday.

In February, Make America Great Again PAC, the successor organization to the Trump presidential campaign, made two large disbursements for "recount travel expenses," according to a filing to the Federal Election Commission. The PAC paid Kerik's company and Giuliani's company $66,251.54 and $76,566.95, respectively.

CNN previously reported that Eastman wrote an email that blamed Pence for causing the violence at the US Capitol on January 6 with his refusal to block Congress' certification of the 2020 election results -- as the riot was occurring and the then-vice president hid from the mob who had breached the building.

Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Democrat from Maryland and member of the committee, previously told CNN the panel is interested in learning more about Eastman's role in attempting to overturn the election results.

"We need to determine to what extent there was an organized effort against Vice President Pence and we believe that, you know, some of the actors' names have become known, including John Eastman, who laid it out in a memo," Raskin said last month.

To McCallum, the committee writes that its investigation and public accounts have led the panel to believe that her role as National Executive Assistant to Trump's reelection campaign made her aware of and involved in the campaign's efforts to spread false information about voter fraud in the presidential election.

The committee cites a "publicly available" voicemail recording in its possession that McCallum left for an unknown Michigan state representative asking whether the Trump campaign could "count on" that representative, while also telling the legislator that they had the ability to appoint an alternate slate of electors, even though the Michigan state Legislature never took that action.

The committee is interested in Flynn, who served as Trump's first national security adviser and has remained a staunch ally of the former President since being fired in 2017, because he reportedly attended a December 2020 Oval Office meeting "during which participants discussed seizing voting machines, declaring a national emergency, invoking certain national security emergency powers, and continuing to spread the false message that the November 2020 election had been tainted by widespread fraud."

"The day before, Flynn gave an interview on Newsmax TV during which he talked about seizing voting machines, foreign influence in the election, and the purported precedent for deploying military troops and declaring martial law to 'rerun' the election," the committee said Monday.

In their subpoena letter to Miller, the committee claims that the former senior adviser used his position of power and prominence within Trump's campaign orbit to peddle lies about election fraud. The committee cites Miller's role in coordinating news conferences with Trump and Giuliani to claim that the election was rigged as one of the reasons why he is of interest to their investigation.

The committee also points to Miller's presence at a meeting on January 5 at the Willard Hotel in Washington, DC, which became known as a command center for Trump allies specifically focused on how to overturn the November results and pressure then-Vice President Pence to not certify the Electoral College results.
 
trump tried to kill him
Sent a violent mob after him and locked him out so they could get at him. Reminds me of a story I read where two business partners went out on a boat in the ocean one warm sunny afternoon. One suggested they go overboard for a bit to cool off, but waited for his partener to jump in first. After his partner dove in he pulled up the ladder, threw chum in the water, and sped away back home to collect on a joint survivor life insurance policy. That's what tRump did to Pence.
 
Sent a violent mob after him and locked him out so they could get at him. Reminds me of a story I read where two business partners went out on a boat in the ocean one warm sunny afternoon. One suggested they go overboard for a bit to cool off, but waited for his partener to jump in first. After his partner dove in he pulled up the ladder, threw chum in the water, and sped away back home to collect on a joint survivor life insurance policy. That's what tRump did to Pence.
yep
plus if Pence was hurt or killed then the certification would be delayed and Trump could declare Martial Law
 
Journalist Describes 'Wild' Unpublished Photos of Mike Pence in Hiding on Jan. 6: 'Holed Up in a Basement'

Jonathan Karl says photos by a White House photographer show the vice president in a barren garage space with no furniture and no windows

AARON PARSLEY
November 10, 2021 10:41 AM


Journalist Jonathan Karl says he has seen unpublished photographs of Mike Pence that were taken by a White House photographer while the then-vice president was in hiding during the deadly rioting at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

During the mayhem as Donald Trump supporters stormed the Capitol — interrupting an electoral vote count with hopes of overturning the 2020 election results — the vice president, Second Lady Karen Pence, their daughter Charlotte Pence Bond and staff members absconded into a hiding place with seconds to spare thanks to the help of Secret Service agents.

While some of the rioters at the Capitol chanted about wanting to "hang" Pence, the vice president and at least some of his entourage were moved to an undisclosed location.

In his book Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show, out on Tuesday, Karl says he saw images captured by a photographer who stayed with Pence and describes the place where the vice president and others hid for "approximately five hours."

"The photos show Pence in a barren garage. There were no windows and no furniture. This was a loading dock with concrete walls and a concrete floor," Karl writes.

During an appearance this week on The Late Show, Karl elaborated with Stephen Colbert. "I saw all of the photographs and by the way, it is wild to see that he was in a loading dock in an underground parking garage underneath the Capitol complex," Karl said. "No place to sit, no desk, no chairs, nothing. He was in this concrete parking garage with his family. This is the vice president of the United States and he's holed up in a basement."

According to Karl, Pence was determined to stay within the Capitol complex. (A spokesman for Pence did not respond to PEOPLE's request for comment on Karl's book.)

"The vice presidential motorcade had been taken down there, but for the first couple hours, Pence refused to go inside his vehicle," Karl writes in Betrayal. "He was concerned that if he did, they would drive him away from Capitol Hill. The last thing he wanted the world to see was his motorcade fleeing the Capitol building."

Karl calls the photos a "remarkable visual account of the vice president's harrowing experience during the riot" but writes in a footnote that his request to publish the images were denied by Pence through spokesperson.

"These are pictures taken by the official vice presidential photographer. The photographer's salary was paid by U.S. taxpayers. The images are public property," Karl writes in the footnote. "I assume that once the congressional committee investigating January 6 becomes aware of them, the photos will be subpoenaed and ultimately made public, as they should be."

In one of the images, Karl says the vice president is looking at his Chief of Staff Mark Short's phone. "One of the things Short showed him was Trump's tweet saying he had no courage. Pence seems to be grimacing as he looks at Short's phone, but I'm told Pence never really reacted to Trump's taunt — not even privately," Karl writes.

"Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify," Trump tweeted on Jan. 6, 11 minutes after Pence was seen on live TV leaving the Senate floor.

Wrapping up the section of Betrayal about Pence's time in hiding on Jan. 6 and the unpublished photos of him in the previously undisclosed location, Karl writes about the vice president's determination to stay at the Capitol.

"The congressional leaders had fled and Pence remained. Trump had incited his supporters to go after Pence. Now there were mobs in the Capitol chanting, 'Hang Mike Pence,'" Karl writes. "If there was ever a day Pence had shown courage, this was the day. But Trump called him a coward."

image

Mike Pence (masked) is evacuated from the Senate after Donald Trump's supporters breached the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.
 
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