Trump declares the Democrat Party "Greatest Enemy of America"

You can't hate the vile dems enough.


Early voting is already underway a full month before the April 21 referendum in Virginia. A yes vote would approve the grotesque Democratic gerrymander proposed by Governor Abigail Spanberger and the state’s Democratic legislature. Virginia voters should say no — and Republican donors would be wise to get involved before it’s too late. For national Republicans, the potential four-seat swing could decide control of the House. They should act as if that is the case.

As we have previously editorialized, the redistricting is absurdly partisan: Unlike other deep-red and deep-blue states redrawing their maps, Virginia has long been a closely divided purple state that was Republican-governed as recently as 2025, yet Democrats seek a ten-to-one Democratic House district map in place of the current six-to-five map. It’s also unfair on regional grounds, snaking multiple districts into the Beltway region so that rural and exurban Virginians will be “represented” by members elected by D.C.-area urban and suburban liberals.

It’s also a flip-flop from a 2020 referendum pushed by Democrats, which was then backed by more than 60 percent of the state’s voters with the aim of preventing partisan gerrymanders. Democrats, unhappy now with the consequences of that vote in a high-turnout presidential election, are trying to sneak this through in a low-turnout off-year election in April against underfunded opposition. There are still legal challenges to the gerrymander, but for now, the Virginia Supreme Court has chosen to let the people weigh in first, which will moot the court cases — if the voters reject this scheme.

Democrats have the deck stacked in their favor. The ballot proposal is a textbook example of a loaded question: “Should the Constitution of Virginia be amended to allow the General Assembly to temporarily adopt new congressional districts to restore fairness in the upcoming elections, while ensuring Virginia’s standard redistricting process resumes for all future redistricting after the 2030 census?” (emphasis ours). Who could be against restoring fairness?

That makes it all the more urgent for opponents to get their message on the airwaves and out door-to-door. Former Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares, heading Virginians for Fair Maps, is leading the fight. As Miyares warns: “They’re not telling Virginians that, if this passes, it will be the single most gerrymandered map in the entire country. There’s a lot they’re not telling Virginians.” But Miyares and other opponents have been massively out-fundraised and are being massively outspent, so who will hear them? House Democratic fundraisers have poured nearly $28 million into the referendum, compared with at most $5 million raised on the “no” side. (Some more pessimistic reports suggest that the “no” side is being outraised 40 to 1.)

But that doesn’t mean this is necessarily a lost cause: With a month to go, turnout has been running higher in Republican areas, and Democratic proponents are warning that this will be close. There’s still time to make a difference.
 
Well then Trump is "antisemitic." 71% of America's Jewish population routinely votes for the Democrat side of the Swamp Party.

View attachment 1234249
Those city guys mostly vote Democrat for some reason.
 
You can't hate the vile dems enough.


Early voting is already underway a full month before the April 21 referendum in Virginia. A yes vote would approve the grotesque Democratic gerrymander proposed by Governor Abigail Spanberger and the state’s Democratic legislature. Virginia voters should say no — and Republican donors would be wise to get involved before it’s too late. For national Republicans, the potential four-seat swing could decide control of the House. They should act as if that is the case.

As we have previously editorialized, the redistricting is absurdly partisan: Unlike other deep-red and deep-blue states redrawing their maps, Virginia has long been a closely divided purple state that was Republican-governed as recently as 2025, yet Democrats seek a ten-to-one Democratic House district map in place of the current six-to-five map. It’s also unfair on regional grounds, snaking multiple districts into the Beltway region so that rural and exurban Virginians will be “represented” by members elected by D.C.-area urban and suburban liberals.

It’s also a flip-flop from a 2020 referendum pushed by Democrats, which was then backed by more than 60 percent of the state’s voters with the aim of preventing partisan gerrymanders. Democrats, unhappy now with the consequences of that vote in a high-turnout presidential election, are trying to sneak this through in a low-turnout off-year election in April against underfunded opposition. There are still legal challenges to the gerrymander, but for now, the Virginia Supreme Court has chosen to let the people weigh in first, which will moot the court cases — if the voters reject this scheme.

Democrats have the deck stacked in their favor. The ballot proposal is a textbook example of a loaded question: “Should the Constitution of Virginia be amended to allow the General Assembly to temporarily adopt new congressional districts to restore fairness in the upcoming elections, while ensuring Virginia’s standard redistricting process resumes for all future redistricting after the 2030 census?” (emphasis ours). Who could be against restoring fairness?

That makes it all the more urgent for opponents to get their message on the airwaves and out door-to-door. Former Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares, heading Virginians for Fair Maps, is leading the fight. As Miyares warns: “They’re not telling Virginians that, if this passes, it will be the single most gerrymandered map in the entire country. There’s a lot they’re not telling Virginians.” But Miyares and other opponents have been massively out-fundraised and are being massively outspent, so who will hear them? House Democratic fundraisers have poured nearly $28 million into the referendum, compared with at most $5 million raised on the “no” side. (Some more pessimistic reports suggest that the “no” side is being outraised 40 to 1.)

But that doesn’t mean this is necessarily a lost cause: With a month to go, turnout has been running higher in Republican areas, and Democratic proponents are warning that this will be close. There’s still time to make a difference.
Why don´t they simply ban gerrymandering? It looks like street gangs fighting for control.
 
You were hired by them so it is up to you to try and solve your own problems .

Our Sir Queer Harmer has his own problems to hide .
I am not hired by anyone. You, on the contrary, are obsessed with Jews and Illuminati.
 
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So................he did that thing again. That thing he does when he accuses someone else of exactly what he's doing. Or in this case exactly what he is.
Lets assume for a moment that Trump is an exceptionally extremist and dangerous man. Wouldn´t that mean that exactly such a political environment enabled him to become President for two times?
 
0 arrest = Trump is lying

Republicans = compromised

Democrats = traitors

Both are working towards the same goal.

The intentional collapse of America.
 
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