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  • Skunk Blunt isn't gonna run again for Senaturd

    Skunk Blunt isn't gonna run again for Senaturd

    Sen. Roy Blunt won't run for reelection, complicating Republicans' bid to retake the Senate



    https://www.neoshodailynews.com/stor...te/4627838001/
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...2539#post22539
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...2539#post22539

    WASHINGTON – A fifth Republican senator decided to pass up a 2022 reelection bid, complicating GOP efforts to reclaim control of the U.S. Senate.

    Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., who turned 71 in January, announced his retirement via video Monday, citing his decades of public service as a factor in his decision.

    “After 14 general election victories – three to county office, seven to the United States House of Representatives and four statewide elections – I won’t be a candidate for reelection to the United States Senate next year," Blunt said.

    More:At CPAC, Donald Trump targets the Republican Party of Liz Cheney and Mitch McConnell

    Moreonald Trump expands his Republican enemies list to Karl Rove, Wall Street Journal op-eds

    In declining to run in 2022, Blunt joins retiring Republican Sens. Rob Portman of Ohio, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, Richard Shelby of Alabama and Richard Burr of North Carolina.

    The party is waiting on decisions by other GOP senators, such as Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Chuck Grassley of Iowa.

    Blunt and other retiring Republicans avoid a congressional election in which ex-President Donald Trump plans to play a major role, forcing GOP candidates to take a stand on his divisive presidency.

    Republican strategist Liz Mair said there's a "trend" of mainstream conservative Republicans "walking away from an environment in which traditional conservatism has been little rewarded, but jumping on crazy trains has been."

    The result, she said, could be a series of elections "that pit die-hard liberals against a nuttier, and often deeply un-conservative and ethically compromised, breed of Republican."

    In last month's Senate impeachment trial, Toomey and Burr were among the seven Republican senators who voted to convict Trump on a charge that he incited the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. They would probably have been targeted by Trump-backed primary opponents, had they run.

    Blunt, a two-term senator, has been generally supportive of Trump. He did not give a particular reason for his retirement, beyond his longevity.

    Missouri is a largely Republican state, but Democrats are often competitive. Blunt barely won reelection in 2016, holding off Democrat Jason Kander with 49.2% of the vote to 46.4%.

    On Twitter, Kander said after Blunt's announcement that he would not for the Senate next year, but "I’ll campaign for the Dem nominee!"

    A former Democratic senator from Missouri, Claire McCaskill, also said she would not seek Blunt's job. "I will never run for office again," she tweeted. "Nope. Not gonna happen. Never. I am so happy I feel guilty sometimes."

    The U.S. Senate is split 50-50 between the Democratic and Republican caucuses. Vice President Kamala Harris, who serves as president of the Senate, provides the tie-breaking vote that gives Democrats control.

    Republicans faced an uphill battle before the retirements. They have more positions to defend, holding 20 of the 34 Senate seats up for election in 2022.

    Sabato's Cystal Ball, a newsletter produced by the University of Virginia Center for Politics, downgraded the Missouri Senate race from "safe Republican" to "likely Republican," still favoring the eventual GOP candidate.

    "We'll see if Democrats can get a good recruit here," said J. Miles Coleman, associate editor of the newsletter.

    Coleman said Blunt's retirement creates the possibility of a "messy" Republican primary involving Trump, his supporters and anti-Trump campaigners.

    Reed Galen, co-founder of the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump political action committee, said most of the GOP Senate candidates in Missouri "will be begging" for support from Trump and his backers, such as the state's other senator, Republican Josh Hawley.

    "It will be an ugly, fascistic, Big Lie-filled contest," Galen said. "The only good news? Even Missourians are likely to understand the insanity and elect a Democrat."

    In his retirement announcement, Blunt said he always tried to do his best: “In almost 12,000 votes in the Congress, I’m sure I wasn’t right every time. But you really make that decision based on the information you have at the time."



    ===666===666===666===

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    All the ZOGling-Approved Shit That Sorta Fits We Print
    http://www.neoshodailynews.com/

  • #2
    Our view: Roy Blunt was always good to Southwest Missouri

    Our view: Roy Blunt was always good to Southwest Missouri

    March 8, 2021


    https://www.joplinglobe.com/opinion/...0f477231b.html
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...2544#post22544
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...2544#post22544

    Agree or disagree with him — and we did both — Sen. Roy Blunt was always good to Southwest Missouri, and he received many Globe endorsements through the years, most recently in 2016.

    Blunt served nearly a half-century in public office at one level or another. He announced Monday morning he will not seek reelection in 2022.

    In his quarter-century in Congress — seven terms as our U.S. representative, two as a U.S. senator — Blunt always fought for this region, and his ability to secure funding on everything from highways to the MARET Center at Crowder College to the visitor center at the Neosho National Fish Hatchery is part of his legacy. And throughout the years we have praised him for his support for national service programs such as AmericCorps, for mental health treatment and funding, for adoption efforts, to name just a few areas where we have found common cause.

    Nor will we forget how he was there for Joplin in 2011. In the months following the tornado, Blunt led the fight for disaster aid, including helping get an amendment into the 2012 appropriations bill that added $400 million to the Community Development Block Grant program in order to aid relief and rebuilding efforts. Millions that went to Joplin to help get us back on our feet during that difficult time are because of Blunt.

    We always found Blunt personable, accessible and willing to work across the political aisle to help us out. We need more of that.

    What we don’t need is former Gov. Eric Greitens, who has been positioning himself as a possible replacement.

    Greitens failed Missouri. He does not deserve to represent Republicans in the 2022 contest and certainly not to represent all Missourians in Washington, D.C. His 17 months as governor ended badly in 2018, undone by ethical and personal lapses, and it’s probable he would have been impeached had he not resigned.

    Asked recently about running for for a U.S. Senate seat by a St. Louis radio station, Greitens said: “It’s something that I’m certainly going to keep the door open to and take a look at.”

    He also was quoted as saying: “As you know, unfortunately Roy Blunt has been out siding with Mitch McConnell. He’s been criticizing the president of the United States over what happened on Jan. 6. He’s been criticizing the president of the United States for not coming to (President) Joe Biden’s inauguration, where obviously everybody in Missouri saw Roy Blunt there.”

    We’ll see what the rest of the Republican field looks like, but Republicans need to run a proven leader. That’s not Greitens. They need to run a candidate who supports openness and transparency. That’s not Greitens, either.

    .


    All the shit unfit to print

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    • #3
      St. Louis gun-waving couple pleads guilty to misdemeanors

      St. Louis gun-waving couple pleads guilty to misdemeanors

      A St. Louis couple who gained notoriety for pointing guns at social justice demonstrators last year have pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges


      https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/fou...8668fa218.html
      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...3044#post23044
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...3044#post23044


      ST. LOUIS (AP) — A St. Louis couple who gained notoriety for pointing guns at social justice demonstrators last year pleaded guilty Thursday to misdemeanor charges and agreed to give up the weapons they used during the confrontation.

      Patricia McCloskey pleaded guilty to misdemeanor harassment and was fined $2,000. Her husband, Mark McCloskey, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor fourth-degree assault and was fined $750.

      When several hundred demonstrators marched past their home in June of 2020, the couple waved weapons at them. They claimed the protesters were trespassing and that they feared for their safety.

      The McCloskeys, both of them lawyers in their 60s, wore blue blazers and spoke calmly in answering questions from Judge David Mason during Thursday’s hearing. Mason asked Mark McCloskey if he acknowledged that his actions put people at risk of personal injury. He replied, “I sure did your honor.”

      Mark McCloskey, who announced in May that he was running for a U.S. Senate seat in Missouri, was unapologetic after the hearing.

      “I’d do it again," he said from the courthouse steps in downtown St. Louis. "Any time the mob approaches me, I’ll do what I can to put them in imminent threat of physical injury because that’s what kept them from destroying my house and my family.”

      The McCloskeys' defense lawyer, Joel Schwartz, said after the hearing the couple had hoped to raise money by donating Mark’s rifle to charity, but acknowledged that it was an unusual request.

      Because the charges are misdemeanors, the McCloskeys do not face the possibility of losing their law licenses and can continue to own firearms.

      On the courthouse steps after the hearing, special prosecutor Richard Callahan said the misdemeanor plea was reasonable noting the McCloskeys called the police, no shots were fired and no one was hurt.

      “But I think that their conduct was a little unreasonable in the end,” he said. "I don’t think people should view this case as some type of betrayal or assault on the Second Amendment. We still have the Second Amendment rights. It’s just that the Second Amendment does not permit unreasonable conduct.”

      The June 28, 2020, protests came weeks after George Floyd's death under a Minneapolis police officer's knee. Mark McCloskey emerged with an AR-15-style rifle, and Patricia McCloskey waved a semiautomatic pistol, according to the indictment. Cellphone video captured the confrontation. No shots were fired and no one was hurt.

      The McCloskeys were indicted by a grand jury in October on felony charges of unlawful use of a weapon and evidence tampering. Callahan later amended the charges to give jurors the alternative of convictions of misdemeanor harassment instead of the weapons charge. Under that alternative, the evidence tampering count would be dropped.

      An investigation by St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner’s office led to the initial indictments — and harsh backlash from several Republican leaders. Then-President Donald Trump spoke out in defense of the couple, whose newfound celebrity earned them an appearance via video at the Republican National Convention.

      Republican Missouri Gov. Mike Parson has said that if the McCloskeys are convicted, he’d pardon them. A spokeswoman for Parson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment after the hearing.

      Callahan, a longtime judge and former U.S. attorney, was appointed special prosecutor after a judge in December ruled that Gardner created an appearance of impropriety by mentioning the McCloskey case in fundraising emails before the August Democratic primary. Gardner went on to win reelection.



      All the shit unfit to print

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      • #4
        Replacing Roy: A year away from primary, race for Senate starts

        Replacing Roy: A year away from primary, race for Senate starts


        https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loc...12c0ed493.html
        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...3044#post23044
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...3044#post23044


        NEOSHO, Mo. — When talking about Republican candidates for a U.S. Senate seat appearing at an upcoming event, Nick Myers noted the date.

        “The watermelon feed is one day short of one year from the primary election,” said Myers, the chairman of the Newton County Republican Central Committee.

        The gap in time indicates how Republicans and Democrats have a lot of work to do in deciding who their candidate will be to replace U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt, who announced earlier this year he would retire from the Senate after his term expires in 2022.

        Two Republican groups will host a watermelon feed Tuesday that features many of the GOP’s candidates for the seat. Speakers at the event will include the following announced candidates:

        • U.S. Rep. Vicky Hartzler, of Harrisonville, who represents Missouri’s 4th Congressional District.

        • Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, who was appointed to the post by Gov. Mike Parson in 2018 and won election for a full term in 2020.

        • Mark McCloskey, a St. Louis personal injury lawyer who earned national attention after he and his wife waved guns at protesters who marched about racial injustice near his home last summer.

        Also present will be U.S. Rep. Billy Long, who won the 7th District seat after Blunt was elected to the Senate in 2010, and U.S. Rep. Jason Smith, a Republican who represents Missouri’s 8th District. Myers said both of them are expected to announce their candidacy for the seat.

        Myers said attendees will get the chance to talk to each of the candidates beforehand, and the program will feature an opportunity for candidates to give brief speeches that will be time-enforced for fairness.

        “One of the attractions to the watermelon feed is that it gives people the opportunity to interact with candidates and also hear them speak and see how they are at addressing issues,” Myers said. “I expect all of them will be there before the event and be able to visit with attendees and talk about what they believe what is important in the upcoming election.”

        The race will likely be expensive and feature a large group of candidates. Former Gov. Eric Greitens, who resigned in 2018 amid criminal investigations with the Republican-led Legislature considering impeachment, has also entered. And there is plenty of time for others to join the race, because the primary — as Myers noted — is a year away.

        The upcoming election is viewed as very important, Myers said. Not only will Republicans seek to replace a lawmaker considered to be respected and influential, but they will also attempt to hold a seat in the 50-50-split Senate.

        Myers said Republicans in Newton County are interested in issues such as inflation, federal spending and the southern border with Mexico. And, as former President Donald Trump uses his influence in the party, local voters will be inclined to follow suit.

        “If you look back at election results, our voters have been very supportive of Trump and his policies,” Myers said. “The choice of how involved he gets is up to him, but I know Newton County Republicans are very interested in what his opinions are.”

        The annual watermelon feed is a tradition jointly presented by the Republican Women of Newton County and the Newton County Republican Central Committee.

        Democratic campaigns


        Democrats also see an opportunity to reclaim a Senate seat lost by Claire McCaskill in 2018 to U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, whose run created the vacancy that Schmitt filled.

        But they say they know that will be difficult in a state that Trump won easily in the last two presidential elections.

        Barring a COVID-19-related cancellation, Democratic candidate Tim Shepard, a Kansas City-based activist, is scheduled to be at JOMO PrideFest on Aug. 28-29, said Krista Stark, executive director of Southwest Missouri Democrats, a six-county group for the region.

        Stark said the group is reaching out to other Democratic candidates for appearances, such as retired U.S. Marine Lucas Kunce, former state Sen. Scott Sifton, St. Louis County startup owner Spencer Toder and U.S. Air Force veteran Jewel Kelly. The group has already hosted events with Shepard and Kunce.

        For Democrats, the bigger news lately has been people who have decided not to run for the U.S. Senate seat, including former Gov. Jay Nixon, former senatorial candidate Jason Kander, Missouri Auditor Nicole Galloway and McCaskill.

        Stark said Democrats across the area are focused on voting rights, health care and recovering from the pandemic.

        “We’re looking forward to a robust primary, where candidates can listen to people’s concerns,” Stark said. “We definitely did see a calling for (Nixon, Kander and Galloway), but we have a lot of people who like multiple candidates who are already running. Some of us already have favorites.”

        Want to go?

        The annual free watermelon feed will be held at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Big Spring Park, 308 W. Spring St. in Neosho. Watermelon and bottled water will be provided, and state Sen. Bill White will provide ice cream.

        The event is open to all Republicans. It is organized by the Republican Women of Newton County and the Newton County Central Republican Committee.

        .

        All the shit unfit to print

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        • #5
          7th District Congressman Billy Long announces U.S. Senate bid

          7th District Congressman Billy Long announces U.S. Senate bid


          https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loc...e54b664c2.html
          http://christian-identity.net/forum/...3044#post23044
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...3044#post23044

          U.S. Rep. Billy Long, R-Mo., announced his campaign for U.S. Senate late Tuesday night. He also said he has hired Kellyanne Conway as his senior adviser and pollster. Conway was a senior counselor to former President Donald Trump.

          Long, 65, who has been the Southwest Missouri congressman since 2010, made his announcement during an interview with Tucker Carlson.

          U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt has announced plans to retire in 2022.

          Long, an auctioneer and real estate broker, said in a statement: “We need to get the Senate back. You aren’t going to do anything until you get the Senate back and I’m the guy who can win that Senate seat in Missouri."

          “As Republicans we must fight hard to regain control of the Senate. The Democrats are working at warp-speed to dismantle everything President Trump and I fought for over the last four years. I'm fed up and I'm not having it!"

          In the same statement, Conway also said: “Who serves in the Senate matters. Kamala Harris has not done much as vice president, but she has broken eight ties in the Senate. The Democrats now control what happens to you. Congressman Billy Long is a fighter who unequivocally supports the America First agenda. He was one of the longest and the strongest supporters of President Donald J. Trump."

          Other Republicans who are officially running include:

          • U.S. Rep. Vicky Hartzler, of Harrisonville, who represents Missouri’s 4th Congressional District.

          • Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, who was appointed to the post by Gov. Mike Parson in 2018 and won election for a full term in 2020.

          • Mark McCloskey, a St. Louis personal injury lawyer who earned national attention after he and his wife waved guns at protesters who marched about racial injustice near his home last summer.

          • Eric Greitens, a former Missouri governor who resigned office amid personal and political scandals and the threat of impeachment by his own party.



          All the shit unfit to print

          http://www.joplinglobe.com

          Comment


          • #6
            Sen. Josh "Howdy-Doody Hawley announces endorsement Saturday

            And he picked the dumbest of the lot of Congress-Critters, Vickie Hartzler

            https://www.fourstateshomepage.com/news/sen-josh-hawley-announces-endorsement-saturday/
            http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/forum/the-church-of-jesus-christ-christian-aryan-nations-of-missouri/campaign-headquarters-pastor-lindstedt-for-first-warlord/1929-skunk-blunt-isn-t-gonna-run-again-for-senaturd?p=35734#post35734


            Posted: Feb 12, 2022 / 07:56 PM CST
            Updated: Feb 12, 2022 / 08:50 PM CST

            ST. CHARLES, MO. — U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley has announced who he is endorsing to take Sen. Roy Blunt’s seact, after he retires later this year.

            Howdy-Doody Hawley, former corporate meercat until Insurrection Day, is now playing "kink-mamzer" by anointing with strong Republican urine the suckcessor to Roy 'Skunk' Blunt, the former corporate meercat from Missouri who is pissing down his leg and running for the tall grass.


            Four of the six candidates running for U.S. Senate had 90 minutes Saturday to tell a room full of supporters why to vote for them, but the biggest news of the day actually happened before the forum as Hawley endorsed Congresswoman Vicyky Hartzler.

            “I’m so thrilled, I’m so grateful, he is such a campion for our conservative values in Washington and has been such a powerful voice in what Missouri believes in,” Hartzler said in an exclusive interview Saturday.

            She's the dumbest of the lot but she did manage to unseat Democrat Ike Skelton in the Central Missouri Fourth District back in 2010. Also, she is against abortion, same-sex marriage and easily fully Republican Conservative, thus the safest person to for Howdy-Doody to endorse.

            During a statewide gathering of Republican leaders and activists, the candidates hoping to fill Blunt’s seat took the stage at Lincoln Days at the St. Charles Convention Center.

            “The first thing we need to do is secure the border,” Attorney General Eric Schmitt said.

            “We’ve got to get spending under control,” Congressman Billy Long said.

            ZOGbot Silly Long is the 7th District Congress-Critter from Southwestern Missouri and a total fuktard who spends more time in Lost Wages than Springfield.

            Moments before the forum, Hawley, while standing next to Hartzler, announced his support.

            “People trust Josh, they respect him as a true conservative who is out there on the forefront fighting and for him to recognized I am that way as well,” Hartzler said.

            In a press release, Hawley said Hartzler is “unafraid to stand up for conservative values, and she is exactly who Missouri needs in the U.S. Senate.”

            While the endorsement was not mentioned in the forum, other candidates told reporters, they were not surprised.

            “I knew that was coming whenever the day that Vicky hired Josh’s team to represent her,” Long said. “I called Josh and said this looks to me like you might getting in with Vicky.”

            “Josh Hawley’s endorsement of Hartzler is just what you would expect from a person who has high political office will endorse somebody else that has been a five-year congresswoman,” Mark McCloskey, attorney and candidate for US Senate said.

            When asked, McCloskey said he did not ask for Hawley’s endorsement.

            “I didn’t ask him for it and he didn’t offer it to me, so read your own interpretation,” McCloskey said.
            Former Gov. Eric Greitens and Senate President Dave Schatz were also invited but did not participate in the forum. The Missouri Senate held a rare Saturday session as the chamber continues to work towards finding a solution on how to redraw the state’s congressional map.

            All four candidates at the forum said they support a 7 Republican – 1 Democrat map, but Hartzler was hesitant to endorse that kind of map.

            “We ought to try to get as conservative as a map as possible, and if it’s possible to get 7-1 without jeopardizing it in a Democratic election year, we should go for it,” Hartzler said. “If it’s going to jeopardize it, maybe we should think about it.”

            Besides redistricting, other topics that were discussed were abortion issues, election reform, public safety and the southern border.

            “We have to back the Blue, back the police, fund the police, don’t defund the police and criminalize crime,” Long said.

            Schmitt said this race is the “fight to save America.”

            “As your attorney general, I have taken Joe Biden to the Supreme Court twice and won already, and we’re going to continue that,” Schmitt said.

            He also mentioned his suits against school districts and the Biden administration for masks and vaccine mandates. Schmitt also mentioned if elected, he would like to serve on the judiciary committee, to block the “woke justices and judges that President Biden has in the pipeline.”

            During the forum Hartzler also brought up education saying, “We should be teaching ABCs, not CRT [critical race theory].”

            Long told reporters that he plans to support the winner of the primary, no what which Republican wins, but he wishes Saturday was more in the form of a debate instead of a forum.

            “It’s a different format where you can’t really talk, so everyone kind of gave their talking points,” Long said.

            In her interview, Hartzler mentioned she had more endorsements, but could not give any details. She also plans to travel the state with Hawley during her campaign.


            Comment


            • #7
              Politico: Trump called Billy Long, told him to ditch Senate campaign, return to House seat

              https://rturner229.blogspot.com/2022/02/politico-trump-called-billy-long-told.html
              http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/fo...5768#post35768


              AVvXsEjLEgN30grAoRm9_GRt9EdCsUMWDx4Ry2zuq7Z7HHMhV1dmkpKudzgRucHRRJ3Xux3E6krcINNk54anty8siidT9maQVkZ4_9mB-1oAOmjMwPg4xR4X0t8ARp72jxh4YqHoOrXsbiNcmcQUxSpToLCg48LjJHB1dGnJpv0ibvhakGAnrf6bU2o.jpg
              Big Fat Congress-Critter Billy Long



              The Politico Playbook today included a breakdown of the Missouri Senate race and the maneuvering that continues between the candidates.

              Reportedly, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell wants anybody but former Gov. Eric Greitens to win the nomination, not surprising since Greitens has been attacking McConnell and saying he wants to see him replaced.

              The fear has been that having a large number of candidates plays to Greitens' advantage since he has a steady 25 percent supporting him and can win if the others split the vote.


              Sen. Josh Hawley endorsed Fourth District Congresswoman Vicky Hartzler, while Attorney General Eric Schmitt picked up the endorsement of Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.

              Seventh District Congressman Billy Long's only chance appears to be to gain the endorsement of former President Donald Trump, something that Trump has told him is not going to happen unless his poll numbers improve.

              In December, after Long failed to do that, multiple sources tell us that Trump called Long and asked him to seek reelection to the House, gently suggesting he bow out of the Senate race. “We really need you in the House,” Trump said, according to someone familiar with the call.


              Long ignored the advice.

              At the moment, the article says Trump is not inclined to endorse Greitens.


              The former president, we’re told, doesn’t like Greitens. While Trump often sides with men accused of sexual misconduct over the women who accuse them — and has asked some associates if they thought Greitens’ past sexual exploits could have been consensual — he’s also shown contempt for him. “What kind of guy ties a woman up in the basement against her will?” Trump recently asked one confidant.
              .

              Posted by Randy at 9:48 AM on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2022
              Last edited by PastorLindstedt; 02-18-2022, 12:46 AM.

              ___666___666___666___



              The Turner Diaries RULES, The Turner Report drools

              Comment


              • #8
                Politico --INSIDE THE GOP’S MISSOURI CLOWN SHOW

                17 February 2022


                http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/fo...5774#post35774


                INSIDE THE GOP’S MISSOURI CLOWN SHOW — For months, many Republican operatives across the political spectrum — from MAGA world and the RNC to the NRSC and Team Mitch — have privately whispered agreement on one thing when it comes to Missouri’s crowded Senate GOP primary: They’d welcome any nominee except ERIC GREITENS.

                The disgraced former governor of the Show-Me State resigned in 2018 after a woman testified under oath that Greitens tied her up in his basement, stripped her naked and took photos of her to use as blackmail in their extramarital affair — before forcing her to have oral sex with him. Greitens maintains that the exchange was consensual.

                Despite that history — and despite a number of other prominent Republicans in the race —Greitens leads the pack in Missouri’s GOP primary. Party operatives know that if they want to stop him, they need to clear the field so that the anti-Greitens vote isn’t fragmented. But they’re at a loss over how to do that. None of the prominent candidates shows any sign of dropping out anytime soon.

                — Over the weekend, Sen. JOSH HAWLEY (R-Mo.) took a first stab, backing Rep. VICKY HARTZLER with an endorsement that many believe could make a difference.

                — But just as he did, another candidate, Rep. BILLY LONG, started attacking Hawley personally, going on a rant against him and having what some Republicans called a “public meltdown on Twitter” (see here and here).

                — On Tuesday, state A.G. ERIC SCHMITT locked down Sen. TED CRUZ’s (R-Texas) endorsement, a sign that he’s in the race for the foreseeable future.

                THERE’S ONE MAN WHO THEY ALL AGREE COULD CLEAR THE FIELD. Trump won the state by 16 points, and if he backed Hartzler alongside Hawley, many think this primary would be over. But Trump feels burned by some of his previously endorsed candidates who’ve fizzled out, and has been reluctant to wade in unless he’s sure he’s backing a winner.

                Trump is also hearing opposing perspectives from prominent figures in the MAGA world orbit. Former adviser KELLYANNE CONWAY is working for Long, while KIMBERLY GUILFOYLE, who is engaged to DONALD TRUMP JR. and helps lead a pro-Trump super PAC, is national chair of Greitens’ campaign.

                A few things to know about Trump and this race:

                — The former president, we’re told, doesn’t like Greitens. While Trump often sides with men accused of sexual misconduct over the women who accuse them — and has asked some associates if they thought Greitens’ past sexual exploits could have been consensual — he’s also shown contempt for him. “What kind of guy ties a woman up in the basement against her will?” Trump recently asked one confidant.

                — Even so, Trump has seen Greitens’ internal poll numbers and asked those close to him if he should just endorse him and take the victory. And Greitens is certainly trying his best to get Trump’s blessing: He’s vowed to vote against MITCH MCCONNELL for GOP leader, regularly spouts the president’s election conspiracies to earn points and, according to one source, even spent several days hanging around Mar-a-Lago last week.

                — People close to Trump and senior Republicans across the party have encouraged the former president not to back the former governor, arguing both that they can’t have an alleged sexual predator in the Senate and that if he wins the primary he could lose a seat for Republicans in the general — a prediction backed by recent polling. (Greitens’ campaign has pushed back on this conclusion, arguing that Trump’s 2020 pollster, TONY FABRIZIO, has numbers showing otherwise.)

                IN FAIRNESS, IT’S NOT AS THOUGH TRUMP HAS DONE NOTHING SO FAR. In 2021, Trump and Conway told Long — an early Trump 2016 supporter — that he needed to boost his poll and fundraising numbers if he wanted Trump’s endorsement. In December, after Long failed to do that, multiple sources tell us that Trump called Long and asked him to seek reelection to the House, gently suggesting he bow out of the Senate race. “We really need you in the House,” Trump said, according to someone familiar with the call.

                Long didn’t take kindly to the idea, ignored the advice and is still trying to gain traction — though even his adviser Conway has told him to lay off the Twitter rants and that he needs to do more. Indeed, when asked about whether GOP leaders have asked him to drop out, Long told our Alex Isenstadt in a text “they know that will NEVER HAPPEN.” His campaign spokesperson told us last night that “Billy is working hard not only to get the endorsement of President Trump, but also the endorsement from the voters of Missouri on August 2nd.”



                SO WHAT ABOUT OTHER REPUBLICAN LEADERS?

                — In the past, the NRSC has waded into these sorts of fights to try to ensure the candidate who wins the nomination can win the general. But NRSC Chair RICK SCOTT (R-Fla.) has made clear he’s not getting involved in any — any — internal GOP races.

                — Some have wondered why McConnell world or the McConnell-aligned Senate Leadership Fund haven’t done more. But around Washington, other anti-Greitens Republicans say that McConnell’s involvement could actually backfire and help the former governor, which is why they’re hoping he stays out of this for now.

                — Instead, many seem to be looking to Hawley, who is influential within the state GOP, hoping that his endorsement will help narrow the field.

                These Republicans are crossing their fingers that Trump will follow the senator’s momentum and lean in for Hartzler, whom the former president has met but doesn’t know well. A double Hawley-Trump Hartzler endorsement, these Republicans say, may be the only thing that puts Greitens away for good, though one person told us Trump has called Hartzler “a nice lady, but not a fighter.”

                Still, we’re told Trump considers Hawley’s counsel, often asking people “what does Hawley think?” when it comes to anything Missouri-related.

                While Hawley hasn’t flat-out asked Trump to back Hartzler, after endorsing the congresswoman, Hawley called Trump to make the case why she would be the strongest candidate. Sources also said that Hawley — who investigated Greitens as state A.G., and was one of the first Republicans to ask for him to resign — has made the case to Trump in the past that having Greitens as the nominee would be a serious problem for the party.

                Meanwhile, Trump isn’t weighing in. Greitens feels like he’s sitting pretty, and has a good chance at becoming Missouri’s next senator. “Missouri political consultants and establishment swamp creatures are terrified that a Trump candidate like Governor Greitens will flip the trough over,” Greitens’ campaign manager, DYLAN JOHNSON, told us Wednesday night.


                jewboy Eric Greitens -- former gubbernatard and Navy SEAL running a Republican Family-Values BDSM Rape Dungeon -- has the largest polling value over the 3 Congress-Critters, Attorney General and lawyers currently running for Skunk Blunt's U.S. Senate Seat. So the Missery Republicunts want to get the jewboy.
                ____________________________
                I am The Librarian
                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
                http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

                Comment


                • #9
                  Danforth wants to find independent candidate to run for U. S. Senate in Missouri


                  https://rturner229.blogspot.com/2022...dependent.html

                  http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...2445#post22445
                  By Rudi Keller
                  Missouri Independent




                  Former Sen. Jack Danforth is looking for a centrist Republican to run an independent race for the U.S. Senate this year in Missouri — and said Friday there would be “a lot of resources” to help the campaign.

                  Danforth, who left the Senate in 1994 after three terms, enlisted a polling firm, Miami-based Bendixen & Amandi International, and an emerging political group, the Serve America Movement, to gauge whether Missouri is ready for an alternative in November.

                  The results, based on a survey of 800 voters in the first week of February, is that they are. A generic Republican nominee aligned with former President Donald Trump was chosen by 31 percent, as was a generic Democratic nominee aligned with Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. A Republican-leaning independent was selected by 28 percent of those polled.

                  When the poll used the names of the “current leading candidates” for both major parties, the Republican nominee got 27%, the Democratic nominee 25%, and the independent 26%, a news release stated without giving the names of the candidates polled.

                  The ideal candidate, Danforth said in an interview Friday, would be someone known to Missourians who accepts that the most important thing the nation needs is someone who wants to soothe partisan divisions paralyzing the government.

                  “It needs to be a center-right Republican who believes in the basic message, and the basic message is that the project of America is to hold ourselves together and the two parties intentionally are tearing us apart,” Danforth said. “This is our opportunity for Americans to come together regardless of party.”

                  The poll is being released to attract the interest of potential candidates, not because there is a campaign ready or someone waiting to join the race, Danforth said. He added that he is not interested in being a candidate again.

                  “There is not a network of anything,” Danforth said. “There’s me and 80 percent who answered the poll. This would have to be a very, very well-financed campaign. Do I believe those resources would be available? Yes. I think it would be a very serious campaign with a lot of resources.”

                  Filing opens Tuesday for the August primary in the race to succeed Sen. Roy Blunt, a Republican who is stepping aside after two terms in the Senate.

                  Major Republican candidates in the primary are former Gov. Eric Greitens, Attorney General Eric Schmitt, U.S. Reps. Vicky Hartzler and Billy Long, and St. Louis attorney Mark McCloskey. Democratic candidates include Air Force veteran Jewel Kelly, Marine veteran Lucas Kunce, community college professor Gena Ross, activist Tim Shepard, former state Sen. Scott Sifton and businessman Spencer Toder.

                  Greitens, who left office in 2018 as lawmakers moved to impeach him and while under indictment, accused of violent sexual misconduct during a 2015 affair, is leading the GOP field. Recent polling showed him with a narrow lead over Kunce, the Democrats’ most prolific fundraiser, worrying Republicans that the seat is in jeopardy if he is nominated, Politico reported.

                  Missouri has not elected an independent to the U.S. Senate since direct election of Senators began in 1913. Two of the 100 current members of the Senate, Angus King of Maine and Bernie Sanders of Vermont, are independents but they caucus with Democrats, making an even 50-50 split.

                  Democrats have the majority on the vote of Vice President Kamala Harris, and keeping the Missouri seat in Republican hands is vital for hopes of a GOP takeover.

                  Pushing for an independent candidate isn’t about stopping one individual, Danforth said.

                  “I think the Republican candidates, and I have been following them pretty closely, are indistinguishable,” Danforth said, adding “If there is a distinction, it is without a difference. I am not impressed by any of them but I also don’t want Chuck Schumer to be the majority leader.”

                  The polling data suggests voters are ready for an alternative.

                  Asked if they favor a Republican aligned with former President Donald Trump, believes Trump won in 2020 and opposes President Joe Biden’s agenda, 47% said they agree and 48% said they did not. Asked if having a Democrat who supported Biden and believes attempts to overturn the 2020 election led by Sen. Josh Hawley led “to a deadly insurrection,” 42% said they agree and 51% said they did not.


                  Danforth has long been critical of the growing partisanship in national politics and in 2017, became estranged from many Republicans by calling for them to distance themselves from Trump.

                  Danforth was also an early supporter of Hawley and played a key role in getting him to run for U.S. Senate in 2018.

                  After the Jan. 6 insurrection last year, Danforth said Hawley had a major share of the blame.

                  “I wouldn’t say he was storming the battlements himself,” Danforth said, “but he was certainly lighting the match in the middle of the forest and creating the situation where all this occurred.”

                  The effort to find an independent candidate isn’t about personalities, Danforth said.

                  “It goes deeper than that,” he said. “My views of Josh are well known, but we will need a lot of people who are Hawley believers and anti-Hawley people.”

                  Asked if they wanted an alternative who would work to close divisions, 67% said they agree.

                  On other questions, 72% said both parties are too extreme and 80% said the country is close to a constitutional crisis because of partisanship.

                  The Save America Movement is a Colorado-based group seeking to form a new centrist party. While it helped with the poll, Danforth said the quest to find an acceptable independent is not aligned with that group or any other political party.

                  “I just want to put that out there and see what happens,” he said of the poll.

                  The partisanship of both parties treats disagreements as a war and it is creating the worst divisions since the Civil War, Danforth said.

                  “The project of America is to hold ourselves together and the two parties intentionally are tearing us apart and this is our opportunity for Americans to come together, regardless of party,” he said.

                  The sentiments of President Abraham Lincoln in his First Inaugural Address express the tone he is looking for, he said.

                  Lincoln told the rebelling southern states that they were not enemies and that he hoped “the mystic chords of memory…will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”

                  “So much depends on touching the better angels of our nature and that is what the campaign would be about,” Danforth said.


                  This ridiculous old cuck actually believes that keeping ZOG together depends on finding an old Republicuck / Demopublican faggot like himself to ignore the interests of working-class whiggers and work for the donor jewboys and corporations.


                  ___666___666___666___



                  The Turner Diaries RULES, The Turner Report drools

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/fo...5796#post35796
                    Another crok like Jaybird Asscrack

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Skunk Blunt offers unconditional support for winner of Missouri GOP Senate primary

                      https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loc...8a36de0cb.html

                      http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/fo...5821#post35821

                      By Rudi Keller | Missouri Independent

                      U.S. Senator Roy Blunt says he isn’t imposing any conditions on his support for the eventual winner of the Republican primary to succeed him.

                      Blunt was asked about the GOP primary at a news conference after his recent address to the Missouri House. He used his address to push plans to expand broadband access throughout the state and to chide the Missouri Senate for failing to pass a congressional redistricting map before filing for the eight seats opened Feb. 22.

                      Speaking to reporters afterward, Blunt talked politics about the seat he is giving up after two terms.

                      As he has said before, Blunt said he wants to stay out of the primary that has attracted 15 candidates, including former Gov. Eric Greitens, U.S. Reps. Vicky Hartzler and Billy Long, St. Louis attorney Mark McCloskey and state Senate President Pro Tem Dave Schatz.

                      “I am going to support the Republican nominee,” Blunt said.

                      Blunt lost a hotly contested primary for governor in 1992, and the lingering divisions helped elect Mel Carnahan as Missouri’s first Democratic governor in 12 years.

                      Skunk Blunt said truthfully that the Missouri Attorney General Bill Webster was helping to loot the Missouri Workman's Compensation fund by giving in to coonected lawyers and then getting from the proceeds some campaign coontributions. Being #2 in the primary meant that by telling the truth about this matter meant that Baal Webster still won the primary but was crippled to where Minstrel-shoah Mel Carnahan as a Southern Democrat got two terms as governor and even beat John Ashcroft for U.S. Senator in 2000. while dead. These crooked corporsoreate Repubs gat caught doing something crooked and then the Democrats win a term or two until they get caught again.


                      Blunt said he has worked with many of the candidates over the years.

                      “I hope this works itself out without my involvement,” Blunt said.

                      It is clear that it will be hard to close divisions in the GOP after the primary if Greitens prevails. After filing Feb. 22, Hartzler said she would not support Greitens if he wins and cited the scandal that helped drive him from office in 2018.

                      “It is not conservative to tie a woman up in your basement and assault her,” Hartzler said.

                      It is coonservantive to be a brain-dead idiot -- like Vickie Hartzler. But she is right. A clipped-dick Navy-SEAL jewboy who had to quit in order to avoid prostitution for running a BDSM rape-dungeon and collecting millions in illegal campaign coontributions and who used to be a Democrat means that it will not go well with the other-than-brain-dead Republicunts.

                      That's why the Republicunts need an open White Supremacist who stands for White People as opposed to corporsorat ass-clowns who want to buy the nomination -- like Skunk Blunt.


                      Blunt also dismissed former Sen. Jack Danforth’s effort to enlist a Republican-leaning centrist to join the race as an independent.

                      An old thieving cunt who took the payments for three terms and then passed it on to other false-fag Repulsivecunts like Josh "Howdy-Doody" Hawley.


                      “I think the Republican candidate needs to be the candidate that Missouri Republicans and conservatives rally around, and I will be supporting the Republican candidate,” Blunt said.

                      In his address to the House, Blunt said that reaching every Missouri household with broadband internet connections is essential for supporting work, education and health care. Broadband opens opportunities that allow people to work remotely and live where they please, he said.

                      Gov. Mike Parson’s budget for the coming fiscal year provides more than $300 million to improve broadband access and speeds, using federal COVID-19 relief funds from the American Rescue Plan Act.

                      The COVID-19 pandemic presented many challenges, Blunt said, but it also “brought into focus the desire of people to live where they want to live and be connected to the greater society.”

                      MoZOGling rural whiggers need to watch high-definition porn on the Internuts and that means letting out coontracts to the local telephone cum-cumpanies and thus more campaign coontributions.


                      All the shit unfit to print

                      http://www.joplinglobe.com

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Jewplin Glob: Listen 2 jewk Dancuck -- Voaters should vote for a Centrist Pussy who will fuck them

                        https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/our...cd11e6fab.html
                        http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/fo...5822#post35822


                        Missouri voters, we urge you to heed the words of John Danforth. He believes Missouri politics are too polarized. Both sides. So do we.

                        Some readers, no doubt, will brush aside his words, but consider this: Danforth was first elected to statewide office in 1968 — decades before many of the divisive voices in politics today were even born. He represents an earlier generation of politicians who understood values such as civility, listening and uniting.

                        And then this piece of shit fucked up first Moronsouri, then the rest of the ZOGland.

                        He was, in fact, the first Republican elected to statewide office in Missouri in decades, and built the state’s Republican Party, bringing along the likes of Kit Bond, John Ashcroft, Clarence Thomas and others. He served in the U.S. Senate for three terms and is a former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. In short, he has unmatched political bona fides.

                        So jewk Dancuck was the template for a bunch of go-along to get along Repulsivecucks like him, cum-cum, cum-cum.

                        Danforth recently commissioned a poll of 800 likely voters in the general election and found that 83% agreed that American politics is too toxic and they want their next U.S. senator to be someone who can build bridges, find agreement on difficult issues. We weren’t part of the poll, but add our voices to the total.

                        “The poll shows that people overwhelmingly think the two parties don’t represent them,” Danforth told the Kansas City Star. “They represent people who are the strong believers, who vote in the primary elections where everything is determined, but they don’t represent them.”

                        Does anyone disagree with his assessment?

                        The primary process is usually a process wherein the leaders of the party choose who they want to hold the office. However, the voaters no longer trust the Repulsivecucks and so they want to choose, and 30% of them in Missery want a jewboy running a BDSM family valjews rape-dungeon.

                        How we got here is a big question. Blame the level of money it takes to engage in national or even statewide races today, which push candidates into the arms of billionaire megadonors, meaning they are listening to them rather than engaging with voters. Blame uncivil social media, which lets people be heard but does not require that they listen, and does not connect them with genuine debate, argument or even require so much as a conversation. Blame a primary system that drives candidates to extremes, rather than the center.

                        Danforth believes a centrist Republican running as an independent would find a lot of support in Missouri.

                        An ideal candidate, Danforth told the Missouri Independent, would be someone who recognizes the most important value would be someone “who believes in the basic message, and the basic message is that the project of America is to hold ourselves together, and the two parties intentionally are tearing us apart. This is our opportunity for Americans to come together regardless of party.”

                        The ideal candidate according to jewk Dancuck, would be a mealy-mouthed chickenshit pussy cuck who supports the [d]ruling elite like him who fucked up the ZOGland in the first place.

                        Missourians face many critical races this year, for U.S. Senate, and for House seats.

                        We urge voters to find those candidates who have the ability to listen, to be civil, to connect with Missourians, and to connect them with each other, rather than build their success on division.

                        Not to mention able to jump-suck a golf ball through a garden hose or the chrome off the lug-nuts of a logging truck.

                        “So much depends on touching the better angels of our nature, and that is what the campaign would be about,” Danforth said.

                        Don't you wish this lying chickenshit ass-clown would croak?
                        All the shit unfit to print

                        http://www.joplinglobe.com

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Eric jewboy Greitens hits its kikess & kikelings

                          http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/fo...5939#post35939

                          Eric Greitens accused of physical abuse in affidavit filed by ex-wife

                          https://rturner229.blogspot.com/2022...cal-abuse.html



                          Eric "BDSM Rape-Dungeon"
                          jewboy Greitens, cum-cum, cum-cum !!!


                          By Tessa Weinberg and Jason Hancock
                          Missouri Soros-Independent


                          Former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens is facing new allegations that he physically abused his ex-wife and children, and that in the months before his resignation became so unstable that his access to firearms had to be limited.

                          The accusations are included in a sworn affidavit filed by former Missouri First Lady Sheena Greitens as part of an ongoing child custody dispute. She sought a divorce from Eric Greitens in 2020 and is asking a court to move the child custody case to Austin, Texas, where she is currently a professor at the University of Texas. The affidavit was first reported Monday by The Associated Press.

                          Eric Greitens’ “unstable and coercive” behavior included physical violence to their children, “such as cuffing our then three-year-old son across the face at the dinner table in front of me and yanking him around by his hair,” the affidavit states.

                          In November 2019, the affidavit states that one of their sons came home from a visit with Eric Greitens with a swollen face, bleeding gums and loose tooth and said his father had hit him. The affidavit states Greitens said it was an accident while roughhousing. The tooth later had to be surgically removed.

                          In addition to allegedly abusing his children, Sheena Greitens alleges Eric Greitens knocked her down and confiscated her cell phone, wallet and keys during a 2018 argument so she would be “unable to call for help or extricate myself and our children from our home.”

                          In the spring and early summer of 2018, Sheena Greitens also said her ex-husband repeatedly threatened to commit suicide unless she showed “specific public political support” for him. As a result, she and others were so concerned they limited his access to firearms on at least three occasions that year.

                          “I started sleeping in my children’s room simply to try to keep them safe,” Sheena Greitens said in the affidavit.

                          In response to the affidavit, Dylan Johnson, Greitens’ campaign manager, released a statement denying the allegations of physical abuse, saying the former governor is a “great Dad” and accusing the former Missouri First Lady of “emotionally-abusive behavior.”

                          “One of the documented reasons Eric sought a divorce from Sheena was because of her constant threats to lie about him, which she made repeatedly over many years, in the belief that the press would believe anything that she said,” Johnson said.

                          “Eric will fight for his children and defend himself from these outright lies,” Johnson said.

                          In a statement of his own Monday afternoon, Eric Greitens said: “I have faith, and I know that ultimately the truth will always prevail.”

                          Neither Sheena Greitens nor her attorney, Helen Wade, could be immediately reached for comment on the former governor’s accusations or the affidavit made public Monday. After the allegations surfaced Monday, Eric Greitens’ opponents in the Republican U.S. Senate primary swiftly called on him to exit the race.

                          Eric Greitens’ attorney, Gary Stamper, filed a motion Monday requesting the case’s records be immediately sealed. He argued in a filing that “public disclosure of (Sheena Greitens’) allegations — that are as yet unproven — will irreparably harm (Eric Greitens’) candidacy and will deprive him of his due process right to a fair trial due to the intense public pressure the allegations will impose…”

                          Invasion of privacy

                          The new accusations come as Eric Greitens attempts a political comeback, launching a bid last year to replace retiring U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt. But he continues to be dogged by the allegations of violent sexual misconduct that drove him from the governor’s office in 2018.

                          Those accusations centered on a 2015 affair in which he allegedly led a women down to his basement, taped her hands to pull-up rings, blindfolded her, spit water into her mouth, ripped open her shirt, pulled down her pants and took a photo without her consent.

                          The felony charge that stemmed from that allegation was eventually dropped by Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker, who cited statutes of limitation that had or were about to pass and potentially missing evidence.

                          Eric Greitens denied ever taking the photo, but Sheena Greitens attested in the affidavit that he admitted to her in late January 2021 that he had in fact taken the photo that resulted in the invasion of privacy charge and threatened legal consequences if Sheena Greitens ever shared that fact with anyone — including family members or a therapist.

                          “Through that excruciating process, I saw Eric seek to destroy the credibility of the victim in the invasion of privacy case, using the unique leverage he had in Missouri to do so,” Sheena Greitens said in the affidavit. “This history made his threats against me seem all the more credible. Now, I am watching him use his political influence and public platform to make these claims again, as this nightmare is back in public view…”

                          He also allegedly ordered her to destroy emails she had sent to their therapist, who Sheena Greitens said she had sought out for help with Eric Greitens’ “escalating behavior.” If she and the therapist did not delete the emails, he threatened to accuse her of child abuse, the affidavit states.

                          During the same call, he reminded Sheena Greitens he was currently with the children and she wasn’t and accused her of giving information to prosecutors investigating him and to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and calling her “hateful, disgusting, nasty, vicious… a lying bitch.”

                          Days later when Sheena Greitens told him of her plans to take the children to her parents’ house out of fear for their safety, “he threatened to come to the airport and have me arrested for kidnapping and child abuse.” He cited the support from law enforcement he had as governor as justification that “the police would support him and not believe me, and I would lose our children.”

                          In early 2020, after she told him of her intention to accept a position at the University of Texas, he threatened to use his political influence to have the job offer revoked, the affidavit states.

                          With Eric Greitens now a candidate for federal office, their custody issues and the breakdown of their relationship have been thrust to the forefront of public discussion, heightening the risk to both her and her children, Sheena Greitens said in the affidavit.

                          Moving the case to Texas would mitigate the reach of Eric Greitens’ power and influence and the impact of personal attacks, Sheen Greitens attests.

                          Avalanche of scandals

                          The list of scandals that forced Greitens from the Missouri governor’s office in 2018 is long and varied.

                          In addition to the allegations of sexual misconduct during the 2015 affair, Greitens also was accused of stealing a donor list from a veteran’s charity he founded in order to boost his political career — a felony charge that was dropped as part of a plea deal that stipulated prosecutors had “sufficient evidence” to bring his case to trial.

                          Before his resignation, the Republican-dominated Missouri General Assembly was set to impeach him and remove him from office. An ethics complaint filed by the lawmaker who led the impeachment effort resulted in one of the largest fines in the history of the Missouri Ethics Commission — a $178,000 hit to Greitens’ campaign committee for violating state law.

                          The ethics commission concluded, however, that there was no evidence Greitens was involved in the wrongdoing.

                          Greitens hoped to return to the Navy following his resignation. But neither the Navy, nor the elite Navy SEALs, wanted him back. It was only after intervention from the office of then Vice President Mike Pence that Greitens was allowed to return to the Navy as a reservist.

                          Since his reemergence in Missouri politics last year, when he launched his Senate bid, many Republicans have publicly fretted that Greitens could win in a crowded GOP primary but ultimately lose the seat to a Democrat in November because of his scandal-plagued history.

                          Posted by Randy at 10:38 AM

                          ___666___666___666___



                          The Turner Diaries RULES, The Turner Report drools

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Why can't get good jewboy 4 Missouri Morons?
                            http://www.wsj.com

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              ddddddddddddddddddddd

                              Pastor Lindstedt's Web Page
                              Pastor Lindstedt's Archive Page & Christian Nationalist Forum

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