Donald



According to European sportsbook Betfair, which had Joe Biden as the favorite to win the November presidential election, a divided government is the most likely outcome in January. Perdue is a -250 favorite (66.2% implied probability) against Ossoff, while Loeffler is a smaller -175 favorite (58.9% implied probability) vs. Warnock.

Given that math, Republicans have nearly a 40% chance of winning both Senate seats, although that’s not necessary for party control. More importantly, these odds suggest that Democrats winning both races — and giving Biden a trifecta — is right around 14%.

https://www.actionnetwork.com/politics/georgia-senate-election-odds-perdue-loeffler-ossoff-warnock
 
Wrong---
upload_2022-2-3_13-44-43.png
 
Let's see what GOP does now when Trump is taking their money...

Trump says Republican donations should come directly to him as battle for funds with GOP steps up
Former president’s lawyers have demanded GOP stop using his name and image on fundraising media
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/.../trump-republican-donations-gop-b1814689.html


Donald Trump issued a statement telling his supporters to send money directly to his PAC rather than donating to the Republican Party.

Mr Trump issued a statement on Tuesday directing his supporters to send their money to the "Save America PAC" rather than give it to "RINOS" – a derisive shorthand for "Republicans in name only."

"No more money for RINOS. They do nothing but hurt the Republican Party and our great voting base – they will never lead us to Greatness," Mr Trump said in the statement.

The statement directs potential donors to Mr Trump's personal website.

"We will bring it all back stronger than ever before!" the statement concludes.

The statement appears to be the latest development in a squabble between Mr Trump and the party.

On 5 March, Mr Trump's lawyers sent the Republican National Committee a letter instructing it to "immediately cease and desist the unauthorised use of President Donald Jr Trump's name, image, and/or likeness in all fundraising, persuasion and/or issue speech."

The RNC pushed back on the the directive, saying it had "every right to refer to public figures as it engages in core, First Amendment-protected political speech" and that it would "continue to do so in pursuit of these common goals".

The spat outlines a lingering question following Mr Trump's departure from the White House; who is in charge of the Republican Party?

Mr Trump has alluded to – but not announced – a 2024 presidential run.

Since then, Trump loyalists in the party have made it clear they see the former president as the party's best path forward. His critics – like Rep. Liz Cheney – have said they hope to see the party move past Trumpism.

It's not immediately clear how contentious Mr Trump plans to be with the party; he was the star speaker at the Conservative Political Action Conference this year and still has the support of many Republican lawmakers, including bomb-thrower loyalists like Reps. Jim Jordan and Marjorie Taylor Greene.

The former president told RNC chair Ronna McDaniel that he planned to fundraise alongside the GOP, and is still scheduled to speak at the party's spring donor event in Palm Beach, Florida.

While Mr Trump has said he plans to assist the Republicans in taking back the House in 2022, it is also clear he intends to seek revenge on the GOP members he feels betrayed him by voting to impeach him. That revenge will likely come in the form of fundraising and endorsing MAGA-styled primary challengers to the Republicans he feels slighted him.

shocking!!!!

upload_2022-2-18_22-59-38.png



In 2021, Trump's Make America Great Again PAC spent $37,541.67 a month for ten months renting space in the Trump Organization building in Manhattan, according to a HuffPost analysis of campaign finance filings.

"The ex-aide’s assertion was confirmed by a Trump Tower employee who screens traffic to offices above the floors that are open to visitors," HuffPost reported. "When asked for permission to visit Trump’s political office recently, the employee told HuffPost that Save America and its related entities did not have offices there. 'It’s all being run out of Florida,' he said, declining to give his name."

Trump's campaign itself also rented unused space in Trump Tower.

"That was the same monthly amount his campaign had spent there from mid-2017 through the end of 2020, when his reelection campaign was actually based in northern Virginia, across the Potomac River from Washington," HuffPost reported. "In all those months, there was at most one person who periodically visited the 7,000-square-foot office in Trump Tower, the former aide said. But Trump insisted on having the campaign continue renting there ― as it had during the 2016 election ― because the building was having trouble finding tenants, he said."

In 2016, Trump reportedly increased the rent his campaign was paying at Trump Tower by five times after donors began footing the bill.

HuffPost noted "the $375,417 Trump spent for the unused office space is more than the $350,500 that his Save America committee donated last year to Republican candidates running for office, which is ostensibly Trump’s purpose for raising money for his committees."
 
Back
Top