He’s back on Twitter baby!
You can’t stump the Trump. You just can’t https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1594131768298315777?s=46&t=IBY2RIlRU5Yu0lsEw4x58g
shareYou can’t stump the Trump. You just can’t https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1594131768298315777?s=46&t=IBY2RIlRU5Yu0lsEw4x58g
sharehe's not active , he on Truth social, so he won't be back, if twitter is around later he may post for primaries
shareIf Elon Musk was truly worth his word, Trump's account should have been the very first one that got reinstated. He tends to flip flop a lot on the things that he says he's going to do.
shareElon is far from perfect but he's making some good moves. If Trump wants to win 24 as unfortunate as it is he needs Twitter and now he has that option again if he chooses.
shareTrump is vastly closer to jail time than another presidency. He’s an anchor on the party. You should probably shift your undying loyalty to DeSantis.
Either way, it won’t make a difference. Trump already poisoned the well, and damned the party until a legitimately impressive candidate presents itself. Democrats are going to keep winning the presidency until that happens.
Legitimate delusion, you guys have had your finger on the metaphorical scales skewing things for so long you've forgotten what an even playing field is like. All your talk of jail time is just that, talk. For 6 years you've been trying to dig up dirt on him and now the Biden regime are overstepping their bounds and going on political witch hunts against anyone they think might help him. Stop trying to push the fake Trump/Desantis rivalry because it doesn't fool anyone who doesn't vote Dem.
shareHehe…Trump is functioning on borrowed time. Even his actions demonstrate that. You wanna suck that cock, go ahead. I’m not judging, but it’s not the hill I’d want to die on. There absolutely has to be better representation than that.
shareYes very good Mr NPC you hit all of the required talking points, heard it all before, anyway moving on.
shareA criminal who manages to evade prosecution is still a criminal, and that such a person has fans is despicable.
shareIncorrect Lenny.
President Trump is the de facto leader of the GOP
He led a hostile takeover of the party. War mongering neocons like Liz Cheney have been replaced by MAGA candidates.
We are in a culture war and we are winning.
Now President Trump's Twitter account has been restored. Great news!
TRUMP 2024
Winning? The democrats just took the Senate (when it should have never happened with a responsibly driven Republican Party). A minuscule lead in the house where McCarthy has to get on his knees to the likes of MTG?
Doesn’t exactly look like “winning” to me. It looks like a slow, pride-swallowing crawl to the next election.
You're not prepared for what's coming and it's going to be hilarious.
shareI thought the red wave was coming. Instead we got a red ripple. What do you think is coming then?
shareTrump endorsed 239 candidates and 219 of them won leaving him with a 93% success rate.
shareThat is not a wave. The GOP has a majority in the House, but not a overwhelming majority. The Democrats control the Senate and the White House.
What is your source for those numbers? They do not match this; https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/11/21/trump-republicans-elections/
LOL
shareDo you have nothing, as usual. Someday your arguments might have some substance. But today is not that day.
shareIt's cute that you think you posted a source yourself.
sharehttps://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/campaigns/trumps-general-election-endorsements-fared-midterms
This was before Boebert was called.
LOSERS
ARIZONA
Kari Lake, Arizona governor
Mark Finchem, Arizona secretary of state
Kelly Cooper, Arizona’s 4th Congressional District
Blake Masters, Arizona Senate
Robert Scantlebury, Arizona state Senate's 9th District
CONNECTICUT
Leora Levy, Connecticut Senate
ILLINOIS
Darren Bailey, Illinois governor
KANSAS
Derek Schmidt, Kansas governor
MICHIGAN
Tudor Dixon, Michigan governor
Shane Hernandez, Michigan lieutenant governor
Kristina Karamo, Michigan secretary of state
Matthew DePerno, Michigan attorney general
John Gibbs, Michigan's 3rd Congressional District
MINNESOTA
Scott Jensen, Minnesota governor
NEVADA
Adam Laxalt, Nevada Senate
NEW HAMPSHIRE
Don Bolduc, New Hampshire Senate
NEW MEXICO
Mark Ronchetti, New Mexico governor
NEW YORK
Lee Zeldin, New York governor
NORTH CAROLINA
Sandy Smith, North Carolina's 1st Congressional District
Bo Hines, North Carolina's 13th Congressional District
OHIO
Steve Chabot, Ohio's 1st Congressional District
Madison Gesiotto Gilbert, Ohio's 13th Congressional District
PENNSYLVANIA
Doug Mastriano, Pennsylvania governor
Dr. Mehmet Oz, Pennsylvania Senate
Jim Bognet, Pennsylvania's 8th Congressional District
VERMONT
Gerald Malloy, Vermont Senate
WASHINGTON
Joe Kent, Washington's 3rd Congressional District
WISCONSIN
Tim Michels, Wisconsin governor
[deleted]
WINNERS
ALABAMA
Jerry Carl, Alabama's 1st Congressional District
Barry Moore, Alabama's 2nd Congressional District
Mike Rogers, Alabama's 3rd Congressional District
Robert Aderholt, Alabama's 4th Congressional District
Gary Palmer, Alabama's 6th Congressional District
Katie Britt, Alabama Senate
ARKANSAS
Sarah Sanders, Arkansas governor
Tim Griffin, Arkansas attorney general
Rick Crawford, Arkansas's 1st Congressional District
Bruce Westerman, Arkansas's 4th Congressional District
John Boozman, Arkansas Senate
ARIZONA
David Schweikert, Arizona’s 1st Congressional District
Eri Crane, Arizona’s 2nd Congressional District
Andy Biggs, Arizona’s 5th Congressional District
Debbie Lesko, Arizona's 8th Congressional District — uncontested
Paul Gosar, Arizona's 9th Congressional District — uncontested
Wendy Rogers, Arizona state Senate's 7th District
David Farnsworth, Arizona state Senate's 10th District
Anthony Kern, Arizona state Senate's 27th District
Janae Shamp, Arizona state Senate's 29th District
CALIFORNIA
Doug LaMalfa, California's 1st Congressional District
Tom McClintock, California's 5th Congressional District
Kevin McCarthy, California's 20th Congressional District
Jay Obernolte, California's 23rd Congressional District
Ken Calvert, California's 41st Congressional District
Darrell Issa, California's 48th Congressional District
FLORIDA
Ashley Moody, Florida attorney general
Jimmy Patronis, Florida's chief financial officer
Wilton Simpson, Florida Agriculture commissioner
Matt Gaetz, Florida's 1st Congressional District
Neal Dunn, Florida's 2nd Congressional District
Kat Cammack, Florida's 3rd Congressional District
Aaron Bean, Florida's 4th Congressional District
Michael Waltz, Florida's 6th Congressional District
Cory Mills, Florida's 7th Congressional District
Gus Bilirakis, Florida's 12th Congressional District
Anna Paulina Luna, Florida's 13th Congressional District
Vern Buchanan, Florida's 16th Congressional District
Greg Steube, Florida's 17th Congressi
cont.
Greg Steube, Florida's 17th Congressional District
Scott Franklin, Florida's 18th Congressional District
Byron Donalds, Florida's 19th Congressional District
Brian Mast, Florida's 21st Congressional District
Mario Diaz-Balart, Florida's 26th Congressional District
Carlos Gimenez, Florida's 28th Congressional District
Marco Rubio, Florida Senate
Joe Gruters, Florida’s state Senate's 23rd District — uncontested
Kevin Cabrera, Florida's Miami-Dade District 6 county commissioner
Juan Carlos Bermudez, Florida's Miami-Dade District 12 county commissioner
GEORGIA
Burt Jones, Georgia lieutenant governor
Buddy Carter, Georgia's 1st Congressional District
Rich McCormick, Georgia's 6th Congressional District
Andrew Clyde, Georgia's 9th Congressional District
Mike Collins, Georgia's 10th Congressional District
Barry Loudermilk, Georgia's 11th Congressional District
Rick Allen, Georgia's 12th Congressional District
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Georgia's 14th Congressional District
IDAHO
Russ Fulcher, Idaho's 1st Congressional District
Mike Crapo, Idaho Senate
ILLINOIS
Mike Bost, Illinois's 12th Congressional District
Mary Miller, Illinois's 15th Congressional District
Darin LaHood, Illinois's 16th Congressional District
INDIANA
Jim Banks, Indiana's 3rd Congressional District
Jim Baird, Indiana's 4th Congressional District
Victoria Spartz, Indiana's 5th Congressional District
Greg Pence, Indiana's 6th Congressional District
Larry Bucshon, Indiana's 8th Congressional District
Erin Houchin, Indiana's 9th Congressional District
IOWA
Kim Reynolds, Iowa governor
Brenna Bird, Iowa attorney general
Ashley Hinson, Iowa's 2nd Congressional District
Zach Nunn, Iowa's 3rd Congressional District
Randy Feenstra, Iowa's 4th Congressional District
Chuck Grassley, Iowa Senate
KANSAS
Jerry Moran, Kansas Senate
Tracey Mann, Kansas's 1st Congressional District
Jake LaTurner, Kansas's 2nd Congressional District
Ron Estes, Kansas's 4th Congressional District
cont.
KANSAS
Jerry Moran, Kansas Senate
Tracey Mann, Kansas's 1st Congressional District
Jake LaTurner, Kansas's 2nd Congressional District
Ron Estes, Kansas's 4th Congressional District
KENTUCKY
James Comer, Kentucky's 1st Congressional District
Brett Guthrie, Kentucky's 2nd Congressional District
Thomas Massie, Kentucky's 4th Congressional District
Hal Rogers, Kentucky's 5th Congressional District
Andy Barr, Kentucky's 6th Congressional District
Rand Paul, Kentucky Senate
LOUISIANA
Steve Scalise, Louisiana's 1st Congressional District
Clay Higgins, Louisiana's 3rd Congressional District
Mike Johnson, Louisiana's 4th Congressional District — uncontested
John Kennedy, Louisiana Senate
MARYLAND
Dan Cox, Maryland governor
Gordana Schifanelli, Maryland lieutenant governor
MASSACHUSETTS
Geoff Diehl, Massachusetts governor
MICHIGAN
Jack Bergman, Michigan's 1st Congressional District
John Moolenaar, Michigan's 2nd Congressional District
Bill Huizenga, Michigan's 4th Congressional District
Tim Walberg, Michigan's 5th Congressional District
Lisa McClain, Michigan's 9th Congressional District
John James, Michigan's 10th Congressional District
Jonathan Lindsey, Michigan state Senate's 17th District
Rachelle Smit, Michigan state House's 43rd District
Matt Maddock, Michigan state House's 51st District
Angela Rigas, Michigan state House's 79th District
Mike Hoadley, Michigan state House's 99th District
MINNESOTA
Tom Emmer, Minnesota's 6th Congressional District
Michelle Fischbach, Minnesota's 7th Congressional District
Pete Stauber, Minnesota's 8th Congressional District
cont.
MISSISSIPPI
Trent Kelly, Mississippi's 1st Congressional District
Mike Ezell, Mississippi's 4th Congressional District
MONTANA
Ryan Zinke, Montana's 1st Congressional District
Matt Rosendale,, Montana's 2nd Congressional District
MISSOURI
Blaine Luetkemeyer, Missouri’s 3rd Congressional District
Mark Alford, Missouri’s 4th Congressional District
Sam Graves, Missouri’s 6th Congressional District
Eric Burlison, Missouri’s 7th Congressional District
Jason Smith, Missouri’s 8th Congressional District
Eric Schmitt, Missouri Senate
NEBRASKA
Adrian Smith, Nebraska's 3rd Congressional District
NEVADA
Joe Lombardo, Nevada governor
NEW JERSEY
Jeff Van Drew, New Jersey's 2nd Congressional District
NEW YORK
Nicole Malliotakis, New York's 11th Congressional District
Elise Stefanik, New York's 21st Congressional District
Nick Langworthy, New York's 23rd Congressional District
Claudia Tenney, New York's 24th Congressional District
cont.
NORTH CAROLINA
Greg Murphy, North Carolina's 3rd Congressional District
Virginia Foxx, North Carolina's 5th Congressional District
David Rouzer, North Carolina's 7th Congressional District
Dan Bishop, North Carolina's 8th Congressional District
Richard Hudson, North Carolina's 9th Congressional District
Patrick McHenry, North Carolina's 10th Congressional District
Ted Budd, North Carolina Senate
NORTH DAKOTA
Kelly Armstrong, North Dakota's at-large congressional district
John Hoeven, North Dakota Senate
OHIO
Mike DeWine, Ohio governor
Jon Husted, Ohio lieutenant governor
Dave Yost, Ohio attorney general
Frank LaRose, Ohio secretary of state
Robert Sprague, Ohio treasurer
Keith Faber, Ohio state auditor
Brad Wenstrup, Ohio's 2nd Congressional District
Jim Jordan, Ohio's 4th Congressional District
Bob Latta, Ohio's 5th Congressional District
Bill Johnson, Ohio's 6th Congressional District
Max Miller, Ohio's 7th Congressional District
Warren Davidson, Ohio's 8th Congressional District
Mike Turner, Ohio's 10th Congressional District
Troy Balderson, Ohio's 12th Congressional District
Mike Carey, Ohio's 15th Congressional District
J.D. Vance, Ohio Senate
OKLAHOMA
Kevin Stitt, Oklahoma governor
Kevin Hern, Oklahoma’s 1st Congressional District
Josh Brecheen, Oklahoma’s 2nd Congressional District
Frank Lucas, Oklahoma's 3rd Congressional District
Tom Cole, Oklahoma's 4th Congressional District
James Lankford, Oklahoma Senate
Markwayne Mullin, Oklahoma Senate
PENNSYLVANIA
Dan Meuser, Pennsylvania's 9th Congressional District
Scott Perry, Pennsylvania's 10th Congressional District
Lloyd Smucker, Pennsylvania's 11th Congressional District
John Joyce, Pennsylvania's 13th Congressional District — uncontested
Guy Reschenthaler, Pennsylvania's 14th Congressional District — uncontested
Glenn “GT” Thompson, Pennsylvania's 15th Congressional District
Mike Kelly, Pennsylvania's 16th Congressional District
SOUTH CAROLINA
Henry McMaster, South Carolina governor
Alan Wilson, South Carolina attorney general
Joe Wilson, South Carolina's 2nd Congressional District
Jeff Duncan, South Carolina's 3rd Congressional District — uncontested
William Timmons, South Carolina's 4th Congressional District — uncontested
Ralph Norman, South Carolina's 5th Congressional District
Russell Fry, South Carolina's 7th Congressional District
Tim Scott, South Carolina Senate
SOUTH DAKOTA
Kristi Noem, South Dakota governor
TENNESSEE
Bill Lee, Tennessee governor
Diana Harshbarger, Tennessee's 1st Congressional District
Tim Burchett, Tennessee's 2nd Congressional District
Chuck Fleischmann, Tennessee's 3rd Congressional District
Scott DesJarlais, Tennessee's 4th Congressional District
Andy Ogles, Tennessee's 5th Congressional District
John Rose, Tennessee's 6th Congressional District
Mark Green, Tennessee's 7th Congressional District
David Kustoff, Tennessee's 8th Congressional District
cont.
TEXAS
Greg Abbott, Texas governor
Ken Paxton, Texas attorney general
Dan Patrick, Texas lieutenant governor
Sid Miller, Texas agriculture commissioner
Glenn Hagar, Texas comptroller
Dawn Buckingham, Texas land commissioner
Nathaniel Moran, 1st Congressional District
Keith Self, 3rd Congressional District
Pat Fallon, Texas's 4th Congressional District
Lance Gooden, Texas's 5th Congressional District
Jake Ellzey, Texas's 6th Congressional District — uncontested
Michael McCaul, Texas's 10th Congressional District
August Pfluger, Texas's 11th Congressional District — uncontested
Kay Granger, Texas's 12 Congressional District
Ronny Jackson, Texas's 13th Congressional District
Randy Weber, Texas's 14th Congressional District
Monica De La Cruz, Texas's 15th Congressional District
Jodey Arrington, Texas's 19th Congressional District
Troy Nehls, Texas's 22nd Congressional District
Beth Van Duyne, Texas's 24th Congressional District
Roger Williams, Texas's 25th Congressional District — uncontested
Michael Burgess, Texas's 26th Congressional District
Michael Cloud, Texas's 27th Congressional District
John Carter, Texas's 31st Congressional District — uncontested
Brian Babin, Texas's 36th Congressional District
Wesley Hunt, Texas's 38th Congressional District
Angela Paxton, Texas state Senate's 8th District
Mayes Middleton, Texas state Senate's 11th District — uncontested
Pete Flores, Texas state Senate's 24th District
Adam Hinojosa, Texas state Senate's 27th District
Kevin Sparks, Texas state Senate's 31st District — uncontested
Steve Toth, Texas state House's 15th District
Ryan Guillen, Texas state House's 31st District
Frederick Frazier, Texas state House's 61st District
Tim O'Hare, Texas Tarrant County judge
Phil Sorrells, Texas Tarrant County district attorney
UTAH
Chris Stewart, Utah's 2nd Congressional District
Burgess Owens, Utah’s 4th Congressional District
Mike Lee, Utah Senate
cont.
VIRGINIA
Rob Wittman, Virginia’s 1st Congressional District
Bob Good, Virginia's 5th Congressional District
Ben Cline, Virginia's 6th Congressional District
Morgan Griffith, Virginia's 9th Congressional District
WISCONSIN
Brian Steil, Wisconsin's 1st Congressional District
Derrick Van Orden, Wisconsin's 3rd Congressional District
Scott Fitzgerald, Wisconsin's 5th Congressional District
Tom Tiffany, Wisconsin's 7th Congressional District
Ron Johnson, Wisconsin Senate
Janel Brandtjen, Wisconsin state House's 22nd District
WEST VIRGINIA
Carol Miller, West Virginia's 1st Congressional District
Alex Mooney, West Virginia's 2nd Congressional District
WYOMING
Chuck Gray, Wyoming secretary of state — uncontested
Curt Meier, Wyoming treasurer — uncontested
Brian Schroeder, Wyoming superintendent
Harriet Hageman, Wyoming's at-large Congressional District
OUTSTANDING
ALASKA
Mike Dunleavy, Alaska governor
Sarah Palin, Alaska at-large congressional district
Kelly Tshibaka, Alaska Senate
ARIZONA
Abraham Hamadeh, attorney general
CALIFORNIA
Kevin Kiley, California's 3rd Congressional District
COLORADO
Lauren Boebert, Colorado's 3rd Congressional District W
GEORGIA
Herschel Walker, Georgia Senate
So? The GOP has a small majority in the House and does not control the Senate or White House.
Do you think they will get more done than they did in 2016 to 2018 when they pissed away two years of GOP control of the House, Senate and White House?
Your moving of the goalposts have been noted lol
shareHere is my original goalpost; "I thought the red wave was coming. Instead we got a red ripple".
It has not moved.
And that's why I initially laughed at your nonsense because a 93% success on endorsements is a ripple to you and you've given nothing in evidence to support your ridiculous assertion to the contrary. Even the article you linked has his 2022 numbers fairly close to what I stated and yet they are still claiming it was underwhelming like you. You might accept their 2+2=5 gaslighting bullshit but nobody with a functioning brain does. Just more lies like "mostly peaceful" and "he incited insurrection" you people literally cannot stop lying.
shareIn the end the GOP had slight gains in Congress. Why is that a red wave?
sharehttps://somnowell.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Yawning2.jpg
You're the only one who has been using the term "red wave" in this conversation so how about you just state your definition of what that would even consist of instead of hiding behind some vague undefined term you saw on one of your propaganda networks. Is it when you say goodbye to a communist as they're being hauled off to the gulags?
It is entirely appropriate to use the term "red wave" when it was what was supposed to be coming in the 2022 election according to many conservatives.
A red wave would be a overwhelming number of flipped seats in Congress to give the GOP control. It did not happen even though some people thought it would.
How is it that you managed to remain unaware of how a red wave was defined during the time prior to the election? I did not know they drilled holes that deep.
https://news.yahoo.com/fox-news-pundits-admit-red-063734040.html
according to many conservatives
A red wave would be a overwhelming number
A red wave would be a overwhelming number of flipped seats in Congress to give the GOP control
How is it that you managed to remain unaware of how a red wave was defined during the time prior to the election?
I did not know they drilled holes that deep.
The Daily Beast link was to show what some people were claiming, that is it.
Do you think a red wave meant anything else other than the GOP taking control of both the House and the Senate?
"But muh red wave"
You're a child trying to spin doctor the fact you lost the House and got 6 million less votes overall, your damage control is "herp derp you should have won everything" utterly pathetic attempt do better.
No. I live in WA, the local and state elections affect me more than the national ones.
WA is still blue, but I did gain GOP Representative in my district. I'll be hitting him up for more pro-gun bills this time around.
Biden is going to push for his own AWB, but it is not going to pass in my opinion.
Why is it that you seem to be the only person on the forum who is confused by how the Dems and GOP were using the term "red wave"?
Thank you for the update to your blog, how do I unsubscribe?
I don't care if people were using some buzzword or phrase.
He should be restored with all of his previous followers intact. Please fix that. If you don’t have the data in the current database just pull it from a backup when his account was still live.
shareThats a Red Tsunami!
The Trump Bump is real.
But he needs to be more firm in the things he says. Trump should have been the very first person that was reinstated. That would have shown that he was serious about the things that he says that he's going to do. Instead he reinstated others first and was still "mulling over" whether he would reinstate Trump which is complete fucking bullshit. Then he had to put a poll up asking people if he should reinstate him or not. He doesn't need anybody's permission to do what he said he was originally going to do. So now if the vote was more against reinstatement, then what would he have done? Kept him banned? He'd get more respect from people if he would just stick to his word more and not be so wishy-washy.
shareHmmm….his word doesn’t mean shit. His poll doesn’t mean shit. He’s just leading you on, like that pole dancer that’s tricking you into thinking that you might go home tonight with her. Just a whore that wants to milk you for as much money as you’re willing to give.
shareYour word doesn't mean shit
shareNeither does yours. So, whatever? 🤷🏻♂️ I guess just go on word vomiting non-sensical political babble that only dumbasses can identify with?
shareYou literally just described what you've done here but are probably too dense to even notice.
shareYeah, as if Elon was playing coy with his intentions. What the fuck would a poll matter if he was going to do it anyway? Like he really gives a shit.
The guy is stupid rich enough to pay $30 Billion more than he had to. Why? To have a silly little poll that decided if Trump should be reinstated? Please.
He’s an idiot burning a fuck ton of money to make a point that doesn’t ultimately make any sense.
A history book will eventually say: Elon Musk spent $44 Billion Dollars to buy a social network. He could have instantly ended world hunger with that money, but instead felt a deep desire to get Donald Trump reinstated into Twitter…..BUT NOT BEFORE THROWING A POLL (to ensure that everyone was cool with it 🙄). Ends up it was for nothing, because Trump said “Well, I’ve already got a ton of other suckers involved in my competing platform ….so, good luck?” 🤷🏻♂️
Maybe he wanted to use the poll as a way to weed out the inevitable bots who would be swarming to the poll trying to skew the true results? I made an account there just to vote in the poll, now I'm waiting to see what happens.
sharemillionaires like millionaires for some reason
share"Donald Trump on Saturday said he had no interest in returning to Twitter even as a slim majority voted in favor of reinstating the former U.S. president, who was banned from the social media service for inciting violence, in a poll organized by new owner Elon Musk."
https://www.reuters.com/technology/musks-twitter-poll-showing-narrow-majority-want-trump-reinstated-2022-11-20/