Trump Gains Strength

In case you missed it our ex-president has been indicted a few times for his antics after he left the Oval Office….under normal circumstances this alone would be the kiss of death for political campaign….but not these day….if anything he adds fuel to the re-election drama…..

Multiple indictments, pending investigations, and being found liable of sex abuse and defamation in a civil suit apparently can’t keep him down: Donald Trump is even more in the lead in a new NBC News poll of 2024 presidential candidates. Per the Hill, Trump was the No. 1 pick of 51% of Republican primary voters. In second place was Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis with 22%—that’s nine points down from his April position, while Trump is five points up. Next up were Mike Pence (7%) and Chris Christie (5%); all other GOP candidates got 4% or less. Matched up with President Biden in a hypothetical election, the poll found Trump got 45% support to Biden’s 49%, Fox News reports.

When asked whether Trump should continue leading the Republican party, 49% of GOP voters said yes. Another 29% said the party needs a new leader “with better personal behavior and a different approach,” while 21% said Trump was a good president but should now pass the torch. Notably, however, while a CNN poll released last week still found Trump at the head of the pack, it found he’d dropped from 53% in a May poll to 47%. That poll found DeSantis in second place with 26% and Pence in third with 9%. It also found Trump’s favorability rating among Republicans had dropped from 77% in May to 67%

It is early in the possible match-ups….a lot can change between now and the heat of campaigns….but I do not see Trump having much problem beating the clowns that will challenge him in the primaries.

Biden is not so lucky….his numbers do not bode well….but again something could change all that.

How does it look from armchair?

This is it for the day for I will celebrate my birthday with Sue over a good meal.

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”

What The Hell Happened In Russia?

I am guessing that most people have heard the news of the mercs and Putin mash-up….but all in all just what the Hell happened?

Let me catch you up….

If you blinked and missed the headlines on Saturday, the news out of the Russia-Ukraine war will cause a double-take on Sunday. Russian warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin of the Wagner Group declared an open rebellion against Vladimir Putin, brought his tanks about 120 miles from Moscow, then abruptly called off the coup and said he was leaving for Belarus after the Kremlin promised not to prosecute him. The head-spinning developments have analysts all over the world scrambling to assess. Examples follow, but perhaps the big one to keep in mind comes from Alexander Vershbow, a former US ambassador to Moscow and a current deputy secretary general of NATO. “We can speculate all we want, but the fact is we have little idea of what happens next,” he tells the Washington Post.

  • Weaker Putin: “Whatever the outcome of this weekend’s astonishing drama, Putin looks weaker than at any time since he became president in 2000,” writes Luke Harding at the Guardian. “His decision to invade Ukraine has proven a major strategic blunder—the biggest of his career and one that may, sooner or later, force him from power.” In terms of the war itself, the weekend developments “dramatically” raised the chances of a Ukrainian military breakthrough, he adds.
  • Weaker Putin, II: The above sentiment is widespread. “Putin has shown he can no longer maintain order among his warlords,” per an analysis at the Economist. “He has been greatly weakened by the challenge—and in his world weakness tends to lead to further instability.” John Simpson, world affairs editor at the BBC, similarly sees this as evidence of “real, real weakness in Putin’s rule.”
  • The aftermath: Peter Baker of the New York Times agrees that the near-coup suggests “Putin’s hold on power is more tenuous than at any time since he took office more than two decades ago.” But those rooting for his downfall should be wary. “Weakness begets riskier behavior on Putin’s part,” says Jon Huntsman Jr., a former ambassador to Russia under former President Trump. “There’s a new ripple in Putin’s ‘invincibility,’ which will be exploited from every angle.”
  • No winners? A Wall Street Journal assessment by Yaroslav Trofimov suggests both Putin and Prigozhin emerge weaker. The rebellion did fall short, after all. “The entire system has lost yesterday, including Prigozhin, who is also part of the system,” says Andrei Kolesnikov, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment. “It turned out that the czar is not a real czar because he couldn’t control a man from his own system who’s supposed to be under his full control.”
  • The timeline: A timeline by the New York Times shows how the near-rebellion unfolded in real time. It includes a map showing the progression of Prigozhin’s tanks.
  • At root: Prigozhin, whose group has fought some of the deadliest battles on behalf of Russia in Ukraine, has lately become a scathing critic of Russia’s military strategy and of its justification for the war. He has demanded the ouster of Russian defense chief Sergei Shoigu, per the AP. As of Sunday, Shoigu was still in his post. Prigozhin has accused the Russian military of deliberately targeting Wagner camps with rockets and artillery.

How safe will this dude be in Belarus considering they are an ally of Russia?

Will he fall out a window?  Or maybe some mysterious sickness?

This ain’t over until it’s over.

You are now caught up on the Russian thing…..

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”