Wednesday, March 06, 2024

AFTER TRUMP CLEANS HALEY LIKE COMET DUST.NIKKI FINALLY QUITS.TRUMP AGAINST BRAIN DEAD BIDEN IN THE FINAL.

 AFTER TRUMP CLEANS HALEY LIKE COMET DUST.NIKKI FINALLY QUITS.TRUMP AGAINST BRAIN DEAD BIDEN IN THE FINAL.
 
REVELATION 13:16-18
16 And he(FALSE POPE) causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, (SLAVE) to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:(CHIP IMPLANT)

1 TIMOTHY 1:10
10 for the sexually immoral, for those practicing homosexuality, for slave traders and liars and perjurers—and for whatever else is contrary to the sound doctrine

DEUTERONOMY 24:7
7 If someone is caught kidnapping a fellow Israelite and treating or selling them as a slave, the kidnapper must die. You must purge the evil from among you.

REV 9:21
 21 and they did not repent of their murders nor of their sorceries (DRUG HIGHS) nor of their immorality nor of their thefts.

HEBREWS 10:26
For if we go on willfully and deliberately sinning after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice [to atone] for our sins [that is, no further offering to anticipate],

ISAIAH 49:26
26-And I will feed them that oppress thee with their own flesh; and they shall be drunken with their own blood, as with sweet wine: and all flesh shall know that I the LORD am thy Saviour and thy Redeemer, the mighty One of Jacob.(ISRAEL)

OF THE 16 STATES ON THIS SUPER TUESDAY VOTING. AS OF 11.30PM TRUMP IS LEADING IN 15 OF THE 16 SUPER TUESDAY STATES.

Super Tuesday 2024 live results: Haley expected to drop out of race after Trump, Biden win big-Trump won 15 of the 16 GOP contests on Tuesday; Haley's lone victory came in Vermont.Yahoo News Staff-Wed, March 6, 2024 at 7:53 AM EST

President Biden and former President Donald Trump each notched a string of resounding victories on Super Tuesday that brought them even closer to a 2024 rematch of their fierce battle in 2020 for the White House.Trump's last remaining challenger for the Republican nomination, is expected to suspend her campaign on Wednesday morning. Trump's former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations denied him a Super Tuesday sweep by winning Vermont's Republican primary.Biden posted wins in Iowa, North Carolina, Virginia, Vermont, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Massachusetts, Maine, Arkansas, Alabama, Texas, Colorado, Minnesota, Utah and California, while Trump scored victories in Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Maine, Alabama, Massachusetts, Texas, Arkansas, Colorado, Minnesota and California. Biden lost to political unknown Jason Palmer in the sparsely attended Democratic caucus in American Samoa.

Today at 12:32 AM EST-Jon Ward-Where things stand as Super Tuesday ends

Here are where things stand as Super Tuesday comes to a close.Donald Trump has won Republican elections and caucuses in Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Maine, Alabama, Massachusetts, Texas, Arkansas, Colorado, Minnesota and California.Nikki Haley, however, scored an upset win in Vermont. The Alaska caucuses and Utah caucuses have not yet been called by the Associated Press.In a victory speech at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, Trump did not mention Haley but launched into a speech aimed at contrasting himself with President Biden."Nov. 5 is right around the corner," Trump said.Haley did not give a speech, although her campaign released a statement late Tuesday night."Unity is not achieved by simply claiming 'we’re united.' Today, in state after state, there remains a large block of Republican primary voters who are expressing deep concerns about Donald Trump."President Joe Biden won the Democratic primaries in Iowa, North Carolina, Virginia, Vermont, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Massachusetts, Maine, Arkansas, Alabama, Texas, Colorado, Minnesota, Utah and California. But little-known candidate Jason Palmer won the Democrats' caucus in American Samoa."Tonight’s results leave the American people with a clear choice: Are we going to keep moving forward or will we allow Donald Trump to drag us backwards into the chaos, division, and darkness that defined his term in office?" Biden said in a statement.The results put America on the verge of a rematch election between Trump and Biden, who defeated Trump in the 2020 election.

Republicans are holding primaries in the following states:

1-Alabama-50-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.-  - NIKKI HALEY.-
2-Arkansas-40-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY.-
3-California-169-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.-169 - NIKKI HALEY-0
4-Colorado-37-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
5-Maine-20-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-   
6-Massachusetts-40-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
7-Minnesota-39-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
8-North Carolina-74-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
9-Oklahoma-43-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
10-Tennessee-58-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
11-Texas-150-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
12-Vermont-17-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
13-Virginia-48-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-

Republicans are holding caucuses in the following states:

 14-Alaska-48-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-
 15-Utah-40-DONALD JOHN TRUMP.- - NIKKI HALEY-

How many delegates are up for grabs on Super Tuesday?
There are 865 Republican delegates up for grabs on Super Tuesday. The Republican candidate needs 1,215 delegates out of  2,429 to win the nomination.

Nikki Haley plans to drop her presidential bid Wednesday-She was the last viable alternative in the GOP primary to former President Donald Trump.By Natalie Allison-03/06/2024 06:58 AM EST

Nikki Haley kept running long after it was clear she didn’t have a shot.But on Wednesday morning, the former South Carolina governor — and only woman to seek the Republican presidential nomination in 2024 — will end her yearlong bid, ceding the GOP nomination to Donald Trump.The Wall Street Journal first reported Haley’s plans, and a person familiar with those plans confirmed Haley intends to leave the race. Haley is expected to deliver remarks in South Carolina around 10 a.m.Haley’s departure follows a brutal series of losses in states across the map on Super Tuesday, where she failed to halt Trump’s momentum. And it marks the end of what remained of the GOP’s nominal attempt at soul-searching this presidential cycle, when few of the dozen candidates who signed up to run against Trump would dare to take him on directly.Haley did step up her attacks on Trump over the last several weeks. It wasn’t enough, but nothing may have been.Previously appointed by Trump as his United Nations ambassador, Haley was the first Republican to launch her presidential bid after he announced his campaign in late 2022, and was the last to remain in the GOP contest after other challengers bowed out.Her persistence allowed Haley to make history. In winning her first primary in Washington, D.C. on Sunday, Haley became the first woman to win a GOP presidential primary. She won her first state on Tuesday, narrowly beating Trump in Vermont.Her unsuccessful run leaves her at a personal and professional crossroads — forced to decide whether she will continue her crusade against Trump and his influence on the Republican Party, or endorse him as he becomes the party’s nominee. Haley last year signed a pledge issued by the Republican National Committee to support the eventual nominee, a requirement to participate in the RNC’s primary debates. But in recent days, Haley said she no longer felt bound to the pledge — while telling POLITICO she was unsure if her Trump criticism would continue post-candidacy.In her presidential run, Haley never got closer than her 11-point finish behind Trump in New Hampshire, where Haley benefitted from an electorate far less conservative than in Iowa or South Carolina.Her standing in the party has taken a hit, too. In her home state, where she had not appeared on the ballot in a decade, Haley finished 20 points behind Trump — and was already hinting her road could be coming to an end. In a sign of how dire her prospects had become, the Koch network’s Americans For Prosperity Action, a powerful conservative group supporting her run, announced after South Carolina it would no longer spend money supporting her campaign. Heading into Super Tuesday, it was only a question of when, not if, she would drop out.The only woman to launch a bid in this year’s GOP presidential primary, Haley went farther in her campaign than any of the few women who did so before her, collecting 20 delegates across Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.Betsy Ankney, Haley’s campaign manager, had repeatedly said there would be “more fertile ground” for Haley in Super Tuesday states, when 11 of 16 had primaries that allow non-Republicans to participate. But having once been a firebrand conservative who won a difficult 2010 gubernatorial primary in a wave of tea party momentum, Haley’s campaign became increasingly dependent on turning out large numbers of unaffiliated voters, Democrats, moderates and the shrinking, traditional wing of the Republican Party.To those Republicans, she was a source of some hope — and a place for the donor class to invest in their long-shot effort to derail Trump.Haley’s campaign boasted its highest fundraising month of the campaign in January, reporting that it raised $16.5 million and picked up 70,000 new donors. Beginning in the fall — and as candidates like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina crashed in polling — Haley became the top choice of major Republican donors, and even top Democratic financiers. But money proved to be insufficient when it came to winning over voters.Previously an accountant by trade, Haley started with little traction in the race but stuck to a lean budget, keeping overhead costs low as she waited to staff up and open offices in the early states. As support picked up, she repeatedly bragged about her decision to fly commercial and stay at lower-cost hotels.“From the beginning, we have been very smart about how we spent our money,” Ankney said earlier this month. “We did not build too quickly. We did not grow before we had the resources to do so.”Haley was defiant as she faced calls from influential Republicans to bow out, scrambling instead to breathe new life into her campaign. In February, she appeared as herself on an episode of “Saturday Night Live,” and her campaign and super PAC seemed to suddenly be having fun with their Trump insults — dropping “Mean Girls” memes, putting his face on the “Grumpy Old Men” movie poster and mocking up a Halloween costume package for “Weakest General Election Candidate Ever.”The jovial, attention-grabbing approach didn’t move the needle in the polls — though Trump’s resentment toward Haley for remaining in the race appeared only to grow. After results posted Sunday night showing Haley capturing nearly 63 percent of the vote in D.C., Trump went on social media, once again calling Haley “Birdbrain” and “a loser.”Trump had seemingly locked up most of the Super Tuesday states before any real campaigning took place, with the rank-and-file squarely behind him and endorsement after endorsement from prominent Republicans, including former primary rivals.Haley, meanwhile, secured the endorsement of only three members of Congress, her longtime friend and former state legislative colleague Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), followed by Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Susan Collins (R-Maine). Murkowski and Collins, two critics of Trump, weighed in just days before Republicans in their states voted on Super Tuesday.

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