Are there any Q drops for this date. It feels like an explosive day on subliminal ways. Keep your eyes peeled.
Pray for Trump
Are there any Q drops for this date. It feels like an explosive day on subliminal ways. Keep your eyes peeled.
Pray for Trump
🇺🇸 Pismo 🇺🇸
@Pismo_B
Flashback - @AOC : I was almost rqped and kiIIed on January 6th in the Capitol building.
Reality: She wasn't even there.
8:45 PM · Jan 5, 2025
·
314.2K
Views
(The answer on whether media would be nice, NO!They are laying the ground work of 4 more years of lying against Trump and MAGA)
https://x.com/Pismo_B/status/1876082690824564777
0.26
Former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio asks Trump for Jan. 6 pardon
He was sentenced to 22 years in prison for his seditious conspiracy conviction — the lengthiest sentence of any Jan. 6 defendant.
Kyle Cheney
01/06/2025, 10:04AM ET
The most notorious of all Jan. 6 defendants — former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio — has formally asked President-elect Donald Trump to pardon him for his seditious conspiracy conviction related to the attack on the Capitol.
Tarrio was convicted by a jury of helping orchestrate the attack on the Capitol, even though he was banished from the city by prosecutors that day for his role in burning a stolen Black Lives Matter banner. U.S. District Judge Tim Kelly, a Trump appointee, sentenced Tarrio to 22 years in prison, the lengthiest sentence of any Jan. 6 defendant.
Now, Tarrio is asking Trump for a full pardon, claiming he was targeted by the Biden administration for his political views rather than the alleged effort to subvert the 2020 election by force.
Prosecutors laid out their case against Tarrio and other prominent Proud Boys during a four month trial last year. They described him as the driving force behind efforts to assemble hundreds of Proud Boys in Washington in response to Trump’s call for a “wild” protest on Jan. 6, and to point them toward the Capitol as a target.
Many of Tarrio’s top lieutenants in the group were at the front of the mob as it breached police lines and helped drive the riot forward at key moments. Dominic Pezzola, who was convicted alongside Tarrio, became the first rioter to breach the Capitol, using a stolen police riot shield to smash a Senate-wing window. He later came within the eyeline of Senate President Pro tem Chuck Grassley as he was being evacuated.
https://www.politico.com/live-updates/2025/01/06/congress/proud-boys-enrique-tarrio-pardon-00196572
Enrique wasn't even there on J6
Trump seeks stay of sentencing in hush money case
The president-elect is scheduled to be sentenced on Friday, just 10 days before his inauguration.
Updated Jan. 6, 2025, 10:08 AM
President-elect Donald Trump is seeking a stay of his Friday sentencing in the hush money case, according to a court filing made public Monday.
“The Court should vacate the sentencing hearing scheduled for January 10, 2025, and suspend all further deadlines in the case until President Trump’s immunity appeals are fully and finally resolved,” Trump's attorneys argued in the filing to New York state Judge Juan Merchan dated Sunday.
Merchan had denied Trump's bid to dismiss the case in a ruling last week and ordered his sentencing on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to proceed this week, ahead of his inauguration.
Trump's filing said he is appealing those decisions to the state Appellate Division later today, and is entitled to an "automatic stay."
In a statement, Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung called the sentencing "unlawful."
"The Supreme Court’s historic decision on Immunity, the state constitution of New York, and other established legal precedent mandate that this meritless hoax be immediately dismissed," he said.
NBC News has reached out to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office for comment.
In his Friday ruling, Merchan said he did not plan to jail Trump and was likely to sentence him to an unconditional discharge, meaning he would remain a convicted felon but would have no other punishment.
Trump was convicted in May of falsifying records related to a hush money payment his then-attorney Michael Cohen paid to adult film star Stormy Daniels in the closing days of the 2016 presidential election. Daniels testified she had a sexual encounter with Trump in 2006, a claim he has denied.
He was initially scheduled to be sentenced in July, but Merchan postponed the proceeding at Trump's request in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling setting a new standard for presidential immunity earlier that month.
In a pair of rulings over the last month, Merchan found that the Supreme Court ruling didn't affect Trump's conviction in the criminal case.
The judge's Friday ruling said Trump could appear in person or virtually for the sentencing and asked Trump's attorneys to inform him of the decision by Sunday. It's unclear if they replied or if their filing is the response.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-seeks-stay-sentencing-hush-money-case-rcna186373
Blah, blah, blah media joins to make more noise
Trump invites House Republicans to Mar-a-Lago ahead of inauguration
President-elect Donald Trump is set to host several groups of House GOP lawmakers in Florida next weekend. Jan. 5, 2025
President-elect Donald Trump has invited multiple groups of House Republicans to join him at Mar-a-Lago next weekend, three sources involved in the planning told NBC News.
Trump’s team worked with Speaker Mike Johnson’s leadership team to finalize which members would be invited, the sources said.
Between Jan. 10 and Jan. 12,members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, lawmakers from states affected by the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap, chairs of key committeesand other groups of Republicans will visit Trump at his Florida residence, just days ahead of his inauguration to a second term.
The Mar-a-Lago trips come after a tense speaker vote on Friday in which Trump had to personally convince at least two holdouts to support Johnson’s re-election. It also comes as Republicans prepare to take up one massive reconciliation package later this spring that will likely include an extension of Trump’s 2017 tax law.
Trump wants to make sure that Republican lawmakers across the ideological spectrum are unifiedand on the same page with his ambitious legislative agenda, two of the sources added.
A spokesperson for the Trump transition team did not immediately respond to requests for comment about next weekend’s visits.
Divisions between different factions of the party were on display after Friday’s speaker vote when members of the Freedom Caucus released a lettersaying that they voted for Johnson “because of our steadfast support of President Trump.”
They added, “We did this despite our sincere reservations regarding the Speaker’s track record over the past 15 months.”
Along with Trump’s victory in November, Republican lawmakers retained control of the House and flipped control of the Senate, meaning the GOP is likely to have an easier time advancing its agenda once Trump is inaugurated.
But in the House, Republicans have a fragile majority and can barely afford to lose a single vote when advancing Trump’s preferred legislation. It’ll force GOP House members to be almost unanimously united on their agenda.
Already in the first vote of the year, three GOP lawmakers — Reps. Keith Self of Texas, Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Ralph Norman of South Carolina — initially voted for someone other than Johnson for speaker.
Self and Norman changed their decisions minutes after casting their first votes, ensuring a victory for Johnson.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/trump-invites-house-republicans-mar-lago-rcna186296
They will be more united since they know PDJT has a leash on Johnson. They have to be one, like the dems for this four year term.
DOJ: 200 Jan. 6 cases pending as Trump prepares to retake office
Kyle Cheney Mon, January 6, 2025
EVIL Federal prosecutorsare weighing charging as many as 200 more people for their involvement in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol — including 60 suspected of assaulting or impeding police officers during the riot that nearly derailed the transfer of power from Donald Trump to Joe Biden.
The new figures, released by the Justice Department Monday, reveal for the first time how many cases prosecutors believe are pending as Trump prepares to take office and threatens to unravel the massive four-year probe. About 1,583 people have faced federal charges for their role in the attack — including more than 600 facing felony charges for assaulting or resisting police during the chaos.
Though the Justice Department has released monthly statistics on the Jan. 6 probe — the largest federal prosecution in its history, according to DOJ leaders, Monday’s figures are the first time prosecutors have estimated how many uncharged cases remain. It’s a signal flare to Trump, who has indicated he expects to pardon many people involved in the attack but has repeatedly mischaracterized the status of the cases.
About 180 Jan. 6 defendants have faced charges for carrying a dangerous weapon on Capitol grounds, and another 153 have faced charges for destruction of government property.
Prosecutors also emphasized what they say is their restraint in deciding which defendants to charge. They’ve largely opted against charging people who trespassed on Capitol grounds but didn’t enter the building, and the Justice Department said that discretion has led them to decline about 400 cases presented for potential prosecution by the FBI.
“Because of this exercise of prosecutorial discretion, the typical charged January 6 rioter committed multiple federal crimes,” prosecutors indicated in the update.
The new figures also highlight how many pending cases Trump will inherit. Though about 1,100 defendants have been convicted and reached sentencing — including 700 who have completed jail sentences or received no incarceration at all — another 300 charged cases have not yet reached trial or a guilty plea, including about 180 facing felony charges.
Trump has rooted his pardon pledge in a claim about the status of defendants held in Washington, D.C.’s jail, which he’s argued is unsafe. But the Justice Department indicated that just 10 Jan. 6 defendants — including eight awaiting trial but detained because of other exacerbating factors —remain in the D.C. jail.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/doj-200-jan-6-cases-050000807.html
Axios interview: Trump chief of staff Susie Wiles vows to block West Wing Troublemakers. 1/2
Incoming White House chief of staff Susie Wiles tells Axios in an interview that she aims for the West Wing to be a no-drama zone for staff. If that works, it won't be the chaotic den of self-sabotaging that stymied the early days of President-elect Trump's first term.
•"I don't welcome people who want to work solo or be a star," Wiles, whose boss calls her the Ice Maiden, said by email. "My team and I will not tolerate backbiting, second-guessing inappropriately, or drama. These are counterproductive to the mission."
Why it matters:Trump's 2024 campaign was more organized and less leaky than any previous Trump team. Wiles, who was co-campaign manager, gets much of the credit. Two weeks from today, she'll bring her formula to Washington.
Between the lines:Wiles, 67, will become the first woman to be White House chief of staff — and the fifth person to serve Trump in that role.
• The veteran Florida political operative — a former lobbyist who worked for Trump's GOP primary rival, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, in 2018 — has become a true Trump loyalist who stuck with him during his post-Jan. 6 political exile.
• That earned the trust of the typically mistrustful Trump. So Wiles has become the motherboard of the MAGA mainframe: Trump programs what he wants; she tries to turn it into reality.
• Wiles already is exercising power: During Friday's chaotic reelection of House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), a photo from the House floor showed the iPhone screen of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), a Trump loyalist, on the line with "Susie Wiles."
The backstory:Wiles says she tries not to manage Trump — and dislikes chatter that she does, pointing out that she managed the campaign, not the candidate.
• She never tells others what she tells Trump. If she disagrees with him, it's not done in front of anyone — and it doesn't leak. She avoids the spotlight. To survive in the MAGA-verse, you have to always remember that Trump is the star around which others revolve.
• "Susie likes to stay sort of in the back, let me tell you!" Trump said during his Election Night victory speech, as he thanked Wiles and co-campaign manager Chris LaCivita. "The Ice Maiden. We call her the Ice Maiden."
• Trump invited Wiles to speak. She shook her head "no."
Zoom in:Wiles is looking past the fabled first 100 days of a new administration — "an artificial metric," she told us — and said the most critical period will be between the inauguration and the 2026 midterms. For those precious two years, Republicans know they'll have full control of Congress.
• Translation: All gas and no brakes. Promises made and kept.
The blueprint, Wiles said, includes "getting off to a quick start and staying on that pace, together with an expectation of excellence every day."
• The plans, she said, are all about "engendering public support" to deliver on Trump's promises and policies, including promoting energy production, "rolling back redundant and burdensome regulations, keeping taxes low, cutting government waste through DOGE [the new Department of Government Efficiency], and most importantly, sealing the border and deporting criminals who are in this country illegally."
Trump's first administration"had an enviable level of accomplishment" despite "impeachment attempts and other witch hunts," Wiles said, sounding Trumpian.
• "I have every hope that the 47 administration will not have the same number of attempts to put sand in the gears," she told us. "We are off to a fast start with congressional work, hiring the best people, preliminary discussion with heads of state, fine-tuning his policy agenda, and planning for the first 100 days."
https://archive.is/uZk1D
2/2
Lightly edited excerptsfrom Wiles' interview with Axios' Marc Caputo:
Q. How will the Trump 47 administration differ from Trump 45?
• Wiles: Trump "knows much more about the way the Washington institutions work, especially the need to have people who are serving be both competent and loyal. He has taken a keen interest in personnel and has personally interviewed and hired all the Cabinet and many sub-Cabinet hires."
Q. How did you and Trump approach the transition?
• Wiles: "He engaged fully with hiring … He interviewed the Cabinet leadership, and made it clear his priorities for White House and agency staff. We set timelines and held ourselves accountable for the deadlines we set. President Trump 47 will have the finest public servants available with great work ethic, a demonstrated ability to break down bureaucratic walls to help hold the bloated federal workforce accountable, have fealty to the conservative and common-sense principles that President Trump ran — and won — on, and be determined to make a difference during their time serving. We are cognizant of a turning clock — much to do."
Q. What will the hallmark of this West Wing be?
• Wiles: "The West Wing staff is a mix of new and veterans — many are young, all are prepared to work punishing hours," Wiles said. "To my core, I believe in teamwork. Anyone who cannot be counted on to be collaborative, and focused on our shared goals, isn't working in the West Wing."
Q. What was Trump's instruction to the transition team?
• Wiles: "Be smart with hiring. Remember what President Trump promised the American people he would do: Set goals and then exceed them in every area, with every staff member."
Q. What did you learn on the campaign trail that you'll apply in the White House?
• Wiles: "I cannot stress teamwork and mutual support enough. … It's not magic — set goals and timelines for me and the team and then work to exceed them. Simple, yes, but this worked quite nicely on the campaign."
Q. What has President Biden's team been like to work with during the transition?
• Wiles: White House chief of staff Jeff Zients "has been very helpful. He has made great suggestions, helped make sure we stay on time with required functions, helped us navigate the labyrinth that is the Executive Office of the President, and been very professional. He introduced me to the 'former chief of staff club' and even hosted a dinner [for Wiles and the former chiefs] at his beautiful home."
Q. You're a Floridian. Trump is a Florida resident. The campaign was based in West Palm Beach, and now the transition is. Several of his top picks are Floridians. How will that affect this administration?
• Wiles: "Florida people overpopulate the leadership of the administration, and we would not have it any other way!"KEK
https://archive.is/uZk1D
They will, desperation is oozing out of them