Fox News primetime host Jesse Watters is pushing President-elect Donald Trump to be the transformative leader who finally orders the details of several scandals over decades be made available to the American people, including President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, financier Jeffrey Epstein’s clients and contacts, and how it was that a 20-year-old radical was able to take several shots at him in Butler, Pa., at a rally over the summer.
“Make no mistake, Donald Trump has a massive mandate, a common sense coalition destined to rebuild the American Dream. Trump won the election his way. He didn’t have to compromise who he was and what he wanted, so his leadership and his agenda must be respected,” Watters said during his show on Thursday. “We’ve sent him to Washington on a mission, and just like he has high expectations of us, we have high expectations of him. Remember, Trump can’t run again, so he’s got nothing to lose. He just has to deliver what the American people demand, and with the right team, he’ll execute. The future looks bright.
“Trump is going to be presiding over America’s 250th Anniversary. How poetic. Oh, and in LA’s Summer Olympics and the World Cup, what a perfect fate. The Never Trump Movement has been vanquished. The lawfare is over. More on that later, and House and Senate troublemakers have all disappeared while we fight to fix the economy, crime and the border,” Watters continued. “We also need to get to the bottom of Butler and what really happened that day, and we deserve to see the Epstein materials, the JFK files, and the [rapper P] Diddy tapes. That’s not revenge, that’s justice. Last night was the first day of American justice in a very long time, and now Trump has a clear runway to do what he’s always wanted to do and what we need him to do, and we’ll hold him to his word.”
WATCH:
Vice President Kamala Harris struggled to connect with voters while her campaign aides focused on trivial issues, which contributed to her significant election loss to former President Donald Trump, according to Democratic insiders who spoke to the New York Post. Harris, 60, took over the top spot on the Democratic ticket from President Biden, 81, in late July and initially saw a surge in polling while raising nearly $1 billion over a six-week period—outpacing Trump, 78, and equipping her campaign with the resources to capitalize on her early lead against the Republican nominee.
Her inability to secure the victory frustrated Democrats, including those who worked in the Biden-Harris administration and on her campaign. “I’ve worked on five presidential campaigns. I knew this would be hard. Others acted like they knew they were going to win,” one person who lent some support during the late stretch of the race told The Post. “They were arrogant.”
Among those receiving blame on Wednesday were Harris herself and campaign chairwoman Jen O’Malley Dillon, with one insider questioning, “Where did $1 billion go?” Insiders also pointed fingers at Obama campaign veterans David Plouffe and Stephanie Cutter, alleging that they misjudged the issues that truly resonated with voters. The two of them “tried an Obama play with a non-Obama candidate,” said one source close to the Harris campaign. “They are the worst.” Ultimately, Harris failed because “people didn’t connect with her,” this person said.
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