Over HALF of the publicly identified donors to Trump’s White House ballroom project have been awarded federal contracts worth more than $50 billion.
That's pay-to-play and quid pro quo and it violates the Appropriations Clause.
Trump is selling the White House off like a dime bag.
Spencer Pratt got 0 out of 24,000 votes in a late night LA ballot drop.
0/24,000
A guy getting around 30% support got 0 out of 24,000.
Astronomically small probability of happening.
Impossible.
California no longer even hides it.
Doors need to be kicked in.
Why does everything feel like theater?
We have a Congress that won't pass something 83% people want.
We have a judicial system that doesn’t hold criminals accountable.
We have an education system that doesn’t educate.
We have a non-profit system that profits from our tax dollars.
We have a health care industry that profits from you staying sick.
We have a financial industry that needs you to stay in debt.
We have an insurance industry that fights every single claim.
It just all feels so fake, so theatrical.
Donating $5 million to the people investigating you is corruption.
Accepting $5 million from the person you’re investigating is corruption.
Our government is run by corrupt billionaires and bought politicians.
@DanielJ2031@leahfiles Hate to say it was from the beginning of 47. He sold his soul to them to be allowed to win again we just didn’t know it yet. They won’t allow anybody empower that they don’t have dirt on and they could no longer hide it after the EP files.
@leahfiles@marklevinshow He’s right though, it’s not. It’s taxpayer dollars funneled through a foreign entity then brought back to bribe, blackmail, and control our politicians by any means necessary.
DID HEGSETH USE THE PENTAGON AS A CAMPAIGN TAXI?
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth went to Kentucky for an official Purple Heart ceremony at Fort Campbell.
That part matters.
A Purple Heart ceremony is official government business. That means travel orders. Duty status. Scheduling. Security. Transportation. Staff coordination. Funding lines. A travel voucher.
Then, later that same day, Hegseth showed up at a campaign event for Ed Gallrein in the Hebron area of northern Kentucky.
That is not a quick hop across town.
Fort Campbell to Hebron is roughly 282 miles by car.
That is about 4 hours and 32 minutes of driving.
So here is the problem.
You do not get to wear the government hat at Fort Campbell, jump into campaign mode later that day, travel across Kentucky, and then tell the public the magic words:
“Personal capacity.”
Fine.
Then prove it.
How did Secretary Hegseth get to Kentucky?
How did he get from Fort Campbell to Hebron?
Did he use a government aircraft?
Did he use a government vehicle?
Did staff or security travel with him?
Who paid for each leg of the trip?
Was the campaign charged?
Was the government reimbursed?
Where does the official trip end and the campaign trip begin?
And here is the bigger question:
Is this a Hatch Act problem?
Because federal officials do not get to use government resources, official duty status, or public power to boost a political campaign.
And the same administration spent years screaming about Biden “weaponizing agencies.”
Well, what is this?
A sitting Defense Secretary appearing beside a House candidate after an official military event does not look like clean separation.
It looks like the war office getting dragged into campaign politics.
If this was Biden’s Defense Secretary doing a campaign stop after a military ceremony, the same people defending this would be throwing chairs through the internet.
So no, “personal capacity” is not a magic spell.
The records matter.
Travel orders. Vouchers. Itinerary. Transportation logs. Security cost allocation. Campaign reimbursement records. Ethics review.
Release them.
If everything was clean, this should be easy.
Because sunlight does not hurt clean hands.
But when officials start treating public office like a campaign Uber with a Pentagon logo on the door, people have every right to ask who paid for the ride.
Call your representatives.
Ask for the travel records.
Ask for the reimbursement records.
Ask for the ethics memo.
Do not let “personal capacity” become Washington’s newest invisibility cloak.
#HatchAct
#GovernmentAccountability
#RedLines