Rats are jumping off SS Trump: Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate ... Lindsey Graham sinks

Said by all 13 year old high school students trying to grasp the complexities of governance

reference to Angus above
 
If not for Hillary Clinton Trump would be a 210 lb. physically fit commemorated war veteran married to the same women for 50 years and beloved by all of America instead of being despised by so much of it and the rats would be jumping on his ship instead of off of it.

it’s hard to overestimate how great of a man Trump would be if Hillary didn’t give him the bone spurs.
And, it was a deep state witch hunt hoax that caused Hillary to make him be a serial compulsive malicious liar.
 
A large number of GOP Republican senators are retrieving their balls from the White House lost property office and are exhibiting some morals and rectitude which have not seen the light of day since Trump's 2017 inauguration.

Trump is starting to lose GOP lawmaker support very early in the impeachment process which exemplifies that GOP lawmakers believe Donald Trump has already lost public support.

If the trickle of GOP lawmakers dumping and dumping-on Donald Trump turns into a flood the impeachment may be circumvented by Donald Trump's resignation.

One can only hope.

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate
A resolution meant to be a show of solidarity by Republicans with the president has instead become a sign of weakness.
OCT 25, 2019
David A. Graham

As the White House struggles to build an anti-impeachment strategy, President Donald Trump turned this week to Lindsey Graham, his staunchest ally in the Senate, to try to stiffen Republican spines in that chamber. It’s not going the way the president must have hoped.

On Thursday, Graham announced that he’d put forward a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry. By mid-afternoon, when he actually announced it, the resolution had been watered down to a plea for a different and more transparent process, apparently a sop to GOP senators unwilling to go quite that far. And yet by Friday morning, only 44 of 53 Republicans in the Senate had signed on to the resolution. A gesture meant to be a show of solidarity by senators has instead become a sign of the weakness of the president’s position.

The Senate was supposed to be Trump’s firewall in the Ukraine scandal, and there’s still not any reason to believe that there would be 67 senators willing to vote to remove the president. But with impeachment in the House an all-but-foregone conclusion, as I wrote earlier this week, the administration is turning its focus to the Senate, and it’s proving to be less of a redoubt than Trump wanted. ...
/----/ CNN Finds Impeachment Not Impacting Trump Voters
RUSH: "Do you realize, this is not playing at all the way the Democrats are planning for this to play? It’s not playing anywhere close to the way they’re dreaming it. In fact, these Trump voters see it for exactly what it is. Schiff and his merry band are not fooling anybody. Remember, if they can’t separate Trump’s voters from Trump, none of this is going to matter.

For this to work they have got to drive Trump’s approval numbers down. That’s the only way they think they can get Republicans in the Senate to abandon Trump. If Trump’s voters don’t go anywhere, this is gonna implode on them, and it has with the announcement of a criminal investigation into the Obama administration. I mean, that’s not how it’s phrased, but that’s what it is. Everybody involved in this investigation of Trump did so while working for Obama. It was the Obama administration when all of this happened!"
 
A large number of GOP Republican senators are retrieving their balls from the White House lost property office and are exhibiting some morals and rectitude which have not seen the light of day since Trump's 2017 inauguration.

Trump is starting to lose GOP lawmaker support very early in the impeachment process which exemplifies that GOP lawmakers believe Donald Trump has already lost public support.

If the trickle of GOP lawmakers dumping and dumping-on Donald Trump turns into a flood the impeachment may be circumvented by Donald Trump's resignation.

One can only hope.

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate
A resolution meant to be a show of solidarity by Republicans with the president has instead become a sign of weakness.
OCT 25, 2019
David A. Graham

As the White House struggles to build an anti-impeachment strategy, President Donald Trump turned this week to Lindsey Graham, his staunchest ally in the Senate, to try to stiffen Republican spines in that chamber. It’s not going the way the president must have hoped.

On Thursday, Graham announced that he’d put forward a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry. By mid-afternoon, when he actually announced it, the resolution had been watered down to a plea for a different and more transparent process, apparently a sop to GOP senators unwilling to go quite that far. And yet by Friday morning, only 44 of 53 Republicans in the Senate had signed on to the resolution. A gesture meant to be a show of solidarity by senators has instead become a sign of the weakness of the president’s position.

The Senate was supposed to be Trump’s firewall in the Ukraine scandal, and there’s still not any reason to believe that there would be 67 senators willing to vote to remove the president. But with impeachment in the House an all-but-foregone conclusion, as I wrote earlier this week, the administration is turning its focus to the Senate, and it’s proving to be less of a redoubt than Trump wanted. ...

22be980478ea25838cd7ea64ab1fe020.jpg


More liberal fantasies.
 
A large number of GOP Republican senators are retrieving their balls from the White House lost property office and are exhibiting some morals and rectitude which have not seen the light of day since Trump's 2017 inauguration.

Trump is starting to lose GOP lawmaker support very early in the impeachment process which exemplifies that GOP lawmakers believe Donald Trump has already lost public support.

If the trickle of GOP lawmakers dumping and dumping-on Donald Trump turns into a flood the impeachment may be circumvented by Donald Trump's resignation.

One can only hope.

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate
A resolution meant to be a show of solidarity by Republicans with the president has instead become a sign of weakness.
OCT 25, 2019
David A. Graham

As the White House struggles to build an anti-impeachment strategy, President Donald Trump turned this week to Lindsey Graham, his staunchest ally in the Senate, to try to stiffen Republican spines in that chamber. It’s not going the way the president must have hoped.

On Thursday, Graham announced that he’d put forward a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry. By mid-afternoon, when he actually announced it, the resolution had been watered down to a plea for a different and more transparent process, apparently a sop to GOP senators unwilling to go quite that far. And yet by Friday morning, only 44 of 53 Republicans in the Senate had signed on to the resolution. A gesture meant to be a show of solidarity by senators has instead become a sign of the weakness of the president’s position.

The Senate was supposed to be Trump’s firewall in the Ukraine scandal, and there’s still not any reason to believe that there would be 67 senators willing to vote to remove the president. But with impeachment in the House an all-but-foregone conclusion, as I wrote earlier this week, the administration is turning its focus to the Senate, and it’s proving to be less of a redoubt than Trump wanted. ...



The senate will not vote to impeach TRUMP. McConnell has no plans of going anywhere and he knows if TRUMP is impeached republicans will face massive losses in 2020. McConnell knows TRUMP is the only thing keeping him in power.
 
What Trumpers fail to realize is that one way or another Trump will be gone and the stooges who carried water for him will have to face an accounting. They know that if you don’t
 
A large number of GOP Republican senators are retrieving their balls from the White House lost property office and are exhibiting some morals and rectitude which have not seen the light of day since Trump's 2017 inauguration.

Trump is starting to lose GOP lawmaker support very early in the impeachment process which exemplifies that GOP lawmakers believe Donald Trump has already lost public support.

If the trickle of GOP lawmakers dumping and dumping-on Donald Trump turns into a flood the impeachment may be circumvented by Donald Trump's resignation.

One can only hope.

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate
A resolution meant to be a show of solidarity by Republicans with the president has instead become a sign of weakness.
OCT 25, 2019
David A. Graham

As the White House struggles to build an anti-impeachment strategy, President Donald Trump turned this week to Lindsey Graham, his staunchest ally in the Senate, to try to stiffen Republican spines in that chamber. It’s not going the way the president must have hoped.

On Thursday, Graham announced that he’d put forward a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry. By mid-afternoon, when he actually announced it, the resolution had been watered down to a plea for a different and more transparent process, apparently a sop to GOP senators unwilling to go quite that far. And yet by Friday morning, only 44 of 53 Republicans in the Senate had signed on to the resolution. A gesture meant to be a show of solidarity by senators has instead become a sign of the weakness of the president’s position.

The Senate was supposed to be Trump’s firewall in the Ukraine scandal, and there’s still not any reason to believe that there would be 67 senators willing to vote to remove the president. But with impeachment in the House an all-but-foregone conclusion, as I wrote earlier this week, the administration is turning its focus to the Senate, and it’s proving to be less of a redoubt than Trump wanted. ...
A few – but far too few.

The 11th Commandment still dominates, and most on the blind partisan right lack the courage to acknowledge the fact that Trump is unfit to be president, and to openly oppose him accordingly.

Of course he is fit to be President. How, specifically, is he not?

Trump is a:

  1. Liar;
  2. Cheat;
  3. Swindler;
  4. Grifter;
  5. Traitor;
  6. Corrupt;
  7. Fornicator.
Those are not generally accepted as Presidential qualities.
 
A large number of GOP Republican senators are retrieving their balls from the White House lost property office and are exhibiting some morals and rectitude which have not seen the light of day since Trump's 2017 inauguration.

Trump is starting to lose GOP lawmaker support very early in the impeachment process which exemplifies that GOP lawmakers believe Donald Trump has already lost public support.

If the trickle of GOP lawmakers dumping and dumping-on Donald Trump turns into a flood the impeachment may be circumvented by Donald Trump's resignation.

One can only hope.

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate
A resolution meant to be a show of solidarity by Republicans with the president has instead become a sign of weakness.
OCT 25, 2019
David A. Graham

As the White House struggles to build an anti-impeachment strategy, President Donald Trump turned this week to Lindsey Graham, his staunchest ally in the Senate, to try to stiffen Republican spines in that chamber. It’s not going the way the president must have hoped.

On Thursday, Graham announced that he’d put forward a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry. By mid-afternoon, when he actually announced it, the resolution had been watered down to a plea for a different and more transparent process, apparently a sop to GOP senators unwilling to go quite that far. And yet by Friday morning, only 44 of 53 Republicans in the Senate had signed on to the resolution. A gesture meant to be a show of solidarity by senators has instead become a sign of the weakness of the president’s position.

The Senate was supposed to be Trump’s firewall in the Ukraine scandal, and there’s still not any reason to believe that there would be 67 senators willing to vote to remove the president. But with impeachment in the House an all-but-foregone conclusion, as I wrote earlier this week, the administration is turning its focus to the Senate, and it’s proving to be less of a redoubt than Trump wanted. ...
A few – but far too few.

The 11th Commandment still dominates, and most on the blind partisan right lack the courage to acknowledge the fact that Trump is unfit to be president, and to openly oppose him accordingly.

Of course he is fit to be President. How, specifically, is he not?

Trump is a:

  1. Liar;
  2. Cheat;
  3. Swindler;
  4. Grifter;
  5. Traitor;
  6. Corrupt;
  7. Fornicator.
Those are not generally accepted as Presidential qualities.

People regard Slick Willie as a good POTUS, yet he is every one of those.
 
A large number of GOP Republican senators are retrieving their balls from the White House lost property office and are exhibiting some morals and rectitude which have not seen the light of day since Trump's 2017 inauguration.

Trump is starting to lose GOP lawmaker support very early in the impeachment process which exemplifies that GOP lawmakers believe Donald Trump has already lost public support.

If the trickle of GOP lawmakers dumping and dumping-on Donald Trump turns into a flood the impeachment may be circumvented by Donald Trump's resignation.

One can only hope.

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate
A resolution meant to be a show of solidarity by Republicans with the president has instead become a sign of weakness.
OCT 25, 2019
David A. Graham

As the White House struggles to build an anti-impeachment strategy, President Donald Trump turned this week to Lindsey Graham, his staunchest ally in the Senate, to try to stiffen Republican spines in that chamber. It’s not going the way the president must have hoped.

On Thursday, Graham announced that he’d put forward a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry. By mid-afternoon, when he actually announced it, the resolution had been watered down to a plea for a different and more transparent process, apparently a sop to GOP senators unwilling to go quite that far. And yet by Friday morning, only 44 of 53 Republicans in the Senate had signed on to the resolution. A gesture meant to be a show of solidarity by senators has instead become a sign of the weakness of the president’s position.

The Senate was supposed to be Trump’s firewall in the Ukraine scandal, and there’s still not any reason to believe that there would be 67 senators willing to vote to remove the president. But with impeachment in the House an all-but-foregone conclusion, as I wrote earlier this week, the administration is turning its focus to the Senate, and it’s proving to be less of a redoubt than Trump wanted. ...
Fake news article #784,234,560
 
A large number of GOP Republican senators are retrieving their balls from the White House lost property office and are exhibiting some morals and rectitude which have not seen the light of day since Trump's 2017 inauguration.

Trump is starting to lose GOP lawmaker support very early in the impeachment process which exemplifies that GOP lawmakers believe Donald Trump has already lost public support.

If the trickle of GOP lawmakers dumping and dumping-on Donald Trump turns into a flood the impeachment may be circumvented by Donald Trump's resignation.

One can only hope.

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate
A resolution meant to be a show of solidarity by Republicans with the president has instead become a sign of weakness.
OCT 25, 2019
David A. Graham

As the White House struggles to build an anti-impeachment strategy, President Donald Trump turned this week to Lindsey Graham, his staunchest ally in the Senate, to try to stiffen Republican spines in that chamber. It’s not going the way the president must have hoped.

On Thursday, Graham announced that he’d put forward a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry. By mid-afternoon, when he actually announced it, the resolution had been watered down to a plea for a different and more transparent process, apparently a sop to GOP senators unwilling to go quite that far. And yet by Friday morning, only 44 of 53 Republicans in the Senate had signed on to the resolution. A gesture meant to be a show of solidarity by senators has instead become a sign of the weakness of the president’s position.

The Senate was supposed to be Trump’s firewall in the Ukraine scandal, and there’s still not any reason to believe that there would be 67 senators willing to vote to remove the president. But with impeachment in the House an all-but-foregone conclusion, as I wrote earlier this week, the administration is turning its focus to the Senate, and it’s proving to be less of a redoubt than Trump wanted. ...
Is that why Democrats are so hysterical in politically and literally assassinating Trump before the election just a year away?
 
A large number of GOP Republican senators are retrieving their balls from the White House lost property office and are exhibiting some morals and rectitude which have not seen the light of day since Trump's 2017 inauguration.

Trump is starting to lose GOP lawmaker support very early in the impeachment process which exemplifies that GOP lawmakers believe Donald Trump has already lost public support.

If the trickle of GOP lawmakers dumping and dumping-on Donald Trump turns into a flood the impeachment may be circumvented by Donald Trump's resignation.

One can only hope.

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate

Donald Trump Has a Big Problem in the Senate
A resolution meant to be a show of solidarity by Republicans with the president has instead become a sign of weakness.
OCT 25, 2019
David A. Graham

As the White House struggles to build an anti-impeachment strategy, President Donald Trump turned this week to Lindsey Graham, his staunchest ally in the Senate, to try to stiffen Republican spines in that chamber. It’s not going the way the president must have hoped.

On Thursday, Graham announced that he’d put forward a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry. By mid-afternoon, when he actually announced it, the resolution had been watered down to a plea for a different and more transparent process, apparently a sop to GOP senators unwilling to go quite that far. And yet by Friday morning, only 44 of 53 Republicans in the Senate had signed on to the resolution. A gesture meant to be a show of solidarity by senators has instead become a sign of the weakness of the president’s position.

The Senate was supposed to be Trump’s firewall in the Ukraine scandal, and there’s still not any reason to believe that there would be 67 senators willing to vote to remove the president. But with impeachment in the House an all-but-foregone conclusion, as I wrote earlier this week, the administration is turning its focus to the Senate, and it’s proving to be less of a redoubt than Trump wanted. ...
A few – but far too few.

The 11th Commandment still dominates, and most on the blind partisan right lack the courage to acknowledge the fact that Trump is unfit to be president, and to openly oppose him accordingly.

Of course he is fit to be President. How, specifically, is he not?

Trump is a:

  1. Liar;
  2. Cheat;
  3. Swindler;
  4. Grifter;
  5. Traitor;
  6. Corrupt;
  7. Fornicator.
Those are not generally accepted as Presidential qualities.
strippers.jpg
 

I said it before and will say it again and I believe McConnell has the twenty Senators to Convict and Remove.
/-----/ #9,875
View attachment 286378

You will scream at me if I am correct... McConnell and Graham are Trump worst nightmare...

Those two are going to go after Trump and just playing the game...

All while claiming it pains them to do so They will claim they support everything he has done, but he technically went about it the wrong way, so they have to vote to impeach. They will try to play up to the crazies all the way to the end.
 

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