Difference between revisions of "Trump's inept advisers"

From Conservapedia
Jump to: navigation, search
(... and people who lack an understanding of grassroots politics)
m (Hope Hicks)
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
These people have severely hindered what President Trump could be achieving, and are interfering with his re-election efforts.
 
These people have severely hindered what President Trump could be achieving, and are interfering with his re-election efforts.
 +
 +
== Hope Hicks ==
 +
 +
An unmarried 31-year-old former model who grew up in wealthy Greenwich, [[Connecticut]] as the daughter of a one-time [[NFL]] executive, Hope Hicks left the Trump administration in 2019 after reportedly admitting that she had been telling "white lies" while working at the [[White House]].
 +
 +
But then she returned in 2020 and apparently advised President [[Trump]] for the [[presidential debates 2020|first presidential debate in 2020]], where he promoted [[vaccination]] despite strong opposition on both sides of the political spectrum against that.  On October 1, 2020, Hicks announced that she had contracted [[COVID-19]], and subsequently President [[Trump]] and the [[First Lady]] announced that they had contracted it also.
  
 
== Brad Parscale ==
 
== Brad Parscale ==

Revision as of 22:12, October 2, 2020

Trump's inept advisers have been a collection of Hillary Clinton supporters, Ted Cruz acolytes, Deep State operatives, establishment bureaucrats, hydroxychloroquine deniers, moles who leak distorted information to the liberal media, and people who lack an understanding of grassroots politics.

These people have severely hindered what President Trump could be achieving, and are interfering with his re-election efforts.

Hope Hicks

An unmarried 31-year-old former model who grew up in wealthy Greenwich, Connecticut as the daughter of a one-time NFL executive, Hope Hicks left the Trump administration in 2019 after reportedly admitting that she had been telling "white lies" while working at the White House.

But then she returned in 2020 and apparently advised President Trump for the first presidential debate in 2020, where he promoted vaccination despite strong opposition on both sides of the political spectrum against that. On October 1, 2020, Hicks announced that she had contracted COVID-19, and subsequently President Trump and the First Lady announced that they had contracted it also.

Brad Parscale

Trump's campaign manager until he was fired in August 2020, he spent time publicly criticizing conservative Jeff Sessions as he attempted to win back his U.S. Senate seat. This was unhelpful to Trump's own reelection campaign and did not help bolster Trump's base.

Parscale also reportedly oversaw the spending in ineffective ways of most of originally more than $1 billion in campaign cash.[1]

Admiral Brett Giroir

An Assistant Secretary for health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Admiral Brett Giroir manages COVID-19 testing. On Aug. 2, 2020, Adm. Giroir disparaged hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) on Meet the Press, a Sunday morning national television show.

Numerous studies show the effectiveness of HCQ when used early, and studies claiming otherwise have obvious flaws such as using very sick subjects who have had the disease for more than two weeks or healthy patients likely to recover regardless.

"I take exception to Giroir's analysis," White House official Peter Navarro declared. "He hasn't looked at the data."[2]

Mark Meadows

The Chief of Staff to Trump since early March 2020, Mark Meadows' tenure has coincided with a decline by Trump in the polls and his chances for reelection. Merely a coincidental correlation? Meadows has interfered with decisive action by Trump which could have opened up access to hydroxychloroquine for the American people,[Citation Needed] who instead remain largely sheltered out of fear of being denied the all-important early treatment for the Wuhan virus.

Meadows supported Ted Cruz rather than Donald Trump in early 2016.[3]

John Fleming

John Fleming, M.D., is the adviser to the Chief of Staff on medical issues, and Fleming is a shill for Hillary Clinton-supporting organized medicine. He adamantly opposes allowing Americans to access hydroxychloroquine for prevention against COVID-19, despite the 65-year track record of safety for the medication.

John Bolton

John Bolton is a neocon who became Trump's National Security Adviser after appearing often on television. Bolton's advocacy for foreign wars was never on the same page as Trump's pro-peace approach. But instead of working to advance Trump's superior philosophy, Bolton secretly worked on a self-serving book to harm Trump, which Bolton published after being inevitably fired. Despite trashing the president, he still elicited no praise from the pro-impeachment sham Adam Schiff, who said that Bolton was “no patriot”.[4]

Bolton's book received, even from the fawning liberal media, “withering reviews describing it as 'bloated with self-importance.'”[5]

Rex Tillerson

Before being fired as Secretary of State, Tillerson reportedly worked contrary to Trump, as explained by Nikki Haley:[6]

Former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson tried to subvert President Trump’s wishes and justified their actions as trying to “save the country,” former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley says.

In a her new book, “With All Due Respect,” Haley recalls a closed-door meeting with Tillerson and Kelly where they ask her to join their effort to counter Trump.

Jared Kushner/Ivanka Trump

President Trump's daughter Ivanka and her husband Jared Kushner, who serve as two of his senior advisors, are known for having given bad advice numerous times. In 2017, it was reported by LifeSiteNews that they were advocates of the homosexual agenda,[7] successfully sinking a potential executive order aimed at protecting religious freedom.[8] In late May 2020, Kushner advocated for the GOP party platform to exclude mention of parental rights in regards to conversion therapy.[9] He also had at one point suggested the elimination of all borders between Israel and the Palestinians.[10] In early July 2020, it was reported that conservative White House insiders viewed Kushner as a strongly negative factor to the Trump agenda, with one activist referring to him as a “total f*** up”.[11] Conservative commentator and pundit Tucker Carlson noted Kushner's advice amidst the 2020 Leftwing insurrection to have disastrously affected Trump's responses.[12] President Trump also asserted by then that he would have “no more of Jared’s woke s***.”[13]

References

  1. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/the-2020-trump-campaign-is-reportedly-a-financial-mess/ar-BB18OauN
  2. https://www.newsweek.com/trump-adviser-rebukes-admin-official-who-broke-president-hydroxychloroquine-he-hasnt-looked-1522526
  3. Mark Meadows endorses Ted Cruz ahead of Iowa caucus
  4. Multiple references:
  5. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/jun/18/john-bolton-bad-reviews-book-charts-the-room-where-it-happened-trump-presidency (quoting the review of the book by the New York Times)
  6. https://nypost.com/2019/11/10/nikki-haley-says-john-kelly-and-rex-tillerson-tried-to-recruit-her/
  7. Ivanka Trump’s LGBT activism contradicts her Jewish faith
  8. Ivanka Trump, husband reportedly stopped religious freedom order; Pence affirms pro-LGBT rights move
  9. Jared Kushner wants to shrink GOP platform, nix parental freedom over therapy: report
  10. Whoa! Jared Kushner Tells Sky News Arabia His Plan Is to Eliminate Borders with Palestinians and Israel (VIDEO)
  11. 'He's a f---ing idiot': White House insiders accuse 'moron' Kushner of sabotaging Trump agenda
  12. Tucker Carlson: Jared Kushner keeps talking Trump out of cracking down on rioters… [VIDEO]
  13. Report: Trump Regrets Taking Jared Kushner’s Advice, Done With His ‘Woke (Expletive)’