Also, the wedding is through. Accusing your social foe of a revolution has a tendency to sag the opposite effect.  ,
Before escaping in November with the narrowest triumph of her long legislative job, Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., seemed to be cozying up a little with subsequently- GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump. Politicians do make the strangest of role, and was there anything stranger than watching Wisconsin’s far-left junior legislator, a very open and vocal gay and warrior to the LGBTQ/DE I creation, judge” Trump-Tammy voters” by selling common ground on an America First system?
Hungry occasions called for desperate measures. Late in the campaign, Baldwin was losing. When she saw the writing on the wall, it became clear that far-left prospects were in the ascendancy in 2024. But, as she has much done on the campaign trail, Baldwin pretended to be what she has never been: a average.  ,
After her sweat-it-out success, Baldwin pledged to work with the recently elected Trump and work toward a kinder, gentler social setting.  ,
” We deserve a elections with less negativity, less section, less contempt and fewer rests. Basically, no lies”, the Democrat told her followers on election day at a steamfitters coalition training facility.
On Monday, Baldwin was again at the negativity and took aim at Trump.  ,
Following a tour of the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Pharmacy’s Opioid Overdose Response Center, the leftist said,” I don’t understand what this change will result to. It’s looking more like a revolt than a change right now.”  ,
That’s Never a Revolution, Crazy
A revolution? We are aware that Dems struggled with the diction test. They’ve been known to clutter up the definition of “insurrection”, and “border” is a difficult strategy for them. But revolt? A revolution led by a free and fair election that Trump won the popular vote, won the election, and won all seven swing state. Oh, yes. The process of free and fair elections is unique to the left.  ,
According to Baldwin’s Republican coworker, Wisconsin senior senator Ron Johnson,” I guess Senator Baldwin is overlooking the election President Trump won in the political school and with the popular vote because Democrats screwed things up so badly,” he said on Monday evening.  ,
According to Baldwin, the duly elected government’s revolution stems from his “unconstitutional” usage of executive authority to pause federal grants and loans while the Trump Administration weighs continuing federal government spending that at best is ineffective, or worse, harmful, or worst, really illegal. The pause-and- assessment method is aimed at “financial support for foreign support, nongovernmental organizations, DEI, woke gender philosophy, and the clean fresh deal”.
According to CBS58 in Milwaukee, UW-Madison last year issued a hiring freeze on jobs funded by federal help following Trump’s guidelines. On Monday, Baldwin called the professional commands an “illegal power grab”, once showing her battle with the language. Or at least her political confusion. The junior senator never previously referred to the long line of senior actions by Trump’s Democratic predecessor as being unlawful. But then again, she did ballot with Biden about 96 percent of the time.  ,
Congressman Bryan Steil, a Republican who represents Wisconsin’s 1st Congressional District, found Baldwin’s apply of” coup” interested.  ,
Steil told CBS58,” I do believe it’s ideal to make sure that all provincial government spending is reviewed and that we determine it’s a good usage of tax money.”  ,
Yes. It’s not only affordable to make sure that taxpayer dollars are being spent legally and legally, but it’s the responsibility of the three coequal branches of government to do so. It’s a task parliament in particular has generally abdicated.  ,
That’s never a revolt, that’s the rules. But Democrats, with their peculiar way of defining issues and their soft connection with law and order, can’t help but combination up the words.  ,
A True Coup
There has been a lot of coup talk from the left these days. When you search for the word”” in corporate media, the same story appears with a similar headline. Trump, Elon Musk, and the Department of Government Efficiency, the White House’s Department of Government Efficiency, are the main protagonists in the debate. They are responsible for streamlining and cutting the federal government. From the Atlantic to Al Jazeera, the headlines scream coup accusations. By design, of course.
The coup’s actual aftermath last summer was largely unknown in the same publications. Millions of primary voters were disenfranchised and denied to the Democratic National Committee, forcing Biden to withdraw from the race for president when it appeared clear he could not defeat Trump. The accomplice media gladly ran interference for Biden’s stand-in, Vice President Kamala Harris, and the big-monied power interests that crowned her the nominee without challenge. No one should be surprised. The media also has issues with word definitions. After all, they declared Trump was a threat to democracy while his opponents were dismantling the pillars of this federal democratic republic — justice, due process, free speech, etc. — to prevent the Republican Party nominee from retaking office.
Baldwin called on Republicans to back down against the president over the grant freeze in response to a memo from the Democrat leadership recently that aimed to intensify the fight against Trump ( including street fights ). A few have, and some more undoubtedly will, because they’re politicians that hold a loose relationship with conservative, limited-government values. They, too, have had a hard time with definitions, like fiscal constraint, business as usual, the Deep State, and the Swamp. American voters, however, know the language. Due to business as usual in the Deep State and the Swamp, they are aware of what they have endured. They are aware of what primaried means. And in November, they taught the left to throw the bums out.
Or, in the lexicon of Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a coup.  ,
A duly elected coup.  ,
Matt Kittle covers The Federalist’s senior elections coverage. An award-winning investigative reporter and 30-year veteran of print, broadcast, and online journalism, Kittle previously served as the executive director of Empower Wisconsin.