
According to reporter Alex Thompson, members of the Democratic Party are then self-reflecting as they attempt to adjust their course for upcoming elections, arguing that former president Joe Biden’s mental condition was guarded by them.
The new guide Original Sin, which Thompson co-authored with CNN’s Jake Tapper, aims to highlight the former president’s cognitive decline while in office. The writer claimed on Sunday that Biden’s supporters were lying and that the mayor’s speech at the argument shocked “millions of Americans.”
Thompson was pressed by Fox News ‘ Shannon Bream to ask if any Cabinet officers had any “remorse” for not expressing their concern for Biden’s emotional state.
On Fox News Sunday with Shannon Bream, Thompson said,” I mean, there’s certainly a lot of self-reflection about what, if anything, they may have done differently.” Going public was going to support Donald Trump, according to some users of the Democratic Party who were seeing this or having some moments where he seemed out of it, and I believe that’s how many of them rationalized it.
Biden was given a diagnosis of “agressive kind” of prostate cancer next week. Braam inquired whether this impactedO’Connor’s ability to assess Biden’s health and how Original Sin indicates there were fears that Dr. KevinO’Connor, Biden’s physician, was” to close” to the leader. Thompson asked “more inquiries” about Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel’s claim that Biden was most likely diagnosed with cancer while he was president, raising “more issues”.
Liberals CAN BREAK WITH PARTY LEADERSHIP DURING BIDEN COVER-UP TALK
Megyn Kelly pushed the publication of Thompson and Tapper’s book in response to Megyn Kelly’s criticism of Lara Trump, in which the current government’s daughter-in-law expressed concern that Biden might be experiencing a” mental drop” in 2020. Kelly claimed that Tapper was “running include” for Biden, and the CNN writer acknowledged that Lara Trump’s remarks have “aged well.”
Thompson and Tapper were both accused of saving their examinations for the text “instead of reporting it when it mattered,” according to Joe Concha of the Washington Examiner.