- cross-posted to:
- politics
- cross-posted to:
- politics
Donald Trump is now facing condemnation from the editorial board of North Carolina’s second-largest newspaper as he continues to take criticism for politicizing the response to Hurricane Helene across the US southeast.
Trump was in Georgia last week to survey hurricane damage alongside the state’s governor, Brian Kemp — a one-time foe who has returned to the Trumpworld fold, like many Republicans, seeking political cover.
On Monday, he attacked Vice President Kamala Harris and the Biden administration in a Truth Social post for supposedly “going out of their way to not help people in Republican areas”, a false charge. A Republican lawmaker representing three counties in hard-hit western North Carolina — which is largely rural, and politically trends conservative — has called it a “junk” conspiracy.
He’d go further in an interview with Kellyanne Conway, one of his most ardent truth-twisters on cable TV before she was largely exiled from the networks, accusing Harris of trying to “hurt” western North Carolina residents.
On Saturday, Trump’s claims provoked a response from one of the state’s most widely-read newspapers, the Charlotte Observer. The Observer’s editorial board slammed the ex-president for his lies about the federal response to Helene, which is believed to have killed more than 100 across the state.
🗳️ Register to vote: https://vote.gov/
And it still won’t matter to anyone who was already planning to vote for him.
When new information counter to their beliefs is presented, it only further entrenches their beliefs.
They are a cult, as described in when prophecy fails.
Add it to the pile
I wonder what its largest newspaper will have to say? Of course, Autotrader doesn’t usually make political statements.
As North Carolinian I chuckled way too hard at this. 🙂
NASCAR weekly should say something here.
Condemn him to death
Thank god the newspapers are involved, everything will surely be fine now that the newspapers are involved.
You’d be surprised at how many rural North Carolinians only get their news from print media. This is likely a good thing. At the very least it’s not bad.