Examples of GOP Leadership

BudmanTX

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topcat

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printer

Well-Known Member
Do you think anyone will be fooled?
DeSantis’s biggest donor cuts off funds, demands moderate shift
One of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’s (R) most prominent donors told reporters on Friday that he would cut off funds to his 2024 campaign if he didn’t adopt a more “moderate approach.”

Robert Bigelow, the founder of Budget Suites of America and Bigelow Aerospace, told Reuters in an interview that he explained to DeSantis’s campaign that the governor needs to shift his agenda to target moderates or he risks losing his support.

“He’ll lose if he doesn’t,” he said, referring to DeSantis’s chances against former President Trump. “Extremism isn’t going to get you elected.”

He added that his funding wouldn’t resume “until I see that he’s able to generate more on his own.”

“I’m already too big a percentage,” Bigelow claimed. “A lot of his donors are still on the fence.”

When asked what led him to the decision to curb funding, the entrepreneur pointed to what he called the governor’s “extreme positions” on policy, including the six-week abortion ban DeSantis signed into law in April.

He claimed six weeks is too short, as many women don’t know they are pregnant at that stage, according to Reuters.

Still, Bigelow said in the interview that he remains behind DeSantis and believes he is “the best guy for the country.”

The billionaire has already given $20 million to the “Never Back Down” pro-DeSantis super PAC. He is also considered the Florida governor’s largest individual donor.

The news comes as DeSantis’s campaign has struggled to meet financial expectations and amid a reset cut of a total of 38 staffers over the last several weeks. The shake-up is an effort to “streamline operations and put Ron DeSantis in the strongest position to win this primary,” according to his team.

Despite the governor’s efforts on the campaign trail visiting early primary states, Trump is still leading DeSantis by double digits, according to polling averages. A new poll out of Iowa this week shows the former president ahead of DeSantis by 24 points.
 

printer

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New Pentagon memo reshuffles workforce to offset Tuberville blockade
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has issued a new memo to all military personnel outlining how to “mitigate the harms” caused by Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s (R-Ala.) months-long hold on hundreds of military confirmations.

“This unprecedented, across-the-board hold is having a cascading effect, increasingly hindering the normal operations of this Department and undermining both our military readiness and our national security,” Austin writes in the Aug. 2 guidance, obtained by The Hill.

With that in mind, Austin directs the Pentagon’s workforce to consider several strategies, noting that leadership roles might need to be reorganized.
“In extraordinary cases,” lower-level officers in a grade of 0-8 or below who are not in the normal line of succession “may be assigned to head organizations in an acting capacity,” Austin writes.

In other cases, and without vacating their current position, some three- and four-star officers may perform the duties of another role in an acting or temporary capacity if they are in the normal line of succession for that job, regardless of whether they have been or will be nominated for it.

The Pentagon chief acknowledges that such steps “will not end or offset the risk to our readiness or our global leadership position. Nor will they resolve the uncertainty and stress inflicted upon our general and flag officers and their families, or alleviate the worries rippling further down our ranks.”

Austin’s memo was issued ahead of the retirement of Army Chief of Staff Gen. James McConville, who vacated his role Friday without an official replacement.

There are now two military services without a confirmed leader, including the Marine Corps, as the former official commandant, Gen. David Berger, retired last month. Berger’s departure left the military arm with no confirmed leader for the first time in more than 100 years.

Several other roles may soon be left open as top military officials retire, including chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The current chairman, Army Gen. Mark Milley, will retire at the end of September.

It’s unclear when Tuberville will end his block on Pentagon nominees, which he began in March to protest the Defense Department’s new abortion travel reimbursement policy.

Austin has spoken to Tuberville directly about the hold at least twice, but Tuberville has shown no sign of letting up, even as the standstill has sparked bipartisan frustration.
 

Budzbuddha

Well-Known Member
Welp - the orange orangutan couldn’t put a sock in it for 24 hours.
This is gaining traction all over the twit / x ( or whatever the fuck you call it ) and online. Let’s see what comes down the pipe come Monday or so.

 
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