Sensing what light on January 6, the exposure of the United States outside the two parties of the unified party

Trump storm is coming” January 6, Washington DC will become a tent city? Why is this?

With the collusion of top Republicans and Democrats, the Senate overruled President Trump’s veto of the National Defense Authorization Act by a large margin. Like President Trump said, eight Republican senators, including McConnell, relied on President Trump’s stumping to get the win. Look at which senators are really solidly behind Trump today. The differences between Trump and the top of the Republican Party are highlighted by commentator Wang Dukran’s analysis of Trump’s warnings and calls to immediately replace McConnell.

President Trump is pained to miss the opportunity to repeal Section 230 and deny the National Defense Authorization Act for several reasons. Wang Dukran’s analysis points to a unified party outside of the two U.S. parties. After watching this episode of Apollo.com, you will have a general sense of how Senate Republicans will perform on Jan. 6, and a bottom-line worst-case preparation for the outcome on Jan. 6. But we the people must be working toward the best possible outlook, defending the U.S. Constitution and not letting America become Venezuela.

Everyone can be a keyboard warrior, just as our colleagues at Apollo.com have done. Your retweets, likes, subscriptions and comments can break the news embargo and unite the forces of justice. See the details below.

“Trump storm is coming” Washington DC will be turned into a tent city on January 6th?

The U.S. Senate rejected Trump’s veto of the National Defense Authorization Act Look at those senators support Trump

On Friday (Jan. 1), the U.S. Senate voted to override President Trump’s veto of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2021 (NDAA).

The Senate voted 81-13 in the afternoon to pass the NDAA without the president’s signature after morning discussions – the first time in four years that a Trump veto has been overridden.

The 13 senators who supported Trump’s veto of the bill included seven Republicans and six Democrats.

The seven Republicans are: Indiana Republican Senator Mike Braun, Arkansas Republican Senator Tom Cotton, Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz, Missouri Republican Senator Josh Hawley, Louisiana Republican Senator John Neely Kennedy, Utah Republican Senator Mike Lee and Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul.

The six Democrats are Senators Cory Booker (D-NJ), Ed Markey (D-MA), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Bernie Sanders (D-Vermont), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Ron Wyden (D-OR).

Six senators, including five Republicans and one Democrat, abstained: Cory Gardner, Republican of Colorado; Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina; Kelly Loeffler, Republican of Georgia; and David Perdue, Republican of Georgia. David Perdue (R-GA), Ben Sasse (R-Nebraska), and Doug Jones (D-Ala.).

Wang Dukran analyzes Trump’s warning and calls for leadership change

The U.S. Senate voted 81 to 13 to override President Trump’s veto of the $740.5 billion National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). This follows the December 28, 2020, vote by the U.S. House of Representatives to override President Trump’s veto by a vote of 322 to 87.

The vote highlighted the divide between Trump and top Republicans.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell also hinted earlier that Republican senators were going to vote to override Trump’s veto.

Previously, President Trump has made several public warnings about vetoing the 2020 defense bill, which Trump opposes, among other things, calls for changing the names of military bases and slowing the withdrawal of troops from overseas, as well as his desire to repeal Section 230, the blockade for technology companies.

Subsequently, President Trump on December 29, not only a rare criticism of the Republican Party senior, calling on Senate Republicans not to let the defense authorization bill pass, but also called for a change in Republican leadership, President Trump also met the betrayal of McConnell. “The weak and tired Republican ‘leadership’ will allow a bad defense bill to pass,” Trump tweeted. “Negotiate a better bill now, or get better leadership! The Senate should not approve the NDAA until the bill is amended!!!”

On the House’s Dec. 27 vote to flip Trump’s veto, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) voted no, but Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Calif.), the third-ranking Republican, voted yes.

And several Republican bigwigs, including Sen. John Thune (R-South Dakota), the No. 2 Republican, and Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), who advises top Republicans, told The Hill on Friday that they had not heard Trump or the White House encouraging them to vote no in the days leading up to Friday’s vote.

Apollo.com commentator Wang Dukran described the results of the Electoral College vote on the congressman’s Jan. 6 challenge. Republican Senate Whips Thune and McConnell are teaming up to oppose Republican senators launching challenges in Congress. President Trump fired back on Twitter, calling him “Mitch’s boy. “Republicans in Name Only” (RINO). Thune and Cornyn now say that President Trump and the White House did not encourage them to vote against the veto of President Trump’s veto of the National Defense Authorization Act, which is a complete and abject lie. President Trump has made his position on the veto and the reasons for it as clear as can be.

Trump criticized the missed opportunity to repeal Section 230 and vetoed the National Defense Authorization Act for several reasons

After the Senate flipped Trump’s NDAA veto, Trump tweeted Friday, “The Republican Senate just missed an opportunity to get rid of Section 230, which gives unrestricted authority to big tech companies. Pathetic! Now they want to give $600 to people hit by the Chinese virus (CCP virus) instead of the $2,000 they desperately need. Not fair and not wise!”

Trump vetoed the defense authorization bill on Dec. 23. Trump cited several main reasons for his veto of the bill.

One was the wastefulness of spending overseas.

Two, the bill did not remove the social media umbrella Section 230, which, between the crackdown on conservatives by social media companies during the election, provided Big Tech with protections that were not commensurate with its responsibilities.

Third, Trump said he was also unhappy with the bill because it calls for the renaming of some historic military installations.

Fourth, it limits the president’s authority to use military construction funds to respond to national emergencies. This would limit his efforts to “bring America’s troops back to America.

For all of these reasons, I cannot support this bill,” President Trump said in a Dec. 23 statement. He also stressed that he is a strong supporter of the military, despite his veto vote.

Wang Dukran analyzed that the United States unification party, outside of the two parties, feels that on January 6

I think there is another important reason for Trump to negate the bill, which also restricts Trump from using the military to suppress protesters, said Apollo.com commentator Wang Duran.

Wang Duran analysis, from the Senate veto of President Trump’s veto of the National Security Authorization Act de voting results, Trump caught such a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to override Section 230, the opportunity missed will not be available again. In such an important issue, Republican senators opposed, there is really a point like the deep government stand.

Wang Dukran research and judgment, the large-scale fraud in the 2020 U.S. election, the evidence is lined up, McConnell-led Republican Party also does not support the challenge fraudulent results, but rather support Biden. This election fraud situation does not change, the Republican Party will forever become the party in opposition. If Trump has to create another party, the Republican Party will disintegrate. In such a life-and-death situation, the Republican Senate will support Biden, most likely because these people have been given the leverage by the Chinese Communist Party and the left wing.

Wang Duran said that some people in American society believe that there are not only two parties in the United States, the Republican Party and the Democratic Party, but also the Uniparty Party, which is both opposed to Trump and in collusion with the Communist Party. This Uniparty is not an open, formal organization, but a class of people. Sixty percent of the U.S. population supports Trump. Under normal circumstances, Republican lawmakers in re-election, if they have turned their backs on Trump, they are likely to lose, but these Republican senators still do so, possibly because they are what everyone calls the fake Republican Party, the real Democrats, can be re-elected by cheating, for such people, they may also be a road to black, reckless.