By Lee Williams
San Francisco radical Kamala Harris and her leftwing ideology are done, thank God, but she’ll never be held responsible for the millions of illegal aliens she brought into the country, or the crazy ideas she had about how she was going to run the government.
Tim Walz, whom Harris chose as VP, returned to his Minnesota home. No one will remember him or his penchant for fancy waves. He flew home Tuesday and did not have any events on his calendar Wednesday. Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro or literally dozens of others would have been a much better choice for the Dems.
“There’s no point in saying good morning,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Wednesday. “Because it certainly is not one.”
Barbara Heineback, a former White House staffer says she was disappointed by how Harris blew up after her loss to President-elect Donald J. Trump.
“She (Harris) is so completely insecure that she could not have someone that bright around her to upstage her and outshine her. She made a lot of mistakes by bringing on all of Hollywood and Beyoncé and all of those people. But they always do that. Beyoncé wasn’t very happy,” Heineback said.
CNN’s roundtable of hacks blamed racism and sexism for Harris’ loss but said nothing about how she had the worst approval rating of any vice president.
Vance Jones, one of CNN’s talking heads, said folks were smiling when they woke up Tuesday morning, but were going to bed with a “nightmare.”
Harris herself was missing Wednesday. One of her staffers said he might resurface around 4 p.m. or 6 p.m.
Meanwhile, Trump was smiling about his victory. He had been impeached, convicted of laughable “crimes,” silenced by the corporate media and then shot by an assassin – one of two men who tried to kill him.
Despite all he had gone through, President-elect Trump was happy Wednesday morning. He appeared tired but was ready to go to work.
Here’s where he should focus during his first 30 days.
World peace
Trump said he will stop “the chaos in the Middle East,” adding “Israel would have never been attacked of October 7th, and I will prevent World War Three from happening.”
After Trump rebuilds our military, they can be sent out to stop these senseless acts by weakened dictators.
Second Amendment
Trump said in May he will end the more than 50 executive orders Joe Biden has issued about guns and the Second Amendment.
Biden has signed executive orders covering homemade kit guns that do not use serial numbers, stabilizing braces for ARs, which he wanted the owners to have to register as short-barreled rifles under the National Firearms Act, as well as safe storage requirements. Biden even created a task force to consider 3D printed firearms and fully automatic conversion devices that are already regulated as machine guns.
“In my second term, we will roll back every Biden attack on the Second Amendment — the attacks are fast and furious — starting the minute that Crooked Joe shuffles his way out of the White House,” Trump said.
Trump told senior NRA executives he will fire Steve Dettelbach, who was Joe Biden’s second choice to lead the ATF. “Have you heard of him? He’s a disaster,” Trump told the NRA.
While firing Dettelbach would be a great start, there are other issues that need to go too, such as the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention and the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which has billions for Red Flag laws and other litigation.
While Trump told the NRA he plans to appoint a pro-gun attorney general, “who will stop the weaponization of government against lawful gun ownership and who will prioritize traditional law enforcement by catching and punishing criminals,” perhaps it’s time to get rid of the ATF itself.
The ATF has never functioned well, and like President Biden, it needs to go soon.
The post What President-elect Trump needs to do during his first 30 days appeared first on Second Amendment Foundation.