Many in the state see prosecution of Trump as a Democratic political move – and they say it will backfire

From his corner of rural Iowa, Neil Shaffer did more than his fair share to put Donald Trump in the White House and to try to keep him there.

Shaffer oversaw the biggest swing of any county in the US from Barack Obama to Trump in 2016, and increased the then president’s share of the vote four years later. But the chair of the Howard county Republican party is not enthusiastic at the prospect of yet another Trump presidential campaign, and he blames the Democrats for driving it.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Failure to check on Laura Winham a sign of ‘systemic’ problems, court told

Social workers did not carry out adequate checks on woman later found…

UK could jail social media bosses who breach child safety rules

No 10 considering amendment to online safety bill that would give Ofcom…

James Norton: ‘I’m very aware of how lucky I am’

After his amazing success in Happy Valley, James Norton is taking on…