Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, has given different responses, at different times, to the accounts of him being racist and antisemitic when he was a teenager given by some of his contempories at Dulwich College in south London. They have ranged from saying he may have engaged in banter using language that, 50 years later, may be regarded as offensive, to saying the claims were entirely without foundation.
Imagine a little boy at odds with himself, awkward, shy, painfully self-conscious, the passage began. Imagine that little boy dreading the lunchroom at school, the hierarchical order of jocks over here, freaks over there, and nerds in a self-protective circle, and that little boy fleeing into the cocoon of the library where no one would notice him, where he could read his USA Today. I'm curious if that animates your posture in the political scene, because you are someone who refuses to hate, McEnany said.
I wonder how you read the message from the elections that we just had, the big wins for Democrats, not just the New York mayoral election, the governor's races in Virginia and New Jersey. Because there is this feeling that people, I know that inflation has come down from the Biden era, but it's still elevated. And those cumulative gains in things like beef prices and coffee prices, the everyday items that people face are still high. And that is something that President Trump ran on. I do wonder what What sort of economic takeaways you have from the Big Dem wins.
MSNBC host Rachel Maddow and former Vice President Kamala Harris cracked up over a quip in response to President Donald Trump's racial attack, which was revealed in Harris's new book. VP Harris stunned the political media world with surprisingly candid excerpts from the forthcoming campaign tome 107 Days, and has embarked on a media tour in support of the book. The title is a reference to the time elapsed between her ascension to the top of the ticket and her Election Day loss to now-President Donald Trump. The ex-Veep was a guest on Monday night's edition of MSNBC's The Rachel Maddow Show for a wide-ranging interview that hit a lot of topics that are covered in the book, and some that aren't.