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Pamela Jo Bondi [1] (born November 17, 1965) is an American attorney, lobbyist, and politician. A member of the Republican Party, she served as Florida attorney general from 2011 to 2019, the first woman elected to the office. In 2020, Bondi was one of President Donald Trump's defense lawyers during his first impeachment trial.
Women for Trump, Women for America First and Women Vote Smart [ edit ] In June 2018, Kremer, who by then was a co-founder of Women for Trump , was interviewed on CNN, where she insisted that family separations at the U.S.–Mexico border were occurring at the same level for both the Obama administration and the Trump administration.
The exact terms of what makes up Trumpism are contentious and are sufficiently complex to overwhelm any single framework of analysis; [1] it has been called an American political variant of the far-right, [2] [3] and the national-populist and neo-nationalist sentiment seen in multiple nations worldwide from the late 2010s [4] to the early 2020s.
Central to the "America First" question is the online debate raging over the expansion of the H–1B visa program, which allows American employers to hire foreign workers, and is vehemently ...
'She has to win' Only one other woman, Hillary Clinton, has ever won a major party’s presidential nomination. Harris is the first Black woman and the first Asian woman to lead a presidential ticket.
Lucy Stone, the founder of the American Woman's Suffrage Association. The American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) was a single-issue national organization formed in 1869 to work for women's suffrage in the United States. The AWSA lobbied state governments to enact laws granting or expanding women's right to vote in the United States.
In its early going, the Trump campaign publicized an article by Jeff Kuhner on the World Tribune praising the candidate as a "nationalist who seeks to put America first"; [26] campaign manager Corey Lewandowski (who later published a book with the title) [27] promoted Trump with the phrase; [28] [29] and both Sarah Palin [30] and Chris Christie ...
In 1868, conservatives backed Horatio Seymour against Ulysses S. Grant, in a campaign built on the promise of disenfranchising Black Americans, and their rhetoric sparked widespread violence.