Trump's Campaign Advisor Makes Shocking Announcement About Trump's 2020 Run – This
is NOT GOOD!
The colorful and never-at-a-loss-for-words longtime confidante and campaign adviser,
Roger Stone, gave his two cents today when it comes to President Donald Trump's 2020
re-election campaign.
Although the president has already appeared at campaign rallies in order to generate funds
and keep his base ignited for his re-election campaign, Stone told the Howley Report last
week that Trump's bid for a second term was a not a "foregone conclusion."
"If at the end of the next three years the economy is very strong, he has built the wall,
sealed our borders, he's reformed our immigration policies, he has redone these trade agreements
so that they are beneficial to the United States, that he has got a peace agreement
in Korea — I could see him saying, 'You know what?
I don't need this anymore.
I made America great again.
I have kept my promises to the American people.
I'm heading off to the golf course,' " said Stone, in remarks first reported by the Washington
Examiner.
Stone then continued by predicting that Vice President Mike Pence and the UN Ambassador
Nikki Haley may be set to make a bid for the presidency in 2020 although rifts are opening
between the vice president and Trump's core base.
Something which made Stone confirm might make him support a candidate to stand against Pence.
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Stone has referred to Vice President Mike Pence as an "Establishment Republican Quisling"
before.The veteran political operative has recently become the target of Special Counsel
Robert Mueller's witch hunt into allegations of collusion between the Trump campaign and
Russia, allegations which have already been proven to just be a fake narrative which was
conjured up by Hillary Clinton and her Democrat cronies shortly after Donald Trump won the
presidential election in 2016 in order to excuse her loss.
Roger Stone is one of the smartest political strategists of all time.
He has worked on multiple campaigns, including President Nixon's.
If he says he will find someone to run against Pence and Haley they better watch out, because
Stone knows more about the true pulse of American than the whole Republican party put together
does and you can bet the farm that most of Trump's base will support whoever he finds
who will, like Trump did, appeal to the American working class which has been ignored and looked
down upon for decades by both political parties.
Here is an excerpt from Stone's most recent book, "The Making of the President 2016:
How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution."
"On November 8th, 2016, Donald John Trump was elected the forty-fifth President of the
United States.
This is a singular accomplishment that can only be attributed to the talent, energy,
and foresight of Donald Trump himself.
Trump's sprint across eight states in the closing days led to the greatest upset since
1948, when President Harry S Truman barnstormed across the country by train, breaking all
railroad speed regulations, making six or seven stops per day, and ensuring his victory
over New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey.
The physical energy that Trump expended going down the stretch was indeed Herculean.
There is no question that his final push into Wisconsin, Michigan, and returning to western
Pennsylvania, was an act of pure will that, while Clinton was already celebrating, propelled
him to victory.
The 2016 election was the first in which the mainstream media lost its monopoly over political
media coverage in the United States.
The increasingly vigorous alternative media, whose reporting standards are superior to
the networks and the cable news behemoths, is where more and more voters are getting
their information.
Trump's skillful courting of the conservative media, like The Daily Caller, Breitbart News,
WND.com, and InfoWars, made Trump the first presidential candidate to reach these disaffected
and highly motivated Americans effectively.
At the same time, Trump's relentless attacks on the media as "unfair" and "dishonest"
came right out of the Nixon playbook, where both Nixon and Trump exploited the resentment
of the biased media, so hated by their supporters.
Trump's willingness to challenge openly the media outlets that went after him kept
them somewhat honest in their coverage of his campaign but the relentless cable news
networks' attacks on him were unlike anything I have seen in the nine presidential campaigns
in which I worked.
The media dropped all pretext of objectivity.
Their motives and tactics were naked.
Most of this would largely backfire.
American voters have finally become hip to the fact that the media and the political
establishment work hand-in-glove to conceal many facts from the American people.
The voters no longer believe the media.
Donald Trump is his own strategist, campaign manager, and tactician, and all credit for
his incredible election belongs to him.
I'm just glad to have been along for the ride.
I wanted him to run for President since 1988 and had served as chairman of his Presidential
Exploratory Committee in 2000, as well as serving as a consultant to his 2012 consideration
of a candidacy.
I have worked for Trump with the Trump Organization, the Trump Shuttle, Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts,
and several political explorations over a forty-year period.
He is perhaps the greatest salesman in US history, with the spirit of a promoter and
the infectious enthusiasm of an entrepreneur who likes making money and winning.
Trump waged the first modern "all communication" campaign, eschewing polling, expensive television
advertising, sophisticated analytics, and all of the traditional tools of a modern presidential
campaign.
At the same time, Trump's campaign was centered around a "set piece rally," just as Richard
Nixon's campaign had been.
That Trump ran as the candidate of "the Silent Majority," appealing to forgotten
Americans, running as the law and order candidate and in the end, the peace candidate, was not
accidental.
Trump's campaign was much like Nixon's.
He understood that politics is about big issues, concepts, and themes, and that the voters
didn't really care about wonkish detail.
If they had, then Newt Gingrich would have been president.
Although there are similarities between Ronald Reagan's victory in 1980 and Trump's ascendancy
to the presidency, Trump's election is less an ideological victory and more a manifestation
of a genuine desire for a more competent government.
Like Nixon, Trump is more pragmatic, interested in what will work, as opposed to what is philosophically
pure.
He's tired of seeing America lose.
He is exactly the cheerleader the country needs.
Like Truman's whistle-stop events, Trump rallies became the focal point of his entire
campaign, amplified by the cable news networks that carried his rally speeches around the
clock.
He drew enormous crowds and voters found him funny and genuine.
All the while, his trusted press aide Hope Hicks was booking as many one-on-one interviews
into his schedule as humanly possible.
There was literally a time when you could not turn on the television without seeing
and hearing Donald Trump.
The cable networks of course did it for the ratings.
The fact that Trump was unrehearsed, un-coached, and unhandled, meant that voters found him
refreshing and authentic."



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