President Biden’s reelection campaign is pouncing on former President Trump’s fundraising numbers, dubbing its political rival “Broke Don” on Thursday.

“Not a Winning Campaign: Broke Don Hides in Basement,” the campaign wrote in an email. “Trump can’t raise money, isn’t campaigning, and is letting convicts and conspiracy theorists run his campaign.”

Election filings made public Wednesday showed Trump’s 2024 campaign brought in $10.9 million last month, while his joint fundraising committee raised nearly $11 million. It has about $42 million in cash on hand.

Meanwhile, Biden’s campaign operation raised roughly $53 million in February, which gave it $155 million in cash on hand entering March.

  • Gonkulator@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    So sick of trump sycophants astroturfing by pretending to be lefists. The left doesnt play your in-group/out-group games so cosplaying as a leftist while nakedly shilling for the fascists is ineffective. You dont gain street cred by pretending to be on team X, thats projecting how you think onto people who dont think like that.

    This means when talking to the actual left you must stand on your ideas and your idea is to elect trump and that idea is shite. There is a reason all the grifters are on your side of the aisle, you wont find that level of gullibility here.

    • iAmTheTot@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      Saying that Trump did nothing to help the country and that he should not run again is being a sycophant?

    • sailingbythelee@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I wish you were correct, but you aren’t. The left is famous for its identity politics, which is precisely an in-group/out-group game. Also, the left is just as bad as the right when it comes to lacking nuance and brigading people who express ideas that the hive mind doesn’t like.

      • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        I would say that a very vocal, but hopefully tiny, minority on the left are very much caught up in that. Not all of us are. Unfortunately, in some venues/platforms they have utterly captured the mods, and in some cases, have completely destroyed any reasonable discussion (an example I’ve mentioned before is Boing Boing’s comment section - it’s reached cartoonish levels, and I’ve mostly stopped reading Boing Boing in recent years as a result. It’s almost a self-parody, not even joking.). I think the impression is that there are many more of these types of leftists than there really are.

      • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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        8 months ago

        You’re getting hate but you’re absolutely right

        I love the left and I don’t want Trump to put us all in concentration camps more than anyone else does. But even that being the case, I’ve been yelled at much more by people on the left for having an “incorrect” opinion than I have from the right.

        • The right will disingenuously repeat talking points and groupthink
        • The left will very sincerely repeat talking points and groupthink, and then call you a racist asshole and get insanely mad at you for daring to question.
        • sailingbythelee@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Thanks, you summed it up nicely. I’m very committed, both personally and professionally, to the left in terms of social policy, but I recognize our tendency towards tribalism, doctrinaire language policing, and groupthink.

          Also, you nailed it when you said that one of main differences between left and right is their degree of earnestness. Anyone who has watched the development of identity politics since the 1990s can recognize that the right is now just doing a bad imitation of the left’s rhetorical tactics. That’s why they seem disingenuous: because most of them are acting out their impression of the so-called “radical left”, but from the other side.

          Whether you agreed with them or not, the right used to pride themselves on being the sober, fiscally conservative, “responsible”, establishment people, while the left were the loud, obnoxious ones screaming about identity and shaming normal people for their supposed “privilege”.

          The rise of the Tea Party marks the beginning of the right-wing adoption of these left-wing identity politics tactics. The right has now become a radical reactionary movement rather than the small-c fiscal conservatives of the past. Watching the nuttiness on the right makes me think that the transformation happened largely because many middle- and working-class whites now see themselves as victims of the same race-based persecution that the left correctly complained about for decades, so they’ve just leaned into it.

          All of this reminds me of Foucault’s assertion that ideologies are not about right and wrong, but rather about power. That’s why we are in the middle of a culture war. Of course, we can’t let the oligarchs, the fascists, or the Christian Nationalists win, but the left is not entirely innocent either in the sense that we have demonized and alienated a very large segment of Western society. I don’t absolve myself, either. I have railed against the right, especially the religious right, in the past just as hard as anyone.

    • Verdant Banana@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      actually not on either corporate party’s side

      bipartisan politics took my vote away so do not support either of those two parties

      • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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        8 months ago

        actually not on either corporate party’s side

        Did you know that Biden’s corporate tax reforms at the beginning of 2023, meant that Amazon went from getting a $1.2 billion tax credit to again paying a billion dollars per quarter? And that it’s now up to $3 billion per quarter, comfortably more than they’ve ever had to pay before? And that he’s using those corporate tax increases to fund his big-ticket priorities like student loan forgiveness?

        Me neither. I didn’t know that shit at all, until a few days ago, when I was arguing with someone like you who was saying how much Biden loves the corporations.