Wealthy Kentucky business executive Nate Morris entered the race to succeed Mitch McConnell in the United States Senate, casting himself as the only political outsider in the field and an unwaveringly loyal supporter of President Trump. He announced his candidacy on a podcast hosted by the president's son Donald Trump Jr. The race is expected to be among the biggest and most expensive Republican primary battles of 2026. On his campaign website, Mr. Morris says he opposes "all forms of amnesty" for undocumented immigrants and wants to end birthright citizenship. He says he supports Mr. Trump's tariffs and wants to cut federal funding for schools and universities that "try to indoctrinate our kids with woke propaganda." The GOP Senator hopeful stated "We need a hard stop on immigration, right now." Link: Twitter.
After helping destroy the US for decades, Sen. "Moscow" Mitch McConnell (R-KY) won't be seeking re-election in 2026 and zenophobic oligarch Nate Morris wants to replace him. Why would a superrich fascist like Nate Morris seek a $174,000 per annum position? One of his opponents, Congressman Andy Barr said Mr. Morris "can't run from all the liberal trash in his past." Archived link: archive.ph.
@#2 ... Of course he does.
Who does he think will fill all these jobs? ...
That's the question of late.
Even Pres Trump seems to be TACO'ing on it.
Rotting strawberries in the field because there is no one to pick them?
Are farm workers exempt from Pres Trump's deportation dicta? Or not?
That seems to depend upon what day he speaks.
Meanwhile, US crops are rotting in the field.
ICE Raids on US Farms Leaves Crops Rotting
www.newsweek.com
... Immigration enforcement operations on farms have left crops rotting and farm operations disrupted in major agricultural states including California, Texas, and Pennsylvania.
Farm owners and industry representatives report that up to 70 percent of workers stopped reporting to work following Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) actions, resulting in significant crop losses and financial strain.
"We do not have enough workforce in the United States to do manual work, to do those jobs that other people are not qualified to do and do not want to do it," Alexandra Sossa, CEO of Farmworker and Landscaper Advocacy Project, told Newsweek. "For example, we are running into a problem where we do not have enough farm workers to grow the food we eat every day.
"Now we do not have enough workers to go to the meatpacking processing industries and factories to produce, to pack the food that we are eating." ...
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