Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Judge Rips Trump With Dig Comparing Just How Differently He And Al Gore Handled Their Election Losses

Judge Rips Trump With Dig Comparing Just How Differently He And Al Gore Handled Their Election Losses
Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images; Dave J. Hogan/Getty Images

A federal judge criticized former President Donald Trump for his continued insistence that the 2020 general election was stolen, noting that former Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore had better standing to challenge his 2000 election loss yet took his loss like "a man."

Judge Reggie Walton, who serves on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, made the remarks during a plea hearing for defendant Adam Johnson, who participated in the January 6 insurrection and was photographed carrying House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's lectern through the Capitol.


Johnson pleaded guilty on Monday to one count of entering or remaining in any restricted building. Walton declined to detain Johnson until sentencing based on a request from prosecutors, but indicated he would still consider sending Johnson to prison.

Walton criticized Johnson for his actions during the attack, which took place after a mob of Trump's supporters stormed the Capitol on the false premise the election had been stolen, while denouncing the behavior of the former President:

"You seemed to have thought it was a fun event to be involved in. I don't understand that mentality and to come to Washington D.C. and to destroy a monument of our democracy, I find very, very disturbing."
"And what concerns me, is that you were gullible enough to come all the way up here from Florida based upon a lie and then associate yourself because of that lie with people and try to undermine the will of the American public about who should be the President of the United States."
"I have concerns about whether you will be gullible when something like this arises again ... That concerns me, it really does because we are in a troubled situation as a country."
"Al Gore had a better case to argue than Mr. Trump and he was a man about what happened to him and he accepted it for the benefit of the country and walked away."

Walton, who was appointed by the man who defeated Gore, former President George W. Bush, referred to Gore's decision to concede the 2000 race against Bush after weeks of legal proceedings surrounding a tight race in Florida and the decision of the Supreme Court in Bush v. Gore to halt the recount there.

Gore had won the popular vote, much like Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton in 2016, but challenged the election results based on the fact that electoral votes in Florida were still undecided.

Weeks after the controversial ruling, when Congress met for a joint session to certify the electoral vote, Gore, who presided in his capacity as President of the Senate, ruled the objections of twenty members of the House of Representatives out of order because, pursuant to the Electoral Count Act, any such objection had to be sponsored by both a Representative and a Senator.

Many concurred with Walton's assessment and continued to criticize Trump for his lies about the election's integrity.










Gore himself has publicly criticized Trump's falsehoods about the election and slammed the Republican Party for embracing those claims.

During a CNN interview over the summer, Gore likened claims that the 2020 election had been stolen to a case of "artificial insanity" and denounced Trump's actions:

"The refusal of the former President to acknowledge that he lost by 7 million votes — it wasn't close for God's sake — and apparently a majority of his party is still so enthralled to him that they still believe that the American people did not make the judgment that they clearly made: This is very damaging to our democracy."

Trump's claims and the Republican Party's enabling also ignore the findings of intelligence agencies that conducted investigations under Trump's watch.

In fact, a statement from the Trump administration's own Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), part of a joint statement from the Election Infrastructure Government Coordinating Council and the Election Infrastructure Sector Coordinating Executive Committees, affirmed the agencies found "no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised."

More from People/donald-trump

James Charles
@jamescharleslol/TikTok

YouTuber James Charles Sparks Backlash For Berating Former Spirit Airlines Worker Who Sent Him GoFundMe Link After Losing Her Job

The thing about being a rich influencer is that you're only a rich influencer in the first place because the fans who watch your content made you one.

Makeup content creator James Charles seems to have forgotten this simple fact and has turned himself into the internet's latest Marie Antoinette because of it.

Keep ReadingShow less
bedazzled MAGA hat
Timothy Hurst/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images

Threads User's Epic Rant Ripping MAGA Fans Who Now Claim They 'Always Had Doubts' About Trump Has The Internet Applauding

As prominent MAGA minions, like QAnon conspiracy peddler and former Georgia Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, have come out against MAGA Republican President Donald Trump, so too are some lesser known individuals.

Whether it's his Iran War, his continuing saga with the Epstein files, his utter failure to keep any of his campaign promises that they banked on helping them, or the abject incompetence of his hand-picked personnel, some members of MAGA are distancing themselves from the cult.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Trump Ripped For Somehow Making His 'Happy Mother's Day' Post All About Himself Without Any Mention Of Melania

President Donald Trump was criticized after he "honored" mothers on Mother's Day by attacking Democrats in a self-absorbed post on Truth Social, never mentioning his wife, First Lady Melania, who is the mother of his youngest son Barron.

Instead of acknowledging her and mothers around the country, Trump gloated about the economy and accused critics of having "Trump Derangement Syndrome," targeting Democrats and Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve Chair he's been trying to push out of his administration.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Zach Galifianakis; Donald Trump
Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend; Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Zach Galifianakis Expertly Lays Into Comedians Who Refuse To 'Challenge' Trump When He's A Guest On Their Podcasts

Actor and comedian Zach Galifianakis called out comedians who have had President Donald Trump on their podcasts and didn't "challenge" him, noting that they've effectively abdicated their role by not making jokes at Trump's expense or pushing back against things he says.

Galifianakis made that argument during a recent episode of Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, where host Conan O'Brien remarked that few, if any, people have challenged a sitting president the way Galifianakis did when he interviewed then-President Barack Obama in 2014 on his satirical series Between Two Ferns.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Sean Duffy
Fox News

Sean Duffy Ripped After Encouraging Americans To Take 'Road Trips' As Gas Prices Continue To Soar

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was called out after he encouraged Americans to take "road trips" as gas prices continue to rise as a result of President Donald Trump's war in Iran.

Republicans have faced pressure from constituents nationwide to address the rising cost of living, but Americans are feeling pain at the pump now that the Iran war, which the Trump administration kicked off in late February, has prompted a spike in gas prices.

Keep ReadingShow less