Photo: Alamy
The Trump campaign wasted no time in responding to a ruling from Maine’s Superior Court on Wednesday that put a temporary stay on Secretary of State Shenna Bellows’ decision to strip President Trump’s name off the state’s 2024 ballot.
“This is a correct action, and we remain steadfast in our opposition to these bad-faith shams,” Trump spokesman Steven Cheung stated on Wednesday night.
As reported by RSBN, the court issued the decision and order on Wednesday, pending a final decision from the U.S. Supreme Court. In the meantime, President Trump’s name will remain on the 2024 ballot in the state of Maine.
Cheung’s statement continued, “President Trump is confident that we will ultimately prevail with a fair ruling on the issues in front of the Supreme Court. In states across the country, Crooked Joe Biden and his Democrat apparatchiks, through Soros-funded front groups, have weaponized the institutions of government to interfere in the upcoming election and disenfranchise over a hundred million voters.”
The victory in Maine is a big one for Trump, as swirling lawsuits and legal battles have seemed to surround him from all sides in 2023 and now in the presidential election year.
Luckily for Trump, the ongoing legal battles seemed to have had a resoundingly positive effect on his campaign. On Monday, Trump won the Iowa caucuses in a decisive and powerful sweep, taking 98 of 99 counties in a historic, nearly 30-point win.
The next primary contest will take place next week in New Hampshire on Jan. 23. In the meantime, the president will make multiple campaign appearances and speeches in the leadup to the primary.
Trump spokeswoman Steven Cheung concluded in his statement, “We will not stop fighting the remaining bogus, bad-faith 14th Amendment ballot challenges and President Trump looks forward to winning the state of Maine later this year, being re-elected in November, and he will Make America Great Again.”
1 comment