Republican Vice president candidate criticizes Poland and supports Hungary

angora24.pl 1 year ago

In his speech, the politician addressed abroad policy, announcing that U.S. allies would gotta share with this country the "weight of planet peace".

No more stowaways for countries that betray the generosity of an American taxpayer “Vance said — Together we will only send our children to war erstwhile we have to, but as president Trump showed by eliminating ISIS [...] erstwhile we hit, we hit hard.

Vance, although called political novice, rapidly became 1 of Donald Trump's leading camp figures. In 2 years in the Senate, he gained a reputation as a folk tribune, populist, Viktor Orban's fan and major support criticism for Ukraine.

J.D. Vance is 1 of the top critics of globalism, free trade and large corporations. Presenting him at the Republican electoral convention in Milwaukee, the party's candidate for the Ohio Senate, Bernie Moreno, emphasized that, like Trump, Vance would care about “forgotten Americans”.

He knows what it means to live in poverty, to be forgotten by politicians in Washington. He will guarantee that no American is forgotten He said.

Ukraine shall surrender part of the territory

The candidate for Vice president is besides known for his controversial views on the war in Ukraine. In the past, he declared that he did not care what would happen to Ukraine, and suggested that in order to end the war, the government in Kiev would gotta surrender part of Russia's territory. Today, his views have not changed much.

President Trump promised to go there and negociate with the Russians and Ukrainians and bring all of this to an early end so that America could focus on the real problem, China. This is the biggest threat to our country and we're completely distracted. — he gave during the Wednesday electoral convention.

USA can learn from Hungary

Like Trump himself, Ohio Senator is simply a supporter of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Vance repeatedly praised the decisions of the Hungarian government regarding ideological changes at universities and claimed that the US could learn a lot from the solutions introduced in Budapest. At the same time, the strongest of all politicians in Washington criticized the actions of the current government in Poland, identifying changes in public media as a "real attack on democracy" and demanding the intervention of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

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