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Monday, August 26, 2019

Chicago Radio: Joe Walsh Makes It Official "Friends, I'm In"


Conservative radio talk host Joe Walsh, a former Tea Party congressman, is launching a long-shot primary challenge to President Trump. He's the second Republican to officially announce a run against Trump, who has a strong approval rating among his party's base, reports NPR.

Walsh, 57, supported Trump during his 2016 campaign but in recent months has been offering a bitter critique of the president, calling Trump a liar, bully and unfit for office. Walsh has also attacked Trump from the right.

"Mr. Trump isn't a conservative. He's reckless on fiscal issues; he's incompetent on the border; he's clueless on trade; he misunderstands executive power; and he subverts the rule of law. It's his poor record that makes him most worthy of a primary challenge," Walsh wrote in a New York Times op-ed this month.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld is the only other person so far to announce he'll try to unseat Trump, whose support among Republicans usually polls in the 80s, making him a formidable party incumbent.

"We can't take four more years of Donald Trump. And that's why I'm running for President," Walsh tweeted on Sunday. "It won't be easy, but bravery is never easy."

Walsh, who show airs on WIND 540 AM Chicago weekdays,  has a history of controversial, incendiary and offensive comments.

In October 2016, Walsh said on Twitter that he was backing Trump for president, saying: "On November 9th, if Trump loses, I'm grabbing my musket. You in?"

Walsh was pulled off the air from his radio show in 2014 following his use of racial slurs in a discussion over the controversy around the Washington Redskins. He later tweeted that: "I'm trying to have an honest, adult conversations about words without resorting to alphabet soup phrases(C-word, N-word, etc)"


Walsh, who has called President Barack Obama "Muslim" and a "traitor" told George Stephanopoulos on ABC News's This Week on Sunday that he has apologized for those comments, saying he feels responsible for some of Trump's incendiary rhetoric.

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