by Michael Schwarz
For the tyrannical administration of President Joe Biden and his diabolical establishment enablers, things have not gone to plan.
Following the May 30 sham conviction of former President Donald Trump in a trial orchestrated by Democrats, prosecuted by a former high official in Biden’s Justice Department and driven by political motivations that neither the octogenarian president nor his surrogates bothered to hide, the establishment conspirators expected that by mindlessly chanting “convicted felon” at each mention of Trump’s name, they would persuade Americans to finally abandon the former president.
Instead, Americans propelled Trump to a May fundraising haul that dwarfed Biden’s by 65.8 percent.
According to CNBC, the Biden campaign, the Democratic National Committee and their allies raised a combined $85 million in May.
By contrast, the Trump campaign, its allies and the Republican National Committee took in $141 million last month, according to the report.
Remarkably, the Trump campaign said it raised nearly $53 million in the 24 hours following the former president’s New York conviction on charges of falsifying business records.
The establishment’s sham trial, therefore, had the ironic effect of bolstering the presumptive GOP nominee’s resources.
But the verdict alone did not account for Trump’s spectacular May. In fact, even without that $53 million surge, the former president and his allies would have outraised Biden and his allies by $3 million.
That sounds even more impressive in light of the fact that May’s haul gave Biden his second-best fundraising month this cycle.
In terms of cash on hand, Trump’s campaign has lagged far behind the president’s for much of this year. But the infusion of cash last month followed an April fundraising performance that also saw the former president outraise his rival $76 million to $51 million, thereby closing the cash gap.
According to The Washington Post, those results could “dramatically reshape the presidential race.”
To date, for instance, the Biden campaign has managed to “significantly outspend Trump’s effort on the airwaves.”
That effort from the president and his allies has included more than $65 million in television ads.
By contrast, the Trump campaign, as of Thursday, “had not aired a single general-election ad on television,” the Post reported.