Trump intends to participate in US presidential election in 2024

Former US President Donald Trump made it seriously considering the possibility of participating in the next elections of the head of state in 2024. The corresponding statement 45th Head of the White House made on Wednesday on the air of the British TV channel GB News, writes TASS.

Responding to an interview to the question of the former party leader Brexit Niphel Farage about readiness to return to a big policy, Trump stressed that he could not do differently. “If you love your country, you have no choice, so it’s not a question,” he said.

“I love our country. I brought it to an previously unprecedented level. Then there was a coronavirus pandemic, but I again returned the country [to the top] with the development of vaccines that we all use and who saved tens of millions of people around the world. They were created in less than nine months, although it was assumed that it would take 12 years old, “said Trump, adding that his administration” did a wonderful job. ” He also noted that he was engaged in politics because he “like help people.”

At the same time, Trump revealed his opponents from the Democratic Party, which distributed information about the alleged relations with Russia. “Two lies based on the impeachment procedure. Russia, Russia, Russia – now it turned out that it was a frank lie, everyone knows about it. They need to pick up Pulitzer Prizes from journalists who in most cases intentionally wrote about these fictional stories,” concluded Former American president from the Republican Party.

In addition, he said that he would help republican candidates for the interim elections of 2022 in the US Congress. “I have to make sure that the right people will be chosen,” said Trump. Interim elections to Congress will be held in November 2022. All 435 members of the Chamber of Representatives and 34 senators will be elected on them. Currently, the Most of the Democrats are held in the lower chamber of the Congress, parity has been established in the Senate – each of the two parties occupies 50 seats.