WARMINSTER TOWNSHIP, Pennsylvania – For nearly two hours Saturday, members of the media were banned from attending a routine campaign event attended by leaders of the Pennsylvania Governor and the U.S. Senate, a security group that did not say who sent the message. Their.
“I know my rights,” said the man in the triangular hat and white knee-high socks, when asked why he was blocking media access.
“We are just following orders,” said another security official.
The decision to ban journalists running as governor, Doug Mastriano, and Senate nominee Katie Barnett, from interfering with the usual campaign space in the office park events space has been a long-standing confrontation with between journalists and two distant campaigns. Right candidates.
The recession has been the iconic relationship between the GOP and the mainstream media over the past decade, mainly because it’s so ridiculous.
A man dressed in colonial attire was forced to enter the parking lot, along with several other men dressed in modern attire who had no contact with reporters and prevented reporters from approaching the building where Barnett, Mastriano and former legal advisers were Donald Trump. Jenna Ellis hosts a rally before the election. At one point the police were called. Visitors must also verify that they have preregistered online or have not logged in.
“The letter states that Doug Mastriano’s group of friends has the exclusive authority to grant or deny entry to any person as belonging to the property. “Fuge is the host place and will not interfere with the security group in any way,” the security group member read aloud.
Later, The Fuge owner Samuel Cravero came out and spoke to reporters. “I rented space for a private event and they decided not to be here,” he said.
This person is preventing the press from getting into the film at the Mastriano / Barnett rally. He does not answer any questions or make eye contact. pic.twitter.com/LTWuHlDMSG
– Kolby Itkowitz (@ColbyItkowitz) May 14, 2022
It was the unpredictable end of primaries that saw GOP Senate candidate Mehmet Oz, the nation’s most prominent heart surgeon, ultimately break Trump’s support. It also forced Mastriano, a state senator and central figure, to try to turn the 2020 elections into a serious fight for governor. On Saturday, Trump blasted a last-minute note of approval from Mastriano. “No one in Pennsylvania has done more or fought for the integrity of the state’s election of Senator Doug Mastriano,” Trump wrote.
Trump’s allies panicked over Barnett’s rise – and the prospect of his approval ending in Oz’s loss – calling the situation a “nightmare.” CNN reported. Trump released a statement on Thursday stating that Barnett had not been properly “evaluated” but left the door open for his support for the general election.
Several people who spoke to HuffPost before attending the Barnett-Mastriano event said they did not have Oz as a candidate and were more responsive to Barnett’s story. In the campaign video And during the debate, Barnett mentioned how his mother was raped and inspired at the age of 12, a story he used to reflect on anti-abortion MPs.
“In Oz, it’s just a double talk on issues like the Second Amendment and red flag laws,” said Nick, a 30-year IT employee in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. “I appreciated Barnett’s story.”
Neither Barnett nor Mastriano spoke to reporters outside, but Barnett’s face lit up in the parking lot of the van’s electronic billboard with the slogan: “I’m you!”
Source: Huffpost