Disgraced Carlo DeMaria was Worse than Defeated Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán
Disgraced Carlo DeMaria was Worse than Defeated Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán A Developing Story on the DeMaria Family Business and how DeMaria's defeat and subsequent investigations into his questionalble campaign contributors and general malfeasance are the end of his political career, much like Hungary's Outgoing Prime Minister Viktor Orban --- two scoundrels with nowhere to go.
The Shadow of DeMaria's 18 years of corruption still stains the city of Everett, Massachusetts with the malfeasance and misdeeds of his two cousins affecting seniors suffering from the DeMaria / DiPierro elder abuse.
Defeated Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán had sixteen years in bed with Vladmir Putin and the likes of Donald J. Trump. In a difficult situation now over his appearances in the Epstein files and the War in Iran, Beleaguered Trump
sends J.D. Vance and Melania Trump out as distractions. Nothing can distract from the fact that Trump's touch is as toxic and poisonous as that of Carlo DeMaria in Everett.
DeMaria preyed upon the weak, and still thinks in his megalomania-addled brain that he will rise to power again. We will not let that happen.
The last vestige of DeMaria power is the nitwit that he wanted to succeed him, Anthony N. (is for nonsense) DiPierro. Anthony is scrambling, dissolving before your very eyes. The cousin of DeMaria an embarrassment and that Crooked Cousin Carlo is now hanging on to Anthony DiPierro for dear political life is all that you need to know.
Orbán's election loss has ripple effects for Trump and U.S. conservatives https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/orbans-election-loss-has-ripple-effects-for-trump-and-u-s-conservatives
Trump supported Orbán's reelection bid and even dispatched Vice President JD Vance to Budapest last week — in the midst of the Iran war — to stump for the incumbent.
Orbán's loss was a reminder of how the war has diminished Trump's ability to help allied politicians overseas, as well as of the limited ability of leaders to use their power to tilt voting in their direction in an age of worldwide discontent over incumbents of all ideological stripes.
"Oppositions can win despite a tilted playing field," said Steven Levitsky, a politics professor at Harvard and coauthor of the book "How Democracies Die." "Democracies are facing many challenges in many parts of the world, but so are autocracies."
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