By David Kamioner | December 6, 2019

The Republican Party has lost every popular vote total in presidential elections since 1992, with the exception of 2004.

If there had been a switch of less than 100,000 votes in several key states in 2016, failed Democrat candidate Hillary Clinton would be president today after winning the Electoral College.

Democrats, using the new scam of ballot harvesting, stole several congressional seats in Orange County, California, in 2018.

Bad news, huh?

Combine that with the current push for the impeachment of President Donald Trump — and we have a Democratic Party that has the possible way and certainly the will to try to make sure no Republican ever wins the presidency again (or finishes his or her term).

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Related: Trump Dares Pelosi and Dems to Impeach Him

It can be said: Well, of course. It is the normal duty of a political party to try to deny the other party the presidency into perpetuity.

But until recently, this sort of thing was done by standard electoral methods at the polls.

Even in 2016, the Dems were playing by the traditional playbook, generally speaking, because they thought it would benefit them.

However, their rude shock on election night of November 2016 has motivated overturning DOI rule blocking oil and gas on 13 million acres in Alaska