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..."President Trump is going to announce on Tuesday that he's running for president, and it's going to be a very professional, very buttoned-up announcement," Miller told Steve Bannon on his "War Room"...

Grifter's gonna grift.
But watch the media start again to give him all the oxygen in the room because it sells soap.
Former President Donald Trump repeatedly told his onetime White House chief of staff, John Kelly, that he wanted the Internal Revenue Service to investigate his political foes, Kelly told The New York Times.
Among the people Trump wanted to “get the I.R.S. on” were former FBI Director James Comey and former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, Kelly told the newspaper.
“I would say, ‘It’s inappropriate, it’s illegal, it’s against their integrity and the I.R.S. knows what it’s doing and it’s not a good idea,’” Kelly said he told Trump, according to the Times.
“Yeah, but they’re writing bad things about me,” Trump responded, according to Kelly.
McCabe and Comey, both fierce critics of Trump, were ultimately selected by the Internal Revenue Service for an intensive tax audit. The Times noted earlier this year that the odds of any one person being selected for the audit are about one in 30,600, raising questions about how two of Trump’s most visible critics were both selected.
As long as Democrats are in charge of DOJ...But it won't go anywhere.
Until Trump is actually charged with a criminal offense, nothing will ever happen.
But once he is charged, then the dam will burst.
Those who seek, the impeachment of President Nixon have long believed that one of his greatest areas of vulnerability may be his alleged interference —for both political and personal motive—with the operations of the Internal Revenue Service. They have two main reasons for thinking so.
The first is the sensitivity of the American people, and hence their elected representatives, to any hint that the tax laws are not being administered fairly.
The second relates to the argument being put forth by James D. St. Clair, the President's lawyer, that nothing short of proof of the president's commission of an “indictable crime” is constitutional cause for his removal.
In the area of I.R.S. operations, unlike many others involved in the impeachment inquiry, a large number of the offenses of which Mr. Nixon has been accused are “indictable crimes.” They would fall under the prohibitions of Section 7212 of the Internal Revenue Code, which makes it a felony for anyone “corruptly” to attempt to “obstruct or impede the due administration of” the Internal Revenue Code.
