Trump announces what holiday he will declare when he gets into office

Former President Donald Trump deemed November 5 — which just happens to be Election Day — “Christian Visibility Day,” in response to President Joe Biden issuing a proclamation honoring Easter Sunday as Transgender Visibility Day.

Only in post-Obama America could a Democratic president get away with besmirching the day Christians celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ AND then denying that he did it, as 81-year-old Biden did.

Trump was in Green Bay, Wisconsin, for a rally on Tuesday, the day of the state’s presidential primary elections.

“What the hell was Biden thinking when he declared Easter Sunday to be ‘Trans Visibility Day.’ Such total disrespect to Christians,” Trump told the crowd.

“Nov. 5 is going to be called something else,” he continued. “You know what it’s going to be called? Christian Visibility Day, when Christians turn out in numbers that nobody has ever seen before.”

Biden apologists look past the fact that Biden issued an official proclamation honoring the day set aside to “recognize” the transgender community by noting that it traditionally falls on March 31, which was Easter Sunday this year.

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Despite not participating in any 2024 Republican primary debates, Trump challenged Biden to debate him before November’s general election.

“As you can see, we have an empty podium here, right? To my right. That’s for Joe Biden. I’m trying to get Joe to debate,” he said in Green Bay. “I’m calling on Crooked Joe to debate any time, any place. We’ll do it any way you want, Joe, so that we can discuss, in a friendly manner, the real problems of our country, which are many.”

Having endorsed Senate candidate Eric Hovde, who is running against Democratic incumbent Tammy Baldwin, Trump added, “With your support, we’re going to win the Wisconsin Republican primary in a landslide, that will be in a few hours. And Nov. 5, we are going to win this state, we’re going to win the White House, and we are going to save our country.”

Biden has not officially said no to a debate, but he came real close when he told reporters last month that “it depends on [Trump’s] behavior.”

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Trump won Wisconsin over Hillary Clinton in 2016 by just 23,000 votes, and Biden won it by even less in 2020, with just a 21,000 vote advantage.

Tom Tillison

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