"Maybe we like a dictator": Donald Trump denies one he is one, says, "Just a man with a great common sense"
US President Donald Trump on Monday hinted that many Americans would prefer a dictator while signing orders to increase federal control over Washington, DC, and to prosecute those burning the flag, AFP reports. Trump, during a long oval event of 80 minutes of Oval Office, criticized his opponents and the media, and expressed frustration that he did not receive enough recognition for his national efforts to undertake crime and immigration. “They say ‘we don’t need him. Freedom, freedom. He is a dictator. He is a dictator. “Many people say,” Maybe we like a dictator, “Trump told reporters. “I don’t like a dictator. I’m not a dictator. I am a man with a great common sense and a smart person. ” Watch the video here: Trump – who at the end of his first term tried to reverse the results of his 2020 defeat by Joe Biden – said before winning a second term in November that he would be a ‘dictator on the first day’. Republican Trump deployed the national guard earlier this month to Washington to counteract what he claimed was a crime problem out of control, and also took the federal control over the police police department. Trump said he also considered sending the military to the cities of Chicago and Baltimore, while targeting a series of democratic strongholds. He sent the national guard to Los Angeles in June – against the wishes of the mayor and the wishes of California. The president was particularly abominable of the Governor of Illinois, JB Pritzker, a vocal opponent who strongly rejected any step to send troops to Chicago. “You send them, and instead of being praised, they say,” You are trying to take over the Republic, “Trump says.” These people are sick. ” Pritzker, a billionaire businessman like Trump, launched his own broad conference at the president at a press conference on Monday, called him a wannabe dictator who “wants to use the military to occupy a US city, punish his dissidents and score political points.” On Monday, Trump has assigned his emphasis by signing and prosecuting an executive order to burn and prosecute people – despite a verdict from the US High Court in 1989, saying that the law is protected by the freedom of speech laws. Washington sharpened, and the defense secretary Pete Hegseth ordered to set up a specialized unit in the national guard of Washington for public order and terminated cashless bail.