The story goes on under the ad Republican nominees have sought to turn to Trump for support in the 2022 race, although the former president is slowing down his support and showing a willingness to step down – relinquishing his support to lawmaker Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) Last month. the deviation of the hopeful Senate slightly from Trump’s ruthless false narratives about the 2020 presidential race. Palin’s race and a series of upcoming primaries will test the strength of Trump’s support in 2022 as Georgia’s nominee is running for office, and some observers say a strong focus on election fraud could hurt his overall contest choices. . Palin described herself in a Facebook post last week as a fighter against the “radical left.” She rose to the right as the running mate of Sen. John McCain in the 2008 presidential election and remained on the front pages even after her departure from political office, strengthening the tea party movement and embracing her pop culture in reality. The story goes on under the ad “America is at a critical juncture,” Palin said in a statement, criticizing inflation, praising the “free market” and denouncing illegal immigration. “As I watched the far left destroy the country, I knew I had to join and fight.” Palin is vying with candidates from all parties in the June 11 primary election for Yang’s headquarters, the first step in a special election under Alaska’s new top four. The four people who win the most votes will appear on a ranking ballot in August. Voters went through the change in electoral procedures in 2020 due to the opposition of many Republicans. The change has overturned a previously predictable race in Alaska, where Democrats have not won a federal election in nearly 15 years. The story goes on under the ad Palin’s opponents include Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate 2020 Al Gross, Anchorage Assembly member Christopher Constand (D) and Republican Sen. Josh Revak, who chaired Young’s re-election campaign in 2022. Palin — who was elected Alaska’s first female governor in 2006— paid tribute to Trump as he showed interest in Yang’s former headquarters. “We need people like Donald Trump who have nothing to lose like me,” he told Fox News last month. “We have nothing to lose and nothing more than this namby-pamby vanilla milletost… things that happen.” While approving Palin on Sunday night, Trump claimed that he “took McCain’s presidential campaign out of the trash.” The election of Palin as McCain’s candidate thrilled the Republican base – but McCain would eventually regret his choice. Palin won the recognition of the national name but also the ridicule for the blunders and was presented as not serious and unqualified on “Saturday Night Live”. Researchers at Stanford University found in a 2010 study that Palin’s presence on the presidential ticket cost McCain 1.6 percentage points, or more than 2 million votes. The story goes on under the ad Palin’s popularity in Alaska plummeted after she ran for vice president in 2008 and decided to step down next summer. In 2018, when Palin suggested she could challenge Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) after the moderate incumbent refused to support Brett M. Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination, a poll conducted by the Alaska Survey Research that 31 percent of Alaskans had a favorable view of Palin. Trump has used his support to criticize Palin’s former vice president, McCain – a moderate Republican who has been repeatedly attacked by Trump, even after the Arizona senator died. In Trump’s 2015 campaign, Trump famously said that McCain “was not a war hero” despite his service in Vietnam and ironically said that he liked “the people who were not captured.” Palin has largely stayed away from national politics in the last decade. But he continued to advocate for conservative purposes and to cultivate the following. Palin sold more than 2 million copies of her memoirs, signed a lucrative contract with Fox News and starred in the TLC show “Sarah Palin’s Alaska.” The story goes on under the ad This year, she defied New York’s coronavirus rules by eating out in the city while unvaccinated and sued over her long-running defamation lawsuit against the New York Times. “What am I trying to achieve? “Justice for the people who are waiting for the truth in the media,” Palin told reporters as she entered the courtroom. A judge dismissed the case in February, saying Palin did not show the Times acted with “real malice”, even when she criticized the newspaper’s mistake in a 2017 article. Like others who won Trump’s approval, Palin helped reinforce the former president’s mythical allegations that rampant fraud stigmatized the 2020 election. “When there was apparent unrest in so many constituencies, the president insisted that we look at where all these votes came from,” he said last year when he clashed with Piers Morgan in Good Morning Britain. David Weigel contributed to this report.