Kelli Ward Calls Arizona Primary the “Exorcism of John McCain From Our State and From Our Country”

Arizona GOP Chairwoman Kelli Ward does not mince words. She speaks her mind, tells it how it is, and is no stranger to controversy.

In Arizona, the shadow of John McCain persists, but according to Ward, Tuesday’s primary may have taken care of that forever.

This from thelibertydaily.com.

Watch:

On Steve Bannon’s War Room, Ward said:

Yesterday in Arizona it was a culmination and it was an exorcism of John McCain from our state and our country.

Ward was a critic of McCain’s in his home state throughout his career in the Senate.

As a former state senator, she ran against McCain in 2016 and against Martha McSally in 2018, losing both Republican primaries.

But in 2019, she found her niche as a strong GOP chair, thriving in the role ever since.

America First patriots Kari Lake, Blake Masters, and Abe Hamadeh were among the Trump-backed patriots who won on Tuesday.

Ward backed them all and will [work] to push them to victory in the November general election.

Final thoughts, information concerning military history and military tradition: Any questions about why Senator McCain’s casket was covered with a wrinkled flag at his funeral?

The Wrinkled Flag theory states that the caskets of veterans draped in this less-than-desirable manner acted inappropriately in their duties to the country. We can argue the point well that many in government are absolute traitors, but otherwise there is no signal to indicate that.

Suffice to say, we should never expect to see a wrinkled flag on a veteran’s casket. So, why was Sen. McCain’s casket covered with a wrinkled flag (recently Pres. Bush 41 and Rep. Lewis, also)?

McCain’s biographer, Robert Timberg, who interviewed several Vietnam POWs while writing the biography John McCain: An American Odyssey, said “I’ve never known of any occasion in which Sen. McCain provided the North Vietnamese with anything of value.” However, McCain did acquire, according to the group Vietnam Veterans Against McCain, the nickname “Hanoi Hilton Songbird.”

Stories abound of McCain’s time in the U.S. Navy both before and after he was shot down and taken prisoner by the North Vietnamese. His time as a U.S. Senator was likewise the source of less-than-desirable stories. The name “RINO” may very well be mild in comparison.