Justin can't be happy.
Donald Trump may not be counting on the support of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau anytime soon.
But the Republican presidential candidate received an endorsement from Trudeau’s brother Monday.
“Donald Trump, I really believe in my gut, my heart, that he’s a genuine person,”
Kyle Kemper
said in social media posts from Florida Monday. “He wants to leave a good legacy.”
Even more important, wearing a MAHA (Make American Healthy Again) cowboy hat, Kemper said a Trump presidential win on Nov. 5 will be good for Canada, too.
“What does a Trump presidency mean for Canada?” the son of Justin Trudeau’s mother, Margaret, said in a four-minute video. “In a nutshell, it’s going to mean a shift in the vibration of Canada; it’s going to open up the opportunity for government innovation, within Canada, likely massive tax reform in Canada.”
Kemper, who has been driving around in the Robert F. Kennedy bus for the past year with his wife and six kids, is supporting Trump, as well. Kyle told me he thinks a Republican administration in the United States will help create boom times in Canada.
“There is no question about it,” he told The Toronto Sun.
In the video, Kemper said “the business sector in Canada recognizes how big American business is.” While the media “are going to scare you over the next little bit that it’s all doom and f——- gloom. Guess what guys? It’s not.”
It’s the opposite, he insisted.
“Trump on the Joe Rogan Experience said he’s open to getting rid of income tax,” said Kemper. ”Oh my God, if that happens, that is going to unlock so much wealth. All of a sudden, the need for offshore accounts, Swiss bank accounts, funny money managing to reduce your tax exposure, changes.”
Kemper said ending income tax would be an “unbelievable moment to break free of government slavery tools.”
If it happens in America, could it happen in Canada?
Unlikely, under his brother’s leadership. But Kemper hinted he sees a new government coming in the Great White North, too, and that positive changes could result.
“This (current) corporate government in Canada has no chance of surviving,” he said. “People are over it.”
It is, Kemper said, just a matter of time until his brother moves on to a new career. He loves his brother but has been critical of his strident approach over things like vaccine mandates and the censoring of free speech.
“They are riding it out and all getting their pensions,” he said of the Trudeau Liberals.
In the meantime, with while opinion polls show the American presidential race is too close to call, Kemper said what he has seen with his eyes is new, big thinking on the United States political menu.
Driving all across American on the Kennedy bus, which has been renamed the MAHA bus, Kemper said, he sees massive Trump support everywhere he goes — in red states, blue states, or any state for that matter.
Donald Trump may not be counting on the support of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau anytime soon.
But the Republican presidential candidate received an endorsement from Trudeau’s brother Monday.
“Donald Trump, I really believe in my gut, my heart, that he’s a genuine person,”
Kyle Kemper
said in social media posts from Florida Monday. “He wants to leave a good legacy.”
Even more important, wearing a MAHA (Make American Healthy Again) cowboy hat, Kemper said a Trump presidential win on Nov. 5 will be good for Canada, too.
“What does a Trump presidency mean for Canada?” the son of Justin Trudeau’s mother, Margaret, said in a four-minute video. “In a nutshell, it’s going to mean a shift in the vibration of Canada; it’s going to open up the opportunity for government innovation, within Canada, likely massive tax reform in Canada.”
Kemper, who has been driving around in the Robert F. Kennedy bus for the past year with his wife and six kids, is supporting Trump, as well. Kyle told me he thinks a Republican administration in the United States will help create boom times in Canada.
“There is no question about it,” he told The Toronto Sun.
In the video, Kemper said “the business sector in Canada recognizes how big American business is.” While the media “are going to scare you over the next little bit that it’s all doom and f——- gloom. Guess what guys? It’s not.”
It’s the opposite, he insisted.
“Trump on the Joe Rogan Experience said he’s open to getting rid of income tax,” said Kemper. ”Oh my God, if that happens, that is going to unlock so much wealth. All of a sudden, the need for offshore accounts, Swiss bank accounts, funny money managing to reduce your tax exposure, changes.”
Kemper said ending income tax would be an “unbelievable moment to break free of government slavery tools.”
If it happens in America, could it happen in Canada?
Unlikely, under his brother’s leadership. But Kemper hinted he sees a new government coming in the Great White North, too, and that positive changes could result.
“This (current) corporate government in Canada has no chance of surviving,” he said. “People are over it.”
It is, Kemper said, just a matter of time until his brother moves on to a new career. He loves his brother but has been critical of his strident approach over things like vaccine mandates and the censoring of free speech.
“They are riding it out and all getting their pensions,” he said of the Trudeau Liberals.
In the meantime, with while opinion polls show the American presidential race is too close to call, Kemper said what he has seen with his eyes is new, big thinking on the United States political menu.
Driving all across American on the Kennedy bus, which has been renamed the MAHA bus, Kemper said, he sees massive Trump support everywhere he goes — in red states, blue states, or any state for that matter.
WARMINGTON: Trudeau's brother says Trump win good for Canada
“Trump is way ahead,” Kemper said is his observation.
torontosun.com