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US Presidential Elections 2024: Vivek Ramaswamy provides a protester a platform, saying, "Who needs signs when you have voice."

 US Presidential Elections 2024: Vivek Ramaswamy provides a protester a platform, saying, "Who needs signs when you have voice."


Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy engaged a protester who was yelling outside the venue during his address at New England College.


Ramaswamy abruptly terminated the town hall discussion and invited the protester to enter and share his opinions.


Would you want to join us? he enquired. You seemed to be speaking a lot."


 You're welcome, Ramaswamy continued. You are welcome inside; you are not required to be outdoors.


Who needs the signs when you have the voice, Ramaswamy said, adding that the protester is free to bring protest signs. Come on, we'll offer you the same opportunity to ask questions as everyone else.




Ramaswamy harshly slammed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's plea for further financial aid from the US to hold elections in their conflict-torn country earlier on Thursday. The biotech entrepreneur, 38, said with assurance that he is working to win the party's candidacy for the 2024 presidential elections.


Ramaswamy defended his earlier claim that if he were elected president of the United States, he would cut down on funding to Ukraine during an interview with Fox News.


To be absolutely clear, I also have an issue with appeasement. With the American people, we must be honest. "Ukraine is not good just because Putin is an evil dictator, which he undoubtedly is," he remarked.


"Eleven opposition parties have been outlawed in this nation (Ukraine). This nation, whose president only last week praised a Nazi inside his own ranks, has threatening to prevent the United States from holding its own regular elections this year unless it receives additional cash, Ramaswamy added.


According to a story by The Washington Post from earlier in September, Vivek Ramaswamy has reiterated a 2015 idea on the abolition of birthright citizenship in the United States that was first put up by former President Donald Trump.


Ilia Calderón, a presenter on Univision, questioned Ramaswamy "what legal premise" he would rely on in order to deport illegal immigrants and their children who were born in the United States. By supporting the militarization of the southern border, defunding "sanctuary cities," and ending foreign aid to Mexico and Central America, the candidate said his opponents on stage were "on the right side of this issue." However, the candidate added that he would go "a step further" by ending "birthright citizenship for the kids of illegal immigrants in this country."



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