Category: News from Dana for District 4

  • Trump’s Epstein Cover-Up: Probable Outcomes and Public Unity

    This post examines the chance of various outcomes—immunity deals, subpoenas, pardons, or silence—in Trump’s Epstein cover-up saga and spotlights bipartisan calls for transparency.

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  • A Cruel Distraction: Trump’s Executive Order to Remove Homeless People

    President Trump’s new executive order to remove homeless people from streets is a cruel distraction from his 34 felony convictions and growing Epstein scandal.

    Black-and-white editorial cartoon showing President Trump with exaggerated features sweeping three homeless people—a hunched man, an elderly man, and a woman—off a sidewalk with a large broom, as a crumpled newspaper behind them reads “EPSTEIN FILES.”
  • Time for Real Change: Elect Ricky Dana, a True Rural Missourian

    I’m Ricky Dana, a rural Missourian born and raised in District 4, ready to deliver real solutions by exposing incumbents’ failures and representing farm families.

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  • My Opponent Votes Against Missouri’s Farms—Again and Again

    My opponent—who wasn’t born in Missouri and still doesn’t live in rural Missouri—cast another round of votes that help big corporations and hurt the working families of MO-4. In

  • Why Is Speaker Johnson Sitting On the Epstein Files?

    Mike Johnson keeps stalling the Epstein files. Is he in them? Is he protecting someone? Or is Trump pulling the strings? Read more.

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  • Trump and Epstein: A Closer Look at the Connections

    Trump has never been charged in connection with Epstein’s crimes — but that doesn’t mean he was far from the action. This diagram maps his known links to the Epstein scandal.

    A network diagram showing Donald Trump at the center, connected by lines to people and events related to Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking case. Nodes include Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, Virginia Giuffre, Mar-a-Lago parties, 1992 NBC footage, flight logs, a rape lawsuit, Trump’s accusers, beauty pageant teens, and Trump’s name in Epstein’s contact book.
  • Trump’s MLK File Dump Sparks Well-founded Epstein Distraction Accusations

    Donald Trump dropped a massive batch of FBI files on MLK Jr.—but critics say it’s a diversion. Why now? Epstein victim Maria Farmer says she reported Trump to the FBI as early as 1996. This post connects the dots between the headlines and the hidden history.

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  • The Real Record: Eric Schmitt’s Votes Against Rural Missouri

    Senator Eric Schmitt claims to support rural Missouri, but his votes say otherwise. From cutting hospital funding to slashing public broadcasting, his record puts special interests first—not Missouri families.

    A watercolor illustration of a stern-looking man in a dark suit and red tie standing with arms crossed in front of a crumbling rural hospital. The hospital’s brick walls are partially collapsed, with a broken “HOSPITAL” sign above the entrance. A rusting radio broadcast tower stands in the background, and a wooden fence separates the man from the ruins, symbolizing detachment from the healthcare crisis in rural communities.
  • The Truth About Josh Hawley’s Empty Medicaid “Rescue” Plan

    Josh Hawley’s Medicaid “rescue” bill holds off funding for rural hospitals until 2031 and is fueled by PAC and committee money. Rural Missouri can’t wait for his empty promises.

    A political cartoon shows a smiling politician in a suit holding a large sign that reads “PROTECT MEDICAID AND RURAL HOSPITALS ACT – STARTING IN 2031.” Behind him, a rural hospital labeled “EMERGENCY” is crumbling into rubble. In the foreground, a concerned rural man and woman stare angrily at the politician, highlighting the disconnect between his delayed promises and the urgent healthcare crisis in rural America.
  • Why Republicans Fear Rural Democrats

    Rural Democrats are fighting for the people of Missouri’s 4th District with real solutions for farms, healthcare, and infrastructure. We’re from here—and we won’t sell out to special interests.

    Missouri state flag: three horizontal stripes—red on top, white in the middle, and blue on the bottom—with the Missouri state seal at center, featuring a circular blue band of 24 white stars surrounding the state coat of arms.