Wednesday, February 17, 2016
Ted Cruz Super PAC President: We’ve Knocked on ‘More than 100,000 Doors’ in South Carolina
Friday, February 12, 2016
Trump Up +16 In Latest SC Poll; Cruz Beats Rubio +5
Getty
by JOHN NOLTE12 Feb 20160
After a dry spell of nearly a month, and all the political drama and actual voting that has taken place in Iowa and New Hampshire, we finally have a new poll out of South Carolina, where the next round of voting begins in less than 10 days. And, quite incredibly, it shows that … almost nothing has changed. Donald Trump is still up by double digits, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) is in second, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL)is in third.
The Augusta Chronicle poll, taken on February 10 and 11, almost perfectly mirrors its immediate predecessor, a NBC poll taken during the third week of January. With 36% support, Trump is in first place by +16 points. Cruz is in second with 20%. Rubio jumped a statistically insignificant +1 to enjoy 15% support.
Jeb Bush jumped +2 to 11%.
The only notable change is Kasich’s leap from 1% to 9%. That’s a nice jump … into fifth place.
The best news is for Trump, who has managed to hold on to a substantial lead. The news for Rubio is mixed. After that brutal debate performance, the Florida senator’s support didn’t crater in South Carolina like it did in New Hampshire. Nevertheless, he’s still stuck -21 points behind Trump. On the flip-side, he is leading in the Establishment Lane, and holding that lead will become increasingly important as this primary campaign rolls on.
Follow John Nolte on Twitter@NolteNC
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Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Twilight of the Gods: New Hampshire Voters Reject Clinton , Bush Dynasties in Epic Defeats
AFP, AP
by BEN SHAPIRO9 Feb 20162011
On Tuesday night, the establishment of both parties got hammered. On the Democratic side of the aisle, the most establishment candidate in American history, Hillary Rodham Clinton, got demolished by a 74-year-old loonbag socialist – she’s currently losing by more than 20 points in the state that saved her campaign in 2008, and a state she led by 56 points one year ago.
Hillary lost among voters of every age group up to 65 and over; she got cleaned by an 85 percent to 14 percent margin among young voters. She lost with every income bracket except those earning over $200,000. She lost among men; she lost among women. There will be plenty of women in hell for failing to vote Hillary tonight. Voters who worried most about honesty voted for Sanders by a margin of 91 percent to 5 percent for Hillary; for which candidate cares more about people like them, they said Sanders by an 82 percent to 17 percent margin.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the aisle, Donald Trump destroyed the competition. He more than doubled the second-place finisher, Ohio Governor and black belt fruit ninja John Kasich, winning 35 percent of the vote to Kasich’s 16 percent. Senator Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), whom the establishment despises, finished a surprising third with 12 percent of the vote, despite spending well under $1 million in the state in television advertising. Cruz actually won about the same percentage as fourth-place finisher Jeb! Bush, who spent $35 million on television advertising in the state. Cruz was rightly celebratory:
Thank you New Hampshire for tonight’s result, which has left the Washington Cartel utterly terrified.
— Ted Cruz (@tedcruz) February 10, 2016
Senator Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), who had all the momentum coming out of Iowa and a hearty dose of media love as well, apparently blew all of it with his debate gaffe last Saturday night: he came in a distant fifth in a state in which he needed to take silver. He admitted that New Hampshire was a massive disappointment, and vowed never to do this poorly again:
Our disappointment tonight is not on you. It’s on me. I did not do well on Saturday night. So listen to this, that will never happen again.
— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio)February 10, 2016
Good luck.
All of this is setting up perfectly for a final establishment meltdown in South Carolina.
In 2008, Hillary lost her campaign for the presidency by winning a majority of the white vote but losing the ethnic minority vote in a landslide. This time around, the math has almost entirely reversed: she must win ethnic minorities in order to wrest the nomination away from the Old Man Howling At The Moon. She made clear tonight that she would pander as hard as she needed to in order to accomplish that mission:
We also have to break through the barriers of bigotry. African-American parents shouldn’t have to worry that their children will be harassed, humiliated, even shot because of the color of their skin….when children anywhere in our country go to bed hungry, or are denied a quality education, or who face abuse or abandonment, that diminishes all of us. That’s why I did start my career at the Children’s Defense Fund. That’s why I went undercover in Alabama to expose racism in schools. That’s why I worked to reform juvenile justice in South Carolina. And that is why I went to Flint, Michigan, on Sunday.
She’s about five minutes away from breaking out her down home accent for a few church visits in Charleston. She’ll need them, given Sanders’ upcoming meeting with racial conflagrationist Al Sharpton and the endorsement of radical racial figure Harry Belafonte.
Meanwhile, look for Hillary to beg President Obama desperately for an endorsement. Look for him to hold off until after South Carolina.
The Republican race in South Carolina now swings heavily against the establishment. The only two candidates with a win under their belt are Cruz and Trump – and no Republican candidate has won the nomination without taking either Iowa or New Hampshire since the primary and caucus system began in 1976.
Perhaps that changes, but it’s difficult to see precisely how. Kasich has no ground game outside of New Hampshire; he’s angling for a vice presidential slot. Chris Christie has already suspended his campaign. Jeb! is sticking around – he said tonight that New Hampshire had “reset the race” — but voters dislike Jeb! more than anyone else in the field, and he’s likely to split votes with Kasich and Marco Rubio. Rubio still hopes to boost in South Carolina, but his lackluster finish in New Hampshire won’t help him one iota.
Which means South Carolina is now a two-man race: Trump vs. Cruz. That’s the establishment’s worst nightmare.
Hillary Clinton is down to her last stand in South Carolina. And the Republican establishment’s last stand may just have taken place in New Hampshire.
Ben Shapiro is Senior Editor-At-Large of Breitbart News, Editor-in-Chief of DailyWire.com, and The New York Times bestselling author, most recently, of the book,The People vs. Barack Obama: The Criminal Case Against The Obama Administration (Threshold Editions, June 10, 2014). Follow Ben Shapiro on Twitter @benshapiro.
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Big Government, 2016 Presidential Race,Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, Hillary Clinton,Marco Rubio, Bernie Sanders, John Kasich,South Carolina, Washington cartel, Hillary Clintonk
Twilight of the Gods: New Hampshire Voters Reject Clinton , Bush Dynasties in Epic Defeats
AFP, AP
by BEN SHAPIRO9 Feb 20162011
On Tuesday night, the establishment of both parties got hammered. On the Democratic side of the aisle, the most establishment candidate in American history, Hillary Rodham Clinton, got demolished by a 74-year-old loonbag socialist – she’s currently losing by more than 20 points in the state that saved her campaign in 2008, and a state she led by 56 points one year ago.
Hillary lost among voters of every age group up to 65 and over; she got cleaned by an 85 percent to 14 percent margin among young voters. She lost with every income bracket except those earning over $200,000. She lost among men; she lost among women. There will be plenty of women in hell for failing to vote Hillary tonight. Voters who worried most about honesty voted for Sanders by a margin of 91 percent to 5 percent for Hillary; for which candidate cares more about people like them, they said Sanders by an 82 percent to 17 percent margin.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the aisle, Donald Trump destroyed the competition. He more than doubled the second-place finisher, Ohio Governor and black belt fruit ninja John Kasich, winning 35 percent of the vote to Kasich’s 16 percent. Senator Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), whom the establishment despises, finished a surprising third with 12 percent of the vote, despite spending well under $1 million in the state in television advertising. Cruz actually won about the same percentage as fourth-place finisher Jeb! Bush, who spent $35 million on television advertising in the state. Cruz was rightly celebratory:
Thank you New Hampshire for tonight’s result, which has left the Washington Cartel utterly terrified.
— Ted Cruz (@tedcruz) February 10, 2016
Senator Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), who had all the momentum coming out of Iowa and a hearty dose of media love as well, apparently blew all of it with his debate gaffe last Saturday night: he came in a distant fifth in a state in which he needed to take silver. He admitted that New Hampshire was a massive disappointment, and vowed never to do this poorly again:
Our disappointment tonight is not on you. It’s on me. I did not do well on Saturday night. So listen to this, that will never happen again.
— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio)February 10, 2016
Good luck.
All of this is setting up perfectly for a final establishment meltdown in South Carolina.
In 2008, Hillary lost her campaign for the presidency by winning a majority of the white vote but losing the ethnic minority vote in a landslide. This time around, the math has almost entirely reversed: she must win ethnic minorities in order to wrest the nomination away from the Old Man Howling At The Moon. She made clear tonight that she would pander as hard as she needed to in order to accomplish that mission:
We also have to break through the barriers of bigotry. African-American parents shouldn’t have to worry that their children will be harassed, humiliated, even shot because of the color of their skin….when children anywhere in our country go to bed hungry, or are denied a quality education, or who face abuse or abandonment, that diminishes all of us. That’s why I did start my career at the Children’s Defense Fund. That’s why I went undercover in Alabama to expose racism in schools. That’s why I worked to reform juvenile justice in South Carolina. And that is why I went to Flint, Michigan, on Sunday.
She’s about five minutes away from breaking out her down home accent for a few church visits in Charleston. She’ll need them, given Sanders’ upcoming meeting with racial conflagrationist Al Sharpton and the endorsement of radical racial figure Harry Belafonte.
Meanwhile, look for Hillary to beg President Obama desperately for an endorsement. Look for him to hold off until after South Carolina.
The Republican race in South Carolina now swings heavily against the establishment. The only two candidates with a win under their belt are Cruz and Trump – and no Republican candidate has won the nomination without taking either Iowa or New Hampshire since the primary and caucus system began in 1976.
Perhaps that changes, but it’s difficult to see precisely how. Kasich has no ground game outside of New Hampshire; he’s angling for a vice presidential slot. Chris Christie has already suspended his campaign. Jeb! is sticking around – he said tonight that New Hampshire had “reset the race” — but voters dislike Jeb! more than anyone else in the field, and he’s likely to split votes with Kasich and Marco Rubio. Rubio still hopes to boost in South Carolina, but his lackluster finish in New Hampshire won’t help him one iota.
Which means South Carolina is now a two-man race: Trump vs. Cruz. That’s the establishment’s worst nightmare.
Hillary Clinton is down to her last stand in South Carolina. And the Republican establishment’s last stand may just have taken place in New Hampshire.
Ben Shapiro is Senior Editor-At-Large of Breitbart News, Editor-in-Chief of DailyWire.com, and The New York Times bestselling author, most recently, of the book,The People vs. Barack Obama: The Criminal Case Against The Obama Administration (Threshold Editions, June 10, 2014). Follow Ben Shapiro on Twitter @benshapiro.
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Saturday, February 6, 2016
Donald Trump: ‘I Am a Unifier’ for a Fractured Nation
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
by ALEX SWOYER5 Feb 2016Washington, DC244
Donald Trump said that he is a “unifier” who will bring the fractured nation together.
“I bring people together,” Trump stated. “I am a unifier … You will see our country is going to come together,” he vowed.
Trump suggested that President Barack Obama is a divider, adding that right now in the country, “Everybody hates everybody.”
The GOP frontrunner spoke at a campaign rally in Florence, South Carolina on Friday night. “It’s a movement,” Trump said about attendance at his large rallies. He said his supporters can take the country back, adding “We’re going to run our country intelligently.”
Trump referred to politicians as “blood suckers” who take money from donors and special interests. He said he is the only candidate on the Democrat or Republican side who is self-funding his own campaign.
Trump talked about the incoming migrants from the Middle East, saying it could be a “Trojan horse” for terrorism, because the refugees cannot be vetted properly. He also said Christianity is under siege and stressed the threat of radical Islamic terrorism.
Trump focused on his ability to make great deals for the country, said that “not the right people [are] negotiating our deals.”
He said the Second Amendment is “vital to protect.” He touched on illegal immigration, promising, “We’re going to have strong borders again. We’re going to have the wall.”
Trump referenced the recent Iowa caucus where he placed second to Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX). “I think we did great. The people of Iowa are tremendous,” Trump said. “I think we should have come in first … a lot of things happened there,” he added, referencing the controversy between Dr. Ben Carson and the Cruz campaign telling caucus goers that Carson was “suspending campaigning” ahead of the votes.
“Isn’t it funny, I came in a strong, strong second. Third was quite a distance away,” Trump said of Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), who placed third, losing to Trump by roughly 2,000 votes.
“I think I came in first, I’ll be honest,” Trump said about coming in second in Iowa, “But honestly it doesn’t matter. We got a lot of delegates.”
Trump said this week he is focused on New Hampshire, and then next week he will focus on South Carolina.
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Big Government, 2016 Presidential Race,Donald Trump, Iowa, New Hampshire,South Carolina