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The Democratic mock draft for President. ( funny )

Steeltime

They killed Kenny!
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easier to read here


This is how it will go



The Dems’ Radical Left is going to unleash Antifa on any of the Old Guard who stray from their new party line.



Joe Biden calls VP Pence 'a decent guy' then backtracks after leftists rage

Former Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday described current Vice President Mike Pence as “a decent guy,” but then quickly backtracked following criticism from actress Cynthia Nixon.

Biden made the comment while speaking at an event in Omaha, Nebraska. The remark provoked a quick backlash online from left-wingers.

Biden, who is expected to run for president, grovelled like a dog before the leftist onslaught

https://dailycaller.com/2019/02/28/joe-biden-mike-pence-decent-guy/

Crazier and crazier, by the day. To which I respond

exc.gif


Freaks, weirdos, liars, idiots, and thieves ... YOUR (D)umbass party!!
 

Spike

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Hilarious!


Sanders says he's not interested in asking Hillary Clinton for 2020 advice

Sen. Bernie Sanders said Friday that he hasn’t spoken to Hillary Clinton for advice on the 2020 race, and frankly, he isn’t interested.

“Hillary and I have fundamental differences and that’s just what it is,” Sanders (I-Vt.) said on "The View."

https://www.politico.com/story/2019/03/01/bernie-sanders-hillary-clinton-2020-1198599
 

Spike

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The clown car groweth



Hickenlooper expected to announce Presidential run March 7 in downtown Denver

DENVER -- Former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper is expected to announce on March 7 he is running for President of the United State

“I think he has a lane: that lane is of a pragmatic, pro-trade business-oriented Democrat who has a very progressive social record, and a more centrist view of economic issues,” said Alan Salazar, a former Hickenlooper strategist in Colorado.

https://kdvr.com/2019/03/01/hickenl...-presidential-run-march-7-in-downtown-denver/
 

Spike

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Grey Beaver doesn't stand a chance




Bernie Locks Up The Socialist Vote Before The Primary Even Starts

The Democratic Socialists of America are preparing to launch a full campaign supporting Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary

The DSA may not support the Democratic nominee if someone other than Sanders wins the primary.

• One memo cited “developing propaganda” as a “primary task of the national DSA Bernie campaign.”

• Another memo stressed the “need to agitate for Sanders” among “rank-and-file union members.”


nyds.jpg


https://dailycaller.com/2019/02/28/dsa-bernie-sanders-2020/
 

Ron Burgundy

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Crazier and crazier, by the day. To which I respond

exc.gif


Freaks, weirdos, liars, idiots, and thieves ... YOUR (D)umbass party!!

Limbaugh reporting today about some politico saying the Dems are in the same spot as the 1964 Republicans and 1972 Democrats, i.e. poised for an epic beatdown.
 

Vincent

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Limbaugh reporting today about some politico saying the Dems are in the same spot as the 1964 Republicans and 1972 Democrats, i.e. poised for an epic beatdown.

Said politico...

https://amgreatness.com/2019/02/28/why-trump-is-destined-for-an-historic-2020-win/
Why Trump is Destined for an Historic 2020 Win
By Conrad Black| February 28th, 2019

Each week, as the thundering host of Democratic seekers of their party’s 2020 presidential nomination scramble for attention and try to outflank their rivals to the left, that party rolls out a new policy proposal that lurches further away from where the solid center of American politics has always resided. The most transformative presidents, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan, to adapt a sports metaphor, moved center-field, 10 yards to the left under Roosevelt, and 10 yards to the right under Reagan, but always between the 30-yard lines.

In the five elections between 1876 and 1892, the popular vote was always very close, and the Democrats actually led four times, losing in 1880 by only 2,000 votes out of 9 million cast (James A. Garfield defeated Winfield S. Hancock). Even so, their candidate was only victorious twice; both times with Grover Cleveland. The Republicans ran as the party of Lincoln and Grant and victory in the Civil War, and kept expanding veterans’ pensions more widely among their families. The Democrats prevented the emancipated slaves from voting in the South, states they won en bloc, while they rounded up immigrant and working-class votes with their political machines in the great cities of the North and Midwest. Thus the popular vote was deceiving, as the Democrats won almost all the votes in the South and the Republicans won safely enough in the North.

But policy differences revolved mainly around the tariff—the Democrats wanted lower tariffs to get lower prices for the working and middle classes and the Republicans wanted higher tariffs to promote domestic manufacturing growth and profits.

Democrats then departed the center of the political field starting in 1896, when they nominated for the first of three times William Jennings Bryan, a Nebraskan who promoted a radical increase in the money supply by issuing silver as well as gold-backed currency: bimetallism. The Republicans won the next four elections easily, and only lost in 1912 when Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft split the vote, enabling Democrat Woodrow Wilson to win. His margin was over 3 percent (570,000 votes), because of the unrepresentative margin in the South, but it was still a hair’s-breadth election as he only won California (10 percent of the country’s population) by under 4,000 votes out of 1 million cast in the state. Wilson won on his slogan “He kept us out of war” but delivered his speech to Congress requesting a declaration of war less than a month after he was inaugurated the second time.

The Republicans won the three elections in the twenties quite easily and then, with the Great Depression and World War II, the Democrats won five straight terms under Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman.

Since then, the parties have alternated two-term presidencies, with the exception that Democrats receive a single term with Jimmy Carter, and the Republicans three terms with Reagan-Bush (1981-1993); the election of George H.W. Bush may be seen substantially as a reward for the public’s satisfaction with President Reagan. Thus, since Cleveland left office in 1897, there has only been one occasion when either party has not received at least two terms (Carter 1977-1981). Between Wilson and George W. Bush, the second term was one-sided, and usually a landslide: Coolidge in 1924 (25 percent margin), Roosevelt in 1936 (24 percent), Eisenhower in 1956 (15 percent), Johnson in 1964 (23 percent), Nixon in 1972 (23 percent), Reagan in 1984 (18 percent), and Clinton in 1996 (9 percent). George W. Bush and Barack Obama were narrowly reelected because—unlike FDR, Ike, LBJ, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan—they did not do especially well in their first terms.

For 2020, Democratic rhetoric and the conventional wisdom relentlessly inflicted on the country by the anti-Trump media claque holds that Trump should be easy to defeat, because his polls have never risen above 50 percent. This is meaningless chatter because it neglects to remember that Trump in 2016 was running against the Republicans as much as the Democrats. As someone who changed his party registration seven times in 13 years, Trump had no call on party loyalty. In the first six months of his presidency, the congressional Republicans sat on their hands and were not entirely averse to the voluminous musings about impeachment. In the only sensible sentence I ever heard from former Arizona senator and ardent NeverTrumper Jeff Flake, “It’s the president’s party now.”

In 2020 there won’t be a split such as that caused by Ross Perot to defeat the senior Bush in 1992 and probably Robert Dole in 1996; and Trump’s record seems certain to be much more successful that Carter’s, who had 20 percent interest rates, high inflation, unemployment, and taxes to deal with in 1980. Whatever happens with the current southern border state of emergency, Trump is putting a border in place and has won that argument. The country wants a border, without government shutdowns. Trump has worked the “Mexico will pay for it” nonsense into the facts of more favorable trade arrangements and has kept faith with his followers, unlike the Bush “No new taxes” pledge in 1988.

Trump is not going to be running as an unsuccessful president as Carter did, or even as a marginally successful president as the Bushes and Obama did. He has delivered tax cuts and reform and great prosperity, as Reagan did, and he is the first president to deal seriously with illegal immigration and oil imports and nuclear proliferation to rogue states (Iran and North Korea), since those crises arose. He has refused to be stampeded by the eco-Marxists while doing nothing to backpedal on the environment itself, and has partially delivered on trade imbalances and will almost certainly reach a much improved trade arrangement with China.

Contrary to the assessments of Trump-haters who supposedly know something about the economy, such as Paul Krugman and the Economist magazine (which on the subject of Trump is as drivelingly hostile but not as amusing as Vanity Fair or the Daily Beast), this economy is not going to cool out appreciably in the next 18 months. As was mentioned here last week, the Democrats are going to pay heavily for the disgraceful Russian-collusion red herring.

To return to the thought at the top of this piece, the Democrats now look more like the Republicans of 1964 (Barry Goldwater) and the Democrats of 1972 (George McGovern), as the reality sinks in that Trump has demolished the post-Reagan bipartisan tweedle-dee-tweedle-dum politics of sloth, a depressing “new normal” and foreign policy impetuosity (Iraq War) or defeatism (Iran, North Korea, Syria). In the aftermath of this shock, the Democrats are like a suicide case contemplating Russian roulette with all chambers loaded, and they are the ones loading in the cartridges: open borders, a top personal income tax rate of around 70 percent, nationalized health care; legalized infanticide; a green policy that bans cars, airplanes, oil, coal, and bovine flatulence; and now reparations for African-Americans, and perhaps, says Senator Elizabeth Warren (0.5 percent American Indian), for the native people. Unless a sensible person like Michael Bloomberg or even Joe Biden—or possibly Amy Klobuchar or Sherrod Brown—gets hold of that party, the Democrats will self-inflict mortal wounds and give Trump the greatest plurality in history, (breaking Richard Nixon’s record of 18 million in 1972).

In 1944, Roosevelt focused on the spurious claim of a Republican congressional candidate that the president had sent a destroyer back to retrieve his dog in the Aleutian Islands, while returning from his Pearl Harbor meeting with General MacArthur and Admiral Nimitz. FDR’s Republican opponent, Thomas E. Dewey, found himself running against the president’s dog. In 1940, Roosevelt just had to recite the names of three reactionary congressmen: “Martin, Barton, and Fish,” and the absurdity of the refrain helped to win him a third term.

Trump is no Roosevelt (either one), but the Democrats seem to be yielding to the ineluctable urge that possesses each party every other generation, to utter a primal scream of nonsense, get everything off their chest and out of their system, be dragged to the padded cell by the voters, and regroup back at center-field four years later. It may even be good for them—as therapy, not as government.
 

Vincent

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N'then there's this...

https://pjmedia.com/rogerlsimon/dem...tisan-cohen-hearing-during-nuke-negotiations/
dims Reelect Trump by Staging Partisan Cohen Hearing During Nuke Negotiations
By Roger L. Simon | February 27, 2019

The day the Democrats decided to schedule the House Oversight Committee hearing with Michael Cohen to coincide with Trump's negotiations with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Hanoi is the day the Democrats ensured the president's reelection. It was one of those rare moments of clarity you can imagine in the history books.

The Democrats revealed themselves as partisan hacks while the president was halfway around the world trying to save the lives of millions. That's not just bad timing, it's atrocious. And it has little to do with the success or failure of the talks with Kim. No one knows how that will turn out, probably not even the principals themselves. It has do with the priorities of the human race like global survival -- what a normal person should care about.

At first the consensus (at least among the talking heads) was that the hearing would outshine whatever was happening in Hanoi, but as the day wore on with no revelations that were even slightly new (Trump paid Stormy -- je suis shockay), no evidence of conspiracy with the Russians whatsoever, just tons of speculation and innuendo we have been hearing since the day Trump came down the escalator, and ended with Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) in some racist rant at Rep. Mark Meadows (we already knew she was an anti-Semite), we realized we were witnessing a bizarre clown show that only a CNN commentator could like.

And then it segued into coverage from Vietnam, Trump and Kim talking to each other live in front of the world, and we began to understand something of great magnitude was happening, something genuinely amazing. We leaned closer to the television to hear Kim's interpreter. What were they saying? Was it possible that things could change? Could the dictator be tamed by the businessman? What could be more dramatic?

Experts of all sorts were brought on, opining about things most people could figure out for themselves. Was Trump going to give away the store without guarantees? Kim's regime depended on nuclear weapons for survival. He would never surrender them. Trump was clever to stage the event in Vietnam, whose economic miracle could entice Kim. It could happen to North Korea. Then we heard that Kim went to boarding school in Switzerland, so he'd already seen the fancy life. He wouldn't be interested--or would he?

And then there was the matter of the Chinese. What did they really want? Was there going to be a peace treaty, ending the decades-old Korean War? A unified Korea looming in the future would be a threat to China, Samsung versus Huawei. But then what if South Korea stayed separate and went nuclear with Japan? That could be worse. Was Xi playing two sides against the middle and four diagonals against a horizontal in three dimensional chess?

In all, this was a thousand times more interesting than the partisan palaver in Washington and a million times more significant.

What we are watching is a new form of diplomacy, more public than anything seen before, even though the crucial parts take place behind closed doors. We should recall, when we are quick to criticize, that the old method failed, miserably.

Trump says this negotiation will take time. That makes sense and we should give him the space. The test for Americans of all political parties, indeed of citizens of all countries, is whether they actually wish Trump well in this endeavor. If they don't, they are truly evil.
 

CharlesDavenport

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These dems are a joke. Serious **** to do and they stage a congressional hearing and the star witness is going to jail for lying to congress. Trump is dealing with North Korea, meanwhile back at the Capitol - "Trump's a racist. Is not. Is too. Is not. This black lady even says he's not. She's a prop, you're a racist. Am not, you are."

WTF
 

Vincent

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To wit...

New NH primary polling (UNH)

Dems

Sanders 26%
Biden 22%
Harris 10%
Warren 7%
O'Rourke 5%
Klobuchar 4%
Booker 3%

GOP

Trump 68%

Kasich 17%
Weld 3%

https://scholars.unh.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1551&context=survey_center_polls

I do hope that some more never-Trumpers step up so that the Donald has somebody besides Kasich and Weld to abuse in the debates. It makes for better TV.

Grey Beaver doesn't stand a chance

I doubt that Grey Beaver 'resonates' much beyond the **** waffle echo chamber that is Eastern New England. To shrill. To squeaky. Too bitchy. Too school marm. 'Put down the skunky beer Liawatha and slowly step away.'
 

Vincent

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If this holds, 2020 will be another wipeout...

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/...st-immigration-trade-war-platform-candidates/
Harvard/Harris Poll: 3-in-4 Voters Favor ‘America First’ Immigration, Trade, War Platform from Candidates
John Binder | 1 Mar 2019

About 3-in-4 American voters favor a populist-nationalist “America First” legal immigration, trade, and foreign policy platform from candidates running for office that prioritizes protecting the way of life and economic security of United States citizens above all else.

The latest Harvard/Harris Poll finds near unanimous support for populist-nationalist candidates among Republicans, conservatives, and President Trump supporters, as well as a majority of support from all voters.

The findings are the latest evidence that the open borders, globalization, and endless wars ideology of former administrations — such as President George W. Bush’s — has very little support with the American electorate.

On Immigration

Voters were asked if they would be more or less likely to support a candidate who said, “We have a moral duty to create an immigration system that protects the lives and jobs of our citizens,” the kind of populist sentiment often deployed by former Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

In total, about 75 percent of all voters said they would be more likely to support a candidate who made the statement, while about 88 percent of Republicans, 89 percent of conservatives, 75 percent of swing voters, and 91 percent of Trump supporters said they too would be more likely to support the candidate.

Across racial lines, the vast majority of white Americans, 79 percent, and black Americans, 75 percent, said they would support a candidate who said they wanted an immigration system that benefited American citizens, rather than foreign nationals.

Similarly, more than 6-in-10 voters said they would be more likely to support a candidate in an election that spoke of the national “emergency with the savage MS-13 gang” that has been largely due to the country’s mass illegal and legal immigration system that has been supported by Republicans, Democrats, the open borders lobby, Wall Street executives, and corporate interests.

On Trade

A total of 65 percent of voters said they would be more likely to support candidates who touted imposing $250 billion worth of tariffs on China, as Trump has done. This economic nationalist policy platform on trade garners support from 87 percent of Republicans, 61 percent of swing voters, and 89 percent of Trump supporters.

Likewise, when voters are asked if they would be more or less likely to support a political candidate who wants to replace NAFTA with a bilateral trade deal that protects American jobs and industry while bringing lost U.S. jobs and industry back to the country, about 7-in-10 voters said they would be more likely to support such a candidate.

The economic nationalist rhetoric has the highest support among conservatives, 90 percent, and Trump supporters, about 93 percent.

On Foreign Policy

Even when it comes to foreign policy and international affairs, Americans are vastly more likely to support candidates who oppose delegating more U.S. sovereignty to global organizations and foreign interventionism that results in countless lost lives.

For instance, when asked if they would be more or less likely to support a candidate who said, “Great nations do not fight endless wars,” nearly 3-in-4 voters said they would be more likely to support such a candidate.

Across party lines, voters tend to support candidates with Trump’s “America First” foreign policy rather than the Bush, neoconservative worldview.

Roughly 84 percent of Republicans, more than 60 percent of Democrats, and 76 percent of Independents said they would be more likely to support a candidate that opposes endless foreign wars. This anti-war platform is the most popular among conservative voters, 84 percent of whom said they would be more likely to support a candidate that talks like Trump on foreign policy.

Close to 70 percent of all voters are more likely to support a candidate that wants to pull American troops out of Syria and Afghanistan, as Trump has demanded. This anti-interventionist platform is most supported by Republicans, 82 percent, and Trump voters, 84 percent.

About 7-in-10 swing voters are more likely to support a candidate who wants to bring American troops home after years of U.S. intervention in Syria and Afghanistan, as well as 64 percent of Hispanic and black Americans.

Every year, the U.S. admits more than 1.5 million illegal and legal immigrants at the expense of America’s working and middle class who are forced to subsidize the policy through their depleted wages and job prospects. At the same time, free trade deals like NAFTA have cost at least five million American manufacturing jobs to be eliminated from the U.S. economy. Overseas, U.S. wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan have left up to 507,000 people dead and more than 60,000 American soldiers killed or wounded.
 

CharlesDavenport

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I agree that the far left is overplaying their hand. I am not convinced that many voters are not stupid enough to latch on to the message. There is absolutely no zeitgeist informed by history anymore. The education system, aided by the media has done a great job of eliminating the lessons of history with respect to economic models.
 

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Most Americans have been easily persuaded by all media to hate Trump and embrace all things Democrat. Most Americans don't think for themselves. The upcoming presidential election will be Trump versus big media (it won't matter who the Democrat candidate is).
 

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This election like all other elections will be decided by the independents, and I don't think there is anyway they vote for socialism and it's failed policies.
 

Ron Burgundy

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This election like all other elections will be decided by the independents, and I don't think there is anyway they vote for socialism and it's failed policies.

I think most people will see that their lives are better and their paychecks are bigger and blame Trump.
 

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The Trump Effect



Ted Cruz at CPAC: 'Democrats have gone bat-**** crazy'


Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, accused Democrats of going "bat-crap crazy" during a speech to a gathering of conservative activists on Friday in which he assailed the other party for its views on abortion, border security, and the environment.

“I think there is a technical description for what’s going on, which is that Democrats have gone batcrap crazy,” Cruz told National Review editor Rich Lowry at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Md.

“They are getting more and more and more extreme on every issue,” Cruz said.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/ted-cruz-at-cpac-democrats-have-gone-bat-crap-crazy
 

Ron Burgundy

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It's going to be a lot of fun watching the Dems implode when President Trump wins 45 states in 2020.
 

Spike

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and as Liberals brace themselves for a disastrous Mueller report that clears President Trump of collusion
 

Spike

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Bernie still a rock star?

perfect, he'll split the vote again, lol





Sen. Sanders drew a crowd of nearly 13,000 at his Brooklyn launch today, according to a senior aide.


D0qt8YCW0AAT6AN.jpg
 

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and then there's this


Michelle Obama rules out running for president because she wants to 'make room' for next generation

Michelle Obama has ruled out running for president at any point in the future.

The former First Lady said she wanted to “make room” for younger generations who she and husband former President Barack Obama hope to “empower”.

She made the announcement while speaking to a sellout crowd at the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, TX.

Someone in the hall”s audience shouted that she would run for president, according to KXAN. Obama shook her head and replied, “Nope, nope, nope”.

“It’s not us occupying the same seats; it’s making room,” she said, before going on to describe how she would work with her husband to empower the “next generation of leaders”.

She spoke earlier in the event about the last time she flew on Air Force One, the Presidential plane after the inauguration of Donald Trump in 2017.

“I sobbed for like 30 minutes,” she recalled. “That day was hard for so many reasons. Getting on that plane, I was finally able to release how hard that journey was.” …

-------------------------------

nope, nope, nope

chwbcn.gif.cf.gif
 

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Cancel the parades



Hillary Clinton Confirms She Will Not Run for President in 2020


http://fortune.com/2019/03/05/hillary-clinton-2020-president/

----------------------------



Michael Bloomberg will not run for president in 2020


https://www.cnbc.com/2019/03/05/michael-bloomberg-will-not-run-for-president-in-2020.html

-------------------

‘Weaker candidate than Hillary’: Democrats cast deep doubt on Biden’s 2020 value

The Democratic political community is more broadly and deeply pessimistic about Biden’s potential candidacy than is commonly known. While these strategists said they respect Biden, they cited significant disadvantages for his campaign — from the increasingly liberal and non-white Democratic electorate to policy baggage from his years in the Senate and a field of rivals that includes new, fresh-faced candidates.

“Let’s be honest: He’s an older white guy,” said Jim Cauley, a longtime Kentucky-based Democratic strategist. “Does he connect with the base?”

https://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/politics-government/election/campaigns/article226007090.html
 
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