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Presidential race is GOP's to lose.

littlejoe

Well-known member
What bunch of troopers! It's looking like they'll do it with ease!

And what a year for a 3rd party guy--who hopefully has some statesmanship, experience, and an actual brain---to come forward.
 

Brad S

Well-known member
Put me down as confused - all the way around. Some are saying Trump is running a third party in the GOP. Maybe, but with policy arguments like "loser & fatty" I'm not seeing much brain power. As much as I really wouldn't choose trump, what I really resent is Romney and bush and rove and the rest of them disregarding the will of the people. I'll try to talk anyone out of voting for trump, but we don't need rove saving us from ourselves.

Hillary won't be prosecuted (Hillary and oj are innocent) and her recipient class voters don't care if she is a serial orphanage arsonist.

The election is still going to be settled by Ohio and Florida. A ticket of kasich and Rubio would likely beat the machine, but I like Rubio less every time he talks.

To me, this election decides the future of the bill of rights. I can't overstate how important this election is.
 

Mike

Well-known member
I wouldn't put Bernie past running an Independent campaign in the General Election. When November rolls around, Hillary should be in deep hot water and Bernie knows it.
 

Faster horses

Well-known member
IT''S NOT OVER!

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — In a split decision, Ted Cruz and Donald Trump each captured two victories in Saturday's four-state round of voting, fresh evidence that there's no quick end in sight to the fractious GOP race for president. On the Democratic side, Bernie Sanders notched wins in Nebraska and Kansas, while front-runner Hillary Clinton snagged Louisiana, another divided verdict from the American people.

Cruz claimed Kansas and Maine, and declared it "a manifestation of a real shift in momentum." Trump, still the front-runner in the hunt for delegates, bagged Louisiana and Kentucky. Despite strong support from the GOP establishment, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio had another disappointing night, raising serious questions about his viability in the race.
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If Rubio drops out, would Cruz benefit?
 

iwannabeacowboy

Well-known member
Yes, cruz though hated by DC crowd for keeping his promises, is preferable to Donald by most voting for rubio and kasich.

What I don't get, is why Donald is so hated by the GOP progressives. He's been doing business with them for decades. Many would chose Hillary over him, I don't see much difference than Hillary and most of his past interviews. I guess except his plan to tax the hedge fund managers income equivalent to everyone else's. Maybe that's where most of this everyone but Trump business is derived. But I wonder if he'd soften a bit and evolve as new information came to light like he has on immigration...
 
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