Friday, March 25, 2016
Thursday, March 24, 2016
Scammer Alert: Calls from Utica, NY (315)-327-2778 trolling for donations for Trump campaign gotta be a scam
He's got a website folks, if you want to donate or buy a hat. He doesn't need to call you for money.
Trump's low favorables today match Reagan's exactly in March 1980
2016 candidates' current favorables averages, according to Real Clear Politics:
Sanders: 48.7
Kasich 43.2
Clinton: 40.7
Cruz: 33.4
Trump: 30.4
Like Donald Trump, Ronald Reagan 36 years ago tomorrow was very unpopular in this country
L.A.Times poll 3/25/80 Favorables:
John Anderson 68% (0 electoral votes in November, Independent party)
Teddy Kennedy 60% (lost primary to less popular Carter even though winning 11 states & DC with 7.3 million popular votes)
Jimmy Carter 51% (49 electoral votes in November)
Ronald Reagan 30% (489 electoral votes in November).
Republican establishment desperately endorses "outsider" Ted Cruz, including Jeb Bush, Lindsey Graham and Mitt Romney
From the story here:
“These guys look like all desperation and as if they have really no means, or ability, to speak to the core constituents who are supporting Donald Trump,” said Michael Steele, a former chairman of the Republican National Committee. “At this last minute, it’s, ‘Now we support Ted,’ after you spent the best part of a year telling America how much you hate him.”
“It’s disingenuous,” Steele added. “People aren’t stupid. They see it for what it is.”
Labels:
Lindsey Graham,
Michael Steele,
Mitt Romney 2016,
RNC,
Ted Cruz,
The Hill
Neocon Iraq war enthusiast and Bush adviser Eliot A. Cohen to vote for Hillary Clinton if Trump is the GOP nominee
Go ahead!
Quoted here:
“What’s happening is you have a lot of people who are desperate to get anybody in there other than Trump. ... People are going to go for Cruz, because at the end of the day they think he’s considerably less bad than Trump,” said Eliot A. Cohen, a former Jeb Bush adviser who also served in the George W. Bush administration.
Cohen, along with Bryan McGrath, organized an open letter opposing Trump that was signed by more than 120 members of the Republican foreign policy establishment. The letter declared that Trump is unfit to be president because his views of American power are “wildly inconsistent and unmoored in principle.” ...
“I’ll never support Trump, period. If the only choices I’m offered is between Hillary and Trump, I’ll go for Hillary,” said Cohen, who said he’s hoping for a third possibility or a write-in.
Romney adviser Bryan McGrath, CDR USN (ret.), of the Hudson Institute trusts Hillary's judgment on foreign and defense policy, you know, like at Benghazi
Quoted here:
“Donald Trump is not a Republican. ... He is a caricature of classless wealth. ... He is a caricature of the ugly American,” said McGrath, the deputy director at the Center for American Seapower at the Hudson Institute who is now working with the Cruz campaign. ...
McGrath said he would vote for Clinton if he “got a gun held to my head” and was forced to choose only between her and Trump. He added that in reality, however, he would write in a name.
But, he added, “on foreign and defense policy, I at least trust Hillary’s judgment.”
---------------------------------------------------------
Do you think he'd like Trump better if Trump had high class wealth? Or how about just normal classless wealth? Kinda giving it away there, Bryan.
McGrath served as Navy Policy Team Lead, Romney for President (2011-2012).
McGrath served as Navy Policy Team Lead, Romney for President (2011-2012).
Emerson poll is showing Cruz by 1 in Wisconsin, but . . .
. . . Emerson got Iowa wrong by 430%, predicting Trump by 1 when it was Cruz by 3.3.
In New Hampshire Emerson got it wrong by 30%, predicting Trump by 15 when it was Trump by 19.5.
And in South Carolina Emerson got it wrong by 41%, predicting Trump by 17 when it was Trump by 10.
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
Laugh of the Day: Ted Cruz actually lifted the lines from "The American President"
Here.
Maybe Ted's not as smart as everyone makes him out to be.
Time for Ted to release his transcripts.
Matt Cover thinks Donald Trump is talk radio's Frankenstein
Here, saying Trump is the by-product of an ignorant expectations farce deliberately played on the public by the scheming, self-serving jibber-jabberers Limbaugh, Hannity and Levin:
However, by organizing the GOP base around this fictional system of legislative combat, Movement leaders would lay the groundwork for the ignorant populism of Donald Trump.
Voters, having been told that Congress just lacked strong leaders willing to fight for principle, would flock to a figure who embodied exactly the kind of fiery machismo they had been told was needed.
That's almost amusing, but blindly discounts the "non-ideological" character of the Trump phenomenon's success with the illegal immigration and trade issues. These are conservative issues with a long and storied history but, unfortunately, are not granted legitimacy by today's current crop of so-called conservatives, for whom "principles" and ideology are paramount because they are at heart libertarians, not conservatives.
Trump's immigration and trade crusade may eventually come a cropper, but it won't be because he and the people don't believe in it. It'll be because it has no support from the establishment which runs a "system" organized around antithetical ideas, but also because it has no support from the "anti-establishment" either.
Represented by Limbaugh, Hannity and Levin on the radio, the preferred element of the contemporary demagogue, the anti-establishment has been just as much for open-borders and free-trade as the establishment has been. None of them can even imagine a limited, small American federal government starving from its very beginning on the measly tariffs, excises and land sales with which the founders stuck it. And none in the establishment even wants to.
Laura Ingraham has been waging the lonely battle against illegal immigration almost single-handedly for years on her little radio program in the mornings, with great success, while Michael Savage has had to beat the dead horse for almost twenty-five years as a misunderstood New York Jew.
But the cool thing about 2016 is that New York values are finally getting some respect in the rest of the country for a change, thanks to one Donald John Trump.
"Anti-establishment" talk radio has yet to catch up.
Wake up conservative talk radio: After yesterday, Trump needs just 52.8% of remaining delegates, Cruz 81.8%
And Rush Limbaugh keeps saying, among others, that it ain't over for Cruz.
Explain to us how Cruz goes from winning 30% of delegates so far to 82%.
Tea Party class action against the IRS certified, goes to discovery stage
From the story here:
Certifying the class allows any of the more than 200 groups that were subjected to the criteria to join the lawsuit. But until the IRS complies with the appeals court’s ruling this week, the list of those groups is secret.
Now that the class has been certified, the case moves to the discovery stage, where the tea party groups’ lawyers will ask for all of the agency’s documents related to the targeting and will depose IRS employees about their actions.
The lawyers hope they’ll be able to learn details Congress was unable to shake free in its own investigations.
Caucus system, more or less over after North Dakota on April 1, has been favoring Cruz over Trump 1.5 to 1
I'm counting 148 delegates awarded to Cruz in Iowa, Nevada, Alaska, Minnesota, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Hawaii, Wyoming and Utah.
For Trump I show 99 delegates in Iowa, Nevada, Alaska, Minnesota, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Hawaii, Wyoming and Northern Mariana Islands.
Colorado has 37 delegates yet to be allocated, the US Virgin Islands 9, Wyoming 18 and North Dakota 28.
Hey Ted, you dumbass! Forget Utah, Clinton just beat you like a drum in Arizona!
234,713 to 130,762
But Trump won with 248,383
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
In 2013 Ted Cruz wanted 1.35 million green cards issued per year, 325,000 H-1B visas per year
Plans pushed by GOP presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz under the immigration reform debate in 2013 would have jumped the number of immigrants, including those from Muslim nations, by doubling green card caps and boosting temporary worker visas five-fold.
Read the rest here.
Monday, March 21, 2016
If true Politico story means Ted Cruz is soft enough on illegal immigration to unite with Gang of Eighter Marco Rubio
Politico reports here that Cruz' people have been pursuing an alliance with Marco Amnesty Rubio for weeks, and more than that:
Over the last week, according to a person familiar with the Cruz team's internal deliberations, the campaign has conducted polling in forthcoming contests — including ... the one on Tuesday in Utah — in which questions are posed about the two running side-by-side.
Labels:
amnesty,
Gang of Eight,
illegal aliens,
Marco Rubio,
POLITICO,
Ted Cruz
Trump delegate total rises to 680, which is really 692 at minimum with 12 from Missouri not yet distributed
bloomberg.com/politics |
That means Trump now needs 52.2% of the remaining 1044 delegates to get to 1237. See the latest Missouri delegate story here.
A number of other delegates also are not yet distributed from races already held, among them:
Oklahoma: 3
Louisiana: 5
Mississippi: 3
Illinois: 2.
With 424 delegates, Cruz now needs almost 78% of the remaining 1044 to get to 1237.
Conservative talk radio won't tell you Cruz is finished, but he was finished already a week ago.
John Kasich, Supreme Court squish, would consider Obama's nominee Garland
Quoted here:
"As someone who's talked about unity, would you take a look at Mr. Garland...if you were elected president?" host John Dickerson asked Kasich.
"Well, you know, he received you know overwhelming support, I think even from Senator Hatch, so of course we'd think about it," Kasich replied.
In other words, expect more liberals on the court from President John Kasich.
If Ted Cruz joins a Donald Trump ticket, Erick Erickson says he won't vote for it!
In the last segment on the Laura Ingraham Show.
Sunday, March 20, 2016
Dark pools of money spew out bluenoses against Trump
Registered Democrat Obama voter Michael Goodwin, writing here:
For his chutzpah, tens of millions of dollars are being poured into attack ads against Trump, and the urgent blue-nosed concerns about dark pools of money in politics have vanished. As long as he’s the target, all is fair.
Often, the avalanche of sludge against Trump looks and sounds like a reactionary confederacy fighting to keep its power and privileges. Naturally, the mainstream media is slashing away.
A Washington Post editorial claims that stopping Trump is the only way to “defend our democracy.” In other words, those troublesome voters are the problem.
A New York Times columnist raised the prospect of assassination. Sure, it was a joke. Make that joke about Obama or Clinton and see who laughs.
It was the Dowdy yellow journalist who said "Nein", not Trump
Here:
I wondered about ex-wife Ivana telling her lawyer, according to Vanity Fair, that Trump kept a book of Hitler’s speeches by his bed. Or the talk in New York that in the ’90s he was reading “Mein Kampf.” Nein, he said. “I never had the book,” he said. “I never read the book. I don’t care about the book.”
Labels:
Adolf Hitler,
Donald Trump 2016,
Ivana Trump,
Maureen Dowd,
NYTimes,
Party of No
Ranking the candidates by credit scores of supporters: Kasich's have the best credit, Sanders' the worst
Nearly 60% of Kasich's support comes from people with excellent credit (FICO 720-850).
Half or more of supporters for all candidates have excellent credit, including supporters of Trump (who brings up the rear at 49.8%).
Compiled from the story here.
Combined percentages of supporters with excellent and good credit scores / combined percentages of supporters with fair and bad credit scores:
Kasich 86 / 14
Rubio 69 / 31
Trump 69 / 31
Cruz 68 / 32
Clinton 67 / 33
Sanders 66 / 34.
Rubio's in second because of the difference between 68.65% of support coming from from the good side for himself and 68.6% for Trump. Before rounding Cruz trails Trump in each category by 0.5 points.
Flashback: In 2006 Barack Obama sounded just like Donald Trump on illegal immigration
Here.
Make sure to click the speaker icon at the link to hear Obama himself recite these and other relevant lines in the audio version of his book.
Famous libertarian takes test, finds out he's a LEFTIST
Yet more evidence that conservatives should dump the libertarians, who belong in the Democrat Party, not the Republican.
Former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson took the test at isidewith.com, reported here by CNBC:
"The candidate that most paired up with my beliefs is (Vermont Sen.) Bernie Sanders at 73 percent," the 2012 Libertarian candidate told CNBC in a phone interview this week from New Mexico.
Funny he needed a test to figure out where he really stands. How un-self-aware can you be? Apparently liberalism is more of a mental disorder than we knew, and marijuana-induced hallucinations less revelatory than he knew.
Johnson received almost 1% of the popular vote for president in 2012 running as a libertarian, but continues to insist "that the vast majority of the people in this country are libertarian".
Uh huh.
Saturday, March 19, 2016
Friday, March 18, 2016
NYT: Hillary needs a black opponent to win Democrat white men
While Mrs. Clinton swept the five major primaries on Tuesday, she lost white men in all of them, and by double-digit margins in Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio, exit polls showed — a sharp turnabout from 2008, when she won double-digit victories among white male voters in all three states.
She also performed poorly on Tuesday with independents, who have never been among her core supporters. But white men were, at least when Mrs. Clinton was running against a black opponent: She explicitly appealed to them in 2008, extolling the Second Amendment, mocking Barack Obama’s comment that working-class voters “cling to guns or religion” and even needling him at one point over his difficulties with “working, hard-working Americans, white Americans.”
USA Today: Congress had a right to access Hillary Clinton’s emails as part of their investigation regardless of motive
Here:
Nevertheless, members of Congress, like reporters and the public, had a right to access Clinton’s emails as part of their investigation regardless of motive. And were it not for the dogged partisanship of Republicans and the actions of a hacker, Clinton’s private email system might never have come to light.
Nine days after the Benghazi attack, Congress asked for any State Department emails related to the subject. It took two years before Congress was given access to a single email from Clinton’s private account. By then, four House committees and two Senate committees had already issued their reports on the issue.
Ted Cruz has at most 423 delegates and NO path to 1237
Ted Cruz needs 814 more, almost 77% of the remaining 1059 delegates, to get to 1237.
Ain't gonna happen.
Update:
Cruz has won not quite 30% of the 1413 delegates already allocated.
To win 77% of the remaining delegates means improving his performance to date by 156%.
Update:
Cruz has won not quite 30% of the 1413 delegates already allocated.
To win 77% of the remaining delegates means improving his performance to date by 156%.
Trump needs at most 559 delegates: That's 52.78% of the 1059 remaining
Trump has accumulated at least 678 of 1413 delegates awarded so far, 47.98%.
Trump's current total of 678 will rise (to 690?) after Missouri is adjudicated, so he actually needs fewer than 559 delegates (547?).
Missouri expects to award Trump an additional 12 delegates on top of the current 25, as reported here:
On Wednesday, the Missouri Republican Party announced Trump had won 37 delegates, and Cruz won 15.
About only one third of remaining delegates come from states with proportional contests. The rest are in winner take all states.
Bonehead Erick Erickson should stop with the kooky Rick Perry shtick already
Noted here:
[A] meeting among a small group of “GOP operatives” and “conservative leaders" ... included talk of a third-party alternative to take on Trump in the general election.
One of the meeting’s participants, conservative radio host Erick Erickson, told Fox News on Thursday that the idea of a third-party bid was proposed at the meeting as a “final fallback option” to stop Trump.
... Earlier this year, Erickson publicly and privately pitched a potential third-party bid by former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, whose presidential campaigns in 2012 and this cycle did not catch fire. The effort became serious enough that a group of donors contacted Perry directly a few weeks ago, asking him to consider it, but he would not entertain the idea.
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Hey Mark Levin: There's nothing unconstitutional about a compact between the executive and the people . . .
. . . against a judiciary run amok and a congress which no longer represents the people.
It was done in England between the king and his subjects. It can be done here between the president and the voters.
The founders were wiser than you.
Let me translate this Ted Cruz statement for you
Cruz: Every Day Kasich Stays In The Race, It Benefits Donald Trump
Translation: Every day Kasich stays in the race hurts me.
Kasich isn't too smart: Neither Trump nor Cruz can win a general election
Here:
“Neither of those guys can win a general election,” he told reporters after a town hall-style event outside Philadelphia.
Oh yeah?
Ohio results from Tuesday:
Trump: 727,585
Clinton: 679,266
Missouri results from Tuesday:
Cruz: 380,367
Clinton: 310,602
Marco Rubio drops primary ballot challenge to John Kasich in Pennsylvania: Kasich short of the needed 2,000
So it wasn't a matter of principle at work to Rubio, just self-interest while he was still a candidate. Dropping the challenge now that he's out ensures that Rubio's spoiler strategy continues in the person of John Kasich. Denying Trump delegates is still the mission.
Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity keep misrepresenting Marco Rubio as a conservative. Little Marco's actions even now prove otherwise.
Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity keep misrepresenting Marco Rubio as a conservative. Little Marco's actions even now prove otherwise.
From the story here:
The Kasich campaign's lawyer had agreed that Kasich's paperwork was eight valid signatures short of the 2,000 required, but he maintained that the challenge was invalid because it was filed after the deadline.
Wednesday, March 16, 2016
Florida's Rick Scott joins three other governors endorsing Trump
Noted here:
Florida Gov. Rick Scott is calling on the Republican Party to come together and support Donald Trump. ... Trump has earned the endorsements of current governors Chris Christie of New Jersey, Paul LePage of Maine, and Jan Brewer, the former governor of Arizona.
Told you so: Trump needs only to maintain his current level of support to win, not increase it
The New York Times, here:
If Mr. Trump maintains his current level of support in the remaining races, he would almost certainly secure the nomination.
With delegate allocation still incomplete at Real Clear Politics after yesterday's primaries, Donald Trump needs to garner less than 53% of the remaining delegates to win, a level consistent with his actual performance at the beginning of March (see here).
Trump has consistently needed between 50% and 54% of outstanding delegates to win throughout the period to date since February contests ended.
With his wins yesterday the percentage needed is moving back toward 50%, indicating his momentum is increasing.
Trump has consistently needed between 50% and 54% of outstanding delegates to win throughout the period to date since February contests ended.
With his wins yesterday the percentage needed is moving back toward 50%, indicating his momentum is increasing.
John Boehner voted for Kasich yesterday, calls Cruz "lucifer" and wants Paul Ryan if no one wins the primaries
Here:
"If we don't have a nominee who can win on the first ballot, I'm for none of the above," Boehner said at the Futures Industry Association conference here. "They all had a chance to win. None of them won. So I'm for none of the above. I'm for Paul Ryan to be our nominee."
Trump crushes previous nominees' performance yesterday and Limbaugh talks John Kasich, Marco Rubio and a shooting story
A speech last night by Marco Rubio suspending his campaign proves to Limbaugh that Marco is the real deal while his one accomplishment in an otherwise feckless Senate career proves otherwise, that's what you should be thinking about.
Maybe Rush is waiting for the drugs to kick in.
Trump 2016 handily beats both McCain in 2008 and Romney in 2012 in OH, IL, FL, MO, NC primaries by 39% (but not Romney in NC)
Ohio: McCain 636,256 Romney 460,831 Trump 727,832 (Trump by 14% over McCain)
Illinois: McCain 426,777 Romney 435,859 Trump 548,528 (Trump by 26% over Romney)
Florida: McCain 701,761 Romney 776,159 Trump 1,075,094 (Trump by 39% over Romney)
Missouri: McCain 194,145 Romney 63,882 Trump 382,093 (Trump by 97% over McCain)
North Carolina: McCain 383,085 Romney 638,601 (both were May cleanup primaries by the defacto nominees), Trump 458,151
Overall Trump by 39%: McCain 2.34 million Romney 2.37 million Trump 3.2 million
Republican primary turnout in 2016 up 52% from 2008 in OH, IL, FL, MO and NC, Democrat enthusiasm in 2008 still beats by 9%
2008: 5.05 million
2016: 7.66 million
In the five states mentioned Republicans are voting in numbers 17.5% higher than Democrats in 2016.
In 2008 Democrats had all the enthusiasm: Democrats turned out in numbers 65% higher than Republicans.
Democrat turnout in these states in 2008 still beats Republican turnout in 2016 by 9%.
Democrat primary turnout down 22% overall from 2008 in OH, IL, FL, MO and NC combined
2008: 8.35 million
2016: 6.52 million
Missouri Primary 2016 turnout up 50% among Republicans, down 25% among Democrats compared to 2008
With Missouri still officially too close to call but with Trump in the lead by 1,726 votes in the Republican primary over Ted Cruz, turnout in 2016 is running 0.9 million v 0.6 million in 2008, up 50%.
Democrat turnout is down 25% at 0.6 million in 2016 v 0.8 million in 2008 with Hillary Clinton leading Bernie Sanders by 1,531 votes.
North Carolina Primary 2016 turnout about equal for both parties, just like in 2012
Republicans turned out 1.1 million in 2016 while Democrats turned out 1.08 million, rising just 13% and 11% over 2012 respectively.
In 2012 each party turned out 0.97 million in North Carolina (Obama of course was the Democrat incumbent president that year; Romney swept with almost 66% of the vote).
In 2008 Republicans turned out only 0.5 million (McCain swept with 74%) while 1.6 million Democrats duked out their contest between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.
Clinton lost to Obama by 230,000 votes in 2008, but in 2016 she has beaten Bernie Sanders by 156,000.
Trump's victory over Cruz in 2016 is by less than 40,000 votes.
Florida Republican Primary 2016 turnout up big as homeboys Trump and Rubio duke it out
Democrat turnout fell slightly from 1.75 million in 2008 to 1.66 million in 2016, about 5%.
Florida's closed Republican primary saw 2016 turnout rise to 2.27 million from 1.95 million in 2008 and 1.7 million in 2012, up 16% and 34% respectively.
Illinois Primary 2016 turnout up 53% among Republicans, unchanged among Democrats
Democrat turnout in the primary in 2016 was about the same as in 2008: 1.97 million v 2 million.
Republican turnout was considerably higher in 2016 over prior years. In both 2008 and 2012 Republicans turned out 0.9 million voters, but this year it's up to 1.38 million, 53% higher.
The reason?
Well it ain't Ted Cruz.
In Ohio it looks like independents came out big for John Kasich yesterday
Democrat primary turnout in 2008 in Ohio was 2.2 million (in 2012 0.5 million for the incumbent Obama), but in the 2016 contest last night it struggled to round off at 1.2 million.
On the Republican side, turnout yesterday in Ohio was 2 million in contrast to 2008 and 2012 when turnout was 1.1 million and 1.2 million respectively.
Since Republicans and independents only could vote in the Republican primary in Ohio, not Democrats, it looks like independent support for the Ohio governor carried the day for John Kasich yesterday.
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Little Marco finally drops out of the race for president
The Hill reports here:
Marco Rubio dropped out of the Republican presidential race on Tuesday night after losing badly to Donald Trump in his home state of Florida.
Hillary: In Libya "we didn't lose a single person"
Except for those four guys in Benghazi, who still don't count to her.
Here:
"Now, is Libya perfect? It isn't." Clinton said. After contrasting her approach toward Libya with the ongoing bloodshed in Syria's civil war, Clinton said "Libya was a different kind of calculation and we didn't lose a single person ... We didn’t have a problem in supporting our European and Arab allies in working with NATO."
Ted Cruz piling on Donald Trump as divisive like Obama reminds me of . . .
. . . the mushy headed liberal George W. Bush smearing Pat Buchanan as a 1920s nativist.
New Hampshire taught us that nothing John Kasich says can be taken seriously
December 28th: “If I get buried in New Hampshire, it’s over.”
February 9th: Trump 35.3% over Kasich 15.8% in New Hampshire (2.2:1)
March 14th: "This is the craziest election that we've had in decades. And I'm taking things one day at a time."
Monday, March 14, 2016
It's hard to overstate what an ignoramus is Mark Levin about tariffs and trade
Mark Levin is a lawyer, not an historian, and not an economist, and not much of a hail fellow well met, either. Always seeking approval at others' expense, he should rather seek to convince without spite than to confound without understanding.
His tariff rant this evening ignores that the America of his precious founders was a tariff regime until the dreaded income tax of 1913.
The America of the founders was also a limited government for that reason until that very day.
But open wide the avenue for revenue, and you open the maw of the Leviathan and crawl into it.
We haven't been the same since, slowly dissolving in its mandibular juices on our way to the shit pile of history.
If Mark Levin had any brains about the founding, he'd know this.
Ted Cruz' many flip-flops: Obamatrade, foreign workers, illegal alien amnesty, birthright citizenship, Edward Snowden, crop insurance
Nicely detailed with links by Laura Ingraham, here.
Labels:
amnesty,
Edward Snowden,
illegal aliens,
Jobs 2016,
Laura Ingraham,
Ted Cruz
John Kasich would legalize all illegals within the first 100 days of his presidency, which would open the floodgates to millions more
Noted here in a list of all Kasich's extreme positions on illegal immigration:
In last Thursday’s CNN debate, Kasich told voters that he would enact the largest amnesty in U.S. history within his first 100 days in office. “For the 11 and a half million who are here, then in my view if they have not committed a crime since they’ve been here, they get a path to legalization. Not to citizenship. I believe that program can pass the Congress in the first 100 days,” Kasich said.
Defectors from Cruz to Trump are getting through to talk radio this morning
To both the Laura Ingraham Show and the Chris Plante Show, citing the failure of Cruz to stick to principle over the left's attacks on Trump rally attendees in Chicago.
Sunday, March 13, 2016
Prediction: Marco Rubio will become a Democrat after his US Senate term expires
Yeah, I know, whattayamean after.
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