Citizens Dedicated To Preserving Our Constitutional Republic
The RNC is preparing a brokered convention...to not allow Marco Rubio to win...They will bring in an establishment candidate to give it to that candidate...What can be done about that..We know it will be Jeb or Rubio..They can do this because of the ways that they have structured the riles...this is incredible.. the pick at a brokered convention never wins..they said FDR was the last to ever win a brokered convention.What they are really doing is saying they had rather elect Hillary than have Trump win............I AM TOO DISGUSTED FOR WORDS
UPDATE:
The big winner in Iowa’s Republican caucuses on Monday night might not have been Ted Cruz. It may have been a nominating process that fails to yield a clear winner. A clear winner being a candidate who goes to Cleveland this summer with the presidential nomination in hand.
At the end of Monday night, which count really mattered? Delegates acquired. As of this writing, Cruz has bagged eight delegates, Trump and Rubio, seven each, with four other delegates going to also-rans.
Raw vote totals are what most folk tend to watch and weigh. But in 2016, it pays to more closely follow the candidates’ delegate totals. Thanks to the Republican National Committee (RNC), caucuses and primaries held prior to mid-March mandate proportional distribution of delegates based on candidates’ vote totals in given contests. Most early caucuses and primaries impose threshold minimums to win delegates (say, Alabama, with a 20% threshold).
Prior to Mid-March, 25 States, along with DC, Guam, and Puerto Rico, will hold proportional contests. That accounts for 1,022 bound delegates (“bound” being delegates committed to a candidate for the first vote). 45% of the bound delegates will be picked proportionally or in “hybrid” formats, which include triggering provisions for larger delegate yields for candidates who meet higher vote percentage thresholds. There are WTA (winner-take-all) thresholds, but those will be quite difficult to achieve.
Starting with Super Tuesday, March 15, most of the remaining states have opted to hold winner-take-all contests, though a handful will continue to make proportional distributions. From mid-March forward, 1,238 bound delegates will be chosen (Colorado’s delegates declare at convention).
The number of delegates needed to secure the GOP nomination is 1,237. There are a number of unbound (3 per state) and unpledged delegates. The unpledged delegates are mostly establishment picks who would factor in at a deadlocked convention.
Short of a breakout by one the major contenders (Trump, Cruz, and Rubio), it’s not hard to imagine a scenario where the proportional phase of the nominating process yields tightly packed delegate counts among the three. Complicating matters is if new life is breathed into the Carson, Kasich, or Christe campaigns (as improbable as that appears).
But, say you, won’t the nomination fight be resolved with Super Tuesday and the subsequent contests?
That could happen, but consider this prospect. Cruz, Rubio, and Trump take roughly a third each of the delegates in the proportional phase. For illustration, say, 340 delegates per man. That means in the winner-take-all phase, one of the principals would need to capture 897 of the available 1,238 bound delegates to win. That’s about 73% of the total or three out of every four delegates. Possible, but how likely? This assumes, too, that the principals are competitive with one another, affording each the chance to pick off states.
Cruz, Trump, and Rubio have the resources to stay the course. Trump is self-funding. Cruz’s fundraising operation is already solid and benefits all the more from his Iowa win. Rubio’s stronger than anticipated finish in Iowa boosts his fundraising. And as Rubio consolidates establishment voters -- as he began doing in Iowa -- and lesser establishment candidates drop out, expect a significant upswing in his campaign’s financial fortunes.
Writes Michael Snyder at “Before It’s News”:
[I]f no candidate is able to secure enough delegates, that means that we would end up with a “brokered convention”. The mechanics of a brokered convention can get quite complicated, but on a practical level what that would essentially mean is that the party establishment would get to hand select the nominee. And in case you are wondering, that would not be Donald Trump or Ted Cruz.
Snyder’s assessment is flawed in a couple of respects (though not his conclusion about the candidates).
“Deadlocked” versus a “brokered” convention, the more accurate designation is “deadlocked.” A brokered convention suggests that party bosses call the shots nearly exclusively. The party boss era in American politics is long past.
Though unpledged delegates -- who are likely establishment recruits -- will play a critical role at a deadlocked convention, it’s important to remember that bound delegates are only committed to their candidates on the first ballot.
Thereafter, they’re unbound. Candidates’ and, perhaps, dark horses’ (yes, a draft is possible) primary focus for vote gathering will be among all those plentiful unbound state delegates. If the convention deadlocks, it’s going to be the Wild West, with plenty of wheeling and dealing, barroom brawls, shoot-outs, shenanigans, and backroom deals. But all that will occur across delegations and not just among the establishment few.
Snyder’s guess that the nominee won’t be named “Cruz” or “Trump” should a deadlock occur is reasonable. Deadlocked conventions -- if past brokered conventions are any guide -- tend to nominee candidates who at least appear more centrist or moderate. At a deadlocked 2016 Cleveland affair, the buzz word may be “electable.” Right now, Marco Rubio seems to fit the bill. As Snyder pointed out in his article, that’s not an endorsement; it’s merely an observation.
If the Republican field narrows to two principal candidates, then the chances for a deadlocked convention melt away. But if, as anticipated, Cruz, Trump, and Rubio (and possibly one or two others) remain in the race, then a deadlocked convention moves from “maybe” to “probable” with each passing primary, caucus, and state convention. The Republican presidential nominee who emerges will have done so after the fight of his political life – and ours.
The big winner in Iowa’s Republican caucuses on Monday night might not have been Ted Cruz. It may have been a nominating process that fails to yield a clear winner. A clear winner being a candidate who goes to Cleveland this summer with the presidential nomination in hand.
At the end of Monday night, which count really mattered? Delegates acquired. As of this writing, Cruz has bagged eight delegates, Trump and Rubio, seven each, with four other delegates going to also-rans.
Raw vote totals are what most folk tend to watch and weigh. But in 2016, it pays to more closely follow the candidates’ delegate totals. Thanks to the Republican National Committee (RNC), caucuses and primaries held prior to mid-March mandate proportional distribution of delegates based on candidates’ vote totals in given contests. Most early caucuses and primaries impose threshold minimums to win delegates (say, Alabama, with a 20% threshold).
Prior to Mid-March, 25 States, along with DC, Guam, and Puerto Rico, will hold proportional contests. That accounts for 1,022 bound delegates (“bound” being delegates committed to a candidate for the first vote). 45% of the bound delegates will be picked proportionally or in “hybrid” formats, which include triggering provisions for larger delegate yields for candidates who meet higher vote percentage thresholds. There are WTA (winner-take-all) thresholds, but those will be quite difficult to achieve.
Starting with Super Tuesday, March 15, most of the remaining states have opted to hold winner-take-all contests, though a handful will continue to make proportional distributions. From mid-March forward, 1,238 bound delegates will be chosen (Colorado’s delegates declare at convention).
The number of delegates needed to secure the GOP nomination is 1,237. There are a number of unbound (3 per state) and unpledged delegates. The unpledged delegates are mostly establishment picks who would factor in at a deadlocked convention.
Short of a breakout by one the major contenders (Trump, Cruz, and Rubio), it’s not hard to imagine a scenario where the proportional phase of the nominating process yields tightly packed delegate counts among the three. Complicating matters is if new life is breathed into the Carson, Kasich, or Christe campaigns (as improbable as that appears).
But, say you, won’t the nomination fight be resolved with Super Tuesday and the subsequent contests?
That could happen, but consider this prospect. Cruz, Rubio, and Trump take roughly a third each of the delegates in the proportional phase. For illustration, say, 340 delegates per man. That means in the winner-take-all phase, one of the principals would need to capture 897 of the available 1,238 bound delegates to win. That’s about 73% of the total or three out of every four delegates. Possible, but how likely? This assumes, too, that the principals are competitive with one another, affording each the chance to pick off states.
Cruz, Trump, and Rubio have the resources to stay the course. Trump is self-funding. Cruz’s fundraising operation is already solid and benefits all the more from his Iowa win. Rubio’s stronger than anticipated finish in Iowa boosts his fundraising. And as Rubio consolidates establishment voters -- as he began doing in Iowa -- and lesser establishment candidates drop out, expect a significant upswing in his campaign’s financial fortunes.
Writes Michael Snyder at “Before It’s News”:
[I]f no candidate is able to secure enough delegates, that means that we would end up with a “brokered convention”. The mechanics of a brokered convention can get quite complicated, but on a practical level what that would essentially mean is that the party establishment would get to hand select the nominee. And in case you are wondering, that would not be Donald Trump or Ted Cruz.
Snyder’s assessment is flawed in a couple of respects (though not his conclusion about the candidates).
“Deadlocked” versus a “brokered” convention, the more accurate designation is “deadlocked.” A brokered convention suggests that party bosses call the shots nearly exclusively. The party boss era in American politics is long past.
Though unpledged delegates -- who are likely establishment recruits -- will play a critical role at a deadlocked convention, it’s important to remember that bound delegates are only committed to their candidates on the first ballot.
Thereafter, they’re unbound. Candidates’ and, perhaps, dark horses’ (yes, a draft is possible) primary focus for vote gathering will be among all those plentiful unbound state delegates. If the convention deadlocks, it’s going to be the Wild West, with plenty of wheeling and dealing, barroom brawls, shoot-outs, shenanigans, and backroom deals. But all that will occur across delegations and not just among the establishment few.
Snyder’s guess that the nominee won’t be named “Cruz” or “Trump” should a deadlock occur is reasonable. Deadlocked conventions -- if past brokered conventions are any guide -- tend to nominee candidates who at least appear more centrist or moderate. At a deadlocked 2016 Cleveland affair, the buzz word may be “electable.” Right now, Marco Rubio seems to fit the bill. As Snyder pointed out in his article, that’s not an endorsement; it’s merely an observation.
If the Republican field narrows to two principal candidates, then the chances for a deadlocked convention melt away. But if, as anticipated, Cruz, Trump, and Rubio (and possibly one or two others) remain in the race, then a deadlocked convention moves from “maybe” to “probable” with each passing primary, caucus, and state convention. The Republican presidential nominee who emerges will have done so after the fight of his political life – and ours.
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/02/cleveland_cliffhang...
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Two emails received by Hillary Clinton on her private email server were in fact classified “top secret” at the time she received them.
Harvard Law School professor Lawrence Lessig says that the Democratic Party presidential primary is ignoring the issues of crony capitalism and campaign finance reform. “It is really astonishing…that we have not yet had a question that addresses the crony capitalism problem” in the Democratic debates, Lessig said Monday morning.
by Joel B. Pollak21 Dec 2015, 6:01 AM PST0
Donald Trump’s political success continues to gnaw at President Obama as he wraps up his presidency and prepares to hand the keys to the White House to his successor. In an interview with National Public Radio’s Steve Inskeep, the President took another shot at explaining why Trump continues to rise in the polls, despite his inflammatory rhetoric.
by Charlie Spiering21 Dec 2015, 5:58 AM PST0
Phyllis Schlafly predicts Trump will win because grassroots voters are outraged over such “betrayals” as the omnibus spending bill, in which Republicans used their historic midterm election victory – under the leadership of a Speaker who made his bones as the math-wizard archenemy of irresponsible government spending – to deliver a trillion-dollar bag of Christmas goodies to Democrats, funding almost the entirety of the Obama agenda without a fight.
by John Hayward21 Dec 2015, 5:57 AM PST0
The Washington Post explains Marco Rubio is difficult for voters to get to know.
by Breitbart News21 Dec 2015, 5:36 AM PST1
The new video mysteriously lacks any audio of Jeb Bush’s attacks against Trump, but highlights media coverage of the former Florida governor’s willingness to attack set to a dramatic soundtrack. The video, titled ”The Only One,” indicates that unlike Bush, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Chris Christie have largely shied away from criticizing Trump’s inflammatory statements, including positive comments about Russian President Vladimir Putin.
by Charlie Spiering21 Dec 2015, 5:32 AM PST11
Billionaire presidential candidate Donald Trump is demanding an apology from Hillary Clinton for claiming that the Islamic State is using videos of his comments about Muslims to recruit fighters.
by Charlie Spiering21 Dec 2015, 5:10 AM PST11
Billionaire presidential candidate Donald Trump reacted to the Miss Universe pageant catastrophe after host Steve Harvey mistakenly named Miss Colombia the winner. “Very sad what happened last night at the Miss Universe Pageant,” he said. “I sold it 6 months ago for a record price. This would never have happened!”
by Charlie Spiering21 Dec 2015, 5:05 AM PST1
Hillary Clinton’s claim that Donald Trump is “becoming ISIS’s best recruiter” has sparked wide backlash against her presidential campaign.
by Patrick Howley20 Dec 2015, 8:54 PM PST34
Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton was late getting back to the debate stage Saturday night because she didn’t want to share a restroom with a Martin O’Malley staffer.
by Patrick Howley20 Dec 2015, 8:08 PM PST735
Ed Rendell is a sly old fox of a dem..who wishes the dems could run against Kasich a total status quo politician....
Just want to point out this is a great read...as to why this is important.............
During the most recent Democrat debate – the one they held on the last Saturday before Christmas, so voters wouldn’t see it – Hillary Clinton falsely claimed the Islamic State is prominently featuring Donald Trump in its recruiting videos.
by John Hayward22 Dec 2015, 6:28 AM PST25
A whole host of pre-holiday polls show that Ted Cruz is about to have a very merry Christmas. For the first time since the collapse of Ben Carson, Donald Trump has some real competition. Nationally, a new Quinnipiac poll shows
by John Nolte22 Dec 2015, 6:06 AM PST1,336
New Jersey Governor and Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie stated he wouldn’t take any position on legalizing people in the US until the border is secured, but declared, “Never a path to citizenship” in an interview broadcast on Monday’s “On
by Ian Hanchett21 Dec 2015, 9:11 PM PST183
Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, strongly criticized the Obama administration’s strategy against the Islamic State on Fox News Sunday.
by John Hayward21 Dec 2015, 7:08 PM PST4
Columnist Charles Krauthammer argued Democratic presidential candidate former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton should “quit at two” lies about videos radicalizing terrorists while discussing her claim that ISIS is using video of GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump to recruit on
by Ian Hanchett21 Dec 2015, 7:03 PM PST143
A.B. Stoddard, Associate Editor of The Hill, declared, “Hillary Clinton makes stuff up, this is a well-documented pattern of hers” while discussing her “made-up story” of ISIS using Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to recruit on Monday’s “Special Report” on the Fox
by Ian Hanchett21 Dec 2015, 7:03 PM PST144
The Washington Post—Washington D.C.’s media outlet for the Democratic Party—showed its desperation to stop what it perceives to be the Donald Trump juggernaut, limning him as a white supremacist by association.
by William Bigelow21 Dec 2015, 5:50 PM PST1,691
Republican presidential candidate Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) told One America News Network that he finds it difficult to work with Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) because of their differing “world views.” “I think here is a great deal of separation between
The Gang of Eight comprehensive immigration reform bill passed the Senate after a series of votes in June 2013. Democrats, who controlled the Senate at the time, unanimously supported the bill, while most Republicans opposed it.
by Breitbart News21 Dec 2015, 4:25 PM PST139
On Monday, Weekly Standard editor-in-chief Bill Kristol tweeted out what the rest of the Republican establishment is thinking: better Hillary than Donald. Here’s the tweet:
Crowd-sourcing: Name of the new party we’ll have to start if Trump wins the GOP nomination? Suggestions welcome at editor@weeklystandard.com
— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) December 20, 2015
by Ben Shapiro21 Dec 2015, 4:22 PM PST4,668
In an casual remark, inserted in the middle of a story, New York Times reporter Matt Flegenheimer conflated Republican Presidential candidate Ted Cruz with the segregationist former Alabama Democratic Governor, George Wallace.
by Spyridon Mitsotakis21 Dec 2015, 4:17 PM PST10
His withdrawal ensures his name can be removed from the primary ballot in South Carolina, which votes on February 20. A recent poll of the Palmetto State found Graham with just 1 percent support, even though he has represented the state in Congress for twenty years.
by Mike Flynn21 Dec 2015, 4:14 PM PST45
Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton’s husband Bill Clinton is disparagingly featured as a “fornicator” in an Islamic State propaganda recruitment film.
by Patrick Howley21 Dec 2015, 3:49 PM PST4,092
Republican presidential candidate Gov. Mike Huckabee tweeted his post-debate question for Hillary Clinton.
by Patrick Howley21 Dec 2015, 3:46 PM PST10
Republican frontrunner Donald J. Trump has a massive lead in national polls. But it may be even bigger than it seems, because while most major polls are conducted by telephone, his lead in online polls is even bigger.
by Joel B. Pollak21 Dec 2015, 3:28 PM PST128
Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton’s daughter Chelsea is pregnant with her second child.
by Patrick Howley21 Dec 2015, 3:12 PM PST342
Sen. Ted Cruz went after House Majority Leader Mitch McConnell Monday, arguing that he works for Democrats — including Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) — to help get their liberal policies passed in Congress.
by Michelle Fields21 Dec 2015, 3:08 PM PST2,308
Republican presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson argued it wasn’t necessary for President Obama “to bring race into it” while discussing GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump’s appeal and that the controversy over whether ISIS is using Trump to recruit is “much
by Ian Hanchett21 Dec 2015, 2:05 PM PST191
Monday on Bill Bennett’s radio show, Republican presidential candidate former Gov. Jeb Bush (R-FL) defended his opponent Donald Trump against Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s claim at the debate Saturday night that ISIS is using Trump in their recruiting videos. Bush
Sen. Lindsey Graham’s formal exit from the 2016 race exposes the unpopularity of the GOP establishment’s enthusiasm for overseas entanglements and inward migration, says conservatives.
by Neil Munro21 Dec 2015, 12:59 PM PST4
On December 21, Governor Chris Christie (R) released a statement supporting the clarification of New Jersey gun laws and the expansion of what qualifies as a “justifiable need,” as it pertains to reaching the threshold for being issued a firearm carry permit.
by AWR Hawkins22 Dec 2015, 8:05 AM PST0
New polling from three early voting states shows Donald Trump leads the Republican field, but Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is moving into a strong second place in the race for the nomination.
by Mike Flynn22 Dec 2015, 8:05 AM PST0
Monday night at a rally in Michigan, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump said Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton was “schlonged” by then-candidate Barack Obama in 2008. Trump also said it was “too disgusting” to talk about why Hillary was momentarily missing after a
Tuesday on Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends,” Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ), a candidate for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, discussed how he is the most qualified of the field to take on terrorism. “Everyone else on that stage, the
During a live Morning Joe interview aboard a campaign bus in New Hampshire Tuesday, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie took a shot at his opponent Marco Rubio for his absence in the state.
Read more: http://therightscoop.com/#ixzz3v4IV4I6a
countries to enter the U.S. with just a passport.
One of the countries affected by the change, for what I’d think would be obvious reasons, was Iran. It was not an all-out travel ban on people coming from Iran, but raather the removal of a shortcut that was making it far too easy for people coming from Iran to bypass the usual visa process.
Even though he had never heard of Murphy’s Law, which states, “Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong,” my lifelong best friend and mentor, Jaybird, often quoted his own version of it, which I called Jaybird’s law: “If sumpin’ kin go wrong, hit will go wrong.”
Whenever he stated it, I teased him about being pessimistic, but on one of our hunts, I learned not to take lightly the old black man’s law.
Fairfax, VA - Today Liberty Counsel filed a lawsuit against the School Board of Fairfax County, Virginia, for illegally changing its nondiscrimination policy so that it conflicts with the state’s policy. Virginia law explicitly prohibits local governing bodies from adding to, or removing protected classes from, the state’s nondiscrimination policy. In direct defiance, Fairfax has added new groups to its policy twice now. The board added “sexual orientation” on November 6, 2014, and again added “gender identity” on May 7, 2015, of which the school failed to even define its intended meaning.
Unbeknownst to most Americans, there was a presidential candidate out there who was quietly running a secret campaign for America’s highest political office. His name was Lindsey Graham, and he was running on a platform of “I hate Ted Cruz and I love John McCain.”
He’s decided to fold up shop because maybe, just maybe, this isn’t his year.
Dedham, MA - Judge Douglas Wilkins of Norfolk County Superior Court denied a motion for summary judgement requested by Fontbonne Academy, a Catholic all-girls prep-school that terminated a new employee, Matthew Barrett, because he is involved in homosexual conduct and holds a marriage license to another man. Fontbonne regards all employees as models to the students.
A lot of conservatives were predictably disappointed in the budget deal that Speaker Paul Ryan agreed to last week with the White House. We did get a few things, like delays in the implementation of several key ObamaCare taxes, and the repeal at long last of the 42-year-old oil export ban.
But the Democrats got lots more spending, and even the tax delays are not the same as tax repeals. They added another $500 billion to the deficit and Josh Earnest and Harry Reid are crowing that this is a great budget that keeps Republicans from “achieving their ideological agenda through the budget process.”
Does anyone, save possibly a mentally- depraved Communist or Democrat politician, honestly believe that Donald J. Trump would not be a profound improvement over Barack Obama, America’s closeted Muslim, anti-American, race-baiting Marxist?
In the war against terrorism, the US federal government has devised a system of advisories to coordinate efforts by the public, federal agencies, and state and local authorities to keep our homeland and people safe and secure.
Tis the Christmas season!
Santa Ryan and Santa McConnell slid down the chimney of chicanery to hand out more lavish gifts to the puppet president, their Democrat comrades, and the globalist elites, intentionally at U. S. citizen/taxpayer expense. Thankfully, but belatedly, it appears that some people are finally willing to admit that the government has gone rogue. We are being fed the ‘company line’ that timing and circumstances forced Ryan’s hand in pushing through the treasonous omnibus bill. Actually, the timing and circumstances were ‘by design’!
Yesterday, in the “City that Care Forgot,” New Orleans politicians displayed very little care for their city’s history, but showed they cared a great deal for political correctness.
In a 6-1 vote, City Council members passed an ordinance supported by Mayor Mitch Landrieu to declare four historic Confederate monuments “nuisances” and remove them from the city landscape. It was a big political victory for Landrieu who created this controversy after the murder of nine African Americans in Charleston, South Carolina, by a racist white maniac in June.
Boston, MA - Dr. Paul Church, a highly credentialed doctor, has released a statement to the press and public after the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) revoked his hospital admission privileges, and its Board of Directors rejected his appeal of this decision. Dr. Church raised concerns for medical reasons to BIDMC’s annual promotion of homosexual conduct.
The last GOP debate of the year proved once again John Kasich is the most tone–deaf politician in the contest. There he was — America’s Angry RINO —clinging to his edge of the stage with that desperate look on his face that only comes from knowing a poor performance means next time he’ll be with Lindsey Graham sharing a riser in front of a Winnebago.
Two thousand years ago, the weary world rejoiced. A Savior was born in Bethlehem, and His work endures to this day. Today, on the cusp of a new millennium, no matter how grim our times may stare at us, the world is waking up, crying out for the better to break forth. This holiday season draws men and women away from their daily lives, to busier pursuits: buying gifts, connecting with extended family, talking about gun control (Just kidding. A little holiday jeer!)
For We the People Rising, a growing coalition of concerned California conservatives who fight against illegal immigration and its enablers, the holidays do not interrupt but augment our activism for truth, justice and the American way.
On December 21, Governor Chris Christie (R) released a statement supporting the clarification of New Jersey gun laws and the expansion of what qualifies as a “justifiable need,” as it pertains to reaching the threshold for being issued a firearm carry permit.
by AWR Hawkins22 Dec 2015, 8:05 AM PST0
New polling from three early voting states shows Donald Trump leads the Republican field, but Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is moving into a strong second place in the race for the nomination.
by Mike Flynn22 Dec 2015, 8:05 AM PST0
Monday night at a rally in Michigan, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump said Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton was “schlonged” by then-candidate Barack Obama in 2008. Trump also said it was “too disgusting” to talk about why Hillary was momentarily missing after a
Tuesday on Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends,” Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ), a candidate for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, discussed how he is the most qualified of the field to take on terrorism. “Everyone else on that stage, the
During a live Morning Joe interview aboard a campaign bus in New Hampshire Tuesday, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie took a shot at his opponent Marco Rubio for his absence in the state.
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