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Citizens Dedicated To Preserving Our Constitutional Republic

REPUBLICAN LEADERS ...RNC AND FOX NEWS ARE PLANNING A BROKERED OR CONTESTED CONVENTION ELECTION 2016NEWS AND UPDATES...etc etc

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:

Cleveland Cliffhanger? Prospects of a Deadlocked GOP Convention

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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LA Times: ‘Originalism’ Means Ted Cruz Ineligible

A law professor has argued in the pages of the Los Angeles Times that an “originalist” reading of the Constitution means that Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) is not a “natural-born citizen” and therefore is ineligible for the presidency.

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Look who the liberal propaganda news arm of the democrat party is most scared od...TED CRUZ.... doinf all they can to get rid of him...They seem to think that they can handle TRUMP...

Donald Trump, Ted Cruz

LA Times: ‘Originalism’ Means Ted Cruz Ineligible

A law professor has argued in the pages of the Los Angeles Times that an “originalist” reading of the Constitution means that Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) is not a “natural-born citizen” and therefore is ineligible for the presidency.

A law professor has argued in the pages of the Los Angeles Times that an “originalist” reading of the Constitution means that

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX)
97%

is not a “natural-born citizen” and therefore is ineligible for the presidency.

Thomas H. Lee, the Leitner Family Professor of International Law at Fordham University, argues that while the more liberal schools of interpretation would allow Cruz to run, the conservative school of interpretation cannot.

Lee writes: “Under either a textualist or a ‘living Constitution’ theory, Cruz is a ‘natural born Citizen,’ eligible to be president; under an originalist view, however, he isn’t. It’s the conservative theory that would exclude the conservative Cruz from presidential eligibility.”

Lee defines originalism as interpreting the Constitution according to “what ordinary people would have understood it to mean at the time it was ratified, which is 1788.”

That is a somewhat different definition of “originalism” than other scholars use. While it is preferable to interpret the “ordinary” meaning of a phrase, legal terms do not always have an “ordinary” meaning, historically or today. The question is how a specific term was understood at the time by those who had written it, and by those entrusted with its interpretation.

As Breitbart News’ Ken Klukowski has BBN, most “originalists” would allow Cruz to run; hardly any would not.

Klukowski cites a 1790 statute passed by the First Congress as the best evidence of how the term “natural-born citizen” was meant to be interpreted by the Framers of the Constitution.

Lee acknowledges that law, but says that it “was not intended to address presidential eligibility.” He calls Klukowski’s approach “textualist,” as opposed to “originalist,” and says an originalist would interpret the term “natural” as referring to “‘natural’ principles of law.”

Here, Lee says, there were two: “Jus soli–the law of soil–was the principle that a child was subject or citizen of the sovereign who ruled the land or seas on which the child was born….Jus sanguinis–the law of blood–held that a child’s citizenship flowed from the parents’ allegiance, regardless of place of birth.”

Jus soli, he says, was typical in English common law, from which much of U.S. law is derived–and the exceptions for jus sanguinis “applied to patrilineal descent only.” That would mean Ted Cruz would not have inherited his U.S. citizenship from his mother.

“However odious it seems today,” Lee writes, “a child born of a woman whose citizenship was different from her husband’s–much rarer then than today–could not be a ‘natural born Citizen’ of the mother’s country.”

That is not how we interpret citizenship today, but it may be how eligibility for the presidency was meant to be determined, he implies.

Lee, who is cited as an “expert” by the conservative Federalist Society, concludes: “It’s a neat irony: The most conservative constitutional interpreters must find Cruz ineligible to be president; liberals must grin and bear him.”

It would appear that Lee’s opinion is a minority view, not only among constitutional scholars in general, but also within “originalist” theories of interpretation.

Still, it is a sign of why Donald Trump thinks he still has a case.

 

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Media Chatter: House Speaker Paul Ryan Is The Establishment’s Next Challenger to Face Trump

11 Jan, 2016 11 Jan, 2016

House Speaker

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI)
56%

may become the GOP establishment’s 2016 candidate who can snatch the nomination or the leadership of the GOP away from pro-American populist Donald Trump, according to D.C. media chatter.

But the move — if it happens — may be too late.

Any fight between the increasingly popular Trump and the decreasingly popular Ryan would mark a last-ditch effort by the GOP’s establishment-business-wing to deny any political power to its conservative voters, likely splitting the party just before the elections that will decide which party gets to control the White House and the U.S. Senate. It might also damage Ryan’s long-term career plans, which are already being undermined by his unpopular policies and his complete failure in the 2016 budget negotiations, despite his support in the establishment media.

The media suggestions for Ryan suddenly appeared Sunday, Jan 10.

In a Daily Beast article about the media’s desire for a political fight at the GOP convention, veteran reporter Jeff Greenfield casually suggested the GOP’s establishment might sabotage Trump at the last moment by using the convention to give the nomination to Ryan, who was defeated in 2012 when he ran as the vice-president candidate with Gov. Mitt Romney.

“If party elders were to meet behind closed doors and deliver the nomination to, say, House Speaker Paul Ryan, that would qualify as a ‘brokered’ outcome,” Greenfield wrote Jan. 10.

Tai Kopan, a writer for CNN, floated Ryan as the media-backed silver bullet against Trump during a Jan. 10 article about a weekend event that showcased Ryan’s much-touted efforts to win more votes from lower-income Americans.

In rare joint appearances, six Republican presidential candidates gathered here on Saturday to talk about ways to address poverty in America, speaking to voters in the crucial early primary state and beyond about why the GOP has the best answers.

House Speaker Paul Ryan and South Carolina

Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC)
88%

were moderators, and they questioned former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Ben Carson, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Florida

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL)
79%

in small groups about how to address systemic problems at the Kemp Forum on Expanding Opportunity….

‘We’re the only nation founded on an idea: The condition of your birth does not determine the outcome of your life,’ Ryan said at the outset… The candidates heaped him with plenty of praise along the way.

“The country’s better off that you’re the speaker,” Bush said to Ryan as his panel began…

It wasn’t just the candidates that took notice. After the day wrapped, Gerry Gudgel, a school administrator from Columbia who says he’s looking for a “compassionate conservative” and likes the governors in the race along with Marco Rubio said he wouldn’t question Ryan in the field.

“If the Republican Convention went into gridlock, I think Paul Ryan, somehow, put him on the ballot right away,” Gudgel said.

On CBS’s “Face The Nation,” panelist Susan Page, the bureau chief for USA Today, also suggested Jan. 10 that Ryan could save the day for the establishment by becoming the fall-back GOP leader, operating out of Congress.

I wonder if what you might see happening is the establishment Republican say, yes, Trump’s our nominee, let’s talk about Paul Ryan. Let’s make him the face of the GOP. Let’s talk about what Congress is going to do.

You remember what happened in 1996 when establishment Republicans decided that Bob Dole was going to lose and Newt Gingrich started making deals with a Democratic president, Bill Clinton, and it was harmful for Dole, but they had decided he was going to lose that election. They tried to find — go in a different direction to save the party and I just wonder if we might see that happen this time.

A Ryan challenge against TRump would be very risky for Ryan and his establishment backers.

Trump is already winning enthusiastic support from many of the blue-collar, mid-western voters that are key to any GOP win in 2016. Moreover, he’s winning those crucial votes by opposing large-scale migration.

But Ryan has strongly backed open-borders and amnesty since his first entry into politics in the 1990s.  In 2014, Ryan even tried to pass an amnesty bill, but was blocked by Republican base voters. In 2015, Ryan sneaked a plan into the must-pass 2016 budget that allows U.S. employers to hire at least 50,000 low-wage foreign-workers in 2016 instead of Americans, likely helping to crash his brief popularity among the GOP’s base, despite media support.

Still, a Ryan challenge is possible, wrote Mickey Kaus, an anti-amnesty progressive and an influential blogger. “Ryan Scenario Not Insane (Unfortunately),” he wrote Jan. 10, saying:

1) Ryan’s running a self-promotional Speakership not unlike a national campaign; 2) Given his perceived betrayals of the Party’s base, he might not be looking at such long tenure as Speaker anyway; 3) Politics moves fast these days; 4) Ryan has plenty of seemingly infatuated cheerleaders in the press; 5) What if none of the establishment non-Trumps catches on… 6) Maybe there are no more party elders around to manipulate Republicans in back rooms in order to achieve their preferred outcome. But that sure seemed to be how Ryan became Speaker two months ago. … 7) It might be the only way for the GOP/K Street Establishment to get its precious immigration amnesty.

Ryan’s self-promotion was showcased by an friendly Jan. 10 interview with CBS’s John Dickerson, who nudged Ryan to contrast himself to Trump and his populist, pro-American, low-immigration policy.

Ryan took the bait, and tried to distance himself from Trump with a series of buzz-words, including “inclusive” and “inspirational.”

“Inclusive” is typically used by GOP establishment candidates to call for pro-amnesty policies that are supposed to attract votes from the low-income Hispanic-Americans who would be hit hardest by another wave of low-wage job competitors. The term “inspirational,” is often used by establishment GOP leaders — especially Jeb Bush — to call for a campaign that doesn’t challenge any core priorities for Democrats, such as greater immigration. Also, noticeably, Ryan did not say he would remain as House Speaker throughout 2016.

DICKERSON: Last night, I was at a Donald Trump rally in Rock Hill, South Carolina, and there were about 6,000 or 7,000 people. And the crowd reaction was very loud on the following things: Donald Trump’s opposition to the Asian trade deal, which you support, his opposition to last year’s budget at the end of the year, budget which you support, his opposition to undocumented workers having any kind of pathway to anything, legal status or citizenship, and also to any tinkering with entitlements.

The crowd didn’t just clap politely. They went crazy. How does a Republican Party get together when you have a set of ideas that are totally antithetical to all of those people who were cheering so loudly?

RYAN: We’re a big tent party. I think what we do as leaders is, we say who we are, what we believe, and where we want to lead, and let the people decide.

Look, that’s just the way I see this thing. I really think the country is on a bad path, a dangerous path. I think we could lose what is so unique about our country, this American idea, the condition of your birth doesn’t determine the outcome of your life. We believe in growth and prosperity and security.

All those things are in real deep jeopardy. And so, yes, do I agree or disagree with various candidates on various issues? Of course I do. We’re individuals. But can we offer the country a really clear and compelling choice that’s not divisive, but inclusive, that’s inspirational, that’s pro-growth? That’s what I’m trying to do. And that’s what I think we can do. And so…

DICKERSON: Does the campaign make it harder to do that, though?

RYAN: I don’t think the campaign makes it harder, because this is a primary season.

What’s happening right now are, these candidates are trying to distinguish themselves from among the same party, from — over the same voters. I think primaries inevitably have this kind of friction. But once you get through the primary, I think we unify as a conservative movement. We unify as a cause. And we go out and we try and win converts to conservatism. We go out and we try to give the country a really clear choice.

But that clear choice seems to have been made — and its name is Donald Trump.

Frontrunner Trump and runner-up challengers

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2016/01/11/2745159/

Personally, I like what I hear Trump say, however it is what we all want to hear. I still have this nagging feeling that Trump is the same type of red herring that Ross Perot was to Billy's run. Let's see what happens if the GOP refuses to give him the nomination. If he decides to go third party it will be just like Perot all over again and we will be saddled with Hillary. I don't think America can withstand another Progressive onslaught like she will bring. It seems we will have choices but those choices will probably not be ones we like. The Key to this and every election is to rally the conservatives to get out and vote even though they don't feel like their vote will particularly mean anything. Every Vote counts, and we must start right now to rally the Conservative voters to get to the polls regardless of who is running. I don't just mean the Presidential election, but all the elections for Congress, state Legislatures and Governors, and even local elections. They all count much more this time than they have in the past 50 years.

honored to hear from you my dear friend....It is what it is ..All that I read and all that I hear is that people are coming out to vote who have not voted in years...These seem to be divided between Cruz and Trump...I believe the evangelicals will carry Cruz to victory in IOWA....and Trump will take the win in the godless heathen New Hampshire ...Watch out for the SOUTH...CRUZ IS THE MAN THERE..LOL You heard it here....if Cruz gets the big MO there...he will be herd to stop...JMHO..;)

Only problem with Ross Perot (and I voted for him, twice) was he created a third party. And now we have another one wanting to go 3rd party.  So Cruz is it for me, but I will vote Trump if I have to.  As for the others, will have to wait and see. I will vote, however.  If it keeps up, I'd love to see the Tea Party pull out and take over. But not right now. 

I heard rumor that if it comes down to Trump vs.Hillary, that Mike Bloomberg will get in as an independent......http://fortune.com/2015/10/06/bill-ackman-mike-bloomberg-president/

Thanks for the good news Kev...He will split the dem vote and give it to Trump...everyone knows that Bloomberg is not  a repub that he is a democrat. ......Blue Collar NY will  put Trump across the finish line in NY at least...;)

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New York Times, by Anne Barnard*    Original Article
Posted By: Honeybadger- 1/11/2016 6:58:39 AM     Post Reply
BEIRUT, Lebanon — In the hills near the Lebanese border, an hour’s drive from downtown Damascus, much of a Syrian town is starving, according to residents and international humanitarian workers. The town, Madaya, is controlled by rebels and encircled by pro-government forces with barbed wire, land mines and snipers. People there make soups of grass, spices and olive leaves. They eat donkeys and cats. They arrive, collapsing, at a clinic that offers little but rehydration salts. Neighbors fail to recognize neighbors in the streets because their faces are so sunken. Syria, once classified as a middle-income country, now reports periodic malnutrition deaths.

  

Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb threatens
to attack Rome, Naples and Madrid
Jerusalem Post [Israel], by Maayan Groisman    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 1/11/2016 6:54:59 AM     Post Reply
The organization continues escalating its rhetoric against France, threatening to commit more terror attacks in Western capitals to force Paris to stop its military intervention in Mali. After the merciless attack on a luxury hotel that took place in Timbuktu last November and resulted in the killing of 21 people, al-Qaida in North Africa has continued to escalate its rhetoric against France, threatening to commit more terror attacks in Western capitals to force Paris to stop its military intervention in Mali. On January 6, the media institute of the al-Qaida-affiliated organization released a video titled "From the Desert´s depth," in which

Obama: I´m going to visit
the Detroit Auto Show
Investor´s Business Daily, by Andrew Malcolm    Original Article
Posted By: SurferLad- 1/11/2016 6:51:51 AM     Post Reply
President Obama´s weekly remarks Hi everybody. Seven years ago, the American auto industry was on the brink of collapse. Plants were closing. Hundreds of thousands of workers were getting laid off from jobs that had been their ticket to a middle-class life. And as the pain spread across the country, another one million Americans would have lost their jobs in the middle of the worst economic crisis of our lifetimes. Some said it was too late to turn things around. But I refused to turn my back on so many of the workers that I’d met. Instead, I

President Trump: Taking The Donald Seriously
Townhall, by Kurt Schlichter    Original Article
Posted By: Judy W.- 1/11/2016 6:41:49 AM     Post Reply
There is a real chance that our next president will be Donald Trump. I am not happy about that – I’ve found a media niche as a hardcore conservative who outlets call to get the right wing view of why he’s terrible (Well, at least media outlets without Don Lemon). Yet it’s foolish not to face the potential reality – we are sort of just hoping he goes away thanks to flaws that never seem to actually hurt him. We are not taking seriously the Donald Trump we actually face, as opposed to the one we wish we were facing. Exactly

Obama´s Veto Just Postpones the Inevitable
American Spectator, by David Catron    Original Article
Posted By: garnet- 1/11/2016 6:38:32 AM     Post Reply
On Friday, the President vetoed H.R.3762, which would have repealed Obamacare’s worst provisions. This was not a surprise. Nor was it, as the law’s apologists claim, an indication that the fight is over. As House Speaker Paul Ryan put it, “The idea that Obamacare is the law of the land for good is a myth. This law will collapse under its own weight, or it will be repealed … It’s just a matter of time.” Only one vote, Obama’s, saved it this time. If he is replaced by a Republican next January, the “Affordable Care Act” will go shortly thereafter.

  

  

EXCLUSIVE: Queens DA’s dedicated
Animal Cruelty Prosecutions Unit
cracks down with pet protection effort
New York Daily News, by Lisa L. Colangelo    Original Article
Posted By: Lalo- 1/11/2016 6:16:25 AM     Post Reply
When it comes to cases of animal abuse, Queens District Attorney Richard Brown isn’t dogging it. His office is launching the city’s first-ever Animal Cruelty Prosecutions Unit to focus on crimes that range from dog fighting for blood sport and money to neglect and abandonment of household pets. “While animal cruelty cases have been aggressively prosecuted by a number of different bureaus throughout our office in the past, we recognize that the time has come for a committed and dedicated unit,” said Brown, noting his prosecutors work closely with the

Senate still sluggish despite
big bipartisan deals, Times
legislative futility index finds
Washington Times, by Stephen Dinan    Original Article
Posted By: Lalo- 1/11/2016 6:11:06 AM     Post Reply
Congress began to pull out of the legislative doldrums last year but still has a long way to go before it returns to full health and the kind of freewheeling legislative action of previous decades, according to The Washington Times Legislative Futility Index, which found that despite some big bipartisan deals, the Senate remains a major stumbling block to passing bills. Under Republican control last year, for the first time since 2006, the Senate did better than the previous four years under Democratic control — but still notched the fifth-worst year on record, passing relatively few bills and watching power

Rand Paul predicts Democrats
would challenge Ted Cruz’s citizenship
Washington Times, by Tom Howell, Jr.    Original Article
Posted By: Lalo- 1/11/2016 6:08:16 AM     Post Reply
Sen. Rand Paul on Sunday said there is no question his 2016 GOP rival for the president, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, is an American citizen despite his birth in Canada. But the Constitution’s call for a “natural born” candidate poses a legal question for Mr. Cruz, should he become the nominee, Mr. Paul told CBS’s Face the Nation. “I think the Democrats will challenge it, at the very least,” Mr. Paul, Kentucky Republican, said. “He would be the first president not born in the United States,” he added. “That alone would be extraordinary.” As it stands, Mr. Paul is

Donald Trump, Republican establishment
headed for convention showdown
Washington Times, by Ralph Z. Hallow    Original Article
Posted By: Lalo- 1/11/2016 6:05:21 AM     Post Reply
Donald Trump is on track to storm into July just shy of the majority of delegates needed to win the Republican Party’s presidential nomination, rolling into the national convention in Cleveland slightly ahead of Sen. Ted Cruz, according to a state-by-state analysis by The Washington Times. That would set off a feverish scramble with Mr. Trump trying to seduce some 150 or more delegates away from his competitors. The billionaire businessman would have to pull off a series of artful deals — wielding the accouterments of his wealth and promises of plumb jobs to delegates’ relatives — that would be the

Trump Denies He’d Put 45 Percent
Tariff on Imported Goods from China:
‘I Didn’t Say I Was Going to Do It’
Washington Free Beacon, by David Rutz    Original Article
Posted By: Lalo- 1/11/2016 5:58:35 AM     Post Reply
Republican frontrunner Donald Trump denied that he would impose a 45 percent tariff on Chinese goods coming into the United States as president, telling Fox News Sunday “I didn’t say I was going to do it.” However, Trump told the New York Times this week he would “do a tax” on imported goods from China to restructure the relationship with the country, who he has constantly railed against on the campaign trail, and that it should be 45 percent: “The only power that we have with China,” Mr. Trump said, “is massive trade.” “I would tax China on products coming

  

A Day Without Donald Trump
Washington Free Beacon, by Matthew Walther    Original Article
Posted By: Lalo- 1/11/2016 5:53:13 AM     Post Reply
Columbia, S.C.—Early last summer my wife and I were having dinner with some friends in Springfield, Virginia. By “dinner” I mean that our hosts made tacos and we stood in the kitchen eating them—the tacos, not my friend and his wife—while drinking beer. Then the men in our group started talking, as Men Do, about work. The man of the house, whose common sense I have never gainsaid, insisted there was no way Donald Trump was serious about running for president. Male heads bobbed in agreement. My wife, the happiest pessimist of my acquaintance, insisted that we

Pennsylvania Mayor Pulls
Police From NRA Gun Show
Washington Free Beacon, by Stephen Gutowsk    Original Article
Posted By: Lalo- 1/11/2016 5:51:16 AM     Post Reply
The mayor of Harrisburg, Penn., ordered his police department on Friday not to provide security for an upcoming NRA-sponsored gun show after the association refused to meet a demand to pay a 60-percent increase in fees for the service. Harrisburg police have provided security for the annual Great American Outdoors Show, scheduled this year for February 6-14, in the past. Mayor Eric Papenfuse said that the decision not to offer the department’s services this year was motivated in part by the NRA’s opposition to the city’s gun control policies. “We have an epidemic of gun violence,” Papenfuse told

State of the Union Spectacle
Would Appall Thomas Jefferson
Townhall, by Jeff Jacoby    Original Article
Posted By: StormCnter- 1/11/2016 5:03:20 AM     Post Reply
On Tuesday evening, amid much splendor and spectacle, the president of the United States will be welcomed by a joint session of Congress, there to be cheered and applauded like a homecoming conqueror, and, before an audience of lawmakers, diplomats, military officers, and dignitaries, to deliver his State of the Union oration in a live nationwide broadcast. It is the most preposterous and gaudy ritual in American political life. Thomas Jefferson will be turning in his grave. Like Moses, Jefferson was burdened with a speech impediment and disliked public speaking. Unlike the Hebrew lawgiver, Jefferson wasn´t compelled by Heaven to preach to

Hillary Tries to Put Out the Fire
Power Line, by John Hinderaker    Original Article
Posted By: StormCnter- 1/11/2016 5:00:40 AM     Post Reply
In recent days, attention has focused on an email exchange that Hillary Clinton had with one of her principal aides, Jake Sullivan, in June 2011. As Paul noted here and here, some have characterized the exchange as a smoking gun, demonstrating that Hillary improperly instructed Sullivan to send classified information by unsecure email when an attempt to send by secure fax failed. If true, this would refute Hillary’s last line of defense with regard to her bizarre homebrew email setup, i.e., the claim that her home server was never used to send or receive classified information.(Snip)This morning on Face the

Monarchical Obama? Real monarchs
are humbler and a whole lot cheaper
Washington Examiner [DC], by Dan Hannan    Original Article
Posted By: StormCnter- 1/11/2016 4:56:08 AM     Post Reply
I admit it: By American standards, I´m a bit of a pantywaist when it comes to gun control. By British standards, for what it´s worth, I´m a libertarian: I opposed, and continue to oppose, the ban on handguns brought in after the monstrous school shooting in Dunblane in 1996. Although no one seriously argued that such a ban would have prevented that atrocity — it was carried out with an illegally held weapon — Tony Blair felt that the legislative response should be proportionate to the sense of grief, not proportionate to the need to prevent shootings. But although I don´t

Donald Trump´s Electability Paradox
Atlantic, by Ronald Brownstein    Original Article
Posted By: MissMolly- 1/11/2016 4:51:50 AM     Post Reply
A widen­ing dis­tance between per­spect­ives about Don­ald Trump among Republicans and all oth­er voters—the “Trump gap”—presents GOP lead­ers with a conun­drum as the primar­ies ap­proach. The phe­nomen­on can be charted across a series of na­tion­al polls, from which a con­sist­ent pat­tern has emerged in at­ti­tudes to­ward the GOP front-run­ner since he entered the race last sum­mer. Re­pub­lic­an par­tis­ans and some oth­er con­ser­vat­ive-lean­ing con­stitu­en­cies are demon­strably warm­ing in their at­ti­tudes to­ward the blustery busi­ness ex­ec­ut­ive. But views of Trump gen­er­ally re­main stag­nant, or are even de­teri­or­at­ing, among adults who identi­fy as Demo­crats or in­de­pend­ents. With­in that mix, the groups at the core of

Next 25 Articles

http://www.lucianne.com/?s=4965

Matt Damon defends Sean
Penn´s El Chapo interview backstage
at Golden Globes
Boston Herald, by Jenelle Riley    Original Article
Posted By: Hazymac- 1/11/2016 9:50:19 AM     Post Reply
Matt Damon was named best actor in a motion picture musical or comedy for "The Martian," and when asked backstage on whether he felt the film was a comedy, he quipped, "No, it´s a musical." Damon, who flies out to Las Vegas in the morning to continue working on the new Jason Bourne movie, was also asked about Sean Penn´s interview with Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman in Rolling Stone. "I haven´t read it yet; I definitely plan to. I subscribe to Rolling Stone so it´s already been sent to me," he said. "But look, it´s nothing new, actors going and

Germany´s 21st century
descent into hell
American Thinker, by Carol Brown    Original Article
Posted By: magnante- 1/11/2016 9:42:07 AM     Post Reply
More and more news is pouring out of Germany on the coordinated violence that Muslims perpetrated on New Year’s Eve, as the scale of what unfolded slowly comes to light. (snip) This is what Angela Merkel (and all of those who supported and continue to support her) has wrought. Not that Merkel cares. In fact, a few days after the wave of brutal New Year’s eve attacks she said: “We/Germans must accept that immigrants are more criminal.” Wow. Really? Apparently she wasn’t one of the rape victims so she is free to intellectualize inane ideas such as inviting savages into one’s

David Bowie: The most poignant quotes
from Iman about her husband
The Independent [UK], by Olivia Blair    Original Article
Posted By: SoCalGal- 1/11/2016 9:28:16 AM     Post Reply
David Bowie, who died on Sunday aged 69 after an 18-month battle with cancer, is survived by his wife the Somalian supermodel Iman Abdulmajid, and his children Duncan Jones, the son from his marriage to first wife Angie Bowie and his daughter with Iman, Lexi who is 14. Bowie married the supermodel in a romantic ceremony in Tuscany on 24 April, 1992. The couple were often regarded as one of the most stable in the public eye having been married for 23 years. They were also known for being particularly private of their marriage. In 2013 Iman, 60, was interviewed

  

R-G6-LC
  

Trump´s Not Going Anywhere,
So Start Taking Him Seriously
The Federalist, by Samantha Strayer    Original Article
Posted By: Pigtails- 1/11/2016 9:23:59 AM     Post Reply
Along with the dip in temperature and shortened daylight hours, fall and winter ushered in cooler heads and tempered hearts. And now the new year is a time of getting back to the business of living — a cold dose of reality filled with managing schedules and cleaning up after the holidays. Summer, by contrast, is the season of ephemeral pursuits, self-indulgence, and caprice. Donald Trump was meant to be all three. Supporters were going to love him then leave him — that is, if he didn’t dump them first.

When Pfleger flogged Hillary
Powerline, by Scott Johnson    Original Article
Posted By: Tianne- 1/11/2016 9:04:04 AM     Post Reply
I had forgotten about Father “Mike Pfleger,” as President Obama called him at CNN’s “gun violence” forum last week. Obama and Pfleger are old Chicago buddies. I was unaware of Pfleger’s interest in snuffing out Second Amendment rights. “It wasn’t that many years ago,” John Boch writes, “that the man of the cloth called on the owner of Chuck’s Guns, John Riggio, to be ‘snuffed out’ – using the lingo of his parishioners. Pfleger had used the same thinly veiled call for violence against Illinois legislators who voted against gun control.” Boch posts photos of Pfleger protected by three armed

Ted Cruz Is Nixon, Not Goldwater
Real Clear Politics, by Rich Lowry    Original Article
Posted By: Moritz55- 1/11/2016 8:25:35 AM     Post Reply
The lazy conventional wisdom is that Ted Cruz is the new Barry Goldwater, doomed to suffer an electoral landslide defeat should he win the Republican nomination. Not only is this wrong about Cruz’s general-election chances, it may compare Cruz to the wrong 20th-century Republican forebear. The better analogue for Cruz might be Richard Nixon, not in the crudely pejorative sense, but as another surpassingly shrewd and ambitious politician who lacked a personal touch but found a way to win nonetheless. First, all the caveats. Obviously and most importantly, Cruz is not a paranoiac. He’s more ideological than Nixon. And he has none

Storm Clouds Form: Bob Woodward
Compares Hillary Scandal to Watergate
National Review, by John Fund    Original Article
Posted By: Moritz55- 1/11/2016 8:09:10 AM     Post Reply

Hillary Clinton’s e-mail scandal has been a difficult one for the public to understand and for journalists to explain. But Bob Woodward, the Washington Post reporter who helped uncover Watergate 40 years ago, clarified things a lot on Fox News Sunday today when he said that an e-mail in the most recently released batch shows Hillary trying to “subvert the rules” that she expected others to follow. A few days earlier, Joe DiGenova, a well-respected former district attorney for the District of Columbia, told The Laura Ingraham Show that “there is vitriol of an intense amount developing” in the intelligence

http://www.lucianne.com/?s=4965

Whoopie..Woodward will be the skunk at the garden party for Hill and Bill....;)

Storm Clouds Form: Bob Woodward
Compares Hillary Scandal to Watergate
National Review, by John Fund    Original Article
Posted By: Moritz55- 1/11/2016 8:09:10 AM     Post Reply

Hillary Clinton’s e-mail scandal has been a difficult one for the public to understand and for journalists to explain. But Bob Woodward, the Washington Post reporter who helped uncover Watergate 40 years ago, clarified things a lot on Fox News Sunday today when he said that an e-mail in the most recently released batch shows Hillary trying to “subvert the rules” that she expected others to follow. A few days earlier, Joe DiGenova, a well-respected former district attorney for the District of Columbia, told The Laura Ingraham Show that “there is vitriol of an intense amount developing” in the intelligence

http://www.lucianne.com/?s=4965

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