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Ted Cruz vs. Ben Carson – Where They Stand On Guns, Abortion, Immigration, Parental Rights and More


Ben Carson’s speech at the 2013 National Prayer Breakfast thrust the famed neurosurgeon into the national spotlight as a contender for the 2016 GOP presidential nomination. He has been well received by many evangelicals and Tea Party adherents who believe him to be one of them. But, things are not always as they seem, especially when it comes to politicians and speech writers.

My research has shown Ted Cruz to be the far more conservative and constitutionally-minded candidate as Dr. Carson is neither an evangelical nor a true Conservative. I have gathered information and quotes from many sources so that you can judge for yourselves whether Cruz or Carson is better aligned with your religious and political beliefs. As for me, the Seventh-day Adventist doctor who has admittedly referred women, especially those carrying children with birth defects, for abortions, supports Obama-style amnesty and gun control and opposes parental rights, is not the right choice to guide this nation away from the Socialist path that we are on and back to a Constitutional foundation of liberty and justice for all.

This blog is rather lengthy, so feel free to skip around to the issues that matter most to you. But, whatever you do, please don’t continue to buy the hype. Instead, investigate to find out who these candidates really are and where they stand. It would be wise to heed this advice from our second president as you consider where you will cast your vote this primary season:

We electors have an important constitutional power placed in our hands; we have a check upon two branches of the legislature . . . the power I mean of electing at stated periods [each] branch. . . . It becomes necessary to every [citizen] then, to be in some degree a statesman, and to examine and judge for himself of the tendency of political principles and measures. Let us examine, then, with a sober, a manly . . . and a Christian spirit; let us neglect all party [loyalty] and advert to facts; let us believe no man to be infallible or impeccable in government any more than in religion; take no man’s word against evidence, nor implicitly adopt the sentiments of others who may be deceived themselves, or may be interested in deceiving us. ~ John Adams

Life

Ted Cruz

Ted Cruz has been consistently pro-life in his speech and he has the record to back it up, as documented by the Conservative Review (https://www.conservativereview.com/2016-presidential-candidates/candidates/ted-cruz#article-12).

As LifeNews reported, Paul said in an interview that Republicans should agree to disagree on social issues… “I think that the Republican Party, in order to get bigger, will have to agree to disagree on social issues,” Paul told vocativ.com… But Ted Cruz doesn’t agree, as CNN reports: The first-term Republican senator from Texas, who was in Iowa Tuesday, was asked by the Des Moines Register about Paul’s recent comments that Republicans should “agree to disagree” about social issues. Cruz seemed to disagree, saying, “I think that we should continue to defend our shared values.” “There are some who say the Republican party should no longer stand for life. I don’t agree with that,” he also said. “I’ll let him characterize his views,” Cruz said. “What I can tell you is my views are that we should continue to defend life and that we should continue to defend traditional marriage.” On eight votes cast in the Senate during his tenure, Paul has a 100% pro-life voting record, according to the National Right to Life Committee. Cruz also has a 100% pro-life voting record, casting three pro-life votes out of three votes on pro-life issues during his time in the Senate. (Source: http://www.lifenews.com/2014/03/19/ted-cruz-rand-paul-is-wrong-repu...)

Ben Carson

Based on the opinions that he has expressed in interviews and debates, Ben Carson has been touted as a staunchly pro-life candidate by many media outlets. However, this is one of the few issues where he does have a record and that record does not support his claims.

But while Carson insists he’s a fierce opponent of abortion, he also defends a long series of actions on the issue that are sharply at odds with the beliefs of the very voters fueling his rise. Carson, a retired pediatric neurosurgeon, has referred women to doctors who perform abortions, was a trustee of a foundation that gave hundreds of thousands of dollars to Planned Parenthood, and his campaign struggles to articulate which legal restrictions he supports on the procedure. Carson’s history on the issue is shaped by his medical background: Decisions he made decades ago — about referring women carrying fetuses with genetic defects to doctors willing to perform abortions, and conducting research using fetal tissue — came in the context of making complex medical decisions. But those are calls the candidate, who is running as ardently anti-abortion, stands by today, positions he argues are not out of step with being personally pro-life. And they are positions his communications director defended in an interview using language favored by advocates for abortion rights. “He believes in quality medical care, No. 1, and secondly, he believes in people making their own decisions based on facts and information,” said Carson communications director Doug Watts, when asked whether Carson stands by his previous decisions to refer women whose fetuses had genetic defects to doctors who provide abortions. He does, Watts said. (Source: http://www.politico.com/story/2015/08/ben-carson-abortion-stance-12...)

Marriage

Ted Cruz

Senator Cruz has been a defender of traditional marriage from the beginning, and he didn’t mince words following the June 26th Supreme Court decision.

In the case of marriage, a majority of states passed laws or state constitutional amendments to affirm the definition of marriage as between one man and one woman. At the federal level, the Congress and President Clinton enacted the Defense of Marriage Act. When it comes to marriage, the Court has clearly demonstrated an unwillingness to remain constrained by the Constitution. (Source: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/420409/ted-cruz-supreme-court...)

Ben Carson

Dr. Carson, who has voiced his support for same-sex civil unions in the past, neglected to take a strong stand against the Supreme Court’s unconstitutional ruling.

But when the Obergefell decision came down, he followed up this tactical retreat with a surprisingly brief public statement whose first sentence emphasized: “While I strongly disagree with the Supreme Court’s decision, their ruling is now the law of the land.” Carson called for general religious-liberty protections from Congress, but made no specific promises. The welcome news that Carson has made a commitment to pass the First Amendment Defense Act comes just as the neurosurgeon outsider has also emerged as a serious contender for the GOP nomination. (Source: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/423207/ben-carson-marriage-ch...)

Immigration

Ted Cruz

Again, Cruz has been the strongest voice for securing our border, insisting that we must put a stop to illegal immigration and leading the fight against the proposed amnesty legislation put forth by the Gang of Eight in 2013.

Nearly every candidate in the GOP race for President claims to fight for stopping illegal immigration. However, only U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, has a proven record of repeatedly and consistently fighting to do so. Ted Cruz believes we must secure the border and enforce our immigration laws. As President, Ted Cruz would rescind President Obama’s unconstitutional executive amnesty and cut off all federal funds to sanctuary cities that refuse to enforce immigration laws and cooperate in the capture of illegal immigrants who commit violent crimes. (Source: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3321761/posts)

Ben Carson

As with other crucial issues of our time, Carson seems unsure as to what he actually believes about illegal immigration. He has expressed a wide range of opinions, from the need to secure the border and enforce current immigration laws, to declaring the impossibility of deporting all of the illegal immigrants and suggesting, instead, an amnesty-type solution.

Carson in his books has staked out a hard line on immigration. Carson has called for both the border to be secured and strict interior enforcement measures. Carson has opposed illegal immigration and called for a system to ensure only legal immigrants are hired. However, in more recent rhetoric Carson has championed a national guest-worker program as a way for immigrants to be granted citizenship and favored a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants. In the late summer of 2015, Carson came out against rigorous enforcement of current deportation laws. Carson has flip flopped on the proposed national guest-worker program; first, Carson said that illegals would have to return to their home country, but in July of 2015 Carson amended his proposal to allow for illegals to remain in country as guest workers as long as they pay taxes. This proposal is very similar to the failed Gang of 8 amnesty bill and until the border is secured incentivizes illegal immigration. Additionally Carson directly slammed calls for enforcing deportation laws. Carson like all the other GOP candidates wants the border secure, but Carson’s support for creation of a new guest-worker program comprised of illegal immigrants is amnesty but by another name. (Source: https://www.conservativereview.com/2016-presidential-candidates/can...)

War on Terror

Ted Cruz

Senator Cruz has consistently taken a hard line as to what our response to Islamic terrorism and ISIS should be and he has the record to prove it. (See: https://www.tedcruz.org/record/stronger-safer-america/, https://www.conservativereview.com/2016-presidential-candidates/can...)

Cruz said that while he was at the Munich Security Conference, the President of Kurdistan revealed to him that ISIS was using rape as a political tool to instill fear within minority sects. “ISIS is the face of evil. They are beheading children. They are crucifying Christians. They are beheading journalists,” said Cruz. Cruz added, “The solution to ISIS is not eradicating poverty in the Middle East, or expanding medicaid in Iraq. The solution to ISIS is to hunt down and kill the terrorist leaders.” (Source: http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2015/02/11/%EF%BB%BFsen-...)

Ben Carson

Dr. Carson is very weak on foreign policy and far too idealistic in his stance on terrorism. He has no record that would demonstrate a willingness to protect America from the greatest evil we face in the 21st Century, so we can only judge him by his own words.

I actually wrote President Bush a letter before the war started and I said, you know, what I would do is I would use the bully pulpit at this moment of great national unity and, very much in a Kennedy-esque type fashion, say within 10 years we’re going to become petroleum independent,” Carson told TheDC. “And that would’ve been much more effective than going to war because, first of all, the moderate Arab states would’ve been terrified. And they would’ve handed over Osama Bin Laden and anybody else we wanted on a silver platter to keep us from doing that.” (Source: http://dailycaller.com/2013/03/19/ben-carsons-most-surprising-polic...#)

Israel

Ted Cruz

Cruz has been a loyal friend to Israel in words and actions.

He blasted the administration’s handling of the latest failed round of the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Cruz said a long-lasting peace agreement is unlikely unless and until Palestinian leadership agrees to acknowledge the right of Israel to exist as Jewish state, and until they “renounce terrorism.” Cruz ripped U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry for his private warning Israel could become an “apartheid state,” a statement for which Kerry later apologized. However, Cruz said the damage is already done, calling Kerry’s remark “grossly inaccurate” and “deeply offensive.” “Those words will certainly be repeated by enemies of Israel. They will say this is not us speaking. This is the Secretary of State of the United States,” Cruz said Wednesday. (Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/ted-cruz-israel-policy-2014-5)

Ben Carson

Carson has been outspoken about his support for Israel, stating,

“I would make it very clear that Israel and the United States have a long, cordial relationship, and I don’t think we should ever leave the Israelis in a position of wondering whether we support them,” Carson said in an hourlong interview with The Associated Press in Jerusalem. “And that certainly is a question now.” (http://news.yahoo.com/2016-hopeful-ben-carson-pledges-support-israe...)

However, his understanding of foreign governments, including America’s only Democratic ally in the Middle East, is demonstrably weak.

“What is the role of the Knesset?” Carson asked his Israeli guide of the country’s one-chamber legislature. The occasion was a Christmastime trip in 2014, his first to the nation that almost all presidential hopefuls visit. The guide explained its working and Israel’s political parties. “It sounds complex,” he said. “Why don’t they just adopt the system we have?” (http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-03-25/the-best-and-...)

Spending

Ted Cruz

As a Senator, Cruz has been one of the few exceptions to the “when in Washington, do as the politicians” mindset. Famous (or infamous depending upon your commitment to the Constitution) for shutting down the government in 2013 in an attempt to defund Obama Care, Cruz has been consistent in his opposition to excessive government spending.

During his time in the Senate, Cruz has mounted a fierce fight against wasteful government spending at every turn. He has consistently opposed spending with no budgetary offsets. Additionally, he led the effort to oppose the latest increase in the federal debt ceiling, receiving significant criticism from establishment Republicans. He has also not only voted for a balanced federal budget, but also opposed bloated omnibus spending bills and bailouts. Cruz has voted consistently to protect America’s fiscal security and to limit government to its constitutionally defined roles. (Source: https://www.conservativereview.com/2016-presidential-candidates/can...)

Ben Carson

Dr. Carson has expressed a very limited view on government spending, which does nothing more than highlight his lack of executive experience, which is arguably necessary to be an effective president.

Unlike the other candidates running, Carson does not have a legislative record to clearly define his fiscal record. Carson has made generally conservative statements about the budget, spending and debt, but these statements lacks specifics. His most specific proposal is a federal government hiring freeze, but that does nothing to immediately address the size of the government. (Source: https://www.conservativereview.com/2016-presidential-candidates/can...)

Liberty

1. Guns/2nd Amendment

Ted Cruz

The Texas Senator’s undying allegiance to the U.S. Constitution doesn’t waiver when it comes to the Second Amendment. Even in the face of tragedies that have had a tendency to transform the spines of many politicians to Jello, Ted Cruz has remained strong.

Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story described the Second Amendment as the palladium of our liberties. It is foundation to free men and free women being able to defend their homes, their families, their lives and liberty, and it also serves as a fundamental check on government tyranny… America was founded on a revolutionary concept. Namely, that our rights don’t come from government, they come from God Almighty. The natural rights of man include life, liberty, and property. Each of those rights is dependent upon being able to preserve the safety and security of your own family. In fact, the very first Congress not only acted to protect our Second Amendment rights but mandated the militia act; that adult free men must own a musket.” (Source: http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/04/09/exclusive-sen-te...)

 

Unfortunately that is the approach with President Obama on every issue, is that he seeks to tear us apart, he seeks to politicize it and it’s worth remembering he is ideological and he’s a radical,” Cruz said on “The Mark Levin Show,” as first reported by Buzzfeed News. “You know, as his former chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel said, ‘you never let a good crisis go to waste,’ and that is sadly his approach.” The GOP presidential hopeful said the president is using the shooting as a political ploy to take guns away from Americans. “We ought to do everything we can, for example, to be prosecuting the felons and fugitives who are trying to illegally buy guns,” Cruz said. “The Obama administration doesn’t do that. Instead, they try to use these tragedies as an excuse to come after the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens. “It’s unconstitutional, it’s cynical, and it’s wrong,” he added. (Source: http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/255803-cruz-obama-trying-to-tea...)

Ben Carson

Our 2nd Amendment rights are no laughing matter to most Conservatives. As has been the case with so many important issues, Dr. Carson has been unable to decide where he stands on this issue.

Dr. Carson has taken several different positions on the second amendment. While historically some statements initially sound like they line up in support of the 2nd Amendment, other statements come closer to Obama’s call to ban various weapons. Carson has embarked on a concerted effort to address previous statements and positions that were indicative of being open to gun control such as registration and bans. His goal is to put supporters of the Second Amendment at ease that he was misinterpreted or no longer holds those views. It should also be noted that while Carson has attempted to clarify his position he has not stated his position on policies that would strengthen the Second Amendment like a national concealed carry reciprocity and removing the interstate ban on sale of handguns. While Carson’s change in heart may be one of sincerity or a shift because of political winds, the reader will have to determine ultimately where they think Carson stands on the Second Amendment. (Source: https://www.conservativereview.com/2016-presidential-candidates/can...)

2. Parental Rights

Ted Cruz

While he believes in vaccines and has vaccinated his own children, Ted Cruz has taken a Constitutionally appropriate stand on federally mandated vaccines, standing by his opinion that issues such as these belong in the hands of the state governments, while expressing support for the vaccine exemptions that are allowed by most states.

Cruz, a Tea Party favorite, is known for his adherence to the Constitution and notes requirements on whether vaccinations should be mandatory is a state issue. “Most states include an exception clause for good faith religious convictions, and that’s an appropriate judgment for the states to make,” he said. “But on the question of whether kids should be vaccinated, the answer is obvious and there’s widespread agreement: Of course they should.” (Source: http://onpolitics.usatoday.com/2015/02/03/ted-cruz-vaccines-childre...)

Ben Carson

Dr. Carson enraged many Conservatives and Libertarians when he made clear his position that parents do not have a right to decide whether their children should be given vaccines. Whatever your beliefs on this particular issue, parental rights have always been sacred ground for liberty-minded Americans.

Although I strongly believe in individual rights and the rights of parents to raise their children as they see fit, I also recognize that public health and public safety are extremely important in our society,” Carson told The Hill. “Certain communicable diseases have been largely eradicated by immunization policies in this country and we should not allow those diseases to return by foregoing safe immunization programs, for philosophical, religious or other reasons when we have the means to eradicate them.” (Source: http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/02/03/dr-ben-carson-no...)

Faith

I have included this section because of the many Evangelical Christians that mistakenly believe that Dr. Carson is an Evangelical Christian.  This issue is important to me, as it was to our founders.  John Jay, the first Chief Justice of The United States Supreme Court, stated, “Providence has given to our people the choice of their rulers, and it is the duty as well as the privilege and interest of our Christian nation to select and prefer Christians for their rulers.”  This is one of my priorities when selecting a candidate to support.

Ted Cruz

Cruz is a Southern Baptist who has never been afraid of standing up for his faith. He was the keynote speaker at The Colorado Renewal Project conference, which emphasized the need for Christians and pastors to get involved in politics and influence our culture for Christ.

Speaking of his personal faith in a 2013 interview with CBN News he said: “At the end of the day, faith is not organized religion; it’s not going to a church. It is a personal relationship with Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour.” But although he rarely shies away from mixing his faith and politics, he said it was important for politicians “to avoid being a Pharisee, to avoid ostentatiously wrapping yourself in your faith, because I think in politics, it’s too easy for that to become a crutch, for that to be politically useful.” His father, Pastor Rafael Cruz, is director of Purifying Fire Ministries – the ministry of Suzanne Hinn (wife of Benny). Cuban-born Pastor Cruz has compared Barack Obama’s leadership approach to that of Fidel Castro, describing him as a Marxist who “seeks to destroy all concept of God”.  (Source:What Do We Know About The Faith Of The 2016 Presidential Candidates...)

Ben Carson

Carson is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist church, the religion of both his mother and his estranged father, who was an Adventist minister. Despite proclaiming himself to be a Christian, especially in the wake of the UCC Massacre in Oregon when he posted a photograph of himself to Facebook and Twitter with the caption, #IamAChristian, the Seventh-day Adventist church strays far from Biblical Christianity in many ways including their teaching that Sunday worship is the mark of the beast (http://www.letusreason.org/7thAd28.htm) and their doctrine of Annihilationism (http://christianity.about.com/od/glossary/a/Annihilationism.htm).

However, Ben Carson has voiced an acceptance of all religions that is contrary to the Biblical doctrine that Jesus is the only way to the Father and which contradicts the beliefs of the Adventist church itself.

Carson’s understanding of other religions is also atypically inclusive compared to many Christian conservatives. Carson has repeatedly voiced respect for multiple faith traditions, and described a tolerant approach to religious pluralism in his 2012 book America the Beautiful. “As a Christian, I am not the least bit offended by the beliefs of Hindus, Buddhists, Muslims, Mormons and so forth,” Carson wrote. “In fact, I am delighted to know that they believe in something that is more likely to make them into a reasonable human being, as long as they don’t allow the religion to be distorted by those seeking power and wealth.” (Source: Ben Carson Faith Profile)

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This looks like Boehners revenge on the public for daring to force him into retirement.

FOX News First: Oct. 27
By Chris Stirewalt
 
Buzz Cut:
·        Christian conservatives put Carson on top
·        GOP and Obama reach terms on spending, debt plan
·        Hillary drops gender bomb on Bernie
·        Jeb steps up Rubio attacks, again
·        Napoleon Dynamite P.D.
 
CHRISTIAN CONSERVATIVES PUT CARSON ON TOP
Each election cycle, we are told that this is the season in which social moderation and libertarianism is ascendant in the GOP. And then we get to voting…

New polls this week show the might of Christian conservatives within the Republican Party as Ben Carson’s rise takes him into what is shaping up to be a tie with Donald Trump, who had been the undisputed poll king since mid-July.

Carson today saw his second-ever lead in any national poll, and the NYT/CBS News survey conforms to the general trend: Carson has been gaining ground steadily since the last GOP debate six weeks ago.

And it’s no wonder.

Consider this from CBS: “Carson’s support among evangelicals has risen and he now leads Trump by more than 20 points with this group. Carson performs well among conservative Republicans and those who identify as Tea partiers. Trump does well with moderates….”

Almost half of Republican voters in 2012 identified themselves as “born-again Christians,” which should give you some sense of what that bloc means in a GOP primary.

Trump’s struggle with Christian conservatives helps explain what’s happening in Iowa, where Carson is now the clear frontrunner. In one recent poll there, 40 percent of likely caucus goers did not know if Trump was “a committed Christian” and another 28 percent said they were certain he was not. In a state where 60 percent of GOP caucus goers were self-identified Evangelical Christians, that’s not where you want to be.

But Trump is not yielding in his bid for evangelical votes, attacking Carson today on MSNBC for what seemed to be having conducted clinical trials in the 1990s on fetal tissue. Trump is also talking frequently again about his own faith, a “down the middle of the road” Presbyterianism.

(One can imagine the paroxysms of aguish in the hushed hallways of the proudly liberal main branch of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S. as Trump more and more loudly proclaims his devotion to the Scottish-born brand of Reformed theology. They will have to conduct thrice the number of same-sex marriages just to get their reputation restored.)

One senses that Trump has not yet learned the language of faith that prior Republican nominees have had to master to win support from the party’s conservative base. He has had great success with more moderate, less conspicuously Christian voters, but a drive to the nomination will require the GOP base to be on board.

And most worrisome for Trump, even beyond the polls, is what we learn in David Drucker’s dispatch from Carson’s campaign headquarters: The doctor is putting together a real campaign and running ads.

While Trump’s success has relied on endless coverage of his campaign events and sundry outrages, Carson is trying to make the leap to a durable organization. If he can do that, Trump might have to get used to not winning for a while.

Trump looks at upside on burkas - The Hill: “Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on Monday said the U.S. should not tell countries with large Muslim populations to forbid burkas. ‘They want to [wear them]!’ Trump said to his supporters at a town hall in Atkinson, N.H. ‘What the hell are we getting involved for? In fact it’s easier. You don’t have to put on makeup, look how beautiful everyone looks. Wouldn’t it be easier?’”

Kasich reacts to Trump’s Ford claims - On Monday’s “The Kelly File” Ohio Gov. John Kasich commented on Ford Motor Company’s decision to put a new plant in his state instead of Mexico. The Ford deal gained attention from Donald Trump’s comments, but Kasich said Trump shouldn’t be credited for the move: “We were able to get Ford because we got a great workforce.  We’ve taken Ohio from debt to surplus.  We’ve reduced taxes.  We do workforce.  I mean, we’re up 347,000 jobs in Ohio.  We’re a different state today, but we didn’t do it by, you know, going and raiding other states or all this bombast.” Watch here.

Jeb steps up Rubio attacks, again - Politico: “The campaign’s fixation on the Florida senator was evidenced by several slides, including one noting the allies of both Rubio and Bush who have sided with Bush’s campaign…The following slide called Rubio ‘a GOP Obama’ and noted their  ‘strikingly similar profiles…’”

DEAL OR NO DEAL? GOP AND OBAMA REACH TERMS ON SPENDING, DEBT PLAN
Fox News: “House Republican leaders have unveiled a tentative two-year budget agreement with the Obama White House aimed at preventing a partial government shutdown and forestalling a debt crisis. The text of the deal was posted to the House Rules Committee’s website late Monday, setting up a final debate and vote on the plan Wednesday. Sources told Fox News the House GOP leadership will likely require the support of almost all House Democrats and between 90 and 100 Republicans to see the agreement through. The measure was to be discussed further at a GOP meeting Tuesday morning.
 
The budget pact, coupled with a must-pass increase in the federal borrowing limit, would solve the thorniest issues awaiting Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., who is set to be elected Speaker of the House on Thursday. However, sources told Fox that conservatives opposed to Ryan as speaker may use the proposed budget as a reason to vote against the House Ways and Means committee chair. Not enough members were expected to defect to imperil Ryan’s ultimate election.”

[Watch Fox: Chief Congressional Correspondent Mike Emanuel is on Capitol Hill with the latest on the budget talks and speaker race.]

WITH YOUR SECOND CUP OF COFFEE…
If you have ever been in love with words you have probably been at least a little in love with Dylan Thomas. The tragic, elegiac poet was born on this day in 1914. His most famous work “Do not go gentle into that good night” has captured the imagination of many students to find their emotions met so fully and mirrored so well by the words of another. Thomas is among the most famous poets in America thanks in part to his frequent, dramatic radio readings and public tours in the United States. Thomas’ image as a tragically romantic figure was cemented by his death on a drunken binge in New York at age 39 in 1953. But much of Thomas’ work is tinged with hope as he wrote in a poem about his own birthday: “O may my heart’s truth Still be sung On this high hill in a year’s turning.”

Got a TIP from the RIGHT or the LEFT? Email FoxNewsFirst@FOXNEWS.COM

POLL CHECK
Real Clear Politics Averages
Obama Job Approval:
Approve 45.0 percent//Disapprove – 50.3 percent
Directions of Country: Right Direction 26.1 percent//Wrong Track – 63.4 percent

HILLARY DROPS GENDER BOMB ON BERNIE
Hillary Clinton
dealt the gender card over the weekend, hitting Vermont socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders for his comment on gun control at the Democrats debate Oct. 13 where he said “all the shouting in the world” wouldn’t keep guns out of the wrong hands. Clinton felt his phrasing was sexist saying, “I haven’t been shouting, but sometimes when a woman speaks out, some people think it’s shouting.” Sanders rejected the knock, saying Clinton was “taking words and misapplying them.”

More to come - National Review’s Rich Lowry says “Sanders should get used to it. If he remains a threat to Clinton in the early states, he’ll be deemed a cross between Archie Bunker and Andrew Dice Clay before it’s over… If Hillary is perfectly willing to use this tack against Sanders, a down-the-line supporter of the feminist policy agenda who has spent his adult life soaking in left-wing pieties, just wait until she gets into a race with Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, or any other Republican. No microaggression will be too “micro” to try to use to win a news cycle. Hillary will pretend to have the exquisite sensibilities of a campus feminist insisting she needs a “safe space” from the bristling hostility all around her.”

Hillary PAC launches web campaign - Hillary Clinton’s super PAC, Priorities USA, is launching a $1.5 million digital campaign called “Wrong For Us” to “hold GOP Presidential candidates accountable for their dangerous positions on key issues and contrast their records with Hillary Clinton’s lifelong commitment of standing strong for American families,” according to the group’s statement. The campaign includes paid digital ads running in primary and general election battleground states, and web videos.

[Surprise! - AP: “Ending months of delay that drew criticism from some fellow Democrats, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is planning to endorse Hillary Rodham Clinton for president, a person familiar with his plans told The Associated Press on Monday.”]

SOUND OFF: READERS RESPOND GOP 2016 POWER INDEX
“It’s always good to have opinions and call it analysis, I guess.  The Fox media has been for Trump and sneering about Bush from day one.  Hopefully, Carson will get the nomination so I'll be able to vote in this election.” – Anna Kingry

“Carson and Trump speak candidly about the many dysfunctional aspects of our current bloated government.  The endorsement should go to someone who outlines solutions to major problems and has experience in effective operations of a major enterprise.” – Terence Quigley

“I would participate in your power index, but I don’t even smoke pot.  And I assume that you must be smoking it a lot to come up with the line-up you have.” – Bob Lewis

I thought that Herman Cain had left the stage.....instead he has returned in the schizoid version of Dr. Carson and Donald Trump.  Neither of these gentlemen would or could carry one state.  They would return the Republican Party to a minority status or the rest of my life.  The Senate would be lost and the House would have an institutional majority  of Democrats.” – Steve Bresset

NAPOLEON DYNAMITE P.D.

LAT: “The police force in the Northern California town of about 10,000 people plans to equip its 20 officers with nunchakus, also known as nunchucks. Basically, they’re what martial arts legend Bruce Lee used – besides his fists of fury and feet -- to take down all those bad guys in his movies. The police department was looking for a versatile tool that would limit injuries to officers and the people they detained – but that would still be an effective means of subduing an unruly suspect. Anderson’s top brass decided nunchakus were the way to go, said Sgt. Casey Day. ‘It gives us the ability to control a suspect instead of striking them,” he said. Of course, if you’ve watched enough Lee movies you’ll notice that he didn’t use nunchakus to pacify his enemies. He beat them up with them. But Anderson police insist they can detain someone with them in a relatively peaceful way.’”

Mac..His revenge on us and his gift to P.Ryan........

Daily Presidential Tracking Poll

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Tuesday shows that 45% of Likely U.S. Voters approve of President Obama's job performance. Fifty-three percent (53%) disapprove (see trends).

The latest figures include 24% who Strongly Approve of the way Obama is performing as president and 41% who Strongly Disapprove. This gives him a Presidential Approval Index rating of -17.

Regular updates are posted Monday through Friday at 9:30 a.m. Eastern (sign up for free daily e-mail update).

Do most voters trust Hillary Clinton? Do they trust Donald Trump? Find out at 10:30 a.m. Eastern today.

Earlier surveying finds that Trump holds a double-digit lead in voter trust when it comes to han... and is slightly ahead in the area of national security. Clinton holds small leads on social policy and the environment.

In a hypothetical 2016 presidential matchup, Trump and Clinton are ..., but a sizable 22% prefer some other candidate.

Clinton continues to receive millions in campaign contributions to fuel her bid for the White House; Trump’s campaign is almost entirely self-financed. Most voters continue to believe the government should regulate campaign contributions, but they also still feel that publishing the names of all contributors is more important than lim.... 

Do Republican voters expect Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan, the pa... if he replaces John Boehner as speaker of the House?

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http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/obama_admin...

Another GOP Debate Airs Next Wednesday. Here’s the Lineup!

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Posted by Amy Miller    Wednesday, October 21, 2015 at 6:55pm | 10/21/2015 - 6:55pm

Brace yourselves…CNBC is coming

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CNBC has released the final lineup for next week’s GOP debate in Boulder, Colorado—and there are absolutely no surprises to be had.

The main stage will look very familiar: Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Marco Rubio, Carly Fiorina, Jeb Bush, Ted Cruz, Mike Huckabee, John Kasich, Chris Christie, and Rand Paul.

The top tier is missing Scott Walker, who appeared in last month’s CNN debate but has since withdrawn from the race. Bobby Jindal, Rick Santorum, George Pataki, and Lindsey Graham will hold down their usual places in the pre-primetime debate. Jim Gilmore did not qualify for either debate.

CNBC’s John Harwood has the details:



Larry Kudlow went into detail today on how he thinks it will be important for each candidate (especially John Kasich, who you don’t hear about very much and who Kudlow thinks “needs a good debate”) to message on economic growth:

According to The Hill, CNBC used “an average of qualifying polls from the major broadcast networks and Bloomberg from Sept. 17 through Oct. 21″ to decide who would make the main stage, who would participate in the early debate, and who would be livetweeting from home.

Rand Paul and Chris Christie should be worried, at least by CNBC’s standards; they both came dangerously close to the 2.5% polling line of demarcation separating the lower tier candidates from the main stage.

As far as expectations are concerned, I have to agree with Kudlow—I’m ready for real policy messaging. We got closer to it in the last debate, but at this point, the candidates—especially those taking up space on the main stage—have no excuse to substitute snark for substance.

That’s not to say I don’t expect a show. We’ll be covering the whole thing live, so be sure to tune in here next Wednesday!

Follow Amy on Twitter @ThatAmyMiller

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