Citizens Dedicated To Preserving Our Constitutional Republic
REPUBLICAN PARTY:
Businessman Donald Trump (New York) |
Former Governor Jeb Bush (Florida) |
Dr. Ben Carson (Florida) |
Governor Chris Christie (New Jersey) |
US Senator Ted Cruz (Texas) |
Former IRS Commissioner Mark Everson (Mississippi) |
Businesswoman Carly Fiorina (Virginia) |
Former Governor Jim Gilmore (Virginia) |
US Senator Lindsey Graham (South Carolina) |
Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee (Florida) |
Governor Bobby Jindal (Louisiana) |
Governor John Kasich (Ohio) |
Former Governor George Pataki (New York) |
US Senator Rand Paul (Kentucky) |
US Senator Marco Rubio (Florida) |
Former US Senator Rick Santorum (Pennsylvania) |
|
Tags:
Replies are closed for this discussion.
'It's very difficult to win a debate when you don't have the opportunity to speak the same amount of time on issues'
Yah think?
lol
White House says it 'noticed' Clinton's inconsistent statement
'The whole thing is embarrassing.'
Time for Rand to pack it in... it is all over but the crying.....
I am getting quite tired of a couple of others. They need to pull out soon. It is annoying.
'The Taliban is not on the wane, as he tried to convince the American people of for years'
Promises broad tax cuts
UP TO DATE VOTER FRAUD NEWS and RESOURCES
Go here :
Links posted for your information in the middle of page.
http://wethepeopleusa.ning.com/profiles/profile/show?id=loveofcountry
by Ramesh Ponnuru July 13, 2015 1:39 PM
Donald Trump is not going to be the Republican presidential nominee. His unfavorable numbers among Republicans are too high for that, and Republican voters are too sensible. He is not going to be a huge threat as a third-party candidate in November 2016, since he will first have gone through the humiliation of losing the Republican primaries. He is not going to pull the Republican nominee too far to the right. The other Republican candidates already know that most Republican voters want the federal government to stop illegal immigration, and that a large number of them want it intensely. The candidates would say most of the same things they are saying about that topic if Trump did not exist. He is not going to render the Republican brand toxic. Voters will be able to distinguish between him and the eventual party nominee. Only left-wing partisans think he is a spokesman for the party. Given all of this, it seems to me that the correct response by the other candidates, and by other anti-Trump Republicans, is not to denounce him ever more loudly or to try to change the debate rules to exclude him or to treat him with “kid gloves” (as a misleading headline in The Hill puts it). It’s to ignore him. Don’t get distracted from the fundamental tasks of a campaign, don’t give him the attention he wants, don’t get dragged down to his level. In a debate, just outclass him — which should be feasible.
HA HA HA HA !
bet Rame would like to have that piece back!
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/421110/republicans-shouldnt-pa...
Legislative News
Congressional Quarterly
C-SPAN
Roll Call
Stateline.org
The Hill
Washington Post
Politics Section
Boston Globe
Dallas News
Denver Post
Los Angeles Times
Minneapolis Star Tribune
Stop Island Park Wildlife Overpasses
Seattle Times
NY Times
Washington Post
Washington Times
USA Today
Beltway Buzz
CQ Politics
First Read
The Hotline
The Note
The Page
Washington Wire
Mike Allen's Playbook
Politico
Roll Call
The Hill
CNN Political Ticker
The Swamp
The Fix
Washington Whispers
Fish Bowl DC
Online Political Sites
Alternative Press Index
Capitol Hill Blue
CommonDreams.org
Digg.com Politics
Drudge Report
Political Insider
Political Wire
Politico
PopPolitics
Real Clear Politics
Salon.com
Slate
Stateline.org
TCOT Report
TomPaine.com
US Politics Guide
© 2024 Created by WTPUSA. Powered by