Donald Trump, America's own Mussolini with double the vulgarity
Date
February 1, 2016
Q
Only the former owner of The Telegraph, Conrad Black, has endorsed his friend The Donald, on the grounds he would discover maturity faced with the responsibility of leading the Free World.
While this might be true, the risk is too great; that is why nearly 70 per cent of Republican voters who don't support Trump are telling pollsters they "possibly" or "probably" won't vote for him as president.
Assuming Hillary Clinton isn't indicted by the FBI over her classified emails, and assuming that Bernie Sanders' campaign fizzles out, and assuming ex-New York mayor Michael Bloomberg doesn't mount a White House run of his own, Trump will not win a single state unless those 70 per cent of Republicans return to the GOP camp.
http://www.theage.com.au/world/us-e...ith-double-the-vulgarity-20160131-gmieu5.html
Clinton is a beatable candidate - distrusted, almost 70 years old, a boring speaker with a bad senatorial record and a worse one as secretary of state - yet the Republicans seem about to select the one person who makes her look statesmanlike and almost likeable.
Republicans should rue the day Roosevelt ensured that popular primaries chose candidates rather than the old system of party bosses in smoke-filled rooms, who, if they had that power today would choose Marco Rubio or John Kasich or Jeb Bush, i.e. someone decent who moreover can win.
Telegraph, London
UQ
Date
February 1, 2016
Q
Only the former owner of The Telegraph, Conrad Black, has endorsed his friend The Donald, on the grounds he would discover maturity faced with the responsibility of leading the Free World.
While this might be true, the risk is too great; that is why nearly 70 per cent of Republican voters who don't support Trump are telling pollsters they "possibly" or "probably" won't vote for him as president.
Assuming Hillary Clinton isn't indicted by the FBI over her classified emails, and assuming that Bernie Sanders' campaign fizzles out, and assuming ex-New York mayor Michael Bloomberg doesn't mount a White House run of his own, Trump will not win a single state unless those 70 per cent of Republicans return to the GOP camp.
http://www.theage.com.au/world/us-e...ith-double-the-vulgarity-20160131-gmieu5.html
Clinton is a beatable candidate - distrusted, almost 70 years old, a boring speaker with a bad senatorial record and a worse one as secretary of state - yet the Republicans seem about to select the one person who makes her look statesmanlike and almost likeable.
Republicans should rue the day Roosevelt ensured that popular primaries chose candidates rather than the old system of party bosses in smoke-filled rooms, who, if they had that power today would choose Marco Rubio or John Kasich or Jeb Bush, i.e. someone decent who moreover can win.
Telegraph, London
UQ
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