2024 Field

Vivek unfortunately is a 129 IQ. Just not quite there

I’m guessing he’s much higher. Young politicians, especially inexperienced ones, make mistakes. I’m still watching Vivek over a longer time and think he’ll have a meaningful career in politics if he wants it. There is only one choice now though that has a chance.

The amount of obsession some of you have with Trump is hysterical. I know I can always come here to get updates. Just like the Goldy and 57s used to do.
 
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There is no grand conspiracy or even small tawdry conspiracy. And certainly no outright desperation. The Iowa rules regarding who can participate and allowing late changes in party registration have been in place for a long time. They apply to everyone.
 
I’m guessing he’s much higher. Young politicians, especially inexperienced ones, make mistakes. I’m still watching Vivek over a longer time and think he’ll have a meaningful career in politics if he wants it. There is only one choice now though that has a chance.

The amount of obsession some of you have with Trump is hysterical. I know I can always come here to get updates. Just like the Goldy and 57s used to do.

"There is only one"

Says the cultist
 
Former President Donald J. Trump has reached back into his brand of nativism to accuse a political opponent of color — this time, Nikki Haley — of not being a real American eligible for the presidency as he defends his own eligibility for the ballot under the Constitution.

On his social media site on Monday, Mr. Trump reposted a report by The Gateway Pundit, a website influential in the pro-Trump community that traffics in all manner of conspiracy theories, sowing doubt about Ms. Haley’s U.S. citizenship as polls show her cutting into Mr. Trump’s lead in New Hampshire. The report falsely claims that because Ms. Haley’s Indian immigrant parents were not yet citizens when she was born in South Carolina, she is disqualified “from presidential or vice-presidential candidacy under the 12th amendment.”

Ms. Haley was born in the United States in 1972, automatically becoming a citizen.

Mr. Trump has done this before. His political rise was powered by his false and racist claim that Barack Obama, then the president, was born in Kenya and therefore ineligible for the White House. In 2016, he charged that his closest rival that election year, Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, was ineligible for the ballot because he was born in Canada to an American mother.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/10/...e_code=1.Nk0.5yUo.G9jpE30uvWVB&smid=url-share

recidivism on the racist birtherism
 
He wanted Cruz off the ballot.

He wanted RDS removed as governor.

He wants Haley off the ballot.

He wants my sympathy as leftists want him off the ballot

I don't have any more for him. He is a leftist
 
There is no grand conspiracy or even small tawdry conspiracy. And certainly no outright desperation. The Iowa rules regarding who can participate and allowing late changes in party registration have been in place for a long time. They apply to everyone.

There is never a grand conspiracy in your mind aside when it’s OMB and your endless hoaxes that get laughed out of existence.
 
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Polls are changing so fast!

Can’t wait to see how close the real results in Iowa track to all those “fake” polls.
 
Interesting column from EJ Dionne:

Is the Republican Party irrevocably committed to Donald Trump? GOP voters will begin to answer this consequential question in Iowa on Monday and eight days later in New Hampshire. Believe it or not, there is a chance the verdict will be no.

This is not one of those defy-the-conventional-wisdom-for-the-heck-of-it takes. You can’t look at polls outside New Hampshire and pretend the Las Vegas odds-makers are wrong in viewing Trump as the overwhelming favorite to win the Republican nomination.

But there is a difference between likelihood and inevitability, just as there is a difference between the few Republicans who are firmly anti-Trump and a larger group willing to ponder escorting him off the national stage.

The candidate who has understood these distinctions best is former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley. This is why she is poised to run second to Trump in Iowa and has a real chance of beating him in New Hampshire. Trump’s campaign clearly sees the threat and has moved from attacking Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to assailing her.

Republican pollster Kristen Soltis Anderson offered a shrewd and appropriately tentative reading of the party’s electorate: “There’s not an anti-Trump majority,” she told me. “But it might be possible to build a Beyond Trump Majority.”

The decisive GOP group, she said, are voters who “say there are things they like about Trump, and things they don’t like about Trump.” Some, maybe many, will vote for him anyway because they “harbor the hope that they can get good Trump and bad Trump will go away.” But others are persuadable because “bad Trump” still troubles them.

The same polling showing Trump with a strong lead in Iowa also offered glimmers of the ambivalence about him. A December CBS News-YouGov poll found that found that 76 percent of likely caucus-goers were considering voting for Trump for a variety of reasons, including — by big margins — that they felt “things were better under Trump” and that “he represents Iowa values.”

But only 54 percent said their support reflected a desire “to show support for his legal fights,” and just 40 percent said they backed him because they “want payback for 2020.” In other words, about half of Trump’s potential voters rejected two of the core rationales he offers for his candidacy.

Unlike DeSantis, who ran, in the words of Iowa State University political scientist David Peterson, as “diet Trump,” Haley realized there was a market for a Republican candidate who was stylistically different from Trump, could draw more middle-of-the-road voters in November and move the country past the “chaos” of the Trump era.

But unlike former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, whose frontal attacks on Trump endeared him to many Democrats and the relatively small constituency of anti-Trumpers in the party, Haley knew she couldn’t ask Republicans who had voted for Trump twice to admit they were wrong. “She has managed to walk a fine line,” Republican pollster Whit Ayres told me. “She avoided the Chris Christie message that Trump is unfit for office while at the same time making a case that it’s time to move on."

https://wapo.st/48z4F2Z
 
[tw]1746541106446115084[/tw]

Polls are changing so fast!

Can’t wait to see how close the real results in Iowa track to all those “fake” polls.

I love how you respond to my posts without actually engaging with them.

Such cowardice. Just like your god
 
Interesting column from EJ Dionne:

Is the Republican Party irrevocably committed to Donald Trump? GOP voters will begin to answer this consequential question in Iowa on Monday and eight days later in New Hampshire. Believe it or not, there is a chance the verdict will be no.

This is not one of those defy-the-conventional-wisdom-for-the-heck-of-it takes. You can’t look at polls outside New Hampshire and pretend the Las Vegas odds-makers are wrong in viewing Trump as the overwhelming favorite to win the Republican nomination.

But there is a difference between likelihood and inevitability, just as there is a difference between the few Republicans who are firmly anti-Trump and a larger group willing to ponder escorting him off the national stage.

The candidate who has understood these distinctions best is former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley. This is why she is poised to run second to Trump in Iowa and has a real chance of beating him in New Hampshire. Trump’s campaign clearly sees the threat and has moved from attacking Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to assailing her.

Republican pollster Kristen Soltis Anderson offered a shrewd and appropriately tentative reading of the party’s electorate: “There’s not an anti-Trump majority,” she told me. “But it might be possible to build a Beyond Trump Majority.”

The decisive GOP group, she said, are voters who “say there are things they like about Trump, and things they don’t like about Trump.” Some, maybe many, will vote for him anyway because they “harbor the hope that they can get good Trump and bad Trump will go away.” But others are persuadable because “bad Trump” still troubles them.

The same polling showing Trump with a strong lead in Iowa also offered glimmers of the ambivalence about him. A December CBS News-YouGov poll found that found that 76 percent of likely caucus-goers were considering voting for Trump for a variety of reasons, including — by big margins — that they felt “things were better under Trump” and that “he represents Iowa values.”

But only 54 percent said their support reflected a desire “to show support for his legal fights,” and just 40 percent said they backed him because they “want payback for 2020.” In other words, about half of Trump’s potential voters rejected two of the core rationales he offers for his candidacy.

Unlike DeSantis, who ran, in the words of Iowa State University political scientist David Peterson, as “diet Trump,” Haley realized there was a market for a Republican candidate who was stylistically different from Trump, could draw more middle-of-the-road voters in November and move the country past the “chaos” of the Trump era.

But unlike former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, whose frontal attacks on Trump endeared him to many Democrats and the relatively small constituency of anti-Trumpers in the party, Haley knew she couldn’t ask Republicans who had voted for Trump twice to admit they were wrong. “She has managed to walk a fine line,” Republican pollster Whit Ayres told me. “She avoided the Chris Christie message that Trump is unfit for office while at the same time making a case that it’s time to move on."

https://wapo.st/48z4F2Z

There is a chance the big bad orange man will be out of our lives!

Oh wait - the people voted for him resoundingly again?

Damn!
 
We are all aware that Biden had 81m ballots counted for the two month exercise that was the 2020 “election”

Your boy filed dozens of lawsuits and had plenty of opportunities to have his claims adjudicated. He lost them all cuz he had nothing. Zip. Nada. So he tried an illegal and extraconstitutional end run. He will be duly punished for that. As he should be.
 
Your boy filed dozens of lawsuits and had plenty of opportunities to have his claims adjudicated. He lost them all cuz he had nothing. Zip. Nada. So he tried an illegal and extraconstitutional end run. He will be duly punished for that. As he should be.

Yeah - I know your response to the obvious fraud. Lean on courts avoiding adjudicating facts and then when facts where actually heard trumps lawyers win almost 70% of the time.

Pesky little facts they are…
 
Yeah - I know your response to the obvious fraud. Lean on courts avoiding adjudicating facts and then when facts where actually heard trumps lawyers win almost 70% of the time.

Pesky little facts they are…

Many of those judges were conservative Republicans. Some of them appointed by the man himself. There was no conspiracy. No fraud. Obvious and otherwise. Dozens of judges ruled that your boy's complaints had no substance to them.
 
Many of those judges were conservative Republicans. Some of them appointed by the man himself. There was no conspiracy. No fraud. Obvious and otherwise. Dozens of judges ruled that your boy's complaints had no substance to them.

When the actual facts of the case are adjudicated trumps and his lawyers won majority of the time.

Just suggesting you clean up your deza but let’s not kid ourselves here. That’ll never happen. Slava Ukraine!
 
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