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Donald J. Trump@realDonaldTrump 5 hrs5 hours ago
Thank you America! Get out & VOTE tomorrow! #Trump2016 #MakeAmericaGreatAgain https://www.facebook.com/DonaldTrump/posts/10156700735560725 …

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Trump Loves Dictators:

[video=youtube;73-xpW1tFV8]https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=2&v=73-xpW1tFV8[/video]
 

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http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2016/images/02/29/rel4a.-.2016.primaries.pdf



Highest Trump number I have seen in a national poll. I, unlike some people around here, actually post things that don't conform to what I think and/or want to happen.



However, of repub voters who do not prefer Trump, 35% say they will definitely not vote for him in the general election!



Of dem voters who do not prefer Hillary, only 20% say they will definitely not vote for her.
 

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CNN new survey finds Trump's lead is dominant, and his support tops that of his four remaining
opponents combined. The businessman tops his nearest competitor by more than 30 points:
49% back Trump, 16% Marco Rubio, 15% Ted Cruz, 10% Ben Carson and 6% John Kasich.

Trump is widely viewed as the candidate in the field who would be most effective at solving
the country's problems, 51% vs. 17% for Cruz, 13% for Rubio and 10% for Carson, and as
being best able to handle the responsibilities of being commander-in-chief, 48% say so,
compared with 17% for Cruz and 15% for Rubio. The billionaire is also seen as the one who
best understands the problems facing people like you, 46% Trump vs. 18% Cruz and 15% Rubio.

As accusations of dishonesty have flown between Trump, Cruz and Rubio, voters
say they are more apt to see Trump as honest and trustworthy. Asked who of the five
candidates is most honest and trustworthy, 35% name Trump, 22% Carson -- who has
largely stayed out of the mudslinging - 14% Cruz and 13% Rubio.
 

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b4f2e3e5e8106d37b8e636044b3bd9dc.jpg


Donald Trump Secretly Told The New York Times What He Really Thinks About Immigration

The details? Release the transcript.

Michael B. Thomas / AFP / Getty Images

The New York Times is sitting on an audio recording that some of its staff believes could deal a serious blow to Donald Trump who, in an off-the-record meeting with the newspaper, called into question whether he would stand by his own immigration views.

Trump visited the paper’s Manhattan headquarters on Tuesday, Jan. 5, part of a round of editorial board meetings that — as is traditional — the Democratic candidates for president and some of the Republicans attended. The meetings, conducted partly on the record and partly off the record in a 13th floor conference room, give candidates a chance to make their pitch for the paper’s endorsement.

After a dispute over Trump’s suggestion of tariffs on Chinese goods, the Times
released a portion of the recording. But that was from the on-the-record part of the session.

On Saturday, columnist Gail Collins, one of the attendees at the meeting (which also included editor-in-chief Dean Baquet), floated a bit of speculation in
her column:

The most optimistic analysis of Trump as a presidential candidate is that he just doesn’t believe in positions, except the ones you adopt for strategic purposes when you’re making a deal. So you obviously can’t explain how you’re going to deport 11 million undocumented immigrants, because it’s going to be the first bid in some future monster negotiation session.


Sources familiar with the recording and transcript — which have reached near-mythical status at the Times — tell me that the second sentence is a bit more than speculation. It reflects, instead, something Trump said about the flexibility of his hard-line anti-immigration stance.

So what exactly did Trump say about immigration, about deportations, about the wall? Did he abandon a core promise of his campaign in a private conversation with liberal power brokers in New York?

I wasn’t able to obtain the recording, or the transcript, and don’t know exactly what Trump said. Neither Baquet, Collins, nor various editorial board members I reached would comment on an off-the-record conversation, which the Times essentially said they cannot release without approval from Trump, given the nature of the off-the-record agreement.

Times editorial page editor Andrew Rosenthal told me he would not comment “on what was off the record at our meeting with him.”

“If [Trump] wants to call up and ask us to release this transcript, he’s free to do that and then we can decide what we would do,” Rosenthal said.

Trump, whose spokeswoman didn’t respond immediately to an email, can resolve this mystery: He can ask the Times to release the tape. Will he?

http://www.buzzfeed.com/bensmith/trump-tape#.ncwgVNPk3
 

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Trump detractors are acting like Trump at his magnificent rallies called Duke up on stage
with him to emphasize his endorsement. The wackiest & best has endorsed presidential
candidates from Washington to BO. Let's face it Obama didn't renounce Reverend Wright
tell his braintrust told him he had to.

Jeff Sessions, Sheriff Joe Arpio, Palin, Chris Christie, Reverend Jeffress & Gerry Falwell Jr.
as strong an endorsement ensemble as ever presented he brought on stage proud of
their support. He has no use for the likes of Duke & has said so until he's blue in the face,
but if he wants to support him it's nothing out of the ordinary. Whup-de-damn do!
How silly are the detractors about as silly as Ruio doing his pathetic Don Rickles imitation.
 

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Bookmaker Pays Out Early on Trump Winning Republican Nomination

Dara Doyle

March 2, 2016 — 5:10 AM EST


Paddy Power Betfair Plc, Ireland’s largest bookmaker, is paying out 120,000 euros ($130,000) on Donald Trump winning the U.S. Republican presidential nomination.
Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton each won seven states on their way to commanding victories in Super Tuesday contests.

“Since 1988, the candidate to clean up on Super Tuesday has always gone onto win their party’s nomination,” the Dublin-based bookmaker said in e-mailed statement on Wednesday.

Gambling companies pay out early when they regard the result as a foregone conclusion, in part because it draws publicity and in part because gamblers often recycle winnings into other wagers. For example, Paddy Power paid out early on David Cameron’s 2010 election victory and the 2014 Scottish referendum result.

Trump’s odds indicate he has a 33 pecent chance of winning the White House, while Clinton has a 65 percent shot, Paddy Power Betfair said.
 

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http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/gop-donors-brand-trump-a-racist-in-new-ad/article/2584732

Our Principles PAC, a newly-minted political action committee aimed at stopping Donald Trump, released a new web-based ad Wednesday that says Trump is "unelectable" given his hesitation in condemning an apparent endorsement from a former member of the Ku Klux Klan.


Bunch of miserable fucking vermin...basically doing the dimocrap party's dirty work for them. It should tell you something when your ads are going to look exactly the same as dim ads a few months down the road. Where the fuck was any of this against Obama for the last seven years?

Labeling someone a racist is typically the last half-court shot left in the arsenal. I wonder whether there are enough dumb fucks in this country who will buy the Big Lie (probably). Congrats, though, GOPe...on becoming the same vile scum race hustlers your buddies in the dimocrap party have made a living off of doing. This "principled" PAC probably has no principles other than to maintain their status quo. Looking at that donor list, it seems to be the likeliest option to me.
 

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[h=2]Trump's 'anti-immigration wall' talk sparks migrant rush on U.S.-Mexico border[/h]
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NEW Trump's rise to the front of the Republican pack in recent months has not gone unnoticed and is partly behind a spike in the numbers of Mexican and Central American migrants trying to enter the country.
 

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'Donald is what this country needs': Billionaire Carl Icahn backs his longtime friend in race for the White House but rules out joining a Trump government

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Billionaire Carl Icahn has backed Donald Trump for the Republican nomination but ruled out joining any future government. The New York hedge fund investor and longtime friend of Trump said the real estate mogul ' is what this country needs' as he called on the GOP to rally behind their front runner. Icahn said he would happily advise Trump as president but said he did not want to be actively involved in politics.





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Icahn said Trump 'is what this country needs' as he called on the GOP to rally behind their front runner

.

Billionaire Carl Icahn has backed Donald Trump for the Republican nomination but ruled out joining any future government.
The New York hedge fund investor and longtime friend of Trump said the real estate mogul 'is what this country needs' as he called on the GOP to rally behind their front runner.
Speaking to Fox Business during their Super Tuesday coverage, Icahn said he would happily advise Trump as president but said he did not want to be actively involved in politics.


.
'Donald is what this country needs at this time,' the 80-year-old business magnate said.
'Maybe in the background, I certainly would be happy to talk to Donald and discuss different problems with him. I'm certainly not going to get into the government,' he added.
Icahn has previously been touted as a potential business secretary if Trump is elected, and endorsed The Donald in September last year after backing his tax reform plans.


.

The former Wall Street stockbroker also laid into senior Republicans for not supporting Trump, despite his commanding lead in the race for the nomination.
'Donald is speaking out, he's saying we've got to do something, we've got to help the little guy,' Icahn said.
'I think he has absolutely touched a nerve and it's time the Republican Party coalesced and said, "OK, let's get Hillary Clinton".'


.


He went on to criticize Clinton for calling for change and said electing the Democrat would be 'a horrible decision for America'.
Icahn said: 'I listen to her speak and she keeps talking about the fact that we have to do something for the little guy. Well where the hell has she been for the last 20 years?
'Then she says we have to do something for the veterans. Where was she in Benghazi? It's insane.'
The billionaire also predicted Trump would give Clinton a rough ride if she wins the Democratic nomination.
'I'm like Donald, I tell it like it is,' Icahn said. 'He's no Bernie Sanders.
'I think Bernie Sanders made a mistake in not bringing up the problems that she has. Because she does have problems - legitimate problems - and Donald's not going to do that.'


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[h=2]Super PAC supporting Hillary says it 'will not make the same mistake' as the GOP and ignore The Donald: We take the threat of a Trump presidency seriously [/h]
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In a new memo, Hillary Clinton's super PAC is reassuring supporters that 'the threat of a Donald Trump presidency' is being taken 'seriously,' saying the GOP committed 'political malpractice.'
 

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More good news for Trump: Billionaire Koch brothers will NOT spend money attacking frontrunner in bid to take him out of Republican White House race

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Powerful conservative mega donors Charles and David Koch will not use their $400 million political funds to run attacks on Donald Trump during the Republican primary season, they have said.





The Koch brothers, the most powerful conservative mega donors in the United States, will not use their $400 million political arsenal to block Republican front-runner Donald Trump's path to the presidential nomination, a spokesman told Reuters on Wednesday.
'We have no plans to get involved in the primary,' said James Davis, spokesman for Freedom Partners, the Charles and David Koch's political umbrella group.
He would not elaborate on what the billionaire industrialists' strategy would be for the Nov. 8 general election to succeed Democratic President Barack Obama.


.

Donors and media reports have speculated since a Koch brothers summit in January that they would launch a 'Trump Intervention,' which would involve deploying the Kochs' vast political network to target the billionaire businessman and former reality TV star in hopes of removing him from the Republican race.
Many Republican party elites and business backers are eager to see Trump, a political outsider who has tapped into America's rising anti-establishment sentiment, fail in his bid for the nomination.
But with Trump racking up a series of sizeable wins in the early nominating contests, there is a growing sense of inevitability he will win the party's mantle.
Three sources close to the Koch brothers, who oppose Trump's protectionist trade rhetoric and views on immigration, said the Kochs were concerned they had not yet seen any attack on Trump stick.


.

The brothers are also smarting from the millions they pumped into the 2012 Republican presidential bids of Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney, only to see both candidacies fail, the sources said.
The move will come as a blow to some within the Republican establishment who had been hoping to enlist significant financial support in an effort to stop Trump.
The influence of the Koch brothers, on top of the strength of their arsenal, would have been a significant boost to any 'dump Trump' insurgency.
But there is increasing feeling within the party that it woke up to the threat posed by Trump far too late to be able to counter it.
That was tacitly acknowledged by Mitch McConnell, who the New York Times reported has given permission to senators to run advertising distancing themselves from Trump in the run-up to elections.
Meanwhile Paul Ryan, who as House Speaker is the most senior figure in the party and will chare the July convention in Cleveland, Ohio, which will anoint the White House candidate denounced Trump for not more forcefully disavowing an endorsement from Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke.
'This party does not prey on people’s prejudices,' Ryan said.


.


When Trump celebrated his Super Tuesday victories and took questions from reporters in Florida, he was asked about the push back he was receiving from Ryan and others on Capitol Hill.
'I'm going to get along great with Congress, OK?' Trump said. 'Paul Ryan, I don't know him well, but I'm sure I'm going to get along great with him.'
'And if I don't?' Trump said. 'He's gonna have to pay a big price, OK?'
And Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina senator who dropped his own White House bid, has also called for action against Trump, saying that he would back Ted Cruz.
'Ted Cruz is not my favorite by any means,' he told CBS. 'But we may be in a position where rallying around Ted Cruz is the only way to stop Donald Trump, and I'm not so sure that would work.'
The comments came as the #NeverTrump hashtag spread across Twitter.
Romney, the Republican nominee four years ago, announced plans to speak on the 'state of the 2016 presidential race' Thursday in Utah.
The former Massachusetts governor has moved aggressively to take on Trump in recent days, saying the billionaire's unreleased tax returns might contain 'bombshells'.
However, he was not expected to endorse a candidate or announce a late entry into the race himself.
The best hope the establishment have for defeating Trump is to keep him from getting a majority of delegates in the primary cycle so that the convention is used to determine the winner.
However such a move - known as a brokered convention - would be hugely risky. The last Republican brokered convention was in 1948.
And Franklin D. Roosevelt is the last presidential candidate to have won an election after a brokered convention.


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[h=2]'Thick-skinned' Melania Trump claims she and Donald have NEVER had a fight in their 20-year relationship and reveals her plans to be a 'perfectionist' First Lady[/h][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]
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[/FONT]Melania Trump (left, and right with Fox News' Greta Van Susteren) has claimed she and Donald (inset, with Melania) have never had a fight during their 20-year relationship. Melania, who could be First Lady this time next year, said she often tells her husband what she thinks of his policy ideas - even if she does not like them. Perhaps the reason the couple have never fallen out is because of Melania's 'thick skin'. She said she can weather criticism of her or her husband in the media because she grew used to being in the limelight from her time as a fashion icon. She added that Trump 'doesn't sleep much' and they see less of each other because of his presidential campaign. Melania said if Donald is elected she will be a 'perfectionist' First Lady. She also made a thinly-veiled swipe at the Republican establishment's failure to rally behind Trump, as well as speaking about Hillary Clinton.
 

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