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http://www.youngcons.com/donald-trump-if-i-lose-iowa-it-was-a-waste-of-time/

For the first time, GOP front-runner Donald Trump is admitting he may lose Iowa.

“Unless I win, I would consider this a big, fat, beautiful—and, by the way, a very expensive—waste of time,” Trump said this weekend, speaking to supporters during a whirlwind tour of Iowa.
Trump also seemed to acknowledge that a loss in Iowa could unravel his campaign.
“If I don’t win, maybe bad things happen,” he said.

The Phony is now trying to make it seem like finishing 2nd is a great accomplishment, and no biggie, but his words BEFORE his loss reveal the truth. Of course his sheep will just nod and agree with whatever he says, whenever he says it.
:):):):)
 

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[h=1]Empty Suit Scott Brown will endorse Trump in NH[/h]I wonder if his endorsement will be as effective as Palin's?

Former Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown, a moderate Republican who two years ago ran for Senate in New Hampshire, will endorse Donald Trump at a rally, the Washington Post reports.

“Brown’s decision has been closely guarded for days, but it was confirmed by two people familiar with the event, where Brown will appear onstage with the candidate.

https://politicalwire.com/2016/02/02/brown-will-endorse-trump-in-new-hampshire/

:):):):)
 

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Meet the man behind Loser.com, the Internet’s OG troll

by NATT GARUN Tweet — 12h ago in INSIDER



You might have never heard of Brian Connelly, but you certainly have seen his contributions to the Web. As the owner of Loser.com, Connelly could be the internet’s most underrated prankster, having used the domain as a redirect to sites of famous figures he dislikes.
It started as a joke with his co-workers back in the ’90s when he first purchased the domain and rigged email accounts of those who didn’t pay him to work under Loser.com. Decades later, he would use it to target the likes of Reddit, Kanye West, Al Gore, Charlie Sheen, and most recently, Donald Trump.
“The reason why I did it was because we can’t have a xenophobe as President, ” Connelly tells me. “My wife and I were flabbergasted about Trump’s attacks on Muslims. Fear is just not a good platform to stand up on.”
Connelly, a technical consultant based in South Carolina, says he changed the domain redirect since mid-December, though it only gained notoriety after the Iowa caucus results where Trump came second to Ted Cruz in the Republican primaries.
In March 2015, when the site redirected to Kanye West after he dissed Beck’s Grammy win, Loser.com was receiving “hundreds of thousands of hits” a day, he claims. I spoke to Connelly while he was driving home from work so he hasn’t checked the statistics, but he estimates at least double that number by next week.
Having owned the domain for more than 20 years, Connelly says he’s never figured out how to use it commercially. “Loser.com is something that’s hard to wrap your head around in making financially viable,” he says with a laugh. “You can’t go out and ask people to invest in a loser!”
But it’s not like he hasn’t tried. A quick search brings up a Quora post on what to do with the domain, and he often asks Twitter for ideas.
Since the Iowa Presidential Primary caucuses last night, Connelly says no one has approached him to buy the domain yet – though it’s happened many times before. “Offers have come in around the $100,000 range,” he claims. “But I’m not starving at this point so I haven’t been inspired to move away from it.”
A father to teenage kids, Connelly says he likes keeping up with pop culture and general news, and occasionally checks in on Twitter to watch the chatter around Loser.com.
“When I see something funny, I’ll like or heart it,” he says, “But even still, nobody knows who I am.” Connelly’s account currently has 99 followers at the time of publication.
So far, he’s glad to see that the reaction to the Trump redirect has been mostly positive, and he plans to keep the domain as is throughout the election season. “The common negative email so far has been, ‘You’ll be sorry when Trump finds out!’ – but I’ve tweeted Trump personally about the site,” Connelly says. “Like hell, I’m scared.”
In case you were curious, Connelly is a Bernie man.
loser.com
 

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[h=2]CALENDAR[/h][h=3]US election 2016[/h]
Z


February 1: Iowa caucuses. First votes of primary election cast
February 9: New Hampshire primary
February 20: Republican primary in South Carolina. Democratic caucuses in Nevada
February 23: Republican caucuses in Nevada
February 27: Democratic primary in South Carolina
March 1: Super Tuesday. Thirteen states, many in the south-eastern US, go to the polls
March 15: Super Tuesday part two. Five states, including Florida, go to the polls
June 7: Last primary election. Five states, including California, go to the polls
July 18 to 21: Republican National Convention
July 25 to 27: Democratic National Convention
November 8: Presidential election
 

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.I totally tuned out of Fox news in the run-up to Iowa.....Used to constantly have it on in the background even at
work listening to radio podcasts....it was sickening how every entity of News Corp was simultaneously attacking Trump....
even people that I had respected for years....They totally alienated me.
Now I watch Morning Joe, and listen to MTP daily on the way home at night.....never thought I'd see
the day. Go to Fox News if you need a fix for the unfair and unbalanced.
 

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MIRROR – Former US President Jimmy Carter tonight told the UK Parliament he wants Donald Trump to land the Republican nomination ahead of frontrunner Ted Cruz.

Speaking on a visit to Britain, the 91-year-old Democrat warned Mr Cruz is committed to “Far Right-wing politics” which he would pursue “aggressively” if he makes it to the White House.

By contrast, Carter said, outspoken billionaire Mr Trump has no fixed views at all.

“If I had a choice of Republican nominees, between Cruz and Trump, I think I would choose. Trump – which may surprise some of you,” he told an audience in the House of Lords.

“The reason is, Trump has proven already that he is completely malleable.

“I don’t think he has any fixed opinion that he would fight for."

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Donald Trump's plane makes emergency landing

Private 757 reports engine trouble before landing safely in Nashville en route to Little Rock, Arkansas

PRIVATE-PLANE-trum_3172362b.jpg
Donald Trump, the US businessman better known for hosting The Apprentice, owns a personalised private jet, seen above at Prestwick Airport in Scotland, in May 2014 Photo: Rex Features








By Agencies

3:33AM GMT 04 Feb 2016


Donald Trump's plane was forced to make an emergency landing in Nashville, Tennessee, on Wednesday because of engine trouble.

The Boeing 757 was on its way from Mr Trump's home base of New York to Little Rock, Arkansas, where the property mogul and Republican presidential candidate was due to address a rally.

The private jet landed safely at 4:40 pm after reporting engine problems, according to the Federal Aviation Authority, which said it would investigate the incident.

Mr Trump travelled the rest of the way in a charter aircraft, a campaign spokeswoman said.



Mr Trump eventually arrived an hour and a half late in Little Rock where was addressed more than 11,500 people.
He said it was "rough" getting there but insisted there was "no way" he would return to New York instead of continuing on to Little Rock.
"I love Arkansas," he said.


Just making a quick pit stop. Welcome to BNA, @realDonaldTrump!
CaUtrMgUMAAohRS.jpg







2:32 p.m. - 3 Feb 2016


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I have a different take.

NH is the state that is out of step with most states Republicans need to win in the general, not Iowa.

Just ask McCain and Romney. They won NH and lost the general. Had Republican primary voters stuck with the last two Iowa winners (Huckabee and Santorum) Obama would be community organizing right now.

Same with Newt Gingrich...Gingrich would have crushed Obama (unlike these "electable" RINOs like Romney who can't get more than 235 electoral votes)

Yeah, you've got a "different take," alright, it's the take of a complete moron who lives in a dream world.
 

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[h=1]Donald Trump mocks President Obama for his 'gentle bombing' of ISIS - to save the environment - while jetting to Hawaii to play golf[/h]

  • Donald Trump labeled President Obama a hypocrite for caring about the environment enough NOT to bomb ISIS
  • 'Give me a break,' Trump said, noting how the president is cool with jetting off to Hawaii every Christmas to play golf
  • Trump knocked around the trio of Obama, Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush, but didn't say a word about rivals Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio


By NIKKI SCHWAB, U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM IN PORTSMOUTH, NEW HAMPSHIRE


PUBLISHED: 01:22, 5 February 2016 | UPDATED: 01:34, 5 February 2016




Donald Trump ridiculed President Obama for his decision not to bomb ISIS' oil fields – over environmental concerns – while having no problem taking the energy-sucking Air Force One to Hawaii to play golf.
'They are doing a very gentle bombing because they don't want to pollute the atmosphere,' Trump said at a rally tonight in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
'And yet Obama will take Air Force One, an old Boeing 747, with the old engines, and spew crap into the atmosphere as he goes to Hawaii and stays for almost three weeks playing golf,' Trump continued, adding that Obama then comes back to hold a press conference about global warming.
'Give me a break,' the Republican hopeful told a crowd, which fit nicely in a community college gym.


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After a quick trip to Little Rock, Arkansas, yesterday, which votes on Super Tuesday, Trump returned to the more pressing campaign trail today and made his way through the Granite State's Seacoast.
At a lunchtime event, the Trump campaign was forced to turn away swaths of supporters – and journalists including Fox News Channel's Chris Wallace, the moderator of the last Republican debate, which the billionaire skipped over a tiff with co-moderator Megyn Kelly.
There, Trump took Obama to task over golf too, but used a different line of attack, picking on the president for playing the game with friends instead of hitting the links to make good deals for the country.
'If you play golf, you need to play golf with people who can help you,' Trump told those in Exeter, New Hampshire.
'You've got to cajole,' Trump added.
Tonight, the Republican added the ISIS component.
'These guys in Washington, they're real tough,' Trump said sarcastically. 'They can't beat ISIS, they can't beat anyone, Afghanistan is going to hell, the Middle East is going down, I've been saying bomb the oil for years and they haven't done it.'
The reasoning, expressed by former Obama CIA Director Mike Morell during an appearance on the Charlie Rose show in December, was indeed because of the environment, as Trump had told his supporters.
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Morrell said that 'we didn't go after oil wells, actually hitting oil wells that ISIS controls, because we didn't want to do environmental damage and we didn't want to destroy that infrastructure,' according to Real Clear Politics.
'They don't want to bomb the oil because they don't want to pollute the atmosphere,' Trump sniffed.
Trump also knocked Hillary Clinton around a little bit, suggesting that she's being treated with kid gloves compared to former CIA Director Gen. David Petraeus, whose leak of classified material to lover Paula Broadwell cost the military veteran $100,000 and two years on probation.
'You have a situation where General Petraeus and other people, for doing 5 percent of what Hillary did, have been destroyed,' Trump said.
And while The Donald jabbed an old favorite, Jeb Bush, several times through his 45 minutes of remarks, calling the former Florida governor 'soft,' two noticeable names haven't been uttered at Trump's two large public events today.
Trump didn't say a word about Ted Cruz, who he repeatedly called a 'nasty guy,' before Cruz bested the billionaire in Monday's Iowa caucuses.
Marco Rubio, who came in a strong third, was left untouched too.
Trump did use strong language throughout his speech, dropping the F-word when discussing American companies that have moved overseas.
'You can tell them to go f--- themselves, because they let you down and they left,' Trump said.
'We're going to knock the s--- out of ISIS,' Trump said at another point.
And encouraging New Hampshire voters to get to the polls on Tuesday for the country's first primary, Trump dropped another swear word.
'I don't give a damn, you've got to get out of bed,' he said.

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[h=1]Megyn Kelly will get ANOTHER shot at Trump – if he doesn't boycott again! – as Fox News announces March date for one more GOP debate[/h]
  • March 3 GOP debate in Detroit will again feature Megyn Kelly, Bret Baier and Chris Wallace as co-moderators
  • Fox News sponsored other Republican debates in August and January
  • The first one featured Kelly grilling Trump over his treatment of women
  • The Donald boycotted the second after Fox trolled him with a taunting press release suggesting he was scared to face Kelly a second time
By DAVID MARTOSKO, US POLITICAL EDITOR FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 20:45, 4 February 2016 | UPDATED: 01:38, 5 February 2016
Donald Trump will face at least one more debate gut-check moment in the coming weeks after the Fox News Channel announced Thursday that a trio of the cable network's anchors – including Megyn Kelly – will moderate a third Republican presidential debate in Detroit on March 3.
Trump boycotted the second one, last week in Iowa, declaring war on Fox over what he said was unfair treatment in an August 2015 Fox debate in Cleveland, Ohio, the first candidate faceoff of the election season.
In that early contest, Kelly grilled Trump about his past treatment of female celebrities he didn't like. The Donald later was hammered for saying in a CNN interview that Kelly had 'blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her – wherever. In my opinion, she was off-base.'
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GETTING THE BAND BACK TOGETHER: Chris Wallace (left), Megyn Kelly (center) and Bret Baier (right) will moderate a third Republican debate for the Fox News Channel on March 3 in Detroit

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BOY, OH BOY-COTT: Donald Trump sat out the second Fox debate in Des Moines, Iowa over how the network treated him, and hasn't said whether he will do it again next month

As the January 28 Fox debate loomed in Des Moines, Iowa, just four days before the state's presidential caucuses, Trump polled his fans on Twitter about whether he should boycott it – ultimately choosing to hold his own competing event and raising a reported $6 million for veterans charities.
The network issued a snarky statement in the meantime, suggesting that the billionaire was afraid to answer Kelly's questions head-on and would carry that attitude into the Oval Office.
'We learned from a secret back channel that the Ayatollah [Khamenei of Iran] and [Vladimir] Putin both intend to treat Donald Trump unfairly when they meet with him if he becomes president,' the statement read, adding that 'a nefarious source tells us that Trump has his own secret plan to replace the Cabinet with his Twitter followers to see if he should even go to those meetings.'
Trump later claimed he received a personal apology from the network for that slight, but Fox's brass countered with news that the real estate tycoon had offered to show up at the debate anyway in exchange for a $5 million donation to his charity drive – an offer the network refused.
Fox's second debate went on as scheduled, but Kelly created a new round of controversy after the broadcast by observing that the candidates on stage seemed to be treating Trump like Voldemort – the super-villain at the center of the Harry Potter saga.



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CH-CH-CHANGES: The Detroit debate stage will look different from the Des Moines set (shown) whether or not Trump is added back in at the center podium: Rand Paul (far left) dropped out of the race this week

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POCKET CHANGE: The billionaire Trump raised $6 million for veterans charities on January 28 while his rivals were debating in a Fox broadcast



.She had opened the event by describing Trump as 'the elephant not in the room,' and said the next day that she didn't know who Voldemort was – only that he's referred to in the J.K. Rowling books as 'he who must not be named.'A Fox News statement described the circumstances: 'In an off camera exchange, Megyn asked Senator Ted Cruz about the fact that Donald Trump got very little mention from any of them during the debate.'
'She asked him (approximate quote) off camera: "You seem to be treating Trump like Voldemort – 'he who shall not be named' – did you plan that?'"
Trump will be named one way or another as March 3 draws near since he leads national Republican polls and could mount another boycott effort.
His absence from the January 28 debate stage likely cost Fox dearly as its TV audience dropped off by half compared with the Cleveland debate five months earlier.
Kelly will be joined on March 3 by Fox anchors Bret Baier and Chris Wallace, the same co-moderators who worked the first two Republican debates.
A Trump spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment about whether the GOP's front-runner will participate.
On Thursday in Exeter, New Hampshire, Trump drew a town hall crowd so large that the local fire marshal turned people away – including Wallace, the Fox News anchor.


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[h=1]No 'undercard' and no Carly! Just seven Republicans will debate Saturday – all MEN – and Fiorina is hopping mad[/h]
  • Carly Fiorina is the only major Republican presidential candidate excluded from Saturday's debate in New Hampshire
  • ABC News determined that she didn't meet any of its requirements: placing in the top three in the Iowa caucuses or being in the top six in national or New Hampshire polling averages
  • Fiorina, the only woman in the GOP field, unsuccessfully lobbied the Republican Party to step in
  • Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney – along with her GOP rivals Ben Carson and Ted Cruz – said Carly should be on stage despite her limited following
By DAVID MARTOSKO, US POLITICAL EDITOR FOR DAILYMAIL.COM IN MANCHESTER, N.H.
PUBLISHED: 01:22, 5 February 2016 | UPDATED: 01:25, 5 February 2016
Seven Republicans – all men – will debate in New Hampshire on Saturday in an ABC News event that has left the GOP's only female White House hopeful on the outside looking in.
Real estate developer Donald Trump, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, retired surgeon Ben Carson, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Ohio Gov. John Kasich all posted polling numbers above an arbitrary cut-line ABC laid out a week ago.
Fiorina, the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, didn't win, place or show in the Iowa caucuses and couldn't reach the top six in averages of New Hampshire or national polls.
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COME ON, GUYS! Carly FIorina, the lone woman in the Republican presidential field, is the only remaining GOP candidate for president whose poll numbers were low enough to keep her out of Saturday's upcoming debate

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NO UNDERCARD. NO CARLY? NO DIFFERENCE! – Fiorina has been relegated to the secondary debates reserved for candidates with low poll numbers, and wasn't on the main stage during the January 28 contest

She is polling seventh in New Hampshire, according to an average maintained by Real Clear Politics, and eighth nationally – dead last among the remaining contenders on the political right.
The network's decision didn't play well with the Fiorina campaign, which argued that two candidates whose poll numbers got them into the debate placed beneath the 61-year-old businesswoman in Iowa.
ABC delayed its announcement for nearly two hours after announcing that a decision would be made public around 5:00 p.m. A network source told DailyMail.com that the final minutes were punctuated by calls from Fiorina and her inner circle.
Throughout the day, a short list of Republican Party luminaries made noise on Fiorina's behalf.



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ESTABLISHMENT SUPPORT: Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich were among the big-name Republicans who spoke up to encourage ABD to put Carly on stage with the party's higher-polling men

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, at one point a leading GOP presidential contender four years ago, tweeted that ABC 'should put @CarlyFiorina in the New Hampshire debate. She came in ahead of Kasich and Christie. She has earned a spot.'
And Mitt Romney, the Republicans' 2012 presidential nominee, wrote on Twitter that the network should 'put @CarlyFiorina on the debate stage! She got more Iowa votes than John and Chris. Don't exclude [the] only woman.'
Carson and Cruz also argued publicly that their only female rival should be permitted to participate.
Fiorina's campaign saw the writing on the wall a day earlier and tried to pre-empt her exclusion with an open letter to the Republican National Committee that claimed the debate selection process 'is broken. Networks are making up these debate rules as they go along ... arbitrarily to decide which candidates make for the best TV.'
'There are only 8 candidates left. It’s time for the RNC to demand that media executives step aside and let voters hear from all of us,' she wrote.
Nine, actually, including former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore. But he has been an asterisk in the campaign, seldom appearing on the trail and garnering near-zero support.
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NOT GOOD: Fiorina is running dead last in New Hampshire, with less than half the support of 'undecided'

In the week since Republicans last debated, in Iowa, three GOP presidential candidates have shown themselves the door: Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum.
Another five of the 17 who launched White House campaigns last year had already made their exits before the Iowa caucuses.
Because the field has thinned out, ABC's debate on Saturday will be the GOP's first in the current cycle without an 'undercard' debate for low-performing politicians.
Fiorina has been relegated to that second-tier status for most of the debates, but will be frozen out of the next one entirely as the 'undercard' goes the way of the dodo.

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When Trump was bashing illegal aliens, Muslims and the GOPe establishment, his popularity soared and he looked unstoppable.

But then his ego got the better of him and he started with the petty childish name calling trashing principled conservatives like Ted Cruz, and even belittling his own supporters ("I could shoot someone tomorrow and they'd still vote for me!"; "we have to make deals with the establishment") and now he's lost his mojo.

Is Trump as savvy as he wants everyone to believe? It will be interesting to see if he takes a step back and reevaluates his strategy to get his campaign back on track and on message saying which vaulted him to the top of the polls for months.

Obviously NH is a must win for Trump but with only 3 scheduled appearances between now and then (other candidates have well over a dozen), maybe Trump is looking for an exit strategy? :icon_conf


No exit for Trump from politics until 2021.
Trump looks like the most successful economic-populist/secular-but-socially-conservative candidate in decades.
 
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Sarah Palin
For President: who is best on national debt, the economy, jobs?
*Who's the only candidate who hasn't voted to add to our $19 trillion debt, and...
*hasn't voted for Obama's devastating fast-tracked TPP trade deal;
*is expert on national and international trade and economics, actually understanding our destructive, unbalanced trade deals that are struck as favors for the cause of crony capitalism;
*operates in the real world on balanced budgets instead of supporting annual unsustainable deficits, recklessly rolling along spending other people's money;
*actually creates private sector jobs to secure the middle class instead of supporting bureaucratic agencies that chase our businesses out of country;
*hasn't enticed illegal immigrants with taxpayers' "free stuff" - and even their gifts of teddy bears and soccer balls - to illegally cross the border and take American jobs for corporate campaign donors' cheap labor;
*inappropriately prioritized tax dollars that's led to illegals receiving better care than our Vets;
*understands and supports Constitutional government and rule of law - which is abused by politicians supporting their exemption from laws they foist on you, including Obamacare; citizen's tax laws; FOIA, disclosure, and privacy rules; etc.
*has self-funded months of his campaign to break donor class shackles that own other candidates;
*hasn't lived off the government teat an entire career but, like you, has had to put up with an out-of-control government while working, building, employing, generously giving, and creating equal opportunity for families to reach their American dream?
*... and whose unarguable record of success proves the will and ability to fight victoriously for our country, which will empower We the People to make America great again?


 

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[h=2]'I'll be there': Donald Trump and Megyn Kelly to reunite as presidential hopeful reveals he WILL appear at next Fox News debate[/h] Donald Trump said on Friday he will attend a Fox News televised debate on March 3 despite skipping last week's event. 'No, I'll be there. I have no objection to being there. That had nothing to do with Megyn Kelly the fact that I went out of the last one, it had to do with a memo that was sent out by Fox that was a little bit taunting and I said it was inappropriate,' Trump said during an appearance on NewsmaxTV.com. He then added that he had no regrets about missing the January 28 debate in Des Moines, Iowa just days before the caucuses, the first nominating contest of the 2016 campaign, at which he came in second after Texas Senator Ted Cruz. Kelly is set to take the moderators desk again for the debate, and she said on Friday while appearing on Good Morning America that she hopes to see Trump there so she can ask him the questions he had drafted for the last debate.

 

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