Trump: the gift that just keeps on giving

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Trump will take center stage in first Republican debate as big names including Perry, Santorum and Graham fail to make the cut


  • IN: Donald Trump, Jeb Bush, Scott Walker, Mike Huckabee, Ben Carson, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, Chris Christie and John Kasich
  • OUT: Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, Bobby Jindal, Carly Fiorina, Lindsey Graham, Jim Gilmore and George Pataki
  • The second-string will have their own debate in Cleveland, four hours before Thursday night's main event
  • Big winners include Kasich, the Ohio governor who just entered the race and nosed out both Perry and Santorum, the last Iowa Caucus winner




PUBLISHED: 23:43, 4 August 2015 | UPDATED: 00:38, 5 August 2015




The lineup card has been filled in for Thursday night's first Republican presidential primary debate, and a handful of big-time politicians will be watching from backstage.
Fox News Channel and Facebook are hosting the event in conjunction with the Ohio Republican Party at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland.
The top-rated cable news network chose the ten candidates with the best average scores in the five most recent national polls to take part in the prime-time political smackfest.
Billionaire front-runner Donald Trump leads the pack, and will do battle with former Florida governor Jeb Bush, Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Ohio Gov. John Kasich.





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MODERATOR: Fox News anchor Megyn Kelley will co-moderate Thursday's prime-time debate in Cleveland, Ohio alongside veteran Fox News anchors Bret Baier and Chris Wallace







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THE TOP THREE: Donald Trump (left), Jeb Bush (center) and Scott Walker (right) have racked up the biggest polling victories, and were shoe-ins for the Thursday night debate in Cleveland, Ohio







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GOLF CLAPS: Former Texas governor Rick Perry and former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum will be applauding the top ten from afar on Thursday after they failed to make the cut







But that leaves former Texas governor Rick Perry on the outside looking in, along with former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former tech CEO Carly Fiorina, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, former Virginia governor Jim Gilmore and former New York governor George Pataki.

MORE DEBATES ON TAP

Republican presidential hopefuls will debate at leas 10 more times. Here are the remaining events before New Year's Day:
September 16 in Simi Valley, California, hosted by CNN and Salem Radio Network
October 28 in Boulder, Colorado, hosted by CNBC
November (date TBD) in Wisconsin, hosted by Fox Business Network and the Wall Street Journal
December 15 in Las Vegas, Nevada, hosted by CNN and Salem Radio Network



The second-stringers will meet in their own debate at 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, four hours between the main event.
Santorum's failure to make the cut is a stunning turnaround from 2012, when he won the Iowa Caucuses after a recount and went on to finish second in the nomination delegate count, losing to the eventual GOP nominee Mitt Romney.
Perry, too, will feel the sting of being relegated to the consolation event.
He was a front-runner four years ago until his spectacular debate collapse when he couldn't remember which cabinet-level federal agencies he had pledged to shutter from the Oval Office.
And Graham, whose jabs at Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton have made him a crowd-pleaser on the campagn trail, hasn't been able to turn that goodwill into tangible support. His poll numbers have settled at lower than 1 per cent.







Donald Trump: Number one with Hispanics and expecting to win

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SORRY, CARLY! Former tech CEO Carly Fiorina, who has run a lackluster campaign so far, finished near the bottom of the heap and will be relegated to a consolation event four hours before the main debate






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BIG WINNER? Ohio Gov. John Kasich snuck under the wire and finished in the tenth-place slot just two weeks after launching his presidential bid






Among the surprising victors is Kasich, who only entered the race on July 21 but governs the Buckeye State and staked his reputation on gaining ground quickly enough to be included in the field for Thursday's event in his state's largest city.
Just two weeks into his campaign, he's found momentum and snuck into the debate in tenth place. Christie came in ninth despite a light travel schedule and questions about his abrasive style.
Fox relied on its own poll, along with surveys from Bloomberg, CBS News, Monmouth University and Quinnipiac University in order to decide the final lineup.


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This is too funny. I thought the guy who was yelling Trump's been all over the place was gonna try to fight someone.

[video=youtube;PQEkr4dNF7w]https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=20&v=PQEkr4dNF7w[/video]
 

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And Giving And Giving..................





Some in GOP Prepare to Dump Trump to Save the Party

Republican leaders who have watched Donald Trump’s summer surge with alarm now believe that his presidential candidacy has been contained and may begin to collapse because of his repeated attacks on a Fox News Channel star and his refusal to pledge his loyalty to the eventual GOP nominee.
Fearful that the billionaire’s inflammatory rhetoric has inflicted serious damage to the GOP brand, party leaders hope to pivot away from the Trump sideshow and toward a more serious discussion among a deep field of governors, senators and other candidates.
They acknowledge that Trump’s unique megaphone and the passion of his supporters make any calculation about his candidacy risky. After all, he has been presumed dead before: Three weeks ago, he prompted establishment outrage bybelittling the Vietnam war service of Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), only to prove, by climbing higher in the polls, that the laws of political gravity did not apply to him.
Related: Trump’s Debate Performance Should Kill His Candidacy…But Won’t
Still, Trump’s erratic performance during and after the first Republican presidential debate last week sparked a backlash throughout the party Saturday and a reassessment of his front-running bid. The final straw for many was Trump’s comment on CNN late Friday that Fox moderator Megyn Kelly had “blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever.”
Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (S.C.), a fellow candidate, said Trump was jeopardizing the GOP’s chances of winning back the White House and urged party leaders to stop “tiptoeing” around him.
I think we’ve crossed that Rubicon where his behavior becomes about us, not just him,” Graham said in an interview.
“Donald Trump is an out-of-control car driving through a crowd of Republicans, and somebody needs to get him out of the car,” Graham said. “I just don’t see a pathway forward for us in 2016 to win the White House if we don’t decisively deal with this.”
Trump — whose strident opposition to illegal immigration helped him amass a 2-to-1 polling lead over his nearest GOP rivals — was characteristically defiant and confident in a series of phone calls Saturday with The Washington Post. He vowed to reboot his campaign amid a staff shake-up and said he could capture the White House because “millions of people everywhere” who feel alienated by the political class are standing by him.
Related: Trump—What Doesn’t Kill Him Makes Him Stronger
“I have a lot of money, and I’m not getting out. I’m going to win,” Trump said. “You watch: When this campaign is over, I win. As good as I’m doing — and I’m leading the polls — it’s just the start.”
Trump added, “I want this to be serious, I really do.”
However, a consensus is forming in Republican circles that Trump’s eruption over Kelly and other Fox News anchors makes his campaign anything but serious.
“The fire still burns, but the fire is now contained,” said Alex Castellanos, a veteran GOP strategist. “He can’t grow. He has condemned himself to be a protest candidate, not a serious candidate for the Republican nomination. That means we now move forward to a more normal debate.”
We've heard the top ten GOP candidates talk. Here's what happens now.
The first primary debate on Fox attracted a record cable television audience of 24 million viewers and lent some clarity to a presidential race that has seemed hazy. It underscored former Florida governor Jeb Bush’s inability, at least so far, to excite the party’s grass roots and step fully into the role of the alpha candidate. It also marked the emergence of back-of-the-pack candidates, including Ohio Gov. John Kasich and former technology executive Carly Fiorina, as potential contenders.
Related: The Best Jabs at Hillary Clinton from the GOP Debate
The performances renewed the belief of many Republican leaders that the party has the strongest field in a generation, with several contenders capable of challenging Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton at a time when she appears increasingly vulnerable.
“What could come out of this debate is Republicans beginning to have a conversation about the ticket,” said Matthew Dowd, a former strategist for President George W. Bush. He said there was considerable chatter on Friday about pairing Kasich and Sen. Marco Rubio: old and young, white and Latino, executive and legislator, swing-state Ohio and swing-state Florida. “Maybe that’s the ticket.”
But first, the party has to move beyond Trump, who created another controversy in a Friday night interview on CNN. He hurled insults about Kelly, including the blood comment, which was widely interpreted as a reference to menstruation.
Trump’s words cost him a speaking slot at the RedState Gathering, an influential conservative event this weekend in Atlanta, and drew condemnations from Jeb Bush, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and other candidates. Two notable exceptions were Rubio and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.
“I’ve made a decision here with Donald Trump, you know, if I comment on everything he says, my whole campaign will be consumed by it,” Rubio told NBC News.
Related: Donald Trump’s Curious Clinton Connection
In New York, meanwhile, Trump’s campaign was in turmoil as he parted ways with longtime adviser Roger Stone after weeks of quarreling over political strategy. Stone is the second top Trump adviser to leave in as many weeks.
The timeline and reason for Stone’s departure were under dispute. Trump said in an interview that he “fired” Stone on Friday night because he didn’t want “publicity seekers” working for his campaign and because he heard from other associates that Stone had been grumbling about Trump’s behavior and refusal to heed his advice in the debate.
But Stone said in an interview that he had quit and was not fired. In a resignation letter to Trump obtained by The Post, Stone expressed regret for ending a “close relationship” that dates to the 1980s but said that “current controversies involving personalities and provocative media fights have reached such a high volume that it has distracted attention from your platform and overwhelmed your core message. . . . I can no longer remain involved in your campaign.”
Trump said he dispatched his campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, to reach out to dozens of early-state operatives and conservative leaders nationwide this weekend with the goal of expanding Trump’s nascent political organization.
“I’m going to surround myself only with the best and most serious people,” Trump said. “We want top-of-the-line professionals.”
Trump said he would not apologize for his remarks about Kelly, which he said were misinterpreted. “Only a deviant would think I was saying anything about blood somewhere other than her eyes or her nose,” he said.
Related: For Better or Worse, Trump’s Brash Style Has Mesmerized the GOP
Trump had been scheduled to fly to Atlanta on Saturday to address RedState, but leader Erick Erickson revoked his invitation late Friday night. Erickson — a conservative commentator with his own history of poking the GOP establishment and derogatory remarks about women — said Trump crossed a line of decency with his comments about Kelly.
Trump’s campaign responded by calling Erickson “a total loser.”
In an interview Saturday, Erickson said Trump’s remarks about Kelly — a favorite of conservatives and a colleague of his at the network where he works as a contributor — woke up the “sleeping giants” within the conservative movement.
“It’s been building for a while,” he said. “You’ve had a lot of people, myself included, holding our breath as he kept talking and talking.”
Even without being in Atlanta, Trump dominated the conference on Saturday. One after another, presidential candidates were asked to respond to Trump’s comments. On stage, Erickson described the hundreds of e-mails he had received that morning from Trump supporters calling President Obama “the n-word” and Kelly “the c-word.”
From the audience — the kind of grassroots activists primed to rally to Trump’s anti-Washington call — there was a jarring burst of anger against the candidate.
Related: Trump Shows Broadening Appeal As He Surges in the Polls
“Talking about blood and a woman — it was just inappropriate,” said Myra Adams, 60. “Megyn Kelly is just so well-liked by the public. . . . He should have made nice-nice with her. I thought that [debate] question was a little off-base, but he took a mosquito bite and turned it into a skin cancer.”
Jeb Bush, whom Erickson introduced with effusive praise, commended the decision to disinvite Trump and called on the developer and reality TV host to apologize.
“Do we want to win?” Bush said. Or, he asked, “Do we want to insult 53 percent of all voters? What Donald Trump said is wrong.”
Katie Packer Gage, a strategist who advises Republican candidates on appealing to female voters, said that Trump poses dangers to the party at large. “People see this as a blustery, bullying circus act,” she said. “The longer it goes on, the more it becomes part of the GOP narrative.”
Strategists predicted that Trump’s raising of his hand in the opening minutes of Thursday’s debate to rule out an independent candidacy should he fail to be the GOP nominee could limit his ability to expand beyond his base of angry, anti-establishment voters. An adviser to a rival campaign described Trump’s move as “the hand of heresy.”
“If you start to see erosion of Trump’s numbers, it could become a tailspin quickly, and it could be hard to pull the plane out of the dive,” said Phil Musser, a GOP consultant and chair of IMGE, a digital media agency. “There would be a major pile-on and likely a spectacular crash.”
Costa reported from Atlanta. David Weigel in Atlanta contributed to this report. This article was published originally in The Washington Post.
 

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In New York, meanwhile, Trump’s campaign was in turmoil as he parted ways with longtime adviser Roger Stone after weeks of quarreling over political strategy. Stone is the second top Trump adviser to leave in as many weeks.
The timeline and reason for Stone’s departure were under dispute. Trump said in an interview that he “fired” Stone on Friday night because he didn’t want “publicity seekers” working for his campaign and because he heard from other associates that Stone had been grumbling about Trump’s behavior and refusal to heed his advice in the debate.
But Stone said in an interview that he had quit and was not fired. In a resignation letter to Trump obtained by The Post, Stone expressed regret for ending a “close relationship” that dates to the 1980s but said that “current controversies involving personalities and provocative media fights have reached such a high volume that it has distracted attention from your platform and overwhelmed your core message. . . . I can no longer remain involved in your campaign.”
Trump said he dispatched his campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, to reach out to dozens of early-state operatives and conservative leaders nationwide this weekend with the goal of expanding Trump’s nascent political organization.
“I’m going to surround myself only with the best and most serious people,” Trump said. “We want top-of-the-line professionals.”
Trump said he would not apologize for his remarks about Kelly, which he said were misinterpreted. “Only a deviant would think I was saying anything about blood somewhere other than her eyes or her nose,” he said.



damn, .....dagone......................



:)
 

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"Katie Packer Gage, a strategist who advises Republican candidates on appealing to female voters, said that Trump poses dangers to the party at large. “People see this as a blustery, bullying circus act,”"


ah cmon Katie, don't be such a stiff. We need SOMEONE tweeting at 3:00am!!........have a heart....



 

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Sources: Roger Stone quit, wasn't fired by Donald Trump in campaign shakeup

Trump says he fired his campaign adviser. His adviser says he fired Trump.

By Marc Caputo

8/8/15 2:40 PM EDT
CORAL GABLES, FL - DECEMBER 09: Roger J. Stone Jr. discusses and signs copies of his book

Roger Stone is a Republican operative who has worked for Reagan and Nixon.


Donald Trump made the surprising announcement Saturday afternoon that he was firing his top adviser, Roger Stone, but, hours before that, the political consultant’s friends told POLITICO that he was actually quitting.

“Sorry @realDonaldTrump didn’t fire me- I fired Trump. Diasagree with diversion to food fight with @megynkelly away core issue messages,” Stone, referencing Trump’s battle with a moderator of Fox’s Republican debate Thursday, said just before 3 p.m. on Twitter.

Later in the day, Trump’s campaign denied the claims from Stone and his friends and said he was fired the night before. Conspicuously silent: The usually voluble Trump, whose Twitter feed said nothing of the controversy Saturday.

Earlier in the day, Stone’s friends told POLITICO that he sent an email to Trump announcing his decision to leave the campaign. More than an hour later, Trump told a Washington Post reporter he fired Stone. The news coincidentally hit Twitter about 15 minutes after Stone told a Fox News TV show that he couldn’t appear Saturday because he was no longer affiliated with the campaign, friends say.

“I can’t believe Roger got out-Trumped, that he got out-Stoned,” one of Stone’s friends said. “Roger’s mistake was trusting Donald and not establishing a clear record that he was resigning first.”

Regardless of who resigned or was fired first, the campaign shakeup was the first sign that Trump’s election effort was seriously damaged from within after his Thursday night debate performance and his subsequent comments in which he attacked one of the Fox debate moderators, Megyn Kelly.
Donald Trump. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks to the media in the spin room after the first Republican presidential debate at the Quicken Loans Arena Thursday, Aug. 6, 2015, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) URN:23754238
Trump camp in crisis

BEN SCHRECKINGER and KATIE GLUECK

Hours before Stone was planning to quit, conservative Erick Erickson disinvited Trump from his RedState gathering on Saturday because of Trump’s increasingly misogynistic attacks on Kelly.

Stone, who initially would not comment to POLITICO, later appeared on CNN and told anchor Poppy Harlow that he quit. He also confirmed the version of events and conversation that his friends told POLITICO, but said he didn’t want to discuss private campaign matters. Stone would not discuss the events in a follow-up conversation with POLITICO but he called the Trump campaign’s assertion that he was fired “bull.”

Stone praised Trump but said he thought the campaign was not serving him well. Stone also echoed comments he made in an email that his friends said he sent earlier in the day to Trump. Stone said the email was sent to Trump’s secretary. In the email, obtained earlier by POLITICO, Stone expressed gratitude concerning their longtime relationship, which dates back to the 1980s.

“I was proud to have played a role in the launch of your presidential campaign. Your message of ‘Make America Great Again’ harkened back to the Reagan era. Restoring national pride and bringing jobs back to America - your initial and still underlying message - is a solid conservative message. In fact, it catapulted you instantly into a commanding lead in the race,” Stone’s email said.

“Unfortunately, the current controversies involving personalities and provocative media fights have reached such a high volume that it has distracted attention from your platform and overwhelmed your core message,” Stone wrote. “With this current direction of the candidacy, I no longer can remain involved in your campaign.”

Though longtime friends, Stone and Trump have clashed before – in part because the two men share such similar combustible personalities. Both men are from New York; Stone lives in Fort Lauderdale now and Trump owns the Mar-a-Lago mansion to the north in Palm Beach. A longtime Republican operative, Stone became a libertarian. Trump has flirted with leaving the GOP as well.

The two clashed after Stone – known universally in political circles as a Nixon-era “dirty trickster” – helped bring down Trump friend and New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer in a prostitution scandal. But soon Stone and Trump were back and working together.

Stone’s friends say internal troubles in the Trump campaign were roiling before Thursday’s debate. Stone had increasingly felt that the campaign team surrounding Trump was feeding his bad habits: megalomania and peevishness. Stone wanted the campaign to focus on a message about taking on the political establishment and running government like a business.

Then the debate happened, in which Kelly asked Trump about his comments calling women he didn’t like “fat pigs, dogs, slobs, and disgusting animals.”

Trump joked that he was referring to just one TV personality, “only Rosie O’Donnell.”

Kelly continued and pointed out that Trump’s “Twitter account has several disparaging comments about women’s looks. You once told a contestant on ‘Celebrity Apprentice’ it would be a pretty picture to see her on her knees.”

Trump derided what he called the scourge of “political correctness” and then said he wasn’t always serious. “And honestly Megyn, if you don’t like it, I’m sorry,” he said. “I’ve been very nice to you, although I could probably maybe not be, based on the way you have treated me. But I wouldn’t do that.”

Trump proceeded to do just that later in the evening, posting another’s message on his Twitter account that called Kelly a “bimbo.”
Fox News moderators from left, Chris Wallace, Megyn Kelly and Bret Baier warm up the crowd before Republican presidential candidates New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., Ben Carson, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Donald Trump, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Ohio Gov. John Kasich take the stage for the first Republican presidential debate at the Quicken Loans Arena, Thursday, Aug. 6, 2015, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Also on POLITICO
Donald Trump's war on Megyn Kelly

BEN SCHRECKINGER



The next morning, Stone had to fight Trump’s handlers to meet with him for 15 minutes, prompting the following exchange that both of Stone’s friends, independently and separately, tell POLITICO what happened:

Stone: “Donald, stop with the Megyn Kelly shit. It’s fucking crazy. It’s killing us.”

Trump: “What do you mean? I won the debate. People loved it.”

Stone: “You didn’t win the debate.”

Trump: “Yes I did. Look at the polling. Look at Drudge.”

Stone: “The Drudge Report poll isn’t a scientific poll. You won’t give me the money to pay for a scientific poll. And you’re off-message.”

Trump: “There are other polls.”

Stone: “Those are bullshit polls, Donald. They’re not scientific polls. We need to run a professional campaign and talk about what people really care about.”

Trump: “We’re winning.”

After the meeting, Trump did the opposite of what Stone had recommended by going on CNN and trashing Kelly. “You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her — wherever,” Trump said, a comment perceived by many to be a reference to a woman’s menstrual cycle. Trump’s campaign later denied that interpretation, but by then Stone was consulting his friends about quitting.

“He is losing his grip on reality,” Stone told them. “He has these yes-men around him. And now he’s living in a parallel world.”

After reading this article, Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski called POLITICO’s Mike Allen and said, “This conversation [between Trump and Stone] didn’t take place. … He spoke to Roger Stone last night when he terminated him from employment. … That was the first time they talked since the debate.” Lewandowski said Trump fired Stone “some time after 6 p.m.” Friday. The campaign manager said he didn’t know who initiated the call.

Lewandowski said the conversation described by the two friends suggests an email exchange. “Mr. Trump doesn’t have email and doesn’t email,” the manager said. “Mr. Trump has never sent an email in his life.”

Lewandowski added, “There was no physical meeting that took place the next morning. We got back from the debate at 3:30 in the morning … These guys never met the next day.”

Stone kept his apparent criticisms quiet and, before his Friday meeting with Trump, made it seem as if there was no problem.

“I’ll do whatever the Donald asks me to do. He is a friend of almost 40 years. I attended two of his three weddings. I was at his father’s funeral, his mother’s funeral, his brother-in-law’s funeral,” Stone said Friday morning on “The Joe Piscopo Show” on AM 970 THE ANSWER.

“I love the Donald. I love what he’s doing, challenging the orthodoxy of the ruling class,” Stone said. “These guys don’t know how to handle it.”

The following morning, Saturday, Trump was disinvited from the RedState gathering of conservatives in Georgia. Trump claimed he didn’t mind being disinvited. About that time, on Saturday morning, Stone’s friends confirmed to POLITICO that he was intending to leave the campaign.

Along the way, and soon after informing some at Fox, Trump allegedly trumped Stone.

“Well this is what happens when you deal with Donald Trump,” one of Stone’s friends said.

Mike Allen contributed to this report.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2015/...in-campaign-shakeup-121177.html#ixzz3iOF0RuGd
 

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Stone: “Donald, stop with the Megyn Kelly shit. It’s fucking crazy. It’s killing us.”

Trump: “What do you mean? I won the debate. People loved it.” :)


He is losing his grip on reality,” Stone told them


ahhhhhhhhh cmon, that's a bit harsh......:)
 

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These highlights including The Donald's Appearance on MTP in 1999 with The Late Great Tim Russert, explaining that he's leaving the Republican Party because they were too crazy Right Wing 16 years ago, and that he gets his Foreign Policy Advice from The TV. :ohno:. One bit of sanity by Donald. He won't rip up Obama's Iran deal(neither will anyone else, but at least Donald is honest about it). http://www.msnbc.com/the-last-word/watch/trump-in-1999--gop-is--just-too-crazy--507196483657
 

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Half the Dems are going to finally smell the coffee & make the switch".....mmmmmmgooood!

Yeah, well, you're the lying turd who supposedly attended a Romney rally in Ohio during 2012 and claimed the crowd was 15,000, when the reports on the rally said more like, 5,000-so we know how much to take YOUR word on anything, don't we?
 

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Scott Walker (and Jeb and Marco and all the rest) are drowning and Trump is handing them a water
hose to place in their mouths as he turns on the faucet...

Trump is the only hope the GOP has--the rest of the also ran morons have no idea what the rest of
the country feels outside their own little serfdoms

Once again, the Right Wing Media twists facts to show an agenda. The real headline should be
as follows: Trump still tops Republican field: poll shows that Beltway Republicans are still clueless morons.
 
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Yeah, well, you're the lying turd who supposedly attended a Romney rally in Ohio during 2012 and claimed the crowd was 15,000, when the reports on the rally said more like, 5,000-so we know how much to take YOUR word on anything, don't we?
I'll let you know how many there are at the Trump rally if he comes to town...
 

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It's funny you keep saying this.

The Donald continues to build his lead over the rest of the R candidates and is closing the gap on Hillary. It's becoming uncertain which side, Rs or Ds, hopes Hillary can survive and stay in the race since her campaign is turning into such a disaster...

It's still far too early for predictions, but you may have no idea how right you are about Trump being the gift that keeps giving. You're just probably picking the wrong beneficiary side.
 

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For those who want to see the Gift that keeps giving speak in Alabama shortly...

http://www.fox10tv.com/category/291730/livestreaming-on-fox10

It's also on Fox Business Channel...if you want to see Lou Dobbs' hilariously terrible hair dye job before The Donald takes the stage.

They had to move the speech into a stadium because of crowd overflow. Stadium is packed...looks like it's about to host a football game. This reminds me of the Stuttering Clusterfuck's campaign in '08.
 

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