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April 11, 2016 Vol. 21, No. 29 |
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Madison, Wisc. Wisconsin Republicans have heard it all before. "There's a lot of hate going on in Wisconsin, and I think it's bad." "There's a $2.2 billion deficit, and the schools were going begging." "He didn't want to raise taxes 'cause he was going to run for president." "So instead of raising taxes, he cut back on schools, he cut back on highways, he cut back on a lot of things." In several pitched electoral battles over the last five years, Democratic lawmakers have lobbed these talking points at Scott Walker, so it's not clear what Donald Trump thought he would accomplish when he spoke these words in Wisconsin this week....
In Batman v. Superman, the Caped Crusader and the Man of Steel try to kill each other. In the sequel, they should team up and kill the people who made Batman v. Superman. Its filmmakers and the executives who hired them run the gamut from the unspeakably cynical to the astoundingly pretentious without ever bothering to take a pit stop at talent. They have violated the basic social contract by conspiring to drain the coffers of unsuspecting teenagers by telling said victims that they are going to see a movie rather than a promotional product reel for future promotional product reels. Vigilantism may be required. Here's what happens in...
House speaker Paul Ryan is not running for president. That became clear several months after the 2012 election, in which Ryan was Mitt Romney’s vice presidential running mate. At two private dinners, a prominent Republican introduced Ryan to a bipartisan group of influential policy intellectuals and potential campaign financiers, not all of them conservatives. Ryan didn't bite. It's now three years later, and he hasn't changed his mind. Ryan will preside over the Republican convention in July, but he says even if the presidential nomination is contested, he won't seek or accept it. "I actually think you should run for president . . . if...
In a famous episode of Seinfeld, George Costanza concludes that every instinct he’s had, every decision he's made, has been wrong and that he should henceforth do the opposite of what he had routinely been doing. He implements this new philosophy and promptly manages to entice an attractive woman to go out with him by introducing himself as unemployed and living with his parents. He then gets a job with the New York Yankees by telling off its imperious and temperamental owner, George Steinbrenner.
When we last checked in on Donald Trump’s campaign it was still a rolling embarrassment—a near-daily parade of pettiness, ignorance, and farce that was nonetheless en route to an ever-increasing delegate lead. Trump had held an unusual QVC-style postelection press conference in which he displayed phony "Trump products" in order to pretend that his failed businesses hadn't failed; he'd announced that he would serve as his own primary adviser on foreign policy "because I have a very good brain and I've said a lot of things"; and his campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, was forcefully denying eyewitness claims that, after a Trump presser, he'd...
Some guy dressed as Donald Trump was dancing in New York City.
So this is happening in New York City right now pic.twitter.com/GRAwQMhhtg— Oliver Darcy (@oliverdarcy) March 27, 2016
Pizza overtook the political web. It began when John Kasich was seen eating pizza with a fork like a monster.
via GIPHYFellow fork-pizza-eater NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio applauded the move.
Here's one thing I agree with @JohnKasich on… pic.twitter.com/ads2ilMcFC— Bill de Blasio (@BilldeBlasio) March 31, 2016
Later, Ted Cruz showed he's not a weirdo and ate pizza like a normal person.
Y'all. Eating pizza is not
Read moreOn Sunday, Hillary Clinton told Chuck Todd that no unborn child has constitutional rights.
"The unborn person doesn't have constitutional rights," under our current laws, said Clinton. She also said that "the woman's right to make decisions" is most important when it comes to abortion.
Most notable perhaps is Clinton's use of "person." Oftentimes, when talking about a woman's right to choose, pro-choicers will use terminology that suggests the unborn is not a person or human, but a "fetus.
Read moreMilwaukee
Ted Cruz and John Kasich received a warm reception at Friday night's Milwaukee County GOP Lincoln dinner.
Kasich was introduced by former governor Tommy Thompson, who enthusiastically recalled how Kasich balanced the federal budget.
Cruz was introduced by Governor Scott Walker, who touted Cruz as the only conservative who can win the nomination and beat Hillary Clinton.
Donald Trump didn't show up to the Friday night fish fry in Milwaukee and instead outsourced the job to Sarah Palin, who delivered a meandering speech on trade and immigration.
Read moreMadison, Wisc.
Wisconsin Republicans have heard it all before.
"There's a lot of hate going on in Wisconsin, and I think it's bad."
"There's a $2.2 billion deficit, and the schools were going begging."
"He didn't want to raise taxes 'cause he was going to run for president."
"So instead of raising taxes, he cut back on schools, he cut back on highways, he cut back on a lot of things."
In several pitched electoral battles over the last five years, Democratic lawmakers have lobbed these talking points at Scott Walker, so it's not clear what Donald Trump thought he would accomplish when he spoke these words in Wisconsin this week.
In the last five years, Wisconsin voters have
Read moreAt the Washington Free Beacon, Matthew Continetti writes about "How to Dump Trump," and why he ought to be dumped:
If Trump doesn't win on the first ballot, then the convention will be thrown to the delegates. And the complexity of the proceedings will favor the well organized, the best resourced, and the most influential members of the party. The Trump campaign is none of these things.
What happens next? Trump says he won't abide by his pledge to support the Republican nominee. Figures. It's not like his word was his bond before he ran for president. This is a businessman known for his parsimony, his reluctance to fulfill invoices, his quickness to sue, his welching on commitments.
On Thursday, The Weekly Standard's Michael Warren joined CNN to talk about Donald Trump.
Of Trump's abortion flip-flop yesterday, Warren said, "I don't think Donald Trump has any thoughts on the abortion question. And that was very clear from the answer that he gave to Chris Matthews."
Warren later added, "Donald Trump doesn't actually know what he believes" on numerous issues.
Read moreHillary Clinton lost her cool in an exchange with a Greenpeace activist:
"I am so sick, I am so sick," Clinton says, shouting and wagging her finger at the activist, "of the Sanders campaign lying about me. I'm sick of it."
Greenpeace explained the exchange, "At a Hillary Clinton rally at SUNY Purchase campus today, the presidential candidate lost her patience with a Greenpeace activist who thanked her for her commitment to climate change then asked her whether she'll reject fossil fuel money moving forward. Pointing her finger at activist Eva Resnick-Day, Clinton claimed she only takes money from people who work for fossil fuel companies and called the accusations lies.
Read moreA PAC supporting John Kasich, New Day For America, released what is arguably the most uncomfortable ad of the cycle. It would make Pinocchio blush.
The ad lists lies it says Ted Cruz has told. But when watching, you're not really focused on the lies.
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