Showing posts with label Jeb Bush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeb Bush. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2015

OBAMA CAN’T COUNT TO FOUR PERCENT

Jeb Bush kicked off his campaign in June on a positive, aspirational, pro-growth note, saying, “There is not a reason in the world why we cannot grow at a rate of 4 percent a year.” That thought has some substantial history behind it.

Most immediately, it goes back to a board meeting of the George W. Bush Institute in 2010, at which executive director James Glassman raised for discussion the subject of a pro-growth economics agenda. Board member Jeb Bush proposed the 4% goal then.

Glassman had the good sense to turn that discussion into a full-length book, in a project spearheaded by the gifted Amity Shlaes (who is also one of the contributors to the volume).The 4% Solution: Unleashing the Economic Growth America Needs was published in 2012 by Random House. It comprises 21 chapters written by 26 authors, including Economics Nobel Prize winners Robert Lucas, Vernon Smith, Edward Prescott, Gary Becker, and Myron Scholes, as well as serious economists such as Robert Litan, Kevin Hassett, David Malpass, Eric Hanushek, Pia Orrenius, Peter Klein, W. Michael Cox, Steven Gjerstad, Maria Minniti, Nick Schulz, and Madeline Zavodny.

But the unread chairman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisors, Jason 
Obama Can’t Count to Four Percent | The American Spectator
Furman, snarled in response to Bush’s 4% growth target on CNBC on August 7, “I haven’t seen any serious economist say that is within the realm of possibility.” The 4% growth target is a sensitive subject for the chairman of Obama’s CEA. Growth under President Obama has averaged 2% for the now nearly seven years he has been in office, even though the recession ended in June 2009, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research.

That 2% growth record under Obama is the worst of any president since the Great Depression, worse than Jimmy Carter, worse than George W. Bush. The difference between 4% annual growth and 2%, compounded over decades, is the difference between America and Argentina, or the leading country in the developed world, and the Third World.

Furman’s comment was particularly bizarre because on June 19, Larry Kudlow explained the precedents for Bush’s 4% growth target in detail in National Review Online. “Following the Kennedy tax cuts, the economy averaged 5.2 percent yearly growth between 1963 and 1969. After the Reagan tax rates fully went into effect, alongside Paul Volcker’s conquering of inflation, the economy grew at 4.5 percent annually between 1982 and 1989,” 

Kudlowreported. “And between 1994 and 1999, the Bill Clinton/Newt Gingrich economy increased 4.3 percent annually, after welfare reform, NAFTA trade, and cap-gains tax relief,” he added.

Kudlow also noted that during the entire 60 year period from 1947 to 2007, U.S. economic growth averaged 3.4%. So maybe focusing federal policies more on what is pro-growth, we can reach 4% after all.

Reagan campaigned explicitly on a four-point economic recovery program in 1980, which once elected he then implemented in 1981 and 1982. Those points were 1) slash marginal income tax rates, 2) deregulation, 3) cut federal spending, and 4) stick to monetary policies that maintain a stable dollar. That is what produced the 4.5% annual growth noted above.
What has President Obama done? Just the opposite. What the Republicans are arguing, Mr. Chief Obama Economist Furman, is that those anti-growth Obama policies are why this president has gotten less than half the growth produced by Reagan’s pro-growth policies, and the worst economic growth of any president since the Great Depression.

Furman himself also said on CNBC on August 9, “The debate we should be having is not targets no economist thinks we can hit but are we doing everything we possibly can to strengthen our economy.” That would be no economist besides at least the half dozen Nobel Prize winners and more than a dozen additional “serious” economists in Glassman’s book. That’s just for starters, if you add Kudlow, Art Laffer, Steve Forbes, and Steve Moore to that list.

And no, Jason, we are NOT doing everything we can to strengthen our economy when we hold up the Keystone Pipeline for a decade, raise marginal tax rates on capital gains by nearly 60%, raise marginal tax rates on dividends by nearly 60%, raise marginal tax rates for Medicare payroll taxes on employers by over 60%, raise top marginal income tax rates primarily on savers, investors, small business, and top professionals by over 20%, maintain the highest top marginal corporate tax rate in the industrialized world, maintain the third highest top marginal capital gains tax rate in the industrialized world, impose EPA regs that will cause electricity rates and energy costs to skyrocket, impose health insurance employer mandate regulations that force employers to reduce millions of full time workers to part-time, 29-hour-per-week jobs, and impose banking regulations that force small to medium banks and financial institutions that finance small businesses out of business.

So-called “Progressives” Jason Furman tend to talk to themselves, or only those that agree with them all the time, like crazy people talking to themselves in the bathroom mirror. But given the above established facts, Furman’s statements are effectively an admission that the Democrats have no idea how to restore traditional, booming, American economic growth. (This article is not an endorsement of Jeb Bush’s candidacy. My own favorites are Ted Cruz and Rand Paul.).

If Mr. Furman can’t read more broadly than the party propaganda published in the New York Times and the Washington Post, then he needs to get off the public dole, and maybe start to pay the taxpayers back for what he and his bud Barack have done to the American people these last seven years.
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Thursday, August 6, 2015

How Jeb and the GOP Got Trumped

How Jeb and the GOP Got Trumped - Glenn Thrush and Alex Isenstadt - POLITICO Magazine
The establishment wanted a sweet ’16, not a 17-candidate pileup. Here’s what happened.

Jeb Bush, the man who would be frontrunner, was as surprised as anybody when Donald Trump jumped into the 2016 presidential race in June. His instinctive first reaction was to hold his tongue, and his advisers agreed the best option was to keep his distance from an interloper who wanted to drag him into a reality-show shouting match.

Bush stayed strategically silent even when Trump delivered his infamous crack that some Mexican immigrants were “rapists.” It wasn’t easy, considering Bush speaks nearly flawless Spanish, backs comprehensive immigration reform and is married to the former Columba Garnica de Gallo of Leon, Mexico.

Like everyone else, Bush soon found Trump impossible to ignore. When Trump reposted a nasty tweet a couple of weeks after his contentious announcement speech— “Bush has to like Mexican illegals because of his wife”—the former Florida governor was forced to respond. “You can love your Mexican-American wife,” he told one interviewer before telling another that Trump was “preying on people’s fears.”

The half-dozen conservative senators and governors who had planned to run before Bush brought out his shock-and-awe fundraising campaign, had to laugh: They viewed Bush himself as an intruder, a political semi-retiree who sat on the sidelines for eight years while they fought Barack Obama. Now it was Bush’s turn to rage at an outsider.

“Seriously, what’s this guy’s problem?” he asked one party donor he ran into recently according to accounts provided by several sources close to Bush—and he went on to describe the publicity seeking real estate developer now surging in public polls far ahead of Bush and all the 15 others in the Republican field as “a buffoon,” “clown” and “asshole.”
***
Whatever Bush wants to call Trump, the most accurate appellation heading into Thursday night’s first big Republican debate of the chaotic 2016 contest in Cleveland is the label that should have been Bush’s: “frontrunner.”

Bush may yet emerge as the party’s nominee, the third member of his family to claim the mantle, and his aides now claim Trump’s bloviating presence in a record-shattering field of 17 could be a blessing, allowing Bush to fly under the radar. But Trump’s rise has coincided Bush’s awkward return to the national stage, and he has proven to be gaffe-prone on the trail (Just this week he had to quickly walk back a statement that he wanted to de-fund “women’s health” programs, when he meant to say abortion services). The party’s conservative primary voters remain lukewarm and as importantly, he hasn’t scared rivals out of the race despite a massive $100 million-plus fundraising haul during his first few months in the race.

As much as anything, this is the story of 2016 so far. The proliferation of 17 candidates—a mob so big it needed to be subdivided into two separate debates—is a symptom of a deeper dynamic—the absence of a true frontrunner capable of uniting the party.

“The plan isn’t working,” conservative writer James Tobin wrote in Commentary magazine of Bush’s de facto entrance into the race in January. “[O]ther Republicans appear to be insufficiently shocked and awed.”

Trump is besting Bush so far, but it’s hardly a lock that this is anything more than summer fling. So far, The Donald has been immune from the backlash that typically kills mouth-driven campaigns—which is a good thing given his flip-flopping, amateur-hour staffing decisions, and relentless you’re-a-loser negativity, and the bad hair hidden under worse hats. But he shares a characteristic with all those lesser-known candidates who have also flooded into the 2016 race: He sees a vacuum at the top.

“You know, I thought about running in the past,” former New York Gov. George Pataki, the 8th candidate to announce his intention to run, told us. “I came close in 2012, but to be perfectly honest, Mitt Romney had been running for 6 years … it was pretty obvious that he had, if not a lock, a very, very strong hold on the Republican nomination.” 

Via: Politico

Continue Reading....

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Charles Koch calls for an end to 'corporate welfare'

The Koch conspiracy theorists are having a field day this weekend, as the bi-annual confab of Koch brothers donors got underway on Saturday. 

In addition to about 450 contributores, no less than 5 GOP presidential candidates will make an appearance through Sunday.Saturday featured "auditions" by two prominent White House hopefuls Scott Walker and Carly Fiorina. Jeb Bush will address the gathering today.

In his opening remarks, Charles Koch called for an end to "corporate welfare," specifically targetiing the big banks.
The press-shy 79-year-old chief executive of Koch Industries took the nation’s biggest banks to task for accepting “massive bailouts” and cheap loans from the Federal Reserve in return for the federal government wielding increased influence over how they run their businesses.
The comments came at a cocktail reception kicking off the latest gathering of wealthy conservatives assembled by Mr. Koch and his brother David. In brief remarks welcoming donors to the event at the St. Regis Monarch Beach resort, Charles Koch challenged the assembled business leaders to encourage other corporate chieftains to “start opposing rather than promoting corporate welfare.” 
[...]
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, one of the Republican White House contenders invited to appear, presented himself as the only candidate in the GOP field with a record of both fighting for conservative principles and winning those battles. He questioned why Republican majorities in Congress couldn’t repeal the 2010 health law or the Dodd-Frank financial-market reforms, a not-so-veiled shot at the senators in the race. 
But on other occasions, Mr. Walker sidestepped opportunities to take direct shots at two top rivals, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and real-estate developer Donald Trump.“You’re not going to hear me belittle any other Republicans,” he said, before restating his criticism of Mr. Trump for questioning the war record of Arizona Sen. John McCain, the 2008 Republican presidential nominee who spent more than five years in a Vietnamese prison camp.l 
Former Hewlett-Packard Chief Executive Carly Fiorina, the other 2016 contender to appear at the event Saturday, was much more assertive in her critique of Mr. Bush, questioning whether the son and brother of former presidents is the best candidate in the field to reform Washington. “Why do you think you’re the Bush who can change that?” she said, when asked what question she would pose to the former Florida governor, who will make an appearance on Sunday. 
The big banks give generously to both parties, in order to ensure they can keep their perks and advantages. But change is in the wind. The Republican who emerges as the nominee will almost certainly souind a more populist note when it comes to Wall Street and the big banks. Market friendly reforms could become an issue in the campaign as Democrats will seek to demonize Wall Street (while grasping for as much campaign cash as they can"). 

But Fiorina highlights the big question that should concern GOP primary voters; how can Jeb Bush be a credible candidate for "change"? He may end up raising more money than anyone else, but his policies reek of the Washington establishment and, in many cases, are in direct opposition to what the conservative mainstream believes. Right now, his poll numbers reflect his name recognition. But it should be interesting to see where he stands after the first debate when every other candidate attacks him for some of his more problematic proposals.




Saturday, August 1, 2015

JEB’S PLANNED PARENTHOOD PROBLEM: DID HE OPPOSE BLOOMBERG’S $50 MILLION DONATION?

The recent release of undercover videos that appear to show Planned Parenthood executives engaging in the sale of aborted body parts has put the Jeb Bush Presidential campaign on the defensive.

Before becoming a GOP candidate Bush was serving as a director of Bloomberg Philanthropies, former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg’s non-profit, in March 2014 when it announced a $50 million partnership with Planned Parenthood in Africa.
At issue is whether Bush was aware of the initiative and if he exercised his fiduciary responsibility as one of Bloomberg Philanthropies’ directors to provide “advice and oversight” to the foundation’s management team prior to the decision to spend $50 million on the program.
“As a board member of Bloomberg Philanthropies, Governor Bush did not vote on or approve individual projects or programs. Governor Bush and Mayor Bloomberg disagree on several policy areas, including Planned Parenthood. They do share a passion for reforming education, which was Governor Bush’s focus on the board,” Jeb Bush campaign spokeswoman Kristy Campbell tells Breitbart News. That echos the themes — and some of the exact words — she first used in April when interviewed by the Tampa Bay Times on Bush’s role in the Bloomberg Philanthropies’ $50 million partnership in Africa with Planned Parenthood.
Campbell adds:
Governor Bush’s strong record of fostering a culture of life is clear, and he has called on Congress to investigate and defund Planned Parenthood in light of the recent alarming revelations about its practices. During his eight years in office, Governor Bush took measures to protect innocent life by passing a partial-birth abortion ban, fighting for a constitutional amendment requiring parental notifications and doing everything possible to promote adoption.
Even for a charity as wealthy as Bloomberg Philanthropies, whose 2013 endowment was$5.4 billion, an expenditure of $50 million over several years is a substantial portion of the estimated $200 million in grants it disburses annually. In 2013, it disbursed $204 million in grants. Data is not yet available for 2014.
When news that Bush was one of the Bloomberg Family Foundation’s nineteen founding directors from the charity’s formation in 2010 until the end of 2014 (by which time the name had been changed to Bloomberg Philanthropies) was first brought to the public’s attention in April 2015 by the Tampa Bay Times, the Bush campaign tried to minimize Bush’s involvement with the Planned Parenthood decision.
But a Lifesite News article on Thursday resurrected the issue, which, in light of the release of the undercover videos, has become politically radioactive.
Last week, Bush called for a Congressional investigation into Planned Parenthood.
“I’m confirming that yes, we have a maternal and reproductive health program. We support work in countries in Latin America and Africa to prevent maternal deaths and work with partners including Planned Parenthood Global. In regards to Mr. Bush’s involvement, Bloomberg Philanthropies’ board members do not vote on individual initiatives or program spends,” Rebecca Carriero, a spokesperson for Bloomberg Philanthropies tells Breitbart News.
But pro-life activists are not impressed with the explanations offered by either the Bush campaign team or Bloomberg Philanthropies.
“Abortion and association with Planned Parenthood, the largest promoter and provider of abortions, will be front and center in the upcoming election,” Susan Allen, a pro-life activist, speaker and writer from Tennessee, tells Breitbart News.
“The pro-life community is adept at cutting through rhetoric and euphemisms very quickly,” Allen says.
“Governor Bush needs to answer why he would allow his name and influence to be added to a board who would donate $50 million dollars to this organization to export the culture of death to developing nations,” Allen adds.
Breitbart attempted to obtain more detailed answers from the Bush campaign, but did not receive a response to these specific questions:
(1) Was Governor Bush aware of the $50 million partnership with Planned Parenthood before it was announced in March 2014?
(2) If so, did he offer any advice to the CEO and/or Mr. Bloomberg as to the appropriateness of the project?
(3) If so, what was that advice?
Lacking any comment from the Bush campaign or Bloomberg Philanthropies to the contrary, it is fair to assume that as a director with clearly delineated fiduciary responsibilities, Bush was well aware of the $50 million Planned Parenthood initiative and did nothing to stand in its way, even if he was not asked to vote to approve the initiative.
According to press reports, Bush was paid $37,100 in director fees during his five years of service to the Bloomberg Family Foundation.
The current list of directors, which now numbers twenty-one, is a “Who’s Who” of establishment figures. It includes two Republican establishment figures well known to Bush: former Secretary of the Treasury Hank Paulson, who oversaw the bank bailout approved by his brother, former President George W. Bush, in the fall of 2008, and former Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao, wife of Senate Majority Leader 
Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY)

52%

The involvement of Bloomberg Philanthropies with Planned Parenthood on Jeb Bush’s watch is not the only problematic partnership that may cause Bush political troubles. The Bloomberg Philanthropies website also proudly notes a partnership with the Open Society Foundations, which is funded by far-left billionaire George Soros.
At the heart of the political problem for Bush is that he has a long-running professional and business relationship with a billionaire who espouses a political philosophy that is the exact opposite of the conservative limited government philosophy Bush is attempting to persuade Republicans he holds.
Bloomberg’s stated philosophy on the role of philanthropy and government, which he articulated in his 2014 “Annual Letter on Philanthropy” is exactly the sort of elitist statism abhorred by the Republican base:
Modern philanthropy began as a substitute for government. Where government failed, philanthropists stepped in, providing food for the poor, hospitals for the sick, and libraries, museums, and colleges for the masses. Philanthropy continues to play a vital role in all of these areas. But some still see philanthropy as an alternative to government. I see it as a way to embolden government.
In so many areas, governments represent our best hope for making the broad-based societal changes that philanthropic organizations are devoted to bringing about. Governments have the authority to drive change in ways that philanthropic organizations cannot. By leveraging our resources, and forming partnerships with government, philanthropic organizations can help push those changes forward. That mindset may be untraditional, but it is at the heart of nearly everything Bloomberg Philanthropies does.
Breitbart News asked the Bush campaign if Governor Bush agrees with Mike Bloomberg’s stated philosophy on the role of philanthropy and government, and if he does not, why he agreed to serve on the board of the Bloomberg Family Foundation from 2010 to 2014.
The Bush campaign has not yet responded to those questions either.
If Jeb Bush wants to win the Republican nomination for President, he’s going to have to start providing satisfactory answers to these questions.

Friday, July 31, 2015

POLITICS Jeb Bush Sat On Board Of Philanthropy That Gave Millions To Planned Parenthood

Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush answers a question from the audience during a town hall campaign stop at the VFW Post in Hudson, New Hampshire, July 8, 2015. REUTERS/Brian SnyderRepublican presidential candidate Jeb Bush was one of the directors of a charity that gave tens of millions of dollars to Planned Parenthood, LifeSiteNews first reported.
Named a founding director to the tax-exempt Bloomberg Family Foundation in 2010, Bush sat on the board until the end of 2014 when he began to prepare for his presidential run.
Bloomberg Philanthropies announced in March of 2014, while Bush was still on the board, it was giving $50 million to strengthen “reproductive health rights in Burkina Faso, Nicaragua, Senegal, Tanzania, and Uganda.
According to a Bloomberg Family Foundation statement, the philanthropy teamed up with Planned Parenthood to send abortion activists into these countries to “help augment their capacity for effective advocacy.”
“In 2014, we started supporting local nonprofit organizations in Burkina Faso, Senegal, Uganda, and Nicaragua to advocate for better policies in their countries that will expand access to comprehensive reproductive health services,” said the foundation.
“These organizations will receive technical assistance from Planned Parenthood Federation of America – Global Division to help augment their capacity for effective advocacy.”
Mike Bloomberg himself, Life Site News notes, discussed how his family foundation’s partnership would function with Planned Parenthood.
“I am happy to say our major partner in this project will be Planned Parenthood – Global,” Bloomberg said. “In some countries, our funding will help advocates work towards better sexual health policies for teens and better access to contraceptives. In others, we’ll help push for less restrictive abortion laws and more government funding for high-quality, accessible services.”
The Bush campaign responded to a Daily Caller inquiry with the following email statement:
“Governor Bush’s strong record of fostering a culture of life is clear, and he has called on Congress to investigate and defund Planned Parenthood in light of the recent alarming revelations about its practices. During his eight years in office, Governor Bush took measures to protect innocent life by passing a partial-birth abortion ban, fighting for a constitutional amendment requiring parental notifications and doing everything possible to promote adoption.

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Poll: Trump Soars Past Jeb, Rubio in Florida


Image: Poll: Trump Soars Past Jeb, Rubio in Florida

Donald Trump would beat both former Gov. Jeb Bush and Sen. Marco Rubio by wide margins if the Republican primary were held today in Florida, according to a new survey.

Twenty-six percent of 1,902 Republicans surveyed for The St. Petersburg Times said they would vote for Trump, vs. 20 percent for Bush and 10 percent for Rubio, based on results released Wednesday.

The Sunshine State Republicans were asked to choose among eight candidates. The survey was conducted July 18-28 and has a margin of error of 2 percent.

Twelve percent would vote for Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, while 16 percent said they were undecided or would vote for a candidate not named in the poll.

Here is how the remaining candidates fared:

  • Retired pediatric neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson, 5 percent.
  • Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, 4 percent each.
  • Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, 3 percent.

Trump continues to lead in national polls among GOP candidates — and Wednesday's survey shows the developer on top for the first time in Florida this year.

The St. Petersburg Times poll also comes as the first Republican debate nears Aug. 6 in Cleveland.

Trump told CNN Tuesday that he would not prepare for the contest with a debate coach.

"I am what I am," he told Don Lemon in an interview. He cited the 2012 debates between former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama.

"Romney had a debate coach, and Obama had a debate coach," Trump said. "I thought Obama was terrible, but Romney got worse and worse every time there was a debate. By the time they had third debate, he was catastrophic.

"I have to be myself," Trump added. "If it is not good enough, that's OK."

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Big Trouble for 'Inevitable' Hillary in New Poll ...

QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY, JULY 22, 2015 -  Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is behind or on the wrong side of a too-close-to-call result in matchups with three leading Republican contenders, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in Colorado, Iowa and Virginia, according to a Quinnipiac University Swing State Poll released today.
Perhaps the biggest loser, however, is Donald Trump, who has negative favorability ratings of almost 2-1 in each state, the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN-uh-pe-ack) University Poll finds. The Swing State Poll focuses on key states in the presidential election.
In several matchups in Iowa and Colorado, another Democratic contender, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, runs as well as, or better than Clinton against Rubio, Bush and Walker. Vice President Joseph Biden does not do as well.
Clinton gets markedly negative favorability ratings in each state, 35 - 56 percent in Colorado, 33 - 56 percent in Iowa and 41 - 50 percent in Virginia.
....
"Hillary Clinton's numbers have dropped among voters in the key swing states of Colorado, Iowa and Virginia. She has lost ground in the horserace and on key questions about her honesty and leadership," said Peter A. Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll. "On being a strong leader, a key metric in presidential campaigns, she has dropped four to 10 points depending on the state and she is barely above 50 percent in each of the three states."
"Against three Republicans, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Secretary Clinton trails in six matchups and is on the down side of too-close-to call in three," Brown added. 

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

WaPo-ABC Poll: Trump Almost As Popular as Bush Among GOP


Donald Trump's favorability is on the rise with Republicans and closing in on front-runner Jeb Bush, a new Washington Post-ABC News poll finds. 

Trump's appeal has risen to 57 percent, meaning that nearly six in every 10 Republicans see Trump in a favorable light, compared to 65 percent who saw him negatively just two months ago, the Post reported Wednesday. 

That's good enough to challenge Bush, whose appeal among GOP voters is just six points higher at 63 percent. 

But Trump remains unfavorable among the general public, the poll finds, with 61 percent ranking him unfavorably and 33 percent favorably. Latinos by a wide margin — 81 percent — dislike Trump, particularly after his recent comments on Mexicans and immigrants. His numbers with this group were at 60 percent unfavorable in a May survey.

However, the general public's view of the real estate mogul has improved since he launched his campaign in May, when 71 percent had an unfavorable view of Trump. 

By comparison, Bush's favorability among all voters of all political stripes is at 38 percent, with 47 percent having an unfavorable view of the former Florida governor. 

Outside of Hispanics, Trump's appeal has slowly improved across almost all demographics and parties. Even Democrats like the billionaire slightly more — his favorability there is up from 17 percent to 19 percent. 

While his favorability rating is going up across the board, conservatives are split, 46 percent to 46 percent, on how much they like Trump, and his net favorability rating is still in the negative among independents, moderates and women. 

Trump says he's confident he could win substantial Hispanic votes if he's the party's nominee.

Brushing aside the controversy over labeling Mexican immigrants as "rapists" and "criminals," Trump argues "the Hispanics love me."

He tells MSNBC: "I employ thousands of Hispanics."

Trump also says he's not worried about any lack of support in the Latino community and argues he hasn't been hurt politically by his calls for clamping down on illegal immigration.

Trump has refused to soften his stand on immigration, even after a plea by Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus that he tone down his remarks.

The GOP fared poorly with the Hispanic community in the 2012 presidential election.

Bush's net favorability among Hispanics is 15 percentage points higher than Trump's. In the poll, 46 percent said they have a favorable view of the former Florida governor, who has a Mexican wife and a much softer stance on illegal immigration, with 31 percent saying they have a negative view of Bush. The Post notes that these are "very good numbers for a Republican these days."

In addition, Bush's general favorability rating also tops Trump's in every other major category. This is true even among conservatives, by 67 percent–28 percent, which amounts to a net favorability rating for Bush of 39 percentage points. Trump's rating with conservative Republicans is far lower that Bush's, with a net 20 percentage points, or 58 percent–38 percent. 

The Washington Post-ABC News poll was taken July 8-12 of 1,011 adults with a margin of error of 3.5 percentage points.



Monday, June 29, 2015

If Each GOP Candidate Were a Conservative News Site, Which Would They Be?

If you were a tree, what kind of a tree would you be? I’d be a weeping willow because… sigh. More important question about personifying inanimate objects: If the 15 or so Republican presidential candidates were conservative news websites, which ones would they be?
Let’s attempt to answer that question because it’s Monday and we’re all in for a long 497 days until Election Day 2016.
Note: We’d make a companion piece for the Democrats and liberal news sites, but there are only four options. So here goes: Hillary Clinton is the Huffington Post; Bernie Sanders would be Democracy Now!; Martin O’Malley would be ThinkProgress; and Lincoln Chafee would be… oh man, is there even a site out there that would fit the profile?
And now the Republican field (yes, some haven’t announced yet)…
 
Donald Trump – Breitbart
trump_breitbart
Think of the most common words used to describe Donald Trump: “Blowhard,” “obnoxious,” “clownish,” “troll,” “windbag,” “xenophobic.” Sounds exactly like the preponderance of material coming out of Breitbart, right? (It also doesn’t hurt that Trump’s unofficial stenographer is the site’s most prized reporter.)

Marco Rubio – IJReview
rubio_ijreview
Did you know Senator Rubio is young(ish), likes hip hop, uses hashtags, and does clever non-old-person things? He’s one of the cool kids, you guys. #YOLO.

Ted Cruz – The Right Scoop
poop_cruz
If you are a loyal reader of The Right Scoop, you’d come away thinking literally every word uttered by Sen. Ted Cruz is “FANTASTIC” (all-caps required). No, really… take a look. With that in mind, it seems like the most appropriate fit.

Lindsey Graham – Washington Free Beacon
lindsey_wfb
Because Sen. Graham loves to troll; because he’s never met a war he didn’t like; and because hedespises Rand Paul. Oh, but he also knows it’s all about taking down Hillary Clinton in the end.

Mike Huckabee – NewsBusters
hucklebusters
If there’s a gay person kissing on your television, a voluptuous woman singing about sex on your radio, or a Hollywood celebrity saying something about Republicans or Christianity, Mike Huckabee is there to sermonize against it.

Scott Walker – NRO
walker_nro
Slightly wonkier than the rest, slightly more buttoned-up, classically conservative in the William F. Buckley tradition, and definitely opposed to unions.

Rick Santorum – TheBlaze
blaze_santorum
TheBlaze founder Glenn Beck once described former Sen. Rick Santorum as “the next George Washington,” and while it’s not a perfect fit, both the site and the candidate have an obvious appeal to “Real American” religious conservatives who homeschool their children and are terrified of the coming apocalypse.

Bobby Jindal – The Daily Signal
jindal_dailysig
Because he got in the race way too late and no one really cares.

Jeb Bush – The Weekly Standard
tws_bush
Because anything with the name “Bush” or “Cheney” would get the thumbs up from Bill Kristol & Co.

George Pataki – Power Line
pataki_pwl
Think of it this way: Years ago, Power Line had its time in the conservative spotlight when it broke the scandal that ended Dan Rather‘s CBS News career. Now, though? No one cares.

Ben Carson – WorldNetDaily
carson_wnd
Because the theory that prison sex proves homosexuality is definitively and always a “choice” is something you’d expect to see next to an article questioning President Obama’s birth certificate or a column suggesting the Sandy Hook school massacre might’ve been staged.

Carly Fiorina – The Daily Caller
fiorina_thedc
Because, yes, the Daily Caller is a staunchly conservative website that projects a tough-guy attitude, but occasionally it just wants to be a beautiful, strong woman.

Chris Christie – Wall Street Journal
wsj_christie
Well-moneyed, at one time considered the mainstream, and decidedly east coast when it comes to politics. Also because Jeb Bush was already taken.

Rand Paul – The Federalist
federalist_rand
Rick Perry – RedState
redstate_perry
The former Texas governor is as red state as they come. Sure, any of the southern state Republicans could embody the sensibilities of Erick Erickson‘s RedState blog, but the devoutly Christian Gov. Perry has had a long, close relationship with the site. This doesn’t hurt either.

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