![]() |
Quote:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
What I see is they spent 5 million to win a seat in a district that was considered a safe Republican one.
Multiply that by the number of open seats and consider that the master tweeter has started a battle with the Koch brothers and everyone else that doesn’t agree with him completely How do you think that’s gonna work Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
The democrats will most likely gain seats in the house, good chance they retake the house. They most likely lose seats in the Senate. Curious to see what happens at the state level, especially here in CT. I'm also curious to see what happens if the GDP growth is another big number next quarter, which will be right before the midterms. Might not be enough to save the GOP lead in the house. Starting a civil war with the Koch brothers might not be a great strategy. |
|
Quote:
if this is the future of the GOP be afraid.[/QUOTE] And then, you do exactly what you accuse Trump of doing, you try to arouse fear. |
Quote:
And then, you do exactly what you accuse Trump of doing, you try to arouse fear.[/QUOTE] Your in the I am just here for the supreme court seat Crowd .. I would love to see and hear what is your definition far more diverse at Trumps rally means ... let me guess this https://news.iheart.com/featured/rus...-of-the-crowd/ http://www.capitalgazette.com/multim...6693-132.html# I guess theres the proof ... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
we can’t all be as united as your party. no confluctbthere between the moderates and the extremists, nope. there is pure harmony in the left, and a brutal civil war on the right, which will result in the democrats running everything come november. do i have that right? trump and the koch brothers are at odds. those are two powerful forces in the GOP. but moderates in both sides are more electable, than extremists, in most places. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
the democrats, needing a convenient excuse as to why they apparently lost, are blaming the green party candidate. but since the green party candidate received a smaller number of votes than would close the gap between the republican and the democrat, thisnis some interesting math. because when i was in elementary school, i was taught that 1,700 > 1,000. butbthats me, what do i know about anything.
ANYTHING to avoid admitting that you can’t win ‘em all, and this was one of those that you simply lost. Democrats always need an outside force to blame, liberalism commands that they not consider that they are responsible for anything, they must have had their rightful victory stolen by another entity. they didn’t lose, they were robbed. Always. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
From Fox “Green Party spoiler candidate in Ohio special election claims to be descended from aliens By Katelyn Caralle | Washington Examiner” Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
it ain’t the DNC that’s saying it, you are correct there. mostly hollywood liberals.
https://www.mrctv.org/blog/democrats...n-party-voters Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
and spence is right that the closeness of this race, in this district, is a good sign for the democrats chances of re-taking the house in november. .
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Who says the dem lost in Ohio? He’s trailing by 1500 votes and there are still 8000 to count.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Hold that thought
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
Your in the I am just here for the supreme court seat Crowd .. I would love to see and hear what is your definition far more diverse at Trumps rally means ... let me guess this https://news.iheart.com/featured/rus...-of-the-crowd/ http://www.capitalgazette.com/multim...6693-132.html# I guess theres the proof ...[/QUOTE] My definition of far more diverse in regard to Trump rallies is that the crowds are made up of the great "diversity" of the American public, not just the two cherry picked types that Spence noted. |
Quote:
Deep thinker Alyssa Milano goes further, she thinks that the Russians (Russians!!!) manipulated the Green Party apparatus, to sabotage the Democrat's chances there. Obviously not many people listen to her, but not enough people are laughing at her, only people on my side are laughing at her. I hope she gets a prominent speaking engagement at the next democrat national convention. |
Quote:
"Status threat, not economic hardship, explains the 2016 presidential vote" And here is the research paper, with the who and why http://www.pnas.org/content/115/19/E4330 |
Quote:
Quote:
I don't believe you. You posts are like Bernie is typing them for you (or has redistributed your fingers to various keys ; ) ) BTW - this uber Right Wing NearFascist right here did vote for him in the Primaries Quote:
|
Quote:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
Probably her Twitter feed. Unfortunately she has the same Cell Phone Filters as the Pres |
Quote:
ByS. E. Cupp @secupp The polls closed on Tuesday evening in Ohio. Yet, as I write this, the only thing clear about Republican Troy Balderson’s slight edge over Democrat Danny O’Connor is that nothing is clear. The race for an open seat in Congress is a few hundred votes apart and still too close. But this razor-thin, near-tie in a special election — for a seat that will be up for a vote again in November — is nevertheless a huge “trouncing,” both sides are claiming, and proof their party is sure to dominate the midterms. Late on Tuesday night, as votes were still being counted, the Republican National Committee blasted out their congrats to Balderson, writing: “With President Trump’s support that helped lead him to victory, Troy Balderson’s win tonight is another example of the so-called ‘blue wave’ being nothing but a ripple.” Er, no. If anything, it’s an example of unexpectedly high Democratic turnout in a district Trump won in 2016 by 11 points. And, to be clear, history, as well as nearly every predictive analysis of the midterms, suggests Republicans will perform poorly in November, particularly in the House. But welcome to Trump’s America, where losses are wins, ties are trouncings, waves are ripples and facts matter not at all. This kind of fact-free spin is hardly new in politics, of course. Democrats, too, spun the results as proof of a blue wave. But I was curious to see how average folks interpreted what was essentially a tie in the era of “fake news” and Trump’s “alternative facts.” And, not surprisingly, there was blind rage and willful ignorance on both sides. I tweeted the RNC’s statement, and noted the fact — repeat, fact — that Balderson at that time was up .9 points in a Trump +11 district. I got replies from the left claiming that O’Connor’s likely loss was proof Republicans and Trump — who is poised to be 14 for 14 in primary endorsements — were totally owned: Doug Johnson (@bleacherscreech) wrote: “10.9% swing in a red gerrymandered district. Whistling past the graveyard #GOP?” Lynne Charlotte (@lynne_kern) wrote: “Looks like the ripple is in the win. The wave 🌊? NOVEMBER HERE WE COME!” Ulsterman (@alexcoleraine) wrote: “Tsunamis start off as a ripple, until they hit the shore. Enjoy this ‘victory’ for it will be short lived!” From the right, my mere questioning of the RNC’s dopey spin made me a Democrat: dbg (@dbg0501) wrote, “Keep crowing about your moral victories. Whatever makes you feel good. The fact that you’d want a Pelosi running the House is quite telling.” Others were more creative. It was the calendar’s fault, said one. ConservativeEsquire (@ConservEsq) wrote: “People go on vacation in August. Republicans who live in suburbs go on vacation in August.” Still others blamed the media (of course they did). Kevin Stuckey (@drberzerko) wrote, “I guess with 90% negative stories by your colleagues and censorship by social media it’s probably a bigger win than your pea brain can admit.” For a few celebrities, it was all the fault of Green Party candidate Joe Manchik, whose 1,100 votes could have pushed O’Connor over the line: Billy Eichner (@billyeichner) wrote: “Dear Green Party: Can you PLEASE wait to make your symbolic votes at a time when our government isn’t being overrun by white supremacists??? Come @ me I don’t care.” And Alyssa Milano (@Alyssa_Milano) seconded the motion: “You know what sucks? Because of our unwillingness to pass policy that protects our election integrity, I immediately think the Green Party votes tonight are Russian meddling. Why else would anyone cast a protest vote in Ohio when there’s so much at stake?” Of course, a pungent bouillabaisse of factors could have all contributed to Tuesday’s results. But it’s still just a near tie — in one special election, in one district, in one state. Apparently, in 2018, that means definitively that my side is kicking your side’s ass. Or just as easily, vice versa. secuppdailynews@yahoo.com |
Quote:
|
Pete -
If anyone on the right sees this as a reason to feel better about our chances of holding the house in November, they are either lying or delusional. The left can legitimately claim that there is good news in a close loss, if it turns out to be a close loss. The President's party usually loses Houses seats in the first midterm, and I can easily be convinced that this President, with the help of a media that's absolutely committed to helping democrats, could be poised to lose more seats than usual. But a roaring economy, you'd think, would help to mitigate that. At the same time, the democrats really have nowhere to go but up at this point, the pendulum has to swing back to the left at some point. As I've said, I'm fascinated to see what happens. The dems probably re-take the house, the dems probably lose a couple of senate seats, who knows what happens at the state level. Can't wait to see what happens in CT. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Maybe Scott Baio will run for office. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
https://twitter.com/Alyssa_Milano/st...5774552014848? Quote:
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:13 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright 1998-20012 Striped-Bass.com