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Donald-Trump-Dubuque-Iowa

DUBUQUE, IA – AUGUST 25: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks to guests gathered from around Iowa and neighboring Wisconsin. (PHOTO: GETTY)

With an overwhelming vote from working class voters, Republican Donald Trump has defeated Hillary Clinton in the blue state of Wisconsin. With 71.1% percent of precincts reporting, the Republican businessman had nearly 4 point lead on Mrs. Clinton. (2,559 of 3,620 precincts).

With an overwhelming vote from working class

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump pumps his fist during a campaign rally, Sunday, Oct. 23, 2016, in Naples, Fla. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump pumps his fist during a campaign rally, Sunday, Oct. 23, 2016, in Naples, Fla. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)

With an overwhelming vote from working class voters and the Panhandle, Republican Donald Trump has defeated Hillary Clinton in Florida. With 99.1% percent of precincts reporting, the Republican businessman has 49.2% to 47.7% of the vote for Mrs. Clinton.

Amazingly, Mrs. Clinton put up huge numbers in the Democratic strongholds of Broward County and Palm Beach County, but the latter was much closer than anyone predicted (save for PPD) and Mr. Trump ran up big margins in traditionally Republican strongholds.

The Florida Panhandle, despite hearing terrible exit polls that were horribly wrong, the Republican strength flexed it’s muscles and went in historical numbers to the polls for the outsider.

Meanwhile, incumbent Republican Sen. Marco Rubio defeated Democratic Rep. Patrick Murphy handily and retains his seat. The win gives the GOP a much better chance to hang on to control of the Upper Chamber. The GOP is already projected by PPD to hold on to the House of Representatives.

Thus far, Mr. Trump has carried nearly all the states lost by Gov. Mitt Romney in his failed bid against Barack Obama in 2012, including the must-win battleground states of North Carolina and Ohio.

With an overwhelming vote from working class

crooked-clintons

In spite of the mainstream media spin, there is a very stark choice this election cycle. For those #NeverTrump Republicans out there, it is a very simple choice to make. You can choose to vote against evil or not.

You don’t have to like Donald Trump or support his inflammatory statements in the past. However, I am sure you could find a way to support the bulk of his policies. You won’t agree with all of them, but as Ronald Reagan said, if you can get most of what you want, go for it.

But it’s deeper than that. Hillary Clinton is pure evil and corrupt through and through. You know that. I know that. The world knows that. If one tenth of what has been reported is true, she should be in jail.

If she becomes president, our republic will be gone, probably never to recover. She doesn’t give a damn about America or her people. She cares about herself, money, power, Islam, and other globalist agendas.

She will sell out our people to the Chinese, to the Saudis, to whomever pays Bill Clinton enough money. She’s already demonstrated this behavior. It’s nothing new. As American servicemen and women die overseas as she starts wars, “What difference does it make?” will be her mantra. “I got mine, get yours,” will be her response to those suffering declining income and unemployment as their jobs are shipped overseas.

It’s no more complicated than that. As I said, for conservatives, it should be an easy choice. So vote against evil. That’s the real principal you should be concerned about.

Copyright © 2016 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

In spite of the mainstream media spin,

california-vote-sign

File photo of a California polling place sign. (Credit: Ho John Lee/flickr via Creative Commons)

Fox News host Bret Baier last Friday explained “On the Record” with Brit Hume how the networks’ decision desks call races for presidential candidates. What we heard out of Baier indicates that Big Media outlets have no intention of correcting the exit poll flaws that led them to cover past elections irresponsibly and make incorrect calls.

If you listen to the media, then you think the biggest exit poll blunder came in both the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections. But that’s only because their favored candidate lost. As far as the data go, the discrepancy has been far worse in other elections and they by far overestimate Democratic support and underestimate Republican support. This isn’t a new artifact or one U.S.-specific, either. Nigel Farage was getting ready to $H!t his pants the day voters decided Brexit.

But let’s talk about those previous elections first and others.

In 2000, the Voter News Service falsely led CNN, which was followed by the rest of the networks, to call the state of Florida first for Al Gore, then for George W. Bush. Eventually, they reported it was “too close to call.” On Election Day 2002, the Voter News Service completely fell apart, which led to the creation of the National Election Pool for 2004, consisting of major television networks and The Associated Press.

But the $10 million polling system also failed. The final wave of national survey data showed then-Sen. John Kerry with a statistically significant lead, or outside the margin of error. In fact, the final wave of national exit polls showed Mr. Kerry winning the popular vote by 51% to 48%, more than enough to carry the Electoral College.

He didn’t and news outlets were pissed. A report written by exit pollsters Joe Lenski and Warren Mitofsky basically told them to stop using exit polls to call elections.

“The exit poll is a blunt instrument,” Lenski told CNN during the review, adding “the polls are getting less accurate.”

Bill Wheatley, then the vice president at NBC News, which was a partner overseeing the new pool, suggested for future elections the survey data be reported later in the day. He was concerned about leaks for two reasons–influencing the vote and making the wrong calls.

“If it were not for leaks we would not have much of the problem forced on us by the leakees: the nonsubscribing media and the politicos,” the report said. “They don’t know how to evaluate what is being leaked, and then they demand that the leaked results be accurate in midday before it is vetted and before it is complete.”

“We made a mistake in not realizing the full impact of these leaked exit poll numbers on the political discourse of the day.”

Uh huh.

But what if you were trying to influence the election, as say, WikiLeaks clearly show the media have tried and continue to do today.

Well, you would continue to make the same mistakes, without telling viewers that they have been far worse than in 2000 and 2004. Further, you wouldn’t tell your viewers how lopsided the discrepancies have been.

In 1992, national exit polls overstated Bill Clinton’s support in the vote by 2.5%. While that’s roughly the same as Mr. Kerry in 2004, the election wasn’t close so nobody cared.

As Mark Blumenthal himself once wrote in his Mystery Pollster blog, Mr. Mitofsky, who ran the 2004 exit poll operation along with partner Mr. Lenski, wrote the following in the Spring 2003 issue of Public Opinion Quarterly (p. 51):

An inspection of within-precinct error in the exit poll for senate and governor races in 1990, 1994 and 1998 shows an understatement of the Democratic candidate for 20 percent of the 180 polls in that time period and an overstatement 38 percent of the time…the most likely source of this error is differential non-response rates for Democrats and Republicans:

From the internal CNN report on the network’s performance on Election Night 2000 (p. 48 of pdf):

Warren Mitofsky and Joe Lenski, heads of the CNN/CBS Decision Team, told us in our January 26 interview with them that in VNS’s use of exit polls on Election Day 2000, the exit polls overstated the Gore vote in 22 states and overstated the Bush vote in 9 states. In the other 19 states, the polls matched actual results. There was a similar Democratic candidate overstatement in 1996 and a larger one in 1992.

In fact, as Blumental points out, Mitofsky and Lenski said exit polls have overstated Democratic support in every election since 1990 (and badly in 1980). In 2000, some of the biggest doozies, including a few battleground states, which Colorado really wasn’t back then, are below and have been taken directly from the internal report:

  1. Alabama: Exit Poll Gore + 1.2; Result: Bush + 14.9
  2. Arizona: Gore + 3.6; Result: Bush + 6.3
  3. Colorado: Gore + 3.1; Result: Bush + 8.4
  4. Georgia: Bush + 4.7; Bush + 11.7
  5. North Carolina: Gore +3.0; Result: Bush+12.8

In an internal report from CNN, Joan Konner, James Risser, and Ben Wattenberg said in conclusion:

Exit polling is extremely valuable as a source of post-election information about the electorate. But it has lost much of the value it had for projecting election results in close elections…[Their recommendation to CNN:] Cease the use of exit polling to project or call winners of states. The 2000 election demonstrates the faults and dangers in exit polling. Even if exit polling is made more accurate, it will never be as accurate as a properly conducted actual vote count.

Then why not shut the hell up until raw vote totals confirm the exit polls?

Exit polls still have considerable problems and

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, left, and Abraham Lincoln, left, the 16th president of the United States.

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, left, and Abraham Lincoln, left, the 16th president of the United States.

You’d think there’d have been more laughs. Hard-fought political campaigns drenched in sweat and tears usually produce moments of levity. But Americans seem to have lost their sense of humor, becoming late-night angry, frustrated and sick with anxiety.

Mark Twain said: “The secret source of Humor itself is not joy but sorrow. There is no humor in heaven.” The problem is that Americans can’t agree on what to be sorrowful about. Many can’t even recognize as false the “facts” fueling their woes, so trapped are they in their alternate reality.

Political wit has traditionally provided sparks of light in the darkest of times.

Winston Churchill: “If Hitler invaded hell, I would make at least a favorable reference to the devil in the House of Commons.”

Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War: “I can make more generals, but horses cost money.”

Made today, such remarks would easily ignite demands for apologies from groups feeling insulted — or, in many cases, feigning umbrage for political effect. Often the demands follow failed attempts at wit, which is too bad. Efforts to lighten things need encouraging.

Theodore Roosevelt poked Grover Cleveland as “His Accidency.” And when George H.W. Bush persisted in likening his opponent Bill Clinton to Elvis Presley, Clinton responded, “I don’t think Bush would have liked Elvis very much, and that’s just another thing that’s wrong with him.”

Wit requires using words and ideas in quick, inventive and humorous ways. Donald Trump’s insults were mere stink bombs. And his alt-right chorus was a uniquely dimwitted bunch. The alt-right’s idea of funny is grossly worded memes tacked on obscene images. Yuk, yuk, yuck.

Trump did show some comedic promise at the Al Smith dinner, delivering some decent jokes written for him. Self-mockery is not in Trump’s natural repertory, but he got laughs complaining that everyone loved Michelle Obama’s speech but not his wife’s when she used the exact same (plagiarized) words.

But then his rudder broke off, as it so often did, and Trump veered into leaden attacks on that “corrupt” woman. Trump’s own idea of funny wasn’t funny, but it sometimes sounded that way because of his New York patter.

Bernie Sanders, though Jewish and from Brooklyn, revealed no sense of humor. Vermont must have beat it out of him.

That said, Calvin Coolidge of Putney, Vermont, fired off some of the presidency’s most sophisticated wisecracks.

At a White House briefing, “Silent Cal” gave one-word answers of “no” to a string of questions dealing with Prohibition, the World Court and the farm situation. As reporters were leaving the room, Coolidge called out, “And don’t quote me.”

Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, hasn’t said a single really funny thing on her own. (Perhaps someone can correct me on this.)

Much of the left has replaced humor with snark, which is heavy and grouchy and does not zing. The one bright lift this season came from the “Saturday Night Live” skits making fun of Clinton, Trump, Sanders and the media figures covering them.

Whatever happened to the clever retort? Whatever happened to the smart rejoinder? Portrayed as a plodding man, Lincoln said, “I am a slow walker, but I never walk back.” Not hilarious but a return shot.

Perhaps we lost our ability to laugh during the recent campaign because we didn’t find ourselves to be funny. One of the nominees was a dangerously crazy man. Scarier than Trump himself was that so many Americans found him acceptable.

Well, Churchill said, “If you’re going through hell, keep going.”

But also remember Will Rogers’ nod to the opposition: “Everything is funny, as long as it’s happening to somebody else.”

[caption id="attachment_45684" align="aligncenter" width="740"] Democratic presidential candidate

Former President Bill Clinton, right, stands on stage with then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, and their daughter Chelsea Clinton during the closing Plenary session of the seventh Annual Meeting of the Clinton Foundation, or the Clinton Global Initiative, on September 22 in New York City. (Photo: Reuters)

Former President Bill Clinton, right, stands on stage with then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, and their daughter Chelsea Clinton during the closing Plenary session of the seventh Annual Meeting of the Clinton Foundation, or the Clinton Global Initiative, on September 22 in New York City. (Photo: Reuters)

Oh, no! President Hillary Clinton! For four years we must follow her bureaucrats’ edicts.

It’s full employment time for trickster lawyers and other parasites who feed off complex government. Even The New York Times admits her taxes will make life more complicated. Useful people who actually produce things must kiss more bureaucrats’ rings begging for their approval.

I should probably be more careful with my assumptions, because I write this column Tuesday — well before election results are announced. As of now, I don’t know that Clinton won.

But by the time you read this, I’m sure she’ll be president-elect.

I’ve grown to trust the world’s best predictor of future events: gamblers — futures markets, a.k.a. prediction markets. Despite the vast optimism of enthusiastic Donald Trump supporters and media babble about “polls tightening” and a Trump “surge,” etc., by now, he’s lost. Lost big.

Another prediction: Trump did not challenge the results. He surprises sneering pundits by being gracious in defeat. Well, sort of. He does throw in a few zingers. But he doesn’t challenge the results.

Thank goodness Republicans held the House of Representatives. Presidents have grabbed more power in recent years, but Congress still writes the laws, so the Republican House will limit the legislative damage Clinton’s socialists will do.

Unfortunately, the Senate gives consent to Supreme Court picks, so Clinton may have her way. The bettors predict Democratic control, although the race is close.

I fear that on Tuesday, freedom-loving senators like Wisconsin’s Ron Johnson lost to command-and-control bureaucrats like Russ Feingold. That means, over four years, Clinton gets to appoint as many as five big-government-loving justices. They serve for life. It may be half a century before America recovers from that.

Clinton can do a lot of damage over the next four years.

She will keep America at war — Afghanistan is already the longest war America has ever fought — 15 years and counting. She may start other wars. She will continue our march toward bankruptcy. She will stifle economic growth by pushing countless new rules.

But aside from that, cheer up! It could have been worse. Destructive ballot measures like “ColoradoCare,” progressives’ attempt to create state-run health care, were soundly defeated, I assume.

Also, thanks to our constitution, the president’s powers are limited. Around election time, people fight as if the president has unlimited power. On NBC, Chuck Todd says voters “decide who can lead this country.” No, Chuck, scientists, artists and entrepreneurs lead the country. Politicians just preside over government .

Chris Hayes talks about politicians “running the country.” Wrong again! A president doesn’t run the country, we do. A president is commander in chief. She runs just the federal government (and just a third of that, the executive branch).

Despite the destructive growth of government under Presidents Bush and Obama, free people have continued to find ways to do things better, faster, cheaper.

Despite decades of presidents like them, we live longer than ever, and we’re richer today than we’ve ever been. Even those who didn’t gain in income have gained in other ways. We now have air conditioning, music services like Spotify, fresh fruit in winter and the world at our fingertips via tiny smartphones. Low-income Americans live better than kings and queens once did. Would you change places with King George? George didn’t have antibiotics, Netflix or flush toilets.

Things got better not because of any politician, but because America has rule of law and individual freedom. Individual Americans were allowed to create — usually, without government getting in the way.

There’s no doubt that, under President Clinton, innovation is threatened. Entrepreneur George Hotz just shut down his driverless car startup, he told Venturebeat.com, because “[I] would much rather spend my life building amazing tech than dealing with regulators and lawyers. It isn’t worth it.”

Clinton’s higher taxes, environmental regulations, labor laws and higher minimum wage will kill other opportunities.

But the checks and balances provided by our Constitution will stop the socialists from wrecking everything that’s good.

It’s time people realize that no president — or government — is the answer to most of our problems. We are.

Oh, no! President Hillary Clinton! For four

Election-2016-New-Hampshire-Turnout

A ballot is posted to the wall as voters wait in line to cast their ballots for the New Hampshire primary at a polling place Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016, in Manchester, N.H. (Photo: AP/David Goldman)

DIXVILLE, N.H. — Donald Trump opened up a small early lead over Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election, winning over the voters of three New Hampshire precincts 32-25. Under New Hampshire state law, communities with fewer than 100 voters can get permission to open their polls at midnight and close them as soon as all registered voters have cast their ballots.

Polls in the New Hampshire towns of Dixville, Hart’s Location and Millsfield, a proud group of voters first to cast their vote in a presidential election, open just after midnight Tuesday and close as soon as everyone votes.

While Mrs. Clinton won more votes in Dixville and Hart’s Location, Mr. Trump won Millsfield with a 16-4 margin. The New York businessman hopes that’ll be the bigger story on Tuesday, with the Granite State closing fast in the final week of the election.

Libertarian Gary Johnson earned three votes, while Mrs. Clinton’s rival Bernie Sanders, John Kasich and 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney got write-in votes.

Do they predict the outcome of the state or the race in general. The answer: Dixville Notch has proven unreliable at predicting statewide or national results, but the other towns have roughly the same predictive value. The small town results hold more predictive value in primaries than general elections.

Donald Trump has a small early lead

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump delivers his speech on Election Eve in Manchester, New Hampshire, November 7, 2016.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump delivers his speech on Election Eve in Manchester, New Hampshire, November 7, 2016.

After nearly 2 years of fighting the media and two party establishment, Donald Trump ended campaigning asking voters to “deliver justice at the ballot box.” The New York businessman has been trying to get back to the surge he was enjoying before some of that momentum was blunted by FBI Director James Comey announcing the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s mishandling of classified information would again result in no charges.

“Now it’s time for the American people to deliver justice at the ballot box,” he told the crowd. “Tomorrow, the American working class will strike back.”

He ended with the people he could count on the most throughout a campaign that saw an old guard try to hold on to their power–his family and supporters. A massive crowd cheered when he announced the support of New England Patriots star quarterback Tom Brady, and head coach Bill Belichick.

“You can have Pocahontas. I’ll take Tom Brady and Bill Belichick,” he said in a reference to far leftwing Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., to cheers from an enthusiastic crowd.

Trump’s closing argument throughout the day: if he wins, “corrupt politicians and their donors lose.”

After nearly 2 years of fighting the

Wolf Blitzer, left, and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump sit for an interview in which the Democratic National Committee designed and planted the questions for the "anchor" to pose.

Wolf Blitzer, left, and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump sit for an interview in which the Democratic National Committee designed and planted the questions for the “anchor” to pose.

Perceived leftwing bias at CNN has earned it the nickname the “Clinton News Network,” but new emails reveal complete corruption and collusion. The emails show the DNC actually gave CNN anchors Wolf Blizter and Jake Tapper suggestions and questions to help their narrative before interviews with Donald Trump.

The latest batch of 8,263 emails released on Sunday night also show CNN asked the DNC for advice when it came to interviewing former Republican candidate, Ted Cruz. Mr. Cruz was Mr. Trump’s chief rival throughout much of the primary season.

An email dated April 28 sent from DNC research director Lauren Dillon read ‘Subject: Cruz on CNN’ stated ‘CNN is looking for questions. Please send some topical/interesting ones.’ Only a few days before, on April 25, she asked for questions from officials and staffers for an interview that CNN’s Wolf Blitzer would be conducting with Trump.

On April 24, DNC research director Lauren Dillon sent the above email to staffers saying Blitzer is interviewing Trump ahead of his foreign policy address. The subject line reads 'Trump Questions for CNN'

Yet one day before that on April 24, Dillon sent the above email to staffers stating that Blitzer was interviewing Trump ahead of his foreign policy address. The subject line reads ‘Trump Questions for CNN’:

An email (above) dated April 28 entitled 'Cruz on CNN' reads 'CNN is looking for questions. Please send some topical/interesting ones.' That email was sent from Dillon to other officials and staffers

The email above, which is dated April 28 reading ‘Subject: Cruz on CNN’ reads ‘CNN is looking for questions. Please send some topical/interesting ones.’ That email was also sent from Dillon to other officials and staffers.

‘Wolf Blitzer is interviewing Trump on Tues (sic) ahead of his foreign policy address on Wed,’ Dillon wrote in the email that was entitled ‘CNN questions for Trump.’

There were numerous questions submitted by the DNC for Blitzer to ask the New York businessman. However, in a follow-up email, she informed the group of staffers that particular Trump interview ended up being cancelled.

‘CNN said the interview was cancelled as of now but will keep the questions for the next one Good to have for others as well,’ Dillon wrote.

DNC deputy communications director Christina Freundlich responded to Dillion’s email with “Boo,” meaning she was disappointed. Still, Blitzer, who was hammered for bias by Newt Gingrich during a GOP presidential primary debate, has been working at CNN since 1990. He did interview Trump on May 4.

Further, in a separate email exchange that was dated April 28, Jason Seher, who is a writer for Jake Tapper, a trusted journalist and host of CNN’s State of the Union, emailed Pablo Manriquez, a former DNC media booker thanking him and said he needed to know ‘asap if we want to offer Jake Tapper questions to ask us.’

In that same email chain, he said he needed to know 'asap if we want to offer Jake Tapper questions to ask us'

Yet in another email dated April 28, Seher wrote Manriquez thanking him for ‘facilitating Luis coming on today, and bearing with us through a meelee (sic) of GOP nonsense and cancellations and all that. Any particular points he’ll want to make? We’re gonna stay Dem focused…’

In response, Manriquez told Seher he would put Dillon and Christina Freundlich into the loop to see ‘if there’s any newsworthy (opposition) Luis can drop.’ Freundlich worked for the Iowa Democratic Party before she got caught up in a political firestorm after she took a selfie smiling in front of a deadly New York City fire in March 2015. She was hired as a spokeswoman for the DNC in July 2015.

‘Window closing on this. Need to know asap if we want to offer Jake Tapper questions to ask us,’ Manriquez wrote to staffers.

WikiLeaks Jake Tapper Staff DNC ColludingThe release, which comes hours before the 2016 presidential election, now follows revelations that DNC interim chairwoman Donna Brazile got debate questions from the Cable News Network and leaked them to the Clinton campaign before a debate and a town hall event. It was just one aspect in a tangled web of corruption and bias to stop Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders from defeating Mrs. Clinton for the Democratic nomination.

After they succeeded, they clearly used those same corrupt tactics to help Mrs. Clinton and target Mr. Trump. Worth noting, following the revelations Brazile leaked debate questions to the Clinton campaign, Tapper said he was outraged. Well, we are too.

Perceived leftwing bias at CNN has earned

House Speaker Paul Ryan was berated and shouted down by chants of “Trump” at the Fall Fest event Saturday in Wisconsin after he abandoned the nominee amid controversy.House Speaker Paul Ryan was berated and shouted down by chants of “Trump” at the Fall Fest event Saturday in Wisconsin after he abandoned the nominee amid controversy.

House Speaker Paul Ryan at the Fall Fest event Saturday in Wisconsin.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., released a strong statement after FBI Director James Comey said the new review won’t result in charges against Hillary Clinton. The Wisconsin Republican, who at times has butted heads with his own party’s nominee, said voters must indict Mrs. Clinton at the ballot box because she operates under two sets of rules.

“Regardless of this decision, the undisputed finding of the FBI’s investigation is that Secretary Clinton put our nation’s security at risk and in doing so compromised our national security,” he said in a statement Sunday. “She simply believes she is above the law and always plays by her own rules.”

The 2016 presidential race was shaken up nearly two weeks ago when the FBI director informed the Congress that they had reopened the investigation, which the Justice Department tried to stop. The Bureau uncovered what Mr. Comey called “new and pertinent” evidence in the form of more than 600,000 documents from a laptop shared by top Clinton aide Huma Abedin and her disgraced husband Anthony Weiner while investigating sex crimes involving minors.

“Fortunately, the American people have the opportunity to to ensure Secretary Clinton never gets her hands on classified information again. Let’s bring the Clinton era to an end by voting for Donald Trump on Tuesday.”

While Democrats argued Sunday that the letter absolves Mrs. Clinton of any wrongdoing, Republicans were quick to point out two things. First, the FBI probe should speak for itself and, second, that it wasn’t the only open investigation into Mrs. Clinton’s activities.

“The FBI found evidence Clinton broke the law, that she placed highly classified national security information at risk and repeatedly lied to the American people about her reckless conduct,” Republican National Committee (RNC) Chairman Reince Priebus said in a statement. “None of this changes the fact that the FBI continues to investigate the Clinton Foundation for corruption involving her tenure as secretary of state. Hillary Clinton should never be president.”

House Speaker Paul Ryan released a strong

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