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Democratic-Debate-AP

Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton take part in the Democratic debate in Miami on March 9, 2016. (Photo: Wilfredo Lee, AP)

I don’t know whether it’s because I’m dedicated or masochistic, but I woke up at 3:00 AM in Serbia to live-tweet the Democratic presidential debate.

In retrospect, staying in bed would have been a better choice. This debate was basically the same as the others, with both Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders competing on who could turn America into Greece at the fastest rate.

Both candidates argued for higher tax rates on evil rich people, as well as sinister corporations, ostensibly because bigger government will make America more equal.

For those who care about the real world, however, this isn’t such a good idea.

Larry Lindsey, a former Governor at the Federal Reserve, writes in the Wall Street Journal that leftist policies actually cause inequality.

…when you look at performance and not rhetoric, the administrations of political progressives have made the distribution of income more unequal than their adversaries, who supposedly favor the wealthy. …inequality rose more under Bill Clinton than under Ronald Reagan. And it wasn’t even close. While the inequality increase as measured by the Gini index was only slightly more during Clinton’s two terms, the Theil index and mean log deviation increased two and three times as much, respectively. Barack Obama’s administration follows this pattern… The Gini index rose more than three times as much under Mr. Obama than under Mr. Bush. The Theil index increased sharply during the Obama administration, while it fell slightly under Bush 43.

Larry explains what drove these results.

And two big factors are easy-money monetary policies that artificially push up the value of financial assets (thus helping the rich) and redistribution policies that make dependency more attractive than work (thus hurting the poor).

Democratic presidents presided over bubble economies fueled by easy monetary policy. There is no better way to make the rich richer than to run policies that push up the price of financial assets. Cheap money is a boon to those who have access to it. …Transfer payments under Mr. Obama increased by $560 billion. By contrast private-sector wages and salaries grew by $1.1 trillion. So for every $2 in extra wages, about $1 was paid out in extra transfer payments—lowering the relative reward to work. …the effective tax rate on the extra earnings—including lost government benefits such as food stamps, the earned-income tax credit, and medical support payments—is between 50% and 80%. This phaseout of the ever increasing array of benefits has created a “working-class trap” instead of a “poverty trap” that is increasing inequality and keeping the income of these households lower than they might otherwise be.

I especially like Larry’s conclusion.

He points out that statist policies have a long history of failure. The only real beneficiaries are members of the parasite class in Washington.

None of this should really be surprising. If the socialist ideal of “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need” worked in practice, the Berlin Wall might still be standing. …Redistribution through the political process is not costless—even in a perfect world there would be a large bureaucracy to feed. Special-interest elites also emerge when so much money is being moved around. They take their cut, introducing even more inefficiency into the system. …voters who think the progressives running today are going to reduce inequality are falling into the same trap as people entering fifth or sixth marriages—the triumph of hope over experience.

So why do our friends on the left have such an anti-empirical approach to the issue of inequality?

Instead of fixating on inequality, why don’t they focus on policies that will actually help poor people?

Some of them probably don’t care. They simply view class warfare as a way of creating resentment and getting votes.

But many leftists are doubtlessly sincere and genuinely want to help the less fortunate.

The problem is that they suffer from the fixed-pie fallacy.

My Cato Institute colleague Chelsea Germanexplains this fundamentally flawed understanding of the world.

“The rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer.” Senator Bernie Sanders first said those words in 1974 and has been repeating them ever since. …A simple logical error underlies Sanders’ belief. If we assume that wealth is a fixed pie, then the more slices the rich get, the fewer are left over for the poor. In other words, people can only better themselves at the expense of others. In the world of the fixed pie, if we observe the rich becoming richer, then it must be because other people are becoming poorer. Fortunately, in the real world, the pie is not fixed. US GDP is growing, and it’s growing faster than the population.

Amen.

And it’s not just the U.S. data on how all income classes are climbing over time. Check out the “hockey stick” showing how the entire world is becoming richer.

Last but not least, Kyle Smith also addresses the topic of inequality in his New York Post column. He starts by explaining there isn’t a problem.

…there is no inequality crisis. …The US is only 42nd (out of 117 countries measured) in income inequality, according to the World Bank. We’re only 16th when it comes to the wealth held by the top 1%.

He then makes a far more important point, which is that it’s good to have an economy and a society where people can become rich by providing goods and services that the rest of us value.

Inequality is to some extent a residual effect of success: If there weren’t any billionaires or millionaires, inequality would be vastly diminished. America attracts and breeds success so brilliantly that we nearly beat the rest of the world combined in some respects: 42% of the world’s millionaires are Americans, and 49% of those with $50 million or more in assets. The American tendency to respect, and expect, success runs counter to the progressive plan to tax it away.

He basically reaches the same conclusion as Larry Lindsey.

In other words the left’s favorite policies help Washington insiders and hurt poor people.

A cap on incomes above, say, $100,000 would massively increase both equality and poverty as millions of middle-class people whose jobs depend on the rich in one way or another found themselves unemployed. …People tend to suspect, rightly, that government intervention in the name of fighting inequality will lead to exactly what’s happened in the Obama era: more inequality, with bureaucrats and their cronies standing to gain.

By the way, here’s a satirical Jonathan Swift version of what happens when you get rid of “rich” people.

P.S. Here’s my video on class warfare, featuring the clip of then-candidate Obama saying he favored a tax hike even if it imposed so much economic damage that the government collected no tax revenue.

P.P.S. The President isn’t the only leftist to have this spite-driven mentality.

In the Democratic debate in Miami, Florida

[brid video=”29947″ player=”2077″ title=”Butler Praises “Incredibly Generous” Trump”]

Tony Senecal, who served as butler to Donald Trump for some 20 years, told CNN Thursday that the Republican frontrunner is “an incredibly generous person.”

“He’s an incredibly generous person. He’s been generous to his employees. He’s generous to strangers. He’s an entirely a nice guy,” Senecal said. “He’s not the gruff person that people make him out to be. Sure, you attack him, he’s going to fight back. But most of the time he’s just a nice man. I lasted with him for 20 years, he had to be pretty good.”

CNN host Carol Costello wasn’t exactly thrilled to hear Senecal praise Mr. Trump and cut away as fast as she could.

Tony Senecal, who served as butler to

Push for Ted Cruz is Not About Electability, and It’s Not About Conservatism

Carly-Fiorina-Ted-Cruz-Miami

Ted Cruz and former Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina pose for photographs during a campaign rally in Miami on Wednesday. (Photo: Paul Sancya/AP)

On Wednesday, former Hewlitt-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina endorsed Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in what was the beginning of a reluctant coalescing by the Republican Establishment. There were only about 100 people in attendance at the event in Miami. But judging by the way the media covered the endorsement, you might think it was a 20,000-strong crowd symbolically representing an organic anti-Trump grassroots movement.

It wasn’t. But it also wasn’t surprising.

I’m not going to re-litigate Mrs. Fiorina’s record. PPD has already done so throughly and, in reality, it is about as conservative as Mitt Romney’s record. Carly Fiorina has a long Establishment history of supporting and preserving the status quo largely by opposing those who challenge it. Fiorina supported “compassionate conservative” George W. Bush, Sen. John McCain and “severely conservative” Mitt Romney.

“The truth is Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are two sides of the same coin,” Fiorina said in her endorsement speech in Miami. “They’re not going to reform the system. They are the system.”

When asked why she supported Sen. Cruz, she responded: “They [Sen. Marco Rubio and Gov. John Kasich] don’t have a prayer to beat Donald Trump.”

The latter statement isn’t at all a ringing endorsement of Sen. Cruz. However, the former statement is far more important and begging of a simple question.

If it was true that Mr. Trump is “the system,” then why is “the system” trying to take him down? Use your heads. There is a difference between operating within a system and believing in or supporting that system. If global elites, to include those in the Republican Party, were confident a President Trump would maintain that status quo, they wouldn’t be mobilizing donors, spending millions of their own money and holding secret meetings to discuss strategy on how best to spend those dollars.

The Bushes epitomize the system and, frankly, Fiorina isn’t the only one with long and strong ties to the dynastic order.

Sen. Cruz, after using the Bush family to carry the Maine Republican caucus (yet another story completely ignored), has now brought in Neil Bush and courted the endorsement of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. Don’t be surprised when Jeb!, who is still mad at his former protege, comes out in support of Mr. Cruz.

So, to include South Carolina Sen. Linsey Graham, the rest of the elitists in the Republican Establishment are now getting behind their new anti-Trump warrior. It’s not that Sen. Cruz is beloved, he’s just the last man standing.

The reason the Republican Establishment and globalist elites are racing to Sen. Ted Cruz is simple and two-fold. It’s not about electability or defending conservatism because, despite what the D.C. power-brokers claim, they’re more afraid of Mr. Trump winning then they are Sen. Cruz losing. Whether Sen. Cruz wins or loses, they still win.

Even if Cruz Loses, the Establishment Wins

If Sen. Cruz wins the nomination, he has little chance of winning in November. With President Barack Obama’s approval rating teetering above the historical average needed to prevent the third-party itch, Sen. Cruz, who has already demonstrated very limited appeal demographically in the primaries, will struggle to get above 47%.

Now, I’m sure Cruz supporters reading this will object to this assertion. However, until you spend 23 out of 24 hours combing through the demographics in each county, comparing them to the last 50 years of popular presidential election data, estimating participation rates and actual voting behavior this cycle, spare me your expertise.

Those of us who are honest and have been doing this long enough know that the talk about Donald Trump losing to Mrs. Clinton in head-to-head polling is just that–talk. That goes for any candidate. Pre-Labor Day polls on the presidential level have zero, zero predictive value unless they are lopsided some 20 to 1. All that is predictive at this point in the cycle are the trends identifying demographic appeal.

To that end, judging by the actual vote, none of the other Republican candidates come close to demonstrating the level of appeal necessary to win or exploit the electoral map in November than Donald J. Trump–period. But this isn’t an endorsement of Mr. Trump, it’s an indictment on the preservers of the status quo and, to a lesser extent, the beginning of an “I told you so” moment for and regarding Sen. Cruz.

Which brings me to my point. The Republican Establishment, which agrees with the Democratic Party on trade, immigration and foreign policy, would love to lose with Sen. Cruz. Then, they would revel in telling the base of the party, whom they’re ashamed of, they were right all along to embrace amnesty, neoconservatism and economic globalism. In fact, the Republican National Committee’s own polling shows that with Sen. Cruz at the top of the ticket, they do worse in down-ballot Senate and House races than with Mr. Trump at the top.

Haven’t heard about that on Fox News, have you? Of course not. But it’s 100% the truth.

Whether our readers who support Sen. Cruz like it or not, we will always tell you the truth. The same is true for those who support Mr. Trump. While it’s true that some of Mr. Trump’s positions are more conservative than his rivals, particularly on immigration, it is also true that he is not really a conservative in the traditional sense. Mr. Trump is an economic populist, an American nationalist and, by talking with those who know him, he has been for quite a long time. He also truly does view himself to be a “common sense conservative,” but for practical rather than philosophical reasons.

Cruz is Globalist-lite, But a Globalist Nonetheless

Sen. Cruz has always been at least a wanna-be member of the globalist order in the Republican Party. Talking with insiders on Capitol Hill, it quickly becomes clear that one of the main reasons his fellow-lawmakers in D.C. couldn’t stand him and opposed his candidacy prior to the rise of their mutual enemy is because they know that. They don’t view him to be a principled purist as he’s painted in the media. Too many of them have watched him come up under and, work hard to promote, Bushism.

They view him to be what he really, truly is at his core–an opportunist. Nothing more, nothing less.

From 1999 to 2003, Sen. Cruz worked as the director of the Office of Policy Planning at the Federal Trade Commission. Heidi Cruz served in Bush’s neocon White House under Secretary Condoleezza Rice as the Economic Director for the Western Hemisphere at the National Security Council, the Director of the Latin America Office at the U.S. Treasury Department, and as Special Assistant to Ambassador Robert B. Zoellick, U.S. Trade Representative.

Prior to her government service, Mrs. Cruz was an investment banker with J.P. Morgan in New York City. In 2012, when he was running for U.S. Senate and attended a Straw Poll in Texas, Sen. Cruz was asked about his wife’s role and connection with the Council on Foreign Relations.

He deflected and cited former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton as one of the conservatives, along with his wife of course, who only participate to move the council in a more conservative direction. To those who say an attack on his wife is unfair, we say the senator had a chance to show daylight between them as individuals, and he blew it. When given the chance, he supported TPP in the Senate and only now modified his position to compete with Mr. Trump, who has thus far carried all the states that Sen. Cruz built his entire campaign strategy around.

Further, Mr. Bolton is a neoconservative, not a conservative, and the CFA agenda is a globalist agenda. The CFA, whose members along with Karl Rove have been meeting in secret to plot the takedown of the Republican frontrunner, embodies the post-World War II internationalist order. In other words, they subscribe to the worldview that exporting U.S. wealth and industry will ultimately make the world a more prosperous and safer place.

Unfortunately, for them, more than 50 years have passed and they still have no evidence to support that theory. Unfortunately, for the American worker, these globalists and their cronies got richer in that timeframe, while Main Street America saw their industries and their jobs disappear, along with their dreams.

Behind the scenes there is a battle taking place in the Republican Party. The battle is between those who support a continuation of the globalist status quo and those who say it’s time to move the party in a different direction. Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions and Pastor Robert Jeffress, all are prominent conservative figures who supported Sen. Cruz in the past and now support Mr. Trump.

They chose national populism over globalism. The Republican Establishment will always choose the latter. Voters will have to make that same choice, too.

The GOP Establishment is not backing Ted

unemployment-benefits

Weekly jobless claims, or first-time claims for unemployment benefits reported by the Labor Department.

The Labor Department said weekly jobless claims fell by 18,000 to 259,000 last week, coming in lower than the median forecast for 275,000. The prior week was revised lower by 1,000 to 277,000.

The four-week moving average–which is widely considered a better gauge as it irons out volatility–was 267,500, a decrease of 2,500 from the previous week’s revised average. The previous week’s average was revised down by 250 from 270,250 to 270,000.

A Labor Department analyst said they were no special factors impacting this week’s initial claims and no state was triggered “on” the Extended Benefits program during the week ending February 20.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending February 20 were in Alaska (4.6), West Virginia (3.5), New Jersey (3.4), Rhode Island (3.3), Montana (3.2), Connecticut (3.1), Pennsylvania (3.1), Wyoming (3.1), Massachusetts (3.0), California (2.8), and Illinois (2.8).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending February 27 were in New York (+17,920), California (+4,346), Texas (+959), Oregon (+930), and New Hampshire (+686), while the largest decreases were in Massachusetts (-3,413), Michigan (-1,054), Missouri (-983), Rhode Island (-838), and Pennsylvania (-609).

The Labor Department said weekly jobless claims

Hillary-Clinton-Benghazi-hearing

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton listens to a question as she testifies before the House Select Committee on Benghazi, in Washington, D.C., Oct. 22, 2015. Reuters

What if Hillary Clinton is in legal hot water and she knows it but won’t admit it? What if she has decided to go on the offensive and make her case that she did nothing unlawful with her emails that contained state secrets?

What if the essence of her defense is that other secretaries of state used non-secure email devices and thus it was lawful for her to do so, as well as the point that none of her emails was “marked classified” at the time she sent or received them? What if these defenses do not hold up to even cursory examination?

What if the other secretaries of state to whom she refers are Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice? What if neither of them diverted all of their emails to a private server? What if neither of them sent or received state secrets — secrets that under the law of the land are marked “confidential,” “secret” or “top secret,” not “classified” — using a non-secure email account?

What if neither of them hired an information technology expert and paid him to divert both a standard State Department email stream and a secret State Department email stream to a private server in one of their homes?

What if neither Powell nor Rice is currently running for president? What if neither Powell nor Rice has had his or her behavior as secretary of state referred to the FBI for a criminal investigation by the inspector general of the State Department?

What if the law of the land is that a document or email contains state secrets by virtue of the information or data in the document or email and not by virtue of any warning label? What if the legal definition of a “state secret” in the U.S. is “information the revelation of which could cause harm to the security of the United States”?

What if it is the law of the land that people in the government to whom state secrets are entrusted are required to recognize the secrets when they see them and protect them from intentional or inadvertent revelation?

What if it is the law of the land that everyone in the government to whom state secrets are entrusted receives a multi-hour tutorial from the FBI on how to protect state secrets? What if the successful completion of that tutorial is a legal prerequisite to the receipt of a national security clearance and thus the receipt of state secrets?

What if that tutorial reminds the people to whom secrets are being reposed that it is their legal obligation to recognize and accept and understand the law before they can receive any state secrets? What if, in order to confirm that understanding, all people who receive the tutorial are required to sign an oath at the end of the tutorial recognizing, accepting and understanding the law and agreeing to be bound by it? What if Clinton signed just such an oath?

What if Clinton had no intention of complying with the oath she signed at the time she signed it? What if we know that because we know she hired the information technologist to divert her emails the same week she received the FBI tutorial? What if she never told the FBI that she planned to divert all her emails — including those that would contain state secrets — to a private non-secure email server in her home?

What if it is the law of the land that the failure to secure state secrets is a felony, known as espionage? What if it is the law of the land that espionage can be committed by a person who intends to expose state secrets or by a person who doesn’t care if she exposes state secrets? What if the FBI explained to Clinton in her first day as secretary of state that the grossly negligent exposure of state secrets constitutes espionage?

What if before Clinton was secretary of state, she was a U.S. senator from New York for eight years? What if during that time, she was a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee? What if during her time in the Senate, she was exposed to hundreds of military-related state secrets?

What if Clinton is smart enough and shrewd enough and experienced enough to recognize a state secret when she sees one?

What if the FBI has seen emails in which Clinton ordered subordinates deliberately to avoid State Department secure channels of communications and to send state secrets to her through channels she knew were not secure? What if Clinton passed on state secrets to others who had no security clearances? What if she did so knowing she was sending state secrets from her non-secure server to other non-secure servers?

What if Clinton sent or received more than 2,000 emails that contained state secrets? What if she authored more than 100 of them herself? What if some of the 2,000 emails were so secret that the FBI agents investigating her lack the security clearances to view those emails?

What if Clinton did all this so that she could keep her behavior as secretary of state secret and away from all officials in the State Department outside her inner circle, away from the president and away from the American people? What if she orchestrated and carried out a conspiracy to violate the Espionage Act?

What if the FBI is onto her? What if the Democrats are not?

Judge Andrew Napolitano: What if Hillary Clinton

Bernie-Sanders-NH-Victory-Speech

Vermont socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders gives his victory speech in New Hampshire on Feb. 9, 2016. Photo: AP/J. David Ake)

When the dust settled after Tuesday’s Democratic primaries, Hillary Clinton expanded her commanding lead over Bernie Sanders by 18 delegates. This was the political bottom line, but it wasn’t THE story, was it?

The story was that by confounding pollster expectations that Clinton would handily take Michigan, Bernie scored a huge upset. Thus, Clinton’s loss in Michigan was “shocking” and Bernie’s win “stunning,” according to The Washington Post.

Actually, the two split Michigan pretty much evenly. Bernie’s 49.8 percent victory in Michigan was no more spectacular than Hillary’s 49.9 percent win in Iowa.
We are assuming it’s the vote that matters, as opposed to the story. Bernie’s great triumph came from upending the predictions of pollsters who, obviously, weren’t doing a very good job of polling. It’s all part of a pundit-pollster complex in which the analyzers play the man behind the curtain and the voters are munchkins who serve to validate their confidently delivered predictions.

Bernie did run a strong campaign in Michigan. He wisely showed up in the smaller cities, such as Traverse City and Kalamazoo. And he profited from his simple, if simple-minded, message that trade agreements single-handedly killed thousands of factory jobs in the Rust Belt.

One can understand the anger of a worker whose employer packed up and moved to Mexico. And the North American Free Trade Agreement provides a handy explanation of why that happened.

It’s a lot harder to examine the complex dynamics of trade. Reputable economists who have studied NAFTA, including some of its critics, have concluded that the accord modestly helped the American economy on the whole.

How many of the jobs that did leave for Mexico would have otherwise gone to even-lower-wage China? And how has rising demand for U.S. products from Mexico’s growing middle class helped U.S. manufacturing?

Back to the pundits.

The herd has stampeded to the importance of “angry white working-class men,” a group with which Bernie did quite well in Michigan. And they are important. (Many Democrats have long erred in cultivating racial and ethnic identity politics at the expense of white blokes.)

At the same time, THE story could have lingered longer on Clinton’s decisive win in Mississippi, where 90 percent of that state’s large African-American electorate chose Hillary over Bernie. Black votes matter just as much as white votes, do they not?

My Bernie friends have been cross with me of late. They accuse me of being blindly in love with Hillary.

Not true. I don’t love Hillary. She exasperates me on a number of counts. Bernie is more lovable, but he bothers me more. I am suspicious of radical promises from one who couldn’t get a single senator to co-sponsor his single-payer plan. And Bernie’s scheme for funding his proposals was so off-the-wall unrealistic it left even liberal economists gasping.

I do share with my Bernie friends a fear of the Republican candidates, except (in my case) John Kasich. My Bernie people will persist in sending me polls “showing” that he could more easily defeat any of the leading Republicans in a general election than could Hillary.

What those polls really show is how well Bernie would do if he were the nominee and Republicans let his politics, writings and personal history skate into November without comment. Hillary has already been copiously dumped upon.

Really, how much stock are you going to put in an eight-months-hence prediction from the same fellows who couldn’t get Michigan right the night before? The biggest losers on Tuesday were the pollsters, for sure.

When the dust settled after Tuesday's Democratic

2016 North Carolina Democratic Primary

121 Delegates: Proportional Allocation (March 15, 2016)

(Total delegates include 70 district delegates, 23 at large, 14 Pledged PLEOs and 14 Unpledged PLEOs.)

[election_2016_polls]


Polling Data

[wpdatatable id=47]


The latest 2016 North Carolina Democratic Primary polls and PPD average for the March 15, 2016, proportional contest with 121 proportional delegates. A whole 107 of 121 delegates to the Democratic National Convention are pledged to candidates based on the results of the vote in the North Carolina Democratic Primary. A mandatory 15% threshold is required in order for a candidate to be allocated National Convention delegates at either the congressional district or statewide level.

Another 70 district delegates are to be pledged proportionally to presidential contenders based on the primary results in each of the State’s 13 congressional districts. In addition, 37 delegates are to be allocated to presidential contenders based on the primary vote statewide. There are another 23 at-large National Convention delegates and 14 Pledged PLEOs.

[ssbp]

2016 North Carolina Democratic Primary 121 Delegates: Proportional

2016 North Carolina Republican Primary

72 Delegates: Proportional Allocation (March 15, 2016)

(Total delegates include 10 base at-large, 39 for 13 congressional districts, 3 party and 20 bonus.)

[election_2016_polls]


Polling Data

[wpdatatable id=46]


The latest 2016 North Carolina Republican Primary polls and PPD average for the March 15, 2016, proportional contest with 72 proportional delegates. For every 1.39% of the statewide vote the candidates receive 1 delegate. The 3 party leaders, the National Committeeman, the National Committeewoman, and the chairman of the North Carolina’s Republican Party, will attend the convention as bound delegates by virtue of their position.

[ssbp]

2016 North Carolina Republican Primary 72 Delegates: Proportional

Marco-Rubio-Lindsey-Graham-Getty

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, left, and South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, right, speak to each other prior to a news conference on the “Gang of Eight” immigration bill, otherwise known as amnesty. (Photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Sen. Lindsey Graham unleashed an astounding attack on Donald Trump on national TV the other day, faulting the Republican front-runner for fueling the party’s poor showing among Hispanics and stating bluntly the billionaire businessman ought to be kicked out of the GOP.

In so doing, he provided the perfect case-in-point of why voters are backing Trump in the first place.

What part of “the status quo has got to go” messaging of this current campaign trail did Graham miss? He represents a class of politicians the voters are tired of hearing, the same type who’s fueling this campaign season’s unstated “insider-out, outsider-in” phenomenon.

Graham said of Trump: “He took our [party’s] problems in 2012 with Hispanics and made them far worse by espousing forced deportation. Looking back, we should have basically kicked him out of the party.”

Put aside for the moment the line of logic Graham is suggesting here – that Republicans ought to consider immigration policy a political issue first, and matter of national security, second. Even CNN host Wolf Blitzer picked up on the other curious facet of Graham’s assertion, asking him to explain: Just how in the heck would you have accomplished that?

Graham – who apparently goes by the vaulted titles of Keeper of the GOP Key and Grand Watchdog of the Party Member List – responded thusly: True Republicans could have banded together to fight Trump and in so doing, driven him from the party. Or, in his words: “We could all [have] ganged up and [do] what we’re doing now.”

The problem, of course, with that viewpoint is it’s not working. The gang’s all ganged. Trump has been fighting off media scorn, Republican Party derision and presidential primary contender attacks for months – partly by going on the offense, partly by swatting on the defense with a playbook that seems to return 10 times the insult. And newsflash: He’s winning.

So taking to national television to boldly proclaim that kicking the front-runner Republican primary presidential candidate out of the Republican Party is the direction the Republican Party ought to go is not only ineffective, because it fails to take into account the millions of voters who support Trump. It’s also outrageously elitist.

Graham’s remarks underscore why Republicans hate the Republican Party in power right now – because the very people who’ve corrupted the conservative message by deal-making to death with Democrats are now trying to paint themselves as not just defenders of the GOP, but definers of what constitutes a GOPer.

National Review tried it, with a full-blown assault of letters from those at the supposed forefront of Republican politics pointing out why the Donald just won’t do. Mitt Romney, twice-failed presidential candidate, tried it with a nasty verbal press conference that rocked the national media and included such phrases as “Trump is a phony, a fraud,” and Trump is a “bully,” and Trump offers the nation little more than “absurd third-grade theatrics.”

Yet in the days that followed, voters and Trump supporters said: We don’t care.

Trump may not be the best candidate for the White House job. He may not be the best candidate for the Republican Party to fight off what’s sure to be a savage campaign battle against Hillary Clinton. But note to Graham and others who share and seek to spread his viewpoint: Enough already.

Like Obama with guns, who surges sales every time he addresses the nation post-shooting and touts the need for more Second Amendment crackdowns, the attacks on Trump are only fueling more support for him. If you truly don’t want Trump as president, stop exposing the reasons conservatives are rallying behind him in the first place – because of the elitist “we know better than you” attitude that’s coursing through much of the present-day Republican Party.

[mybooktable book=”police-state-usa-how-orwells-nightmare-is-becoming-our-reality” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

Sen. Lindsey Graham unleashed an astounding attack

hillary-clinton-united-nations-march-10-2015

Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks to the reporters at United Nations headquarters, Tuesday, March 10, 2015. Clinton conceded that she should have used a government email to conduct business as secretary of state, saying her decision was simply a matter of “convenience.” (Photo: AP/Seth Wenig)

WASHINGTON – The Republican National Committee (RNC) on Wednesday filed two lawsuits to obtain public records related to Hillary Clinton at the State Department. The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to compel the State Department to produce records requested in October and December of last year.

As of now, no documents or information have been provided.

“The Obama Administration has failed to comply with records requests in a timely manner as required by law,” said Chairman Reince Priebus. “For too long the State Department has undermined the public and the media’s legitimate right to records under the Freedom of Information Act, and it’s time it complies with the law. If this administration claims to be the ‘most transparent in history,’ and Clinton the ‘most transparent person in public life,’ then they should prove it, release these records, and allow the American people to hold her accountable.”

FROM RNC:

BACKGROUND

The first lawsuit seeks electronic communications sent to and from then-Secretary Clinton via text or BlackBerry Messenger, as well as emails sent to and from several key senior aides: former Chief of Staff Cheryl Mills, former Director of Policy Planning Jake Sullivan, Undersecretary for Management Patrick Kennedy, and former IT Staffer Bryan Pagliano, whom The Washington Post reported last week was granted immunity for his cooperation with the FBI’s investigation into Clinton’s server. This lawsuit focuses on those communications sent and received during Clinton’s tenure as Secretary of State.

The second lawsuit seeks communications between senior officials at the State Department and the Clinton campaign and other allied entities. This lawsuit focuses principally on communications that were sent or received after Clinton’s tenure as Secretary of State.

FOIA was intended to inform and educate citizens about their government and elected officials. Disclosure of the records requested in these lawsuits would carry out that purpose. The RNC seeks records that will ensure that the public has information to consider whether former Secretary Clinton is fit to serve as the next President of the United States.

The Justice Department is looking into Mrs. Clinton’s use of a private email server while conducting official State Department business. However, the RNC isn’t taking any chances. There are numerous other organizations that have filed similiar lawsuits, including The Association Press, Gawker, Judicial Watch and others. All of them claim they have been stone-walled by the State Department, though the RNC argues they have standing.

The Republican National Committee (RNC) on Wednesday

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