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Cruz Says Trump Supporters Will Soon Back Him (Meet the Press)
NBC ^ | 10/17/15 | Leigh Caldwell

Posted on 10/17/2015 2:58:18 PM PDT by VinL

Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz said Donald Trump's campaign has been "immensely beneficial" to his own campaign but added that his supporters will soon turn to him as they become "more educated."

"I think Donald's campaign has been immensely beneficial for our campaign and the reason is, he's framed the central issue of the Republican primary as, who will stand up to Washington," [sic] Trump told "Meet the Press" moderator Chuck Todd.

"Well, the natural follow up if that's the question is, who has actually stood up to Washington?" [sic] Trump continued, adding that he's the only one with the proven record of standing up to both Democrats and Republicans.

Cruz said that "as voters get more educated, study the candidates, listen to the candidates in person," conservatives are getting behind his candidacy.

The firebrand Texas senator has made few friends in Washington, even from his own party, with his no-compromise tactics that have on one occasion led to a government shutdown...

"You know others have gone out of their way to smack (Trump), I haven't," Cruz noted.

(Excerpt) Read more at nbcnews.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: careerpolitician; cruz; delusional; kochbrothers; trump
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To: Fantasywriter

Why Donald Trump Is Right
By: Jeffrey Lord | January 27th, 2015

Do you think Donald Trump would make a good front-runner for conservatives in the 2016 presidential race? Conservative Review will be following the GOP 2016 contenders and who will stand with conservatives and who will move to the middle.

According to media accounts, business mogul Donald Trump, while in Iowa addressing a possible presidential run at the Iowa Freedom Summit, received thunderous applause when he said it.

“...Many in the room applauded and cheered at the idea that Romney and Bush should not run.”

What “it” did Mr. Trump verbalize that was so overwhelmingly received? Reuters headlined the story this way: “An Iowa Crowd Had A Surprising Reaction When Donald: Trump Bashed Mitt Romney And Jeb Bush.”

The story noted that “the reaction from the crowd was noteworthy. Many in the room applauded and cheered at the idea that Romney and Bush should not run.”

Over at Politico the story was reported this way:
Donald Trump on Saturday slammed Mitt Romney and Jeb Bush as potential 2016 presidential candidates — a move that delighted the crowd of Iowa conservatives and demonstrated the two candidates’ potential liabilities in a GOP primary. The conservative real-estate magnate, speaking at the Iowa Freedom Summit in Des Moines hosted by Republican Rep. Steve King, spent several minutes criticizing both Romney and Bush and labeling them as weak candidates. ‘It can’t be Mitt — he ran and failed. He failed,’ Trump said, to applause….. ‘You can’t have Bush,’ Trump later added, a line that drew even more applause from the crowd.’

And on NBC’s Today Show, reporter Kelly O’Donnell covered the event, with NBC reporting that “it’s what Donald Trump had to say about potential candidates Mitt Romney and Jeb Bush that really got people talking.”

Three different news stories reporting exactly the same perceived reaction. Clearly Donald Trump struck a sensitive nerve inside the grassroots base of the Republican Party. Sensitive enough that when Karl Rove was asked about Trump’s remarks on Fox the following Monday morning, the ex-George W. Bush aide bristled and lashed out defensively. Said Rove:
I love Mitt Romney being lectured by Donald Trump on choking. Trump is the guy who constantly chokes on the idea of becoming a candidate. He says he’s gonna run and then, like in 2012, goes out and gives a lousy speech in Las Vegas and ultimately decides his TV show is more important than his presidential campaign.

But why the visceral nature of the Rove response to Trump?

To which Mark Levin tweeted in classic “get-off-the-phone-you-big-dope” style: “Shut up Karl. You’ve been so wrong for so long, if you were an attorney you’d be sued for malpractice.”

But why the visceral nature of the Rove response to Trump? Beyond any animus that Rove holds for him? And he surely does. Well, aside from the fact that Trump is no Bush fan, after the losing 2012 campaign when the results-oriented Trump saw failure, the disbelieving billionaire offered the following advice to GOP donors: “Why are people giving money to Karl Rove when he just wasted $400M without any victories. Use your head. Karl Rove is a total loser. Money given to him might as well be thrown down the drain. Karl Rove’s strategy and commercials were the worst I have ever seen.” Ouch.

Appearing on Mark Levin’s radio show a couple years back, Trump hesitated not a moment to challenge Rove’s record and elaborate:
Karl Rove is bad news for the Republican Party….If the Republicans are going to win, they’re going to have to break away from the Karl Rove’s of the world and, frankly, get more about you know the tea party… they are great Americans, they love this country, they work so hard, and they have been so mistreated by the liberal press, the liberal media. They have been just so mistreated and made to look so bad.

The answer that so terrifies Inside the Beltway Republicans is that, in fact, Republican “moderates” (like Romney and Bush) have an absolutely abysmal history of winning presidential elections.

And right there is what one of those news stories cited above was “notable” about the nature of the response Trump’s Iowa words – words received with an abrupt burst of applause.

The reason for the response to Trump’s statement is as plain as it could possibly be – a reason that terrifies Establishment Republicans like Karl Rove to death. (It clearly terrifies the Washington Post as well. Just yesterday they “covered” this story making the moderate-conservative fight all about Trump and Rove. The story puzzles, headlined as it was “Trump vs. Rove: Battle of the Titans?” The Post story began: “In case you missed it last week, everyone’s favorite orange-haired political sideshow slammed a potential Mitt Romney rerun.” My two questions? Trump aside, who is the other “titan?” And when did Karl Rove dye his hair orange? Just asking.

The reason for this skirmish is not only that “moderate” or “centrist” or “progressive” or “liberal” or “RINO” Republicans – however you wish to label them – are Establishment Republican favorites. The answer that so terrifies Inside the Beltway Republicans is that, in fact, Republican “moderates” (like Romney and Bush) have an absolutely abysmal history of winning presidential elections. An absolute historical fact that the Establishment insiders prefer to ignore, trying always to give the impression that it is conservative X who is really the “unelectable” candidate.

So let’s do some quick history homework. Let’s go back and highlight the facts that those Iowans applauding Donald Trump understand in their political bones, even if they may not know the history in detail.

The so-called “progressive movement” in American politics dawned just before the turn of the twentieth century. The Civil War era and the post-war era that followed had come to a close. From the election of the very first Republican president – Abraham Lincoln – in 1860, all the way through the election of Republican Benjamin Harrison in 1888, the GOP had become the dominant political party in America. It was branded, to use a 21st century term, as the “Party of Lincoln” – which translated in the day to support for liberty and the Constitution. As it were: conservatism.

Mark Levin has a Lincoln quote on the jacket of his phenomenal best seller Liberty and Tyranny (a book then Congresswoman Michele Bachmann credited as the intellectual underpinning of the Tea Party) has this notable – and typical – quote from Lincoln on liberty, delivered at a time Lincoln believed the country sorely needed a specific reminding definition. Said Lincoln:
We all declare for liberty; but in using the same word we do not all mean the same thing. With some the word liberty may mean for each man to do as he pleases with himself, and the product of his labor; while with others the same word may mean for some men to do as they please with other men, and the product of other men’s labor. Here are two, not only different, but incompatible things, called by the same name — liberty. And it follows that each of the things is, by the respective parties, called by two different and incompatible names — liberty and tyranny.

The Hughes nomination in retrospect eventually launched what is a long and losing stream of moderate GOP nominees with only an eight-year break.

As a new era dawned in the late 1800’s, an era of increased industrialization and mass production, the progressive movement and its allies surged into both political parties. Republican President William McKinley, the last Civil War veteran to serve in the White House, was a conservative in the mold of all of his Republican predecessors going back to Lincoln himself. Running for re-election in 1900, his vice president having died, McKinley gave the impression of neutrality in the selection of his new running mate. But the pressure was on for the popular Republican progressive governor of New York – Theodore Roosevelt. The Republican Convention went for TR, a decided celebrity in the day for his famous and heroic charge up San Juan Hill in Cuba during the Spanish American War. Within a year of his election as vice president, TR was president thanks to the assassination of McKinley. The Republican Party’s romance with what is known today as “moderate Republicanism” began.

At first, it went swimmingly. Theodore Roosevelt, his outsized personality and colorful family of rambunctious kids, was hugely popular. His “Square Deal” and “trust busting” ways were new to the country, and TR rolled on doing what progressives love to do (then and now) – using the federal government to correct what were seen in the day as injustices.

But the split in the Republican Party surfaced quickly. TR’s handpicked successor, William Howard Taft, essentially tried to return the party to its Lincoln/conservative roots. This infuriated TR. He challenged Taft for the GOP nomination, lost to the conservatives, ran as a progressive in the three-way fall election and lost again, bringing Taft down with him – the banner of progressives being carried back into the White House by Woodrow Wilson.

From that point forward, the battle was on between conservatives and Republican “moderates” as they soon began to be called. Moderates carried the day in 1916 – losing to Wilson again with progressive Republican ex-Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes. The Hughes nomination in retrospect eventually launched what is a long and losing stream of moderate GOP nominees with only an eight-year break. After winning twice with conservatives in 1920 (Harding) and 1924 (Coolidge) the baton was passed to progressive Republican Herbert Hoover in 1928. When the Depression appeared, Hoover reacted with moderate GOP dogma of liberal-lite programs – and lost spectacularly to FDR. The GOP was now headed with head-banging craziness down this path of nominating GOP moderates. Between 1928 and 1960 all of the Republican nominees from Hoover to Nixon ran as moderate Republicans. Of those nine elections, only three were won, two of them by Dwight Eisenhower, the hero of World War II. Hoover’s 1928 win was on the coattails of conservative Calvin Coolidge, the latter observing later that for the entire time Hoover was in his Cabinet as Secretary of Commerce, he had given Coolidge a lot of advice – “all of it wrong.”

Establishment Republicans make much of the Barry Goldwater defeat in 1964, ignoring the trauma of JFK’s assassination less than a year earlier. Goldwater knew no Republican was going to unseat Lyndon Johnson, then hugely popular. There was no appetite for a third president in three years. But Goldwater pursued the race to begin making the case for conservatives and bringing the GOP back to its roots. He succeeded. Two years later the GOP had a comeback in the congressional elections – among other victories was Ronald Reagan as governor of California - and the GOP was on its way back – for a while. Post Nixon – and he was no conservative – there was the Ford disaster in 1976. And post-Reagan (like Hoover, George H.W. Bush was elected on the coattails of a popular conservative predecessor and then denied re-election) there was the resumed string of moderate defeats, last seen in 2012 with Romney. The two George W. Bush victories for “compassionate conservative” losing the popular vote in 2000 and coming close to defeat in 2004.

They also know that if the Republicans are ever to regain the White House, not to mention steer America back to its winning course domestically and internationally, letting the moderate Republican Establishment yet again pick a nominee is a sure sign of yet another loss to come.

So is this abysmal track record enough to derail yet another moderate nominee in 2016?

Yes, if the gut-level response to Donald Trump’s comments are an indication. There is a reason the blunt speaking Trump or Dr. Carson or Senator Ted Cruz or the hit of this event (according to the media) –Wisconsin Scott Walker – were so well received. All four have track records in, successively, business, medicine, the Senate or a governorship that match words to conservative action. And that audience in Iowa – not to mention conservatives across the country – knows it.

Nearby is a column by Daniel Horowitz that gets right to heart of the problem. How Can You Fight When You Don’t Believe? That is exactly the problem – with Establishment Republicans, notably inside Washington.

But as the instant, gut-level response of all those Iowans to Donald Trump’s words about Romney and Bush so vividly illustrates, the base of the GOP gets it. They know they are in fact a majority, as Ronald Reagan long ago assured them when he said (as noted last week):

“Let us lay to rest, once and for all, the myth of a small group of ideological purists trying to capture a majority. Replace it with the reality of a majority….”

They also know that if the Republicans are ever to regain the White House, not to mention steer America back to its winning course domestically and internationally, letting the moderate Republican Establishment yet again pick a nominee is a sure sign of yet another loss to come.

Jeffrey Lord is a former Reagan White House political director and author. He writes from Pennsylvania at jlpa1@aol.com
- See more at: https://www.conservativereview.com/commentary/2015/01/why-donald-trump-is-right#sthash.PwJO35H8.dpuf


181 posted on 10/17/2015 8:08:13 PM PDT by stars & stripes forever (Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord.)
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To: Greetings_Puny_Humans

I like Cruz but he has no chance of winning. I’m not making the same mistake I’ve made in the past. I want a winner to win the nomination and go all the way to Washington. That’s Donald Trump.


182 posted on 10/17/2015 8:09:31 PM PDT by pgkdan (But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.)
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To: Tucker39

He’s starting to p**s me off too. How dare he assume that we aren’t uneducated masses because we support Trump? Talk about arrogance! Trump is out front with his - Cruz is showing his subtly, but it’s starting to come out. I seem to remember his wife making a comment that he thinks he knows it all. I assume with his background and education and the fact that he is an only child may contributed to this, but still...........he shouldn’t assume anything.


183 posted on 10/17/2015 8:21:44 PM PDT by Catsrus ( I callz 'em as I seez 'em.)
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To: Fantasywriter

I know, sad isn’t it? Trump even joked about making Gary Busey a Supreme Court Justice and if I recall - Kanye West as his VP. Some people have no sense of humor.


184 posted on 10/17/2015 8:23:27 PM PDT by Catsrus ( I callz 'em as I seez 'em.)
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To: SharpRightTurn

The central issue of the Republican primary isn’t who will stand up to Washington - it’s the economy and the illegal invasion. Ted is wrong on this issue.


185 posted on 10/17/2015 8:27:52 PM PDT by Catsrus ( I callz 'em as I seez 'em.)
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To: CottonBall; dforest
“It is Cruz supporters turning Trump supporters against Cruz with their nasty attitude.”

Exactly that. I like and respect Cruz, but the irrational hatred - yes, actual vicious hatred - that some here display is bizarre.

Have you considered that some of these anti-Trump pro-Cruz people may actually be GOPe disguising themselves as pro-Cruz?

They pretend to be pro-Cruz, but they trash Trump and his followers in such an ugly way that it hurts Trump while simultaneously turning people against Cruz.

In other words, the GOPe can destroy both Trump and Cruz through such activities here.

Considering how desperate the GOPe is, it's possible that some TDSers are doing this here at FR.

186 posted on 10/17/2015 8:39:10 PM PDT by Vision Thing ("Community Organizer" is a shorter way of saying "Commie Unity Organizer".)
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To: Fantasywriter
What is this obsession Cruz supporters have for calling honest people liars? It’s sick and disgusting.

See my post 186 for a possible explanation.

187 posted on 10/17/2015 8:41:17 PM PDT by Vision Thing ("Community Organizer" is a shorter way of saying "Commie Unity Organizer".)
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To: stilloftyhenight
"Trump has huge support among women."

Says who? The polling data I've seen says that is by far his weakest demographic.

188 posted on 10/18/2015 2:19:32 AM PDT by circlecity
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To: Vision Thing

“They pretend to be pro-Cruz, but they trash Trump and his followers in such an ugly way that it hurts Trump while simultaneously turning people against Cruz.”

Aren’t you clever - yes, that could very well be it.

Although it seems to be backfiring with the pro-Trump folks. We - or I - get more behind him the more he is attacked with ridiculous statements. They can’t even come up with anything reasonable!


189 posted on 10/18/2015 5:12:28 AM PDT by CottonBall
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To: Reaper19

A real conservative votes to reauthorize the Patriot Act? A real conservative votes to give our Marxist president fast tract trade authority on secrete trade deals he is not allowed to read? As real conservative refuses to say he would as president enforce existing immigration laws? A real conservative claims NBC status even thou he was not born in this country and only has one America parent? That’s a mighty strange definition you have of a “real conservative”.


190 posted on 10/18/2015 6:15:32 AM PDT by jpsb (Believe nothing until it has been officially denied)
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To: stars & stripes forever

Thank you for posting the article. It is massive. The only positive Trump items I could find in it were that he bashed Jeb and Mitt and tangled with Rove. Pretty thin gruel for an article of that length. Has the Conservative Review ever written an article critical of Cruz?


191 posted on 10/18/2015 6:38:50 AM PDT by Fantasywriter (Any attempt to do forensic work using Internet artifacts is fraught with pitfalls. JoeProbono)
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To: Catsrus

‘Trump even joked about making Gary Busey a Supreme Court Justice and if I recall - Kanye West as his VP.’

Haha! I didn’t know about this. Too funny.

Unfortunately, in a day or two the Trump haters will be bashing him for wanting Kanye as veep. We can’t win.


192 posted on 10/18/2015 6:42:48 AM PDT by Fantasywriter (Any attempt to do forensic work using Internet artifacts is fraught with pitfalls. JoeProbono)
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To: Vision Thing

That was fascinating, brilliant analysis. You are likely right in at least some cases. Some bashers seem more intent on sowing disharmony and demoralizing conservatives than on promoting their candidate. Who could possibly benefit more from that strategy than the GOPe?


193 posted on 10/18/2015 6:47:06 AM PDT by Fantasywriter (Any attempt to do forensic work using Internet artifacts is fraught with pitfalls. JoeProbono)
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To: circlecity

“Trump has huge support among women.”

‘Says who? The polling data I’ve seen says that is by far his weakest demographic.’

“Why Donald Trump Is Polling Well With Women

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is breaking all the rules of political discourse and it seems to be working.
He’s led in virtually every poll for weeks, despite controversies that would sink ordinary candidates.
Even more surprising to some is Trump is doing especially well among women.
A CNN-ORC Poll shows 60-percent of female Republican voters have a favorable opinion of him.”

http://wmfd.com/local-news/single.asp?story=65357


194 posted on 10/18/2015 6:56:32 AM PDT by Fantasywriter (Any attempt to do forensic work using Internet artifacts is fraught with pitfalls. JoeProbono)
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To: Fantasywriter

According to Gallup Trump polls 9 to 10 points lower with Republican women than with men. Across the board Hillary polls substantially higher among women than Trump who only polls about 29% favorable. This is common among Republican candidates. The gender gap between Obama and Romney in 2012 was the largest in history and could be much greater with Hillary as candidate as she would certainly spend millions to paint him as anti women. It’s not the primaries we are dealing with a possible VP candidate, it the the general election so how he polls among Republican is not the relevant factor as much as how well he can get the woman’s vote from the electorate at large. This has hurt Republicans significantly in the last two elections. If Trump thinks or the polls show that Carley could add even 5% more of the women to his side in the general he will pick her in a second. There’s no man who could add that many votes in the general plus Fiorina is a great attack dog against Hillary. I’m not a Fiorina fan at all but she may very well be the smart choice for Trump.


195 posted on 10/18/2015 8:00:24 AM PDT by circlecity
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To: CottonBall

Yes, I started noticing this when some of them were being politically correct and defending fox news: both of these things are unworthy of a true Cruz supporter. So I began wondering if these people were just GOPe-bots trying to hurt both Trump and Cruz through their underhanded activities.

It’s a possibility, so it’s worth monitoring.


196 posted on 10/18/2015 9:07:25 AM PDT by Vision Thing ("Community Organizer" is a shorter way of saying "Commie Unity Organizer".)
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To: Fantasywriter

Yes, it’s hard to verify if this is really happening, but it’s something to keep in mind when we wonder what’s motivating them to behave so badly.


197 posted on 10/18/2015 9:09:52 AM PDT by Vision Thing ("Community Organizer" is a shorter way of saying "Commie Unity Organizer".)
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To: CodeToad
I refuse to back Crus that says he wants to bring in another 325,000 foreign tech workers when so many Americans are out of work. Maybe Cruz should stop letting himself be bribed by the Chamber of Commerce.

Thank-you.. Beat me to it. Image quintupling the number of H-1B;s !

And ... H-1B's are not only to replace STEM workers. Here's a link to all the occupations H-1B's can replace:\
List of H-1B Occupations
198 posted on 10/18/2015 9:35:02 AM PDT by khelus
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To: GulliverSwift

THANK-YOU !


199 posted on 10/18/2015 9:45:24 AM PDT by khelus
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To: circlecity

I love how the Trump haters are positive with absolute certitude that they know what Trump will do. They demonstrate ZERO insight into him, yet they arrogantly insist that they can call his future moves with god-like accuracy.

You keep hawking that snake oil. Eventually someone may buy it.

As to Trump and women, this is the primary. Trump is walking away with the women he needs in this cycle. Not until several mos into the general will any speculation re on he does with the overall women’s vote have a shred of relevance.


200 posted on 10/18/2015 9:55:20 AM PDT by Fantasywriter (Any attempt to do forensic work using Internet artifacts is fraught with pitfalls. JoeProbono)
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