Posted on 01/15/2016 11:38:31 AM PST by TBP
Byron York had an interesting piece on Donald Trump that is worth reading. At least anyone who might be interested in the real Donald Trump. Trump appeared in front of the ânon-partisanâ No Labels group who desperately wants candidates that will âcompromiseâ even though it is never clear what compromises will result in.
Donald Trump told this group, "Let me just tell you, the word compromise is not a bad word to me. I like the word compromise. We need compromise, there is nothing wrong with compromise, but it's always good to compromise and win. Meaning, let's compromise and win." Can you imagine the reaction of Trumpâs supporters if a Marco Rubio actually met with this group and said this? The cries of RINO would arise and say that Rubio is nothing but a tool of the Establishment.
York's thesis is that Trump is prone to saying outrageous things or beginning with outrageous positions so he can get what he wants. This is Trump the deal maker who understands you wonât get all that you want so you start with many positions that you know you can throw away to get what you want in negotiations.
As American Enterprise Institute Marc Thiessen noted, a portion of Trumpâs plan on immigration is actually an idea that came from Texas Moderate Senator Kay Baily Hutchison, who proposed Trump's âtouchbackâ in which you deport millions of immigrants to let them back in. You can decide whether this is a practical plan, but make no mistake, under Trumpâs reform, the vast majority of illegal today will still be here after his reforms. This means that the results will be no different than a President Rubio or a President Bush. If you donât believe me, listen to Trumpâs own words when he told CNN's Dana Bash, âI would get people out and then have an expedited way of getting them back into the country so they can be legalâ¦. A lot of these people are helping us ⦠and sometimes itâs jobs a citizen of the United States doesnât want to do. I want to move âem out, and weâre going to move âem back in and let them be legal.â
I have already made the case that Trumpâs plan is laying the basis for Republican compromise on immigration, and I am not the only one as National Review's Ramesh Ponnuru has made the same observations. Nor is that the only area that Trump will compromise on. As I have mentioned in past posts, moderate and liberal Democrats and conservatives have all agreed that any tax reforms will include lower marginal rates and fewer deductions since 2009. Even the President's own commission under moderate Republican Alan Simpson and liberal Democrat Erskine Bowles agreed with this consensus and Trump's own tax plans follow along those same lines. Trump's tax plans also have been sold as a boon for the Middle Class, using language similar to what Marco Rubio has said about his plan. (There are differences in details but Trumpâs tax plans are part of what the real consensus truly is.)
Trump has set the stage for his own version of the big compromise on both taxes and spending if elected, and his foreign policy is closer to the left than the right as he has supported the leftist position that much of the Middle East's problems are Bushâs fault and not Obama's handling of foreign policies, even though he has criticized Obama's deal making skills. In attacking Obamaâs deal making skills, he has not really attacked the basis of Obamaâs foreign policies. In the case of the Iranian deal, he has made it clear that he would not ditch the deal but simply ârenegotiateâ the deal. And his protectionist trade views are in line not just with the populist right but also the hard left.
The reality for Republican voters is that Trump is the most centrist candidate we have running, if you chose to read what he actually says as opposed to the image he projects. My own view of Trump is that of a business man who loves to make money; he has an instinct for conservative ideas but he is not the conservative that Ted Cruz or Marco Rubio is. Trump doesnât keep a copy of F.A. Hayek in his back pocket, and over the past decade, he has taken positions that are to the left of the GOP and other times, he sounds like the hard core right wing. If you look at Trumpâs supporters, they are more politically moderate than Rubioâs or Cruz's supports, and they are more blue-collar. They are not traditionally conservative but he is building a broader center-right coalition, leaving the question of will that be enough? And a Trump Presidency will be a centrist administration with something for everyone, but will it be a conservative administration? That is a question that one canât fully answer.
Author should look at this
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3384013/posts
Best example I’ve seen of who DT is. This was 1991 but much of what he says explains today’s exonomy / stock market.
You're confused.
I like all the pretty explosions Trump's causing on The Uniparty's Media DeathStar.
Trump is whatever his fans want him to be in any given week.
+1
I’ve said in the past that DC is a china shop in need of a bull.
If you have read all of Trump’s books, you get a really good idea about who he is and why he is particularly good for the country at this time. It’s like his favorite book, the Bible: you only really understand what it is telling you if you read all of it several times. You notice that some things are covered over and over again. These are the important parts.
People who try to generalize from one or two Bible verses are as successful as people who try to generalize what Donald Trump thinks from one or two quotes.
Golly gee willikers, what a novel concept! Actually how negotiations have been done since cave man days, but must be a revelation to Mr. York.
I made up my mind a year ago to not demand perfect complementarity between my views and a candidate who can get the job done. AFAIAC, Cruz or Trump can be caught tossing dwarves through flaming hula hoops and my support for them will not dwindle. Someone has to tear through DC like a Tasmanian Devil, and no other candidates will do it.
“I went from being excited about Trump to having no respect for him in a period of just over a week.”
You are a thinker who can see the reality of Trump. Many are blinded by his billions of dollars, saying he is the smartest man on earth to have that much money and can fix any problem since he has billions of dollars. Money does not make a person liberal or conservative - Trump’s life has been one of a liberal and he will be one as president. A liberal with billions of dollars is still a liberal.
Looks like we will never get this thing fixed that uglies up some posts. Bookmark
http://dan.hersam.com/tools/smart-quotes.html
Seeing more here every day. #trumpremorse
As American Enterprise Institute Marc Thiessen noted, a portion of Trumpââ¬â¢s plan on immigration is actually an idea that came from Texas Moderate Senator Kay Baily Hutchison, who proposed Trump’s ââ¬Åtouchbackââ¬Â in which you deport millions of immigrants to let them back in. You can decide whether this is a practical plan, but make no mistake, under Trumpââ¬â¢s reform, the vast majority of illegal today will still be here his reforms.
The author and assumingly the poster are believe this because all politicians lie and how can Trump be any different. None of this matters because so far Trump is the best we have. No matter your position on illegal immigrants there will have to be some hard case exceptions to permanent deportation. Hopefully, Trump will want a win/win policy on such exceptions.
Well you will get to find out soon because barring an alien abduction Trump is likely the next President of the USA
ooh, ooh. Check mine too!
LOL!!
.
Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, and George Soros are all super liberals.
I’d bet that 99% of billionaires are socialists.
x3
“If Trump came to my house I wouldnât let him in.”
If he came to my house, I would not let him in and would grab a barf bag because his loud mouth pronouncements to fool voters and gutter language makes me that sick.
Cruz is a dream candidate, he was always my first choice, Trump lost me with his Cruz bashing that is irreversible as of last night
baring some terrific apology
That’s the nature of primaries. Don’t let it be a permanent schism.
Wait, what, who?
You have a linky?
I would like to think our infighting is just primary bickering. I can’t believe there are people who would sit out the election against Bernie or Hillary because their guy wasn’t nominated.
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