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Caller: My Republican Friends and Relatives Won't Vote for Trump
Rush Limbaugh.com ^ | January 4, 2016 | Rush Limbaugh

Posted on 01/04/2016 5:32:16 PM PST by Kaslin

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Here's Sarah in Billings, Montana, Sarah, I'm glad you waited. Happy to welcome you to the program. Hi.

CALLER: I'm a conservative. My family members are conservatives. Several family members said they will not vote if Donald Trump gets the nomination. I'm concerned the same thing will happen like the last election. Just wondering what your thoughts are.

RUSH: Well, my thoughts are I need to ask you some questions. Let's see. You won't vote Trump if he gets the nomination, and that a lot of Republicans won't show up if he does. And that we'll just lose again. What about Trump do you not like?

CALLER: It's not me that's saying this; it's my family members. They think that he is very rough around the edges, that he's unpredictable. At least with Hillary you know you can't get any worse than Obama. So because Trump is unpredictable, they're not willing to vote at all.

RUSH: You know, people that are not willing to vote, to me, that's quite a threat. It's almost -- I wouldn't put it up there with blackmail, but at the same time, if somebody says, "I'm not gonna vote," one of my reactions, "Well, then why should I listen to you?" You're willing to take yourself out of the process. You're willing to make yourself a nonfactor. In fact, if anything, you may be furthering the election of that which you profess to dislike. It doesn't make any sense to me, in that sense, given the importance of this election coming up. I mean, I understand people that don't think Trump's conservative, but do they see no value whatsoever in what's happening here in this campaign?

CALLER: You know, I think it's about Trump's morals and his presentation. They don't like him.

RUSH: Okay. That's interesting. We'll deal with that when we get back. Thanks, Sarah, very much.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I heard what she said. I had limited time there. I actually am lucky Sarah was talented enough to say what she wanted to say in a limited amount of time, but I didn't have any time to respond. I heard what she said. I'm checking the e-mail. "Rush, she said 'morals,' Trump's morals? What about the Clintons' morals." I heard it, all right? Let me react to this here. I think you're misunderstanding. When somebody like Sarah calls -- and, remember, she wasn't talking about herself. No, no. She was talking about her "friends and family."

And she said her friends and family don't like Trump's morals and they don't like that he's rough around the edges. They don't like the way he talks. And so, if he gets the nomination, they're gonna take it out on the Republican Party by not voting. They're not saying... Look, I know these people. They're not saying that they prefer Hillary's morals. They want to punish the Republican Party. It's like the four million that didn't vote in 2012. And, by the way, the Republican Party and the Drive-Bys are engaging in push-back now.

They're trying to tell us that the four million that didn't show up... "In the first place, there weren't four million that didn't show up," they're trying to say. And the next thing they're trying to tell us is, "No, no, no, no! They weren't people upset with Romney 'cause he wasn't conservative enough. That's not what happened." It is, and those people didn't show up because they're mad at the Republican Party. It's not that they are doing what they do because they prefer the values of the Democrats. They want to punish everybody by having the Democrats win. That's the objective here. When you say, "Harumph! Harumph! I don't like Trump!

"He's rough around the edges. I don't like the way he talks and he's not a conservative, and if he's the nominee, I'm not voting," it's another way to say, "Notice me! Hey, I'm important out here. I'm important. I don't like Trump -- and if I don't like Trump, then you're not gonna get what you want, and if that means you get the Clintons, then deal with it." It's not that they think the Clintons are more moral Trump. I mean, I don't think anybody would make that claim. If we're talking about morality, there's nobody on the Democrat side, folks, that's gonna trump anybody on the Republican side here.

Don't think anybody's preferring Clinton's morals. This is more like, "If I don't get what I want, I'm gonna punish you by making sure you don't get what you want." And she said something about how she didn't like... Not her. Not her. Not her. Very important. It wasn't her; it was her family that didn't like the Trump's presentation. Which is another way of saying they don't like the way Trump insults people and he calls people losers and third-rate and all that. You know why I don't mind it?

Because for the most part, I happen to agree with what he's saying about the people he's describing when he's talking about the Democrats and Obama and all these others. I don't think there's any mystery why Trump is doing what... You know, I'll tell you a couple of very, very interesting things that I have seen over the break, and this one is fascinating. And, again, it's the Drive-By Media pointing it out. I don't know how much of it you can believe, but the nuts and bolts of this are that a lot of Trump's supporters have no plans to vote.

Have you seen those stories? You see those stories last week, that the biggest challenge the Trump people have is actually getting their supporters to go vote? "They love the guy. They show up in his rallies. They're cheering. But a lot of them, why, they don't really plan to go to the trouble of voting!" This is what these stories said. I have never seen that written or postulated about any other candidate's supporters. I've never seen that. Not that I can remember. I never heard it said, "Yeah, Reagan's got a whole bunch of supporters out there, but the big challenge is gonna be to get 'em them to show up at the polls on Election Day!"

I've never seen that said. But it was all over the news last week about Trump's supporters. And then there's this. I've been trying to make this point for I don't know how long. Well, two or three months, the last three months of last year. This is... Actually it's from New Year's Eve when I printed this out. So this is a story from late 2015. It's in the New York Times. Their number cruncher ran the statistics on Trump's supporters, at least as they're able to determine Trump supporters, and you know who the number one support group of Trump is according to the New York Times?

Registered Democrats.

Now, I know many of you conservatives who don't like Trump are going, "Yeah, yeah, yeah! See? See? I knew it! I knew it! It's the Democrats! We're getting sandbagged. We're getting tricked. It's the Democrats that like Trump, Rush. They're running the Reverse Operation Chaos! I'm telling you what they're doing and you're falling for it." I heard it all, folks. I understand. Don't... A, I'm not falling for anything. B, I remain wary of all this. But let me just tell you what they say here. Nate Cohn is the number cruncher here, the statistician New York Times.

He reveals, "Mr. Trump appears to hold his greatest strength among people like these: Registered Democrats who identify as Republican leaners..." So Trump's number one support group is registered Democrats who are leaning Republican in the polling data out there. Meaning Reagan Democrats is who we're talking about here. Trump "fares best in a broad swath of the country stretching from the Gulf Coast, up the spine of the Appalachian Mountains, to upstate New York." What would you do if I told you that some in the deep, dark crevices of both parties' establishment and apparatus...?

What if I were to tell you that some of the big money people and powerful thinkers in both parties are starting to calculate that Donald Trump could win New York, as a Republican, in the presidential race? Have you seen that? Well, there's a story today if you take a look. I've got it somewhere here in the Stack. My point is there's such fear out there in both parties. "This guy can win New York! Oh, my God." He may lose New Hampshire and Iowa, though, and if that happens, then all this is out the window and all the bets are off.

But there's still sheer panic out there where Trump is concerned. "Mr. Trump's best state is West Virginia, followed by New York. Eight of Mr. Trump's 10 best congressional districts are in New York... Mr. Trump's strength fades as one heads west. Nearly all of his weakest states -- 16 of his worst 19 -- lie west of the Mississippi. ... He leads among Republican women and among people in well-educated and affluent areas. He even holds a nominal lead among Republican respondents that Civis estimated are Hispanic, based on their names and where they live. ...

"He has held between 26 and 32 percent of the vote for five months" that they've been polling here, the New York Times. Now, here's the thing. And I've made this observation before. For all of you who are conservative and say, "Trump's not a conservative. I couldn't support him. I don't know why you are, Rush." A, I'm not supporting anybody. I'm just telling you what goes on day to day here. You'll know when I'm supporting somebody. I've got two or three ways this could go that I would not be unhappy. I don't have all my eggs tied to one basket; I never do.

Anyway, for those of you who are conservative who say, "I'm never voting for Trump," you better keep one thing in mind: That's exactly what the Republican Party wants. Do you understand the Republican Party wants to rid themselves of you? The Republican Party... Jeb Bush. Jeb Bush made it plain as day. Jeb Bush's objective was to win the Republican nomination despite the base. Remember this original plan? He had so much money. He was going to have so much money.

He was gonna wrap up all the delegates with that money even if he lost the primary vote of conservatives in many states. Now, you know as well as I do that the Republican Party's not happy with its base. They're embarrassed of its base. I have almost a perfect illustration. How many of you have watched the documentary The Making of a Murderer on Netflix? You haven't? Oh. Folks, you have to watch this. It's about... I have to be real careful describing this. It's a documentary. It's not... There's no actors in it. It's all real people. It's about a sequence of events in Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, back starting in 2003 up to the present involving a man named Steven Avery, who was imprisoned by the Manitowoc County Sheriff's Department for 18 years for a crime he didn't commit.

DNA evidence cleared him. Shortly after he got out of jail, after he was released, a murder happened on the Avery property, and he has been convicted of that murder. The law enforcement went right after him, so he's back in jail. He's been in jail for a number of years now. The documentary tells the whole story. This poor guy's got an IQ of 70. His family is in the auto salvage business. They are... I'll tell you what they are. They are what elites think of the Republican base (maybe a bit of an exaggeration there): IQ 70, ill-spoken, hick, hayseed, maybe a little slow, not the brightest people around, embarrassing to be around.

You wouldn't want to be anywhere near them. You give thanks every day you're not them. (It's a bit of an exaggeration.) So my point is the Republican Party has done everything it can to signal that it would like a new base. My point is that Donald Trump has come along and has put together a coalition of people that the Republican Party claims it wants. He's running strong with Hispanics and men. He's running strong with women. His number one support group is disaffected Democrats, the old Reagan Democrats!

These are the people that Republicans tell us are the reason they need to support amnesty. They're the reason they've gotta support the Obama agenda, 'cause they've gotta go out and they've gotta show people that they are capable of working with Democrats and "getting things done." I mean, Trump's coalition is almost exactly what the Republican Party claims it wants, and yet they're out there doing everything they can to destroy it. Well, it must mean it's not actually what they want, or it is what they want but they want one of their elites to believe responsible for putting if all together. I don't know.

It's all fascinating to me in a whole lot of different ways.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Jeff in Orange Beach, Alabama. Welcome to the program, sir. Great to have you here.

CALLER: Rush, how are you?

RUSH: Good.

CALLER: So good to talk to you.

RUSH: Thank you very much, sir.

CALLER: Well, I was in Biloxi on Saturday night. A dear friend of mine happened to be the chair of the campaign, and I'm an elected official, and I was hesitant to go. But when I got there, I ran into mayors of major cities in Mississippi. I ran into some of the biggest lawyers in Mississippi. And every one of them who were there, were just die hard supporting him. And the conversation was, "We were afraid to be seen because the GOP would be so mad at us that there'd be bad repercussions if we were seen there." But to be truthful, what he spoke is an undercurrent going on across the country. People are tired of the political correctness, and he just says it the way it is. And everything you're discussing about who was there and who they think the GOP face there is, they're wrong. It is a small percentage. But the people that I saw there were diehard voters and diehard Republicans.

RUSH: Well, I know something about this. There were 15,000 people at this event in Biloxi, and Trump... Now, this is an indication. Nobody else does this, Trump spotted a CNN photographer, and he had the presence of mind to know that the CNN photographer was not showing the entire crowd. And from the stage, Trump called this guy out and challenged him to show the entire crowd. "You get your camera, you aim it, and you show everybody who's here! You show the size of this crowd," because they weren't. He called 'em out on it.

That's something that doesn't happen. This crowd stood up and cheered. They loved it! Because to many of the people of this country, you've also gotta beat the media if you want to win an election. It's not just the Democrats. You gotta beat the media, because they're one and the same. There's a story in the New York Post: "Elites and Media Really Hate Donald Trump's Voters." I've talked about this in my own way on a number of occasions. That's true, too. It's along the lines of the Republican Party not happy with its own base.

END TRANSCRIPT


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2016election; editorial; notaneditorial; rush; trump
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To: Mollypitcher1
I want a fighter who can bring back at least some of the America I loved.

Amen to that, Molly.

181 posted on 01/04/2016 8:33:55 PM PST by exit82 ("The Taliban is on the inside of the building" E. Nordstrom 10-10-12)
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To: Kaslin

You are all wet. Your cynicism is very sad to see. Whatever are you going to do when Trump wins? Cut your throat?
People who go out on snowy, icy roads, stand in line in heat or storm to attend one of his rallys, are dedicated people who WILL cerasinly get out and vote. You are just filthy dreaming.


182 posted on 01/04/2016 8:35:50 PM PST by Mollypitcher1 (I have not yet begun to fight....John Paul Jones)
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To: Nifster

Well I don’t agree with your premise on two counts, that Trump will be the nominee, and that he will beat her. I believe Trump is a Northeast liberal, and is running interference for Hillary. I’m not looking at this from the perspective of ignoring Donald Trumps positions and his rhetoric that has no foundation of principled conservatism. To me Donald Trump is a salesman, he’s selling himself, very thin on the Constitution he is.

So you ask me will I vote for him in this hypothetical situation? I probably will write in Ted Cruz’ name.


183 posted on 01/04/2016 8:41:44 PM PST by gwgn02
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To: Lopeover

I’m with you there. I will not vote for a Canadian citizen.


184 posted on 01/04/2016 8:41:56 PM PST by Duchess47 ("One day I will leave this world and dream myself to Reality" Crazy Horse)
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To: Axeslinger

I review it in the historical light. Facts are facts which somehow seem to always be poorly understood by those with pretensions of being so perfectly right. Each of us as a person is PART of the American people. Get over the me, me, me, of today’;s liberal indoctrination. What is best for the country? Hillery or Trump? That is the question you have to ask and answer. If you don’t vote for Trump, you are voting for Hillary. That IS a FACT!


185 posted on 01/04/2016 8:42:03 PM PST by Mollypitcher1 (I have not yet begun to fight....John Paul Jones)
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To: Axeslinger
Those of us who will not vote for trump believe we will get what we deserve with either trump or Hillary....we believe that there is a high likelihood that trump will be AS damaging to the republic as the she-witch.

Firstly...When you're talking about being damaging to the republic, you do realize that a Clinton Presidency would be the third term of Obama?

Secondly, the agenda which Obama has enacted was also supported by the good old GOP, evidenced by their control of the House and now the Senate.

Most times, you can best judge who someone is by their enemies. If that's the case, there's no way you can put Trump on the same side as Clinton or Obama.

186 posted on 01/04/2016 8:42:52 PM PST by Rational Thought
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To: Axeslinger
It would disgust me to vote for a candidate pushing path to legal status for illegals. That is a form of amnesty. It is the lowest form of liberalism.

Path to Legal Status for Illegals

Pushing TPP

187 posted on 01/04/2016 8:47:02 PM PST by entropy12 (Go Trump 2016! Born in USA of 2 US Citizen Parents! A true Natural Born Citizen!)
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To: Lopeover
From what I've been reading on FR recently, there's no need to promote the "nobody.but Trump" mindset among many Trump supporters. A lot of them already have stated that there are only two - or sometimes only one - candidate (Trump himself) for whom they will vote in the general election. Otherwise, they'll just stay home.

So it is is kind of amusing seeing some of those same people accuse supporters of other candidates of bring petulant if they won't vote for Trump.

The circular firing squad has never been stronger.

188 posted on 01/04/2016 8:51:54 PM PST by Bruce Campbells Chin
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To: Duchess47

He gave up his Canadian citizenship. Cruz had dual citizenship.

I am primarily upset with party folks who won’t vote for the Republican nominee if it is Trump. If that’s how they want to roll, I can play that game too. I gonna be watching the boards if I see more talk about this.


189 posted on 01/04/2016 8:52:17 PM PST by Lopeover (2016 Election is about allegiance to the United States)
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To: Jonty30
I don't owe my vote to anyone. I favor Cruz. If he is not the nominee, I would vote for Trump or Rubio as nominee (based on current knowledge and with no disasters on the horizon. I will NOT vote for the Arkansas Medusa, Sanders or O'Malley. Once, I might have voted for Jebbie but his campaign has convinced me that such a vote is extremely unlikely (Common Core, GOP-E, etc., etc.). I do not trust Christie and do not expect to vote for him. The rest of the GOP candidates are non-factors, dead without the sense to fall over.

You are what you vote for. There is no voting "against." In 2012, I voted for FR's own Tom Hoefling and refused to vote for Romney (first GOP candidate in twelve POTUS elections that I refused to support although I am ashamed of some previous votes particularly Richard Nixon 1968, Gerald Ford, Bush the Elder, Robert Dole and John McCain). I am a recovering Republican and that party does not get my vote without earning it. To vote for GOP-E trash is to destroy the party and the country by encouraging the flushing of our nation and the party down the toilet to the ever more leftist sewer.

While you are attempting to occupy a non-existent GOP-E (as you deem necessary) high ground, the party leaders are busily changing party rules to guarantee that neither Trump nor Cruz nor any other conservative favored by the base will be allowed to be nominated. Then the GOP-E will be happy to taunt us by saying. Well, the nomination has gone to yet another soulless unprincipled social revolutionary slave of "the interests" in "GOP" drag. You can vote for GOP-E guy or Hillary becomes POTUS. Sorry, I am not playing that game any more.

If the GOP-E pulls that crap, the four million who refused to vote for that slimebag baby-murdering, perversion supporting, gun grabbing, socialized medicine creating, etc., etc., etc., Romney will become eight million who won't vote GOP-E next time. The party will continue to bleed out until it dies but, by then, it will probably be too late for the USA or Western Civilization. Nominate accordingly. When this country falls, we have nowhere to flee to.

It is not a question of "fighting like dogs." They either nominate an acceptable candidate or they lose, America loses and the infernal GOP finally dies. I will vote for Cruz in the primary. I will vote for him or Cruz or Rubio in the final. I would have preferred Scott Walker but he is long gone and the best public official I have ever witnessed in office from just across the cheddar curtain as we call the WI/IL boundary. If it is any other nominee, I don't see me voting GOP and I was a Reagan state chairman against Ford in another state.

Voting my conscience is most emphatically NOT TREASON. When I become reacquainted with my Maker, not likely that many years from now, I won't have a vote for a despicable greedhead barbarian like Romney (or Paul Ryan) on my record. Don't like that? Tooooooooo bad! But obedience to conscience is NOT TREASON.

190 posted on 01/04/2016 8:55:23 PM PST by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline: Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Society/Rack 'em Danno!)
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To: Lopeover

It upsets me also. They are all in for voting for someone who is no constitutionally eligible but worried about Trump’s divorces?


191 posted on 01/04/2016 9:01:11 PM PST by Duchess47 ("One day I will leave this world and dream myself to Reality" Crazy Horse)
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To: AuntB

Yep There are no rallies here....and I have been to none ....but if Donald Trump is saying brilliant things I would love for someone to point to it .I have not seen it


192 posted on 01/04/2016 9:08:16 PM PST by woofie
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To: Kaslin

Trump voters can be about as volatile as Trump is - local woman has hated Obama from the start, was all for Trump and looking forward to voting for him - until Philly mayor Nutter got on his high horse and said that because of his stand on Muslims, Trump would not be welcome in Philly and Trump responded with his usual bombast, saying something like Nutter was a failed mayor - since this woman always liked Nutter because he was educated in Catholic schools, she decided she would never vote for Trump - that was about a month ago, but time seems to have mellowed her and when I ran into her this weekend she was back on the Trump bandwagon - stay tuned.....


193 posted on 01/04/2016 9:13:11 PM PST by Intolerant in NJ
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To: Mollypitcher1
I favor Cruz but would certainly vote (as things stand) for a nominated Trump. Your post at #179 is well-stated and in pointing to Trump's undoubted personal charity without seeking credit bears repeating.

There is too much friction at this point. If I had a thousand votes I would never vote for Romney even once and I did not but I am willing to give Trump the benefit of the doubt. Romney is Satan incarnate. Trump is a guy who seems to be coming to conservative views late in life but better late than never. Trump is not Reagan but neither is anyone else. Trump seems to be rebuilding the Reagan constituency and that deserves a LOT of credit. If I am wrong, I have voted for candidates who were unworthy of my vote but Trump seems better than that.

I am somewhat appalled that Cruz is getting called GOP-E. The supporters of both Cruz and Trump should give the harsh words towards the other a permanent rest, playing up the fine qualities of their respective candidates and it would be nice if the candidates would act accordingly. This also applies to Rubio. I think he sank his own ship by supporting amnesty but there is no sense in doing the Demonrats' work for them. Too bad. His personality and charisma and backstory make him a political natural but his lapse of judgment has damaged him badly.

In any event, congratulations on your fine #179. God bless yo and yours!

194 posted on 01/04/2016 9:14:10 PM PST by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline: Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Society/Rack 'em Danno!)
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To: Duchess47

I really can’t stand how the some so called Christians pass judgement on people.


195 posted on 01/04/2016 9:14:45 PM PST by Lopeover (2016 Election is about allegiance to the United States)
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To: Kaslin

“You know, people that are not willing to vote, to me, that’s quite a threat. It’s almost — I wouldn’t put it up there with blackmail, but at the same time, if somebody says, “I’m not gonna vote,” one of my reactions, “Well, then why should I listen to you?” You’re willing to take yourself out of the process. You’re willing to make yourself a nonfactor. In fact, if anything, you may be furthering the election of that which you profess to dislike. It doesn’t make any sense to me, in that sense, given the importance of this election coming up.”

He’s right that it is blackmail, but it does make sense. It makes sense in the context that our party has constantly been nominating candidates (through a quite rigged process) that the base does not want. It’s clear that they do not care for what we want, and they will only give us what we want if forced by some means.

So, how do you force them? You need leverage. Money won’t work, because their big donors can out punch us in that department. The only real leverage we have is our votes. They cannot replace those. The only way we can use our votes as leverage, however, is by demonstrating to them that they cannot take the votes for granted. If they do not earn the votes, then the votes must be denied to them.

Think of it like trying to train a wild dog. If you never deny him a reward, then the reward is meaningless. He needs to learn that you are the master of both the giving and the withholding of rewards, or he will believe that HE is the master!

If we ever want to retake control of our party, this must be done at some point. Whether this election is too important to risk doing that right now is debatable, but, if that excuse prevents us from exercising our power, then I can pretty much guarantee you that we will inevitably be told that EVERY election is too important for us to risk.


196 posted on 01/04/2016 9:20:50 PM PST by Boogieman
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To: Lopeover

So called is the correct term :)


197 posted on 01/04/2016 9:21:54 PM PST by Duchess47 ("One day I will leave this world and dream myself to Reality" Crazy Horse)
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To: Hieronymus

Maybe there were more John Quincy Adams than we know about... or maybe he is like Doctor Who, he can die and just regenerate into another John Quincy Adams?


198 posted on 01/04/2016 9:29:51 PM PST by Boogieman
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To: ConservativeMind

“He was a liberal Democrat for most of his life and elected president of a major union eight separate times.”

You conveniently left out that that was decades in the past by the time he ran for President, and he was a leader of the conservative movement during that interim you conveniently neglected to mention.


199 posted on 01/04/2016 9:35:30 PM PST by Boogieman
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To: LeoWindhorse

Yeah, disenfranchise citizen because they don’t vote the way you want them too. Gee, that’s sound really American...

/sarc


200 posted on 01/04/2016 9:39:00 PM PST by Boogieman
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