Posted on 04/13/2015 2:04:37 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
As Hillary Clinton famously said, What difference at this point does it make?
The difference is that half of Americans believe the other half are insane if they vote the Clintons back into the White House.
The sane voters know that Hillary Clinton is not trustworthy and represents all that is wrong with Washington. We know that she carries more baggage than an airport luggage carousel.
Hillary is a 20th-century politician, and as of yesterday her lame new 21st-century video message is, Im hitting the road to earn your vote because its your time, and I hope youll join me on this journey. (Perhaps instead she should run for president of Greyhound?)
Even our Democratic friends cannot name a single real accomplishment by Hillary Clinton. We all know that if she were a man, she would be long past her political expiration date.
But despite all that (topped off by her botched announcement), here are five reasons why Hillary Clinton is likely to be elected the 45th president of the United States.
Any one of these five factors gives her a huge advantage over whoever the Republican nominee may be, and, taken together, they make her victory almost inevitable (barring some major campaign catastrophe).
1. First Female President
Hillarys official announcement video was devoid of a clear campaign message but does she really need one other than, Its time for a woman president?
Running as an historic candidate will be her default position with her mantra being that Its time, rather than that its her time. And she will downplay, of course, the fact that her last attempt was hijacked by the first African-American nominee.
Writing as a Republican baby-boomer woman, I cannot emphasize enough how emotionally rewarding it would be if Democratic and Independent baby-boomer women elected the first female president. Older women feel this way too my 89-year-old mother in her nursing home recently spoke these exact words: Its time for a woman president. And those raised on girl power women aged 50 and younger, who twice helped elect President Obama are the most rah-rah for Its time.
For the record, in 2012 53 percent of all voters were women. In that election, President Obama won this group by an 11-point margin 55 to 44 percent over GOP nominee Mitt Romney. Hillary is banking on surpassing those numbers just by having her name on the ballot.
Therefore, any Republican pundit or pollster who downplays the true meaning and potential of Hillarys historic candidacy is being untruthful, or has his head in the sand.
2. The Electoral College Is the GOPs Worst Enemy
Our constitutionally mandated Electoral College has evolved to a point where it is slanted in favor of the Democratic partys nominee. If Hillary is indeed the 2016 Democratic nominee, all she has to do to win the necessary 270 electoral votes is sustain the historic equation outlined in my November National Review piece Breaking the Blue Barrier. That equation is: 1992 + 1988 + Florida = a Democrat in the White House.
That first number represents the ten states with a total of 152 electoral votes that have been won by every Democratic presidential nominee since 1992. The second number represents the nine states with a total of 90 electoral votes that have been won by every Democratic presidential nominee since 1988. Together, those states command 242 electoral votes.
Thus, if Hillary follows the Electoral College precedent that has held since 1992 and also wins Florida, with its 29 electoral votes (or any combination of states yielding 28 votes), Bill Clinton would be elected First Dude. (Mothers, hide your daughters!)
Florida, need I remind you, was won by Obama, though by small margins, in both 2008 and 2012, ensuring that in 2016 Mrs. Clinton will become a de facto resident of the Sunshine State.
3. Obamas Third Term
There has been much talk about Hillary either winning or losing Obamas third term. My theory is that she will find a way to take only what she needs and jettison the rest. And what she needs is Obamas winning voter coalition of women, African-Americans, Hispanics, Asians, voters aged 18 to 44, voters with incomes under $50,000, and those belonging to a union. It is no coincidence that Hillarys high command is stacked with seasoned veterans from Obamas two campaigns who are adept at delivering these voter groups.
Additionally, the CEO of Hillary 2016 is John Podesta, who was President Bill Clintons chief of staff, and who was counselor to the president in Obamas White House until he stepped down in February. Podesta, known as one of Washingtons fiercest political operators, was also the mastermind behind Obamas excessive use of executive orders.
Now, Republicans, get ready for some astounding news: President Obamas current job approval rating stands at 45.3 percent, with a 50.3 percent disapproval rating, according to Real Clear Politics. These are highly respectable approval numbers for a sixth presidential year, which explains the following paragraph from yesterdays New York Times: Mrs. Clinton and her team have decided that, on balance, the risk of lining up near Mr. Obamas record is worth taking. Rather than run from Mr. Obama, she intends to turn to him as one of her campaigns most important allies and advocates second only, perhaps, to her husband, the other president whose record will hover over her bid.
This brings us to Hillarys advantage number four:
4. Bill Clintons Third Term
Revolting as that sounds to Republican ears, here is a Washington Post headline from March 13: Bill Clinton is incredibly popular. How much will that help Hillarys 2016 campaign?
The piece reported: Bill Clinton is almost certainly the most popular person in American politics. A new NBC-Wall Street Journal poll showed that 56 percent of people have a positive view of the former president while just 26 percent hold a negative one.
The article continues, referring to Bill Clinton: The campaigner in chief is always more an asset than anything, said Jef Pollock, a New Yorkbased Democratic pollster. Hes good for money, hes good for strategy, and hes good for turnout. Thats the holy trinity of good campaigning.
Therefore, Hillary will have the unusual advantage of running for both Bill Clintons and Barack Obamas third term. Watch her switch back and forth between the achievements (real or imagined) of the former and current presidents whenever it makes good political sense. In turn, the 42nd and 44th presidents will each campaign and fundraise for Hillary in places and to groups where they are most popular. You can just hear each of them say, A vote for Hillary is a vote for me, and the crowd will go wild.
5. Republicans and the General-Election Curse
In five out of the past six presidential elections, starting with 1992, Republicans have lost the popular vote. The key for a 2016 GOP victory will be to nominate a candidate who can attract a winning coalition of voter groups beyond those won by Mitt Romney in 2012.
Here are the groups won by Romney over Obama:
Whites: 59 to 39 percent Men: 52 to 45 percent Voters aged 45 to 64: 51 to 47 percent Voters aged 65 and over: 56 to 44 percent College graduates: 51 to 47 percent (interestingly, Romney lost postgraduate-educated voters to Obama 42 to 55 percent) Voters with incomes between $50,000 and $90,000: 52 to 46 percent. Voters with incomes of $100,000 and over: 54 to 44 percent.
The trouble is that older, whiter, richer male college graduates the kind of voters who show up for midterm elections and vote Republican are overwhelmed by the sheer number of female, younger, poorer, less educated, and less white voters who tend to flood the polls in presidential-election years. And, as I mentioned earlier, Clinton will target these same voter groups as she tries to assemble the coalition that gave Obama his two victories.
Finally, anything can happen, and much will, between now and November 8, 2016. However, these five factors will likely form the foundation of Hillary Clintons victory (even though many of her voters will be holding their noses).
In addition, many low-information voters will pull the Clinton lever because they have been led to believe that a Republican alternative is far more dangerous than letting Bill and Hill back in the White House.
Now, friends, please dont shoot the messenger. Just tell me why I am wrong.
Myra Adams is a media producer and political writer. She was on the 2004 Bush campaigns creative team and the 2008 McCain campaigns ad council. Her writing credits include PJ Media, the Daily Beast, RedState, and the Daily Caller.
No. Never.
6. Jeb Bush is the GOP nominee.
RE: No. Never.
I thought I heard and read the same remark in 2008 and 2012 for Obama.
"Methinks she protesteth too much."
Hillary shoulda got The Drama Award for that performance.
Everyone in America dies and she is the only voter?
For the things she’s done ,she should be hiding under a Rock ,not running for President and if she wins it’s INSANE
How about the reasons she loses?
Obama had no accomplishments and he got elected twice. That speaks volumes. Media buzz over the “first woman president” trumps everything else. Plus the dems have plenty of insurance with illegal and dead people’s votes. Right now I see no way she doesn’t get elected.
3. Obamas Third Term
Pffffffffffffft! Good luck running on that.
4. Bill Clintons Third Term
That would be 16 years ago! In order for that to be of any relevance, you would have to completely ignore the past almost 2 decades and then assume that everything will magically reset to Dec 2000.
The world is extremely different from then.
Money is important.
I just saw Charlie Gasparino mention she’s going to have an astounding 2.5 billion.
And right now it looks like 95% of that gets spent in the fall, which was a big advantage Baraq had in 2012.
Number One Reason: The Clinton Foundation contributes what ever it takes to buy this election.
#2 indeed. Methinks the Left does have a better handle on the raw statistics & data-mining needed to focus maximum money on the minimum area/number of voters needed to sway an election their way (not talking fraud, just sheer persuasive advertising).
You’re right; the media will do their job and convince enough of the 3.000001% she needs (beyond the 47% automatically in the Dem column) that she is the best candidate.
Anyone questioning her competence will be publicly smeared as anti-woman; same nonsense as 2008/2012, with a different “preferred minority”.
So whare you saying, you want her to win?
I can tell her where she is wrong; the Republicans didn’t field a candidate who would campaign against Obama (McCain) and had one who gave away the election to Obama (Romney). The Democrat strategy she lines out won because of a Republican default, not because it was inevitable or inexorable.
NO NEED to waste all that campaign money or suffer through countless, nauseating ads.
Coronate the witch and be done with our Republic.
Oh sure, Bill rode 'er around a few times, but then decided he wanted a younger, snazzier model.
Course nobody's looked under Hillary's hood lately, but Bill better not base his hopes on being the first First Lady w/ gonads.
Ignorant, uninformed, lazy and un-American voters. Couple that with voter fraud and Hillary could win. What a sorry day that would be for our nation.
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