Posted on 02/09/2016 10:01:30 PM PST by Greetings_Puny_Humans
See link for breakdown. Trump dominates everything. Men, women, young, old, graduates, non-graduates, moderates, conservatives, very conservatives. There is not a single category he did not dominate. Trump's huge leads among very conservative and conservative are also very interesting:
For just Conservative: Trump 36% vs Cruz 15%. For Somewhat Conservative: Trump 36% vs. Cruz 9% For Very Conservative: Trump 35% to Cruz 23%
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
If you do not get far in radio, there is always telemarketing.
That's what they all say until the two tubes puncture your neck and start pumping in testosterone:
Didn’t think there were very man “very conservatives” in New Hampshire.
Trump won, so we don’t have listen to him bitch and moan for the next couple weeks. Onto to SC and hopefully a Cruz victory.
You nailed it. I am now eager to listen to Rush tomorrow.
Yes, we know how conservative folks tend to be after four years of non-stop leftist indoctrination in college.
Are you working on your excuse theory why Cruz lost SC?
So how does that help Cruz?
Trump on the contrary could pull in a lot of otherwise Dem or stay-at-home blue-collar voters.
Trump could carry Michigan, Ohio and even New York.
He doesn’t smile much, either. I knew there was something that wasn’t quite clicking with me, and that turned out to be it.
Since not a single one of his 99 colleagues, including senator Sessions and Mike Lee, have endorsed him, that tells me he does not know how to be likable. Even Robot boy Rubio has more senate endorsements. Rubio has the establishment senators.. Why even Bob Dole likes Trump over Cruz. Lott likes him too!!!
Mike Lee and Cruz are very good friends and He said he will endorse him if one of his other friends drops out!!!
Primary date Winner Runners-Up February 9, 2016 Businessman Donald Trump Governor John Kasich, Senator Ted Cruz, former Governor Jeb Bush, Senator Marco Rubio, Governor Chris Christie, businesswoman Carly Fiorina, and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson January 10, 2012 Former Governor Mitt Romney (39.26%) Congressman Ron Paul (22.89%), Governor Jon Huntsman (16.89%), Senator Rick Santorum (9.43%), former Speaker Newt Gingrich (9.43%), Governor Rick Perry (0.71%)[51] January 8, 2008 Senator John McCain (37.00%) Former Governor Mitt Romney (31.55%), former Governor Mike Huckabee (11.23%), former Mayor Rudy Giuliani (8.48%), Congressman Ron Paul (7.65%), former Senator Fred Thompson (1.23%), Senator Barack Obama (0.83%), Senator Hillary Clinton (0.76%), Congressman Duncan Hunter (0.50%)[52] January 27, 2004 President George W. Bush (80.96%) No other candidate received 5%[53] February 1, 2000 Senator John McCain (48.59%) Governor George W. Bush (30.39%), Malcolm S. "Steve" Forbes, Jr. (12.68%) and former Ambassador Alan Keyes (6.38%)[54] February 20, 1996 Pat Buchanan (27.26%) Senator Bob Dole (26.23%), Governor A. Lamar Alexander (22.60%), Steve Forbes (12.24%), Senator Richard G. "Dick" Lugar (5.19%), former Ambassador Alan Keyes (2.67%) and Morry Taylor (1.4%)[55] February 18, 1992 President George H. W. Bush (53.19%) Patrick J. "Pat" Buchanan (37.53%)[31] February 16, 1988 Vice President George H. W. Bush (37.70%) Senator Bob Dole (28.48%), Congressman Jack F. Kemp, Jr. (12.79%), former Governor Pierre S. "Pete" du Pont IV (10.10%), and Reverend Marion G. "Pat" Robertson (9.40%)[56] February 28, 1984 President Ronald Reagan (86.42%) Only Democrat Gary Hart (5.27%) and former Governor Harold E. Stassen (2.06%) also polled more than 2%[33] February 26, 1980 Former Governor Ronald Reagan (49.86%) Ambassador George H. W. Bush (22.94%), Senator Howard H. Baker, Jr. (12.98%), Congressman John B. Anderson (9.91%), Congressman Philip M. "Phil" Crane (1.80%), Governor John B. Connally (1.54%) and Senator Bob Dole (0.42%)[34] February 24, 1976 President Gerald R. Ford (50.06%) Former Governor Ronald Reagan (48.62%)[35] March 7, 1972 President Richard Nixon (67.61%) Congressman Paul N. "Pete" McCloskey, Jr. (19.79%) and Congressman John M. Ashbrook (9.69%)[57] March 12, 1968 Former Vice President Richard Nixon (77.61%) Governor Nelson Rockefeller (10.82%), Senator Eugene McCarthy (5.30%), President Lyndon B. Johnson (1.71%), Governor George Romney (1.68%)[58] March 10, 1964 Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.* (35.54%) Senator Barry M. Goldwater (22.28%), Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller (21.99%), and former Vice President Richard Nixon (16.78%)[59] March 8, 1960 Vice President Richard Nixon (89.28%) The next highest candidate was Governor Nelson Rockefeller (3.76%)[60] March 13, 1956 President Dwight D. Eisenhower (94.11%) Of the the more than 57,000 GOP votes cast only 600 were not for Eisenhower[61] March 11, 1952 General Dwight D. Eisenhower (56.31%) Senator Robert A. Taft (31,18%), former Governor Harold E. Stassen (7.93%) and General Douglas MacArthur (3.89%)[62]
It gives Cruz clear data from the field that he is wasting his time and other people’s money.
By dropping out now, he can help himself by focusing on his current job from which he is truant.
True, but Cruz’s numbers are even less impressive.
“Trump underperformed with voters holding a postgraduate degree, pulling just 20 percent of that vote, compared to John Kasich, who pulled 21 percent of that group.
Isn’t 20% and 21% nearly the same percentage? So how is Trump “under performing” Kasich in that category?
You mad? Don't be mad bro. Conservatives in NH chose Trump. Just deal with it.
Nick Nolte at Brietbart wrote an important piece on how Trump won the New Hampshire vote among college educated voters.
This is significant, because both the left and right claimed Trump supporters were uneducated.
SW13:
Can I wait until you’ve been here a year or two before I take you seriously?
The “conservative media class” are very image conscious and most felt that supporting Cruz gave them the bragging rights of supporting the candidate that claimed the mantel of most conservative early on. Now that it is becoming obvious that the likely winner of this contest is the other guy... a bunch of them will be pivoting to Trump and pretending like he was always secretly their candidate. That is called momentum. Even the editor of the National Review looked like he was eating crow tonight. They tried to stop the Donald in his tracks and just found out that their influence is currently negligible and dropping fast.
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