lawgator1
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Agreed. The DNC and GOP smelt blood in the water after he screwed up his interview with Jake Trapper yesterday, and the media is running with it.
You are Hugely mistaken.
The more I hear GOP politicians speak, the more I'm beginning to think we may very well witness the first official major split of a major American political party that we've seen in what, 50, 60, 70 years or more? I think this has real potential. A Trump nomination could potentially split the Republican Party into two off-shoots.
I think right now the only real question is not whether or not Trump will win the bid (he will), but what the Republican Party will do once that is confirmed. I don't think it accepts it. Instead, I think it's a matter of whether the Republican Party decides it wants to go with another candidate and forces Trump into independence, or if the Republican Party decides it now needs to divide for good. Honestly, the latter would not surprise me, although I still find it more unlikely than the other. The Republican Party has been a discombobulated mess for some time now. It is perhaps only a matter of time before its fractures into two. Maybe Trump is the guy to finally do it.
I agree and hope the same. My opinion is more than half of the GOP could run as Democrats and nobody could tell the difference.
For the record, I am not a Trumpster. I've made it clear how I feel about the guy.
But Frankie is correct. I believe his support is going to surprise a lot of people. I know many lifelong conservatives that have embraced the Trump candidacy and are not looking back. I cannot talk them out of it.
Conversely, I know many lifelong moderate to strong Democrats (and this is in the Maryland suburbs of DC, a blue jackass stronghold) who are equally committed to him. I don't get it but that's where we're at.
I've heard that, besides a few "minor" things (like abortion and gay marriage, which Europe, for the most part, decided upon decades ago), Europeans have a difficult time determining the differences between American Republicans and Democrats, because they're essentially the same, in Europeans' opinions.
He's not going to be able to lay a glove on her when he's asked in a debate to explain his stance on the Central Park 5.
Kasich? I couldn't see that. The few who like Kasich would never vote for him if he joined forces with trump.
Palin, or maybe Carson. Both seem dim enough.
There is no doubting Carson's intelligence as a surgeon. But when it comes to current affairs and politics he comes across as pretty dim. It's why he has such sparse support.
