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Trump: “狼来了,狼来了!”

(2016-05-08 11:31:58) 下一个

Democracy is to respect the right of others. Decency is basic: You can't threaten others if

they don't go your way.

"I don't kill them, but I hate them - the reporters, you know."

"I don't like POW like McCain, I like hero." (below).

"Paul Ryan doesn't come with me? He gotta take the consequence. I gonna remove

him from GOP convention chairmanship (below).

Mr. Trump said there could be consequences in the event that Mr. Ryan continued withholding his support.

“I will give you a very solid answer, if that happens, about one minute after that happens, O.K.?” Mr. Trump said. “There’s no reason to give it right now, but I’ll be very quick with the answer.”

You're as good as your words - particularly in politics, in election.

Trump's behavior reminded me of that story: "wolf come! wolf come! " that child scream. 
Only thunders thunder, lightning, no rain.

Remember that story: 特朗普的行为让我想起了那个故事:“狼来了,狼来了!”那个孩子尖叫。
只有打雷打雷,闪电,无雨。

~~~

Donald Trump Won’t Rule Out Effort to Remove Paul Ryan as Convention Chairman

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Donald J. Trump at a campaign rally in West Virginia last week. In an interview broadcast Sunday, he said of Paul D. Ryan: “I’d like to have his support. But if he doesn’t want to support me, that’s fine, and we have to go about it.”Credit Ty Wright for The New York Times

Updated, 9:56 a.m. | Donald J. Trump said he would not rule out an effort to remove Representative Paul D. Ryan as chairman of the Republican National Convention if he did not endorse Mr. Trump’s candidacy.

Mr. Trump stopped short of calling for Mr. Ryan, the speaker of the House, to step down from his convention role. But in an interview that aired Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Mr. Trump said there could be consequences in the event that Mr. Ryan continued withholding his support.

“I will give you a very solid answer, if that happens, about one minute after that happens, O.K.?” Mr. Trump said. “There’s no reason to give it right now, but I’ll be very quick with the answer.”

Mr. Trump has shown little interest over the last few days in placating his critics inside the party, including Mr. Ryan. Mr. Ryan, a representative from Wisconsin, said on Thursday that he was not ready to endorse Mr. Trump, citing reservations about his political style and policy agenda. The two men are scheduled to meet privately in Washington next week.

But on “Meet the Press,” Mr. Trump struck a dismissive tone toward Mr. Ryan and responded with outright hostility to other Republican critics who have refused to back his campaign.

Jeb Bush, he said, was “not honorable” for breaking his promise to endorse the party’s nominee. Mitt Romney, he said, was “ungrateful” for the help Mr. Trump gave him in the 2012 election. Mr. Trump referred to Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina senator who said Friday he would never vote for Mr. Trump, as “this lightweight.”

Of Mr. Ryan, he said: “I’d like to have his support. But if he doesn’t want to support me, that’s fine, and we have to go about it.”

Asked about Mr. Trump’s remarks on the convention, Brendan Buck, a spokesman for Mr. Ryan, replied, “The speaker looks forward to meeting with Mr. Trump on Thursday.”

Other allies of Mr. Trump have gone further in criticizing Mr. Ryan for declining to issue an immediate endorsement.

Sarah Palin, the former Alaska governor, predicted in an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union” that Mr. Ryan would be “Cantored,” a reference to former Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia, who was in line to be speaker of the House before losing re-election in a Republican primary in 2014.

Find out what you need to know about the 2016 presidential race today, and get politics news updates via FacebookTwitter and the First Draft newsletter.

Correction: May 8, 2016 
An earlier version of this article misstated the year that former Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia lost in a Republican primary. It was 2014, not 2015.
~~

John McCain Demands Donald Trump Make Amends to Veterans

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Senator John McCain of Arizona at the Capitol in Washington in February. He said Donald J. Trump needed to “heal many of the wounds” of the primary season.Credit Zach Gibson/The New York Times

Senator John McCain of Arizona called on Donald J. Trump to make amends to veterans for his belittling comments about prisoners of war and suggested he would be unlikely to appear on a stage with Mr. Trump until that happened.

Mr. McCain has committed to supporting Mr. Trump as the Republican nominee for president. But in an interview that aired on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday, Mr. McCain expressed deep dismay at the tenor of the Republican presidential race, saying Mr. Trump make amends to “a body of American heroes” he had offended.

Mr. Trump mocked Mr. McCain last summer for having been captured and imprisoned during the Vietnam War, saying that he preferred “people who weren’t captured.”

Mr. McCain, who was the Republican presidential nominee in 2008, told CNN that he was personally indifferent to Mr. Trump’s ridicule but that he could not abide the affront to veterans in general. Asked if he would appear on the campaign trail with Mr. Trump, Mr. McCain said “a lot of things would have to happen” first.

“I think it’s important for Donald Trump to express his appreciation for veterans — not John McCain, but veterans who were incarcerated as prisoners of war,” Mr. McCain said. “When he said, ‘I don’t like people who were captured,’ then there’s a body of American heroes that I’d like to see him retract that statement — not about me, but about the others.”

Mr. McCain’s comments add to the already extraordinary pressure on Mr. Trump to mend his relationships across the Republican Party and win over a range of party leaders he has alienated in the 2016 campaign. One of Mr. McCain’s closest friends in the Senate, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, has already announced that he will not vote for Mr. Trump under any circumstances.

Mr. McCain said it was incumbent on Mr. Trump to “heal many of the wounds” from the primary season. The senator said the “personalization” of the 2016 race was like nothing he had ever seen, “where people’s integrity and character are questioned.”

Noting the rift that had opened in the Republican Party, Mr. McCain said the party’s leaders had lost touch with many voters in Mr. Trump’s constituency — mainly, he said, older, white, blue-collar workers who see no job prospects.

“There is some distance, if not a disconnect, between party leadership and members of Congress,” Mr. McCain said,“and many of the voters who have selected Donald Trump to be the nominee of the party.”

5 Things That Will Doom Republicans During 2016 Presidential Elections 

trump

The reason that the Republicans are doomed this Presidential election is simple: they continue to repeat history instead of learning from it. They simply have not learned anything from the problems of the 21st century. In fact, they are running on the same campaign promises that have pushed the country into the abyss. In the last decade we have seen a record deficit, more terrorist attacks, few new jobs, and wealth inequality soaring, yet these appear to be the platforms on which the Republicans are running again. Here are the five things that will doom Republicans during 2016 Presidential elections.

1. Yet Another Middle East War 

The time for talking about dismantling the Iran nuclear program is long over. The Republicans had a chance to stop Iran in their tracks back in 2003 when they had only a few dozen pieces of the puzzle. The George Bush administration had the opportunity to meet and talk with Iranian leaders, but declined to come to the table to negotiate. That would have been the time to discuss dismantling the centrifuges, but the Bush administration simply spurned that deal. The only way to stop Iran now would be nothing short of military action, and that will certainly be the beginning of a deadly war, not the end of their nuclear program. The dark cloud of not negotiating and the eagerness to start a war will be a dark cloud hanging over the Republican Party during the 2016 presidential elections.

2. The Rich Getting Richer

This year the rich in America have never had so much money. The promise of more and even bigger tax cuts for the richest in this country only increases the already enormous gap between the richest 300,000 and the rest of the country. This increase in separation has basically stalled the economy, but the Republicans are poised to make certain the wealthy get even more money this campaign. That small percentage of the richest Americans take in more than all 180 million Americans combined. The Republicans are trying to twist their rhetoric to match public outcry, but it is nothing more than a ploy and smokescreen to make the rich wealthier.

The latest tax reform proposed by Mike Lee and Marco Rubio has already been revealed to be nothing more that a huge tax-cut plan that reduces the Federal reserve by a whopping $2.4 trillion dollars over the next ten years. This large tax cut will benefit one particular group again, and surely alienate more voters who are not willing to line the pockets of the richest any longer.

3. Sending More Troops to Iraq

Whether or not you think that the war powers enacted by President Obama that targeted ISIS were enough, the Republicans think that more ground troops should be deployed much sooner than later. Although President Obama thinks that the war should be left to King Abdullah II, Republicans want faster and a more powerful presence in Iraq. ISIS is a group of outlaws, and King Abdullah II believes he has what it takes to win his war, without the excessive ground troops and airstrikes many Republicans are proposing. While President Obama has been trying to bring our troops home and allow other countries to fight and handle their own wars, the Republican party feels that in order to protect the security of American and every American citizen, we need to increase the ground troop presence, especially in Iraq.

4. Taking Away Health Care Coverage

Although the Affordable Care Act has been a hot-button subject for most of the two terms for President Obama, the bottom line is more people today have coverage than ever before. The Republicans, however, feel that they did not have an adequate chance to vote down the act, and want a second chance to reform health care for all Americans. Going back to the Bush administration, almost eight million Americans lost their health care coverage as they saw their premiums skyrocket. When Republicans were pushed to reform the bills, they simply passed an unfunded expansion of the Medicare system. The simple truth is that once the Affordable Care Act was passed health insurance premium growth has basically stalled. Even as thirteen million Americans took advantage of the lower health care, the country spent $600 million dollars less than we did only a few years ago.

If the Republicans have their way, not only will eight million Americans lose their coverage immediately, over fourteen million middle-class American workers would have their coverage threatened.

5. Electing Another Bush

The truth of the matter is that many voters feel that when all the smoke clears and the rhetoric is exposed for what it is, Donald Trump will simply ride off into the sunset with his millions of dollars in tow. That means that the most likely Republican candidate will be Jeb Bush, and this could already spell trouble for a party that is trying to distance themselves from the policies and the mess that the last Bush administration left behind. The American people are all too familiar with what happens when one Bush President tries to outdo the last Bush President. The problem for the Republican party is that Jeb Bush is not even making any attempts to distance himself from his brother’s policies. In fact, Jeb is claiming that he still backs those failed policies today. During a recent conversation on a conservative talk-show, Jeb Bush said that he would not hesitate for a moment to start the third Bush war in Iraq! Bush feels that his father’s war was just too small, that his brother’s war was extremely too big, and that he will fight the right sized war. It seems like a forgone conclusion that Bush is already preparing the troops even without having secured the Presidential nomination.

These five things that will doom Republicans during 2016 Presidential elections should be enough, but this only scratches the surface. The American voters right now are all caught up in the distractions that are Donald Trump, and once the smoke clears, these five issues alone will sink the party before they even have a chance to get both oars in the water during the Presidential election of 2016.

Find out what you need to know about the 2016 presidential race today, and get politics news updates via FacebookTwitter and the First Draft newsletter.

 
 
 
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