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Politics : Hillary Rodham Clinton for President 2016 -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: manalagi who wrote (344)8/11/2014 1:27:03 PM
From: ChinuSFO  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 850
 
Very sensible viees that I totally agree with. We choose between the better of the alternatives we have in Syria. Assad was smart to give up his chemical weapons and Obama was smarter to have focused his attention on that issue instead of arming ISIS.

Hillary needs to stop pandering. She needs to let the President speak for this country. She should know better having been the Foreign Secretary. She should take here cue from Kerry who unlike her has already been the official choice of her party to run for President. She has not been there.

Also notice that candidate Romney had a price to pay for jumping ahead when he came out on the Benghazi issue before the US President did.



To: manalagi who wrote (344)8/11/2014 2:52:36 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 850
 
Hillary should just keep her mouth shut until she declares her candidacy. Hopefully Elizabeth Warren will run pitting herself against Rand Paul.

Look, Hillary blames Obama for not helping Syrian rebels. Does she not know that the rebels are those barbaric al Qaeda's leaning group where one of the leader yanked the heart of a soldier and ate it raw? Disgusting. Right now Syria is better off with Assad who allows Iraqi's minority to cross the border and get sanctuary in Syria.


At least we know her true position ahead of time.



To: manalagi who wrote (344)12/30/2014 6:43:09 PM
From: ChinuSFO  Respond to of 850
 
CNN/ORC Poll: Bush Surges to 2016 GOP Frontrunner




WASHINGTON D.C. -- Jeb Bush is the clear Republican presidential frontrunner, surging to the front of the potential GOP pack following his announcement that he's "actively exploring" a bid, a new CNN/ORC poll found.

He takes nearly one-quarter — 23% — of Republicans surveyed in the new nationwide poll, putting him 10 points ahead of his closest competitor, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who tallied 13%.

RELATED: Read the entire CNN/ORC poll here

Physician Ben Carson comes in third, with 7% support, and Sen. Rand Paul and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee are both tied for fourth with 6%.
That marks a drop in support for all but Christie and Bush from the last CNN/ORC survey of the field, conducted in November. That poll showed Bush in the lead, but only taking 14% of the vote, while Carson came in second with 11% and Christie tied Rep. Paul Ryan for fourth with 9% support.

Bush's 10-point lead is a milestone for the potential GOP field — it marks the first time any prospective candidate has reached a lead beyond a poll's margin of error in the past two years.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is still far and away the favorite to take the Democratic nomination for president if she runs, with the support of two-thirds of Democrats polled. Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a liberal favorite, comes in a distant second place with just 9%.

myarklamiss.com



To: manalagi who wrote (344)1/17/2015 11:57:49 AM
From: ChinuSFO  Respond to of 850
 
Romney continues to live in the past. I was hoping he would articulate a vision for the future. Putin, I believe has fallen out of favor with the Russian oligarchy. The Iranian economy is also in the doldrums. sometimes, I wonder if the US and Saudi Arabia are colluding to use the oil weapon by crashing prices.
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Mitt Romney's 2016 pitch: I'm a foreign policy prophetBut is he right about that?

By Michael Crowley

1/17/15 8:19 AM EST

Read more: politico.com