Posted on Oct 21, 2015
CW4 Guy Butler
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EDITOR’S NOTE: The following article is adapted from one that ran in the November 2, 2015, issue of National Review.

Hillary Clinton has glaring weaknesses as a candidate. The historical odds are against her goal: getting a third term in the White House for one party. The Democrats should nonetheless be considered the likely winners if they nominate her.
Clinton has had months of bad news. Her mishandling of official e-mails as secretary of state, along with her clumsy lies about it, have kept generating unflattering coverage. Her favorability ratings have been falling for four years straight. A small majority of Americans have an unfavorable impression of her in the latest poll average at RealClearPolitics. In August, a Quinnipiac poll found that 61 percent of voters say she’s not honest or trustworthy. Starting that month, nine polls in a row had her behind Bernie Sanders among New Hampshire Democrats. While she has recovered the lead there in some polls and enjoyed better press since the first Democratic debate, Republicans can point to other reasons for optimism. They have control of Congress, most governorships, and most state legislative chambers: Perhaps that means that the country now has a natural Republican majority? They will also benefit from time-for-a-change sentiment. Only once since 1952 has a party won the Electoral College three times in a row. The exception came in 1988, when George H. W. Bush succeeded Ronald Reagan. But voters then were much happier about the state of the country than they are now. In the fall of 1988, most polls found that Americans were slightly more likely to say that the country was “headed in the right direction” than that it was “on the wrong track....

...Republicans have very little in the way of popular policy proposals to counter the appeal of liberalism. The Republican presidential candidates have not built their campaigns on offering conservative ideas that would give any direct help to families trying to make ends meet. Their tax-cut proposals are almost all focused on people who make much more than the average voter. So far, Republicans do not seem to be even trying to erode the Democratic advantage on middle-class economics.

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/425863/hillary-clinton-2016-election-winner
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SSgt Forensic Meteorological Consultant
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Cackling witch
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LTC Stephen F.
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It is never too early for gloom and doom in politics CW4 Guy Butler :-)
Hillary Rodham Clinton is one of the darlings of the liberal base who would nothing more that for her to be the first former wife of a President to become President and have the impeached former President William Jefferson Clinton became the "first gentlemen." That would be very bittersweet for Jennifer Flowers, Monica Lewinsky and many other women who have been taken advantage of by the former governor of Arkansas.
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GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
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Edited 9 y ago
B15b78bf
I hate to admit it, but I am already looking at real estate in Canada.
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CPT Jack Durish
CPT Jack Durish
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You can run but you can't hide
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GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
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756f7eeb
Yep ... kind of like in those horror movies CPT Jack Durish!
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CPT Jack Durish
CPT Jack Durish
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Did you really have to do that? I just ate...
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SGM Steve Wettstein
SGM Steve Wettstein
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GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad - I will now have nightmares tonight after seeing that picture. Thanks Gunny.
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