Statistikhengst
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A look at Clinton s campaign launch video - CNN.com
(video at the link)
For sure, this is a different kind of rollout than the traditional method.
I will be very interested to see what the polling over the next three weeks does.
Why three-weeks?
Well, in this week, polling data will be gathered and I assume that by then, Marco Rubio (R-FL) will also be in the race.
That means that data from this week will likely come out at the weekend or the beginning of next week. And from that point on, any data that comes is is definitely post-Clinton-announcement data.
BTW, at the Clinton Facebook page, many women who claim to be Republicans are already coming out and saying that they are going to vote for Hillary. I cannot prove their claims at all, but I can say that you can see these messages for yourself. This is exactly what the GOP is terrified of.
Oh, and I am pretty sure that political cartoons in the next weeks are going to be fun.
It also appears that the Clinton campaign is playing nice with the media:
Clinton aides deliver pizza to waiting reporters - CNN.com
And she is DRIVING to Iowa today:
Hillary Clinton to drive to Iowa - POLITICO
The funny part of that story from Politico is that Glenn Thrush contributed to it. Yes, the same Glenn Thrush who wrote just a few short days ago that the wheels were already coming off the Clinton campaign.... lol...
Interesting information to discuss.
ALSO, NBC did a comparison to the Clinton rollout from January 20th, 2007, compared to now.
It is interesting:
From I m In to It s Your Time Clinton s Announcements Then and Now - NBC News
(video at the link)
Clinton officially entered the race on Sunday afternoon with about 55 minutes of activity.
It started just after 2:30 p.m. with an email from John Podesta, her campaign chairman, to veterans of Clinton's failed 2008 run for the White House, who informed her former staffers on that campaign that she was set to officially declare her candidacy once again.
He followed that up with an email to donors, who then got another email from Dennis Cheng, her new campaign's finance director.
By 3 p.m., Clinton's new website, HillaryClinton.com, was up and running, featuring a new logo of the letter "H," with an arrow pointing to the right. And on YouTube, the 2-minute, 18-second video announcing her candidacy was posted.
At 3:10 p.m., that video was posted to Clinton's Facebook page. And at 3:27 p.m., she tweeted to announce she is running.
For sure, this is a different kind of rollout than the traditional method.
I will be very interested to see what the polling over the next three weeks does.
Why three-weeks?
Well, in this week, polling data will be gathered and I assume that by then, Marco Rubio (R-FL) will also be in the race.
That means that data from this week will likely come out at the weekend or the beginning of next week. And from that point on, any data that comes is is definitely post-Clinton-announcement data.
BTW, at the Clinton Facebook page, many women who claim to be Republicans are already coming out and saying that they are going to vote for Hillary. I cannot prove their claims at all, but I can say that you can see these messages for yourself. This is exactly what the GOP is terrified of.
Oh, and I am pretty sure that political cartoons in the next weeks are going to be fun.
It also appears that the Clinton campaign is playing nice with the media:
Clinton aides deliver pizza to waiting reporters - CNN.com
And she is DRIVING to Iowa today:
Hillary Clinton to drive to Iowa - POLITICO
The funny part of that story from Politico is that Glenn Thrush contributed to it. Yes, the same Glenn Thrush who wrote just a few short days ago that the wheels were already coming off the Clinton campaign.... lol...
Interesting information to discuss.
ALSO, NBC did a comparison to the Clinton rollout from January 20th, 2007, compared to now.
It is interesting:
From I m In to It s Your Time Clinton s Announcements Then and Now - NBC News
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