The GOP's next civil war is brewing

guno

Gold Member
Mar 18, 2014
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This is going to be great , but John Kasich is an adult


Washington (CNN)Republicans are preparing for the penalty phase of the 2016 election.

The next Republican civil war came into greater focus over the weekend when party chairman Reince Priebus threw a thinly veiled warning at former GOP 2016ers who haven't yet endorsed Donald Trump: "Get on board" or face penalties if you ever seek the presidency again.
The nudge -- aimed at Republicans such as John Kasich, Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush -- was no off-the-cuff expression of frustration. Several Republican party chairs in early voting states told CNN that Priebus has spent days talking about enforcing the pledge that all 17 GOP candidates signed at the outset of the 2016 primary to support the eventual nominee.


The GOP's next civil war is brewing - CNNPolitics.com
 
Why don't they all ditch the current mutation of the republican party and start a new party?

Voters are familiar with their names, and they know how to organize and raise money, so it's not like they're starting from scratch.
 
Funny how bed wetters like to point at the turmoil in the GOP while ignoring the fighting in their own ranks, as well as the people who mysteriously turn up dead when they've picked the wrong side. The GOP may have it's inner struggles, but no one ever dies.


 
Funny how bed wetters like to point at the turmoil in the GOP while ignoring the fighting in their own ranks, as well as the people who mysteriously turn up dead when they've picked the wrong side. The GOP may have it's inner struggles, but no one ever dies.




are you wearing a tinfoil hat when you type that hysterical nonsense..?
 
Meh, I doubt it.

When Hillary wins, the GOP is going to do very well. 2018 is going to have a bunch of Senate Seats in play that the Democrats will lose in Red states...IN, ND, MO, MT, WV...

they'll probably also do well in House and Gubernatorial elections.

Any other Democrat would have put Trump away by now. Hillary gives him life because she's just not likable and four years of her isn't going to help that.

So the real goal should be making sure the GOP nominates someone sane in 2020.
 
This is going to be great , but John Kasich is an adult


Washington (CNN)Republicans are preparing for the penalty phase of the 2016 election.

The next Republican civil war came into greater focus over the weekend when party chairman Reince Priebus threw a thinly veiled warning at former GOP 2016ers who haven't yet endorsed Donald Trump: "Get on board" or face penalties if you ever seek the presidency again.
The nudge -- aimed at Republicans such as John Kasich, Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush -- was no off-the-cuff expression of frustration. Several Republican party chairs in early voting states told CNN that Priebus has spent days talking about enforcing the pledge that all 17 GOP candidates signed at the outset of the 2016 primary to support the eventual nominee.


The GOP's next civil war is brewing - CNNPolitics.com
It's the same civil war since 2000. Those who don't endorse Trump aka "Anyone but Hillary" will be labeled RINOs and either pushed from the party or, as noted, will not be supported in their reelection.

True, patriotic and honest Americans will vote their conscience, not vote a certain way for money.
 
Members of Congress
  • Rep. Richard Hanna (N.Y.), a moderate Republican who is retiring this year, told Syracuse.com that he will support Clinton and that Trump is unfit to lead. He cited Trump's criticism of Khizr Khan. "I think Trump is a national embarrassment," Hanna said. "Is he really the guy you want to have the nuclear codes?"
Bush administration officials
  • Henry Paulson, treasury secretary
  • Carlos Gutierrez, commerce secretary
  • Louis Sullivan, health and human services secretary -- “Though my enthusiasm for Hillary Clinton is somewhat tempered, I certainly believe she is an infinitely better choice for president than Donald Trump.”
  • Rosario Marin, U.S. treasurer -- "I will stand up for my community against the menace of a tyrannical presidency that does not value the countless contributions of immigrants."
  • John Negroponte, director of national intelligence and deputy secretary of state under Bush, five-time ambassador and Reagan deputy national security adviser
  • Richard Armitage, deputy secretary of state and adviser to Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush — Trump "doesn't appear to be a Republican, he doesn't appear to want to learn about issues. So I’m going to vote for Mrs. Clinton."
  • Brent Scowcroft, chairman of the President's Intelligence Advisory Board and adviser to three previous Republican presidents — "The presidency requires the judgment and knowledge to make tough calls under pressure. ... [Clinton] has the wisdom and experience to lead our country at this critical time."
  • James Clad, deputy assistant secretary of defense -- "There is no choice: In razor sharp contrast to her opponent, Secretary Clinton is ready, steady and prepared. With a proven preference for bipartisanship, she must win this election."
  • Richard Painter, chief White House ethics lawyer -- "I’m a Republican, but I believe that Hillary Clinton is the only qualified major party candidate in the race and she should become president.
  • William Reilly, Environmental Protection Agency adminstrator
  • Alan Steinberg, regional EPA administrator
  • Robert Blackwill, former deputy national security adviser and ambassador to India
  • Scott Evertz, former director of the Office of National AIDS Policy
  • Lezlee Westine, former White House director of public liaison and deputy assistant to the president — “Our nation faces a unique set of challenges that require steady and experienced leadership. That is why today I am personally supporting Hillary Clinton."
  • Shirin Tahir-Kheli, special assistant to the president and ambassador and senior adviser for women's empowerment under Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
  • Ashley J. Tellis, special assistant to the president and senior director for strategic planning and Southwest Asia
  • David A. Gross, State Department coordinator for international communications and information policy
  • James Kunder, assistant administrator for Asia and the Near East at USAID
  • Matthew Waxman, senior official in the State Department and Defense Department
  • Kori Schake, National Security Council and State Department aide
Officials in previous GOP administrations
  • Frank Lavin, former Reagan political director and ambassador to Singapore — "It might not be entirely clear that Hillary Clinton deserves to win the presidency, but it is thunderingly clear that Donald Trump deserves to lose. From this premise, I will do something that I have not done in 40 years of voting: I will vote for the Democratic nominee for president."
  • Doug Elmets, former Reagan spokesman — "I could live with four years of Hillary Clinton before I could ever live with one day of Donald Trump as president." Elmets spoke at the Democratic National Convention, along with other Republicans now backing Clinton.
  • Jim Cicconi, former Reagan and George H.W. Bush aide — "Hillary Clinton is experienced, qualified and will make a fine president. The alternative, I fear, would set our nation on a very dark path.”
  • Fred T. Goldberg Jr., former assistant U.S. treasury secretary and IRS commissioner under George H.W. Bush
  • Charles Fried, former U.S. solicitor general under Reagan and current Harvard Law professor — "Though long a registered Republican, this will be the third consecutive presidential election in which my party forces the choice between party and, in John McCain’s words, putting America first. ... It is to [Mitt] Romney's credit that this year, like John Paulson and George Will, he is standing up against the brutal, substantively incoherent, and authoritarian tendencies of Donald Trump."
  • Pete Teeley, press secretary to then-Vice President George H.W. Bush, former U.S. ambassador to Canada and U.S. representative to UNICEF
  • Richard Howill, former deputy assistant secretary of state and ambassador to Ecuador under Reagan
  • William Ruckelshaus, former Environmental Protection Agency head, deputy attorney general and acting FBI director
  • Carla Hills, U.S. trade representative under George H.W. Bush

Foreign policy leaders
  • Robert Kagan, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, former Reagan State Department aide and adviser to the presidential campaigns of John McCain and Mitt Romney
  • Max Boot, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and adviser to GOP presidential candidates — "I'm literally losing sleep over Donald Trump. She would be vastly preferable to Trump."
  • Peter Mansoor, retired Army colonel and former aide to former CIA director David Petraeus — "It will be the first Democratic presidential candidate I’ve voted for in my adult life."
Business leaders/donors
Former Republican elected officials
  • Chris Shays, former congressman from Connecticut — "I have friends who are up for office and they say, you know, if you don't support Donald Trump, you're hurting us because then we have to answer the question. And now I'm going one step further. So I am hurting them. But, you know, there's a time when you put your country first."
  • Connie Morella, former congresswoman from Maryland
  • David Durenberger, former senator from Minnesota
  • William Milliken, who served as governor of Michigan from 1969 to 1983 — "Because I feel so strongly about our nation's future, I will be joining the growing list of former and present government officials in casting my vote for Hillary Clinton for president in 2016.”
  • Larry Pressler, former three-term Republican senator from South Dakota who lost an independent campaign for his old seat in 2014 — "I can’t believe I’m endorsing Hillary Clinton for president, but I am. If someone had told me 10 years ago I would do this, I wouldn’t have believed them."
  • Arne Carlson, a former two-term Republican governor of Minnesota who supported President Obama
  • Robert Smith, former judge on New York's highest court, the Court of Appeals — "This year, I’m going to vote for a Democrat for president  —  the first time I’ve done it in 36 years  —  and I think the decision is easy. Hillary Clinton is the only responsible choice, and I don’t understand why so few of my fellow conservatives see it that way."
Political operatives
  • David Nierenberg, finance chairman to Mitt Romney's 2012 campaign
  • Mark Salter, former top adviser to John McCain — "Whatever Hillary Clinton’s faults, she’s not ignorant or hateful or a nut. She acts like an adult and understands the responsibilities of an American president. That might not be a ringing endorsement. But in 2016, the year of Trump’s s campaign, it’s more than enough."
  • Sally Bradshaw, former top Jeb Bush adviser, told CNN that she had left the Republican Party to become an independent because of Trump's presence at the top of the ticket — and that if the race were close in her home state of Florida this fall, she would be voting for Clinton. "As much as I don't want another four years of [President Barack] Obama's policies, I can't look my children in the eye and tell them I voted for Donald Trump."
  • Maria Comella, former spokeswoman for two of Trump's top backers, Chris Christie and Rudy Giuliani — "Instead of speaking out against instances of bigotry, racism and inflammatory rhetoric whether it's been against women, immigrants or Muslims, we made a calculus that it was better to say nothing at all in the interest of politics and winning elections."
  • Kurt Bardella, former top aide to Rep. Darrel Issa (R-Calif.) and ex-spokesman for Breitbart News -- "A big reason why I decided that Hillary Clinton is the candidate who I’m voting for -- the first Democrat I’m voting for in my life -- is because this is a time where what’s going on is much bigger than partisanship, bigger than Republican or Democrat, or single issues that traditionally these campaigns are about."
  • Mike Treiser, former Mitt Romney aide — "In the face of bigotry, hatred, violence, and small-mindedness, this time, I’m with her.”
  • Craig Snyder, former chief of staff to then-Republican Sen. Arlen Specter (Pa.) and an ex-colleague of former top Trump adviser Roger Stone and current top Trump adviser Paul Manafort.
 
This is going to be great , but John Kasich is an adult


Washington (CNN)Republicans are preparing for the penalty phase of the 2016 election.

The next Republican civil war came into greater focus over the weekend when party chairman Reince Priebus threw a thinly veiled warning at former GOP 2016ers who haven't yet endorsed Donald Trump: "Get on board" or face penalties if you ever seek the presidency again.
The nudge -- aimed at Republicans such as John Kasich, Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush -- was no off-the-cuff expression of frustration. Several Republican party chairs in early voting states told CNN that Priebus has spent days talking about enforcing the pledge that all 17 GOP candidates signed at the outset of the 2016 primary to support the eventual nominee.


The GOP's next civil war is brewing - CNNPolitics.com
Crushing GOPer liberals like kasich and shrub will be the icing on the cake....
 
I think its fantastic how these GOP hacks have been exposed for the lying backstabbers they are. And my God what a bunch of crybabies, boo hoo Trump said something mean about me. Self centered self important, they weren't in it for the good of the country that much is clear.
 
This is going to be great , but John Kasich is an adult


Washington (CNN)Republicans are preparing for the penalty phase of the 2016 election.

The next Republican civil war came into greater focus over the weekend when party chairman Reince Priebus threw a thinly veiled warning at former GOP 2016ers who haven't yet endorsed Donald Trump: "Get on board" or face penalties if you ever seek the presidency again.
The nudge -- aimed at Republicans such as John Kasich, Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush -- was no off-the-cuff expression of frustration. Several Republican party chairs in early voting states told CNN that Priebus has spent days talking about enforcing the pledge that all 17 GOP candidates signed at the outset of the 2016 primary to support the eventual nominee.


The GOP's next civil war is brewing - CNNPolitics.com

If Trump wins it will be a GOP take over of all branches of the government .

The House will be firmly red. If Trump wins he will push NH, PA, OH, NC and NV over the top in the senate race for 53 seat majority. In 2018 the GOP will have a great chance at a filibuster breaking 60. The GOP will also control 35 state legislatures. And the SCOTUS will have a 5 judge conservative bloc when Ginsburg falls over (with in the next year or so.
 
This is going to be great , but John Kasich is an adult


Washington (CNN)Republicans are preparing for the penalty phase of the 2016 election.

The next Republican civil war came into greater focus over the weekend when party chairman Reince Priebus threw a thinly veiled warning at former GOP 2016ers who haven't yet endorsed Donald Trump: "Get on board" or face penalties if you ever seek the presidency again.
The nudge -- aimed at Republicans such as John Kasich, Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush -- was no off-the-cuff expression of frustration. Several Republican party chairs in early voting states told CNN that Priebus has spent days talking about enforcing the pledge that all 17 GOP candidates signed at the outset of the 2016 primary to support the eventual nominee.


The GOP's next civil war is brewing - CNNPolitics.com
Crushing GOPer liberals like kasich and shrub will be the icing on the cake....
you guys didn't learn your lesson the last 2 presidential elections , doubling down on stupid doesn't work , this isn't the 1950's anymore

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Meh, I doubt it.

When Hillary wins, the GOP is going to do very well. 2018 is going to have a bunch of Senate Seats in play that the Democrats will lose in Red states...IN, ND, MO, MT, WV...

they'll probably also do well in House and Gubernatorial elections.

Any other Democrat would have put Trump away by now. Hillary gives him life because she's just not likable and four years of her isn't going to help that.

So the real goal should be making sure the GOP nominates someone sane in 2020.
the gop does not groom heirs apparent, okay. if you want the nomination, you've got to earn it by defeating the competition. the way the democrats just roll over on their backs for a bitch, that doesn't happen among republicans. the reason the presstitues at cnn and their manson family style cult following believes there's a civil war brewing in the old party is because we debate and argue over everything instead of reciting whatever memo we're told. independent thought is an amazing skill, you should try it sometime, shill.
 

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