The establishment Republican’s candidates can’t get
any traction against Trump, Cruz or Carson, and for the Democrat leadership, Hillary
is looking increasingly weak and threatened against Bernie Sanders. The people
out here in fly-over country are speaking via candidate opinion polls and the
politicians from both parties are frightened about what is happening to their hand-picked
candidates, and they don’t know what’s hit them.
Of course the Democrat-assured candidate may soon be
making license plates for her email and national security scandals, along with
her financial corruption and influence peddling while serving as Obama’s Secretary
of State, and these facts also are certainly shaking up the professional
Democrats, as well as the unbalanced and unexpected polling against Sanders is
disturbing them.
Then, looking to the future, consider that the professional
Democrats and their allies in the liberal media, in addition to and made even
worse by Sanders’ own personal far left and anti-capitalist rhetoric, are
alienating future Democrat voters by calling Trump prejudiced, racist and divisive
for his speeches and positions on refugees and illegal aliens, at a time when
many traditional Democrat voters are attracted to Trump’s truth-telling and
America-favoring, given all of the lying, abuse of the constitution and
political correctness they’ve seen throughout the Obama administration.
So far we only have polling to indicate voter
inclinations, with the actual casting of votes to follow later. But Trump and
Cruz have been so dominant for so long that it’s safe to assume the votes will
follow the polling for these two candidates and take a serious bite from the
percentage of the population that votes for any Democrat candidate.
And then one can never ignore the personal appeal of a
candidate in a national election: Hillary is so sloppy and unpresentable (especially
with her unwashed hair, which unpleasantness has lately been only partly offset
with her new habit of wearing a wig) that she makes Israel’s former Prime
Minister, Golda Meir, look pretty. Ahh, the good old “pretty in pink” days are
long behind us.