GOP NWO Operatives at Work on V.P. Pick
Here you see the Operative Minions of the Bankster Families, Bilders, CFR and Rino Clique' n Clan executing strategy for Trump to pick their Guy.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
JUNE 17, 2016 BY KRISTIE MCDONALD
GOP insiders: Trump should pick Newt for vice president
From Politico
Democrats view Marco Rubio as Donald TrumpâÂÂs strongest possible running mate.
Donald Trump has one month to pick a running mate, and Republican swing-state insiders are deeply divided over who he should choose.
GOP members of The POLITICO Caucus â a panel of activists, strategists and operatives in 10 key battleground states â splintered this week when asked to suggest who Trump should select to share the ticket with him this fall.
Gaining the most support were former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (13 percent), Florida Sen. Marco Rubio (9 percent), Ohio Gov. John Kasich (8 percent), former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (8 percent), Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst (7 percent) and Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions (7 percent).
A plurality of Democratic and nonpartisan members see Rubio, who is reconsidering whether to retire from the Senate before next weekâÂÂs filing deadline to run for reelection, as TrumpâÂÂs strongest running mate. Given a list of seven possible choices, just over a third said Rubio would be TrumpâÂÂs best possible pick â far more than any other individual potential candidate.
For Republicans, though, the responses were a mix of serious suggestions and despair over TrumpâÂÂs decision-making process and his odds in the November election.
Gingrich, who left the House after the 1998 midterm elections and unsuccessfully sought the GOP presidential nomination four years ago, emerged as the narrow favorite.
âÂÂHeâÂÂs intimately knowledgeable how Congress works and has a keen understanding of how to push the Executive Branch,â said a Florida Republican, who, like all respondents, completed the survey anonymously. âÂÂSpeaker Gingrich also brings the conservative credibility that should assuage some of the establishment class which is licking their wounds after being squeezed and beaten for the past year.âÂÂ
âÂÂHe is excellent on his feet,â added a Virginia Republican.
Rubio, who has said he isnâÂÂt interested in being TrumpâÂÂs running mate, was the second choice.
âÂÂRubio understands public policy, heâÂÂs smart, has great legislative experience, heâÂÂs young, good looking and Hispanic â and women like him,â said a Colorado Republican.
âÂÂTrump also needs RubioâÂÂs expertise with regard to the politics,â a Wisconsin Republican added.
Rubio would be the strongest choice for Trump, Democratic insiders said, though they are confident the youthful Floridian wonâÂÂt join the ticket.
âÂÂIt is not going to happen,â said a Nevada Democrat, âÂÂbut Rubio would have best opportunity to help Trump broaden his base.âÂÂ
Added a North Carolina Democrat: âÂÂThe question is if Rubio is willing to destroy his political future for the sake of saving his party.âÂÂ
Unlike Rubio, Kasich hasnâÂÂt even endorsed the presumptive GOP nominee â but a number of GOP insiders said they wanted him on the ticket
âÂÂ[Trump] needs stability and Ohio,â said one Virginia Republican.
And Rice, the former secretary of state, was praised for her foreign policy chops â and her ability to negate a likely Trump weakness.
âÂÂShe has everything that Trump does not, everything,â said a Florida Republican.
The other two potential candidates to earn significant support were Ernst, the first-term Iowa senator, and Sessions, the immigration hawk from Alabama.
âÂÂErnst with her military background, genuine likeability and personality, work ethic and a quick grasp of issues would complement a Trump ticket and help in swing, purple states around the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest,â said an Iowa Republican.
âÂÂ[Ernst] has legislative experience, but she has not been in Washington long enough to be tainted,â added a New Hampshire Republican.
For many GOP insiders long resistant to Trump, the vice-presidential question was an opportunity to tee off on the real-estate mogul. One Iowa Republican said being TrumpâÂÂs running mate was âÂÂlike being first mate on the Titanic.âÂÂ
âÂÂNo one should have to endure that,â added an Ohio Republican.
âÂÂNo one remembers who GoldwaterâÂÂs running mate was, but at least that person had some honor,â a New Hampshire
Republican said. âÂÂThe one who says yes to Trump will not.âÂÂ
âÂÂIt wonâÂÂt matter, except for the poor unfortunate soul who will gain the worldâÂÂs worst resume line,â said a Virginia Republican.
âÂÂI donâÂÂt see any rational political figure accepting this suicide mission except those with an exaggerated ego and self-inflated thoughts of political superego,â a Florida Republican said.
âÂÂAnyone willing to share the ticket with Donald Trump is unfit for the office of the vice president,â insisted an Iowa Republican.
âÂÂThere is no one Trump can pick that would make him palatable,â said a Pennsylvania Republican.
One area where Trump did earn some plaudits from GOP insiders: the idea of announcing his running-mate pick during next monthâÂÂs national party convention in Cleveland. Fifty-nine percent of Republican insiders said that was a good idea, while 41 percent said it wasnâÂÂt, and that Trump should roll out his pick before the convention.
âÂÂPicking a running mate during the convention might be a PR stunt, but it could reinforce TrumpâÂÂs brand as going against the grain,â said a Florida Republican. âÂÂAnd only Trump has the showmanship to pull it off.âÂÂ
âÂÂSurprises are rare in politics,â an Ohio Republican added. âÂÂIt would be beneficial.âÂÂ
But some Republicans said Trump needs to announce his pick before Cleveland, especially with some discussing a revolt to deny him the nomination.
âÂÂPeople are talking about changing the rules to introduce another nominee. Dissatisfaction with Trump is growing among Republicans, not waning,â said a New Hampshire Republican. âÂÂHis VP choice is all he has left if he wants any chance at all of uniting the party behind him.âÂÂ
âÂÂWeâÂÂve seen this approach twice in the last three decades,â added an Iowa Republican. âÂÂOdd 11th-hour, manufactured drama produced Dan Quayle and Sarah Palin.âÂÂ
One Ohio Republican suggested that approach could harm TrumpâÂÂs credibility.
âÂÂThis is not a reality show,â the Republican said. âÂÂI can only imagine the cut shots to the horrified faces of delegates when Sarah Palin walks out.âÂÂ
Sicilianthing wrote:
Here you see the Operative Minions of the Bankster Families, Bilders, CFR and Rino Clique' n Clan executing strategy for Trump to pick their Guy.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
JUNE 17, 2016 BY KRISTIE MCDONALD
GOP insiders: Trump should pick Newt for vice president
From Politico
Democrats view Marco Rubio as Donald TrumpâÂÂs strongest possible running mate.
Donald Trump has one month to pick a running mate, and Republican swing-state insiders are deeply divided over who he should choose.
GOP members of The POLITICO Caucus â a panel of activists, strategists and operatives in 10 key battleground states â splintered this week when asked to suggest who Trump should select to share the ticket with him this fall.
Gaining the most support were former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (13 percent), Florida Sen. Marco Rubio (9 percent), Ohio Gov. John Kasich (8 percent), former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (8 percent), Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst (7 percent) and Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions (7 percent).
A plurality of Democratic and nonpartisan members see Rubio, who is reconsidering whether to retire from the Senate before next weekâÂÂs filing deadline to run for reelection, as TrumpâÂÂs strongest running mate. Given a list of seven possible choices, just over a third said Rubio would be TrumpâÂÂs best possible pick â far more than any other individual potential candidate.
For Republicans, though, the responses were a mix of serious suggestions and despair over TrumpâÂÂs decision-making process and his odds in the November election.
Gingrich, who left the House after the 1998 midterm elections and unsuccessfully sought the GOP presidential nomination four years ago, emerged as the narrow favorite.
âÂÂHeâÂÂs intimately knowledgeable how Congress works and has a keen understanding of how to push the Executive Branch,â said a Florida Republican, who, like all respondents, completed the survey anonymously. âÂÂSpeaker Gingrich also brings the conservative credibility that should assuage some of the establishment class which is licking their wounds after being squeezed and beaten for the past year.âÂÂ
âÂÂHe is excellent on his feet,â added a Virginia Republican.
Rubio, who has said he isnâÂÂt interested in being TrumpâÂÂs running mate, was the second choice.
âÂÂRubio understands public policy, heâÂÂs smart, has great legislative experience, heâÂÂs young, good looking and Hispanic â and women like him,â said a Colorado Republican.
âÂÂTrump also needs RubioâÂÂs expertise with regard to the politics,â a Wisconsin Republican added.
Rubio would be the strongest choice for Trump, Democratic insiders said, though they are confident the youthful Floridian wonâÂÂt join the ticket.
âÂÂIt is not going to happen,â said a Nevada Democrat, âÂÂbut Rubio would have best opportunity to help Trump broaden his base.âÂÂ
Added a North Carolina Democrat: âÂÂThe question is if Rubio is willing to destroy his political future for the sake of saving his party.âÂÂ
Unlike Rubio, Kasich hasnâÂÂt even endorsed the presumptive GOP nominee â but a number of GOP insiders said they wanted him on the ticket
âÂÂ[Trump] needs stability and Ohio,â said one Virginia Republican.
And Rice, the former secretary of state, was praised for her foreign policy chops â and her ability to negate a likely Trump weakness.
âÂÂShe has everything that Trump does not, everything,â said a Florida Republican.
The other two potential candidates to earn significant support were Ernst, the first-term Iowa senator, and Sessions, the immigration hawk from Alabama.
âÂÂErnst with her military background, genuine likeability and personality, work ethic and a quick grasp of issues would complement a Trump ticket and help in swing, purple states around the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest,â said an Iowa Republican.
âÂÂ[Ernst] has legislative experience, but she has not been in Washington long enough to be tainted,â added a New Hampshire Republican.
For many GOP insiders long resistant to Trump, the vice-presidential question was an opportunity to tee off on the real-estate mogul. One Iowa Republican said being TrumpâÂÂs running mate was âÂÂlike being first mate on the Titanic.âÂÂ
âÂÂNo one should have to endure that,â added an Ohio Republican.
âÂÂNo one remembers who GoldwaterâÂÂs running mate was, but at least that person had some honor,â a New Hampshire
Republican said. âÂÂThe one who says yes to Trump will not.âÂÂ
âÂÂIt wonâÂÂt matter, except for the poor unfortunate soul who will gain the worldâÂÂs worst resume line,â said a Virginia Republican.
âÂÂI donâÂÂt see any rational political figure accepting this suicide mission except those with an exaggerated ego and self-inflated thoughts of political superego,â a Florida Republican said.
âÂÂAnyone willing to share the ticket with Donald Trump is unfit for the office of the vice president,â insisted an Iowa Republican.
âÂÂThere is no one Trump can pick that would make him palatable,â said a Pennsylvania Republican.
One area where Trump did earn some plaudits from GOP insiders: the idea of announcing his running-mate pick during next monthâÂÂs national party convention in Cleveland. Fifty-nine percent of Republican insiders said that was a good idea, while 41 percent said it wasnâÂÂt, and that Trump should roll out his pick before the convention.
âÂÂPicking a running mate during the convention might be a PR stunt, but it could reinforce TrumpâÂÂs brand as going against the grain,â said a Florida Republican. âÂÂAnd only Trump has the showmanship to pull it off.âÂÂ
âÂÂSurprises are rare in politics,â an Ohio Republican added. âÂÂIt would be beneficial.âÂÂ
But some Republicans said Trump needs to announce his pick before Cleveland, especially with some discussing a revolt to deny him the nomination.
âÂÂPeople are talking about changing the rules to introduce another nominee. Dissatisfaction with Trump is growing among Republicans, not waning,â said a New Hampshire Republican. âÂÂHis VP choice is all he has left if he wants any chance at all of uniting the party behind him.âÂÂ
âÂÂWeâÂÂve seen this approach twice in the last three decades,â added an Iowa Republican. âÂÂOdd 11th-hour, manufactured drama produced Dan Quayle and Sarah Palin.âÂÂ
One Ohio Republican suggested that approach could harm TrumpâÂÂs credibility.
âÂÂThis is not a reality show,â the Republican said. âÂÂI can only imagine the cut shots to the horrified faces of delegates when Sarah Palin walks out.âÂÂ
Here you see the Operative Minions of the Bankster... (
show quote)
I can see Newt being the VP. He is a smart man, and if Trump already knows that Newt may be a scoundrel or a RINO, if so, then how much better than to keep an inside line to that element to be able to use it for his advantage and control it, rather than to be stuck NOT knowing? It would be a smart move for sure.
Sicilianthing wrote:
Here you see the Operative Minions of the Bankster Families, Bilders, CFR and Rino Clique' n Clan executing strategy for Trump to pick their Guy.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
JUNE 17, 2016 BY KRISTIE MCDONALD
GOP insiders: Trump should pick Newt for vice president
From Politico
Democrats view Marco Rubio as Donald TrumpâÂÂs strongest possible running mate.
Donald Trump has one month to pick a running mate, and Republican swing-state insiders are deeply divided over who he should choose.
GOP members of The POLITICO Caucus â a panel of activists, strategists and operatives in 10 key battleground states â splintered this week when asked to suggest who Trump should select to share the ticket with him this fall.
Gaining the most support were former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (13 percent), Florida Sen. Marco Rubio (9 percent), Ohio Gov. John Kasich (8 percent), former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (8 percent), Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst (7 percent) and Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions (7 percent).
A plurality of Democratic and nonpartisan members see Rubio, who is reconsidering whether to retire from the Senate before next weekâÂÂs filing deadline to run for reelection, as TrumpâÂÂs strongest running mate. Given a list of seven possible choices, just over a third said Rubio would be TrumpâÂÂs best possible pick â far more than any other individual potential candidate.
For Republicans, though, the responses were a mix of serious suggestions and despair over TrumpâÂÂs decision-making process and his odds in the November election.
Gingrich, who left the House after the 1998 midterm elections and unsuccessfully sought the GOP presidential nomination four years ago, emerged as the narrow favorite.
âÂÂHeâÂÂs intimately knowledgeable how Congress works and has a keen understanding of how to push the Executive Branch,â said a Florida Republican, who, like all respondents, completed the survey anonymously. âÂÂSpeaker Gingrich also brings the conservative credibility that should assuage some of the establishment class which is licking their wounds after being squeezed and beaten for the past year.âÂÂ
âÂÂHe is excellent on his feet,â added a Virginia Republican.
Rubio, who has said he isnâÂÂt interested in being TrumpâÂÂs running mate, was the second choice.
âÂÂRubio understands public policy, heâÂÂs smart, has great legislative experience, heâÂÂs young, good looking and Hispanic â and women like him,â said a Colorado Republican.
âÂÂTrump also needs RubioâÂÂs expertise with regard to the politics,â a Wisconsin Republican added.
Rubio would be the strongest choice for Trump, Democratic insiders said, though they are confident the youthful Floridian wonâÂÂt join the ticket.
âÂÂIt is not going to happen,â said a Nevada Democrat, âÂÂbut Rubio would have best opportunity to help Trump broaden his base.âÂÂ
Added a North Carolina Democrat: âÂÂThe question is if Rubio is willing to destroy his political future for the sake of saving his party.âÂÂ
Unlike Rubio, Kasich hasnâÂÂt even endorsed the presumptive GOP nominee â but a number of GOP insiders said they wanted him on the ticket
âÂÂ[Trump] needs stability and Ohio,â said one Virginia Republican.
And Rice, the former secretary of state, was praised for her foreign policy chops â and her ability to negate a likely Trump weakness.
âÂÂShe has everything that Trump does not, everything,â said a Florida Republican.
The other two potential candidates to earn significant support were Ernst, the first-term Iowa senator, and Sessions, the immigration hawk from Alabama.
âÂÂErnst with her military background, genuine likeability and personality, work ethic and a quick grasp of issues would complement a Trump ticket and help in swing, purple states around the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest,â said an Iowa Republican.
âÂÂ[Ernst] has legislative experience, but she has not been in Washington long enough to be tainted,â added a New Hampshire Republican.
For many GOP insiders long resistant to Trump, the vice-presidential question was an opportunity to tee off on the real-estate mogul. One Iowa Republican said being TrumpâÂÂs running mate was âÂÂlike being first mate on the Titanic.âÂÂ
âÂÂNo one should have to endure that,â added an Ohio Republican.
âÂÂNo one remembers who GoldwaterâÂÂs running mate was, but at least that person had some honor,â a New Hampshire
Republican said. âÂÂThe one who says yes to Trump will not.âÂÂ
âÂÂIt wonâÂÂt matter, except for the poor unfortunate soul who will gain the worldâÂÂs worst resume line,â said a Virginia Republican.
âÂÂI donâÂÂt see any rational political figure accepting this suicide mission except those with an exaggerated ego and self-inflated thoughts of political superego,â a Florida Republican said.
âÂÂAnyone willing to share the ticket with Donald Trump is unfit for the office of the vice president,â insisted an Iowa Republican.
âÂÂThere is no one Trump can pick that would make him palatable,â said a Pennsylvania Republican.
One area where Trump did earn some plaudits from GOP insiders: the idea of announcing his running-mate pick during next monthâÂÂs national party convention in Cleveland. Fifty-nine percent of Republican insiders said that was a good idea, while 41 percent said it wasnâÂÂt, and that Trump should roll out his pick before the convention.
âÂÂPicking a running mate during the convention might be a PR stunt, but it could reinforce TrumpâÂÂs brand as going against the grain,â said a Florida Republican. âÂÂAnd only Trump has the showmanship to pull it off.âÂÂ
âÂÂSurprises are rare in politics,â an Ohio Republican added. âÂÂIt would be beneficial.âÂÂ
But some Republicans said Trump needs to announce his pick before Cleveland, especially with some discussing a revolt to deny him the nomination.
âÂÂPeople are talking about changing the rules to introduce another nominee. Dissatisfaction with Trump is growing among Republicans, not waning,â said a New Hampshire Republican. âÂÂHis VP choice is all he has left if he wants any chance at all of uniting the party behind him.âÂÂ
âÂÂWeâÂÂve seen this approach twice in the last three decades,â added an Iowa Republican. âÂÂOdd 11th-hour, manufactured drama produced Dan Quayle and Sarah Palin.âÂÂ
One Ohio Republican suggested that approach could harm TrumpâÂÂs credibility.
âÂÂThis is not a reality show,â the Republican said. âÂÂI can only imagine the cut shots to the horrified faces of delegates when Sarah Palin walks out.âÂÂ
Here you see the Operative Minions of the Bankster... (
show quote)
What is with all this silly shit (that I don't even have on my keyboard) within your article:
â ???
America Only wrote:
I can see Newt being the VP. He is a smart man, and if Trump already knows that Newt may be a scoundrel or a RINO, if so, then how much better than to keep an inside line to that element to be able to use it for his advantage and control it, rather than to be stuck NOT knowing? It would be a smart move for sure.
>>>>>>>>>
Well ok if that strategy would work.. But remember, Rockefeller took Reagan into a private room and threatened him with picking Bush Sr. As V.P. Or Reagan would never have seen the inside of the White House...
2 months later after inauguration they tried to kill Reagan so Bush would be President...
Most don't have a clue with what we're really dealing with.
Newt is a Scoundrel Mole for the Bankster group.
I really hope those close to Trump have told him the who's who ....
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