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Title: Trump scorecard: Who in GOP votes yes, who votes no, who’s undecided (YES: Cheney, Dole, Boehner, McConnell, Rand Paul, McCain, Rubio, Reince Priebus)
Source: News & Observer
URL Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/news/po ... overnment/article76801957.html
Published: May 10, 2016
Author: Jacob Bell, Jess Nocera & Andi Cwieka
Post Date: 2016-05-10 21:49:35 by Hondo68
Keywords: Trump, establishment puppet, designated loser 2016
Views: 2457
Comments: 5

  • Trump supporters include ex-nominees Bob Dole, John McCain, along with Sen. Mitch McConnell
  • Trump opponents include former nominee Mitt Romney and Jeb Bush
  • Trump undecideds include House Speaker Paul Ryan, Sen. Ted Cruz

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump greets supporters during a rally Friday, May 6, 2016, in Omaha, Neb.

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump greets supporters during a rally Friday, May 6, 2016, in Omaha, Neb. Charlie Neibergall AP

    Republicans break into three columns on Donald Trump: Yes, no, and maybe. Here’s a sample.

    For Trump

    Sen. Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire released a statement saying she will support Trump, though she does not endorse him.

    Former House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio said publicly that he will vote for Trump come November.

    Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad issued a statement May 4 supporting Trump.

    Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant publicly announced his support for Trump, according to The Clarion-Ledger.

    Ben Carson has given his support to Trump since March.

    Former Vice President Dick Cheney told CNN on May 7 that he supports Trump.

    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has given his support to Trump since February.

    Former Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, the 1996 presidential nominee, announced his support for Trump on May 6.

    Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa issued a statement May 4 giving support to Trump.

    Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa issued a statement May 4 supporting Trump.

    South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley announced May 4 that she would support Trump.

    Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee issued a statement May 4 saying the Republican Party needs to fall in line behind Trump.

    Rep. Duncan Hunter of California.

    Rep. Darrell Issa of California.

    Former Sen. Trent Lott of Mississippi announced his support for Trump on May 4.

    Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the 2008 presidential nominee, has called out the Republican establishment for not falling into line behind the popular choice.

    Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the House majority leader.

    Rep. Tom McClintock of California.

    Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Senate majority leader, issued a statement May 4 saying he would back the Republican presidential candidate.

    Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the 2008 vice-presidential nominee, has given her support to Trump since January.

    Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky has given his support to Trump since early April.

    Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry told CNN in a May 5 phone interview that he will support Trump.

    Sen. Ron Portman of Ohio intends to support the Republican presidential nominee, according to a statement given by Portman’s Senate campaign manager to The Columbus Dispatch.

    Reince Priebus, the chairman of the Republican National Committee, tweeted a call to the Republican Party to unite behind Trump to defeat Hillary Clinton.

    Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida has said publicly that he will support the Republican nominee, especially since Clinton looks likely to clinch the Democratic nomination.

    Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama was the first sitting member of the U.S. Senate to throw support behind Trump.

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott has given his support to Trump since March.

    Against Trump

    Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan, who formerly supported Rand Paul and Ted Cruz, says he will not vote for Trump.

    Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker said he would not vote for Trump, and probably wouldn’t vote for Hillary either.

    Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush announced he will not vote for Trump or Clinton in November.

    Rep. Carlos Curbelo of Florida announced in late March that he cannot support Trump.

    Rep. Robert Dold of Illinois said in a radio interview that he would not vote for Trump, and instead write in a name on the ballot come November.

    Mayor Kevin Faulconer of San Diego told The San Diego Union-Tribune that he does not endorse Trump.

    Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona. A Politico reporter tweeted that Flake said he couldn’t see how he could support Trump if Trump’s policies and stances on issues continued as they had thus far.

    Rep. Louie Gohmert of Texas “balked” at the idea of supporting Trump, according to Politico.

    Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina has been railing hard against Trump for months, and recently announced he would not vote for him or Clinton come November.

    Rep. Richard Hanna of New York said in a radio interview in late March that he would not support Trump or Cruz in the election.

    Sen. Dean Heller of Nevada said he “vehemently” opposed the Trump nomination, according to Bloomberg.

    Former Sen. Gordon Humphrey of New Hampshire called Trump a sociopath and said he unequivocally did not support him, according to the New Hampshire Union-Leader.

    State Sen. Shannon Jones of Ohio said she would “never support him,” according to The Columbus Dispatch.

    Former party Chairman Sen. Mel Martinez of Florida said he would not vote for Trump, “clearly.”

    Former Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman tweeted that real presidential candidates never have to research whether to deny support from the Ku Klux Klan. Part of the “Never Trump” movement.

    Former Massachusetts party Chairwoman Jennifer Nassour has gone on record as saying she is an anti-Trump Republican.

    Former Rep. Ron Paul of Texas told Fox News that he would not vote for Trump.

    Gov. Bruce Rauner of Illinois said he wouldn’t attend the Republican convention, nor would he vote for Trump in November.

    Rep. Reid Ribble of Wisconsin said in an on-camera interview that he would not vote for Trump or Clinton in November.

    Rep. Scott Rigell of Virginia has urged fellow Republicans not to vote for Trump.

    Mitt Romney, the 2012 presidential nominee, has been railing hard against Trump for months, and recently announced he would not back Trump.

    Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida does not support Trump, and she told a Spanish news outlet that she is waiting for a contested convention.

    Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska published an open letter to Trump supporters on his Facebook page May 4 saying he could not support Trump.

    Lt. Gov. Phil Scott of Vermont said he could not vote Trump for president, according to the Seven Days newspaper.

    Senate candidate Chris Vance of Washington state said he planned to vote for a third-party candidate come November.

    Former Rep. J.C. Watts of Oklahoma told The Wall Street Journal he would write in a candidate before voting for Trump.

    Former New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman wrote an opinion piece for northjersey.com calling Trump unfit to be president.

    Undecided

    Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin said he would remain silent on his preference for president, according to the Lexington Herald-Leader.

    Rep. Barbara Comstock of Virginia said May 6 that Donald Trump had yet to earn her vote.

    Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas has not made any official statement regarding whether he will support Trump since suspending his campaign May 3.

    Former Rep. Tom DeLay of Texas said Trump was “very dangerous for the country” and “very dangerous for the party” in an interview on MSNBC.

    Rep. Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania said Trump “has a great deal of work to do to convince many Americans, myself included, that he is prepared and able to lead this great nation,” according to The Morning Call.

    Rep. Will Hurd of Texas told the El Paso Times that Trump would need to shape up before he gets Hurd’s vote.

    Gov. John Kasich of Ohio has not made any official statement regarding whether he will support Trump since suspending his campaign May 4.

    Rep. John Katko of Kentucky said Trump had a lot of work to do to earn his vote, according to Syracuse.com.

    Rep. Steve King of Iowa said he thought Trump needed to reach out and mend bridges with the Republicans he had insulted, but that he was not part of the “Never Trump” movement.

    Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington state has had issues with the way Trump treats women. She said in an interview with The Spokesman-Review that she had questions about some of his statements.

    Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, the speaker of the House of Representatives, announced May 6 that he was “not ready” to support Trump yet.

    Former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania said he had not yet endorsed Trump and would sit on the sidelines until he figured it out.

    Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Though Schwarzenegger had thrown his support behind Kasich, he has yet to reveal whether he plans to vote for Trump since Kasich suspended his campaign May 4.

    Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder. Snyder spokespeople have told the Detroit Free Press that the governor is not getting involved in the election and did not release whether he intends to vote Trump.

    State Rep. Joe Straus of Texas, the speaker of the Texas House of Representatives, said he thought Paul Ryan’s decision to hold off on supporting Trump “made a lot of sense,” according to The Texas Tribune.

    Rep. Steve Stivers of Ohio did not mention whether he would support Trump during an interview with The Columbus Dispatch.

    Former Ohio Gov. Bob Taft told The Columbus Dispatch he has “very deep concerns” about Trump.

    Rep. Pat Tiberi of Ohio did not mention whether he would support Trump during an interview with The Columbus Dispatch.

    Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania. Though the senator has said he will support the Republican nominee, he has since elaborated that his concerns about Trump may keep him from voting for Trump.

    Rep. Ann Wagner of Missouri announced May 5 that she is withholding support for Trump until he can prove he’s leadership material for the Republican Party.

    Not going to convention

    Former President George H.W. Bush, according to Politico.

    Former President George W. Bush, according to Politico.

    Michael Doyle and Maggie Ybarra contributed to this article.


Poster Comment:

Ron Paul refuses to vote for evil losers like McCain, Romney, and Trump.

Rand likes to back the evil losers, like Romney, and Trump. It's over, and Trump lost.(1 image)

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


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#1. To: hondo68 (#0)

It's over, and Trump lost.

Silly.

Vicomte13  posted on  2016-05-10   22:00:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Vicomte13, hondo68 (#1)

Explain how Trump has a fighting chance to win the electorate in the general election. Moreover, how the HELL is he going to WIN the electoral college.

buckeroo  posted on  2016-05-10   22:09:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: buckeroo (#2)

Explain how Trump has a fighting chance to win the electorate in the general election. Moreover, how the HELL is he going to WIN the electoral college.

Enter Screen Names of recipients separated by commas or semicolons.

His opponent is Hillary Rodham Clinton. She is yet ANOTHER Establishment candidate, just like Walker and Jeb, Jindal and Rubio, Fiorina and Kasich and the other 10 candidates that Trump walked over to win the GOP nomination. No Republican has EVER gotten as many votes as Trump.

He's a phenomenon, and he appeals very broadly to all of the people who are well and truly sick of the way the Democrat and Republican Establishments have run things into the ground.

In the Democrat Party they are experiencing exactly the same thing. Bernie Sanders is no Trump. He's an old socialist from Vermont. But to win the nomination, Hillary is going to have to rely on superdelegates. She is going to eke out a win, in the Democrat nomination process, from a guy who isn't even a Democrat.

She is very weak - as weak as Jeb Bush or Walker or Cruz.

In the general election, massive numbers of Independents will turn out to vote for Trump just like they did in the primaries. Also Democrats. Democrats won't turn out for Hillary. Some Republicans won't turn out for Trump either.

In the process, the movement Republicans who stand against Trump will have painted a big target on themselves, so that when Trump wins anyway, he will owe nothing to those Republicans and their causes other than the back of the hand. SOMEBODY has to pay the taxes, and the best candidate for the tax hikes are those particular sectors and industries in the GOP who stood against Trump and lost. When you play the game of thrones, you win or you die.

Hillary is weak. Trump is strong. People back the strong horse.

Trump crushed Cruz IN THE SOUTH. Remember that. The hard right evangelical South - Trump walked all over Cruz. It was a rout. Cruz only managed to win caucuses, where the people don't actually vote. Where people vote, they voted Trump.

So, Electoral College wise, Trump will take all of the traditional red states. And take a look at the real clear politics averages. Trump is winning Ohio and Florida over Clinton right now. He's within the margin of error of Clinton in Pennsylvania.

Trump has broad appeal to the Rust Belt, to the working class.

The FBI Director who will recommend that Hillary be indicted is a Republican appointee. Hillary is ALREADY staggering. It's not going to get BETTER when the FBI director recommends indictment, is overruled by the Obama Administration, and Trump says that when he is elected, he will ensure she is indicted.

She's weak and crooked. And incompetent. And she enabled rape. All of the negative things that destroyed all of Trump's opponents will destroy Hillary also. Independents are the largest group in the electorate. They know Hillary Clinton and they don't like her.

Here are the blue and purple states that will go for Trump this time: Florida. Ohio. Pennsylvania, Virginia. Michigan. Colorado. Nevada.

Clinton is going to get mopped up in the Electoral College. It will not be close. She's weak and corrupt, incompetent and tied to the Establishment. She'll simply by the 17th Establishment candidate that Trump buzzsaws.

Vicomte13  posted on  2016-05-10   22:21:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Vicomte13 (#3)

Hillary is going to go after Trump using the same crap we heard about already in the primary.

Trump is going to go after Hillary with scandal after scandal that the general public has not heard about because the MSM minimized it or refused to report on it. WE know about these scandals but the average Joe doesn't.

misterwhite  posted on  2016-05-11   9:11:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: misterwhite (#4)

Hillary is going to go after Trump using the same crap we heard about already in the primary.

Trump is going to go after Hillary with scandal after scandal that the general public has not heard about because the MSM minimized it or refused to report on it. WE know about these scandals but the average Joe doesn't.

Which is why the moment will come that Hillary has a health crisis and drops out, and Joe Biden becomes the nominee.

Trump said back in October that Biden would be the hardest Democrat to beat, and if Biden comes in as a Democrat white knight after Hillary's collapse, the massive sigh of relief that will be breathed by so many will probably propel him to the White House.

Biden wins Trump v. Biden. But if the Democrats are stubborn and stupid, and Hillary proceeds on in spite of the recommendation of indictment, come November she will be defeated. And then Trump will have her indicted...or he will let her go in exchange for some massive favors.

Vicomte13  posted on  2016-05-11   10:56:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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