Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Tuesday's Biggest Loser

Political Cartoons by Glenn McCoy 
Forget Hillary and Trump. The biggest loser Tuesday night was Barack Obama.
Weekly Standard . . . "President Obama's 
record on foreign and domestic policy is dismal, to say the least. His withdrawal of American power from the world coincided with the rise of ISIS, the ravaging of Syria and a series of successful terror attacks both in the heart of Europe and here on American soil. Would there have been a Brexit, or victories for anti-immigration parties in Europe without the failure of Obama's leadership in the Middle East and North Africa? 

"President Obama's domestic-policy record is even worse: The weakest economic recovery since the Great Depression; a record number of Americans on food stamps and for the longest time; a stimulus plan that was an economic joke even before "Cash for Clunkers" became a punchline; and a doubling of the national debt in eight short years. And then there's Obamacare.

"On election night Democratic operative James Carville announced "Obamacare is dead." He's right, but that was true whether Trump or Clinton won.

"Obamacare didn't die in the ballot box, it died in the mail box: Millions of Americans getting letters announcing premium increases of 50, 60, even 100 percent. And that's on top of huge deductibles that made their "insurance" little more than a reverse lottery ticket against medical catastrophe." . . .

Bill And Hillary Clinton’s Victims Respond To Trump Victory: “TEARS OF JOY”

AmericanLookout

trump-sex-survivors

"No one is more excited about a Trump victory than Bill and Hillary Clinton’s sexual assault victims.
"Juanita Broaddrick was allegedly raped by Bill Clinton. Kathy Shelton was raped as a child and Hillary got her rapist off. Kathleen Willey and Paula Jones were both allegedly sexually assaulted by Bill Clinton.
"They all responded with gratitude and relief to Trump’s victory.
"They are all grateful that Trump will be the next President of the United States.
Read their tweets here

"These women fought so hard to keep the Clintons out of the White House. All they did is deeply appreciated by all of the Deplorables!
"These women have suffered too long. They were intimidated by the Clintons too long.
"Now, their nightmare is over.
"Now, they have a friend in the White House."

Combing through the wreckage of Tuesday's election


"Virgina tilted Left. Just like they planned.
"By… as reported by Drudge at this point… something like 60,000 votes.
"Let that sink in.
"The swing vote in the swing state were the newly-minted ‘non’-felons ‘born’ at the 11th hour by a stroke of the autopen of the Democrat Governor of and major Clinton Fundraiser…
"(And he was also guy who gave BIG cash to the FBI deputy director’s wife.)"

Maureen Dowd: Absorbing the Impossible via Instapundit: "Plus: “The Clintons remind me of the Universal horror movies where you thought the monster was dead and then the monster would show up in a bad sequel. I’m glad now that they’re finally gone."
Yeah but we will continue to have this guy:



. . . "Though Clinton hasn't been charged with a crime, there have been numerous reports that federal authorities are investigating the Clinton Foundation.

"On Wednesday, during press secretary Josh Earnest's briefing, he was asked whether the president had considered using his executive power in favor of the former secretary of state. 

" 'The president has offered clemency to a substantial number of Americans who were previously serving time in federal prisons,' Earnest said. "





Media disgrace themselves once again

Jay Michaels  . . . "When it became clear what was happening, we were instructed ad nauseam about “uneducated white males,” “white men without a college education,” and “angry white men.”  (It had never been “angry Hispanics” earlier.)  Then, for a while, we were lectured about the betrayal of the “suburban women” who had apparently voted en masse for Trump, inexplicably.  The men lived in mill towns and on farms, but their wives lived in the suburbs.
"Then came a slew of dark references to Putin.
"The mea culpas were exclusively about the polls underestimating the angry whites.  But they had been less than candid with interviewers.
"I was switching among the four MSM sleeping giants (skipping the Clinton News Network and MSNBC), so it’s possible I missed something, but I heard literally no references to the following:
"A corrupt and dishonest media
"The Clinton Foundation
"Hillary’s deleted emails and her successive lies about the private server
"Benghazi" . . .
Political Cartoons by Bob Gorrell

One Anecdote That Helps Explain the “Rage” Our Liberal Masters Don’t Understand:

Donald Trump’s Big Bet on Less Educated Whites

NY Times
A potential victory for Donald J. Trump may hinge on one important (and large) group of Americans: whites who did not attend college.
Polls have shown a deep division between whites of different education levels and economic circumstances. A lot rides on how large these groups will be on Election Day: All pollsters have their own assessment of who will show up, and their predictions rely on these evaluations.
Here’s what the American voting-age population looked like in 2012.

Voting-age population, in millions

White, no college
White, some college
White, college degree
Black
Hispanic
Other
0
10
20
30
40
50
The largest bloc is whites who have no college degree, and the voting-age population of this group is as large as that of voting-age blacks, Hispanics and Asian-Americans combined. Mitt Romney won this group over Barack Obama by 26 percentage points, and Ronald Reagan by 31 points in 1984. But Bill Clinton won this bloc of voters both times he ran. In this year’s political polls, this group favors Mr. Trump by large margins over Hillary Clinton.
White, no
college
degree
White,
college
degree
Black
Hispanic
Clinton
Trump
57
43
37
82
75
29
6
20
Education questions from Fox News poll, Oct. 26; Black and Hispanic from Economist/You Gov Poll, Nov. 1
However, the voting electorate — the people who actually go to the polls — could look substantially different from the voting-age population. Here’s how the population of actual voters broke down in the last presidential election. Only about half of whites with no college degree voted, leaving about 29 million votes on the table in an election decided by five million votes.

Voting-age population, in millions

Voted
Did not vote
White, no college
White, some college
White, college degree
Black
Hispanic
Other
0
10
20
30
40
50

First thoughts on the election

Rich Terrell


Students riot over Trump victory  . . .  I am very familiar with the modus operandi of the hard leftsists in the East Bay where apparently the biggest riot took place, and last night’s riot was quite typical, but a bit understated if anything. I have seen the script play out many times.  They marched down Telegraph Avenue from Berkeley to downtown Oakland, lit some garbage on fire in the street, smashed a few shop windows, and generally acted out like spoiled children.
"Given the eliminationist rhetoric that has been bandied about, further outbreaks of violence can be anticipated.  Hillary Clinton should speak to this, as should President Obama."

Not Just a Rejection of Washington, a Rejection of Obama’s Washington  "If Democrats are stunned by the anger at Washington, maybe it would have been mitigated if President Obama had fired some high-level, recognizable figure over Fast and Furious. Or the IRS scandal. Or the $2 billion spent building Healthcare.gov. Or the Veterans Administration letting veterans die waiting for care. Or the Office of Personnel Management hacking. Or the dishonest explanations about Bowe Berghdahl deal. 
"Maybe when the country witnessed horrible shootings, President Obama shouldn’t have rushed to the cameras to contend that those who opposed to his preferred gun-control laws bore some of the responsibility." . . . Read more

"Hillary Clinton broke tradition and did not address the thousands of supporters gathered at New York’s Javits Center for a victory party. No thanking them for their efforts. No acknowledging their discomfort, and no call for national unity. Instead, campaign chairman and prolific emailer John Podesta was given the job of facing the disappointed throngs and telling them to go home because the race is -- cough – “too close to call.' ”

Obama to make statement on Wednesday, meet with Trump on Thursday  . . . "Earnest said that Obama will make a statement on Wednesday at the White House to discuss the results of the election and "what steps we can take as a country to come together after this hard-fought election season.' " 

Trump campaign: 'Undercover' supporters helped deliver upset victory "The common thread among these voters, she said, was they wanted the country taken in a “new and different direction,” they had an unfavorable view of Clinton and they shared certain concerns – about everything from ObamaCare premium increases to the decline of manufacturing jobs to the threat of terrorism." . . .

"The depth of the divide between the predictions and the outcome in Tuesday’s election will be studied for years. But in terms of the on-the-ground strategy, Conway noted that the campaign committed itself to winning Pennsylvania after seeing their message fit with the beliefs of so many people in the state." . . .
Amid Trump’s victory, Republicans also were projected to hold onto their majority in the House and Senate, improving Trump’s chances of advancing his agenda in office.
Japanese people have reacted with shock and disbelief at the outcome of the US presidential election

President-Elect Trump   . . . "His liberal history and his evident lack of interest in these issues created doubts among many conservatives. We hope he now proves us doubters wrong. To do that he will have to show a self-control that was not uniformly present during his campaign but that characterized his most successful moments of it. Congressional Republicans, who retained a majority in both chambers, should do what they can to reinforce Trump’s better instincts."  NR Editors
More later...

History's Unexpected Guest

Richard Fernandez


"What beat Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election wasn't Donald Trump's well-oiled machinery, American bigotry or the Republican Party.  It was God, or if you prefer "the facts" which did it.  Hillary's real enemy was Obama's real record of failure added to her own. Low wage growth, a disastrous foreign policy, a catastrophic Obamacare and numerous scandals to name a few weighed down on her like an anvil heavier than any insult that Donald Trump could lay upon her." . . .

Sheriff Joe Arpaio loses reelection bid

The Hill
Joe Arpaio, Donald Trump

"Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio (R), a vocal supporter of GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, is projected to lose his reelection race in Arizona to Democrat Paul Penzone.
"The Associated Press has Arpaio down 45 percent to Penzone’s 55 percent.
"Arpaio, who was seeking a seventh term, is known for his hard-line immigration stance.
"Arpaio is facing criminal contempt charges after allegedly violating a judge's order to halt immigration patrols accused of racial profiling. He pleaded not guilty just two weeks before the election.
"An October poll from the Arizona Republic/Morrison/Cronkite News poll found Arpaio trailing by nearly 15 points as news broke that he would face the charges."