Good chat today with Stuart Stevens, but it leaves me with a couple questions.
The easy one, that I’ll dispose of in a sentence, is why didn’t you discuss Burgham in your conversation about VP picks. He can contribute the only thing Trump cares about – money. (Okay, that was two sentences.)
More importantly, your discussion of the future o…
Good chat today with Stuart Stevens, but it leaves me with a couple questions.
The easy one, that I’ll dispose of in a sentence, is why didn’t you discuss Burgham in your conversation about VP picks. He can contribute the only thing Trump cares about – money. (Okay, that was two sentences.)
More importantly, your discussion of the future of the Republican Party and this week’s primaries in New York and Colorado. I’ve asked this of several people and have never gotten a good answer.
Given that the crazies have taken over the Republican Party, why not encourage all Normie Republicans, electeds and rank and file, to switch and become Democrats. It seems to me that it’s easier for lots of former Republicans to bring the Democrats to the center than it is to rescue their former party.
What you’ll probably end up with is a party that’s center left on social issues, center right on economic and strong on defense.
And, as a somewhat liberal Democrat, I ask what’s wrong with that?
But how can you discuss SEC football without facing the fact that Alabama will beat 'e both?
Good chat today with Stuart Stevens, but it leaves me with a couple questions.
The easy one, that I’ll dispose of in a sentence, is why didn’t you discuss Burgham in your conversation about VP picks. He can contribute the only thing Trump cares about – money. (Okay, that was two sentences.)
More importantly, your discussion of the future of the Republican Party and this week’s primaries in New York and Colorado. I’ve asked this of several people and have never gotten a good answer.
Given that the crazies have taken over the Republican Party, why not encourage all Normie Republicans, electeds and rank and file, to switch and become Democrats. It seems to me that it’s easier for lots of former Republicans to bring the Democrats to the center than it is to rescue their former party.
What you’ll probably end up with is a party that’s center left on social issues, center right on economic and strong on defense.
And, as a somewhat liberal Democrat, I ask what’s wrong with that?
But how can you discuss SEC football without facing the fact that Alabama will beat 'e both?