Told ya

I've been saying all along that the eventual Democratic nominee is not yet in the race.

I don't know for sure if it will be Hillary, personally I think that would be political suicide for the Dems. But if they do run her, we're definitely looking at a Trump landslide on election night.

But it would be worth it to see the media cry crocodile tears.
 
Still think it's gonna be Michelle Obama, with the First Husband running things behind the scenes.

You know sad but very true she would cause an uproar, win the nomination in a landslide and might even win the general election. I am being dead serious this country is that screwed up politically. She has as many qualifications as Hussein had when he was elected. She actually has more national political experience from being in Washington eight years than Hussein O.
 
You know sad but very true she would cause an uproar, win the nomination in a landslide and might even win the general election. I am being dead serious this country is that screwed up politically. She has as many qualifications as Hussein had when he was elected. She actually has more national political experience from being in Washington eight years than Hussein O.
She would win.

The socialist millennials LOVE her.

She speaks their language of hate for America and all that is wrong with it.

They think she and Zero can change America it into a country where everyone gets exactly the same, because you didn't build that.

While the people cheer as she eats lobster and goes on extravagant vacations all the while making school lunches inedible and people too impoverished to afford their own food, relying instead on plentiful food stamps.

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They are setting the party up for the new entrant.

Their problem is that they have splintered their party into so many factions all concerned about themselves only, that they need to find someone that all parts will get enthused about. That's tough.

Is there anybody else?

WASHINGTON — When a half-dozen Democratic donors gathered at the Whitby Hotel in Manhattan last week, the dinner began with a discussion of which presidential candidates the contributors liked. But as conversations among influential Democrats often go these days, the meeting quickly evolved into a discussion of who was not in the race — but could be lured in.
Would Hillary Clinton get in, the contributors wondered, and how about Michael R. Bloomberg, the former New York mayor? One person even mused whether Michelle Obama would consider a late entry, according to two people who attended the event, which was hosted by the progressive group American Bridge.

It’s that time of the election season for Democrats.

“Since the last debate, just anecdotally, I’ve had five or six people ask me: ‘Is there anybody else?’” said Leah Daughtry, a longtime Democrat who has run two of the party’s recent conventions.

With doubts rising about former Vice President Joseph R. Biden’s ability to finance a multistate primary campaign, persistent questions about Senator Elizabeth Warren’s viability in the general election and skepticism that Mayor Pete Buttigieg, of South Bend, Ind., can broaden his appeal beyond white voters, Democratic leaders are engaging in a familiar rite: fretting about who is in the race and longing for a white knight to enter the contest at the last minute.

It is a regular, if not quite quadrennial, tradition for a party that can be fatalistic about its prospects and recalls similar Maalox moments Democrats endured in 1992, 2004 and in the last primary, when it was Mr. Biden who nearly entered the race in October. But the mood of alarm is even more intense because of the party’s hunger to defeat President Trump and — with just over three months to go before voting starts in Iowa — their impatience with finding Mr. or Mrs. Right among the current crop of candidates.

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