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Cruz Wins Alaska Caucuses to Wrap Super Tuesday

Photo Credit: Justin Sullivan / Getty ImagesBy The Associated Press. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz has won the Republican presidential caucuses in Alaska. It’s his third win on Super Tuesday, adding to victories in the Texas and Oklahoma primaries.

Cruz adds 12 delegates to his total with the win in Alaska. Donald Trump will take home 11 delegates from the state, and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio gets five delegates.

Cruz’s win in Alaska is the final Super Tuesday contest. The 2016 presidential race will resume on Saturday, with primary elections and caucuses in Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine and Nebraska. (Read more from “Cruz Wins Alaska Caucuses to Wrap Super Tuesday” HERE)

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Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton Score Big Super Tuesday Primary Wins

By Andrew Rafferty. Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton closed in on their party’s presidential nominations by racking up big wins on Super Tuesday, though the rest of the field showed no signs of clearing the way for them just yet.

Clinton won seven states — Virginia, Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, Arkansas, Texas, and even Massachusetts, a state where rival Bernie Sanders was expected to run particularly strong. The former secretary of state fell to Sanders in his home state of Vermont, Oklahoma, Minnesota and Colorado.

Trump scored seven victories Tuesday in Massachusetts, Virginia, Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, Arkansas, and in Vermont, where NBC News declared him the apparent winner.

Sen. Ted Cruz picked up much-needed wins in his home state of Texas and in Oklahoma, and was the projected winner in the Alaska caucuses. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio picked up the first victory of his presidential campaign by winning the Minnesota caucuses, leaving John Kasich and Ben Carson as the only candidates without a No. 1 finish in a nominating contest. (Read more from “Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton Score Big Super Tuesday Primary Wins” HERE)

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Polls for All 12 Super Tuesday States Just Released – They Reveal Something HUGE for This Candidate

When billionaire businessman Donald Trump initially announced his candidacy for president, most political experts did not take him seriously. Some even considered his run for the Whtie House to be a joke . . .

As if to confirm Trump’s validity, polls released from eight states holding primaries on Super Tuesday show him to be in the lead.

In a report from Breitbart, an Alabama poll conducted by Master Image shows Trump ahead with 36 percent, well ahead of Marco Rubio’s 19 percent and Ted Cruz’s 12 percent.

Three separate polls in Georgia all have Trump with commanding leads. The TEGNA/Survey USA poll has Trump with a whopping 45 percent to Rubio’s 19 and Cruz’s 16. The Fox 5 Atlanta poll has Trump at 34 and Rubio and Cruz at 22 percent and 20 percent, respectively. And the WSB-TV/Landmark poll has Trump at 32 percent to Rubio’s 23 percent and Cruz’s 19 percent.

The WBUR poll released a few days ago places Trump’s lead over Rubio in Massachusetts at 40 percent to 19 percent. Kasich also received 19 percent, while Cruz only received 10 percent.

Alaska Dispatch News conducted a Republican poll, which was made public Jan. 23. This poll showed Trump leading Cruz, 27.9 percent to 23.8 percent. Based on the primary victories Trump has had since this poll, his lead may have increased. (Read more from “Polls for All 12 Super Tuesday States Just Released – They Reveal Something HUGE for This Candidate” HERE)

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The One Tweet That Perfectly Sums up the 2016 Election

Here’s a funny summary of how the GOP presidential race shakes out today…

Trump is clearly the person to beat, but both Cruz and Rubio are keeping it close for second – making it a three man race . . .

OH Gov. John Kasich and one day future governor or senator or congressman Ben Carson have no shot at earning the nomination at this point. (Read more from “Cruz Demands Release of NYT Tape Showing Trump Scamming Conservatives on Immigration” HERE)

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Watch: People Noticed 1 Thing All the GOP Candidates Agreed On- It Might Worry Some Americans

By Randy DeSoto. All five Republican candidates side with the FBI over Apple in the stand off regarding gaining access to San Bernardino terrorist Syed Farook’s iPhone.

At the GOP debate in Houston on Thursday night all the candidates but Donald Trump were asked whether, as president, they would force Apple to comply with a court order to assist the FBI in gaining access to the cell phone.

As reported by Western Journalism, Apple CEO Tim Cook has claimed the FBI wants his company to create a “backdoor” into the phone’s operating system, which he argues would potentially compromise the security of all iPhone users.

The government has responded that it only wants the company to disable the self-destruct software, so investigators can use its tools to ascertain the password to gain access to the phone’s data.

Trump has called for a boycott of Apple until it complies with the court order. “We gotta get to the bottom of [the San Bernardino shooting], but we’re not going to get to the bottom of it unless we use common sense,” Trump said at campaign event last week. “So I like the idea of boycotting Apple until such time as they give that information – I think that’s a great idea.”

His four GOP rivals also stated that Apple should comply with the order. Sen. Marco Rubio noted at Thursday’s GOP debate that the phone did not even belong to Farook, but to the government. “[A]ll they’re asking [Apple] to do is to disable the self-destruct mode or the auto-erase mode on one phone in the entire world. But Apple doesn’t want to do it because they think it hurts their brand,” the senator said. (Read more from “Watch: People Noticed 1 Thing All the GOP Candidates Agreed On- It Might Worry Some Americans” HERE)

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Desperate Towel-Snapping as GOP Candidates Try to Take Down Trump

By Cathleen Decker. Desperation spoke, and loudly, at Thursday’s Republican presidential debate.

Acting as if they had just discovered reams of opposition research that had lain unnoticed, Donald Trump’s biggest challengers, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, knocked into the New York billionaire repeatedly, and he responded in kind.

The exchanges descended for long periods into a biting, interrupting, mocking locker-room-style smackdown, the sound of towel snapping replaced by shrieks from the partisan crowd.

The shock of the debate was not that Rubio and Cruz went after Trump, but that it took them until the end of February, after Trump had notched successive victories, to decide to take him on. The reality, however, is that Trump has rarely been hurt by debates, and it was unclear whether the tag team of the two senators was able to damage him meaningfully at this relatively advanced stage of the campaign. (Read more from “Desperate Towel-Snapping as GOP Candidates Try to Take Down Trump” HERE)

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Cruz and Rubio Just Hit Trump With All They’ve Got – There’s Just One Problem…

Cruz/Rubio Slug Trump. But is it too little too late?

As conservatives, we swore to ourselves that we would not let the liberal media pick our nominee again – like we did the past few cycles. Yet, in debate after debate, the entire focus and narrative has been framed by the media in the form of hitting Donald Trump from the left. This has resulted in many conservative voters (rightfully) thinking Trump is the presumptive anti-establishment candidate who will tear down the political class. A case of circular logic, no doubt.

We never had an opportunity to observe candidates actually debate Trump from the right in a sustained fashion and actually reveal just who this man is, a man who is close to sealing the nomination. Part of this was the fault of the other candidates declining to truly assail Trump on the issues, but much of it was because of the media narrative and the pathetic moderators.

Tonight’s debate was different. It was, by far, the most informative debate as it relates to educating the public on Trump’s record. This is because the two leading challengers, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio actually took the fight to Trump in a sustained manner. Wolf Blitzer does deserve credit for formulating good questions that actually afforded the candidates the opportunity to inform the public about the real Donald Trump. Unfortunately, the combination of a number of factors; namely, the clownish anchor from Telemundo, Wolf’s intervention to save Trump from a beat down on numerous occasions, and the distraction of Carson and Kasich’s presence at the debate, prevented the voters from seeing a full-throttle clash between the three real contenders.

In the first half of the debate, Rubio had stronger opportunities to hit Trump on his liberal, incoherent record. But in the second half of the debate Cruz took it to Trump like never before, and he did so by deftly demonstrating how Trump is a consistent liberal and how he would be the worst person to go up against Hillary Clinton, given his political glass jaw. Whether it’s support for Planned Parenthood, socialized medicine, the Libya intervention, liberal immigration policies, or his appalling position on Israel, Trump got exposed tonight. Heck, I work in this business and didn’t even know that Trump supported the ridiculous Libya intervention, just like Rubio did. How are conservative voters supposed to know Trump’s record if this is not litigated in a sustained debate?

Cruz also had the added benefit of tossing in Rubio and landing a lot of punches on his record, while taking no effective incoming fire. He efficiently lumped Rubio in with his attacks on Trump, establishing that they both have inconsistent records.

Finally, the most effective performance from Cruz was his ability to litigate the case against Trump’s decades’ long support for Democrat candidates. While this has been tossed at him parsimoniously throughout the campaign, nobody has successfully revealed in long form how he is responsible for – and tied to – the very system he claims to hate.

Rubio landed a punch that will likely stick with Trump when he showed how Trump is guilty of the very repetitive bromides that Rubio himself was criticized for in New Hampshire. Coupled with Cruz’s attacks on Trump’s record and persona, it stripped bare for the public the person who was once thought as the consummate “alpha male in the room.”

However, Rubio himself was exposed by the Telemundo moderator for changing his position on repealing DACA. Rubio actually admitted that he originally said he wasn’t going to repeal it “before he was running for president.” That in itself reveals the problem many of us have with Rubio: he is only a conservative when trying to win our votes. Ironically, Rubio was actually wrong about that because he announced for president on April 13 and gave the Univision interview, in which he said he would not repeal DACA without finding a replacement, on April 18.

Which leads to the next important outcome of the debate. Cruz lost South Carolina largely because Trump and Rubio called him a liar for an entire week. That accusation stuck with him. In this debate, whether it was Trump on socialized medicine, support for the Libya invasion, or Rubio’s record on immigration, Cruz was vindicated and demonstrated it with painstaking fact by using the words of his opponents. It is in fact his opponents who are the liars.

Cruz can now hold his head high running as the only consistent conservative and finally making that case effectively to the public.

Rubio also turned in a solid night and performed well. But again, “performance” has sadly been the extent of his conservatism when you look at his record.

The question going forward is this: while Trump will likely bleed some support from this debate, was this too little, too late to take down Trump? In addition to coming at the 11th hour, the Trump beat-down was incomplete. Every time Rubio and Cruz trapped him and knocked him off his game, Wolf Blitzer took them off Trump’s beaten body or John Kasich interrupted with nonsense. If this race does indeed continue past next week, conservatives must demand that the debate be limited to the top three candidates and that conservatives ask more questions in an extended format. A townhall format would work out better. We need a Lincoln-Douglas style debate between the three of them with a conservative moderator to simply keep the time and go to commercial break.

If Trump is indeed the nominee, many people will be asking the following two questions: why in the world didn’t the contenders take him down sooner and why do we continue to let the media frame our debate, and by extension, control the destiny of our movement? (For more from the author of “Cruz and Rubio Just Hit Trump With All They’ve Got – There’s Just One Problem…” please click HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

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America Has Spoken on Which GOP Candidate ‘Won’ the Recent Debate — It’s an Earthquake Result

Photo Credit: Chris Keane/ReutersThe American people have weighed in on who “won” last night’s GOP debate, and it’s not even close.

Donald Trump was the winner, according to an Independent Journal Review poll of likely Republican voters who watched the debate, conducted by Google Consumer Surveys . . .

Photo Credit: Independent Journal

Trump is the GOP frontrunner, having won 3 of the first 4 primaries, and he goes into Super Tuesday as the favorite nationwide. (Read more from “America Has Spoken on Which GOP Candidate ‘Won’ the Recent Debate — It’s an Earthquake Result” HERE)

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This GOP Candidate Sees Latest Polling Data, Immediately Cancels Massive Campaign Event

By Jim Hoft. Senator Ted Cruz (R-AL) dropped out of Saturday’s Republican presidential candidate forum at Samford University after dropping to third place in the latest polling.

Senator Ted Cruz is in third place behind Trump and Rubio and has one-third of the support of Trump in the state.

(Read more from “This GOP Candidate Sees Latest Polling Data, Immediately Cancels Massive Campaign Event” HERE)


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Ted Cruz Drops out of Samford Presidential Forum Scheduled for Saturday

By Howard Koplowitz. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is bailing on Saturday’s Republican presidential candidate forum at Samford University, leaving one of his 2016 rivals, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, as the only candidate to take part in the discussion. Yellowhammer News, the organizer of the forum, said the sold-out event would still go on.

An unnamed political consultant who spoke to the Alabama news outlet said the next string of primary states on March 1, which includes Alabama and several other states in which has been dubbed the “SEC Primary,” could doom Cruz’s chances at the nomination. (Read more from “Ted Cruz Drops out of Samford Presidential Forum Scheduled for Saturday” HERE)

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Watch: Cruz, Rubio Slam Trump on Health Care

By Oliver Darcy. Republican presidential contender Ted Cruz cross-examined 2016 rival Donald Trump on Thursday’s GOP debate stage, getting the billionaire businessman on record denying many of his former positions on health care.

“True or false: you said the government should pay for everyone’s health care?” Cruz asked Trump.

“That’s false,” Trump flatly said.

“You’ve never said that?” Cruz asked, seemingly surprised by the denial.

“I said it worked in a couple countries,” Trump quipped.

(Read more from “Cruz, Rubio Slam Trump on Health Care” HERE)

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Watch What Happens When Rubio Repeatedly Demands Trump Lay out His Plan on Health Care

By Oliver Darcy. Marco Rubio turned a familiar attack often used against him into a weapon against Donald Trump Thursday night, accusing the billionaire of failing to have a comprehensive plan on health care and instead only robotically repeating one line when asked about the subject.

The confrontation happened when Trump was asked for his plan on health care by CNN debate moderator Dana Bash. The real estate mogul replied that he would “get rid of the lines around the states” which block competition between health care companies.

“But, just to be specific here, what you’re saying is getting rid of the barriers between states, that is going to solve the problem?” Bash passed.

“That’s going to solve the problem,” Trump insisted. (Read more from “Watch What Happens When Rubio Repeatedly Demands Trump Lay out His Plan on Health Care” HERE)

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What Trump, Cruz, and Sanders Mean for the Political Establishment

On the night of Feb. 15, the split screen that has defined the 2016 presidential race repeated itself with a new urgency. In one half there was Republican front-runner Donald Trump, rallying thousands at an arena in Greenville, S.C., with immigration jeremiads and classic rock anthems. In the other, on a stage 203 miles away in North Charleston, there was Jeb Bush, the pack leader Trump had long since deposed, making his first public appearance with his brother, former President George W. Bush. Here was Jeb, fighting for his political life in a state that had long favored his family dynasty.

This cycle, dynasty hasn’t counted for much. In the debate two days earlier, Trump viciously attacked the elder Bush’s record, marking the first time anyone can remember a GOP poll leader lacerating the party’s most recent President. Trump earned boos for the performance, but the audience in attendance—South Carolina party faithfuls—was so distant from the Republican rank and file that the question “Why are people booing?” trended on Google during the event. What’s more, the businessman’s soaring popularity statewide didn’t suffer. If Palmetto State Republicans didn’t punish that heresy against the last Republican commander in chief, it could spell the last gasp for Jeb, who finished 6th in Iowa and 4th in New Hampshire.

At a mininum, the Feb. 20 primary in South Carolina stands poised to further thin the three-way contest among Bush, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and Ohio Gov. John Kasich to consolidate establishment support against Trump and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. In the Nevada Democratic caucuses that same day, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is hustling to blunt the momentum that Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders carried out of his blockbuster win in New Hampshire. But both sides are dug in for a slog that could spill into the summer.

It would be silly, seeing what we’ve seen, to make any sweeping predictions about how this race will end. In the past, advantages like money raised, endorsements, and name recognition were pretty good indicators of election outcomes. If anything, it may be working the other way this time. Bush, whose campaign was an early juggernaut, embarrassingly floundered despite smashing fundraising records (he still easily retains the money lead, with $150 million raised, including Super PAC funds, and $84 million spent). Clinton, with 184 endorsements from governors and members of Congress, has faced a real challenge from Democratic Socialist Bernie Sanders, who got only two. (Read more from “What Trump, Cruz, and Sanders Mean for the Political Establishment” HERE)

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New Hampshire Poll Shows Big Change at the Top

Sen. Marco Rubio appears to have gained some real momentum coming out of Iowa, where he beat expectations finishing a close third to Donald Trump and within a few points of the winner Sen. Ted Cruz.

According WHDH/UMass Lowell poll, Rubio has surged into second place with 15 percent ahead of Cruz at 14 percent, while Donald Trump maintains a commanding lead in the Granite State at 36 percent. Governors Jeb Bush and John Kasich, who have spent a lot of time in New Hampshire, polled 8 and 7 percent, respectively, with Gov. Chris Christie coming in at 5 percent.

A poll published on Monday by the same group ahead of the Iowa Caucus had Trump at 38 percent, Cruz at 12, Bush and Kasich at 9, Rubio at 8, and Christie at 7 percent.

Rubio’s 7 point rise in two days appears to be driven mostly by a loss of support for the three governors in the field, while Cruz likely gained 2 points by chipping away at Trump’s lead.

(Read more from “New Hampshire Poll Shows Big Change at the Top” HERE)

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