http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/bernie-sanders-new-hampshire_55c15303e4b0f7f0bebae9cb Statistical tie? Seems like she had a 40 point lead or so just several months ago. It's just my opinion of course, but I think Democratic voters are all holding their nose when thinking of voting for Hillary. IF (and its a big if) Sanders keeps this momentum going I can see many of them defecting to Sanders as he starts to become a viable alternative. Thoughts?
I don't think most Democraric voters have heard of Bernie Sanders or Warren or O'Malley. So less a case of Hillary blowing it than an inevitable loss in polling as options emerge. I hope I don't have to vote for her.
A Sanders nomination and loss in the general would say less about Hilary's incompetence than about the DNC's failure to generate any fresh but moderate candidates.
Hillary is very old and stale. At some point she's going to hit bottom. But unlike Obama in 2008, Bernie Sanders is not a viable alternative. She will pull out of it and be the Dem nominee. The only thing that can stop her is a huge scandal.
She's stale, but there's no credible frontrunner on the national scene. Biden is an old white Washington insider who comes off as genuine and bafoonish. Sanders and Warren are too niche and Kucinich-esque (unfortunately but that shows you how right of center the US currently is). Yeah, she has baggage, but it's more or less vetted baggage. I'm betting the Sec of State angle is a red herring for the Repub bloodhounds...
Needs to pull a Monica and blow Bill. He's got a better chance of being reelected than she does. There's already been a "ground breaking" novelty in Obama, now it's time for business. The charade is up.
The one thing I don't worry about is Ms. Clinton's competence. She has the most professional team behind her and she has the experience in the public eye not to say anything stupid. Her "what does it matter" moment was exploited completely out of context, it was really an exasperation at the stupidity of the Republicans trying to diminish her, but it was a learning moment that won't happen again during the campaign. Probably the only excitement and momentum she will require is the distinction of being the first women President. Other than that she just has to show up. I think her actual administration will be well managed, centrist and non-controversial. She would rather do less so as just not to blow it. It's not like any real legislation would pass anyway. It will be sort of like Obama without the ACA, I also think she will only serve one term so the Party's posturing behind her will be more interesting. The influence of Sanders/Warren will actually be more important for the country's political future than her Presidency, unless something happens to Scalia or Thomas.
Her recent ad put a lot of people off... but it will also cater to a lot of under-informed, uneducated Americans. That's American politics for ya!
People said the iPhone was dead because it was losing "market share". The iPhone still reigns supreme.
People thought Gore sealed the deal but there was just enough division through the power of framing and narratives to cause enough doubt. As much as I think the Republican Party is dead on the national scene, the way the system is set up will always give them a credible chance,
I have read that Hillary's handlers know she can easily lose the caucus states of Iowa and New Hampshire, but on Super Tuesday, where just sheer TV money can dominate, she will pull it out. This is the same reason why Jeb will pull it out, unless the Kochs and another half dozen of the billionaires back Walker, for instance. Obviously the billionaires hate Bernie and for the most part they just back the the GOP candidates, including the crazier ones due to their ability to confuse various groups of the lower and middle class, whether it is the young healthy white guy "libertarians" --Rand-- or religious fndamentalists who seek rapture, Huckabee or Cruz. Obviously all the GOPers have to back tax cuts for the billionaires so there is no differentiation there.