reince made for a second. president trump when he was running, this is the other thing, that the mainstream media or opposition party never caught, is if you want to see the trump agenda, it s very simple. it was all in the speeches. he went around to these rallies but those speeches had tremendous amount of content in them. i happen to believe, and many others do, he s probably the greatest public speaker since william jennings brian. this was galvanized. remember, we didn t have any money. hillary clinton had over $2 billion. we had a couple hundred million. it was those rallies and speeches. all he s doing right now is he s laid out an agenda with those speeches and promises he made. our job every day is just to execute on that. to simply get a path to how those get executed. he s maniacally focused on those. people try to convince president trump, this is you won on this but this is what you want to do. he says, no, i promised the
till. they have no idea what he s going to do and it scares the hell out of them. very fair. but if you are a working class voter in middle america and you are trying to i am not trying to speak for everybody, but if you are going to vote this morning and you hear that the financial markets are going to protest donald trump s victory and your wages have gone down in real terms since 1987, that actually probably makes you think i might want to vote for this guy? i think you would run to the polls as quickly as possible and vote for trump. in many cases if there is that anger and resentment, and he knows that, and that has been true through history, william jennings brian welcomed the hatred of the wall street elites and that brought him close to the presidency. i follow you on twitter, and i retweet you many times a day. do you have a favorite moment
cocktails to make money. i wrote about it because i read about it in the newspapers. i have a freakish memory. let s see if i get this right. in 2000 before bush was sworn in seeing you on cspan and talking about how mckinley brought in a lot young people. an amazing character you ll find in here is a 29-year-old lawyer from lincoln, nebraska who practices law in the same office building with another law five years is senior william jennings brian. together the two men have lunch at camerons, a 15 set diner. this 29-year-old, he s 29 in 1895 and plucked out of
weaknesses people are seeing coming from leadership, they see donald trump as an antidote. right now for most americans barack obama apit economizes weakness. for people who love donald trump and support him love what they saw over the last few days. think about the last two days, we admired a debate over whether or not muslim americans were tailgating on roof tops 14 years ago. it s a bizarre race. if you re looking, if you re not paying attention to the primaries, does someone who can t admit their wrong appeal to you or not. i m not sure people who tune in down the road are. he never thinks he s wrong. he never thinks he s wrong. when was the last time donald trump said he was wrong. he always finds a way to work himself out of a situation. neither does obama. i think that at the end of the day is the biggest problem with barack obama. if you have a problem with the fact proc brock can never admit he s wrong, that he can t admit he s wrong and always keeps ci
cnbc debate, the second national poll where carson is in the lead. that doesn t bode well for you. he s te clear front-runner here, isn t he? and maybe he should be, although i have to agree with gloria bolger. he do not see how he or donald trump will be the standard for the republican debate. why do people keep saying that? i think they want it to be true. and they re afraid because they can t actually believe donald trump and/or ben carson might actually be the person selected to lead the republican party. and they don t really see any way to stop them. bob is shaking in his woods right now. i m all for ben carson or donald trump. either one of them, i would away happy guy. put them on the top of the ticket and let s go. we keep reliving these things. it goes back to william jennings