jimnyc
07-20-2019, 10:41 AM
Doesn't matter to them - they will lie anyway, as they have been, complaining about this great economy! :laugh::laugh:
They will talk about Trump, and issues he creates, and ignore like little twits any questions about antifa, ms-13... as if you're not even there, as it was put. But, I assure you 600% that they hear and read every last thing and know the facts, but still don't have the ability... ethics and responsibility and such... :rolleyes:
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Good economic news is awkward for Democratic candidates
With the U.S. economy producing another strong jobs report for June, Democratic presidential hopefuls face a difficult task: how to avoid crediting President Donald Trump.
For months, when faced with positive economic news, Democrats have tended to say either that Trump was lucky to inherit a recovering economy from the Obama administration or that the economy was only benefiting the rich. But with Joe Biden, Barack Obama’s vice president, in the race, crediting the Obama administration is losing its appeal for his rivals.
While Biden is happy to tout the economic blessings from “the Obama-Biden administration,” many of his opponents have no alternative but to double down on waging class warfare. For working-class Americans who are seeing their wages increase, financial security rising and plenty of jobs available for just about anybody who wants one, the message from these Democratic presidential hopefuls is simple: You’re wrong.
The first Democratic presidential debate started with a moderator asking Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., whether her various big-government economic proposals would create economic risks “at a time when 71 percent of Americans say the economy is doing well.” Warren responded, “Who is this economy really working for? It’s doing great for a thinner and thinner slice at the top.”
Only progressive math could turn 71 percent into “a thinner and thinner slice at the top.” This remarkable percentage came from a March CNN poll that recorded an 18-year high in the percentage of Americans giving the economy positive marks. The “thinner and thinner slice” in the poll was the 27 percent of Americans who gave the economy negative marks - the lowest number since February 2001.
Rest - https://www.tauntongazette.com/opinion/20190718/opinion-good-economic-news-is-awkward-for-democratic-candidates
They will talk about Trump, and issues he creates, and ignore like little twits any questions about antifa, ms-13... as if you're not even there, as it was put. But, I assure you 600% that they hear and read every last thing and know the facts, but still don't have the ability... ethics and responsibility and such... :rolleyes:
-
Good economic news is awkward for Democratic candidates
With the U.S. economy producing another strong jobs report for June, Democratic presidential hopefuls face a difficult task: how to avoid crediting President Donald Trump.
For months, when faced with positive economic news, Democrats have tended to say either that Trump was lucky to inherit a recovering economy from the Obama administration or that the economy was only benefiting the rich. But with Joe Biden, Barack Obama’s vice president, in the race, crediting the Obama administration is losing its appeal for his rivals.
While Biden is happy to tout the economic blessings from “the Obama-Biden administration,” many of his opponents have no alternative but to double down on waging class warfare. For working-class Americans who are seeing their wages increase, financial security rising and plenty of jobs available for just about anybody who wants one, the message from these Democratic presidential hopefuls is simple: You’re wrong.
The first Democratic presidential debate started with a moderator asking Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., whether her various big-government economic proposals would create economic risks “at a time when 71 percent of Americans say the economy is doing well.” Warren responded, “Who is this economy really working for? It’s doing great for a thinner and thinner slice at the top.”
Only progressive math could turn 71 percent into “a thinner and thinner slice at the top.” This remarkable percentage came from a March CNN poll that recorded an 18-year high in the percentage of Americans giving the economy positive marks. The “thinner and thinner slice” in the poll was the 27 percent of Americans who gave the economy negative marks - the lowest number since February 2001.
Rest - https://www.tauntongazette.com/opinion/20190718/opinion-good-economic-news-is-awkward-for-democratic-candidates