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The latest CNN/ORC poll out this morning shows the Trump Tide is surging and is about to sweep away the Republican Party as we have known it:
“On the Republican side, the new survey finds Trump’s lead is dominant, and his support tops that of his four remaining opponents combined. The businessman tops his nearest competitor by more than 30 points: 49% back Trump, 16% Marco Rubio, 15% Ted Cruz, 10% Ben Carson and 6% John Kasich. …”
Just a few days ago, the narrative on Cuck Twitter was that Trump couldn’t lock up more than a third of Republican voters and that the other two-thirds supporting the other candidates were the “good ones” who were #NeverTrump.
It has been a momentous weekend with Jean-Marie Le Pen and Jeff Sessions endorsing Trump. I didn’t get the chance to weigh in yesterday on Trump’s “disavowal” of David Duke and refusal to cuck and condemn “white supremacists.” The hysterical virtue signaling that erupted on Cuck Twitter over Trump’s racism had me in tears:
“Political consulting and morality go together about as well as that famous fish and bicycle. Lawyers have constructed a neat paradigm obligating them to handle any and all clients, a very convenient way to maintain pretext of high road while taking any road possible. So it is with political consultants. For years when asked my positions on issues, my standard response has been, “I don’t have positions, I have clients.”
Along the way I’ve been accused of not believing in anything but winning, which I always took as a compliment. The only reason I or any political consultant should be hired is to help a client win. We’re not there to remind a candidate of his deeply held positions or to solve the problems of the world. We are there for one purpose: to do everything possible to win an election. We’re the hammer, votes are the nail. …”
I’m sitting here driving and my notifications are blowing up with new tweets about how Cruz and Rubio are getting in on the act:
We cannot be a party that nominates someone who refuses to condemn white supremacists and the Ku Klux Klan.
— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) February 28, 2016
Really sad. @realDonaldTrump you're better than this. We should all agree, racism is wrong, KKK is abhorrent. https://t.co/dn2D74c5dl
— Ted Cruz (@tedcruz) February 28, 2016
Yeah, that’s exactly what Republican primary voters on the eve of Super Tuesday want to hear: racism lectures from preening cuckservative school marms! I stop at a gas station on I-65 and two men at the counter in front of me are talking about Trump and how they could never vote for the Cuban or the Canadian.
When I get into Madison for the Trump rally, at least three hours before the events starts, the line around the stadium that snakes around like the parking lot like a paperclip is enormous. At this point, it is over a mile long:
The back of the line wraps around this stadium like a paper clip pic.twitter.com/KkgpfB6xB2
— Hunter Wallace (@occdissent) February 28, 2016
In Madison waiting for Trump Force One to arrive pic.twitter.com/1Qh8jXXCdP
— Hunter Wallace (@occdissent) February 28, 2016
— Hunter Wallace (@occdissent) February 28, 2016
I was there in the crowd in Madison and saw Jeff Sessions come on stage and endorse Trump. A first fight broke out below us when a protester tried to disrupt the rally. There were a handful of protesters who we laughed at on the buses on the way into the rally. Otherwise, the rally was pretty much like the ones I have seen on television.
From riding on the bus, talking to people, watching those who showed up, it is clear to me that Trump isn’t appealing to any specific White sub-demographic. These are not downtrodden, elderly, highly religious, blue collar voters. I saw tons of teenagers and college kids, lots of college-educated, white collar supporters, a much more secular looking crowd. It is clear that all kinds of people are attracted to Trump’s message and we have seen this in the exit polls in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada.
I asked Trump last Thursday in the spin room about Duke and White supremacist support. He “disavowed” it. He also “disavowed” Duke on Friday
— Katy Tur (@KatyTurNBC) February 28, 2016
James Edwards and The Political Cesspool broadcasted live from the Trump rally in Millington, TN:
Look, he even got a selfie with Katy Tur! Will she “disavow” it?
Note: The Trump Train runs into Valdosta, GA tonight and Columbus, OH and Louisville, KY tomorrow.