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Friday, August 19, 2016

Donald Trump on the Move: His Two Strongest Speeches of the Campaign

Sometimes, the Main Stream Media can surprise you.

In a string of tweets, CBS News’ Major Garrett offered guarded praise for Donald Trump’s speech on Tuesday night in Milwaukee. As Garrett put it:

Having been listening [to Trump’s speeches] since August 2015, [this was] objectively best drafted and best delivered @realDonaldTrump speech of the campaign. Will resonate.

Even for those who don’t necessarily trust the MSM—though it’s worth remembering that Garrett worked at Fox News for years and, before that, The Washington Times—his assessment is hard to argue with: Will resonate.

Reacting to the same speech, the always astute Byron York wrote in The Washington Examiner:


Trump delivered a focused, powerful, and disciplined speech Tuesday night in West Bend, Wis., about 45 minutes north of Milwaukee. Trump focused largely on problems that disproportionately afflict black Americans, arguing that his proposals on crime, immigration, trade, jobs, education, and other issues will improve African-American lives more than Hillary Clinton’s.

Continuing, York added:

Calling the recent riots in Milwaukee “an assault on the right of all citizens to live in security and live in peace,” Trump won applause with the declaration that “Law and order must be restored.”

Yes, “law and order” has been a winning issue for Republicans for half a century—and Democrats know it.

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3 comments:

Obama Crooked Bastardo said...

Looking more Presidential day by day. It's time to learn how to say:
Mr. President Donald J. Trump.

Anonymous said...

They're already talking about the delegate votes leaning strongly in her favor.Delegates always elect the wrong person,and if the delegates don't screw it up the Supreme Court will. On election night we'll constantly be reminded of the current delegate vote with barely a mention of the popular vote.Are we seriously too stupid to know who we want in office?

Anonymous said...

We know who we want in office but if the election was decided on the popular vote count the people in the densely populated areas would control the elections thus the electoral collage, a rural vote carries more weight than a big city vote.Don't knock it because we might have had a President Gore.