After a few weeks' absence, Joe Biden struggles back into the phony
poll, with the PredictWise
oddsmakers putting him at a 2% probability of being Our Next President.
This gives our poll an even split: 4 Dems, 4 Gops.
The following words were actually spoken last week by Jeb Bush’s
non-campaign spokesperson: “Governor Bush is actively exploring a run.
He has not made a final decision.”
Every grownup in America knows this is a lie.
Good point. It's a legal fiction designed to tap-dance around
the arcane financing rules imposed on declared candidates. As long
as he's not official, Jeb can raise money for his Super PAC.
Trivia:
You can see the Federal
Election Commission's list of the—as I type—356 declared candidates
here.
Of the eight names above, four appear in the FEC list: (Clinton, Paul, Rubio,
Walker);
four are absent (Bush, O'Malley, Biden, Warren). Considering
the latter group, my guess is that
O'Malley's official FEC Form 2
Statement of Candidacy is in the mail. There's a pretty good chance that
neither Biden nor Warren will run.
So what's Jeb
waiting for? (Some sober analysis here.)
By the way: It's easy to dismiss 345 or so of those FEC-declared candidates
as "delusional". And, I confess, I was about to do that.
But if we're going to start picking apart candidates on their personality
traits and psychological
abnormality…
Oh, wait a minute that's what we do here. So, yeah:
delusional.
Back to Hiaasen: he picked a mighty convenient time window in which
to make his complaint about Jeb. Hillary announced on April 13, and
before that she was in the same position Jeb is now. Where was Hiaasen
then? And Jeb is expected to declare in a couple weeks, after which
Hiaasen's point would be moot.
And note that declared candidate Hillary continues to
personally
court donors for Super PAC "Priorities USA". Given Hiaasen's
sputtering outrage at Jeb's Super PAC antics,
you'd expect at least a mention of that.
Instead, crickets. Or, for Hiaasen, swamp cicadas.
This is why I pretty much stick to the fraction of Hiaasen's writing
that's explicitly labeled "fiction".
(paid link)
In 2006, Elizabeth Warren
co-wrote
a book
that (among other things) decried as "myth"
the notion that
“you can make big money buying houses and flipping them quickly.”
And—I bet you can see this coming—at National Review,
Jillian Kay Melchior and Eliana Johnson detail
how Senator Warren previously made big money by buying houses
and flipping them quickly.
If she runs, one of her campaign slogans will need to be: "Do As I Say,
Not As I Do."
As many people noted this week, Hillary's
fake southern accent reappeared, after a four-year absence, while
campaigning in South Carolina.
Byron York covers
Martin O'Malley's campaign announcement in Baltimore, miraculously
unmarred by gunfire. Enjoy the identity politics:
The first speaker was black, gay, and an illegal immigrant. The young
man, Jonathan Jayes-Green, told the crowd that his family came to the
United States from Panama legally — "in search of the American Dream" —
when he was 13 years old. "But our path to that American Dream became
complicated when our visa expired and we became undocumented,"
Jayes-Green said.
[…]
One might think that with Jayes-Green's appearance, O'Malley had covered
the gay marriage issue. Actually, no. The next speaker, Johns Hopkins
student Joseph Weinstein-Avery, stressed that he was just an everyday
Baltimore guy — "I love my Orioles and my Ravens" — going to school and
hoping to enter public service some day. "I'm a grandson, a son, a
nephew and a friend," Weinstein-Avery said. "I'm your next door
neighbor's kid — all thanks to the job that my two moms did raising me."
Yes, I am talking about the hyphenated last names. Democrats are
totally pandering to the hyphenated-last-name voters.
Disclaimers:
Unquoted opinions expressed herein are solely those of the
blogger.
Pun Salad is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates
Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a
means for the blogger to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.