Archive for May, 2017

Kellyanne Conway brutally mocks Hillary Clinton’s obsession with winning the popular vote – TheBlaze.com

White House counselor Kellyanne Conway mocked Hillary Clintons recent comments explaining her responsibility in the 2016 election loss. Conway appeared on Fox News Wednesday with Sean Hannity to discuss the election.

Hannity asked Conway if it was merely arrogance that lost Hillary in November. It was many things, Conway explained, but we also had a better candidate, better message, better campaign, better strategy and I think just more self-awareness overall, but I do want to push back on something Hillary said. She said that she was winning if the election were on October 27th, thats actually not true if you look at the Real Clear Politics aggregate, and I did today, in the six states that went for Obama in 2012 but Trump 2016, Florida, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Iowa.

You look at these states, she explained. Her numbers actually stay the same or in fact improved from the October 27th, to the aggregate that was taken November 5th, of course the election was November 8th. What happened was Donald Trump continued with his strategy of going and connecting with voters doing these 7-8 rallies a day towards the end.

Sure we had a fraction of the money, she continued, a fraction of the staff, we had a much better candidate and an actual economic message for working class America.

And what happened is the undercover Trump voter that I started talking about last July under a hail of criticism, Conway added, was real, people came out for him in the end. They wanted to vote for change, they wanted to vote against stale policies, they did not want a third term of [former President] Barack Obama. And to the extent that Hillary Clinton had hidden voters, theyre still hidden.

Even when yesterday, she continued, I mean the lack of self awareness was stunning, the idea that she ignored Wisconsin meant that Wisconsin ended up ignoring her. And the idea that she yet again mentioned, I won the popular vote. You know what the prize is for that? The participation trophy is second place.

Hannity and Conway were referring to former Obama aide David Axelrod criticizing Hillary for being unable to take responsibility for the devastating election failure that jeopardized former President Obamas legacy. Clinton has been roundly mocked for a recent interview where she says she takes complete personal responsibility for the loss, but then goes on to blame several outside factors outside her control.

Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) blamed the economic message of the Democrats for the election, saying that they have abandoned the working class, a frequent criticism from the progressive wing of the party.

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Kellyanne Conway brutally mocks Hillary Clinton's obsession with winning the popular vote - TheBlaze.com

Hillary Clinton urges Americans to ‘fight back’ against the GOP’s health-care bill – The Week Magazine

House Republicans passed their American Health Care Act in a squeaker on Thursday, popped open some Bud Lights, and headed over to the White House for a celebration with President Trump, who marveled that he was president. "Even Donald Trump can't believe he's president," Trevor Noah said on Thursday night's Daily Show. "I guess he does relate to the American people after all." The GOP passed the bill without knowing what it says, what it will cost, or what it will do "hell, your baby could have to do its own C-section from the inside, you don't know!" Noah said.

Clearly, "Republicans cared less about the bill's quality than the optics of getting a bill passed," he said. "And we know that they didn't like this bill, because they kept on telling us." He proved it, finishing with a clip of Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas). "Oh, something we can live with?" Noah repeated. "That's a particularly poor choice of words. Right now there's someone with cancer watching that going, 'Who the f is we?' Because the big difference between the bill the House passed today and the one that failed six weeks ago is that this one is even worse for people who are most vulnerable."

Republicans will tell you that they have people with pre-existing conditions covered with the high-risk pools "which sound less like an insurance plan and more like something you'd find in Charlie Sheen's backyard," Noah quipped but there's one problem with their promise: Math. "I'm just going to put it out there: If you're short $192 billion, just say you don't have the money," he said. "You can't be 'short' the GDP of Greece."

So House Republicans and people with pre-existing conditions don't like the bill, Democrats hate it, and all the major medical and elderly advocacy groups came out against the bill. "You know, there are many people who are going to be mad about what happened today," Noah said. "And one group that should be more pissed off than any other is Trump voters. Because we all remember what we heard from Trump during the campaign." If you forgot, he was happy to remind you. And he ended on one thing he and Trump do (kind of) agree on. Watch below. Peter Weber

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Hillary Clinton urges Americans to 'fight back' against the GOP's health-care bill - The Week Magazine

Five things we’ve learned about Hillary Clinton’s failed presidential campaign from new inside account – The Independent

It is tempting to think that if only Bon Jovi, at the election eve rally for Hillary Clinton, had played just one more encore song with the volume cranked all the way up to 11, Hillary would have swept the rust belt and won election to become the 45th President of the United States.

Of coursethe explanatory factors behind an election result which elicits the vote of over 130m people after a campaign lasting over a year, featuring two candidates who had both been in the public eye for decades, will be numerous and varied. In Shattered: Inside Hillary Clintons Doomed Campaign, reporters Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes use unprecedented access inside Hillarys team throughout the election to reveal some of the failures specific to Clintons campaign and strategy that brought about one of the least predicted and, for the liberal world, most calamitous election defeats in modern political history.

There are broadly five takeaways from Allen and Parnes mammoth work of reporting on how an election result, that can somehow seem at once utterly unfathomable and deeply inevitable, came to pass.

Hillarys failed campaign in 2008 to be the Democratic nominee for president was famous for its infighting and soap opera feuds that often went public. Hillary had those failures in the forefront of her mind as she began her 2016 run, but failed to prevent a similarly conflict-ridden personnel structure plague her campaign, with interdependent, destructive power struggles play out between rival factions.

The map of Clintonworld looked like a traffic jam on a Venn diagram. Hillary had a huge network of advisers, staff and confidantes whose collective contribution was cacophonous, with many chieftains but no clear leader. With warring groups fighting for power to the detriment of effective messaging to the public, no single authority or campaign leader had control over all the big decisions, nor was important information shared across factions.

Ruthless Democratic party operative Robert Mook, only aged 35 when the team assembled, was campaign chief, but his Mook Mafia still had to contend with campaign chairmanJohn Podesta and the older advisors, a competing State Department team led by Huma Abedin, as well as a team of consultants and communications personnel.

It was unclear who was really running the campaign write the reporters, and few factions could be fully trusted, as advice came laden with the baggage of the advisers agenda, of either pleasing Hillary or undermining a rival factions power. Mook began to develop a reputation for caring as much about his own brand, and promoting his own people, as he did about getting Hillary elected.

Clinton campaign chief Robby MookGetty

Mooks relationship with Podesta wasfraught throughout the campaign, as Mook would hoarde information he was privy to, away from Podesta, as would Abedin.

The campaign was an unholy mess, fraught with tangled lines of authority, petty jealousies, and powerdistributed so broadly that none of her aides or advisers had control of the whole apparatus. Major decisions had multiple clearances required, with speech-writing often done by committee, leading to flat, unmemorable messaging. This was not a luxury the campaign could afford given the difficulty Hillary already had articulating why she should be trusted or had the best plan for America.

For all the strategic and structural faults of the campaign, the lack of vision or platform from the candidate herself was a particularly jarring theme. When Hillary announced her decision to run, it wasnt immensely clear to many of her aides, let alone the public, why her, and why now.

Clintons aimlessness was typified by her Roosevelt Island speech formally announcing her candidacy in the summer of 2015, when she whimpered her way into the election. The speech contained no overarching narrative explaining her candidacy, no framing of Hillary as the point of an underdog spear, no emotive power.

To her critics, including many Sanders supporters, this betrayed a Clintonian entitlement to power, without having to convince the electorate of quite what made her the best person to shape Americas future. America cant succeed unless you succeed. That is why I am running for president of the United States of America, she pronounced in that speech, in a trite tautology that did as little to strike a chord with an electorate as her campaign slogan Stronger Together.

This was an electorate that had lost huge amounts of faith in political and economic institutions, and in addition to the danger of fielding a candidate that embodies the establishment so thoroughly as Clinton, it was often hard for voters to name a concrete policy or change that Clinton was proposing.

Despite Clinton being a self-professed policy wonk, who lives for the complexity, she didnt like taking issues shed been working on for years and boiling them down into little sound bites. As a result, chief speechwriter Dan Schwerin complained repeatedly that Hillary was not doing enough to find a vision of her own that he could help her put into words. More than a year into the campaign, her staff didnt know her well enough to turn her candidacy into a compelling narrative for her.

As much as there was someone in charge of campaign strategy to get 270 electoral college votes, it was Mook, whose game plan rested on a simple premise: prioritize turning out those voters sympathetic to Hillary, instead of trying to convince anyone who is undecided or antagonistic to Clinton to get behind her.

Persuasion, they concluded, just wasnt feasible, for the amount ofmoney it cost to send out door-knockers for what might be pointless conversations. The team aimed to mobilize the Obama coalition, of African Americans, Latinos, women and college-educated whites, but the more she catered to them, the more she pushed away other segments of the electorate.

This was a racial dynamic to the coalition that worked differently for different candidates; Obama could focus on white voters without alienating his African-American stronghold, while Clintons attention to ethnic minorities came at greater risk of alienating white voters.

From a huge office hub in Brooklyn, the Clinton campaign were confident of winning big, against a candidate whose behaviour they believed to be immediately disqualifying to the American electorate on a number of counts. As a result, early on in the campaign they took for granted the blue wall of states that have voted Democratic since 1992, including Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania (all of which she would go on to lose), attempting to enjoy a sizable winning margin by breaking into states often won by the GOP such as Florida and North Carolina.

This quickly proved overly ambitious as November approached and Trumps poll numbers gained ground on Clinton. Its a bizarre strategy for a candidate for whom the American people have some of the strongest preconceptions of mistrust and careerism of any public figure in history. Polling showed the first word people associate with Clinton is liar -the number of voters who were either undecided, sceptical or antagonistic to her were huge. The team rarely if ever devoted extra resources to trying to get them on side.

Mooks cautious strategy worked for the primary campaign for Hillary to be the Democratic nominee over Bernie Sanders, because she already had the backing of a majority of the partys base, so purely focusing on turning these voters out worked. Clinton was sent to big cities during the primaries where a concentration of black and Latino voters would mobilize. But Sanders appeal to millenials and working-class whites, who were more prone to be sceptical of Clinton, had damaged her support amongst them, and thus in the general election, this caution and lack of work in creating a dialogue with said swing voters proved fatal.

While there was no single campaign leader, Robby Mook liked to be the only one with a full view of the campaigns arms, from budgeting to polling, data analytics, and field organizing. And from this position of power, Mooks strategy was almost exclusively based upon a particular analyticsmodel from data chief Elan Kriegel, which gave them their information on voter intentions, opinion and reaction to messaging.

They declined to spend money on third-party polling in the swing states, and refused to use pollsters to track voter preferences all through the final three weeks of the campaign, such was the faith in their own modelling. Senior Democratic operatives with more experience begged Mook to poll states like Florida in October, but Mook thought it was a waste of money, seeing the analytics as cheaper and quicker.

Unfortunately, the model drastically misread the electorate across many states, on many issues. John Podesta was one of a significant contingent of older consultants and staff on the campaign, including Bill Clinton, who mistrusted Mooks religious loyalty to their model which drove so many decisions.

Clinton campaign chairmanJohn PodestaGetty

Mook rolled back older forms of messaging like extra spending on television advertising at inflexion points in the campaign cycle, to the older crews chagrin. Focused on efficiencies in savings, the campaign declined to spend extra money on direct mail or digital advertising in several key battleground states, two methods crucial for targeting older voters and millenials, amongst whom her support was shaky.

There were no checks and balances and transparency on Mooks modelling that drove so much strategy, and so very few face-to-face conversations from the central campaign or on-the-ground operations happened. There was a networked organization ready to work on the ground, across the states, in the super PAC Ready for Hillary, that Mook declined to make use of because his modelling didnt say he needed to, such was their supposed polling lead. (Mook was also in no mood to empower another organizer in his own campaign headquarters.)

This is a model that meant Clinton herself never set foot in the state of Wisconsin after becoming the nominee, a model that showed Clinton had a comfortable lead to win in the months and week preceding election day, and why Clintons team could be so confident on victory even after exit polls started coming in on election night.

Robby Mookdirecting staffGetty

Not only did Clinton not set foot in Wisconsin, but Mook wouldnt even send basic resources like campaign literature for on-the-ground activists to make the case for persuading voters. This complaint of declining to fund even the most basic resources for grassroots activists to engage in any kind of voter persuasion in states like Colorado and New Mexico, two states that Clinton narrowly won, echoed those of campaign leaders across battleground states in which she was less fortunate.

An inability to measure the opinions and mood of the electorate, along with an inability to craft an inspiring, coherent message from the candidate, paints a bleak picture of a blind, disempowered candidate.

Loyalty is everything to Hillary Clinton. Her closest and most trusted advisors were those who had been most loyal to her, rather than necessarily being the most politically astute or competent. Political advisers with decades of experience and election-winning records often failed to get facetime or influential lines of communication with the candidate.

As few people had meaningful access to Clinton, those who did rarely told her something that would upset her, and possibly make oneself an antagonist to Clinton, lose proximity to her, and thus also lose power.

It was a self-signed death warrant to raise a question about Hillarys competence in loyalty-obsessed Clintonworld write Allen and Parnes. In addition to the muddled sources of power discussed above, this loyalty fundamentalism created a toxic atmosphere in which a bonfire of the vanities raged inside the campaign, while liabilities or incompetence might be given a pass.

Huma Abedin and Hillary ClintonGetty

Though largely no fault of her own, Huma Abedins connection to scandal-riddled Anthony Weiner and his resurrection of the e-mail scandal with one week to go meant that Abedin was a disaster waiting to happen,. She would have been cast aside long ago, Allen and Parnes argue, by any political operation that was appropriately sensitive to political risk, and uncompromising in its pursuit of winning votes.

When James Comey revealed the source of that late email fiasco to be Anthony Wieners laptop, Clinton agonized over removing Abedin from the campaigns centre, despite the absolute necessity of doing so, due to Abedins unrivalled loyalty to her, and an almost maternal compassion Clinton felt for Abedin.

Moreover, when Hillary was diagnosed with pneumonia by her doctor, the closest advisor to her, Huma Abedin, kept this information guarded, with most of the rest of her team in the dark about a significant change in the candidates health.

As a result no-one stopped Hillary from intense debate preparation and then attendance of a September 11 memorial service, which made Clinton stagger and faint on the way to her car, giving Trump political meat to question her fitness for office. The campaign team misled the press in their initial response because Abedin hadnt properly briefed their spokespeople, and not for the first time. Like with the Clinton campaign's first response to the e-mail scandal, this only further cemented the impression of the Clintonworldmisleading the public andhiding the truth.

This was one of a number of times that misinformation and silence, motivated by loyalty and power-hoarding, severely hurt the campaigns ability to engage in crisis management.

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Five things we've learned about Hillary Clinton's failed presidential campaign from new inside account - The Independent

Erdogan threatens to say goodbye to EU as official warns …

Published time: 2 May, 2017 13:50 Edited time: 3 May, 2017 09:45

Turkey will say goodbye to the EU if it refuses to open new chapters on its accession into the bloc, President Erdogan has stated. It comes after an EU commissioner said Ankaras actions and policies have made it impossible to meet EU criteria to join.

From now on there is no option other than opening the chapters you have not yet opened. If you do not open [them], goodbye, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at a Tuesday ceremony to mark his return to the ruling AK Party, as quoted by Reuters.

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His comments came after European Commissioner Johannes Hahn, who oversees EU membership bids, told Reuters that Turkeys limits on press freedom, mass jailing, and diminishing civil rights have made it almost impossible for Turkey to meet EU joining criteria.

Hahn said on Tuesday that EU rules are not negotiable, and that the bloc will not put aside the human rights situation in discussions with Ankara.

Everybodys clear that, currently at least, Turkey is moving away from a European perspective, Hahn said.

There is no version of Turkish democracy. There is only democracy. Turkish people have the same rights to live in freedom as Europeans do.

He stated that the focus of the relationship between the bloc and Ankara has to be something else we have to see what could be done in the future, to see if we can restart some kind of cooperation.

Ankara and Brussels have been in talks for years over the possibility of Turkey joining the EU. The already slow negotiations were stalled even further following Erdogans sweeping crackdown after a failed coup in July 2016.

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Relations have since become even more strained following last months referendum results, which allow Erdogan to be granted sweeping powers when it comes to national matters of legislation, finance, appointments, and civil society. The European Commission has called for an investigation into alleged voting irregularities.

Last year, Ankara agreed to a landmark migrant deal with the bloc which would see it take back all illegal migrants landing in Greece from its shores, in exchange for accelerated talks on becoming a member of the bloc and billions in refugee assistance from the EU.

Turkey also rallied for visa-free travel to Europes Schengen zone as part of the deal, but was told by the EU that a list of 72 conditions must first be met a key sticking point of which is Turkeys strict anti-terrorism laws, which Europe has said must be loosened in order for that agreement to go ahead.

Erdogan has repeatedly threatened to destroy the deal if Brussels does not hold up its end of the agreement, a move which could see Europe once again struggling to deal with an overwhelming influx of refugees.

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As Turkey’s Erdogan savors new powers, there are whispers of dissent among his loyalists – Washington Post

ISTANBUL The scenes of Turkeys bloody and abortive military coup last July still scar Uskudar, an old waterside district of Istanbul that was a deadly front of violence that night and remains, nearly a year later, a wellspring of the nations rage.

Residents nervously recall the armored vehicles that appeared thatnight, the rattle of gunfire and the snarling of motorcycles whisking the wounded to the hospital. At least 13 people from Uskudar were killed during the attempted coup, a cataclysm in Turkey that left more than 200 people dead, an anxious country betrayed and the government consumed with a vigorous hunt for it enemies.

So it came as some surprise last month when the residents of Uskudar voted to defeat a measurethat gave the president greater powers rejecting a set of constitutional changes that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his allies had pitched to the country as a patriotic response to the treachery in July. ThatErdogan has a house in Uskudar and votes in the district made it all the more surprising.

The presidents resolute loyalists ultimately propelled him to anationwide victory in the referendum, as they have time and again in votes since 2002, defiantly rejecting criticism that the changes doomed Turkey to one-man rule. But thenarrow win and the defeat of the measure in places such as Uskudar, as well as in Turkeys three largest cities, has also prompted an unusual degree ofintrospection among some supporters of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and even a hint of dissent.

In interviews with supporters of the party in Uskudar and elsewhere, there was an acknowledgment that voters had delivered the AKP a message, although its meaning was disputed. Erdogans most hardcore advocates brushed off the losses in big cities, insisting that the slim margin was due to campaign blundersor the obdurate views of opposition party voters.

Others, though, conceded that the vote had aggravated unsustainable societal divisions in Turkey. And in more damning, albeit guarded, critiques, the party was accused of arrogance and thegovernment of being fixated onits purge of enemies, which for some had gone too far.

Melih Ecertas, the 30-year-old national youth leader of the AKP, who splits his time between Uskudar and Ankara, the capital, said the partys no voters fell into roughly two camps. They included a cohort loyal to elder statesmen in the party who had been shunted from Erdogans inner circle over the past few years and who had remained noticeably silent during the governments all-out effort to pass the constitutional changes.

[Inside a nervous Turkish newsroom as the government closes in]

Then there were those who questioned why the party, given its success, felt compelled to pursue such a drastic transformation in Turkeys system of governance.

They say, Why the change? We are powerful, Ecertas said.

In one subtle but high-profile complaint, Abdullah Gul, a founder of the AKP and Turkeys former president, on Thursday broke the relative silence he had maintained during the referendum campaign and called for a comprehensive reform process in Turkey.It was ostensibly a response to a decision by a leading European human rights body to begin monitoring Turkey for the first time in more than a decade. But Gul also appeared to be drawing a contrast between his partys earlier era when he was a key figure and the present.

Reform, he said, will bring democracy, law and human rights standards closer to universal criteria by rapidly expelling the psychological trauma created by the treacherous July 15 coup.

Growing up with Erdogan

Ecertas, the youth leader, was one of the AKPs most tireless advocates in the run-up to the referendum, shepherding a direct-mail campaignto young Turks that he said reached more than 14 million voters.He used PowerPoint slides and handouts to argue the merits of the constitutional amendments to journalists changes that converted Turkey from a parliamentary to a presidential system and brought the country critically needed stability, he said.

Ecertas was among a generation first drawn to politics in the 1990s as Erdogan rose to prominence, revered for his charisma and his vows to champion the values of conservative Muslims in Turkeys largely secular public sphere.

My father admired him a lot, said Ecertas, who was 7 when Erdogan became the mayor of Istanbul. All of Turkey admired Erdogan.

Ecertas attended religious schools in Istanbul and Emerson College in Boston as a Fulbright scholar. After university, he formally joined the AKP in 2011, seeingthe party as a force for change not just an Islamist movement advocating for conservatives such as himself, but a challenger to Turkeys ossified politics and a modernizing force.

The referendum victory was the culmination of the partys struggles. The day of the vote, he said, is the day we changed the system, that once forbade religious schools, the Koran. The system will never allow anyone to do anything that the Turkish population doesnt want.

Asked about the defeat of the referendum measure in places such as Uskudar and the AKP members who voted against the party Ecertas said it wasimportant to acknowledge and understand all of the no voters.

Not good for the country

The AKP seems more likely to plot a path toward victory in the next elections, rather than reflect on the complaints of disaffected supporters, according to Fehmi Koru, a journalist who is close to senior AKP figures and said he had voted with the party since it came to power.

Koru, who has known Abdullah Gul since the two participated in a religious youth movement together, said that when the AKP came to power in 2002, it was very much interested in making the country more free, he said. The government served the people, he added, saying that people who voted for the AKP like me voted with a clear conscience.

His disappointment had grown over thepast five years because of Turkeys economic problems, the governments foreign policy decisions and the feeling that, increasingly, Turkey was not a united country. In the aftermath of the coup attempt, his journalist friends were imprisoned as the government widened a crackdown beyond the followers ofFethullah Gulen, anexiled Turkish cleric the authorities accuse of orchestrating the unsuccessful attempt to take over the government.

Cracks were visible in the relationshipbetween Turks and the AKP-led government, Koru said. When people look at them, they dont say they are very modest and alleviate the peoples problems. How do I say this they are too sure of themselves, he said.

He voted against the referendum measure partly because a parliamentary system was more in line with Turkeys history, he said, but also because it was a radical change that appeared designed to serve Erdogan.The president, he said, loves the people, and the people love him.But Turkey would be stuck with the changes after Erdogan left the scene.

This is not good for the country, he said.

Sharpened battle lines

For some AKP supporters in Uskudar, acknowledging Turkeys malaise did not mean a loss of faith in the president. In shops that stood empty because of the struggling economy, among residents frustrated with a lack of municipal services, there was a conviction that Erdogan would persevere.

The presidentis very clever, said Selen Ulustu, 40, who runs a beauty supplies store. Thats why he is the winner.

More importantly, she said, the referendum had clarified a struggle between observant Muslims like her, whose frame of reference was Turkeys Ottoman history, and Erdogans opponents, for whom history began with Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,the founder of Turkeys modern secular republic.The coup attempt had only sharpened the battle lines.

There are some people who are not aware of its seriousness, said Ulustu, adding that she had reported at least eight members of her family to the authorities for being suspected Gulenists.

Down the street from her shop, Huda Ozdemir, 24, who attended university in Uskudar and said she came from a conservative Muslim family, was the kind of voter whom the AKP might have reliably courted in the past.

But she balked at thepresidents accumulation of power, at the level of nationalism during the campaign and at what she called the rhetoric of victimhood that the AKP had created in the name of defending conservative women like her.

Shevoted no. And she persuaded her 20-year-old sister, once a determined AKP supporter, to do the same.

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As Turkey's Erdogan savors new powers, there are whispers of dissent among his loyalists - Washington Post