Sunday, December 27, 2015

Another Indication That Hillary Will NOT Be The Democratic Candidate For Prez. If Not Hillary, Then Who? We Believe It Will Be Obama.

We know many of you think that we are wrong about the Democratic candidate for President. For those who are new or have not heard, we believe it will be Obama. Yes, we realize there is the 22nd Amendment which prevents a President from serving more than two terms, but Obama has not cared about Constitutional requirements before, so why should he now.


One very unreported story, except here, is the number of prominent Democrats who have NOT endorsed the "pre-ordained" candidate, Hillary Clinton. Those in the Obama camp, those close to the President, have not endorsed her. So what are the Obama plans.

There are at least three situations that could allow Obama to be the candidate. First would be a convention without a candidate as Hillary pulls out of the race for health or being under indictment. We don't believe that Bernie Sanders would be nominated, even if he was the only candidate left.

Secondly, would be national riots. Using nationwide "Black Lives Matter" civil disturbances as cover, he would call off voting until "it is safe to vote."

Thirdly, a national emergency caused by a war, an EMP attack, or something that would have the politicians and media calling for Obama's re-election.  Their argument is that we should never change "horses middle of the stream."  

Or some event that the Obama clan will create. Their imagination, deceit and conniving is beyond this poor correspondent's.

But no matter what is going to occur, the fact that prominent Democrats are sitting on the sidelines, should give credence to our paranoia.

Conservative Tom

The Hill: Prominent Democrats Putting Off Hillary Endorsements

Image: The Hill: Prominent Democrats Putting Off Hillary Endorsements
By Todd Beamon   |   Saturday, 26 Dec 2015 06:09 PM

Though Hillary Clinton allegedly has the backing of the Democratic establishment, she has not been able to attract the support of key party figures.

President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden — along with top Democrats in Congress and one of the nation's largest labor unions — are sitting on the sidelines, The Hill reports.
Clinton, however, holds the most endorsements so far over key rival Bernie Sanders in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
The former secretary of state's campaign says that Clinton is backed by 145 House members, 38 of the 46 senators who caucus with Democrats, 12 governors and 17 national unions.

By comparison, Sanders has been endorsed by two members of Congress and three labor groups, the Hill reports.

Here’s some of the key Democrats and groups who remain on the sidelines as the primary race gathers steam:
  • President Obama: The White House told the Hill that Obama plans to vote in the March 15 primary in Illinois. The president could send a strong signal in not voting for Clinton. The pair squared off in the 2008 race for the nomination, though Obama later named her as the nation's top diplomat.
  • Vice President Biden: Biden declined to challenge Clinton for the nomination in October — but instead of announcing his support for the former first lady, he slammed her for something she said at a debate and warned against candidates attacking Obama's record, the Hill reports.
  • Sen. Harry Reid: The Senate minority leader said in June that he would announce an endorsement soon, but that has not yet happened.
  • Rep. Nancy Pelosi: The House minority leader has strongly indicated that she supports Clinton, but no formal endorsement has yet materialized.
  • Sen. Elizabeth Warren: The Massachusetts senator was heavily recruited by progressive Democrats to challenge Clinton, but Warren adamantly insisted that she was not running for the nomination.
  • Richard Trumka: The head of nation's largest federation of labor unions, the AFL-CIO, Trumka has praised both Sanders and Biden before he dropped out — but some labor leaders have slammed Clinton for backing some of President Obama’s trade legislation, the Hill reports.
  • Gov. Jerry Brown: The California governor, who challenged Bill Clinton for the nomination in 1992, slammed his wife this past August during Clinton's email scandal — though he has spoken warmly of her in recent months, according to the Hill.

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