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Jeb Bush's Son Once Called Ted Cruz The "Future Of The Republican Party"

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In 2012, George P. Bush said he was confident Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz would inspire a “new generation” of leaders.

Lm Otero / AP

George P. Bush, the Texas Land Commissioner and son of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, once called Senator Ted Cruz "the future of the Republican Party" and compared Cruz's effect on the party to the "Great Reformation."

"Ted is the future of the Republican Party," Bush said in a statement in support for Cruz during the 2012 Texas Republican Senate primary. Cruz, an upstart conservative and grassroots candidate, ultimately came from behind in that race to upset Texas lieutenant governor David Dewhurst, the establishment favorite.

"He is a proven conservative, and his personal story embodies the American Dream. Like Marco Rubio in Florida, I am confident that Ted will inspire a new generation of leaders to stand up and defend American Exceptionalism."

Speaking with the Texas Tribune about his 2013 campaign for land commissioner, Bush said his goal was to follow Cruz's playbook.

"Our idea is to take a page out of Ted Cruz's playbook and engage the grassroots and the activists within the party throughout the state," Bush said.

In that interview, Bush compared the effect candidates like Ted Cruz had on the party to the Great Reformation.

"I analogize it to the Great Reformation, where you have outside forces that reform a body or an institution," Bush said. "I think there are definitely some positive effects that are taking place within the party because of the Tea Party, increased grassroots activism, increased attention and concerns with respect to what's happening in Washington,D.C"

The young Bush told the Texas Tribune in September 2014 that Cruz was a "force of nature" and "fearless."

"I think he has been a forceful advocate for the issues that we talked about today on Obamacare and now increasingly on the international stage," said Bush. "But you know he is a force of nature on the conservative side and he's fearless. And honestly there are a lot of folks who are hungry for that type of challenge in Washington DC. And so we still exchange texts here and there you know, obviously we will help him with whatever he needs."

Asked about his past statements on Cruz by the Tribune, Bush said "I'm not going to endorse."

Asked about his dad, he said, "I think folks know that I love him."


McCain: Not Arming Ukrainians "One Of The Most Shameful Chapters In American History"

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“The Ukrainians aren’t asking for American boots on the ground, they’re just asking for weapons to defend themselves.”

Paul Marotta / Getty Images

Arizona Sen. John McCain says the United States not providing Ukraine with weaponry to defend themselves against Russian aggression is "one of the most shameful chapters in American history."

The U.S. has provided Ukraine with non-lethal military aid but has denied requests for requests for weapons despite having Congressional authority do so. McCain was one of the lead signatures on a bipartisan letter back in February calling for arming of Ukraine against Russian aggression against their country.

"But, let me just say that one of the most shameful chapters in American history is our failure to provide the Ukrainians with weapons to defend themselves while Vladimir Putin dismembers their country," the Arizona senator said on the John CATS Roundtable Radio Show on Sunday.

McCain further added the failure to arm the Ukrainians was "disgraceful."

"The first time since the end of World War II that has happened. The Ukrainians aren't asking for American boots on the ground, they're just asking for weapons to defend themselves and they're being slaughtered by Vladimir Putin and his stooges and it's disgraceful. I would say that's as far as our moral commitment is concerned that's probably one our biggest areas of concern."

McCain earlier in the interview cited former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger saying that the world has never been in more crises since the end of WWII, noting Chinese aggression into international waterways and events in the Middle East.

Here's the audio:

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Republican Congressman: Put The VA In Charge Of ISIS — They'd Get Beheadings Wrong

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“Can you imagine if the VA was in charge of ISIS?”

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Rep. Mike Coffman, a Colorado Republican who has prominently led the charge to have a Veterans Affairs hospital stifled by bureaucratic delays built in his district, joked he'd like to put VA leadership in charge of ISIS on Friday.

"I was speaking before a group the other day and said it's too bad we can't take VA leadership and export it and give it to some of our adversaries around the planet. Let them suffer under VA's leadership," said Coffman.

"Can you imagine if the VA was in charge of ISIS?" he added using the beheading comparison.

"They'd probably say: 'Oh, you know if wasn't quite 2,000 that we beheaded, it was really 24… is the accurate number. And we're sorry that, in fact, they were all our own terrorists that we beheaded because they got misclassified in the system as Christians.'"

"I mean that would be, um…that would be the VA in charge of ISIS. So, clearly we need to clean house. We need better leadership. The president needs to be engaged on this and other issues."

"I don't know what they're putting in your orange juice back there but... that was great," the radio host replied to Coffman.

A Coffman spokesman said the comments were, "a controversy only with liberals and the Washington outrage machine. His sarcastic point was obvious - the VA is an organizational disaster."

Coffman was recently the lead sponsor of a bipartisan bill to get more funding to build the Aurora, Colorado, VA hospital. The project is the most expensive in VA history dues to delays and cost overruns. Additionally, the VA has faced intense scrutiny over the last year for massive waiting lists and delays in care to veterans.

Peter King: De Blasio's Absence From Clinton Rally "A Knife In The Back"

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“She’s saying all the things now that de Blasio is saying. I guess de Blasio’s answer is that he really means them, and she doesn’t.”

STAN HONDA / Getty Images

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Congressman Peter King called New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio's decision not to attend Hillary Clinton's campaign kickoff rally on Roosevelt Island this weekend "a knife in the back."

The Republican from New York also suggested that de Blasio's own presidential aspirations may be behind the mayor's decision to distance himself from the Clintons.

"He was her campaign manager for the Senate back in 2000," King told radio host Joe Piscopo, in an interview on New York's AM 970 The Answer. "You would think, as the mayor of the city where she was the Senator, that that would be an ideal relationship between the two of them -- but no."

"I think de Blasio, Bill de Blasio, really thinks that he has a chance. If there's a stalemate, if Hillary collapses, and people are not gonna take Bernie Sanders seriously, why not take the mayor of New York City seriously?" King continued.

King told Piscopo that he thought a de Blasio bid would be "disastrous," but that he could understand the mayor's thinking.

"Let's face it -- the country is changing, the world is changing," said King. "Maybe he feels that anything could happen."

King went on to suggest that the Clintons should be hurt by de Blasio's betrayal.

"If I were Hillary, I would really feel a little bit of a knife in the back there," King claimed, "because again, she and Bill Clinton did an awful lot to move Bill de Blasio along, and she's saying all the things now that de Blasio is saying."

"I guess de Blasio's answer is that he really means them, and she doesn't."

Hillary Clinton: "ISIS Has Mastered The Internet"

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“The internet does a lot of wonderful things for us but it does enable criminal cartels, as well as terrorists, to be in very close communication.”

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said Sunday that fighting ISIS' online presence would be a significant part of her strategy in taking on the terrorist group, which she argues "has mastered the internet."

Speaking to Radio Iowa for one of the first two interviews she's granted on the campaign trail, Clinton reiterated her opposition to putting more US troops on the ground in Iraq and expressed support for the President's strategy in Iraq and Syria. She then argued that ISIS is a "very serious threat" that is "spreading" because of the group's deft use of the internet.

"I have supported the President's approach to dealing with this very serious threat — and it's a threat, obviously, first and foremost to the Iraqis, the Syrians — but it's a spreading threat that is also one that we have to take seriously because ISIS has mastered the Internet," Clinton said.

Clinton briefly outlined her view of America's role in confronting the radical jihadist organization, saying that the US must "take them on through the Iraqis," while working with allies to combat "their presence on the Internet."

"We just have to take them on through the Iraqis, because if the Iraqis won't stand up for themselves, there's nothing we can do for them," Clinton argued. "Get better support from this Iraqi government so that they understand the threat they face as opposed to just seeing it as a threat to Sunnis in Iraq. Do a better job with our partners and allies in combating the presence on the internet. That's a big order of business, but that's as far as I would go."

Clinton also offered an assessment of the costs and benefits of the Internet as a whole, before describing some of the ways ISIS has used it, including "to direct attacks here in the United States and elsewhere."

"And the Internet does a lot of wonderful things for us but it does enable criminal cartels, as well as terrorists to be in very close communication," she said. "And what ISIS has done is to use their sites to recruit, to train, to enlist, to direct attacks here in the United States and elsewhere."

Here is the audio:

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Jeb Bush Embarks On Least Joyful Campaign Ever

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Jim Cole / AP

Five days ago, Jeb Bush was outside a hotel in Berlin, straining to evince something other than abject dread at the prospect of running for president.

He stood, rigid and erect, in front of a semicircle of American political reporters as they peppered him with questions about the recent shake-up inside his campaign-in-waiting. He labored through talking points, his plodding recitation occasionally drowned out by the BMWs and bicyclists whirring by in morning traffic. After about a minute, his answers began to curdle into a quasi-candid airing of grievances about the political process. He scolded the press for their hyperbolic campaign coverage ("I don't even read the clips"); dismissed the up-and-down nature of the primary polls ("It doesn't really matter"); and pleaded for patience and perspective in the early state-of-the-race punditry ("It's June, for crying out loud!").

Then, as though suddenly remembering himself, the almost-candidate abandoned candor and returned to script. "It's a lot of work, and I'm excited about the prospects of this," Bush said, conveying roughly the same excitement of someone expecting gallbladder surgery. "It's a long haul."

From the beginning, Bush has insisted his decision about whether to undertake a presidential run in 2016 would depend on his answer to one question: "Can I do it joyfully?" But now, as he officially launches his campaign at a Monday afternoon rally in Miami, Bush's pursuit of the presidency seems destined to be a grinding, grumpy ordeal — permeated with disdain for the trivial demands of campaign pageantry, and rooted in a sense of duty to save the GOP from a field of candidates he seems to regard as unprepared or unserious.

Joylessness wafts off Bush wherever he goes, from the photo ops on his just-completed tour of Europe to the grip-and-grins on the campaign trail in New Hampshire.

He responds with impatient sarcasm when he is forced to field questions about political strategy — or his brother's polarizing record — instead of public policy. "Anybody have some questions about Germany?" he deadpanned in Berlin, by way of announcing he was through talking about campaign personnel.

His strict adherence to the trendy, low-carb Paleo diet — with its onslaught of grilled chicken and raw almonds — has left him trimmer, crankier, and frequently complaining that he is hungry.

He has been told he needs to make an effort to smile more.

Of course, presidential campaigns have never been uniformly joyful affairs, and every candidate has their fair share of miserable days. But in Bush's case, the surface-level signs of weariness may be symptomatic of the fundamental rationale for his candidacy. Despite his long-held passion for public policy and stated desire to "develop a message that's hopeful and optimistic about the future of the country," Bush is not entering the Republican civil war as a true believer fighting zealously for one ideological tribe of conservatism. He is casting himself, instead, as the mature, sensible, electable candidate — the GOP grown-up with a proven ability to "move the dial" on key issues while in office.

This approach is premised on the belief that too many of his rivals are either inexperienced lightweights or aspiring celebrities auditioning not for the presidency, but for radio shows and book contracts. When he says that the Republican nominee must be willing to "lose the primary to win the general," he is not just defending his own violations of conservative orthodoxy on issues like immigration and Common Core education standards. He is also implicitly accusing his rivals of un-presidential pandering.

"I'm not going to change my views because today someone has a view that's different," he told reporters in Estonia. “I think candidates have a duty to persuade; that’s what this is about — it’s about the power of ideas and then giving people a sense that you have leadership skills to actually make it so."

The fundamentally oppositional nature of Bush's campaign is illustrated by his decision last week to swap out his perennially cheerful campaign manager, David Kochel, for the younger, more sharp-elbowed Danny Diaz, a master of rapid response and opposition research whom Bush touted as a "grinder." His campaign is now reportedly planning to use its well-stocked war chest to launch an aggressive assault this summer aimed at knocking off the other top-tier candidates in the field.

But if Bush's entry into the race is motivated by a desire to restore a sense of maturity, sobriety, and substance to the process, that is almost certainly a recipe for misery. It may, indeed, get him nominated — Mitt Romney triumphed over a much weaker field with roughly the same strategy — but in the meantime, he will have to spend significant time on a debate stage in between people like Donald Trump and Ben Carson, while they hurl high-octane sound bites at the cameras.

His aversion to partisan theatrics seems to extend to a distrust of the media ecosystem that incentivizes and rewards it. Bush, like every other serious Republican candidate, goes through the motions of courting the conservative press. But his personal tastes trend more toward the Wall Street Journal than right-wing talk radio, according to friends, and during a press conference in Warsaw last week he came perilously close to questioning the legitimacy of some Fox News coverage.

Asked to respond to recent stories about companies using H-1B visas to displace American workers with immigrants, Bush said, "I've actually seen it on Fox, three or four times, this subject. I've been curious to know what the full story is. ... Sometimes you see things in the news reports, you don't get the full picture. Maybe that's the case here."

Bush's campaign has emphasized an upbeat message in the days leading up to his announcement, unveiling an update to his old "Jeb!" logo, and releasing a video bearing the words "TODAY & TOMORROW" that features Bush telling a crowd, "This will be the most extraordinary time to be alive."

But so far, the candidate doesn't appear to be there with them.



Which Of These 3 Presidential Announcement Songs Was The Best?

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You know you liked these — because they were all actually good. But there can only be one that’s best.

But three songs have been better — like actually really good — at these rallies. And it's time to decide which one was best.

This cover of "Emotion" at Jeb Bush's announcement:

View Video ›

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The "Lose Yourself" choir at Ben Carson's announcement:

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The Rick Perry rap:

View Video ›

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View Entire List ›

Jeb Bush Highlights His History — But Not That History

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Joe Raedle / Getty

MIAMI — In a presidential campaign announcement speech that highlighted hopeful messages about the future, Jeb Bush also focused heavily on his own past as Florida governor. It's a past that's largely distinct from the political dynasty he came from.

A large portion of Bush's announcement speech, given in a gymnasium at Miami Dade College, was devoted to his record as governor, a position he has not held since 2007.

"We will lift our sights again, make opportunity common again, get events in the world moving our way again," Bush said. “We will take Washington — the static capital of this dynamic country — out of the business of causing problems. We will get back on the side of free enterprise and free people. I know we can fix this. Because I’ve done it."

Bush said he had been a "reforming governor, not just another member of the club."

“There’s no passing off responsibility when you’re a governor, no blending into the legislative crowd or filing an amendment and calling that success," he said, contrasting his record with other presidential candidates who are senators.

"We made Florida number one in job creation and number one in small business creation. 1.3 million new jobs, 4.4% growth, higher family income, eight balanced budgets, and tax cuts eight years in a row that saved our people and businesses 19 billion dollars," he said. "All this plus a bond upgrade to Triple-A compared to the sorry downgrade of America’s credit in these years. That was the commitment, and that is the record that turned this state around."

Given less attention in the speech: his brother and father, both former presidents, who were also a source of political experience for Bush since he was involved in their campaigns. Neither George W. Bush nor George H.W. Bush attended the launch event. Bush did thank both his parents, but only named his mother. Throughout Bush's quasi-campaign for the past few months, he has tried to balance the fact that he comes from one of the most powerful families in Republican politics with his quest to be seen as his own man, and a different kind of candidate — "the new Republican party," as one of his introduction speakers, Florida state senator Don Gaetz, described him on Monday. He's cautiously started to embrace his family's political legacy again, telling potential donors last month that his brother George W. Bush was his top advisor on Israel policy.

But on Monday, there wasn't much mention of his family's legacy at the announcement event, which was packed with supporters who have known him and supported him since his days as governor.

"My family's been friends with him for like 30 years," said Lourdes Carroll, a retiree from Miami. "My mom and dad have been friends for a long time, and I support his positions."

Sean Donnelly, a 20-year-old student, rode his bike to get to the event because "I really wanted to be here."

"He has the experience and the qualities that work. They worked for Florida and they can work for the United States," he said. "He's real and he's not fake, unlike Hillary Clinton." Donnelly's parents support Jeb as well, he said.

Bush's deep roots in the state, which he came to as a young man and developed into his own political stronghold apart from his family's history in the Northeast and, later, Texas, were on display at the launch event, which was filled with current and former Florida politicians. Bush's former lieutenant governor Toni Jennings spoke before he took the stage, as well as Gaetz. Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi and other notables were in attendance. The display of support from Florida's Republican establishment served as both a reminder of Bush's past as governor and, more subtly, as a show of strength vis-a-vis Marco Rubio, the other Florida candidate. A few days ago, Bush received the endorsements of most of the Florida Republican congressional delegation.

"If this isn't the Republican establishment of Florida — you're not Floridian, are you? Whoever is missing from here, I don't know who it is, but this is the establishment," said former U.S. Sen. Mel Martinez. "This was the establishment of the Republican Party of Florida, my goodness."

Of Rubio, Martinez said "I just think that Jeb is the guy who's prepared today" and that he doesn't want to "take a chance on someone who has not had the depth of experience" that Bush has had.

"I think he doesn't want to take anything for granted," Martinez said of Bush's decision not to mention his family a lot. "I don't think he wants anyone to think that he presumes that because of who he is, his family, that anything is going to be given to him."

"I've been dying for him to do what he did today, which is lay out his gubernatorial record, because I think it's something that's going to be very positive for him politically for the primary," Martinez said.


Killer Mike Is Running For Office In Georgia

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“Why? Because if I win, we win. Thank you now go vote.”

instagram.com / Via instagram.com

Killer Mike is running the jewels, and running for office.

The outspoken rapper, one-half of the explosive duo Run the Jewels, urged his fans in an Instagram post Monday to vote for him in a special election for an empty seat on Georgia's House of Representatives to take place on Tuesday.

"In Atlanta Georgia there will be special election tomorrow for District 55," Mike wrote. "Former state representative Tyrone Brooks no longer sits in the seat. I would like as many people as possible to go to the polls and write in Michael Render. Why because if I win we win. Thank you now go vote."

In the wake of the police shooting of Michael Brown last August, Mike wrote a widely shared Instagram post about the shooting and appeared on CNN to talk about police brutality.

Brooks resigned from his seat in April after pleading guilty to charges of tax fraud, among others.

Mike's last-minute announcement does not leave him any time to campaign, and he is likely a long shot in the crowded field of seven other Democratic candidates.

GOP Congressman: Iran Is "Hitler With Nuclear Weapons"

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“What we see today is Hitler with nuclear weapons potentially and that is the greatest threat this world has ever seen.”

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Rep. Robert Pittenger, a North Carolina Republican, told a local radio station on Monday that he believes the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran was equivalent to "Hitler with nuclear weapons."

Pittenger made the remarks while speaking to a large pro-Iranian democracy rally held by the National Council of Resistance of Iran that he attended in Paris, France, that included former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani and former presidential candidate Howard Dean.

"Iran has been under the oppression of the ayatollahs and the mullahs now for 30 years and there's a tremendous movement inside Iran, encouraged by people who came from all over the world to this meeting in Paris and the intent was to declare to the world and to Iran a full commitment to find liberty and find freedom to that great country," the North Carolina Republican said on WBT radio.

"I really told them that the American people, the American congress stood in solidarity with them on issues related to human rights and the lack of human rights in their country," he said. "The oppression of the people, we stood with them against the nuclear agreement that is being forged right now with Iran. As well as Iran being a sponsor of terrorism throughout the Middle East and throughout the world."

The congressman said the Iranian threat was equal to "Hitler with nuclear weapons."

"What we see today is Hitler with nuclear weapons potentially and that is the greatest threat this world has ever seen," he added.

Donald Trump: I Will Be The Greatest Jobs President That God Ever Created

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Donald Trump is really running for president.

Richard Ellis / Getty Images

Real estate mogul and reality television star Donald Trump on Tuesday officially entered the Republican primary for president.

"Ladies and gentlemen, I am officially running for president of the United States and we are going to make our country great again," Trump said at the Trump Tower in New York City.

Trump, by nature of being a public personality for decades, polls better than several other Republican candidates — and is therefore, under the current proposed debate rules, likely to be onstage with people like Scott Walker and Jeb Bush in the summer's first Republican debate.

LINK: Video: Donald Trump Announcement

This Is How Jeb Bush Plans To Reach Out To Latino Voters

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Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush stands with his family after announcing his plan to seek the Republican presidential nomination during an event at Miami-Dade College.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Jeb Bush was loose before his campaign kickoff event Monday in Miami, joking around backstage and letting loose a dirty word in Spanish, a "colloquial street Miami thing,” said Jose Mallea, Bush's hire for connecting with Hispanic voters.

"I don't want to repeat it, it was a curse word," he said in a phone interview.

That wasn't all, of course. He spoke in Spanish to the crowd, asking them to join his "cause of opportunity for all, the cause of all who love liberty, the noble cause of the United States."

It's this biculturalism — a comfort level he has speaking to Latinos, from Cubans in Miami to Mexican-Americans like his wife and kids or Puerto Ricans when he ran his dad's primary campaign there in 1980, that supporters and Latino Republicans say gives him an edge on other Republican candidates, and one the Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton doesn't actually possess.

Beyond the conventional wisdom that Latinos will be charmed by a former governor from a famous family who speaks their language fluently, Bush’s campaign is already making plans to weaponize those advantages into a vigorous effort to convince Latinos to vote Republican, a long-term effort to bring people out for Bush in key states, if not necessarily in some of the early primary states that come first.

The Bush campaign plans to create in-house videos about the candidate and his family, multiple sources told BuzzFeed News, meant to be shared socially and with Spanish-language stations that might not have the resources to follow Bush around, but who might like a video of the candidate meeting with Hispanic business owners in Colorado, for example.

There will also be major investment in a Spanish-language media buy campaign, led by Mallea, who served as Marco Rubio's campaign manager and was national strategic director for the Koch brother-funded LIBRE Initiative, which has made waves, serving Latino communities in key states, but drawing the ire of Democrats who say the group misrepresents itself.

The plan is for Bush to dedicate a portion of his expected $75 million to $100 million war chest to flooding Spanish-language media in print, radio, TV and online, which happened to be Mallea's forte for LIBRE.

Mallea, who avoided specifics, said the approach will be robust. "It will be as big or bigger than anybody else in this election, Democrat or Republican," he said.

He said "the whole team" will be involved: Bush's wife Columba, and sons Jeb Jr. and George P., who is in Nevada Wednesday holding a campaign event on his own.

Longtime Bush allies Al Cardenas and Ana Navarro said the campaign will strive to offer very few differences between English and Spanish-language content.

"The campaign will reach out to minority groups in a much more significant way than any other presidential campaign before," Cardenas said.

Navarro said that Bush loves that his campaign headquarters is on the edge of Sweetwater, a town nicknamed "Little Managua" for having the largest concentration of Nicaraguans in the U.S. — a place "where Nicaraguan fritangas stand next to Chick-fil-A's."

She said Bush may not be Hispanic by birth but is bicultural and everyone who has ever worked for him understands earning the Hispanic vote is a top priority.

"There is going to be a vigorous campaign for the Hispanic vote and it is all Jeb driven," she said. "Jeb's not one to treat earning the Hispanic vote as a specialty or niche thing, like many campaigns do. It is part and parcel of the general effort."

The campaign points to a separate Spanish-language launch video, with Bush speaking great Spanish, as an example of what it expects to continue to do.

Mallea, who chose Bush over Rubio, is seen as top talent for this role by both Democrats and Republicans.

Democratic pollster Fernand Amandi said his decision should be seen as a rebuke of Rubio. "Mallea by all intents and purposes should be in Rubio's camp," he said. "But he looked at both and decided to go to Jeb, which is very telling because he knows them both intimately."

When Mallea chose Bush over Rubio he told the Miami Herald the decision was a no-brainer: "The decision in terms of who's going to be a better president and who's ready to be president — that wasn't hard."

Amandi said there aren't a lot of success stories for Republicans with Latino voters, but one that stands out is Rubio in 2010, when Mallea was his campaign manager. (Later on, in 2011, when Mallea was running Florida for Newt Gingrich, they took down a Spanish-language ad from the campaign that called Mitt Romney anti-immigrant and slammed him to Miami Cubans for once using a line made popular by Fidel Castro, after Rubio called the ad "unfortunate," "inaccurate," and "inflammatory.")

Amandi said he expects the campaign to be aggressive and maybe even innovative in its outreach to Latinos, which would square with Bush's rationale for his candidacy.

"The center for Jeb's argument is that he can win and at the heart of winning for Republicans is doing better with the Hispanic vote than they've done in the last two cycles," he said. But he said the Bush family approach has always been a "love and kisses" one to the Hispanic community because, with the exception of immigration, "they can't connect with them on matters of policy."

Luis Alvarado, a Republican strategist, said he has received indications that the Bush campaign would pursue this Hispanic outreach plan, and he said in conversations with Mallea and newly named campaign manager Danny Diaz, they made it clear lessons have been learned from Mitt Romney's failed 2012 campaign.

As an example, he cited that Romney campaign leaders decided not to do "important Latino outreach."

"When you hire a Latino operative for optics only, you're going to fail," he said.

People that know Mallea say he understands the nuances and differences among the Latino community — something they believe is easy to talk about, but harder to really get in practice.

Mallea said an example of this can be found in the Southwest states like Colorado, Nevada, and New Mexico. It's not just the difference between New Mexico and Nevada, he said, but drilling deeper Albuquerque and Santa Fe are different themselves and "from a communications standpoint, sending the right messengers, having local people be part of the campaign" is important.

LIBRE's executive director, Daniel Garza, said Mallea's plan could be a gamechanger.

"It's a great idea, my father had a saying. 'Tell me what you give your attention to and I'll tell you who you are,'" he said. "Deliberately focusing content that Latinos can relate to, that is giving them attention and earning their vote, in the long term it's genius."

Garza said that fundamentally the voter is going to ask themselves one question: Will my life be better if I vote for this person or that person?

"The person who can communicate that will win," he said. "If you're in our churches, colleges, Chambers of Commerce speaking to us with tailored messaging, you're speaking my language, then I can connect with you."

And the campaign is banking on Latinos to listen, in a way they haven't to a Republican since it was George W. Bush speaking to them and seeking their vote.

Trump's Fake 2000 Campaign: Gun Bans, Single-Payer Health Care, And Taxes

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Donald Trump also wrote about his “pro-choice instincts.”

Darren McCollester / Getty Images

Real-estate mogul and now Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump briefly flirted with the idea of running for president in 2000 as a member of the Reform Party.

Trump, who launched his presidential campaign for the Republican nomination Tuesday, published an outline of his positions in a book titled, The America We Deserve.

Many of the positions Trump put forth in the book fall in line with what he stands for today. He opposed illegal immigration, supported capital punishment (and sometimes harsher sentences), supported school choice, wanted to fight terrorism, and he supported Israel.

On issues like abortion, gun rights, health care, and taxes, however, Trump's positions were far off from the current Republican line.

What would universal care look like? Nebraska senator Kerrey and others have advocated a version of the Canadian-style, single-payer system in which all payments for medical care are made to a single agency (as opposed to the large number of HMOs and insurance companies, with their diverse rules, claim forms, and déductibles ).

A recent study done by the Massachusetts Medical Society says that in Massachusetts the single-payer plan would save $ 5 billion or about one-seventh of the overhead spent on medical care. Administrative costs across America make up 25 percent of the healthcare dollar, which is two-and-a-half times the cost of healthcare administration in Canada. Doctors might be paid less than they are now, as is the case in Canada, but they would be able to treat more patients because of the reduction in their paperwork.

The Canadian plan also helps Canadians live longer and healthier than Americans. There are fewer medical lawsuits, less loss of labor to sickness, and lower costs to companies paying for the medical care of their employees. If the program were in place in Massachusetts in 1999 it would have reduced administrative costs by $ 2.5 million. We need, as a nation, to reexamine the single-payer plan, as many individual states are doing. But implementing such a plan is not simple. One major problem is that the single-payer plan in Canada is in financial difficulty, as is the nationalized plan in the United Kingdom. We have to improve on the prototype.

It's often argued that the American murder rate is high because guns are more available here than in other countries. After a tragedy like the massacre at Columbine High School, anyone could feel that it is too easy for Americans to get their hands on weapons. But nobody has a good solution. This is another issue where you see the extremes of the two existing major parties. Democrats want to confiscate all guns, which is a dumb idea because only the law-abiding citizens would turn in their guns and the bad guys would be the only ones left armed. The Republicans walk the NRA line and refuse even limited restrictions. I generally oppose gun control, but I support the ban on assault weapons and I also support a slightly longer waiting period to purchase a gun. With today's Internet technology we should be able to tell within seventy-two hours if a potential gun owner has a record.


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Rand Paul Cites Fake Abraham Lincoln Quote In Comments On Trade Authority

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“I like the Lincoln quote where he says…”

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

For second time in the same number of weeks, Republican Kentucky senator and presidential candidate Rand Paul used a fake quote from an American historical figure. Last week BuzzFeed News noted Paul used a fake Patrick Henry in a speech in South Carolina, and this week Paul looks to have misattributed a quote to Abraham Lincoln.

"Yeah, and I think that could be extraordinary in some ways," Paul said when a host on WVJS noted he was a candidate "who wanted to give up power." Paul was discussing giving the president authority to make trade deals.

Paul zeroed in on a Lincoln quote he liked to emphasis the point.

"I like the Lincoln quote where he says, 'any man can stand adversity but if you want to test a man give him power.' And the test is whether the power goes to their head or they try to accumulate more," Paul said. "I think what we really need to get is leaders who want to preserve the power with both the people, and the Congress, and the states and not try to grab up too much power in Washington."

The Lincoln quote, as noted by Harold Holzer, one of the nation's foremost scholars on Lincoln, is fake. Holzer, who has written nearly-thirty books on Lincoln, said the quote was "totally spurious" and not uttered by Lincoln.

"Rand Paul is not the first," he added.

Gordon Leidner, another Lincoln author who served on the board of directors of the Abraham Lincoln Institute likewise concluded in a post that this was one of the things that "Abraham Lincoln did not say."

The earliest attribution of the quote to Lincoln appears to be a 1931 local newspaper article in Iowa. Since then the quote appears to have been used mostly in management, self-help, and quote books.

Paul previously used a fake Thomas Jefferson quote in his Senate acceptance speech.


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The Seven Minutes In 2000 When The Clinton White House Considered Endorsing Marriage Equality

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President Bill Clinton prepares to speak during a fundraiser benefiting Sen. Dianne Feinstein while in San Francisco on March 3, 2000.

Reuters Photographer / Reuters

In the early months of 2000, aides inside President Bill Clinton’s White House faced a dilemma.

Californian voters would soon vote on a ballot measure to ban the recognition of marriages between same-sex couples. Should Clinton speak out against the California initiative, as the two leading Democratic candidates running for president had done? What could Clinton say?

Just four years earlier, Clinton had signed the Defense of Marriage Act, the law that stated the federal government would not recognize the marriages of same-sex couples as valid and states didn’t need to do so, either.

After a prominent Democrat raised the issue of California initiative, Proposition 22, with the president, his deputy chief of staff sent an email to several senior aides.

Clinton “would like to” oppose Prop 22, she wrote, “but he asked that we figure out how to square it [with] the fact that he signed [DOMA].”

After significant internal debate over how the federal law was different from the California proposal — or whether it was even different at all — one of Clinton’s senior legal advisers put forward a new idea.

“What about this?” wrote Eddie Correia, the president’s special counsel for civil rights.

“I now conclude that I was wrong about same-sex marriage,” Correia wrote, in a draft statement meant to be delivered by Clinton. “I continue to believe that the people of California should be able to decide what marriages they will recognize. But I hope they will choose to recognize the validity of marriage between people of the same gender if the marriage is legal where it occurred. Consequently, I am opposed to Proposition 22.”

Clinton, however, would never make the statement. As far as Correia knows, the president never even saw it. The idea was almost immediately dismissed by Eric Liu, the president’s deputy domestic policy adviser.

“Well, let’s not go there yet, and let’s certainly not start there,” Liu wrote in response to Correia’s draft statement.

Clinton ultimately opposed Prop 22. But his statement against it — delivered at a fundraiser for Sen. Dianne Feinstein less than a week before the vote — was narrow, glossing over what he thought about the larger question of marriage equality and leaving out entirely the subject of DOMA.

The measure, Clinton would say, was unnecessary and divisive.

"No on 22" signs lie scattered on the ground in West Hollywood, California, on March 7, 2000.

David Mcnew / Getty Images

Fifteen years later, Eric Liu regrets his quick dismissal of the idea that President Clinton could admit he was wrong about marriage equality in 2000.

“There’s a poignant regret that I have about that — that my mindset was, ‘Let’s not reopen the DOMA can of worms. Let’s figure out a way to be opposed to this without doing that,’” Liu told BuzzFeed News this week. “It’s hard to rewind and ask, but the ‘what if’ question is, ‘What if we had actually had a critical mass of people within the White House who really wanted to reopen that question?’”

Neither the Clinton Foundation nor the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign responded to a request seeking comment from President Clinton for this story.

Bill Clinton wouldn’t publicly support marriage equality until 2011, Barack Obama wouldn’t do so until 2012, and Hillary Clinton didn’t announce her support until 2013 — the same year that the Supreme Court struck down the part of DOMA that barred federal recognition of same-sex couples’ marriages. Now, the country awaits another Supreme Court ruling, this one on whether state bans on marriages between same-sex couples and their recognition are constitutional.

In 2000, there were no states that allowed or legally recognized those marriages. But even then, officials across the country were increasingly being forced to confront questions about whether and how same-sex couples should have their relationships protected and recognized — and fierce opposition to any formal recognition. In response to a 1999 state supreme court ruling, Vermont would soon decide to avoid granting equal marriage rights to same-sex couples by creating an entirely new entity: civil unions. It would not be until 2004, in Massachusetts, that same-sex couples anywhere in the country could legally marry.

The internal White House debate over Prop 22, which offers candid insight into that very unusual moment in time, has not been reported on before. The emails were only made public this year when the Clinton Library released thousands of pages of documents from the Clinton White House covering various issues relating to same-sex couples’ marriage rights. BuzzFeed News found Correia's proposal, Liu's response, and a cache of related documents spread throughout the boxes of documents released earlier this year.

The emails also feature a cadre of top former Clinton White House staffers — including two who have even more political influence today, Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney and Democratic strategist and longtime Clinton ally Minyon Moore — right in the middle of the debate.

For his part, Correia remains glad that he made his proposal, he told BuzzFeed News, even if he knew it was unlikely to happen.

“It seemed to me that it was at least worth considering — that you could change your mind” on the issue of same-sex couples' marriage rights, he said. “It was something you could change your mind on.”

Even the idea of President Clinton opposing the California measure restricting recognition of marriages to opposite-sex couples at all, however, was a matter of debate within the White House in early 2000.

Concerned that reporters might be asking about administration’s view on Prop 22 — also called the Knight initiative after the state senator backing the measure — a White House press aide raised the issue first thing Friday morning, Feb. 25.

The initial response prepared by Mary Smith, the associate director of policy planning in the Domestic Policy Council, was “short and simple,” as a colleague put it. “The administration does not have a position on this specific ballot measure in California,” she wrote in her draft statement in part.

At roughly the same time, however, another group of White House staffers — including the new gay and lesbian liaison, Julian Potter — already had been preparing a different path forward: one opposing the initiative as “counterproductive” and “divisive” and asserting that it “does not support the administration efforts to create a more fair and just society.”

An hour before lunch, Potter made it clear to the press office that there was no answer yet: “[T]wo versions. Very different.”

In the interim, compromise language was reached for the press office: “I do not know if the Administration has taken a position on this specific ballot measure in California.”

Karen Tramontano, Clinton’s deputy chief of staff, responded to that language with an important update. The Democratic National Committee’s new treasurer, Andy Tobias — a prominent gay donor — had spoken with Clinton about the measure. He told the president, as Tramontano put it, that “he thought it would be important for the president to take a stand against the initiative” and that “the president said he would like to” do so.

The discussion, however, quickly turned to the complications caused by the fact that Clinton had signed the Defense of Marriage Act — which appeared to do a very similar thing as Proposition 22 would do. Was there a way to distinguish Prop 22 from DOMA?

Tramontano noted that while there had been a discussion about “how to square the circle,” distinguishing DOMA from Proposition 22 “seems problematic.”

The Domestic Policy Council staff, who initially had recommended taking no position on the measure, now proceeded to take the new marching orders, trying to figure out if there was any real difference between DOMA and Proposition 22.

Three days later, on Monday, Smith sent Liu “a few bullets” that attempted to draw distinctions between the two measures. But, she also wrote bluntly at one point, “This is basically California’s DOMA law.”

She went on, though, to note that Al Gore and Bill Bradley — who were squaring off for the Democratic presidential nomination — were “walking a fine line” of opposing same-sex couples’ marriage rights but also opposing Prop 22. “The main reason they seem to have given to oppose it,” she wrote, “is that it is divisive and unnecessary.”

Smith also noted that Correia in the counsel’s office had suggested that the White House could argue that Proposition 22 would violate the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution. She did not recommend taking that route, however, calling it a “dangerous argument … given that the federal DOMA is probably constitutionally suspect as well.”

The offhand comment is striking. In 1996, when DOMA was under consideration in the House, the Clinton Justice Department wrote in a letter to the House Judiciary Committee that “there are no legal issues raised by” DOMA and that it would be “sustained as constitutional.”

Less than four years later, a domestic policy adviser was writing almost as a given — that DOMA likely was “constitutionally suspect.”

President Clinton speaks at a Democratic fundraising gala in Houston on June 21, 1996.

Denis Paquin / ASSOCIATED PRESS

The debate over how exactly Bill Clinton could oppose Prop 22 in light of his support for DOMA would continue over the next several days — but not before Correia would float his proposal for a dramatic policy shift for the Clinton administration to a number of officials, including deputy White House counsel William Marshall.

In his email, Correia didn’t address the constitutional concerns about DOMA. But, in some ways, Correia went much further in his draft statement for Clinton.

“Four years ago, I signed the Defense of Marriage Act, which provides that states should have a choice as to whether they will recognize a marriage between members of the same sex. I still believe states should have that choice,” Correia drafted.

“For many years, I have been personally opposed to same-gender marriages, and, until recently, I would have agreed with those states who choose not to recognize them. After having reflected on the impact of this position on thousands of loving, committed couples, I now conclude that I was wrong about same-sex marriage,” Correia wrote for the president.

Clinton then, in Correia’s draft, would have announced his opposition to Proposition 22 by saying of California’s voters, “I hope they will choose to recognize the validity of marriage between people of the same gender if the marriage is legal where it occurred.”

The draft statement was emailed out at 1:57 p.m. that Monday.

Seven minutes later, at 2:04 p.m., Liu stopped consideration of the draft before it could even begin. Instead, Liu proposed, the “unnecessary” and “divisive” arguments provided a better path to pursue for any potential statement from Clinton.

Talking with BuzzFeed News this past week about the discussions over Proposition 22 and his draft statement, Correia said the back-and-forth debate over the initiative led him to his proposal.

“I thought, rather than continue to parse this California proposition — why you’re against it — just, just say that ‘same-sex marriage is a good thing, and I’ve changed my mind about it’ — and I thought, ‘Why not now?’” he said.

The process, he knew, would have gotten far more complex had the White House pursued his approach. “It would have been something that — if there had been support for actually raising this with the president — it would have required a senior-level political meeting and a discussion with the president,” Correia said, adding, “We never got to that point, as I recall.”

Explaining what happened, Liu told BuzzFeed News, “The way we ended up doing it was kind of to take as a given that there’s DOMA and with that given, kind-of position against it and still signal on Prop 22 that the president’s heart was in the right place. But, the work of politics is always to try to define the frame of the possible. And, at that time, I let my concern about protecting the president preempt expanding the frame of the possible.”

Instead of Correia’s proposal, aides reached a compromise: Clinton would oppose Prop 22, unlike the initial recommendation that he avoid the issue, but he would use the “unnecessary” and “divisive” argument.

“[H]ad a good meeting today,” Sean Patrick Maloney — now a congressman from New York — wrote to Minyon Moore at political affairs at a little past 5 p.m. “[T]hink we’ve reached a good consensus; [Eric Liu’s] drafting up some q& a.”

Looking at some of the documents, Maloney this week described the internal discussion as an effort by Clinton’s staff “to give life to the leader’s desire to speak out against discrimination, even in a tricky context where you’ve got a state ballot initiative that on its face might seem consistent with his previous position on DOMA.”

While the process, at times, looked hectic from the email trails, Moore told BuzzFeed News this week that such a process is precisely how Clinton liked to see discussions proceed.

“I think he’s happiest when he knows that there are opposing views, that there’s a struggle, because he believe we are weighing everyone’s opinion, not just our own,” she said. “And it’s good to have people for and against, because sometimes you miss the substance for the superficial. Just because you are for something doesn’t mean that we can’t see the other person’s point of view, which is what he always stressed.”

Alice Heimsouth, left, kisses partner Christmas Leubrie, who holds an umbrella with the colors of the pride flag at an anti-Prop 22 party in San Francisco on Tuesday, March 7, 2000.

Dan Krauss / Associated Press

On Monday evening, Feb. 28, 2000, the draft Q&A was sent around to several senior staffers. The draft answers for the president stated that Proposition 22 was “unnecessary and divisive” — and characterized the measure as “mainly an unprovoked attempt to pit one group against another and to engage in the politics of division.”

It added, however, a line noting, “I oppose governmental recognition of same-sex marriages, and that’s why I signed DOMA.” Also included was a follow-up statement asserting that Clinton opposed discrimination against gays and lesbians and that he “believe[s] Proposition 22 could do more to provoke instead of prevent discrimination.”

After ironing out some last wrinkles over the next days, the Q&A was finalized. Tramontano provided it to the president, along with a background fact sheet on “Same-Sex Marriage and California Ballot Initiative,” in a memo dated March 2, 2000.

Clinton flew to California, and on Friday evening, attended a dinner fundraiser benefiting Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

“I hope you'll vote against Proposition 22,” he said to applause in a hotel ballroom in San Francisco on March 3, 2000. “However you stand on the question of gay marriage — and I realize that San Francisco is different from the rest of California, is different from the rest of America. But that's not what is at stake here. This initiative will have no practical effect whatever. This is a solution in search of a problem that isn't there.”

He added that “people are being asked to vote on this to get everybody in a white heat and to divide people,” going on to relay a story about a “six-year-old girl killed in Michigan” by another child with a stolen gun and saying, “That's a problem we ought to be working on.”

He went on to mention, among others, Matthew Shepard and James Byrd — two victims of hate-motivated violence — and told the audience that what those and other stories show is that “there's this huge gulf out there, still, in too many places where people wonder if they can be treated fairly.”

Four days later, on March 7, 2000, California voters overwhelmingly passed Proposition 22, by a margin of 61%-39%.

Via s3.amazonaws.com

The day before the vote, Julian Potter — the gay and lesbian liaison in the White House — responded to an email from Jeff Soref, a prominent New York gay Democratic politico and donor.

“I know how this was done… many fights with WH Counsel and Domestic Policy,” she wrote. Although Potter obviously had professional interests at stake, it is notable whom she chose to praise and how. “I was holding our line here in the WH. Sean [Patrick Maloney] was there at the final meeting….Minyon [Moore] was very helpful and Andy Tobias spoke with the president about it last week.”

Maloney, this week, told BuzzFeed News that he remained “proud” of the president for his opposition to the measure and the “small part” he played in making that happen. “I think from a modern perspective it might seem tame, but at the time, it was no small thing that the president was willing to come out forcefully against an anti-gay ballot initiative.”

Notably, in her email to Soref in 2000, Potter also was blunt about how Clinton’s support for DOMA was a hindrance to getting too far out on the issue, writing, “There was a general fear about getting us into a protracted DOMA conversation … because it is so closely linked to Prop 22.”

DOMA also, Liu acknowledged, limited the thinking on proposals like Correia’s draft statement in support of marriage equality. “When I look back on it,” he said, “certainly, not only by the standards of our times today but by my own standards on this issue, I think I should have pushed harder to expand the frame of the possible.”

Multiple former Clinton aides, however, argue that the Prop 22 opposition alone meant something more in the context of the time, something Liu and Correia acknowledged — and in the concept of “normalizing the conversation,” as Moore put it. Tramontano and Potter did not respond to messages seeking comment, and attempts to reach Smith were unsuccessful.

“I think in 2000 there was almost nobody who was publicly for marriage equality; it was a different world,” Maloney said. “Even people like Minyon and me and Julian, who were pushing for greater tolerance and acceptance within the White House — and the First Lady’s staff as well — no one would have seriously expected the president to come out for marriage at that point. It was a different world.”

Moore contends that much of the work on so-called “cultural” issues is over the question of, “How do you normalize the conversation?”

“I would contend that he started the path of normalizing the conversation around the [LGBT] community,” she said of Clinton. “And you have to start somewhere.”

Eleven years later, Clinton went further down that path, coming out for marriage equality, telling New Yorkers — and the country — in May 2011 that he had reached a decision to support the right of same-sex couples to marry.

“Our nation’s permanent mission is to form a ‘more perfect union’ — deepening the meaning of freedom, broadening the reach of opportunity, strengthening the bonds of community,” Clinton said in a statement released by the Human Rights Campaign. “That mission has inspired and empowered us to extend rights to people previously denied them. Every time we have done that, it has strengthened our nation. Now we should do it again, in New York, with marriage equality.”

For a few minutes more than a decade earlier, though, Eddie Correia had imagined a world in which that would have happened in 2000.

“I think people thought — people higher than my pay grade thought, ‘This is just not realistic,’” Correia said last week. “But, you know, people were changing their minds every day.”


This Group Helped Get Dozens Of Diverse Republican Candidates Elected And They're Back For 2016

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The Future Majority Project’s 2016 goals, given first to BuzzFeed News, come on the heels of a successful 2014 cycle that saw resources pumped into races that led to 43 Republican minority candidates being elected.

Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval and New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez have been involved with the Future Majority Project since 2011.

AP/Rich Pedroncelli and AP/Susan Montoya Bryan

A Republican group whose honorary co-chairs are Govs. Brian Sandoval and Susana Martinez will spend big in 2016 with a singular goal: putting more diverse Republicans in office.

The Republican State Leadership Committee's Future Majority Project is aiming to recruit 250 new candidates to run for state-level office, get 50 of them elected or appointed, and see 10 minority elected officials enter leadership in states around the country, on a $7 million budget, including women.

The PAC actually did something similar in 2014, helping put forward 240 diverse candidates across 40 states (with 43 new minority elected officials on a budget of $6 million for diversity and women).

"Our elected officials at any level do not track with the general public," RSLC president Matt Walter told BuzzFeed News. "We want as many brains as we can have at the table and that's not exclusively a Republican problem."

The Future Majority Project (FMP) began with the goal of identifying, recruiting and training Hispanic candidates to run for office and counts Sandoval and Martinez as the kind of "very principled, right of center thinkers" the group wants to attract, Walter said.

In a statement, Sandoval told BuzzFeed News the FMP mission is to "embrace and empower high quality candidates who reflect the diversity of the communities they seek to represent" and "have the ability to lead our party into the future."

In the wake of the 2012 election, what kind of candidates the party put forward and what kind of voters they appealed to became a dominating topic for the Republican Party. Still, even though Republicans boast more diverse governors than the Democrats, the issue of what the party looks like remains a concern.

Unlike the RNC's Growth and Opportunity project which does its fair share of proselytizing to bring over minorities to the party, FMP executive director Neri Martinez said the group is speaking to people that are already Republican but maybe aren't as politically active or haven't considered running.

Neri Martinez stressed that as a PAC the group had a strict cut off date when they no longer coordinated with candidates, but that while financial support matters, the meat of the program lies in recruiting the right candidates.

Women, she said, are harder to convince to run for office and the group used small business roundtables to go outside of their network to find strong candidates as well. She said mentorship from elected officials has been successful — the kind of thing that could offer a Latina "business owner with three kids, who is wondering how she can do this, someone to talk to."

And the group now has a slate of successful candidates to point to: Illinois Lt. Gov. Evelyn Sanguinetti, the first Latina lieutenant governor; Pennsylvania state Rep. Harry Lewis Jr., who is black and a former teacher, and because he had many Hispanic students when he taught, decided to have his campaign materials printed in English and Spanish; and Ohio state Rep. Niraj J. Antani, 24, who was elected as the first Indian-American Republican and second in the state ever.

He said as he went door to door, people found it refreshing to see a young, diverse candidate running. "The GOP is traditionally seen as monolithic in age and ethnicity, so a young Indian-American Republican getting elected did not seem likely," he said, adding the FMP helped him get elected.

That expectation provides the group with an advantage in promoting candidates — even if growing the party's share of minority votes remains a more complex issue.

Young Kim, a California assemblywoman, helped break the Democratic supermajority and credits the FMP for adding her to their "14 in '14" candidates to watch list as something that helped immeasurably with volunteers and fundraising.

"There are always obstacles when you try to reach new or different voters, but we'll be successful if we continue to elect Republicans who share the same values and experiences as the voters in their districts," she said in an email.

"My experience as the daughter of immigrants who brought me here for a better education and more opportunity resonates with voters not only in the Korean community, but in all immigrant communities."

Republican NH Senator Kelly Ayotte: Trump Running Is "A Positive Thing"

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“Well I think I said before, anyone has a chance to win in New Hampshire.”

Win McNamee / Getty Images

Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte from New Hampshire said Tuesday that Donald Trump running for president is "a positive thing" because it gives people more choices.

"Well I think I said before, anyone has a chance to win in New Hampshire," Ayotte told Boston Herald radio on Tuesday morning when asked about his chances to win the Granite State. "The thing about the Republican field right now is it's obviously a very broad field and it's got a lot of depth."

"So I think the more individuals that get in so that the people of New Hampshire and the country have a choice, I think that's a positive thing."

Trump declared his candidacy for the Republican nomination on Tuesday at the Trump Tower in New York City saying, "ladies and gentlemen, I am officially running for president of the United States and we are going to make our country great again."

Trump is currently polling better than several other Republican candidates, and under the current proposed debate rules, would likely qualify for the summer's first Republican debate.

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Ted Cruz: A Brokered Convention Is "Certainly A Possibility"

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“And so what we’re doing is we’re planning for both contingencies.”

Ethan Miller / Getty Images

Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz called a brokered GOP convention "a possibility" that "could happen" given the wide range of candidates running for the Republican nomination.

"It is certainly a possibility. It hasn't happened in a long, long time, but you've obviously got a wide field, and if it stays splintered, that could happen," the Texas senator told radio host Hugh Hewitt last week.

A brokered convention occurs when a single candidate has not won enough delegates in the primary and caucus states to secure the nomination at the convention. When this happens, all the delegates are freed from their allegiances at the convention in hopes that political deal-making and a subsequent revote will produce a single victor. The last brokered convention occurred in 1952.

Cruz said that historically the first three primary states of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina normally have "a disproportionate impact," but said his campaign was "planning for both contingencies."

"Historically, what has happened is that the first three states, Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina had a disproportionate impact," he said. "And they certainly have a big impact on momentum. And so what we're doing is we're planning for both contingencies.

"We are going all in on Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, and putting together the grassroots teams we have there, we've announced our state leadership teams. And in all three of those states, the state leadership teams are incredibly strong and robust."

Cruz said local press "repeatedly reported that the crowds" were often "double the size of Jeb Bush, double the size of Scott Walker."

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Jim Webb: Presidential Decision Coming In Next Two Weeks

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“I think there’s a lot of movement around Bernie just for people to show they’re uneasy.”

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb, a possible Democratic presidential candidate, says he will announcing whether he's running for president "within the next two weeks." Webb has been making trips to Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina in recent months to test the waters for a presidential campaign.

"We're gonna make a decision within the next two weeks," Webb told Iowa radio show Mickelson in the Morning this week.

Webb said his decision would be based on if he could run a viable campaign without having to take large donations, something he called "damaging to the country,"

"As I've said to you on shows before the decision point is if we put together a viable campaign without having to fall into this financial campaign funding process, which I think is damaging to the country. We'll be saying something within the next two weeks."

Asked about Bernie Sanders, another Democratic presidential candidate along with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, Webb said Sanders raises issues to be debated that otherwise would not be.

"I think Bernie Sanders raises some issues that need to be debated that otherwise won't be debated," Webb said when asked about how Sanders was polling.

"I believe there are a lot of people out there who are looking for a different form of leadership and this country really does need principled leadership from people who have a record and can demonstrate that they have acted in ways that produce results rather than simply making promises. So I think there's a lot of movement around Bernie just for people to show they're uneasy."

Here's the audio:

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Trump In 2007: I Know Hillary Clinton "Very Well," She's "Very Talented"

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“And she has a husband that I also like very much.”

Christopher Gregory / Getty Images

During the 2007 Democratic presidential primary, Donald Trump spoke favorably of Hillary Clinton, telling Wolf Blitzer that he thought she would win the nomination "rather easily."

"I know her very well," Trump said. "She's very talented. And she has a husband that I also like very much. I think she's going to get the nomination rather easily."

Trump added later in the interview that he thinks Hillary Clinton is "very, very capable."

Trump was also asked about Clinton's 2007 health care proposal, at the center of which was an "individual mandate" similar to the one President Obama would later include in his plan.

"I think it was very good. I think she came out with an idea. It's a very, very complex set of things going on right now in terms of healthcare. But she came out with an idea, it sounds like a pretty good idea, and a lot of people like it and embraced it. And she learned a lot from her previous encounter," Trump said.

Trump, who announced Tuesday he was running for the Republican presidential nomination, has also given large sums of money to the Clinton Foundation. His name is listed on the Clinton Foundation's website as having donated between $100,000 and $250,000.

As noted by Bloomberg Politics, Hillary Clinton also had a front row seat at Trump's 2005 wedding and Bill, unable to go to wedding, attended a black-tie reception at Trump's Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach.

Trump and his son Donald Jr. also donated to Clinton's campaigns in 2002, 2005, 2006 and 2007.

Here's a video clip from the interview:

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And here's the full transcript.


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