biochem wrote:1. Bush - Moderate, governor from Florida (swing state), establishment wing of the party
The fact that anyone wants to put the brother of the possibly THE worst president USA ever had as a replacement for his replacement, that´s just scary.
biochem wrote:2. Carson - Social conservative, doctor no previous political experience, outsider wing of the party
Delusional technocrat.
He has SOME decent ideas and might be a good caretaker if not allowed to change too much, but he´s a religious halfnut(not completely looney, but lets religion take precedence when it should not, including clouding his view of facts).
Would probably be a very bad idea.
biochem wrote:3. Christie - Liberal for a Republican, governor from New Jersey (Democratic state), left wing of the Republican party
Left wing? That says something about how rightwing skewed the party is, yikes.
Probably one of the saner and/or more realist candidates.
Might be good, might be a disaster, depending on the times and political landscape, ie what he gets to focus on.
biochem wrote:4. Cruz - very conservative, senator from Texas (Republican state, Tea Party wing of the party
Skilled. And an idiot. Extremeist and fanatically stupid.
Dangerous and should not be in charge of anything.
biochem wrote:5. Fiona - moderate, CEO of HP no political experience, big business wing of the party
Fiorina. Carly Fiorina.
Can make things happen, but you probably wont like HOW she does it.
A true republican. Often ideologically blinded. But smart.
She might make for a decent president. I mean if the world could survive Bush jr, I´m sure we can survive her attempts at starting world war III as well, at least she has brains.
But i doubt US people will like her corporatism in the long run.
And i quite well recall what a HP employee said about her on another forum at the time.
Let´s just say he was generally quite colorful in his descriptions of her.
biochem wrote:6. Gilmore - moderate, governor of Virginia (swing state), moderate wing of the party
Anyone capable of improving the US education system SHOULD be looked at very firmly and with major interest by voters.
Intelligent and reasonably realistic, which of course means he´s unlikely to get any nominations, as this makes him anathema to most of the raving loonies.
biochem wrote:7. Graham - military conservative, senator of South Carolina (republican state), Hawk (pro-military) wing of the party
A great chickenhawk. Interventionist of the dangerous kind. Probably slightly worse than Reagan before his "oh my god we almost started WWIII by accident!" scare in the early 80s.
He´s an ideological idiot. Wants to lord over the world and foolishly expects the world to accept it.
Hopefully someone builds a drone to bomb him with, suitably ironical to his own statement about doing so to others.
biochem wrote:8. Huckabee - social conservative, governor from Arkansas (swing state), religious right wing of the party
A religiously hardcored fool. A fairly nice fool, but a fool nevertheless.
Might make an ok president if he manages to get a good staff, he wants a lot of nice things, but he´s not going to ever get most of them with the policies he wants.
And he actually wants to go back to Reagan-times military spending. Which is quite, quite on the insane side.
biochem wrote:9. Jindal - conservative, governor from Louisiana (democratic state), conservative wing of the party
He has a few good ideas, but overall he´s a BIG IDIOT.
An almost classic southie boy that should just get kicked out of anywhere important.
Most likely a disaster in waiting as a president.
biochem wrote:10. Kasich - moderate, governor from Ohio (swing state), moderate wing of the pary
This one´s mixed. Seems to be a good administrator and/or organiser, has some decent ideas, but at the same time runs off and signs up on some outright stupid ideologicals only crap.
Could be seriously dangerous for USA itself due to how he likes to meddle with people. And might make a nice little cozy pseudo-dictator.
Bit of a flipflop.
biochem wrote:11. Pataki - Liberal for a Republican, governor from New York (Democratic state), left wing of the Republican party
Left wing? A guy trying to privatize public assets? And cuts public spending to healthcare and education? Biggest tax-cutter NY ever had? Seriously?
Not sure what to say about him. At least he seems to learn from his mistakes, or try.
Just a pity he seems to make a lot of mistakes in the first place.
biochem wrote:12. Paul - libertarian, senator from Kentucky (swing state), libertarian wing of the pary
He has a surprising number of sane or even good ideas, but his core ideology is utterly rotten fanaticism.
If he can be forced to act on logic(he has clearly shown that he CAN be objective beyond his own opinions), he might make a good president, but more likely he will go on an ideological spree and be an utter disaster.
biochem wrote:14. Rubio - conservative, senator from Florida (swing state), conservative wing of the party
Powerplayer. Wouldn´t trust him as far as i can throw him while he´s wearing concrete shoes.
Christian nutjob.
biochem wrote:15. Santorum - social conservative, senator from Pennsylvania, religious right wing of the party
Bigot that occasionally forgets his prejudices and thinks for a while.
Flipflops based on political winds at the moment.
Bad idea for a president.
biochem wrote:16. Trump - ???? (makes wild tea party like statements but he tends to make outrageous statements just to get attention, true beliefs unknown), businessman/reality TV star, outsider wing of the party
A joke. A BAD joke.
If anyone actually tries to vote for him, they should probably be given the Garfield treatment for epic stupidity.
biochem wrote:The same thing usually happens with the Democrats
Not remotely to the same level. While the dem´s have their own loony groupings, they don´t have a fraction of the same kind of influence as the ones you find within the republicans.
biochem wrote:Hilary just seems to have used her backroom connections to short circuit the process somehow. Not sure why the rest of you are letting her get away with it.
Look at it logically. I think it´s more a matter of people remembering Clinton as the last "ok" president in many ways, not to mention how Clinton was the last president to manage constistent federal budget surplus and to do so without making a big mess, while at the same time achieving a decent enough foreign policy.
And they expect Hilary to be "not too far from good ol' Billy".
biochem wrote:but the key is to do that without sounding like a raving lunatic.
Something many, especially republican candidates, fail amazingly with.
I still remember hearing Bush jr talk before he became the rep candidate. That´s when i went and placed a bet that if he won, he would start at least one war during his presidency.
I made BIG win on that bet as he wasn´t even the candidate yet.