Sunday, March 19, 2017

Hillary Clinton Cartoon


O'Reilly Slams Hillary's Speech: 'Most Divisive Woman in the Country'



Bill O'Reilly called into "Fox & Friends Weekend" to react to Hillary Clinton's reemergence in the public sphere, and dished on who he thought might be the next Democratic presidential candidates to follow in her footsteps.
Speaking at a St. Patrick's Day event in Scranton, Pa., her father's hometown, Clinton said that Americans cannot allow personal divides to become political divides.
"We've got to keep trying to listen to each other," Clinton said.
O'Reilly slammed the remarks, calling Clinton the "most divisive woman in the country."

Bolling: 'RINO' Establishment Must Get Out of the Way of the 'Trump Train'
Feinstein on Trump: 'I Think He's Going to Get Himself Out' Of Office
Dershowitz: If Obama Issued Trump's Travel Ban, It Would've Been Upheld

"She says she wants [us] to listen to each other? When she did no media and was imperious?" O'Reilly said. "She was the worst candidate I've ever seen in my entire life covering news for more than 40 years."
He said he hopes Clinton will focus on "re-booting" her foundation in order to do constructive work around the world and stay out of electoral politics..
"This is a bunch of garbage and this is not a woman who wanted to ever bring anybody together in her entire life. She's ruthless. She wanted to be president and she's teed off she's not," O'Reilly said.
Ahead of the 2020 elections O'Reilly said his home state's governor, Andrew Cuomo (D-N.Y.) has already started raising money for a potential presidential run.
Cuomo was President Clinton's secretary of housing and urban development and is the son of the late Gov. Mario Cuomo (D-N.Y.).
O'Reilly also said Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe may mount a run in 2020, noting he is closely tied to the Clinton family and would likely have their campaign apparatus behind him.

Pence takes ObamaCare replacement pitch to Florida, thanks voters for 2016 win


Vice President Pence paid a thank you call Saturday in Florida, thanking voters for helping President Trump win the White House and vowing to repay them with a replacement for “nightmare” ObamaCare.
Pence’s visit marked the second consecutive weekend that he has traveled to states to garner support for the Republican-crafted bill to repeal and replace ObamaCare -- ahead of a key House vote scheduled for Thursday.
“Thank you for your hard work, your support, your prayers,” Pence said in Jacksonville, Florida. “Your votes have set us on a path to make America great again.”
Pence tried to assure voters that the GOP House leadership bill, the American Health Care Act, has solid Republican support, despite concern from some of Congress’ most conservative members.
“President Trump supports the bill 100 percent, and we all do,” said Pence, a conservative and former House member who in recent weeks has worked Capitol Hill for Republican support.
The scheduled House floor vote Thursday, if successful, could send the bill to the GOP-controlled Senate, then to the president’s desk.
Pence, who last weekend visited Kentucky, took his appeal Saturday directly to Florida voters, arguing that ObamaCare has failed them and others across the country.
“Florida’s actually a textbook example of what’s wrong with ObamaCare. … Florida can’t afford ObamaCare anymore,” said Pence, citing premium increases of 19 percent over last year in the state, amid fears the new plan will leave Americans with higher premium costs and fewer health-plan choices.
“The ObamaCare nightmare is about to end,” he continued.
To be sure, Florida helped Trump in his improbable 2016 White House win. Its 29 Electoral College votes were the most of any battleground state. And Florida voted in 2008 and 2012 for Democratic President Obama.
Pence also hit home on other key issues for voters in Jacksonville, which has several military bases and one of the country’s biggest military populations.
He said Trump’s plan to increase defense spending by roughly $54 billion is “at the very heart of his budget plan” and that he will end the era of cuts for the military.
“We will restore the arsenal of democracy,” Pence said. “That I promise you.”
He also made clear the administration fully intends to fulfill campaign promises on national security, including getting criminal illegal immigrants “off the streets of Florida and out of this country.”
Pence, in vowing a more robust economy with more work opportunities, called Trump “the best friend America’s small businesses will ever have.”
He also defended the GOP health measure that could include work requirements for Medicaid recipients and Trump’s budget plan that attempts to cut the size of the federal government, suggesting an end to spending decisions “from the comforts of the taxpayer-funded metal desks in Washington.”

President Trump talks health care, taxes and leaks on 'Watters' World'


President Donald Trump expressed confidence in his plan to repeal ObamaCare and blasted his adversaries in the media and elsewhere for leaking a portion of his 2005 federal tax return during an interview on "Watters' World" that aired Saturday evening.
"Yes, we’re going to get something done and it’s going to be terrific and so much better than ObamaCare," said Trump, adding that health care is a "complex" subject. "If you allow [ObamaCare] to exist for another year, it’s going to implode."
When he was asked about a portion of his 2005 federal tax return being revealed on Rachel Maddow's MSNBC show, Trump hit back.
"They’re bad people, there’s something wrong with them.They leaked them, it’s illegal. I always heard that a tax return was a sacred kind of thing, you don’t leak them," Trump said. "It’s terrible what’s going on in Washington.… A tax return’s a very important thing and you’re not supposed to be leaking them. They just don’t respect the law and we have to change that."
TRUMP HITS GERMANY ON NATO AFTER MERKEL VISIT
Trump also spoke about lowering America's corporate and personal income tax rates significantly.
"We’re gonna get a big reduction. We are the highest taxed nation," said Trump. "We’re going from seven to three or four tax brackets and that would be such a pleasure."
The president had kind words for Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who could be a thorn in Trump's side when the GOP health care bill comes up for a vote in the Senate.
"I like him, he’s become a friend of mine. He’s a good guy and he means well. I think ultimately we will come together," said Trump.
When asked who he would fire if he had to choose between CNN's Jeff Zucker, Alec Baldwin and Sen. Chuck Schumer, Trump would not choose.
"Chuck I'm very disappointed in, because he's a guy who should make deals for the people. Not as a Democrat or Republican," said Trump.
IN TRUMP'S $1.065 TRILLION BUDGET, THE DETAILS ARE IN THE WORDS RATHER THAN THE NUMBERS
Trump stated that he got Jeff Zucker his job at CNN and described the cable news network as "fake news."
"I think the Alec Baldwin situation is not good," Trump said. "The portrayal of me is ridiculous."
Trump was asked about criticism of him and his family in the media. He responded by highlighting positive changes that have taken place since his inauguration:
"We’ve done a great job in terms of manufacturing. Look at the border, down now 61 percent since the inauguration, stock market’s up almost 16 percent since the inauguration, over $3 trillion of value has been created, many jobs have been created… so ultimately that’s the thing that talks and as you probably saw the polls that came out today -- I’m at my all time high for this" 

Person detained after incident at White House checkpoint, Secret Service spokesperson says




One person was detained after a suspicious vehicle drove up to a White House checkpoint on Saturday evening, according to a United States Secret Service spokesperson.
A law enforcement official told Fox News that the individual claimed to have an explosive device in the vehicle.
“An individual drove a vehicle up to a Secret Service checkpoint located at 15th Street and E Street NW,” a statement from the spokesperson said. “Upon contact with the individual, U.S. Secret Service Uniform Division Officers detained the individual and declared his vehicle suspicious.”
The incident occurred around 11 p.m. and has prompted the Secret Service to increase “their posture of readiness,” the spokesperson said.
An official told Fox News that one individual was taken into custody; indicating only one person may have been inside the vehicle during the incident.
The driver of the vehicle is currently in custody and being interviewed by officials.
The official could not say what the motive was or if the individual was intoxicated at the time of the incident.
No other details have been released.
Another individual was apprehended earlier on Saturday after jumping a barrier in front of the White House, resulting in a full lockdown of the complex.
The suspect had allegedly jumped a security fence and was on the property for over 16 minutes.
Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, is set to meet with acting Secret Service Director William Callahan and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly about White House security issues on Monday.

CartoonsDemsRinos