Special “What Winning Looks Like” E-dition

HEADER-OCT 17 WINNING

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2015

And It Felt Pretty Good For Conservatives to Win Something For A Change

At this afternoon’s Conservative Agenda Town Hall Forum, Beloved Whistleblower Published Charles Foster Kane was reminding people about a few weeks ago when Donald Trump and Ted Cruz spoke at that TEA Party-sponsored protest of Obama’s “catastrophic” Iran deal, and the front running 2016 Republican Presidential Candidate boasted that “we will have so much winning if I get elected, that you may get bored with winning.”

“I just hope we just saw a small example of that this week after CNBC caved in on the debate format for the October 28 Republican Debate in Boulder, Colorado in just 11 more days,” Kane explained. 

image005Donald Trump often boasts on the campaign trail about his cunning negotiating skills. Almost daily he promises to best the likes of China, Mexico, and Iran to get the most incredible, most tremendous deals.

image005And this week, it was CNBC that got “Trumped.” Under mounting pressure, the network bowed to the demands of Trump and other presidential candidates for the Oct. 28 presidential debate – a decision that capped a flurry of behind-the-scenes negotiations that drew in some of the most powerful figures from the TV network.

image005The Competence Challenged Republican National Committee, which as usual had been negotiating from weakness with CNBC on the format for the next so-called “Debate,” announced on Friday that the program would be capped at a total of two hours and allow for candidates to give opening and closing statements.

But look who really deserves the credit.

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image005Now Reince Priebus and the rest of the wussies at the Republican Party need to explain why those surrender monkeys still have three more so-called “Debates” scheduled with those unrepentant Republican Bashers at CNN. 

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