Repeater
Regular Member
Oh boy, how to Win!! Goodie. Except, look who's giving advice.
Is there anyone here who likes Tucker Martin? I mean really.
How incompetent can a boob be? Who would seriously take his advice?
He won't except any blame for Gillespie's loss; instead, he boasts how close Ed came to win.
So, here's his advice how to win:
Why the GOP should go to pot
This Ass-Clown won't even discuss reform of our gun-control laws. He won't allow any candidate to answer VCDL Surveys. He avoids open-carry Virginians like Ebola carriers.
I suppose he will be attending the upcoming Donald Huffman Advance looking for [strike]victims[/strike] clients.
[size=+2]I give great [strike]head[/strike] advice![/size]
Is there anyone here who likes Tucker Martin? I mean really.
How incompetent can a boob be? Who would seriously take his advice?
He won't except any blame for Gillespie's loss; instead, he boasts how close Ed came to win.
So, here's his advice how to win:
Why the GOP should go to pot
Election Day was great for the Republican Party. The GOP gained at least eight seats to take back the Senate and earned its largest majority in the House of Representatives since 1928. At the state level, Republicans upped the number of governor’s mansions they hold from 29 to 31, a staggering feat. Closer to home, Ed Gillespie, outspent 2-1, almost pulled off the upset of the night with his positive campaign coming within 17,000 votes of defeating incumbent Sen. Mark Warner.
...
The challenge for Republicans is this: Given current voting and demographic trends, it will only get harder for the party to win the big prize: The White House. Sure, short-term issues and immediate population trends could be temporarily helpful, but the long game says we have to, essentially, adapt or die. That is of course what all successful political parties must do, repeatedly; in politics nothing ever stays the same.
One means by which any party can regain competitiveness is to identify issues that connect with both the party’s philosophy and the new voters the party needs to reach. It’s a matter of marrying the party’s principles to policies that appeal to a broader electorate.
...
One small opportunity for Republicans could be found in recent efforts to reform marijuana policies.
This Ass-Clown won't even discuss reform of our gun-control laws. He won't allow any candidate to answer VCDL Surveys. He avoids open-carry Virginians like Ebola carriers.
I suppose he will be attending the upcoming Donald Huffman Advance looking for [strike]victims[/strike] clients.
[size=+2]I give great [strike]head[/strike] advice![/size]