The Many Weaknesses of the Rubio Campaign
Noah Millman sums up the weaknesses of the Rubio campaign in response to a recent Douthat column:
Noah Millman sums up the weaknesses of the Rubio campaign in response to a recent Douthat column:
China warned the U.S. on Wednesday not to adopt punitive currency policies after Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump nudged up another victory in Nevada. Free Bacon reports: Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters in Beijing that “we are following with interest the U.S. presidential election.” Hua was asked about China’s response to a possible Trump presidency and his announced plan to punish China for currency manipulation with a tax on Chinese goods.
The issue of arms sales to Saudi Arabia by Western countries has always been a contentious topic in some circles.
As you might imagine, I’m delighted by any historical comparison that involves Marshall Kutuzov, and so I smiled to read Ross Douthat’s latest column, wondering whether Marco Rubio might be taking lessons from the Russian commander:
[W]hat is Rubio waiting for? What is his campaign thinking?
Back In December, Spain held what turned out to be inconclusive elections.
To be sure, voters were clearly sick of the status quo. The country’s three decade old political duopoly was broken when PP and PSOE garnered their lowest combined share of the vote since the eighties.
Mariano Rajoy’s PP still won the most seats, but fell short of a majority and with a grand coalition comprised of PP and PSOE largely out of the question, the quest to build consensus and form a government has been stuck in the mud for two months.