Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Conservative Agitators Refuse To Accept Defeat!

Conservatives are pissed that the establishment didn't aid Tea Party backed candidate Ken Cuccinelli in his failed bid for governor of Virginia. Cuccinelli in defeat has the Rick Santorum smug.

Now that Terry McAuliffe was elected to be the governor of Virginia, many conservatives believe that the Republican challenger Ken Cuccinelli's defeat was a classic OBAMA (or perhaps a CLINTON) set up.

Because they showed up to help a fellow Democrat win. And even though the polls showed a narrow victory, McAuliffe actually "lost". The junk food media said he had a huge lead, but as soon as President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden showed up, his double point lead shrunk.

Wow, they're saying that if the third party candidate wasn't in the race, Cuccinelli would have won.

Somehow it's believed that if third party candidate manages to strip away a crucial block of voters, the top-tier nominee loses.

So this is what the bitter losers of this election think. They're blaming President Barack Obama for their badly prepared candidate for governor.

The Republican infighting will hand the Democrats victories in the U.S. Midterms.

Getting news off The Fizzle through That Guy Who Throw Shit To The Wall's website, some notable conservative agitators are fumed that Cuccinelli was defeated. The conservative agitators think that a former Obama bundler's contribution to a third party candidate chipped away the Republican nominee's support.

The defeated Cuccinelli and his supporters blame Libertarian nominee Robert Sarvis for their loss. I mean, Sarvis is a conservative who believes in the mindset of perennial loser Ron Paul. That block of Republicans didn't want the bombastic (in your face) nonsense that Cuccinelli provided to Virginia.

Even the racists in the political party can't stomach E.W. Jackson as his running mate. Even though there's a separate election for the lieutenant governor, the notion of having a Black extremist as second banana is too much for Republicans to swallow. So that's probably why it's a loss for Cuccinelli.

In the matter of being a registered political party voter supporting an opposing party: There's nothing wrong with it. 

I mean somehow it's a sin for a Republican to vote for a Democrat and vise versa. Because no one told me that I had to follow the party line when I want to vote in an election. I mean if a Democrat wanted to vote for a Republican, it's perfectly fine. Chris Christie, the Republican governor of New Jersey won. He won with a portion of Democratic support. Despite being a conservative Republican, Christie managed to win over hearts when Hurricane Sandy landed on the beaches. And he worked with the opposition to get things done.
Obama warned Republicans not to listen these agitators. They once again handed Republicans another defeat.
Refusing to acknowledge that the Republicans aren't popular. Not understanding that Americans who are registered Republicans disapproved of the government shutdown. I am guessing Republican voters are tired of the bitter fights over Obamacare. Even some Republicans need a portion of the safety net and their elected leaders continue to cut and cut the very stability of the economy.

Yeah, President Barack Obama isn't popular as he was during the first term, but he's a whole lot better than House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY).

The conservative agitators didn't understand that Cuccinelli was tied to the governor Bob McDonnell.

During his last term, McDonnell was in a scandal that could sent him to federal time out

Virginian voters knew that Terry McAuliffe wasn't the first choice. But since Republicans aided and abetted in the government shutdown, it cost them a chance to hold on the governor's mansion.

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