Lessons from Trump’s victory

Lessons from Trump’s victory

Is anyone not surprised by Donald Trump's ability to plow through the Republican primary process like a hot knife through butter? This is one for the history books, and scholars will be writing about it for decades (especially if Trump manages to pull off a win in November). But here are a few thoughts in the aftermath of the Indiana primary:

1. You cannot anger the electorate indefinitely without consequences. Americans are fed up with having things shoved down their throats by an arrogant government that no longer thinks of itself as representative. Congress won't act? The president will write executive orders. A heated issue is working its way through state courts and legislatures? Nuts to all that — let's have five people in black robes impose their will on 320 million others. Add to that administrative and regulatory agencies that act with virtually no accountability; treaties and conventions that tie our hands without imposing similar strictures on other nations; and a lack of enforcement of our own laws, and you have a recipe for popular insurrection. This is a bipartisan phenomenon. (See, "Sanders, Bernie.")

Why Clinton will choose Deval Patrick as vice president
Massachusetts

Why Clinton will choose Deval Patrick as vice president

James P. Freeman

As "Bern Baby Bern" — like all good socialist-themed endeavors – slowly and inevitably finds itself reduced to a simmering ash heap out of a once flourishing flame, the Clinton campaign has now methodically and understandably begun the process of vetting vice presidential candidates for the Democratic ticket. Hillary Clinton will choose former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick.

This past Sunday The New York Times – which said the nomination fight is "still fluid" (for the Democrats, it isn't) – reported that Clinton is considering between 15 and 20 potential running mates. In addition to Patrick, the Times suggests, wishfully, that Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren is also among the contenders.

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