Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Tread lightly Fox news because your TV Show will be in front of a live audience.

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Thomas Williams

I seem to understand that a lot of the American people are now feeling on the edge to run onto the field of battle and more than ready to start fighting with both hands. And it has occurred to me that if the Fox reporters who are putting on this first Presidential made for TV debate Show, between the 10 candidates on national television, start getting unfair with Donald Trump. That the first live audience would in fact spill onto the stage in protest. And start a wild melee of people who truly want to get a piece of the TV media reporters that the American people are so fed up with these days.

So if I were the Fox crew who are putting on this 2016 Presidential debate they better play fair with Donald Trump. Because they will be dealing with a live audience and not just a camera, and a lonely cameraman recording what they are doing. The American people are gather in greater number to lead each other in support of Donald Trump. And Donald Trump also has a billion dollars that he can use without asking anyone else for a dime. So Mr. wise guy Ivy League, and media, it looks like to me that you are about to be exposed with out your political correct bull talk to hide behind. And a growing number of American people who are dancing at the turn gates with added nervous energy to charge into battlefield for real." Where is my uniform"
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Trump’s presence in first GOP debate makes prep challenging for candidates


By Dan Balz and Robert Costa July 29 at 11:03 AM
 
Next week’s Republican presidential debate in Cleveland marks not only the inaugural formal gathering of the expansive GOP field but also the start of a new and unpredictable chapter in an already raucous 2016 race.

Under the bright studio lights on the shores of Lake Erie on Aug. 6, ambitions will be showcased, positions staked, and Donald Trump, who has consumed the summer’s political headlines, will finally be confronted, face to face, by his rivals.

“There is more downside than upside for most candidates, and the first goal is to try not to self-destruct,” said former House speaker Newt Gingrich, who ran for the GOP nomination in 2012.
“You don’t want to get in a situation where you knock yourself out,” Gingrich said. “The candidates ought to figure out what their message is for the American people rather than worrying too much about the back-and-forth with others.”

But the presence of Trump, who has in recent days attacked former Florida governor Jeb Bush, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and former Texas governor Rick Perry, makes calculations more difficult. Every candidate will have a strategy for making a memorable impression. “Every candidate has to have a Trump strategy” as well, said an experienced GOP operative.
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