How the Clintons are getting turned into Mitt Romney
By itself, making money shouldn’t be an issue for Bill and Hillary Clinton; after all, so many of our past presidents have been wealthy. By itself, Bill Clinton having a shell LLC wouldn’t be an issue either. But when you add the two together, you see that the Clintons have a Mitt Romney problem on their hands — wealth and “otherness” that voters might not be able to relate to, especially when the likes of Bernie Sanders are campaigning against wealth. Of course, there’s one BIG difference between Hillary Clinton and Mitt Romney: Romney wanted to cut taxes for the wealthy, while Hillary likely wants to raise them and eliminate tax loopholes benefitting the well-off. As the Clintons have said before, people like them should be paying more in taxes. And you probably won’t hear that rhetoric from the eventual GOP nominee. Still, Hillary Clinton could arguably be the wealthiest (or close to it) candidate in the 2016 field. And this shell LLC story is going to sound the drumbeats for her to release her taxes.
RELATED: Bad news for Obamacare?
A busy day in South Carolina
Speaking of Hillary, she campaigns in South Carolina — where she lost big to Barack Obama in 2008. “The last time Hillary Rodman Clinton was in South Carolina, it was 2008 and she was on her way to losing the state’s presidential primary to then-Sen. Barack Obama by close to 30 points,” the AP writes. She’ll be back on Wednesday, again to campaign for president. This time around, several of the state’s African-American leaders predict, she’ll find a far different reception.” GOP presidential candidate Carly Fiorina also is in the Palmetto State, where her campaign is — again — trolling Hillary. “Our events tomorrow are all open to the press. And by open press, we mean we’ll actually take questions,” the Fiorina campaign emailed reporters yesterday. (And this is probably a good short-term formula for Fiorina to get into that first debate.) And joining Hillary and Fiorina in South Carolina is possible soon-to-be candidate, Ohio Gov. John Kasich.
Santorum gives it another shot — but this time with more competition on his right flank
Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who won the 2012 Iowa caucuses and was essentially the last man standing against Mitt Romney, announces his presidential bid at 5:00 pm ET outside of Pittsburgh. But this time, he’s running in a field that’s more crowded with social-conservative types. There’s Mike Huckabee, winner of the 2008 caucuses. There’s Ted Cruz. There’s Scott Walker, whose father was a minister. There’s Marco Rubio, who recently argued that same-sex marriage presents a “real and present danger” to Christianity and Catholicism. And there’s even Jeb Bush (see Terri Schiavo).
Santorum: Your pro-minimum-wage-hike social conservative
You could argue that no one better represents the fastest-growing part of the Republican Party — working-class white males — than Santorum does. He’s a “raise the minimum wage” social conservative. But here’s the problem Santorum is facing, per the Washington Post: “If the last several presidential cycles were an accurate predictor of the future, Rick Santorum would be the 2016 Republican nominee. Yet when the 2012 GOP runner-up announces Wednesday that he’s officially running again, it will be met with the same collective shrug it got four years ago. As he stands now — polling around 2 percent, when included at all — there’s a chance the former Pennsylvania senator won’t even make the cut to be on the first primary debate stage in August.” That said, any debate criteria keeping someone like Santorum out of the first debate is bad criteria.
Sure, it’s probably smart for Walker to downplay Florida. But he probably shouldn’t SAY it









