By Robert Laurie —— Bio and Archives April 20, 2018
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From early on, the Clinton camp saw Trump as an enemy to encourage, Chozick writes. During the campaign, as had been previously reported, there was an effort to elevate Trump into a so-called Pied Piper in order to tie him to the mainstream of the Republican Party. “An agenda for an upcoming campaign meeting sent by [Campaign Manager] Robby Mook’s office asked, ‘How do we maximize Trump?’” Chozick writes, describing a time when the GOP primary was still crowded. Even as Trump surged in the polls, the Clinton camp still saw him as a danger to stronger candidates rather than such a candidate in his own right, Chozick reports, so that in August 2015, “when the main GOP debate came on, everyone pushed their pizza crust aside and stared transfixed at the TV set… [Campaign Manager] Robby [Mook] salivated when the debate came back on and Trump started to speak. ‘Shhhhh,’ Robby said, practically pressing his nose up to the TV. ‘I’ve gahtz to get me some Trump.’ Robby thought Rubio would be the nominee. Podesta was bullish on Kasich. Bill and Hillary, still stuck in the 1990s, feared the Bush surname most of all.”
By the time of the conventions, though, as Trump was selected as the Republican nominee, the Clinton campaign was still trying to figure out how to improve her negative favorability ratings.In other words, Hillary Clinton, a widely despised candidate helped select the one person who would constantly, and brutally, pick the scab over her unfavorable numbers. …Which was the one thing her campaign couldn’t get a handle on. Brilliant. Allow me to offer this definition: Schadenfreude [shahd-n-froi-duh] noun 1. Satisfaction or pleasure felt at someone else’s misfortune. …And I’ll use it in a sentence: “If you like your schadenfreude, you can keep your schadenfreude.”
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