10-31-2016, 01:31 PM
An interesting voting strategy from Glenn Reynolds "if you don’t like either of them, then you should vote for the one least likely to get away with things."
http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/20.../93006320/
http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/20.../93006320/
Quote:It won’t be that way with a President Trump. This isn’t because Trump is any less arrogant than Clinton (though it would be hard to be more arrogant). It’s because more people will be willing to tell Trump no. The civil service, which leans overwhelmingly Democratic, won’t be bending over backwards to do his will. The press can’t stand him. And the Congress, even if controlled by the GOP, won’t support him if he misbehaves because so many Republicans dislike him, too.
The truth is, neither one of our leading candidates for president is a paragon of virtue. But only one of them has already made a habit of flouting the law while in office, selling favors and escaping the consequences, and only one of them is likely to be able to pull it off from the White House.
And that’s the problem. If Secretary of State Clinton, serving under a president and with an eye on winning a second term in the White House, wasn’t constrained by the rules, who will constrain her if she’s president?
The answer, most likely, is nobody. And, once again, we’ll all be paying the price.