I have long said that the next president of the United States will be a Republican. I’ve also said he will be a dark horse candidate and a governor.
Americans are hungry for a leader.  No disrespect to Jeb, but Americans also don’t want another Bush—and they sure don’t want another ineffective or treasonous leftie. The public wants someone who can tell Americans the truth and show them what needs to be done to get to where we want to be: safe, free, and prosperous.
Republicans also need a candidate who can unite the different wings of the party, from the Wall Street country club Republicans, social conservatives in Iowa and the rest of the heartland, and national defense hawks.






Scott Walker is that man.
Matt Lewis wrote a prescient article in The Week recently called, Scott Walker and the Art of Winning.  This paragraph captures the problem the Republicans have faced in recent presidential elections:
Conservatives have very obviously had enough of politicians who cave. That hold-the-line, never-give-in attitude has burned at the heart of the Tea Party for years. Less noticed, but equally important, is the fact that we have plenty of conservative lawmakers whose reputations are built on their adherence to principle, their total commitment to never cave — and who inevitably lose. They may make excuses and point fingers to try and claim that losing is winning — but they are still losers.
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Scott Walker is no loser.
He has fought for conservative principles, primarily smaller government and balanced budgets, and won, time and again. He has taken everything the Soros-funded leftist, commie, union crowd could throw at him and won, three times.
Scott Walker is a winner.
He relates to all of the wings of the Republican Party. People trust him.
So he didn’t finish college. He’s in good company. Neither did Steve Jobs or Bill Gates or George Washington.
And for all these reasons, I’m going to Vegas and putting it all on Scott Walker for President of the United States.