2016: The Year of Revolution
Nov 21, 2016 5:41:45 GMT -5
Post by avordvet on Nov 21, 2016 5:41:45 GMT -5
2016: The Year of Revolution
November 20, 2016, By Scott S. Powell
Remarkably 2016 has become the year of Revolution. It started in June with citizens of the United Kingdom voting in the affirmative for “Brexit,” a national referendum to separate from the European Union and the long reach of its Brussels bureaucrats. Then the November 8 U.S. presidential election witnessed the American people voting in outsider Donald Trump, soundly rejecting the political establishment of both national parties and their unelected and unaccountable regulators and bureaucrats.
Trump’s electoral victory was nothing short of a stunning upset -- with ramifications beyond politics. Trump, the outright political neophyte, accomplished the impossible:
www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/11/2016_the_year_of_revolution.html
November 20, 2016, By Scott S. Powell
Remarkably 2016 has become the year of Revolution. It started in June with citizens of the United Kingdom voting in the affirmative for “Brexit,” a national referendum to separate from the European Union and the long reach of its Brussels bureaucrats. Then the November 8 U.S. presidential election witnessed the American people voting in outsider Donald Trump, soundly rejecting the political establishment of both national parties and their unelected and unaccountable regulators and bureaucrats.
Trump’s electoral victory was nothing short of a stunning upset -- with ramifications beyond politics. Trump, the outright political neophyte, accomplished the impossible:
www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/11/2016_the_year_of_revolution.html
Outsiders take power in Trump's Washington
By Niall Stanage - 11/19/16 06:03 AM EST
People once confined to the political fringes will be at the center of power in Donald Trump’s White House.
Liberals and even some moderate Republicans are shuddering at the prospect. But it is a source of delight among conservatives who believe the GOP establishment has drifted too far from its core principles.
Of the people tapped so far by President-elect Trump, only one — Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus — is identified with the party’s mainstream. Priebus will be chief of staff in the Trump White House.
The other names tapped for important positions are outsiders, albeit to varying extents.
thehill.com/homenews/campaign/306851-outsiders-take-power-in-trumps-washington
By Niall Stanage - 11/19/16 06:03 AM EST
People once confined to the political fringes will be at the center of power in Donald Trump’s White House.
Liberals and even some moderate Republicans are shuddering at the prospect. But it is a source of delight among conservatives who believe the GOP establishment has drifted too far from its core principles.
Of the people tapped so far by President-elect Trump, only one — Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus — is identified with the party’s mainstream. Priebus will be chief of staff in the Trump White House.
The other names tapped for important positions are outsiders, albeit to varying extents.
thehill.com/homenews/campaign/306851-outsiders-take-power-in-trumps-washington