Cruz takes Iowa Hillary in Dead Heat
The Iowa vote is in and Senator Ted Cruz has come out on top in the presidential caucuses in Iowa, beating Donald Trump, as Hillary Clinton ended in a ‘virtual’ dead heat with Bernie Sanders. Iowa unfortunately always votes religion before practical economics and will ultimately be their own economic doom. Well, Christ did say“Give back to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s.” Well with Cruz or Hillary in office, Goldman Sachs will pull the strings and get ready to hand it all to Caesar for he his coming after you to pay for his folly and corruption.
Cruz had to win Iowa for he is the conservative lawmaker who had his victory party back in 2012 serve Chic Fill-A because they are a religious based company that is anti-liberal and closed on Sunday. If he could not win Iowa, he was really doomed. Cruz won with 27.7% of the vote compared to 24.3% for Trump, which was not overwhelming while the establishment candidate Jeb Bush came in with 2.8%. You have to wonder if the 2.8% reflects those who drank too much or are aliens living among us.
This religious focus will not play well outside the Bible Belt for the majority believe in a separation of church and state or you end up with Iran or the ISIS model. It sort of makes a mockery of the the right to Freedom of Religion where if the tables were turned and the majority became Muslim in the USA, would they have a right to impose laws on Christians? The Ottoman Empire was famous for forced conversions as did the Spanish upon the natives of South America. Accept or die has never been the definition of “freedom”. One must accept another’s beliefs so they themselves can exercise their own. As they say, that’s God’s job. He will sort things out.
So Iowa has never been a place which picks the winner. In fact, the ONLYpresident they have ever picked was George W. Bush and they have an uncanny ability to pick losers. So a Cruz victory he should line his pockets so he can pay off Goldman Sachs since he is not likely to win nationally.
Here is Iowa’s track Record: (highlight the National Candidate)
1976 (January 19): Gerald Ford (45%) and Ronald Reagan (43%)
1980 (January 21): George H. W. Bush (32%), Ronald Reagan (30%), Howard Baker (15%), John Connally (9%), Phil Crane (7%), John B. Anderson (4%), and Bob Dole (2%)
1984 (February 20): Ronald Reagan (unopposed)
1988 (February 8): Bob Dole (37%), Pat Robertson (25%), George H. W. Bush (19%), Jack Kemp (11%), and Pete DuPont (7%)
1992 (February 10): George H. W. Bush (unopposed)
1996 (February 12): Bob Dole (26%), Pat Buchanan (23%), Lamar Alexander (18%), Steve Forbes (10%), Phil Gramm (9%), Alan Keyes (7%), Richard Lugar (4%), and Morry Taylor (1%)
2000 (January 24): George W. Bush (41%), Steve Forbes (31%), Alan Keyes (14%), Gary Bauer (9%), John McCain (5%), and Orrin Hatch (1%)
2004 (January 19): George W. Bush (unopposed)
2008 (January 3): Mike Huckabee (34%), Mitt Romney (25%), Fred Thompson (13%), John McCain (13%), Ron Paul (10%), Rudy Giuliani (4%), and Duncan Hunter (1%)
2012 (January 3): Rick Santorum (25%), Mitt Romney (25%), Ron Paul (21%), Newt Gingrich (13%), Rick Perry (10%), Michele Bachmann (5%), and Jon Huntsman (0.6%)
2016 (February 1): Ted Cruz (27.7%), Donald Trump (24.3%), Marco Rubio (23.1%), Ben Carson (9.3%), Rand Paul (4.5%), Jeb Bush (2.8%), Carly Fiorina, John Kasich, Mike Huckabee, and Chris Chritie each had 2% of the vote, Rick Santorum had 1%, and Jim Gilmore had 0%. After results were announced, Huckabee ended his campaign.
1980 (January 21): George H. W. Bush (32%), Ronald Reagan (30%), Howard Baker (15%), John Connally (9%), Phil Crane (7%), John B. Anderson (4%), and Bob Dole (2%)
1984 (February 20): Ronald Reagan (unopposed)
1988 (February 8): Bob Dole (37%), Pat Robertson (25%), George H. W. Bush (19%), Jack Kemp (11%), and Pete DuPont (7%)
1992 (February 10): George H. W. Bush (unopposed)
1996 (February 12): Bob Dole (26%), Pat Buchanan (23%), Lamar Alexander (18%), Steve Forbes (10%), Phil Gramm (9%), Alan Keyes (7%), Richard Lugar (4%), and Morry Taylor (1%)
2000 (January 24): George W. Bush (41%), Steve Forbes (31%), Alan Keyes (14%), Gary Bauer (9%), John McCain (5%), and Orrin Hatch (1%)
2004 (January 19): George W. Bush (unopposed)
2008 (January 3): Mike Huckabee (34%), Mitt Romney (25%), Fred Thompson (13%), John McCain (13%), Ron Paul (10%), Rudy Giuliani (4%), and Duncan Hunter (1%)
2012 (January 3): Rick Santorum (25%), Mitt Romney (25%), Ron Paul (21%), Newt Gingrich (13%), Rick Perry (10%), Michele Bachmann (5%), and Jon Huntsman (0.6%)
2016 (February 1): Ted Cruz (27.7%), Donald Trump (24.3%), Marco Rubio (23.1%), Ben Carson (9.3%), Rand Paul (4.5%), Jeb Bush (2.8%), Carly Fiorina, John Kasich, Mike Huckabee, and Chris Chritie each had 2% of the vote, Rick Santorum had 1%, and Jim Gilmore had 0%. After results were announced, Huckabee ended his campaign.
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