ZitatIn the latest level of her blame game, defeated 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is reportedly using a fake study to explain her loss in Wisconsin. NTK Network read her new book What Happened and made the amusing discovery.
“In Wisconsin, where I lost by just 22,748 votes, a study from Priorities USA estimated that the new voter ID law helped reduce turnout by 200,000 votes, primarily from low-income and minority areas,” she writes.
That is an interesting theory – one that PolitiFact rated “mostly false” back in May when Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) made the same assumption.
[snip]
In addition to fake studies, Clinton has also blamed Russia, FBI Director James Comey, the “bankrupt” DNC, misogyny and sexism for her sound defeat at the hands of the unpopular Republican candidate Donald Trump.
Maybe she should try blaming herself – a novel idea that comes right from the mouths of Democratic leaders.
Not listed here but part of her interview with Jane Pauley: white people.
Especially white woman who somehow sinned when they did not vote for Hillary.
Hillary Clinton Slams Women Who Did Not Vote for Her, Says She Cannot Give ‘Absolution’ by Adam Shaw 12 Sep 2017
Hillary Clinton, in her campaign post-mortem released Tuesday, tore into women who didn’t vote for her failed presidential candidacy in November and regretted it, saying “these people were looking for absolution that I just couldn’t give.”
Clinton’s book, What Happened, is an angry account of how she lost to President Trump in November. Among the multitude of people/countries/events she blames for her defeat are young women who didn’t vote for her.
In the book, she talks about the Women’s March in D.C. and other cities across America as “bittersweet” as it contrasted the enthusiasm of activists with the lack of enthusiasm with which her campaign was greeted.
While she called the event “awe-inspiring on Twitter, she says she “couldn’t help but ask where those feelings of solidarity, outrage, and passion had been during the election.”
“Since November, more than two dozen women — of all ages, but mostly in their twenties — had approached me in restaurants, theaters, and stores to apologize for not voting or not doing more to help my campaign,” she writes. “I responded with forced smiles and tight nods.”
Clinton then recounts a moment when a mother dragged her daughter by the arm to apologize to the former secretary of state for not voting. She notes chillingly that the girl had her head “bowed in contrition.” But instead of feeling sorry for the girl being humiliated before her, Clinton says she wanted to pile on.
“I wanted to stare right in her eyes and say, ‘You didn’t vote? How could you not vote?! You abdicated your responsibility as a citizen at the worst possible time! And now you want me to make you feel better?’” she said. “Of course I didn’t say any of that.”
While a majority of women voted for Clinton, she failed to win a majority of white women — who voted instead for Trump.