the finishing post. the queen saw it from its very inception as a foal and took it through all of the training nightmares and everything else. and then to see it cross the finishing line, wow, what a moment. she was on the phone to her trainers all the time, as i understand it. yes. and she took a huge interest in what they were doing. always supportive. never trying to interfere. but just really interested. i heard a story recently, had her uncle not abdicated and therefore, you know, her father take over as sovereign, and clearly she was heir to that and core nated in 1953. had that not all happened, as i understand it, there is a sense that she would quite liked to have got married, lived on a farm somewhere, had the dogs and the horses. and she would have been completely content with that sort of life, correct? the queen was a great country
his clock cleaned by mitt romney. everyone said, romney crushed him in that first debate. he came back strong in the second and third debates and won the election. conventional wisdom was that hillary clinton beat donald trump in every debate last time. so how much of a game changer it is remains a question. but i do think for the first time biden looks vulnerable. dana, a very quick.here. i have seen some of this commentary like, oh, it was bad form for harris to come after biden this hard. that s total nonsense. the democrats had a front runner last time they core nated early on and that ended up badly for the presidency in 2016. if he s going to be the front runner, he has to be able to be nimble and responsive to tough attacks. and we ll see if he shapes up for the next debate better. he did not seem terribly well prepared last time.
senior advisor to hillary clinton s campaign. what was your take away from the night? i was looking to see if these democrats were going to drop the gloves and start throwing punches and go after donald trump or go after joe biden, the front runner. they did a little of both. i expected the first night to be more of a criticism. last night, it was all about joe biden and donald trump. my big take away is that joe biden was a bit shaky. he has a long way to go to be core nated as a nominee. i think they all go on. the big take away for me was the
as he has come forward, we got to see the real donald trump, i got some real problems with that. i think that what he is saying and what he is doing is not necessarily moving the cause of conservatism forward. how does the republican national committee feel about these candidates going at each other, ridiculing each other, in donald trump s case, insulting other candidates? i think a couple things. one, we have to keep our eye on the prize. if we hillary clinton is being core nated as the democratic nominee, we need to remember that s who our focus needs to be on. i understand it s going to be the nature of any primary for folks to discuss the differences between those themselves on policy issues. i think that s fine. the name calling needs to stop. we have to remember what ronald reagan taught us his 11th commandment, thou shall not speak ill of another republican. what chairman priebus said the other night we have to remember where our focus. that s why i surmised that
think about al sharpton in 2004. he was clear, i m just basically to pull you all to the left. he brought up some issues all of the candidates had to address. so if reich is on stage, it would work better if there were multiple candidates so it s not a versus b. but i really think that the democrats need more than just one core nated candidate. thank you for joining us. joy, you re doing it s friday at 2:00?