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here.FOX News First: March 10
By Chris StirewaltBuzz Cuts: ·      Â
Trump or Cruz, who runs better against Hillary? ·      Â
Kasich ahead in Ohio ·      Â
Crubio? ·      Â
Hillary says Benghazi mom âabsolutely wrongâ ·      Â
A fever for small governmentTRUMP OR CRUZ, WHO RUNS BETTER AGAINST HILLARY? Republicans are down to their final choice:
Donald Trump or
Ted Cruz. And for party loyalists, the decision basically comes down to which one â if either â can defeat presumptive Democratic nominee
Hillary Clinton.
Thereâs a lot of talk about Trumpâs potential crossover appeal with whatâs left of white, working-class male Democrats. Cruz, for his part, argues that he would mobilize conservatives in a way not seen in a generation and storm the White House.
Fortunately, we have some actual data to test their hypotheses.
In the two latest national polls that measured head-to-head matchups between GOP contenders and Clinton, the harsh judgement of the general electorate toward frontrunner Trump got even harsher.
Surveys from
WSJ/NBC News and
WaPo/ABC News show Clinton trouncing Trump by 13 points and 9 points respectively. Trump has always fared poorly in head-to-head matchups with Clinton, leading her in only five of 49
national polls conducted since last year.
But things seem to be getting worse â approaching a Dukakis-sized wipeout for the GOP â and itâs not because of anything Clinton is doing. She continues
to mostly trail Cruz as well as other nominal candidates.
So whatâs the deal?
Trumpâs
abysmal numbers with women and struggles with
better-educated voters are probably the driving forces behind his overall problems with beating Clinton. But heâs also suffering because of the deepening rift in his own party. Trump is trying hard to show some graciousness toward his fellow Republicans, but we can still expect this final pairing between him and Cruz to be an atomic blast of nastiness.
Thereâs also the barrage of negative advertising with which conservative groups are now pummeling Trump. Though designed to defeat him in the GOP primary, the devastating attacks on Trumpâs character and business record will have an effect beyond the GOP electorate. Much like the case with the 2012 Republican nominee, the attacks of the primary season will carry over in the general election. The attacks on
Mitt Romney over his business record and taxes started with his primary rivals in January and ended with his eventual November defeat.
Should Trump actually sew up the Republican nomination outright, he would certainly see his numbers improve. Thereâs always a bit of a dowry for the nominee as intra-party rivals soften their resistance following primary fights. But that effect is likely to be muted this time given the murderous fighting and the depth of the divide between Trumpâs populist revolt and the rest of the party.
But there is no evidence that Trumpâs Democratic crossover appeal is nearly significant enough to offset his other huge demographic problems.
Of course, neither is there any evidence to suggest that Cruzâs conservative call to arms will change the electorate in a meaningful way. Itâs just that Cruz isnât starting in the deep hole that Trump is to start.
Cruz has not yet been subject to the avalanche of attack ads that would surely greet him in a general election and Trumpâs ugly, personal attacks on Cruz will also surely intensify in the near term.
But for now, itâs safe to say that Cruz is a better general election bet than Trump. Thereâs more variability with Trump â positive and negative â but Cruz can at least promise to essentially keep the GOP coalition intact and at least keep it close with Clinton.
Kasich ahead in Ohio - Fox News: âOhio Governor
John Kasich bests Donald Trump among Buckeye Republicans by a 34 to 29 percent margin. Ted Cruz is third with 19 percent.Â
Marco Rubio trails with just 7 percent. Thatâs according to a new Fox News poll of Ohio likely Republican primary voters. The governorâs edge is within the pollâs margin of sampling error. Kasich is bolstered by positive evaluations of his job performance as governor. He has a sky high 79 percent approval rating among the Ohio party faithful. Even so, nearly one quarter of Kasich supporters say they could end up voting for another candidate (23 percent).â
Crubio?- Rubio responded to the possibility of a number-two spot on the Cruz ticket on Wednesdayâs special town hall on âThe Kelly File.â Watch
here.
[
GOP delegate count: Trump 458; Cruz 359; Rubio 151; Kasich 54 (1,237 needed to win)]
WITH YOUR SECOND CUP OF COFFEE⦠Chinese food in America is now a staple of the national diet. But despite a lengthy presence in the U.S. the national boom for Chinese food is relatively recent. In a discussion with author
Andrew Coe, the Atlantic
explains how Chinese food came to America and why this cultureâs cuisine took off in the United States: âIt wasnât until adventurous âBohemiansâ in New York City started exploring Chinatown in the 1880s for exotic treats that the food started to become popular. In the years since, âChinese foodâ as understood by Americans has undergone several cycles of trendiness and localization, including the chop suey craze of the early 20th century to the explosion in variety after President
Richard Nixonâs 1972 trip to China.â
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[email protected]POLL CHECK
Real Clear Politics Averages
National GOP nomination: Trump 36 percent; Cruz 21.8 percent; Rubio 18 percent; Kasich 12 percent
Florida GOP Primary: Trump 40.7 percent; Rubio 23.7 percent; Cruz 17 percent; Kasich 8.7 percent
Ohio GOP Primary: Trump 36.5 percent; Kasich 34 percent; Cruz 16.3 percent; Rubio 7 percent
National Dem nomination: Clinton 51 percent; Sanders 39.6 percent
Florida Dem Primary: Clinton 62 percent; Sanders 30.5 percent
Ohio Dem Primary: Clinton 57 percent; Sanders 37 percent
General Election Clinton vs. Trump: Clinton +5 points
Generic Congressional Vote: Democrats +1
HILLARY SAYS BENGHAZI MOM âABSOLUTELY WRONGâ WashFreeBeacon: âWhen confronted with a video Wednesday of the mother of a Benghazi victim saying that she was lied to by
Hillary Clinton, the Democratic frontrunner responded by saying, âsheâs wrong. Sheâs absolutely wrong.â Debate moderator
Jorge Ramos prefaced the video by commenting on the fact that the email that Clinton sent to her daughter was about the videoâ¦Clinton told the audience she feels âa great deal of sympathy for the familiesâ of the victims and she âcanât imagine the grief that she has for losing her son.â But, she then definitively said âshe [the mother of the Benghazi victim] was absolutely wrong.ââ
Wonât answer indictment question, says âitâs not going to happenâ - The Hill: âHillary Clinton on Wednesday refused to answer a question about whether sheâd quit the presidential race if she were indicted over her private email server. âOh, for goodness, itâs not going to happen. Iâm not even answering that question,â Clinton said in the CNN/Univision debate in Miami. Clinton was asked by moderator Jorge Ramos about the controversy over her emails and whether she ever improperly sent classified information over her server. The former secretary of State reiterated that her email arrangement was permitted and said the classification of her emails reflects excessive secrecy in the government.â
The Judgeâs Ruling: What if the FBI is on to Hillary? - Fox Newsâ Senior Judicial Analyst Judge
Andrew Napolitano asks, what if the government investigation into Hillary Clinton is actually amounting to something? The judge lays out all the questions. Read
here.
[
Dem delegate count: Clinton 1,223; Sanders 574 (2,383 needed to win)]
SENATE JUDICIARY HAS FIRST MEETING SINCE VACANCYNYT: âMembers of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday will get a prime opportunity to air their grievances over the handling of the Supreme Court vacancy when the panel gathers for its first business meeting since the death of Justice
Antonin Scalia last month. Senator
Charles E. Grassley, the Iowa Republican who leads the panel bitterly divided over whether to take up
President Obamaâs coming nominee, said on Wednesday that he expected a full-blown debate at the session. Democrats will no doubt be happy to oblige himâ¦On Thursday, the combatants will be at close quarters for the discussion. An earlier business meeting scheduled for last week was canceled when Democrats objected to Mr. Grassleyâs proposal to hold it in a room off the Senate floor, which would have limited attendance from the news media and the public.â
A FEVER FOR SMALL GOVERNMENTWSAZ: âIn the weeks after passing a bill allowing West Virginians to drink raw milk, one delegate brought the drink in to celebrate and, eventually, several lawmakers have gotten sick. Some lawmakers say itâs just a coincidence and a stomach bug is going aroundâ¦An anonymous complaint is in at the state Department of Health and Human Resources. And now, state health officials have to investigate why at least one person is saying the raw milk was given illegally and got these lawmakers sick. However, other delegates, like
Pat McGeehan (R - Hancock, 01), who is quite sick himself, say that recent stomach bug has been making the rounds for weeks. âThereâs definitelyâ¦some other colleagues that have similar symptoms that Iâve been experiencing,â McGeehan said. But the timing is coincidental. McGeehan and some other lawmakers drank raw, unpasteurized, milk to celebrate the passing of a bill that makes it legal before getting sick.â
Chris Stirewalt is digital politics editor for Fox News. Want FOX News First in your inbox every day? Sign upÂ
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