Who said it, Hans Reigle or John Carney?

Who said it, Hans Reigle or John Carney?

Take the quiz. Identify which statement was copied from which candidates web page, and I'll post the correct answers in the comment section this afternoon. Deficit: A: "For too long, Democrats and Republicans have spent trillions of dollars the nation didn't have." B: "Eliminate wasteful spending that is draining our nation's economic resources. An $19 trillion national debt is unacceptable." Jobs: A: "Reclaim high tech and low tech manufacturing jobs to enable more Americans to work. Too many jobs have moved overseas. Strong export industries like aerospace and agriculture need to be nurtured." B: "Delawareans are not just competing against other Americans for good jobs -- they are competing against an increasingly educated workforce around the world. By investing in innovation and building the industries of the future, the U.S. will continue to grow and maintain the world's leading economy." Education: A: "...states and school districts should have flexibility in determining how best to educate their students." B: "Local control of education needs to be increased and maintained." National Security: A: "Address our border control problems in order for Americans to reclaim our sense of security. Current immigration laws are not being properly enforced. A weak border complicates immigration reform and is a threat to our national security. Unvetted immigrants should not be allowed entry into the United States. B: I firmly believe that America should be focused on nation-building here at home, not abroad, I feel strongly that we must maintain a counterterrorism infrastructure that ensures a tragedy like September 11th will never happen again.
Tuesday Open Thread [3.29.16]

Tuesday Open Thread [3.29.16]

David Plouffe:
Ok, you say. We get that Clinton has built a strong delegate lead. But she should be able to close this out with more strength, winning the vast majority of the remaining states. And if she doesn’t, it shows weakness for the general election. Well, [...] [a]t this time eight years ago, ]President Obama] too had an all but insurmountable delegate lead. But in the last 9 contests, we lost 6 of them. Now, we had some issues like Rev Wright we were fighting thru. And Hillary Clinton campaigned admirably. But we predicted those losses long before based on the results we were seeing in the earlier primaries and caucuses. Even as we were moving towards the nomination, and ultimately the Presidency, we knew we would lose a bunch of states in the latter part of the primary calendar. Some suggested it showed weakness or would hurt us in the general. History suggests otherwise.
Bernie had an expected good weekend, and some fools decided that it meant he was absolutely going to be the nominee, despite the math, despite the upcoming slate of primaries that all favor Hillary by large margins, despite the history that Plouffe so expertly lays out. Boy, some of you are going to have to eat a lot of crow in May. Do you like Ketchup to go with it?
Complexities of Color Coalition Mayoral Debate April 18

Complexities of Color Coalition Mayoral Debate April 18

The Complexities of Color Coalition, in partnership with the Metropolitan Wilmington Urban League Young Professionals, Interdenominational Ministers Action Council, Delaware Young Democrats Minority Caucus, and Delaware Black are hosting a debate among Wilmington Mayoral candidates April 18, 2016, 7pm at Ezion Fair Baptist Church in Wilmington. You need a ticket (it's free) for this one and you can sign up for that at this website. Your ticket comes via email.