demoniotasmania escribió:
Cobardes y traidores hay en todos los países, incluído EEUU.
John McCain el primero, seguido como no de Barack Hussein Obama, Hillary Clinton, George Bush, Paul Ryan, Nancy Pelosi y sigue...
Todos los que han trincado pasta de Soros o trabajado para Trump perdiera solo en el lado Republicano, por suerte la mayoría ya están fuera del pantano o en vía de perder el asiento.
Es lo que me gusta de EEUU, que al que ha hecho una pifia los ciudadanos todavía le pueden pasar factura. En España pasan invisibles en las listas o son nombrados cargos de la administración sin que la gente pueda hacer nada.
John Warner, former senator from Virginia -
Christine Todd Whitman,
Chris Shays,
Sherwood Boehlert,
Connie Morella,
David Durenberger,
Claudine Schneider, f
William Milliken,
Larry Pressler,
Grant Woods,
Howard Denis, former Maryland state senator
Jack McGregor, former Pennsylvania state senator
Colin Powell, secretary of state
Henry Paulson, treasury secretary
Michael Chertoff, Homeland Security secretary
Carlos Gutierrez, commerce secretary
Rosario Marin, U.S. treasurer
John Negroponte,
Richard Armitage,
Brent Scowcroft,
James Clad,
Richard Painter,
James Glassman,
William Reilly,
Alan Steinberg,
Robert Blackwill,
Scott Evertz,
Lezlee Westine,
Shirin Tahir-Kheli,
Ashley J. Tellis,
David A. Gross,
James Kunder,
Matthew Waxman,
Kori Schake,
William Sanchez,
Timothy P. Stratford,
Daniel Twining, former State Department staff and foreign policy adviser to John McCain
Deborah Loewer, retired Navy rear admiral and director of White House situation room
Mark Lagon, former U.S. ambassador-at-large to combat trafficking in persons
David Ross Meyers, assistant staff secretary
William A. Pierce, former deputy assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Health and Human Services
Donald Gregg, national security adviser
Louis Sullivan, health and human services secretary under George H.W. Bush
Frank Lavin, former Reagan political director and ambassador to Singapore
Doug Elmets, former Reagan spokesman
Jim Cicconi, former Reagan and George H.W. Bush aide — "Hillary Clinton is experienced, qualified and will make a fine president. The alternative, I fear, would set our nation on a very dark path.”
Fred T. Goldberg Jr., former assistant U.S. treasury secretary and IRS commissioner under George H.W. Bush
Charles Fried, "
Pete Teeley, press secretary to then-Vice President George H.W. Bush, former U.S. ambassador to Canada and U.S. representative to UNICEF
Richard Howill, former deputy assistant secretary of state and ambassador to Ecuador under Reagan
William Ruckelshaus, former Environmental Protection Agency head, deputy attorney general and acting FBI director
Carla Hills, U.S. trade representative under George H.W. Bush, Housing and Urban Development secretary under Gerald Ford
Nicholas Rostow, special assistant to Reagan and George H.W. Bush on national security
Phil Brady, Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations
Michael Browne, deputy undersecretary of transportation under Gerald Ford
These Republicans are backing Hillary Clinton
Robert Kagan, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, former Reagan State Department aide and adviser to the presidential campaigns of John McCain and Mitt Romney
Max Boot, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and adviser to GOP presidential candidates — "I'm literally losing sleep over Donald Trump. She would be vastly preferable to Trump."
Peter Mansoor, retired Army colonel and former aide to former CIA director David Petraeus — "It will be the first Democratic presidential candidate I’ve voted for in my adult life."
Meg Whitman, former Hewlett-Packard chief executive and California gubernatorial nominee — "Donald Trump's demagoguery has undermined the fabric of our national character. America needs the kind of stable and aspirational leadership Secretary Clinton can provide."
Marc Andreessen, venture capitalist — "[Silicon] Valley wouldn't be here, we wouldn't be doing any of this if we didn't have the amazing flow of immigrants that we've had in the last 80 years. And the idea of choking that off just makes me sick to my stomach."
Harry Sloan, head of Global Eagle Acquisition — "He is unprepared and temperamentally unfit to be our president. Most of my Republican friends feel the same way. As a businessman, a father and a conservative, it is clear to me that Hillary Clinton is the right choice in this election."
Dan Akerson, former chairman and chief executive of General Motors — "Serving as the leader of the free world requires effective leadership, sound judgment, a steady hand and, most importantly, the temperament to deal with crises large and small. Donald Trump lacks each of these characteristics."
Chuck Robbins, chief executive of Cisco
Hamid Moghadam, chairman and chief executive of Prologis — "Our country is about tolerance and inclusion and that's why, as a lifelong Republican supporter, I endorse Hillary Clinton for president in this election."
William Oberndorf, donor of $3 million to GOP candidates since 2012 — "If it is Trump vs. Clinton, and there is no viable third-party candidate, I will be voting for Hillary Clinton."
Mike Fernandez, $4 million to GOP candidates in recent years — "If I have a choice — and you can put it in bold — if I have a choice between Trump and Hillary Clinton, I’m choosing Hillary. She’s the lesser of two evils."
Political operatives (10)
David Nierenberg, finance chairman to Mitt Romney's 2012 campaign
Mark Salter, former top adviser to John McCain — "Whatever Hillary Clinton’s faults, she’s not ignorant or hateful or a nut. She acts like an adult and understands the responsibilities of an American president. That might not be a ringing endorsement. But in 2016, the year of Trump’s s campaign, it’s more than enough."
Sally Bradshaw, former top Jeb Bush adviser, told CNN that she had left the Republican Party to become an independent because of Trump's presence at the top of the ticket — and that if the race were close in her home state of Florida this fall, she would be voting for Clinton. "As much as I don't want another four years of [President Barack] Obama's policies, I can't look my children in the eye and tell them I voted for Donald Trump."
Ana Navarro, Florida GOP consultant and frequent CNN guest
Maria Comella, former spokeswoman for two of Trump's top backers, Chris Christie and Rudy Giuliani — "Instead of speaking out against instances of bigotry, racism and inflammatory rhetoric whether it's been against women, immigrants or Muslims, we made a calculus that it was better to say nothing at all in the interest of politics and winning elections."
Kurt Bardella, former top aide to Rep. Darrel Issa (R-Calif.) and ex-spokesman for Breitbart News -- "A big reason why I decided that Hillary Clinton is the candidate who I’m voting for -- the first Democrat I’m voting for in my life -- is because this is a time where what’s going on is much bigger than partisanship, bigger than Republican or Democrat, or single issues that traditionally these campaigns are about."
Mike Treiser, former Mitt Romney aide — "In the face of bigotry, hatred, violence, and small-mindedness, this time, I’m with her.”
Craig Snyder, former chief of staff to then-Republican Sen. Arlen Specter (Pa.) and an ex-colleague of former top Trump adviser Roger Stone and current top Trump adviser Paul Manafort.
Lionel Sosa, a GOP ad-maker who worked for George W. Bush and Ronald Reagan
Cindy Guerra, former Broward County (Fla.) Republican Party chair