De Blasio has grown fond of saying, “There is plenty of money in this world. It’s just in the wrong hands” as a means of justifying his expansion of government into every aspect of life. No word if he counts he and his wife in the “wrong hands” camp after a recent media report suggesting the duo has squandered more than a billion dollars of unaccounted-for taxpayer dollars.
If neither his diminished fanfare nor his abysmal record is enough to convince de Blasio to abandon White House ambitions, the polls should.
His early campaign visits to Iowa aren’t moving the needle one iota, with a new poll from the vaunted Des Moines Register putting him at zero percent – tied for dead last.
Nationally, the picture is even worse. A Monmouth University survey showed Hizzoner as the only Democrat in the packed field with a net negative rating – an impressive feat.
But de Blasio isn’t taking the hint. He’s on the campaign trail, taking shots at his predecessor, Michael Bloomberg, who was eyeing a 2020 bid before concluding there was no path for a centrist in today’s hard left Democratic nominating process.
De Blasio didn't do well in NY in any large project, then turned into taxing the people for project he neglected for years. Now ne is trying to run the scam on a larger scale.
De Blasio didn't do well in NY in any large project, then turned into taxing the people for project he neglected for years. Now ne is trying to run the scam on a larger scale.
No comments:
Post a Comment