Never trust those worked so had for Trump to lose in "National Review" and the "Weekly Standard." m/r
In Trump’s America, Is This The End Of George Will?
Matthew Richer February 28, 2017
George Will, now 75, lost his job as a political commentator on Fox News, in favor of the pro-Trump Nigel Farage, soon after Donald Trump was elected [Fox Declines To Renew George Will’s Contract by Katherine Rodriguez, Breitbart, January 21, 2017]. To paraphrase Edmund G. Robinson’s famous line: Is this the end of George Will?
Sam Francis once said no conservative pundit had “made it” quite like George Will [The Case of George Will, Radix, June 25, 2016]. His column was syndicated to some 450 newspapers; he has long been a regular presence on television, earned a small fortune on the lecture circuit, and has a closetful of honorary degrees. In 1986, the Wall Street Journal called George Will “the most powerful journalist in America.”
But times have changed. Ever since Donald Trump announced his candidacy in June 2015, George Will, like National Review, waged a feverish “Never Trump” campaign to undermine him. All to no avail. Republican voters ignored Will and gave Trump more votes than any other GOP candidate in history.
-go to links-
Sam Francis once said no conservative pundit had “made it” quite like George Will [The Case of George Will, Radix, June 25, 2016]. His column was syndicated to some 450 newspapers; he has long been a regular presence on television, earned a small fortune on the lecture circuit, and has a closetful of honorary degrees. In 1986, the Wall Street Journal called George Will “the most powerful journalist in America.”
But times have changed. Ever since Donald Trump announced his candidacy in June 2015, George Will, like National Review, waged a feverish “Never Trump” campaign to undermine him. All to no avail. Republican voters ignored Will and gave Trump more votes than any other GOP candidate in history.
-go to links-
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