I am still looking into Ben Carson. Like I mentioned, I don't know enough about him to decide.
SR, who do you like for 2016 and why?
Here's the thing... I don't see ANYONE yet at this point that I feel confident about. Most have some kind of "poison pill" issue with me.
Democrat:
This is a narrower slate, so I've actually looked at some of these...
Elizabeth Warren: I kind of like her and she seems authentic--she doesn't seem as much in the pocket of special interests. She hasn't always been a Democrat, which I think is a good thing. She might be from Mass, but she grew up in Oklahoma & Texas. She is a little unfiltered though, which isn't always a good thing. But she is personable, knowledgeable and has a good handle on what's going on in the country. I don't feel like she is feeding me lines of BS. She is willing to put forth creative solutions and her reputation is that she plays well with others. I think she has some useful ideas about the student loan issues. She strikes me as pragmatic more than dogmatic.
Martin O'Malley: He is kind of a pragmatic technocrat based on what I've seen. I like that he has been mayor of a major city--I think an understanding of local government is important. I like that he has been a governor and thus has executive branch experience. He is someone I plan to research more.
Hillary Clinton: I could hold my nose if need be depending on the other options, but I'm not a huge fan. I believe there is talent beyond the Bush & Clinton last names. I don't like her ties to big banking & particularly Goldman Sachs.
Joe Biden: ummmm.... yeah. Nice guy, but doesn't strike me as Presidential. Just can't take him serious.
There are others, but I don't see any of them gaining momentum yet this far out.
Republican:
Very hard to sort through this huge field at this point. I've looked at a few of the wild cards like Carson, but I'm really not going to expend the effort until it starts to narrow a bit.
- If they waiver at all on vaccination requirements, they will not get my vote.
- If they are not supportive or at least neutral/silent on gay marriage/equivalent, they will not get my vote.
- If they advocate getting rid of judges or judicial districts as a means to influence the judiciary, they will not get my vote.
- If they routinely wrap their positions in religion, reference a "war on religion/Christians" or similar BS, they will not get my vote.
- If they deny climate change, they will not get my vote.
- If they advocate further "culture war" efforts like abortion restrictions, they will not get my vote.
- If they advocate ACA repeal without proposing a reasonable alternative, they will not get my vote.
- If they have in any way represented the State of Texas in official capacity, they will not get my vote. I'm allowed to say that since I'm from here.
I recognize that this eliminates nearly all Republican candidates. Sorry. But if the GOP is going to be the party of quacks, anti-science wackjobs, bigots & sexists, which is where all of the hyperbole of most candidates lands thus far, then they do not deserve my consideration. Simple. as. that.
The Republicans need to draft Jon Huntsman, or he needs to run as an indy. Unfortunately, he appears like so many on both sides of the aisle... skilled enough to do a great job as President, but smart enough not to run.
Basically, I want a pragmatic, technocrat optimist that collaborates rather than incites, and acts rationally even if I don't agree on everything. Or a unicorn apparently.
