October 28, 2015

October 28, 2015

BOULDER, CO - OCTOBER 28: Presidential candidates Ohio Governor John Kasich (L-R), Mike Huckabee, Jeb Bush, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Carly Fiorina, Ted Cruz (R-TX), New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) take the stage at the CNBC Republican Presidential Debate at University of Colorados Coors Events Center October 28, 2015 in Boulder, Colorado. Fourteen Republican presidential candidates are participating in the third set of Republican presidential debates. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show: The Republican debates are interesting but the buildup to the debate is boring. The media treats the debates like a baseball game while pushing their agenda, starting fights between candidates and egging them on. The debates are supposed to be battles between candidates, not candidates versus a moderator with an agenda. Instead of surrendering the debate process to the media, the RNC should embrace the Lincoln-Douglass debates. Also, President Obama is smiling ear to ear because he got the budget that he wanted thanks to John Boehner and company. He and Mitch McConnell are scheming to give liberals everything they could possibly want post-Obama with a two year budget, which is a disaster for Social Security, domestic spending, and the national debt.

TAGS: debate, GOP, RNC, media, moderator, agenda, candidate, Lincoln, Douglass, Lincoln Douglas debate, budget, Congress, spending, John Boehner, Mitch McConnell, Social Security, medicare, Medicaid, debt, John Harwood, CNBC, John Kasich, pension, pensions

THIS IS FROM:

The Federalist
CNBC’s John Harwood Has No Business Moderating A GOP Presidential Debate

Gallup
Republicans’ Views of McConnell Now Tilt Negative

The Hill
Kasich: ‘I’ve about had it’ with Carson, Trump

Fox News
Beware America, President Obama has put politics into your pensions

Breitbart
When Obama Says He Won’t Take Your Guns, History Proves He’s Lying

The Blaze
House Passes Budget Deal to Raise Debt Ceiling — Here Are the 79 Republicans Who Voted for It

Image used with permission of Getty Images