President Obama and former President Bill Clinton
got more attention than the Republican presidential candidates combined
with a good-natured exchange on Twitter.
President Obama delivered his first tweet from his personal Twitter account:
Hello, Twitter! It's Barack. Really! Six years in, they're finally giving me my own account.
The President’s first tweet led to this exchange between former President Clinton and Obama:
While Jeb Bush is running around the country try to
convince people that Obamacare can be replaced with an Apple Watch,
Obama and Clinton were owning Twitter.
Welcome to @Twitter, @POTUS! One question: Does that username stay with the office? #askingforafriend
Good question, @billclinton. The handle comes with the house. Know anyone interested in @FLOTUS?
While Jeb Bush is running around the country try to
convince people that Obamacare can be replaced with an Apple Watch,
Obama and Clinton were owning Twitter.
Republicans don’t have a single person in their
party that has as much star power as Barack Obama and Bill Clinton.
Democrats have the top four biggest headline getters in either party.
The Obama/Clinton Twitter exchange highlights a major problem for the
Republican Party. None of the GOP’s presidential candidates has an ounce
of charisma.
The cookie cutter Republicans are all dull, and
there isn’t a single one of them who won’t get blown off of the debate
stage when they stand next to Hillary Clinton. Jeb Bush is about as
exciting as cold and unflavored oatmeal, and he is the Republican
Party’s great white establishment hope for 2016.
Scott Walker is a walking gaffe machine who is in
way over his head. Rand Paul can’t decide whether he is an establishment
Republican or Ron Paul’s crazy kid. Marco Rubio looks like a great
candidate until he talks, and the rest of the field is made up of a
motley crew of has-beens and never-wases that will never be elected
president.
President Obama and former President Clinton put
Republicans to shame because they perfectly demonstrated what real
charisma can do in 140 characters or less. The media has looked at all
sorts of angles as the 2016 candidates announce, but the one point they
overlook is that the Republican candidates aren’t very likable.
A
couple of tweets from two of the biggest heavyweights in the party
showed why Democrats are in a good position to keep the White House in
2016.
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