With No Agenda for You, Hillary Clinton [old white lady billionaire] Plans to Awaken the Sleeping Giant in Arizona [350,000 Latinos not registered to vote] with Hot Racist Hate Alarm

Non-Whites are the Means for Winning. If a campaign is about moving a candidate from point A to a better point by election day there is little room for growth for Clinton based solely on what she brings to the table - much of the votary has known her for 2 decades. She is a known commodity and a polarizing figure. This may explain her popularity and approval ratings which are at a historic low for a presidential candidate as reported by the NY Times this month. Democrats have no agenda for you. They also sell fear. Also a White Party, Dems function to service the interests of the ruling white male corporate and wealthy elite. To both parties Non-White people and their welfare are not the end of the electoral process but merely the means for winning. [MOREThese puppetician folks are playing games with your mind and doing little of tangible benefit for non-white people. Fear of racist Trump for sale. Are you buying? 

Scaring Them to the Polls.  From [HERE] If there is one place where the dramas and subplots of Campaign 2016 collide, it is across the sprawling and scorching desert state of Arizona.

Here lives Donald Trump’s restive base of white voters unsettled by the country’s social transformation and fired up to dismantle Washington’s power structure. Here also lies the Democrats’ sleeping giant — an estimated 350,000 Latinos who are not registered to vote but who could mobilize against the presumptive Republican presidential nominee over his incendiary rhetoric.

Then there are the politicians. One senator, Jeff Flake (R), is a vocal Trump critic sounding the alarm about an electoral wipeout. The other, John McCain (R), ­alternates awkwardly between his maverick persona and a Trump apologist as he navigates an unexpectedly difficult reelection race. Also on the ballot is Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, a Trump backer whose long crusade against undocumented immigrants makes him a lightning rod.

THE REACTION IS HERE

This leaves the Democrats — who have withered away as the state took a hard-right turn in the Obama era — sensing their best chance in two decades to turn Arizona and its 11 electoral votes blue. They think that Trump, who campaigned in Phoenix on Saturday, is energizing a new generation of Latino voters who haven’t participated in elections before.

“Everything that needs to happen on the ground is happening,” said Fred DuVal, a longtime Democratic power broker here.

There is no recent reliable public polling in Arizona, but Democratic and Republican strategists said private research shows the presidential race as a toss-up.

Asked whether presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton has a path to victory here, GOP strategist Charles Coughlin conceded: “I believe it’s there if she wanted to do it. Everybody always says, ‘This is the election when Latinos turn out,’ and it’s never happened. But I can actually see that happening this time.”

[Trump’s candidacy sparking ‘a surge’ in citizenship, voter applications]

For now, the Clinton campaign is not targeting Arizona as a battleground state; its current advertising blitz includes eight other swing states.

Still, Clinton has hired Rodd McLeod, who ran former congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords’s campaigns here, as state director for the general election. He is recruiting half a dozen staffers, according to local Democratic officials, while the state party’s coordinated campaign has deployed a field staff of about 70.

The Clinton team is assessing trends in Arizona to determine whether to make greater investments here, and officials were cagey when asked to detail their strategy. In a statement, Marlon Marshall, the director of state campaigns and political engagement, stuck to the Clinton campaign’s national talking points: “We’re hearing real doubts from voters in Arizona about Donald Trump’s plans for a deportation force and his dangerous agenda on national security.”

Clinton’s footprint appears to be greater than Trump’s. His state director, Charles Munoz, is based in Nevada, and a visit last week to Trump headquarters in Mesa revealed little evidence of an active campaign. There was one worker eating lunch at his desk, a roomful of empty cubicles and, other than a small pile of plastic yard signs, no Trump paraphernalia, brochures or fliers. The GOP’s coordinated campaign has only one staffer, though party officials boast of an active volunteer corps and plans to soon open 14 offices.

The Trump campaign and Republican officials argue that carrying Arizona is pure Clinton fantasy.

“Arizona will stay red,” Arizona Republican Party Chairman Robert Graham declared. “The progressive left should avoid the state of Arizona because it’s a bad investment.”

At GOP headquarters here in Phoenix the other day, executive director Avinash Iragavarapu presented a slide show with data to argue his case for why putting Arizona in play is “all big talk and wishful thinking.” He pointed to the GOP’s roughly 200,000-person advantage in voter registration as well as historical patterns: In 2012, for instance, Mitt Romney defeated President Obama, 54 percent to 44 percent.

Former Arizona governor Jan Brewer — considered the state’s most popular Republican and a leading Trump surrogate — said Trump resonates here because he is speaking directly to voters’ fury and anxieties. [MORE]