Full Article |
Caroline Giuliani is “With Her.”
The daughter of former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani -- a key adviser to Donald Trump and one of his most vocal surrogates -- has been “pro-Hillary all along,” she wrote on her Facebook page.
The younger Giuliani is currently using the campaign’s “H” logo as her profile picture, and posted the #ImWithHer campaign slogan banner as the wallpaper to her page. She has posted multiple photographs and links online, declaring her support for the Democratic nominee. In one photograph of a friend, Jason Lubin, and a pet rabbit, she described the scene as “my handsome guys cheering HRC on in the first debate.”
Reached at her Los Angeles office, Caroline Giuliani confirmed the page was hers. "I love Hillary, I think she's by far the most qualified candidate that we've had in a long while," she told POLITICO. "My dad knows. I was for Barack in 2012. He knows and is fully comfortable with it and thinks I have a right to my opinion." She declined to comment about her father's support for Trump.
In another post online, she shared a photograph from Clinton’s official Facebook page of manicured nails that read “Who Run The World,” with a picture of Clinton and added her own commentary: “Yes please.”
The younger Giuliani is not the only one who has drifted from her father this election -- the New York Times reported that many of the former mayor's most loyal former aides have rejected Trump’s candidacy, and have expressed concerns about Giuliani’s embrace of the Manhattan mogul and his more extreme views, specifically on immigration. Some of his former staffers, like his onetime press secretary Matt Higgins, have endorsed Clinton.
It’s also not the first time Caroline Giuliani has strayed from her father’s party. In 2008, when her father was running for President, the then-17-year-old posted on Facebook that her political views were “liberal” and joined a group called “Barack Obama (One Million Strong for Barack).” She quickly cleaned it up and deleted her page after the news went viral online. At the time, a spokeswoman said that her Facebook post was "not intended as an indication of support in a presidential campaign."
Source: politico.com
Date Posted: Friday, October 7th, 2016 , Total Page Views: 1562
Like what you're reading? Please help us continue providing you with informative and thought provoking stories by becoming a supporter of Moorenews.net