It's too early to count McCain out yet, even though he "suspended" his campaign to make sure the bailout would be agreed upon and passed. All his alleged campaign suspension and his threats not to attend the debate accomplished was to emphasize how impulsive and erratic his behavior is.
Barney Frank had the best line. When the Republicans blamed Nancy Pelosi for souring the deal because she accused the Republicans of being extremists, Frank said (almost exact quote), "Oh, so the Republicans got their feelings hurt, and now they're taking it out on the whole country."
Good man Barney; that puts the blame where it belongs, on the ~70% of House Republicans who voted against the bailout.
But all is not lost for John McCain. The famous "October surprise" awaits in the wings. Now that the bailout as proposed to the House of Representatives has failed (at least temporarily), with an overwhelming majority of the Republicans voting against it--and McCain campaigned with these same Republicans to support it so he could take credit--John McCain can ride in to the rescue.
And now the October surprise. Remember: you read it here first. (If it's wrong, you don't remember where you read it.)
John McCain will resolve the bailout bust by...
(are you ready?)
(are you sure you're ready for this one?)
(last chance to bail out on the bailout...)
John McCain will resolve the bailout bust by...using Cindy McCain's money to buy up all the rotten mortgages, and restore confidence in the banking system, and save the stock market, and bring Republicans and Democrats back together again in one harmonious, glorious, unified governmental collaboration! And he'll WIN! And JOHN McCAIN WILL BE PRESIDENT!! And SARAH PALIN WILL BE...
[uh oh. i gotta stop taking those pills.]
-- triton --
Monday, September 29, 2008
Saturday, September 27, 2008
#67 States in Play
"Candidates' travels show it's all about Ohio" is the headline on Carrie Budoff Brown's Politico online article this evening.
And it's true that both Obama and McCain have spent more time there and in Florida than in any other state. Obama is also visiting Virginia and North Carolina far more frequently than John Kerry did four years ago, as he tries to make inroads into what his campaign clearly believes are vulnerable Red states. My question, rhetorical of course: if he's so concerned about trying to capture Virginia, why didn't he choose as his running mate the senator or the governor? Either Webb or Keane would really have put that state into play.
McCain is spending much time in Michigan and Pennsylvania, as he tries to woo moderate Republicans in the Philly suburbs, conservative Republicans in the southwestern part of Pennsylvania, and Democrats disaffected with Governor Granholm's statewide economic problems in Michigan.
Both Obama and McCain seem to think that Iowa will go Blue this year, although McCain has added Iowa to his schedule recently, so he may see something there that the polls have not reflected. I think Obama needs to spend some time there as well, even though right now at least one poll has him with a nine point lead. Obama is also trying to bring New Mexico back to the Blue, and I see him succeeding there. But he has to work hard to keep Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota in the Democratic column. The polls fluctuate sufficiently in those four states that I don't trust them to reflect true Obama strength.
Obama also has to be careful not to keep neglecting New England (other than New Hampshire, which seems definitely in play). New Englanders are a proud people, and won't look kindly on being ignored, or taken for granted as Obama seems to be doing. Luckily, McCain's not spending much time there either (except for New Hampshire). If Obama doesn't spend some time in the other New England states, I'm concerned about an unpleasant surprise in New England on November 4.
Frankly, I think Obama is wasting his time in Florida. McCain has also spent a lot of time there, and every poll I've seen puts him pretty safely ahead of Obama. Barring something really unforeseen, I don't see that lead changing. Missouri's another state that, I believe, Obama currently has little chance of winning.
McCain probably can't win the election without Ohio, unless he takes both Michigan and Pennsylvania, and maybe Minnesota for good measure. McCain's strong collection of southern states, mountain states, and Dakotas, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Arizona, and Texas base create a math that indicates that likely Obama can't win without it either.
Finally, then, as I've said before, It's Ohio.
-- triton --
And it's true that both Obama and McCain have spent more time there and in Florida than in any other state. Obama is also visiting Virginia and North Carolina far more frequently than John Kerry did four years ago, as he tries to make inroads into what his campaign clearly believes are vulnerable Red states. My question, rhetorical of course: if he's so concerned about trying to capture Virginia, why didn't he choose as his running mate the senator or the governor? Either Webb or Keane would really have put that state into play.
McCain is spending much time in Michigan and Pennsylvania, as he tries to woo moderate Republicans in the Philly suburbs, conservative Republicans in the southwestern part of Pennsylvania, and Democrats disaffected with Governor Granholm's statewide economic problems in Michigan.
Both Obama and McCain seem to think that Iowa will go Blue this year, although McCain has added Iowa to his schedule recently, so he may see something there that the polls have not reflected. I think Obama needs to spend some time there as well, even though right now at least one poll has him with a nine point lead. Obama is also trying to bring New Mexico back to the Blue, and I see him succeeding there. But he has to work hard to keep Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota in the Democratic column. The polls fluctuate sufficiently in those four states that I don't trust them to reflect true Obama strength.
Obama also has to be careful not to keep neglecting New England (other than New Hampshire, which seems definitely in play). New Englanders are a proud people, and won't look kindly on being ignored, or taken for granted as Obama seems to be doing. Luckily, McCain's not spending much time there either (except for New Hampshire). If Obama doesn't spend some time in the other New England states, I'm concerned about an unpleasant surprise in New England on November 4.
Frankly, I think Obama is wasting his time in Florida. McCain has also spent a lot of time there, and every poll I've seen puts him pretty safely ahead of Obama. Barring something really unforeseen, I don't see that lead changing. Missouri's another state that, I believe, Obama currently has little chance of winning.
McCain probably can't win the election without Ohio, unless he takes both Michigan and Pennsylvania, and maybe Minnesota for good measure. McCain's strong collection of southern states, mountain states, and Dakotas, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Arizona, and Texas base create a math that indicates that likely Obama can't win without it either.
Finally, then, as I've said before, It's Ohio.
-- triton --
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Florida,
John McCain,
Michigan,
Minnesota,
Missouri,
New Hampshire,
North Carolina,
Ohio,
Pennsylvania,
Virginia,
Wisconsin
Thursday, September 25, 2008
# 66 Good News and Bad News: Read This Post
Actually, this post should be numbered 666. That is, at least, the way I'm feeling right now.
Here's the bad news:
John McCain has a really good chance of being our next president, and Sarah Palin our next vice president.
How can that be? By all the ideals that the citizens of this country claim to live by; by all that we individually view as sacred, and by our moral and ethical standards; by the use of our minds that can reason and analyze and synthesize; by all that is meaningful in our lives, especially our children and our grandchildren and our friends and our colleagues: by all of these, John McCain should be fifteen, twenty, twenty-five points behind Barack Obama in the polls.
1) The bush administration has deregulated so many parts of our economy that the entire economy is in a shambles, leading the German president to say, bluntly, that the United States will no longer be viewed as the world's financial leader. This is the Republicans' doing.
2) The bush administration has mired us down in a war that we probably had no legitimate reason for beginning in the first place. This is the Republicans' doing.
3) The bush administration, as a result of (2) above, has failed in its pledge to capture those responsible for the September 11 attacks. This is the Republicans' doing.
4) The bush administration, even as a johnny-come-lately to environmental concerns (if we believe they really care at all), has lost all credibility and hence the ability to get global agreement to attack global warming. This is the Republicans' doing.
(5) John McCain has admitted during the campaign that he didn't know much about economics. But one of the most serious problems (of many) that we currently face is the real possibility of a devastating depression in this country, putting millions more people out of work, out of homes, out of everything, and causing unimaginably horrible ripples through the economies of every other nation.
(6) John McCain, in a successful attempt to appeal to the faaaaaaaaaaaar right base of the Republican party, selected unknown and unqualified Sarah Palin to be his vice presidential running mate. If the McCain-Palin ticket wins this election, she will be a heartbeat away from becoming president, a horribly alarming prospect since then-president McCain has had cancer four times, is still psychologically suffering from his war experiences (even his Republican handlers fear his impetuosity and his temper), and looks, sounds, and thinks like a person much older than his 72 years.
(7) John McCain's temper and impetuous nature are precisely the qualities we must not have in a president, the person with his finger on the trigger to our nuclear and conventional weapons.
(8) John McCain flew into the middle of bailout negotiations in D.C. to find a way out of the current 780 billion dollar mess, and negotiations flew into a rage, at least temporarily failing.
(9) John McCain, unprepared to face Barack Obama in a debate on Foreign Policy--for God's sake, that's supposed to be McCain's forte!--so far has backed out, using the ruse of trying to settle our economic dilemma (see #5 above).
(10) Barack Obama needs to be waaaaaay ahead in the polls going into election day if he is to have a chance to win. The bottom line is, Right Now, more people than we could ever believe will deny him their vote because he's black. It is so prevalent now that people are actually saying it to pollsters. The pollsters are further concerned that "Undecided" is becoming a code word for "notablackperson." I am disgusted with racism.
I could go on and on and what good would that do. I see no other reason than racism for the closeness of the current election. It is very depressing.
And now here's the good news.
Right now, this evening as I write this post; right now, as the news is filled with the failure of the Republicans to help construct a solution to the country's, possibly soon to be the world's, economic disasters; right now, with the polls showing just about a dead heat between the two major candidates; right now, there is no good news.
Except perhaps for this courageous statement from Paul Begala, on Anderson Cooper's "A C 360" this evening. I'm surprised his comment wasn't blipped. I'll be surprised if tomorrow it isn't all over the press here and abroad. But perhaps his saying it will somehow awaken our reason, our sense of fairness, our sense of righteous indignation that some people, some of our own countrypeople, view race as more important than ability. Tonight, Paul Begala said that the current president of the United States is "a high-functioning moron."
And no one disagreed. God bless America for its freedom of speech. And that IS good news.
-- triton --
Here's the bad news:
John McCain has a really good chance of being our next president, and Sarah Palin our next vice president.
How can that be? By all the ideals that the citizens of this country claim to live by; by all that we individually view as sacred, and by our moral and ethical standards; by the use of our minds that can reason and analyze and synthesize; by all that is meaningful in our lives, especially our children and our grandchildren and our friends and our colleagues: by all of these, John McCain should be fifteen, twenty, twenty-five points behind Barack Obama in the polls.
1) The bush administration has deregulated so many parts of our economy that the entire economy is in a shambles, leading the German president to say, bluntly, that the United States will no longer be viewed as the world's financial leader. This is the Republicans' doing.
2) The bush administration has mired us down in a war that we probably had no legitimate reason for beginning in the first place. This is the Republicans' doing.
3) The bush administration, as a result of (2) above, has failed in its pledge to capture those responsible for the September 11 attacks. This is the Republicans' doing.
4) The bush administration, even as a johnny-come-lately to environmental concerns (if we believe they really care at all), has lost all credibility and hence the ability to get global agreement to attack global warming. This is the Republicans' doing.
(5) John McCain has admitted during the campaign that he didn't know much about economics. But one of the most serious problems (of many) that we currently face is the real possibility of a devastating depression in this country, putting millions more people out of work, out of homes, out of everything, and causing unimaginably horrible ripples through the economies of every other nation.
(6) John McCain, in a successful attempt to appeal to the faaaaaaaaaaaar right base of the Republican party, selected unknown and unqualified Sarah Palin to be his vice presidential running mate. If the McCain-Palin ticket wins this election, she will be a heartbeat away from becoming president, a horribly alarming prospect since then-president McCain has had cancer four times, is still psychologically suffering from his war experiences (even his Republican handlers fear his impetuosity and his temper), and looks, sounds, and thinks like a person much older than his 72 years.
(7) John McCain's temper and impetuous nature are precisely the qualities we must not have in a president, the person with his finger on the trigger to our nuclear and conventional weapons.
(8) John McCain flew into the middle of bailout negotiations in D.C. to find a way out of the current 780 billion dollar mess, and negotiations flew into a rage, at least temporarily failing.
(9) John McCain, unprepared to face Barack Obama in a debate on Foreign Policy--for God's sake, that's supposed to be McCain's forte!--so far has backed out, using the ruse of trying to settle our economic dilemma (see #5 above).
(10) Barack Obama needs to be waaaaaay ahead in the polls going into election day if he is to have a chance to win. The bottom line is, Right Now, more people than we could ever believe will deny him their vote because he's black. It is so prevalent now that people are actually saying it to pollsters. The pollsters are further concerned that "Undecided" is becoming a code word for "notablackperson." I am disgusted with racism.
I could go on and on and what good would that do. I see no other reason than racism for the closeness of the current election. It is very depressing.
And now here's the good news.
Right now, this evening as I write this post; right now, as the news is filled with the failure of the Republicans to help construct a solution to the country's, possibly soon to be the world's, economic disasters; right now, with the polls showing just about a dead heat between the two major candidates; right now, there is no good news.
Except perhaps for this courageous statement from Paul Begala, on Anderson Cooper's "A C 360" this evening. I'm surprised his comment wasn't blipped. I'll be surprised if tomorrow it isn't all over the press here and abroad. But perhaps his saying it will somehow awaken our reason, our sense of fairness, our sense of righteous indignation that some people, some of our own countrypeople, view race as more important than ability. Tonight, Paul Begala said that the current president of the United States is "a high-functioning moron."
And no one disagreed. God bless America for its freedom of speech. And that IS good news.
-- triton --
Labels:
Anderson Cooper,
Barack Obama,
economy,
foreign policy,
John McCain,
Paul Begala,
racism,
Republicans
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
#65 It's Ohio
Pennsylvania may be known as "The Keystone State," but this year, as in 2004, Ohio is the key state. Almost on a daily basis, certainly on a poll-to-poll basis, the lead switches back and forth between Obama and McCain in Ohio, with its twenty electoral votes.
Right now the polls have McCain ahead but barely. A few days ago, Obama was ahead by four points. It's likely to continue to alternate until November 4. If Ted Strickland (the governor) or Sherrod Brown (the senator, though I don't know if he was seriously considered by the Obama camp) had been willing to run for the VP position, Ohio might be more likely to go Democratic this year. Right now, however, it's a tossup.
But it's appearing increasingly likely that, as Ohio goes, so goes the presidency. Once again. That's a scary thought, given Ohioans' documented difficulty to vote as they actually intend, the questionable accuracy of the machines used for the electronic balloting, and 2004's early surprising difference between exit polls and actual votes. The CEO of Diebold, which made the machines used four years ago in Ohio, proudly exclaimed when the company delivered the machines that Bush was going to win the state.
It is possible--but very difficult--for either candidate to win the election without Ohio. It's also very unlikely. I hope that Strickland and Brown will be campaigning for and with Obama in the state.
I'm not saying the other states are unimportant. For Ohio to be the deciding state, the other states have to line up as they are generally expected to do: the south solidly for McCain (and I'll include VA, WV, MO, TX, OK in this group); New England (except possibly for the battleground NH), NY, NJ, PA, MI, MN, and WI solidly for Obama (and some of these are currently questionable); the agricultural midwest solidly for McCain, except possibly for IA; MT, ID, UT, WY insane for McCain; AZ and one or both of NV and CO for McCain; and the western seaboard (WA, OR, CA) plus NM for Obama. Alaska and Hawaii will likely to continue to cancel each other out. There may be a shift or two of some of the smaller states without major effect, but if several states vote differently from currently expected, they could offset Ohio's large number of electoral votes. I don't think that will happen. Ohio seems to be the key.
-- triton --
Right now the polls have McCain ahead but barely. A few days ago, Obama was ahead by four points. It's likely to continue to alternate until November 4. If Ted Strickland (the governor) or Sherrod Brown (the senator, though I don't know if he was seriously considered by the Obama camp) had been willing to run for the VP position, Ohio might be more likely to go Democratic this year. Right now, however, it's a tossup.
But it's appearing increasingly likely that, as Ohio goes, so goes the presidency. Once again. That's a scary thought, given Ohioans' documented difficulty to vote as they actually intend, the questionable accuracy of the machines used for the electronic balloting, and 2004's early surprising difference between exit polls and actual votes. The CEO of Diebold, which made the machines used four years ago in Ohio, proudly exclaimed when the company delivered the machines that Bush was going to win the state.
It is possible--but very difficult--for either candidate to win the election without Ohio. It's also very unlikely. I hope that Strickland and Brown will be campaigning for and with Obama in the state.
I'm not saying the other states are unimportant. For Ohio to be the deciding state, the other states have to line up as they are generally expected to do: the south solidly for McCain (and I'll include VA, WV, MO, TX, OK in this group); New England (except possibly for the battleground NH), NY, NJ, PA, MI, MN, and WI solidly for Obama (and some of these are currently questionable); the agricultural midwest solidly for McCain, except possibly for IA; MT, ID, UT, WY insane for McCain; AZ and one or both of NV and CO for McCain; and the western seaboard (WA, OR, CA) plus NM for Obama. Alaska and Hawaii will likely to continue to cancel each other out. There may be a shift or two of some of the smaller states without major effect, but if several states vote differently from currently expected, they could offset Ohio's large number of electoral votes. I don't think that will happen. Ohio seems to be the key.
-- triton --
Labels:
Barack Obama,
electoral college,
John McCain,
Ohio,
Sherrod Brown,
Ted Strickland
# 64 McCain Chickens Out of Debate?
CNN has reported that John McCain has taken the initiative to postpone this Friday's debate in order to allow government officials to concentrate on the disaster developing (already developed) in our economy.
Why weren't these officials concentrating on enforcing the rules (and laws!) already in force in the first place?
CNN has not yet reported (the unconfirmed claim) that this was Obama's Idea, suggested privately to McCain. If indeed it was Obama's idea, that information should be publicized, to show that Obama was the leader in this suggestion, wanted to "collaborate across the aisle," and was rebuffed by a knife in the back from the McCain campaign (how's that for a mixed metaphor?).
If it wasn't Obama's idea, and if it actually came from the McCain campaign, then the Democrats should legitimately question how McCain can CLAIM to work and play well with both parties in order to put country first, and then sneak behind the Democrats with this b.s idea. Besides, it smells of the Evil Karl Rove. And anything that the Evil Karl Rove touches is (a) filet mignon for the Republicans, and (b) poison for the rest of the country.
In either case, the Democrats can claim, probably legitimately, that McCain isn't ready for the debate--whose topic is FOREIGN POLICY, not the economy--and hence chickened out. He just can't keep the information straight in his own mind or coming out of his mouth. Call McCain's bluff on this one, show him for the excessively-elder non-statesman that he is, and force him to appear on Friday.
If McCain refuses to debate, Obama should show up and, using the old Monty Python bit, debate against a puddle of brown gravy.
Damn, but I'm sick of the Evil Karl Rove.
-- triton --
Why weren't these officials concentrating on enforcing the rules (and laws!) already in force in the first place?
CNN has not yet reported (the unconfirmed claim) that this was Obama's Idea, suggested privately to McCain. If indeed it was Obama's idea, that information should be publicized, to show that Obama was the leader in this suggestion, wanted to "collaborate across the aisle," and was rebuffed by a knife in the back from the McCain campaign (how's that for a mixed metaphor?).
If it wasn't Obama's idea, and if it actually came from the McCain campaign, then the Democrats should legitimately question how McCain can CLAIM to work and play well with both parties in order to put country first, and then sneak behind the Democrats with this b.s idea. Besides, it smells of the Evil Karl Rove. And anything that the Evil Karl Rove touches is (a) filet mignon for the Republicans, and (b) poison for the rest of the country.
In either case, the Democrats can claim, probably legitimately, that McCain isn't ready for the debate--whose topic is FOREIGN POLICY, not the economy--and hence chickened out. He just can't keep the information straight in his own mind or coming out of his mouth. Call McCain's bluff on this one, show him for the excessively-elder non-statesman that he is, and force him to appear on Friday.
If McCain refuses to debate, Obama should show up and, using the old Monty Python bit, debate against a puddle of brown gravy.
Damn, but I'm sick of the Evil Karl Rove.
-- triton --
Sunday, September 21, 2008
# 63 "Numbers" -- Not Just a TV Show Any More
The report I cited in my post last night is still sticking in me, in part because today Yahoo has that report as one of its featured articles, so I'm constantly reminded of it. I've been fearful of latent racism since the Pennsylvania Democratic primary, when some voters indicated they weren't ready to have "an African-American as president."
We shouldn't be surprised, of course, that racial prejudice exists in our society. But the stakes in this election are so high and the Republicans have been running such a dirty, rotten scoundrel campaign that, frankly, I don't see how any one who is not a dyed-in-the-wool, can't-tell-his-ass-from-his-elbow Republican can even consider voting for McCain. On the other hand, I know some smart, good people who are supporting John McCain, so I can't apply my criteria to other folk. They have their own agendas and benchmarks, for good or for ill, and they'll vote the way they think is best.
I'm voting for Obama because (a) his ideas more closely align with my own in foreign and domestic policies; (b) he'll represent us well in international relationships, as dubya has clearly not; (c) he seems not to act impulsively and with anger, as McCain apparently does (at least according to sources from his own campaign); and (d) he chose a running mate based on qualifications, not political considerations. Joe Biden was not my first choice (or my fourth or fifth, for that matter) to be the VP candidate, but he does seem to be connecting with middle- and lower-economic classes in a way that Obama, despite his economically deprived childhood, is apparently not connecting.
Even some Republican elected officials can't support John McCain. Last week Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska said that Governor Palin “doesn’t have any foreign policy credentials” and added that it’s a “stretch” to say that Palin is qualified to be president. This may be the Democrats’ answer to Lady de Rothschild, a former donor to the Democratic party, who 0n September 17 announced her support for McCain and opposition to Obama. Senator Obama is “an elitist,” said the millionaire who married into a billionaire family.
Here are some recent poll numbers, as of late last week:
NYTimes/CBS: Obama 48-43
Gallup: Obama 48-44
CNN Poll of Polls: Obama 47-44
Virginia: McCain 49 to 41
New Mexico: Obama 49-42
Ohio: tied at 48% each, in a two-person race; when the three other candidates were listed, Obama remained at 48%, McCain dropped to 44%, and Nader got 4%.
I also saw that Indiana, which had been moving toward Obama (perhaps when he was considering Evan Bayh as his running mate?) was moving back to McCain.
But the countrywide polls notwithstanding, I'm still upset with the race issue, and have made some changes in how the electoral college stands, from my point of view, right now. John McCain is now favored in five additional traditionally Red states (even though some of them have Democratic governors and/or senators) which previously I had listed as Tossups; Barack Obama will likely carry New Mexico; but I have removed four states from Obama's column, and have moved them to Tossups. Three of the four are vital midwest states: Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin. If Obama had been able to convince Governor Strickland to be his running mate, Ohio might be strongly in the Obama camp.
KEY:
# moved from Tossup to McCain
+ moved from Tossup to Obama
* moved from Obama to Tossup
McCAIN
Alabama 9
Alaska 3
Arizona 10
Florida 27
Georgia 15
Idaho 4
Indiana 11
Kansas 6
Kentucky 8
Louisiana 9
Mississippi 6
#Missouri 11
#Montana 3
Nebraska 5
#Nevada 5
North Carolina 15
North Dakota 3
Oklahoma 7
South Carolina 8
South Dakota 3
Tennessee 11
Texas 34
Utah 5
#Virginia 13
#West Virginia 5
Wyoming 3
Currently 26 states with 239 electoral votes for McCain
----- -----
OBAMA
California 55
Delaware 3
DC 3
Hawaii 4
Illinois 21
Maine 4
Maryland 10
Massachusetts 12
Minnesota 10
New Jersey 15
+New Mexico 5
New York 31
Oregon 7
Pennsylvania 21
Rhode Island 4
Vermont 3
Washington 11
Currently 16 states + DC with 219 electoral votes for Obama
---- -----
TOSSUP
Arkansas 6 (Republican?)
Colorado 9
Connecticut 7 (because of Lieberman)
Iowa 7
*Michigan 17 (despite auto factory closures and McCain’s ineptitude talking to Michiganders)
*New Hampshire 4 (a bad feeling I'm having right now about Jed Bartlett's state)
*Ohio 20 (despite auto factory closures)
*Wisconsin 10 (McCain spending time and $$ there)
Currently, 8 states with 80 electoral votes are Tossups.
But remember: the election is very fluid and, in addition to the states I've classified as Tossups, several of the states under either candidate can shift (as clearly happened since my last electoral list). Right now, based on the above lists, Obama needs 51 electoral votes: barring any further defections from the Obama column, Connecticut's 7 electoral votes, Michigan's 17, Ohio's 20, and Wisconsin's 10 would give Obama 273 votes and the presidency.
In fact, right now that's the only way I see Obama winning the election: by carrying all three of those midwest states. That's a tough task, especially in Ohio with its strong conservative Republican tradition. A lot will depend on what Governor Strickland and Senator Brown do by way of campaigning.
Two more points: (1) my having even to list Michigan as a tossup is of concern, given the condition of that state's economy; (2) that I had to add Wisconsin is a real shock, and may be a function of McCain's spending time and money there, without yet badly screwing up his appearances.
-- triton --
We shouldn't be surprised, of course, that racial prejudice exists in our society. But the stakes in this election are so high and the Republicans have been running such a dirty, rotten scoundrel campaign that, frankly, I don't see how any one who is not a dyed-in-the-wool, can't-tell-his-ass-from-his-elbow Republican can even consider voting for McCain. On the other hand, I know some smart, good people who are supporting John McCain, so I can't apply my criteria to other folk. They have their own agendas and benchmarks, for good or for ill, and they'll vote the way they think is best.
I'm voting for Obama because (a) his ideas more closely align with my own in foreign and domestic policies; (b) he'll represent us well in international relationships, as dubya has clearly not; (c) he seems not to act impulsively and with anger, as McCain apparently does (at least according to sources from his own campaign); and (d) he chose a running mate based on qualifications, not political considerations. Joe Biden was not my first choice (or my fourth or fifth, for that matter) to be the VP candidate, but he does seem to be connecting with middle- and lower-economic classes in a way that Obama, despite his economically deprived childhood, is apparently not connecting.
Even some Republican elected officials can't support John McCain. Last week Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska said that Governor Palin “doesn’t have any foreign policy credentials” and added that it’s a “stretch” to say that Palin is qualified to be president. This may be the Democrats’ answer to Lady de Rothschild, a former donor to the Democratic party, who 0n September 17 announced her support for McCain and opposition to Obama. Senator Obama is “an elitist,” said the millionaire who married into a billionaire family.
Here are some recent poll numbers, as of late last week:
NYTimes/CBS: Obama 48-43
Gallup: Obama 48-44
CNN Poll of Polls: Obama 47-44
Virginia: McCain 49 to 41
New Mexico: Obama 49-42
Ohio: tied at 48% each, in a two-person race; when the three other candidates were listed, Obama remained at 48%, McCain dropped to 44%, and Nader got 4%.
I also saw that Indiana, which had been moving toward Obama (perhaps when he was considering Evan Bayh as his running mate?) was moving back to McCain.
But the countrywide polls notwithstanding, I'm still upset with the race issue, and have made some changes in how the electoral college stands, from my point of view, right now. John McCain is now favored in five additional traditionally Red states (even though some of them have Democratic governors and/or senators) which previously I had listed as Tossups; Barack Obama will likely carry New Mexico; but I have removed four states from Obama's column, and have moved them to Tossups. Three of the four are vital midwest states: Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin. If Obama had been able to convince Governor Strickland to be his running mate, Ohio might be strongly in the Obama camp.
KEY:
# moved from Tossup to McCain
+ moved from Tossup to Obama
* moved from Obama to Tossup
McCAIN
Alabama 9
Alaska 3
Arizona 10
Florida 27
Georgia 15
Idaho 4
Indiana 11
Kansas 6
Kentucky 8
Louisiana 9
Mississippi 6
#Missouri 11
#Montana 3
Nebraska 5
#Nevada 5
North Carolina 15
North Dakota 3
Oklahoma 7
South Carolina 8
South Dakota 3
Tennessee 11
Texas 34
Utah 5
#Virginia 13
#West Virginia 5
Wyoming 3
Currently 26 states with 239 electoral votes for McCain
----- -----
OBAMA
California 55
Delaware 3
DC 3
Hawaii 4
Illinois 21
Maine 4
Maryland 10
Massachusetts 12
Minnesota 10
New Jersey 15
+New Mexico 5
New York 31
Oregon 7
Pennsylvania 21
Rhode Island 4
Vermont 3
Washington 11
Currently 16 states + DC with 219 electoral votes for Obama
---- -----
TOSSUP
Arkansas 6 (Republican?)
Colorado 9
Connecticut 7 (because of Lieberman)
Iowa 7
*Michigan 17 (despite auto factory closures and McCain’s ineptitude talking to Michiganders)
*New Hampshire 4 (a bad feeling I'm having right now about Jed Bartlett's state)
*Ohio 20 (despite auto factory closures)
*Wisconsin 10 (McCain spending time and $$ there)
Currently, 8 states with 80 electoral votes are Tossups.
But remember: the election is very fluid and, in addition to the states I've classified as Tossups, several of the states under either candidate can shift (as clearly happened since my last electoral list). Right now, based on the above lists, Obama needs 51 electoral votes: barring any further defections from the Obama column, Connecticut's 7 electoral votes, Michigan's 17, Ohio's 20, and Wisconsin's 10 would give Obama 273 votes and the presidency.
In fact, right now that's the only way I see Obama winning the election: by carrying all three of those midwest states. That's a tough task, especially in Ohio with its strong conservative Republican tradition. A lot will depend on what Governor Strickland and Senator Brown do by way of campaigning.
Two more points: (1) my having even to list Michigan as a tossup is of concern, given the condition of that state's economy; (2) that I had to add Wisconsin is a real shock, and may be a function of McCain's spending time and money there, without yet badly screwing up his appearances.
-- triton --
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#62 Latent, "Deep-Seated," Racism Among Democrats
I've been gone for awhile, watching the ocean and the S&P. What the Dow Jones Utilities average predicted a few months ago actually happened: DJU broke below its 474 support level (and is now about 40 points lower still), allegedly a signal that the Industrials would fall significantly within a couple of months. Last week that happened. Technically, a lot of damage has been done to DJI and S&P, and the lows of last Wednesday will be tested. Perhaps they'll hold. Otherwise, we're in for further declines, new lows established, with more testing of those lows to follow. So don't feel too good yet about the apparent upward momentum of the last two trading days.
Don't feel good about the title of this post either. How's that for a smooth segue. Unfortunately, I feel disgusted by the results shown by the most recent AP/Yahoo poll conducted through Stanford University. I'm including the salient parts below, but the basic point is that "one-third of white Democrats have negative feelings toward blacks," and enough of them may vote for John McCain, or may just not vote at all, to tip the election to McCain.
We saw it surface earlier, in the Democratic primary in Pennsylvania, when something like fourteen percent of the exit interviewees indicated that they weren't ready for an African-American to be president.
And I go back even further, to Doug Wilder's campaign for governor of Virginia more than a decade ago. He was ahead in the polls by double figures right up to the election, and won by one-half of one percent. That result was attributed to latent racism. The AP/Yahoo/Stanford poll signals to me that Obama may need to be ahead in the polls by ten points or more really to have a chance to win on November 4.
I am not amused.
-- triton --
Here's the article:
By RON FOURNIER and TREVOR TOMPSON, Associated Press Writers
WASHINGTON (AP) — Deep-seated racial misgivings could cost Barack Obama the White House if the election is close, according to an AP-Yahoo News poll that found one-third of white Democrats harbor negative views toward blacks — many calling them "lazy," "violent," responsible for their own troubles.
The poll, conducted with Stanford University, suggests that the percentage of voters who may turn away from Obama because of his race could easily be larger than the final difference between the candidates in 2004 — about two and one-half percentage points....
Obama faces this: 40 percent of all white Americans hold at least a partly negative view toward blacks, and that includes many Democrats and independents.
More than a third of all white Democrats and independents — voters Obama can't win the White House without — agreed with at least one negative adjective about blacks, according to the survey, and they are significantly less likely to vote for Obama than those who don't have such views....
"There are a lot fewer bigots than there were 50 years ago, but that doesn't mean there's only a few bigots," said Stanford political scientist Paul Sniderman who helped analyze the exhaustive survey. The pollsters set out to determine why Obama is locked in a close race with McCain even as the political landscape seems to favor Democrats. President Bush's unpopularity, the Iraq war and a national sense of economic hard times cut against GOP candidates, as does that fact that Democratic voters outnumber Republicans.
The findings suggest that Obama's problem is close to home — among his fellow Democrats, particularly non-Hispanic white voters. Just seven in 10 people who call themselves Democrats support Obama, compared to the 85 percent of self-identified Republicans who back McCain.
The survey also focused on the racial attitudes of independent voters because they are likely to decide the election.
Lots of Republicans harbor prejudices, too, but the survey found they weren't voting against Obama because of his race. Most Republicans wouldn't vote for any Democrat for president — white, black or brown.
Not all whites are prejudiced. Indeed, more whites say good things about blacks than say bad things, the poll shows. And many whites who see blacks in a negative light are still willing or even eager to vote for Obama.
On the other side of the racial question, the Illinois Democrat is drawing almost unanimous support from blacks, the poll shows, though that probably wouldn't be enough to counter the negative effect of some whites' views.
Race is not the biggest factor driving Democrats and independents away from Obama. Doubts about his competency loom even larger, the poll indicates. More than a quarter of all Democrats expressed doubt that Obama can bring about the change they want, and they are likely to vote against him because of that.
Three in 10 of those Democrats who don't trust Obama's change-making credentials say they plan to vote for McCain.
Still, the effects of whites' racial views are apparent in the polling. Statistical models derived from the poll suggest that Obama's support would be as much as 6 percentage points higher if there were no white racial prejudice....
"We still don't like black people," said John Clouse, 57, reflecting the sentiments of his pals gathered at a coffee shop in Somerset, Ohio.
Given a choice of several positive and negative adjectives that might describe blacks, 20 percent of all whites said the word "violent" strongly applied. Among other words, 22 percent agreed with "boastful," 29 percent "complaining," 13 percent "lazy" and 11 percent "irresponsible."...
Among white Democrats, one third cited a negative adjective and, of those, 58 percent said they planned to back Obama.
The poll sought to measure latent prejudices among whites by asking about factors contributing to the state of black America. One finding: More than a quarter of white Democrats agree that "if blacks would only try harder, they could be just as well off as whites."
Those who agreed with that statement were much less likely to back Obama than those who didn't.
Among white independents, racial stereotyping is not uncommon. For example, while about 20 percent of independent voters called blacks "intelligent" or "smart," more than one third latched on the adjective "complaining" and 24 percent said blacks were "violent." Nearly four in 10 white independents agreed that blacks would be better off if they "try harder."...
Just 59 percent of [Hillary Clinton's] white Democratic supporters said they wanted Obama to be president. Nearly 17 percent of Clinton's white backers plan to vote for McCain. Among white Democrats, Clinton supporters were nearly twice as likely as Obama backers to say at least one negative adjective described blacks well, a finding that suggests many of her supporters in the primaries — particularly whites with high school education or less — were motivated in part by racial attitudes.
The survey of 2,227 adults was conducted Aug. 27 to Sept. 5. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.1 percentage points.
Don't feel good about the title of this post either. How's that for a smooth segue. Unfortunately, I feel disgusted by the results shown by the most recent AP/Yahoo poll conducted through Stanford University. I'm including the salient parts below, but the basic point is that "one-third of white Democrats have negative feelings toward blacks," and enough of them may vote for John McCain, or may just not vote at all, to tip the election to McCain.
We saw it surface earlier, in the Democratic primary in Pennsylvania, when something like fourteen percent of the exit interviewees indicated that they weren't ready for an African-American to be president.
And I go back even further, to Doug Wilder's campaign for governor of Virginia more than a decade ago. He was ahead in the polls by double figures right up to the election, and won by one-half of one percent. That result was attributed to latent racism. The AP/Yahoo/Stanford poll signals to me that Obama may need to be ahead in the polls by ten points or more really to have a chance to win on November 4.
I am not amused.
-- triton --
Here's the article:
By RON FOURNIER and TREVOR TOMPSON, Associated Press Writers
WASHINGTON (AP) — Deep-seated racial misgivings could cost Barack Obama the White House if the election is close, according to an AP-Yahoo News poll that found one-third of white Democrats harbor negative views toward blacks — many calling them "lazy," "violent," responsible for their own troubles.
The poll, conducted with Stanford University, suggests that the percentage of voters who may turn away from Obama because of his race could easily be larger than the final difference between the candidates in 2004 — about two and one-half percentage points....
Obama faces this: 40 percent of all white Americans hold at least a partly negative view toward blacks, and that includes many Democrats and independents.
More than a third of all white Democrats and independents — voters Obama can't win the White House without — agreed with at least one negative adjective about blacks, according to the survey, and they are significantly less likely to vote for Obama than those who don't have such views....
"There are a lot fewer bigots than there were 50 years ago, but that doesn't mean there's only a few bigots," said Stanford political scientist Paul Sniderman who helped analyze the exhaustive survey. The pollsters set out to determine why Obama is locked in a close race with McCain even as the political landscape seems to favor Democrats. President Bush's unpopularity, the Iraq war and a national sense of economic hard times cut against GOP candidates, as does that fact that Democratic voters outnumber Republicans.
The findings suggest that Obama's problem is close to home — among his fellow Democrats, particularly non-Hispanic white voters. Just seven in 10 people who call themselves Democrats support Obama, compared to the 85 percent of self-identified Republicans who back McCain.
The survey also focused on the racial attitudes of independent voters because they are likely to decide the election.
Lots of Republicans harbor prejudices, too, but the survey found they weren't voting against Obama because of his race. Most Republicans wouldn't vote for any Democrat for president — white, black or brown.
Not all whites are prejudiced. Indeed, more whites say good things about blacks than say bad things, the poll shows. And many whites who see blacks in a negative light are still willing or even eager to vote for Obama.
On the other side of the racial question, the Illinois Democrat is drawing almost unanimous support from blacks, the poll shows, though that probably wouldn't be enough to counter the negative effect of some whites' views.
Race is not the biggest factor driving Democrats and independents away from Obama. Doubts about his competency loom even larger, the poll indicates. More than a quarter of all Democrats expressed doubt that Obama can bring about the change they want, and they are likely to vote against him because of that.
Three in 10 of those Democrats who don't trust Obama's change-making credentials say they plan to vote for McCain.
Still, the effects of whites' racial views are apparent in the polling. Statistical models derived from the poll suggest that Obama's support would be as much as 6 percentage points higher if there were no white racial prejudice....
"We still don't like black people," said John Clouse, 57, reflecting the sentiments of his pals gathered at a coffee shop in Somerset, Ohio.
Given a choice of several positive and negative adjectives that might describe blacks, 20 percent of all whites said the word "violent" strongly applied. Among other words, 22 percent agreed with "boastful," 29 percent "complaining," 13 percent "lazy" and 11 percent "irresponsible."...
Among white Democrats, one third cited a negative adjective and, of those, 58 percent said they planned to back Obama.
The poll sought to measure latent prejudices among whites by asking about factors contributing to the state of black America. One finding: More than a quarter of white Democrats agree that "if blacks would only try harder, they could be just as well off as whites."
Those who agreed with that statement were much less likely to back Obama than those who didn't.
Among white independents, racial stereotyping is not uncommon. For example, while about 20 percent of independent voters called blacks "intelligent" or "smart," more than one third latched on the adjective "complaining" and 24 percent said blacks were "violent." Nearly four in 10 white independents agreed that blacks would be better off if they "try harder."...
Just 59 percent of [Hillary Clinton's] white Democratic supporters said they wanted Obama to be president. Nearly 17 percent of Clinton's white backers plan to vote for McCain. Among white Democrats, Clinton supporters were nearly twice as likely as Obama backers to say at least one negative adjective described blacks well, a finding that suggests many of her supporters in the primaries — particularly whites with high school education or less — were motivated in part by racial attitudes.
The survey of 2,227 adults was conducted Aug. 27 to Sept. 5. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.1 percentage points.
Thursday, September 4, 2008
#61 "Houston, we have a problem."
I know I wrote that I was going to take some time off to let the conventions settle in to our collective psyches, in order to get a clearer idea of where the election stands. But we're not just talking about a space shuttle in contact with Houston. Sarah Palin is on a God-mission that is dangerous to the constitutional separation of church and state. Nothing frosts my cake more than this kind of attempted violation of the Constitution. I and many of my friends, colleagues, and fellow and sister Americans are members of religious and ethnic minorities. She isn't just a VP candidate anymore. She is a clear and present danger to the sacred concept that our Founding Fathers created more than two hundred years ago. Here's the news article:
----- ----- -----
By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer Wed Sep 3, 7:23 PM ET
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin told ministry students at her former church that the United States sent troops to fight in the Iraq war on a "task that is from God."
In an address last June, the Republican vice presidential candidate also urged ministry students to pray for a plan to build a $30 billion natural gas pipeline in the state, calling it "God's will."
Palin asked the students to pray for the troops in Iraq, and noted that her eldest son, Track, was expected to be deployed there.
"Our national leaders are sending them out on a task that is from God," she said. "That's what we have to make sure that we're praying for, that there is a plan and that plan is God's plan."
A video of the speech was posted at the Wasilla Assembly of God's Web site before finding its way on to other sites on the Internet.
Palin told graduating students of the church's School of Ministry, "What I need to do is strike a deal with you guys." As they preached the love of Jesus throughout Alaska, she said, she'd work to implement God's will from the governor's office, including creating jobs by building a pipeline to bring North Slope natural gas to North American markets.
"God's will has to be done in unifying people and companies to get that gas line built, so pray for that," she said.
"I can do my job there in developing our natural resources and doing things like getting the roads paved and making sure our troopers have their cop cars and their uniforms and their guns, and making sure our public schools are funded," she added. "But really all of that stuff doesn't do any good if the people of Alaska's heart isn't right with God."
Palin attended the evangelical church from the time she was a teenager until 2002, the church said in a statement posted on its Web site. She has continued to attend special conferences and meetings there. Religious conservatives have welcomed her selection as John McCain's running mate.
Rob Boston, a spokesman for Americans United for Separation of Church and State, lamented Palin's comments.
"I miss the days when pastors delivered sermons and politicians delivered political speeches," he said. "The United States is increasingly diverse religiously. The job of a president is to unify all those different people and bring them together around policy goals, not to act as a kind of national pastor and bring people to God."
The section of the church's Web site where videos of past sermons were posted was shut down Wednesday, and a message was posted saying that the site "was never intended to handle the traffic it has received in the last few days."
----- ----- -----
-- triton --
----- ----- -----
By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer Wed Sep 3, 7:23 PM ET
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin told ministry students at her former church that the United States sent troops to fight in the Iraq war on a "task that is from God."
In an address last June, the Republican vice presidential candidate also urged ministry students to pray for a plan to build a $30 billion natural gas pipeline in the state, calling it "God's will."
Palin asked the students to pray for the troops in Iraq, and noted that her eldest son, Track, was expected to be deployed there.
"Our national leaders are sending them out on a task that is from God," she said. "That's what we have to make sure that we're praying for, that there is a plan and that plan is God's plan."
A video of the speech was posted at the Wasilla Assembly of God's Web site before finding its way on to other sites on the Internet.
Palin told graduating students of the church's School of Ministry, "What I need to do is strike a deal with you guys." As they preached the love of Jesus throughout Alaska, she said, she'd work to implement God's will from the governor's office, including creating jobs by building a pipeline to bring North Slope natural gas to North American markets.
"God's will has to be done in unifying people and companies to get that gas line built, so pray for that," she said.
"I can do my job there in developing our natural resources and doing things like getting the roads paved and making sure our troopers have their cop cars and their uniforms and their guns, and making sure our public schools are funded," she added. "But really all of that stuff doesn't do any good if the people of Alaska's heart isn't right with God."
Palin attended the evangelical church from the time she was a teenager until 2002, the church said in a statement posted on its Web site. She has continued to attend special conferences and meetings there. Religious conservatives have welcomed her selection as John McCain's running mate.
Rob Boston, a spokesman for Americans United for Separation of Church and State, lamented Palin's comments.
"I miss the days when pastors delivered sermons and politicians delivered political speeches," he said. "The United States is increasingly diverse religiously. The job of a president is to unify all those different people and bring them together around policy goals, not to act as a kind of national pastor and bring people to God."
The section of the church's Web site where videos of past sermons were posted was shut down Wednesday, and a message was posted saying that the site "was never intended to handle the traffic it has received in the last few days."
----- ----- -----
-- triton --
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
#60 She is no Ronald Reagan. Give us a few weeks.
I didn't see all of Sarah Palin's "Reagan-esque" speech tonight, but I wasn't impressed by the clips and sound bites all the news stations replayed as her best moments. Of course, I was one of those few Americans who wasn't impressed by Ronald Reagan either. Give the man a script or even a few lines that he could memorize, and he became The Great Orator. Once he finished the script and was answering questions extemporaenously, he could barely garble two sentences together, much less a coherent thought. And people forget that the phrase "The Great Orator" was initially coined by the media ironically because of his INability to speak without a strong script in front of him or already memorized. The lesson is, beware of irony lest the American public AND subsequently even the media miss it and, instead, take it literally.
Actually, I suspect Sarah Palin, who is after all a University of Idaho graduate, can string sentences and thoughts together even without a script. And hence she is no Ronald Reagan. As an off-the-cuff speaker, she may be better, and that's something Joe Biden better be alert to when he enters their sole debate.
More importantly--to me, if not to the mass of American voters or to the media--what she said tonight can easily be turned against the Republican party: for just one example, the liberals ignoring the people in favor of their own agendas. [Q: Who in the past eight years of presidency and six of the past eight years in control of Congress passed tax breaks for the uber-wealthy and passed the cost on to the middle class?] [A: the Republicans]
Now it's time to give ourselves a few weeks to let the dust settle, to let the Republican ultra-right wing base enjoy its new hero, and let the polls reflect a bump for McCain as a result of Palin. It's actually, however, not a good thing for the presidential nominee to be overshadowed by his vice presidential running mate, to (pun intended) pale in comparison.
Before the election, people enamored of Sarah will come to remember that John is at the head of the ticket. Besides, I believe that James Carville is as right today as he was sixteen years ago: It is the economy that will finally drive the vote in this election. Once the media or the Democrats seize upon the paucity of fresh ideas in the Republican platform, especially to improve the status of the millions of Americans who are worse off today than they were four years ago (echoes of Ronald Reagan anyone?), the economy will trump the voting power of the energized Republican far-right base.
And then we have only latent racism to worry about. I hate to keep coming back to that idea, but I have no way of knowing if it's still out there waiting to influence votes, or just a throwback to the Pennsylvania Democratic primary which voters have gotten over.
I plan to sit back over the next two or three weeks, take a few long drives in a fuel-efficient car, watch some news but not enough to get upset, and then wait for the mid/late September poll results. By then, the effects of the conventions will have moderated, and perhaps the Republicans will decrease their pit bull attacks and increase their policy pronouncements. Now that would be a refreshing change.
Oh, by the way, in my list of tossup states, move Minnesota off of that list and onto the Democratic list. Without Pawlenty on the Republican ticket, I don't see MN going Red this year. That move won't change my projected electoral vote totals in my July 5 post, since I had--for electoral total purposes only--assigned all the tossup states to one or the other candidate, and I had put MN's ten votes in Obama's column. I just don't see it as much of a tossup anymore. Still Obama 301, McCain 237.
Have a good three weeks.
-- triton --
Actually, I suspect Sarah Palin, who is after all a University of Idaho graduate, can string sentences and thoughts together even without a script. And hence she is no Ronald Reagan. As an off-the-cuff speaker, she may be better, and that's something Joe Biden better be alert to when he enters their sole debate.
More importantly--to me, if not to the mass of American voters or to the media--what she said tonight can easily be turned against the Republican party: for just one example, the liberals ignoring the people in favor of their own agendas. [Q: Who in the past eight years of presidency and six of the past eight years in control of Congress passed tax breaks for the uber-wealthy and passed the cost on to the middle class?] [A: the Republicans]
Now it's time to give ourselves a few weeks to let the dust settle, to let the Republican ultra-right wing base enjoy its new hero, and let the polls reflect a bump for McCain as a result of Palin. It's actually, however, not a good thing for the presidential nominee to be overshadowed by his vice presidential running mate, to (pun intended) pale in comparison.
Before the election, people enamored of Sarah will come to remember that John is at the head of the ticket. Besides, I believe that James Carville is as right today as he was sixteen years ago: It is the economy that will finally drive the vote in this election. Once the media or the Democrats seize upon the paucity of fresh ideas in the Republican platform, especially to improve the status of the millions of Americans who are worse off today than they were four years ago (echoes of Ronald Reagan anyone?), the economy will trump the voting power of the energized Republican far-right base.
And then we have only latent racism to worry about. I hate to keep coming back to that idea, but I have no way of knowing if it's still out there waiting to influence votes, or just a throwback to the Pennsylvania Democratic primary which voters have gotten over.
I plan to sit back over the next two or three weeks, take a few long drives in a fuel-efficient car, watch some news but not enough to get upset, and then wait for the mid/late September poll results. By then, the effects of the conventions will have moderated, and perhaps the Republicans will decrease their pit bull attacks and increase their policy pronouncements. Now that would be a refreshing change.
Oh, by the way, in my list of tossup states, move Minnesota off of that list and onto the Democratic list. Without Pawlenty on the Republican ticket, I don't see MN going Red this year. That move won't change my projected electoral vote totals in my July 5 post, since I had--for electoral total purposes only--assigned all the tossup states to one or the other candidate, and I had put MN's ten votes in Obama's column. I just don't see it as much of a tossup anymore. Still Obama 301, McCain 237.
Have a good three weeks.
-- triton --
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
#59 Temper, Temper....
One more look at John McCain's unPresidential qualities: we've seen his impulsiveness in deciding--against the advice of his close aides--to put Sarah Palin on the ticket; today we see his irascibility. Make that his very strong anger.
Neither quality is what we need or should want in a president with his finger on the button that sends the bombs. On the other hand, the press is probably none too happy with a presidential candidate giving them the finger. McCain's handlers need to get him back on track, and not attacking the messengers.
I give you parts of the most recent Bloomberg News article. All of what follows is directly quoted:
----- ----- -----
The longtime love affair between John McCain and what he once called his ``base'' -- the national news media -- is on the rocks.
McCain's campaign manager, Steve Schmidt, yesterday lashed out at what he deemed "offensive'' and "demeaning'' coverage and questions from reporters after McCain's running mate, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, confirmed her 17-year-old daughter is pregnant.
"It used to be that a lot of those smears and the crap [sic] on the Internet stayed out of the newsrooms of serious journalists,'' Schmidt said at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Schmidt's criticism is the latest example in the unraveling of what was once a fond relationship between the presumptive Republican presidential nominee and the media. Starting in the 2000 Republican primaries, the Arizona senator became a media sensation by chatting up the press in the back of his ``Straight Talk Express'' campaign bus. The national press corps freely mingled with McCain for hours on the bus, with no topic off limits.
More recently, though, McCain, 72, has accused news organizations such as the New York Times, Time magazine and the NBC network of being unfair to him. The campaign even considered pulling out of one of the three presidential debates because it would be moderated by Tom Brokaw, a former NBC News anchorman....
"You still need the press to get your message out and if you have an antagonistic relationship it can blow up in your face,'' [Darrell West, a scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington who has written several books on the mass media] said.
As the relationship has deteriorated, McCain has stopped hosting his once-famous "straight talk'' get-togethers on his campaign plane. He also has abandoned regular press conferences. Instead, he stops occasionally to read short written statements in front of cameras, like he did Aug. 31 in Jackson, Mississippi; then walks away from questions shouted by reporters. His campaign plane is custom configured with a lounge area designed for hosting question-and-answer sessions with the press. McCain inaugurated the lounge on one of the plane's first flights and hasn't used it since.
Invitations for the press to visit the Straight Talk Express also have grown scarce. Local reporters are allowed the occasional visit, though journalists traveling with McCain no longer are invited to drop in. He hasn't held a news conference since Aug. 13....
There have also been a series of public rifts between the campaign and the media. On July 31, McCain campaign manager Rick Davis sparred with MSNBC anchor Andrea Mitchell in an exchange about a McCain campaign ad portraying Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama as a celebrity.
"I'm happy to talk about more substantive issues the next time I come on your program,'' Davis said, capping the testy interview.
On July 22, the McCain camp assailed the media in an Internet advertisement and an e-mail to supporters. "It's pretty obvious the media has a bizarre fascination with Barack Obama, some may even say it's a love affair,'' McCain's campaign said in the e-mail. "The media is in love with Barack Obama. If it wasn't so serious, it would be funny....''
McCain also took a combative stance in an Aug. 27 interview with Time reporters James Carney and Michael Scherer, refusing to answer a question about his definition of honor.
"Read it in my books,'' McCain said. "I'm not going to define it.'' That exchange set the tone for the rest of the interview: McCain answered a question about his opinion on premarital sex by saying, "I don't have any response to that type of question.''
He added, ``Write what you want.''
----- ----- -----
-- triton --
Neither quality is what we need or should want in a president with his finger on the button that sends the bombs. On the other hand, the press is probably none too happy with a presidential candidate giving them the finger. McCain's handlers need to get him back on track, and not attacking the messengers.
I give you parts of the most recent Bloomberg News article. All of what follows is directly quoted:
----- ----- -----
The longtime love affair between John McCain and what he once called his ``base'' -- the national news media -- is on the rocks.
McCain's campaign manager, Steve Schmidt, yesterday lashed out at what he deemed "offensive'' and "demeaning'' coverage and questions from reporters after McCain's running mate, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, confirmed her 17-year-old daughter is pregnant.
"It used to be that a lot of those smears and the crap [sic] on the Internet stayed out of the newsrooms of serious journalists,'' Schmidt said at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Schmidt's criticism is the latest example in the unraveling of what was once a fond relationship between the presumptive Republican presidential nominee and the media. Starting in the 2000 Republican primaries, the Arizona senator became a media sensation by chatting up the press in the back of his ``Straight Talk Express'' campaign bus. The national press corps freely mingled with McCain for hours on the bus, with no topic off limits.
More recently, though, McCain, 72, has accused news organizations such as the New York Times, Time magazine and the NBC network of being unfair to him. The campaign even considered pulling out of one of the three presidential debates because it would be moderated by Tom Brokaw, a former NBC News anchorman....
"You still need the press to get your message out and if you have an antagonistic relationship it can blow up in your face,'' [Darrell West, a scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington who has written several books on the mass media] said.
As the relationship has deteriorated, McCain has stopped hosting his once-famous "straight talk'' get-togethers on his campaign plane. He also has abandoned regular press conferences. Instead, he stops occasionally to read short written statements in front of cameras, like he did Aug. 31 in Jackson, Mississippi; then walks away from questions shouted by reporters. His campaign plane is custom configured with a lounge area designed for hosting question-and-answer sessions with the press. McCain inaugurated the lounge on one of the plane's first flights and hasn't used it since.
Invitations for the press to visit the Straight Talk Express also have grown scarce. Local reporters are allowed the occasional visit, though journalists traveling with McCain no longer are invited to drop in. He hasn't held a news conference since Aug. 13....
There have also been a series of public rifts between the campaign and the media. On July 31, McCain campaign manager Rick Davis sparred with MSNBC anchor Andrea Mitchell in an exchange about a McCain campaign ad portraying Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama as a celebrity.
"I'm happy to talk about more substantive issues the next time I come on your program,'' Davis said, capping the testy interview.
On July 22, the McCain camp assailed the media in an Internet advertisement and an e-mail to supporters. "It's pretty obvious the media has a bizarre fascination with Barack Obama, some may even say it's a love affair,'' McCain's campaign said in the e-mail. "The media is in love with Barack Obama. If it wasn't so serious, it would be funny....''
McCain also took a combative stance in an Aug. 27 interview with Time reporters James Carney and Michael Scherer, refusing to answer a question about his definition of honor.
"Read it in my books,'' McCain said. "I'm not going to define it.'' That exchange set the tone for the rest of the interview: McCain answered a question about his opinion on premarital sex by saying, "I don't have any response to that type of question.''
He added, ``Write what you want.''
----- ----- -----
-- triton --
Monday, September 1, 2008
#58 The Vetting of Sarah Palin
I love that title. I used it yesterday in an email to a friend, and it sounded so...so...film noir-ish. The first Film Noir was apparently a 1948 RKO production called "Stranger on the Third Floor." I don't know if Sarah Palin has a third floor to her house, but omyword is she a stranger to the public.
Bottom line: John McCain acted impulsively to secure his Republican ultra-conservative base, did NOT vet her very well, and ignored the advice of his close advisors. Yet, it may work out for him. P.T. Barnum said, "Never underestimate the stupidity of the American public," as people, walking past the caged animals, followed the signs "to the Egress."
The bloggers' rumors about Palin started almost immediately upon her selection: her fifth child, the bloggers perhaps erroneously reported, is really her grandson, Bristol's child. As a result of those internet rumors, she has had to make public that seventeen year old Bristol is currently pregnant, will keep the baby, and will marry the baby's father. I'm just waiting for the internet folk to ask the question, Is this pregnancy actually Bristol's second?
Too much in the way of evil rumors can backfire on the rumor-mongers, and create a sympathy vote for Sarah Palin. That is understandable, but it would be misplaced.
True sympathy should be with the American people, who may end up with another term of a Republican administration. Some analysts have assumed McCain was hoping to get the votes of some of Hillary's disaffected female supporters, who may still be angry with Obama. That would be a horribly patronizing view of women by McCain, and is currently not being supported by the polls. The women who will vote for McCain because he put SP on his ticket would have come around to vote for him anyway. They are the extreme right wing, fundamentalist, anti-choice, hypocritical, "family values" folk.
Don't you wish I'd stop being shy and start speaking my mind? In this election, it's the Democratic candidates with the true family values.
Now that the tickets are set (assuming the Republicans do put Palin on the ticket this week), the Democrats need to do at least three things:
(1) Given the amount of negative campaigning that has already occurred, mainly by the Republicans, the Democrats would do well to find some innocuous way to call attention to McCain's impulsiveness and his quick temper. A person with those qualities is too dangerous to be trusted with having to make monumental decisions quickly--or at all.
(2) The Democrats might blow it once again, but they have been handed THE golden opportunity to seize the middle of the political spectrum in this election. John McCain is a conservative in his political positions, but not conservative enough to appeal to the far-right Republican base, so he has chosen as his running mate someone who stands so far right that she risks falling off the edge of the earth. With Joe Biden on the ticket, the Democrats have a legitimate chance to be the centrists in this election.
(3) Finally, the Democrats would do well to say little about Sarah Palin. They can concentrate on McCain and the issues, and let the media do whatever background checking on Palin their investigative journalists want to do. Let the media investigate the potential "troopergate" scandal already brewing in Alaska, and anything else they want to check up on.
Very little is known about her: I find it amazing that Palin spent her junior and senior years at the University of Idaho, and the local press has yet to find anyone who actually knew her well enough to say something positive OR negative. One professor acknowledged that she was in one of his classes, but didn't really know much about her. Several students--including the president of the student government while she was at UI--said the same: 'we didn't really know much about her' is the point they've all made. Except for one student who apparently did know her: this former classmate admitted being "really surprised that she was chosen to be--Vice President??!"
Not a ringing endorsement of one's classmate.
But given the appetite of the press, the vetting of Sarah Palin has just begun.
Bottom line: John McCain acted impulsively to secure his Republican ultra-conservative base, did NOT vet her very well, and ignored the advice of his close advisors. Yet, it may work out for him. P.T. Barnum said, "Never underestimate the stupidity of the American public," as people, walking past the caged animals, followed the signs "to the Egress."
The bloggers' rumors about Palin started almost immediately upon her selection: her fifth child, the bloggers perhaps erroneously reported, is really her grandson, Bristol's child. As a result of those internet rumors, she has had to make public that seventeen year old Bristol is currently pregnant, will keep the baby, and will marry the baby's father. I'm just waiting for the internet folk to ask the question, Is this pregnancy actually Bristol's second?
Too much in the way of evil rumors can backfire on the rumor-mongers, and create a sympathy vote for Sarah Palin. That is understandable, but it would be misplaced.
True sympathy should be with the American people, who may end up with another term of a Republican administration. Some analysts have assumed McCain was hoping to get the votes of some of Hillary's disaffected female supporters, who may still be angry with Obama. That would be a horribly patronizing view of women by McCain, and is currently not being supported by the polls. The women who will vote for McCain because he put SP on his ticket would have come around to vote for him anyway. They are the extreme right wing, fundamentalist, anti-choice, hypocritical, "family values" folk.
Don't you wish I'd stop being shy and start speaking my mind? In this election, it's the Democratic candidates with the true family values.
Now that the tickets are set (assuming the Republicans do put Palin on the ticket this week), the Democrats need to do at least three things:
(1) Given the amount of negative campaigning that has already occurred, mainly by the Republicans, the Democrats would do well to find some innocuous way to call attention to McCain's impulsiveness and his quick temper. A person with those qualities is too dangerous to be trusted with having to make monumental decisions quickly--or at all.
(2) The Democrats might blow it once again, but they have been handed THE golden opportunity to seize the middle of the political spectrum in this election. John McCain is a conservative in his political positions, but not conservative enough to appeal to the far-right Republican base, so he has chosen as his running mate someone who stands so far right that she risks falling off the edge of the earth. With Joe Biden on the ticket, the Democrats have a legitimate chance to be the centrists in this election.
(3) Finally, the Democrats would do well to say little about Sarah Palin. They can concentrate on McCain and the issues, and let the media do whatever background checking on Palin their investigative journalists want to do. Let the media investigate the potential "troopergate" scandal already brewing in Alaska, and anything else they want to check up on.
Very little is known about her: I find it amazing that Palin spent her junior and senior years at the University of Idaho, and the local press has yet to find anyone who actually knew her well enough to say something positive OR negative. One professor acknowledged that she was in one of his classes, but didn't really know much about her. Several students--including the president of the student government while she was at UI--said the same: 'we didn't really know much about her' is the point they've all made. Except for one student who apparently did know her: this former classmate admitted being "really surprised that she was chosen to be--Vice President??!"
Not a ringing endorsement of one's classmate.
But given the appetite of the press, the vetting of Sarah Palin has just begun.
Labels:
Bristol Palin,
Joe Biden,
John McCain,
Sarah Palin,
troopergate
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