In a close election I figure McCain will have to win the following dead heat states: VA, OH, COL, NEV and FL. Fl and VA may well go R due to historical leanings though the $ spent in FL and the rapidly changing demos of VA may alter that. Note to O- Kaine will abolutely have no impact in the state. OH truly is tight- the economy vs. the Bradley effect. Appalachia vs. Illinois influence- and frankly, the OH voter is as unpredictable as their thinking. OH was one of the few states that Bush did worse last election. Is this a trend? However, the dimwit voters may confuse McCain with McKinley. For now, I say OH is R despite same day registrations voting day. COL looks like it has all the indications of being D. The negatives are that it is an evangelical and military state. The positives, everything else is D. The convention may swing the state; and if not the water issue will certainly will. I say this is O's firewall. NV should also go O because of unionization and GOTV efforts. This last two states are two D trending states that may benefit with a good VP selection. If it is a VA pick, I hope it is a Webb, who may actually swing the state, unlike Kaine, and that way Kaine can appoint the replacement and thereby keeping the senate seat in D hands.
Today, Talking Points Memo takes the pulse of the campaigns and questions whether the Obama has a set message apart from 'change' similar to McCain 'I'm a strong leader.' Apart from raising the negatives of McCain and raising the possibilty of more wars and deficits- the change message follows that by changing we improve the government and the economy. McCain will not. He will continue with divisive issues and bankrupt the U.S. Obama should argue that everybody's America would improve if he is elected (now I see where the Messiah talking point originated). If you believes things can improve, then Obama is your vote.
What kind of perverse jurisprudence Justice Scalia advocates in the latest Gitmo ruling? According the judge, applying the basic right of habeas corpus to all individuals in U.S. custody and in U.S. permanent soil "will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed." With all due respect to the soldiers who have died, what kind of intellectual vacuousness does this represent? The idea is repugnant to scholastic study. In no way or fashion can one ascertain a future condition based on a predicated past. What if could be shown that the respect of human rights would lead instead to less soldiers killed, would Scalia then have to reverse himself? Let's apply this "legal principle" to every issue- minds ponder whether buying oil leads to the unwarranted death of soldiers; better yet, going to war without provocation obviously leads to more Americans soldiers getting killed than would otherwise, so this war must be unconstitutional. The indolent mind here represents a repeat of lack of legal priciple shown in Bush v. Gore. Scalia does not use reason in his opinions, he first come to a decision and then works backwards to justify it. Scalia is an intellectual thug. To be clear, the decision today is very similar to Marburry- essentially the Court is disabusing any notion that the other two branches of government can exclude it from weighing in on, of all things, judicial matters.
Tracking poll just released. Obama first lead in a while. I recognize that I cannot be objective but every time the 5'7" John McCain speaks I get shills in my spine. And now we are learning the guy is not the sharpest knife in the drawer. McCain makes Dole (whom I liked) look good. It is no wonder Frank Lutz, who has been remarkably prescient in past elections, is already calling the race for Obama. The D party nominates very competent candidates for the presidency only to lose to empty suits in the general. I happen to think that Hillary may be more competent (who really knows) but sadly Americans vote for the person they want to have a beer with. In this sense, Obama beats McCain and Hillary.
This past week a lot of commentary has been devoted to the fact that many supporters of either candidate in the Democratic Party primaries would defect to McCain in the general election. Historically, because the Democratic Party has a wider ideological support, it has hemorraged 10% of its vote in the general (FROM CNN 2004 exit polling: Democrat (37%) 11% R 89% D). Thus, the 20% number represents a normal historical trend. (20% of half represent 10% of the total). The 30% for Hillary's supporters defecting is higher than average and may represent statistical noise reflecting some recent dispirited passion. But the salient point is that one may select an average statistic from elections past and create a narrative where there is none.
Leslie Byrne voted against NAFTA. She now has Sen. Webb's support, the senator who voted for one of the amendments that scuttled the immigration bill. My suspicion is that she does not support the immigration bill that failed. On this basis alone, I think her claim to that she fights for the less deserving is overrated. She relies on union support, people who have suffered under the current regime, but their misery pales in comparison with what immigrants have to suffer in Virginia. And she is seemingly willing to keep it at that. Gerry Connolly, on the other hand, took a tough stance against anti-immigration bashing in Northern Virginia. It is my sense that Connolly is friendlier towards Hispanic issues than Byrne. Both are solid campaigners and very friendly. Both are also quite accessible. And Both would be good congressmen. And I still support Sen. Webb, despite his immigration stance, because he is the best Virginia can offer for the job. But the same cannot be stated for Byrne.
· NC-Sen: Hagan and Dole Tied in New Poll (HellofaSandwich)
· MN-03: Blog Day for Ashwin Madia (MN Campaign Report)
· Blogger Running for CA Dem Party Vice-Chair (Bob Brigham)
· Does McCain Want to Reenact the Draft? (fbihop)
· SD: New Poll Shows Tim Johnson Romping (lowkell)
· Iowa commission takes one small step against CAFOs (desmoinesdem)
· LA-06: Cazayoux's Gittin' It Done! (DailyKingFish)
· Secrets of the American Future Fund (chase martyn)
· Happy Birthday Jerome! (Jonathan Singer)
· Oilmen For Scott Garrett (NJ-5) (Aaron Banks)
· Youth Delegates at DNC Outnumber RNC 15 - 1 (Mike Connery)
· LA-02: James Carter's First Ad (DailyKingFish)