Posts Tagged ‘2008 Elections’

My former professor Richard Reeves quotes in his column an anti-Obama email he received.

“According to the Book of Revelations: The Anti-Christ will be a man, in his 40s, of MUSLIM descent, who will deceive the nations with persuasive language and have a MASSIVE Christ-like appeal … the prophecy says that people will flock to him and he will promise false hope and world peace, and when he is in power, destroy everything … And Now: For the Award-winning Act of Stupidity of all time the People of America want to elect A Male of Muslim descent who is the most extremely liberal Senator in Congress (in other words an extremist) and in his 40’s…

Scary, right? One little problem: The New Testament (which includes the Book of Revelations) was written in the latter half of the first century AD, according to the International Bible Society. According to the Oxford Dictionary of Islam, Muhammad, the man who was the messenger of Allah and wrote the Koran that is considered the primary source for the Islamic religion, was born nearly 500 years later.

Phil Singer notices a new Obama tactic at reaching young voters. More info from GigaOM.

Update: One of Ben Smith’s readers sent several images of Obama ads in different games.

Following up on my entry yesterday on the Democratic efforts to get a 60-seat supermajority in the Senate, Politico’s Jonathan Martin gets a scoop on last-minute GOP efforts to defend its Senate candidates from what could be a very bloody Election Day that could potentially be bigger than the Democratic tsunami of 2006.

The Republican National Committee, growing nervous over the prospect of Democrats’ winning a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate, is considering tapping into a $5 million line of credit this week to aid an increasing number of vulnerable incumbents, top Republicans say.

With party strategists fearing a bloodbath at the polls, GOP officials are shifting to triage mode, determining who can be saved and where to best spend their money.

And with the House and Senate Republican campaign committees being drastically outspent by their Democratic counterparts, and outside groups such as Freedom’s Watch offering far less help than was once anticipated, Republicans are turning to the national party committee as a lender of last resort.

A decision is imminent because television time must be reserved and paid for upfront, and available slots are dwindling.

A representative for the RNC would neither confirm nor deny that it was considering the move.

Looks like Patrick Ruffini was right in his assessment which I quoted yesterday.

The Tell

Posted: October 14, 2008 in 2008 Elections, John McCain
Tags: ,

James Fallows makes some interesting observations listening to the words and tone of McCain strategist Steve Schmidt during an NPR interview.

Update: Here’s the Wall Street Journal write-up of the interview. The headline: McCain will “need” Florida and Ohio to win.

“A campaign at war with itself cannot fight its opponent effectively.”
GOP strategist and Huckabee campaign manager Ed Rollins

Marc Ambinder does a good job of explaining the war of words between conservative pundit Bill Kristol and McCain surrogate Nancy Pfotenhauer.

While the presidential race is getting most of the press and public attention, recent developments in the political terrain have forced observers and the media to ask themselves a question that would have been thought preposterous as little as a few months ago: Can the Democrats rack up a filibuster-proof 60-seat supermajority?

It’s been fairly clear that Republicans would not be able to flip the Democratic majority in the Senate in the 2008 election, a position confirmed by the McCain campaign this past weekend when they argued in favor of the merits of divided government.

Democrats, under the helm of Charles Schumer, flipped a 6-seat deficit into a 1-seat majority in 2006 by winning every competitive race but one. This year, in an arguably more favorable political environment, they have a historic opportunity to build a lasting Senate majority through the first term of the next president.

If Obama wins the White House, it will be the first time the Democrats have controlled the White House, House of Representatives, and Senate since the first two years of Bill Clinton’s presidency, until the Gingrich Revolution of 1994. If Obama gets a Democratic supermajority in the Senate, there will be nothing Republicans can do to stall his legislative agenda or any nominations requiring Senate confirmation. The same party that advocated the nuclear option as a means of getting around Democratic obstruction of Bush judicial nominees is now looking at the very real possibility that they won’t even have the numbers to pull off a filibuster.

Patrick Ruffini writes that the Republican Party should focus their energies and resources in a handful of Senate races in order to protect a Republican filibuster as an opposition mechanism to a potential Obama presidency.

The NRSC and the NRCC, like the McCain campaign at the national level, are being buried by the Democrats’ massive financial advantage. In 2006, the RNC was able to come to the rescue of these committees. In one case, I believe one of their independent expenditures tipped the outcome with their humorous, effective, and perfectly legitimate ad against Harold Ford in Tennessee.

This time, no such help has been forthcoming in Senate races. The RNC IE unit has targeted one and only one candidate: Barack Obama, with $15 million.

Extraordinary circumstances compel us to begin considering different strategies, including a break with the RNC’s tradition as the Presidential committee in Presidential years.

The RNC’s IE unit should drop at least $15 million on 4 or 5 key Senate races that are salvageable in the last three weeks.

And the decision for Victory to stay in or pull out of states should be heavily influenced by the presence of key Senate and House contests.

And McCain should start explicitly making the argument for divided government, with him as the only hope of preserving it. This is unlikely to be a voting issue at the Presidential level, but we need to get the idea percolating that we are about to elect Obama with unchecked, unlimited power. Power corrupts… absolute power corrupts absolutely, etc.

Obama at 56 seats makes life hard, but a lot more bearable than Obama at 60 seats. The death of the filibuster would be like losing the White House all over again.

Ruffini has a point. The Democrats got their Senate majority in 2006 by squeaking out victories in Virginia and Montana by a few thousand or so votes. If Republican groups had spent a few extra dollars on ads, paid staff, or other resources in those states, Mitch McConnell might be Senate Majority Leader right now instead of fighting for reelection.

I doubt the Democrats will reach 60, given how deeply entrenched the Republican Party is in the South, and the fact that to get 60 they would need to win races in Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, and North Carolina. They have no room for error if they want to pull it off. If they lose even one of these races, they can forget about a supermajority.

I think a 55-58 seat majority is more likely, but the fact that even the possibility of a 60-seat supermajority is being discussed right now speaks volumes about the toxic state of the political environment for the Republican Party.

If somebody had told me a year ago that I’d be looking at poll numbers hinting at a close race in North Dakota, I would have told them to get their heads examined. These numbers seem like an outlier to me, but if McCain has to spend time and resources defending North Dakota, he’s screwed.

Barack Obama is shown with an edge against John McCain in a North Dakota presidential race that has narrowed to a statistical tie, according to a new Forum poll.

The survey shows Obama squeaking past McCain, 45 percent to 43 percent, a lead that falls within the poll’s margin of error and therefore indicates a dead heat, according to political analysts.

Still up for grabs: undecided voters, comprising 12 percent.

“It’s a statistical tossup,” said Jim Danielson, co-director of the Public Affairs Institute at Minnesota State University Moorhead, which conducted the statewide telephone survey for The Forum. Pollsters contacted 606 likely North Dakota voters by telephone Oct. 6-8.

The poll indicates McCain’s once-comfortable lead in North Dakota has melted away as Obama is the widely favored choice among voters who consider the economy the most pressing issue.

I repeat what I said before – the candidates’ itineraries often speak volumes about the state of the race and the morale inside their campaigns:

Things aren’t looking much better in Indiana:

(CNN) – Sarah Palin will campaign in Indiana for the first time Friday, the latest sign this once solidly-red state could be up for grabs this year.

Republican presidential nominee John McCain has already visited the state once, speaking at a law enforcement conference in Indianapolis this summer. Palin’s visit will also be in the Indianapolis area, the McCain-Palin campaign confirmed.

The Democratic ticket has visited the state half a dozen times. Last week, Barack Obama drew an estimated crowd of more than 20,000 at the state fairgrounds.

And they’re now playing catch-up in North Carolina and Virginia:

(CNN) — John McCain and Sarah Palin are campaigning Monday in two states that haven’t voted for a Democratic presidential candidate in more than four decades, a clear indication the GOP ticket is scrambling to defend longtime Republican strongholds with only three weeks until Election Day.

But at a time when the McCain campaign had hoped to have shored up its support in the traditional red states, a string of new surveys show Obama has made significant gains there as voters become increasingly worried about the nation’s financial woes.

McCain and Palin held a joint rally in Virginia Beach Monday morning before the two candidates split up, as the Republican nominee heads down to North Carolina as his running mate stays behind for more events in Virginia. It’s only the second time McCain has made visits to either state in more than four months, and comes as a series of battleground surveys suggest his playing field is increasingly shrinking.

As I’ve said repeatedly – Barack Obama’s road to 270 is expanding, while McCain’s is stagnant or shrinking. If the trends remain constant for the rest of the campaign, McCain will have to come up with the Electoral College equivalent of an inside straight if he has any chance of winning in three weeks.

What is it about West Palm Beach that makes its congressmen prone to scandal? ABC News has the scoop:

West Palm Beach Congressman Tim Mahoney (D-FL), whose predecessor resigned in the wake of a sex scandal, agreed to a $121,000 payment to a former mistress who worked on his staff and was threatening to sue him, according to current and former members of his staff who have been briefed on the settlement, which involved Mahoney and his campaign committee.

Mahoney, who is married, also promised the woman, Patricia Allen, a $50,000 a year job for two years at the agency that handles his campaign advertising, the staffers said.

A Mahoney spokesperson would not answer questions about the alleged affair or the settlement, but said Allen resigned of her own accord and “has not received any special payment from campaign funds.”

Senior Democratic leaders in the House of Representatives, including Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-IL), the chair of the Democratic Caucus, have been working with Mahoney to keep the matter from hurting his re-election campaign, the Mahoney staffers said.

Mahoney was elected two years ago following the abrupt resignation of his disgraced predecessor, Republican Mark Foley, whose lewd internet messages to teenage boys and Congressional pages created a national outrage.

The affair between Mahoney and Allen began, according to the current and former staffers, in 2006 when Mahoney was campaigning for Congress against Foley, promising “a world that is safer, more moral.”

And the story gets better.

Friends of Allen told ABC News that Allen sought to break off the affair when she learned Mahoney was allegedly involved in other extra-marital relationships at the same time.

Her friends say she told them Mahoney threatened that ending the relationship could cost her the job.

“You work at my pleasure,” Congressman Mahoney told Allen on a January 20, 2008 telephone call that was recorded and played for Mahoney staffers. ABC News was provided a copy.

“If you do the job that I think you should do, you get to keep your job. Whenever I don’t feel like you’re doing your job, then you lose your job,” Mahoney can be heard telling Allen.

“And guess what? The only person that matters is guess who? Me. You understand that. That is how life really is. That is how it works,” Mahoney says on the call.

“You’re fired,” Mahoney tells her. “Do you hear me? Don’t tell me whether it’s correct or not.”

Allen says, “Tell me why else I’m fired.”

“There is no why else,” Mahoney responds.

Later, Allen says, “You’re firing me for other reasons. You don’t, you’re not man enough to say it. So why don’t you say it.”

All this from a guy who got elected because of his predecessor’s sex scandal? Yikes. This is manna from heaven for his opponent, who will in all likelihood hammer him upside the head with it for the next three weeks. It’s got Clinton-esque elements: adultery, use of taxpayer money, and litigation.

Keep an eye on this race to see if it gets competitive. It was a Republican district that switched in 2006 in disgust over the Foley scandal, so it could conceivably switch back. An incumbent’s first reelection campaign is usually the most difficult, and it would be a sweet symbolic victory for the Florida GOP if they could reclaim this seat and oust Mahoney because of a sex scandal, even if it isn’t anywhere near as toxic as the one that brought down Foley.

This is not the score of a lopsided basketball game. That’s the number of events Obama/Biden have made in swing states compared to McCain/Palin. From the Wall Street Journal:

Sen. Barack Obama, his running mate and his wife have appeared at twice as many events in swing states as their Republican counterparts, which may help explain the Democrat’s lead in many battleground-state polls.

In the five weeks since the fall campaign officially began, Sen. Obama, his wife, Michelle, and vice-presidential nominee Joe Biden have appeared at a total of 95 separate events in states that both sides are contesting.

Sen. John McCain and his running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, have appeared at 55 events in those areas, with Cindy McCain, the nominee’s wife, adding only one more to the total, according to a Wall Street Journal tally based on schedules provided by the campaigns.
Stopping By Swing States

See how many times the candidates, their running mates and their wives have stopped by hotly contested battleground states.

The gap makes a difference in the amount of press that each ticket gets in critical markets — and is mirrored by a similar disparity in TV advertising. Sen. Obama outspent Sen. McCain and the Republican National Committee on ads in 15 states for the week ended Oct. 4, according to the Wisconsin Advertising Project, an initiative at the University of Wisconsin. The Republicans spent more in just two states.

The effect: The Democrats are being seen much more often, in free news coverage and in paid advertising, in the states that will determine the winner.

The article also includes a handy chart keeping track of both campaigns’ ad spending in key swing states. Obama is outspending McCain in all of them (in some cases, by a rate of nearly 4 to 1) except Iowa and Minnesota.