Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Rudy and McCain Campaign For Allen's Re-election

Senator George Allen (R-VA) is facing an increasingly competitive challenge for his senate seat from Democrat Jim Webb. President Bush recently traveled to Virginia to campaign for Allen, and John McCain and Rudy Giuliani plan visits later this month. Both recognize the advantage of having a competitor owe him a political favor.

McCain backs Crist for Florida Governor


Senator John McCain (R-AZ) has been traveling around the country supporting weak republicans, and most of them have either already lost, or are probably going to lose. He has picked terrible people to support. His idea is that if he has a nationwide network of republicans who owe their jobs to him, he will have an advantage in 2008. So far, it has been a waste of time. He recently traveled to Florida to support Charlie Crist, the Republican
candidate for governor. Crist has been winning by five to ten points in recent polls, proving that McCain is being more cautious. The current governor, Jeb Bush, is retiring, and some pundits are floating the possibility of a McCain-Bush ticket. Although I think it would be a mistake to put a Bush on the ballot, it would win Florida for McCain. You never know....

Dems Preparing For Romney

With Romney taking a surge, the democrats are gearing up for a Romney nomination. The Democratic National Committee has acquired all of the public material on Mitt Romney's record from the state government. This shows that they think Romney has a serious chance, as it is very time consuming to go over such a large record.

Giuliani Running-Says Novak

Conservative columnist Robert Novak, known for his participation in the leaking of CIA agent Valerie Plame's identity, has many confidential sources, and now says that Giuliani will run. Although he has placed first in at least two thirds of Republican primary polls, he has still insisted he is making up his mind. Novak claims, "Republican insiders respond to these numbers by saying rank-and-file GOP voters will abandon Giuliani once they realize his position on abortion, gay rights and gun control. Party strategists calculate that if he actually runs, he must change on at least one of these issues."
New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani (R-NY)
This is not impossible, as "America's Mayor" is now claiming he never supported gay marriage. Novak's Inside Report "confirmed" that Giuliani will try for the nomination. This was, "confirmed by one of the former New York mayor's closest Republican friends. He said Giuliani definitely is running."

Robert Novak

Everyone's Afraid of Romney

Governor Mitt Romney (R-MA) appears to be surging. Apparently, the entire field of GOP candidates is afraid of him.

Al Franken has labeled Grover Norquist, the head of Americans for Tax Reform as the most powerful person outside the White House. He wields enormous power in important circles, as every week he organizes a meeting of representatives from all of the conservative interest groups. Under his direction, they can resolve their differences and make alliances. He had this to say about Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney:

"When I talk to each of the presidential candidates, every one of them brings up Romney -- unsolicited -- because they're all focused on him as the smartest, toughest guy in the race,.....He is very well thought of."

It sure seems like Romney is going to be a much bigger factor in this race than was expected.


Grover Norquist

Kerry and Romney Interest Iowa

Senator John Kerry (D-MA)
With Kerry finishing fourth (behind Hillary Clinton, Al Gore, and John Edwards) in polls for the Democratic primary, and still known for his loss to Bush in the 2004 election, his chances do not look good in 2008. However, although he bores supporters in his home state of Massachusetts, Des Moines register pundit David Yepsen reports that his style is "...sharper and more populist" and his speeches have "...more humor than the wonkish dissertations he served up four years ago." The Bush campaign framed Kerry as being a wooden, out-of-the-loop, Massachusetts liberal, and was able to scare Christian evangelicals into voting for Bush. If Kerry can get some of the charisma and humor that made Bush appeal to the average american, than he has a much better chance.

As for Romney, Yepsen reported that a Republican activist compared him to Reagan. Although Romney is under fire in his home state for the Big Dig fiasco, the Iowa Reagan comparison should be taken seriously. First of all, Many republicans idolize Reagan, and think of him as the ideal president. For an activist who really knows to make this comparison means that Romney probably will do better than his single digit polling results suggest.
Governor Mitt Romney (R-MA) David Yepsen

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Hillary Clinton Information

John McCain Info

I have been requested to include more information on the likely candidates. So here are links to where you can get more in-depth information.

Senator John McCain (R-Arizona)

Interest Group Ratings:
http://www.vote-smart.org/issue_rating_category.php?can_id=S0061103

Voting Record:
http://www.vote-smart.org/voting_category.php?can_id=S0061103

Campaign Finance:
http://www.opensecrets.org/politicians/summary.asp?cid=N00006424

Issue Positions:
http://www.ontheissues.org/Senate/John_McCain.htm

Biography:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_mccain

Monday, August 07, 2006

McCain's Problems

Senator John McCain (R-AZ)
The only reason that this election is competitive is that John McCain's web of power is full of holes. He may look like a moderate unbeatable maverick, but he's not. The whole strategy relies on convincing one group to believe one thing about him, and another to think differently. That might work in a vacuum, but in actual practice, it won't. This is because he relies on the moderates thinking he's an independent, while having the arch-conservatives thinking he's one of them. This presents a problem. GOP activists don't just watch him when he's talking to them. They follow his every move. If you pay attention, it's clear he's trying to have it both ways: be a maverick and be a Bush supporter.
In court if you contradict yourself, the jury has the right to disregard everything else you say. That explains that when the people who wind up making a difference (the interest groups and party activists) do not believe his sincerity when he speaks at Falwell's university, because they know that next week he will sponsor legislation they don't like. The people who are paying attention interact with people who aren't, the message finds the right people and "tips" and soon everybody knows about it. See Malcolm Gladwell's ingenius book The Tipping Point. A recent article from the Concord Monitor showed how leaders of the Christian Coalition and Gun Rights organizations in New Hampshire just don't buy it when McCain flips back and forth. Now he can pick and choose his TV spots, but when the national spotlight shines on his web full 'o' holes, he is going to pay big time.

Mark Warner Is Amazing

Former Virginia Governor Mark Warner, who made millions in the cellphone industry by co-founding Nextel, knows the value of technology. I recently discovered his video podcast, and I must share how inspired I was. His critics say he has no charisma, but he is one of the most passionate public speakers I have ever seen, and I have deeply researched linguistics and political rhetoric. He has a great stump speech, rivalling John Edwards's brilliant "Two Americas". Here are some of his accolades and credits:

1. First in his family to attend college
2. When he first ran for governor, everybody said it couldn't be done. Warner united Democrats, Independents, and Republicans and won.
3. He knows how to connect with Joe Schmo living in Kansas (his campaign sponsored a NASCAR racecar)
4. Has a good record with minorities.
5. Governing rated Virginia as the best managed state in the nation.
6. In four years, 136,000 more children have health insurance.
7. 35,000 students earned G.E.D.s.
8. Time Magazine put him in the best Five Governors
9. He closed 6 billion dollars in budget shortfalls.
10. Under his supervision, 260 rivers and streams were cleaned.
11. 52% more public schools accredited.
12. Virginia is #1 in water quality standards.
13. Cut food tax.
14. 122,000 new jobs in four years.
15. Virginia had the nation's largest increase in Math SAT scores
16. He was the chairman of the national governor's asociation.
17. Governing Magazine rated him the "Top Public Official"
18. He started the ForwardTogether PAC, which has raised millions for progressive candidates nationwide.

When you put these together, he seems like the ideal candidate. However, despite the advantages of putting him with Evan Bayh, he will probably nee someone with foreign policy experience. I would bet on Hispanic Gov. Bill Richardson (D) NM or Hillary Clinton to be his running mate.

Giuliani labeled "GOP Wild Card"

Rudy Giuliani is not your average politician. He has earned the nickname "America's Mayor" for his effective and decisive leadership after the 9/11 attacks. However, his liberal views on abortion, gay marriage, and gun control, combined with his morally questionable divorce while mayor may enrage the party's social conservatives. However, he has a reputation with the american public as a leader and a hero. By the time the primaries come around, we could very well still be in Iraq, have troops in Iran and Lebanon, and be engaged in nuclear talks with North Korea. People will want someone who they know is a leader. It comes down to how much of a mess the world is in. Thus, we have a GOP Wild Card.
Former Mayor of New York City Rudy Giuliani

Huntsman Backs McCain

The most popular governor in the nation, Governor Jon Huntsman (R-UT), had previously supported fellow mormon Mitt Romney for president in 2008. He recently changed his choice to Senator John McCain. This has his ups and downs, as Utah does not have an early primary, and many evangelicals label the mormon religion as a cult. However, It does give McCain a small boost in the moderate segment of the GOP field.

Governor Jon Huntsman (R-UT)

Murdoch changes his mind about Hillary

A few months ago, News Corp. Owner Rupert Murdoch startled everybody by hosting a Hillary Clinton fundraiser. However, when recently asked by Charlie Rose who he would support in a Hillary v. McCain contest, he said that he would "probably support McCain. If it was happening today, I think so." Hillary can say goodbye to that advantage.


Ruper Murdoch

Friday, July 07, 2006

GEORGE ALLEN UPDATE

I'm sorry I haven't updated in a month. I've been busy. Due to polls and developments, I have briefly changed the rankings.

REPUBLICAN #1
SEN. JOHN McCAIN

REPUBLICAN #2
FORMER NEW YORK CITY MAYOR RUDY GIULIANI

REPUBLICAN #3
FORMER HOUSE SPEAKER NEWT GINGRICH

REPUBLICAN #4
SEN. GEORGE ALLEN

REPUBLICAN #5
SEN. BILL FRIST

------------------------------------------------
DEMOCRAT #1
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON

DEMOCRAT #2
FORMER GOV. MARK WARNER

DEMOCRAT #3
FORMER VP AL GORE

DEMOCRAT #4
FORMER SEN. JOHN EDWARDS

DEMOCRAT #5
GOV. BILL RICHARDSON

Saturday, June 03, 2006

Republican #1

1. Sen. John McCain (R) Arizona
After eight years of President Bush, the Republican party will be in shambles. With plummeting approval ratings for Bush, Republicans in Congress, the war in Iraq, the economy, and many other issues, many Republicans will jump ship to save their careers. John McCain is known in every household in the country, as he receives so much media attention. Although he is no moderate, (he always voted for oil drilling in the Artic Wildlife Refuge, to ban "partial birth" abortion and stem cell research, and supported the Federal Marriage Amendment, a rejected amendment that would have prohibited Gay Marriage. He recieved very low ratings from the NAACP, the Brady Campaign against Gun Violence, and voted many times to cut education, food stamps, and welfare spending) McCain was shot down and tortured in Vietnam, and the public views him as an independent thinker because he occaisonally disagrees with the radical policies of the current administration. Due to Allen and Frist's loss of momentum, if will take an unforseen upheaval to get the nomination to somebody else.

Republican #2

Sen. George Allen (R-VA)
With the radical Christian right upset at the fact that President Bush did not nominate total extremists to the Supreme Court, they will not trust John McCain to carry out their agenda. With the Republicans desperately trying to rebuild their former stature, they have realized an important fact. With the Democrats doing so well, they might lose either Florida or Ohio in 2008. Former Virginia governor Mark Warner is very dangerous to them, and the Republicans basically lose if they lose Virginia. Fortunately for them, they have Senator Allen. He is a VERY strong conservative who has been rated very highly by every major conservative interest group, and essentially 0 by all of the liberal ones. He would be adored by the Christian Right. They constitute such a large portion of the Republican electorate that it is almost impossible to receive the nomination without their help. If in fact McCain does recieve the nomination, anticipate someone like Allen running as a third party candidate. Without the help of the Republican base, McCain could be in trouble. Allen, though, has been recently hurt by a loss of momentum, and now it appears that even if he is the nominee, he will STILL lose Virginia to Mark Warner. Therefore, his primary chances are about 1:3, and IF he gets the nomination, his chances against Warner are 2:3. However, don't expect the far right to be satisfied with McCain.

Saturday, June 3, 2006

Sorry, I've gotten a little behind the times. Here is the news for the 3rd. I will try to catch up quickly.
------------------------------------------------
George Allen: Loses a heap of points for having (many years ago) a confederate flag and noose hanging in his office

Mark Warner: Has Jerome Armstrong on the payroll of his Forward Together PAC. Armstrong started MyDD, one of the most popular liberal blogs. It gets several hundred thousand visitors per day.............is campaigning madly all over Virginia for the opponents of Republican senator George Allen. Allen is a likely candidate in 2008.

Bill Frist: Loses points because his 2000 senate campaign was recently fined $11,000 by the FEC.

Hillary Clinton: Is losing ground in Florida - a recent Quinnipiac University poll found her barely leading George Allen and Mitt Romney, who are barely known in the state - and trailing John McCain and Rudy Giuliani by five or six points apiece. However, I repeat that if the Democrats go Warner-Bayh, they can lose Florida and not care at all.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Republican #3

Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN) Senate Majority Leader
Frist has always been a loyal Republican soldier, and many believe that Vice-President Dick Cheney will either resign, be impeached, or die before his term is out, and Frist will be named as the replacement. A former doctor, Frist would be trusted to handle health care, an issue that the vast majority of the country trusts the democrats on. He would also follow the orders of Republican leaders, so there would be no chance of him going against his party. Frist is definitely running, as he is not seeking reelection in the senate these mid-term elections. The cons are that he is involved in an ethics investigation in which he illegally sold $119,000,000 of stocks in HCA, a family company, two weeks before the stock plummeted. This action saved him $20,000,000. Also, he is not the most likable personality, something that has always been essential to the election of Republican presidents.

Republican #4

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA)
Here is where I make a big change. Count out Tommy Thompson. I forgot that he is the Secretary of Health and Human Services. Instead, #4 goes to Newt Gingrich. He masterminded the 1994 Republican takeover, and has many connections. Another pro is that he has disappeared in recent years, making it impossible to tie him to unpopular bills or strange votes. A southerner, many (republicans) associate him with the "good old days". He has shown ability to effectively seperate himself from the administration, while still maintaining allies.

Republican #5

Sen. Chuck Hagel (R) Nebraska

Fifth on the list is senator Chuck Hagel. He is only so high because he is a war-criticizing moderate who cannot be successfully tied to the unpopular administration. He has also recieved a lot of publicity, and is percieved as a moderate. The cons are that when he first ran for Senate in 1996, his opponent was leading him by a huge margin. However, Hagel owned the voting machine company that supplied most of the voting machines to the state of Nebraska. Hagel won in an unprecendented upset, all of the exit polls stated that his opponent had beaten him badly. If the Democrats can frame this well enough, count Hagel out of the running.

Other Republican

There are many other likely candidates, but none have any strong shot at the nomination. Regardless, it is too early to tell so here are some of them with analysis. They are in no particular order.

Sen. Sam Brownback (R) Kansas
Brownback is a two-issue candidate, but the Republicans might like his obssessive opposition to stem-cell research and abortion. More likely, the radical right will be fed up with having a moderate like McCain or Hagel, and might draft Brownback or another conservative to mount a third-party campaign. The fact that he supported Bush's immigration reform bill might hurt him.

Gov. Mitt Romney (R) Massachusetts
A Mormon, Republican, Moderate, ex-pro-choice, governor of Massachusetts! You've got to be kidding me. He will run though, and might steal some primary votes from McCain or Hagel. However, he is beginning to look like the most likely dark horse.

Gov. George Pataki (R) New York
Pataki is not extremely well liked in his home state, and gives the impression of being an not very smart. Anyway, he's from New York. Bye-bye.

There are other possible candidates who I have not discussed here. They don't stand a chance, nor do they stand any real chance of making a difference in the primary.

Rudy Giuliani and Condeleezza Rice are mentioned in Republican #1.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Allen the True Conservative

Today the United States Senate passed President Bush's immigration reform bill, which will strengthen border security, and institute a guest-worker program. John McCain (R) AZ, Chuck Hagel (R) NE, Sam Brownback (R) KS, and Bill Frist (R) TN - all possible contenders for the Republican Nomination in 2008, supported this bill, but George Allen, True Conservative, stayed with the far right of his party, and cried against the bill. It remains to be seen how this will affect his chances in the General, but this

Senator George Allen (R-VA)
behavior will make him the darling of the far-right - a.k.a. Jerry Falwell & Co. A risky political move it may be, but only gamblers make it to the oval office.

Warner-Bayh, The Ticket that can Win



Mark Warner Evan Bayh
Former Virginia Gov. Indiana Sen.

I was wondering recently what the politically ideal democratic ticket would look like. First, my thought was Mark Warner and Bill Richardson. My reasoning was that Warner would carry Virginia and West Virginia, pushing the Democrats to the victory. (Assuming everything else repeats itself from 2004). As insurance, I thought that Richardson would carry New Mexico, possibly Hispanics in Florida, and even maybe Nevada, a "purple" state. If the GOP messes it up, maybe even Colorado! However, I am willing to ASSUME that the DEMOCRATS WILL LOSE FLORIDA IN 2008. This comes from my belief that if you favor the opponent and your candidate still wins, than it will take a huge unforseen event to prove you wrong.
With John McCain, a "moderate" as the Republican frontrunner, the Democrats must prepare for losses where they don't expect it to McCain's mometum and popularity. McCain could win Florida, and being from the southwest, he could dash all hopes if NM, CO, and NV. With these hopes gone, Richarson doesn't look so great, and when you add the baseball scandal (Lying about being drafted by the Oakland Athletics in the 1970's, he looks like exactly the candidate you don't want on your ticket. Looking around for a VP alternative, I must agree with pundit Larry Sabato, and insist on Evan Bayh.
***************CORRECTIONS FOR THE RECORD**********************
I stated in "OTHER DEMOCRAT" that Evan Bayh was not very experienced. I meant that he is not experienced in "FOREIGN POLICY". He has had two successful terms as Governor, and two as senator.

I also stated in that article that John McCain would take all of the centrist vote. After his appearance at Jerry Falwell's Liberty University, things no longer look that way, and Bayh looks much better. Times have changed.
*********************************************************************
Back to business. Bayh is more experienced than Warner, and would combat the "inexperience" challenge that met John Edwards in 2004. If you read Sabato's article, which I would highly recommend, you will find that electorally, this is a rare opportunity for the Democrats.
1. Warner will almost certainly carry red-state Virginia. 13 Electoral Votes
2. Warner will probably carry sister state West Virginia. 5 Electoral Votes
3. Warner also has long-standing family ties in Iowa, and has already campaigned extensively there. 7 Electoral Votes
4. Evan Bayh will very likely carry his home state where he is loved: Indiana. 13 Electoral Votes.
5. Indiana is right next to Bush-Hating Ohio. 20 Electoral Votes.
6. This may seem like a bit of a stretch, but Bush as a 29% approval in Missouri, which disapproves more than ANY OTHER RED STATE, INCLUDING OHIO. INCUMBENT SENATOR TALENT, WILL LIKELY BE OUSTED IN 2006, AND THE SHOW-ME STATE WANTS THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY TO DO THE SHOWING. 11 Electoral Votes.

If you add this up, 13+5+7+13+20+11=69.

I will give the GOP Ohio. Heck, I'll give them New Hampshire. I'll give them Hawaii. I'll give them Wisconsin. I'll give them Iowa, Blue State Oregon, and Maine's fourth fluctuating electoral vote, but Warner-Bayh will still triumph in the end. Not to be overconfident, but the Republicans will never get Ohio, Florida, New Mexico, Nevada, Wisconsin, Oregon, Iowa, New Hampshire, Hawaii, AND Maine's fourth in one election. Never, never, never. Whether they get picked is another question altogether, but if they do the oval office is that much closer.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Hillary, With a Victory, Should Still Reconsider

Hillary Clinton has now been on her center trend for over a year. Now more than ever, she needs to pull out of her dive, and rouse her base. She is making a political miscalculation similar to McCain. However, he can afford mistakes, and she cannot. Her approval ratings as senator have been falling, etc. One thing she has done recently is to cuddle up to FOX News. Background: FOX News is not really news. Employees tell of how they were threatened into a republican bias...81% of Brit Hume's



Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY)
guests are republicans...you get the idea. At first, I thought that she was committing political suicide, because Rupert Murdoch has blasted her since FOX came into existence in 1996. However, he is supporting her now, and recently attended one of her many fundraisers. This is meaningful because one of John McCain's biggest pluses is that the media loves him to death, and Hillary has long been their scapegoat. If Hillary can pull Murdoch to her side, it tips the entire balance of the election, as Rupert Murdoch is a billionaire, and owns News Corporation, which in turn owns the New York Post, HarperCollins publishers, TV Guide, 20th Century Fox, and others.

McCain's Advantage is Slimming

In recent polls, McCain's polled advantage in a head-to-head contest with Hillary Clinton has been getting smaller. Now it is withing five to ten points, down from the fifteen to twenty point lead he boasted several months ago. This is due to the fact that McCain, this past weekend, spoke at Rev. Jerry Falwell's Liberty University. Falwell believes that God blew up the world trade center because he was mad at homosexuals. McCain, attempting to make nice to the far right, is
alienating his real base, the third of the population that identifies as independent. McCain knows that if he can straddle two of the three basically equal groups, (D, R, and I), he can win. However, he seems nervous that a radically conservative opponent will be launched, and he is trying to show his true colors. It won't work. by rushing to the right, he is abandoning his devoted center in the rain, and they won't run back for cover with him. No, they'll give the Dems a try. Hillary can thank her lucky stars, and so can Mark Warner, and George Allen, who dreams of the GOP nomination.