Home » Posts tagged "2012 election"

Republican 2012 race ‘mathematically’ over: Graham

Evans Liberal Politics
Monday, March 12, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

Republican 2012 race
‘mathematically’ over: Graham

Republican 2012 race ‘mathematically’ over: Graham, Agence France-Presse on The Raw Story, March 11, 2012, by AFP, used with permission, quoted verbatim: Evans Liberal Politics is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news.

WASHINGTON — Mitt Romney has all but won the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, top senator Lindsey Graham said Sunday, agreeing with the candidate that “mathematically, this thing is about over.”


Romney has won 14 of 25 state-by-state votes that decide which Republican candidate takes on President Barack Obama in November, compared to eight wins for Rick Santorum and just two for former House speaker Newt Gingrich.

These victories have given Romney almost 40 percent of the 1,144 delegates needed to secure the nomination. He has 446 delegates, Santorum 199 and Gingrich 117, according to authoritative poll aggregator RealClearPolitics.

“Mathematically, Rick would have to win 75 percent of what remains,” Graham, a senior Republican who serves on various Senate committees, told ABC’s “This Week” program.

“He’s done an outstanding job, Rick has, of starting with almost nothing and being a real contender, and Newt’s come back from the dead two or three times,” Graham said. “But mathematically, this thing is about over, but emotionally it’s not.”

Graham was speaking ahead of two do-or-die contests for Gingrich on Tuesday in the conservative southern states of Mississippi and Alabama — although the former House speaker has pledged to stay in the race until the bitter end.

The Santorum camp argues that if he can consolidate the conservative vote behind him, at Gingrich’s expense, then he can still overtake the frontrunner before the race wraps up at the party’s end of August convention.

“I think everybody believes, if I could just get a one-on-one with Romney, I could win this thing,” said Graham.

“But if Romney does well, wins either Mississippi or Alabama and wins Illinois, then I think it’s virtually impossible for this thing to continue much beyond early May.”

Graham, who has yet to officially endorse any candidate, stopped short of calling on Santorum, Gingrich, or even veteran Texas congressman Ron Paul — who has yet to win even one state vote — to quit.

“It’s Romney’s to lose,” he said. “And, quite frankly, every time he had his back against the wall, he’s performed. And I like his chances, but the other two candidates have got to make that decision themselves.”

See Mary Matalin: Romney has ‘heart and soul’ of an average American, The Raw Story, March 11, 2012, by David Edwards: "Mitt Romney may have a net worth of a quarter of a billion dollars (AND a Swiss bank account, AND investments outside of the US in the tax-free Cayman Islands — PE), but he has the “heart and soul” of an average American, according to GOP strategist Mary Matalin." – Ha, ha, ha, ha ha ha. I laugh. – Paul Evans

Obama Behind Romney in New Poll

See Obama poll rating drops in Republican boost, Agence France-Presse on The Raw Story, March 12, 2012, by AFP:

President Barack Obama’s approval rating has plunged below 50 percent and he would be beaten by Republican frontrunner Mitt Romney if November’s US election were held today, a poll showed Monday.

The survey, by ABC News and The Washington Post, indicated that only 46 percent of Americans now approved of the way Obama is handling his job and 50 percent disapproved as he took a hit from rising gas prices.

The situation was a reversal from early February when 50 percent approved of the president’s performance and 46 percent disapproved.

The survey was released as the battleground for the Republican presidential nomination moved to the deep South for Tuesday’s primaries in Alabama and Mississippi.

If the presidential election were held today, the poll found that Romney would beat Obama 49 percent to 47 percent.

Agence France-Presse: "AFP journalists cover wars, conflicts, politics, science, health, the environment, technology, fashion, entertainment, the offbeat, sports and a whole lot more in text, photographs, video, graphics and online."

468x60_newsarticles_light_1.gif

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Robert Reich: The Precarious Jobs Recovery

Evans Liberal Politics
March 10, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

Robert Reich: The Precarious Jobs Recovery

The Precarious Jobs Recovery, Robert Reich.org, March 9, 2012, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

February’s 227,000 net new jobs – the third month in a row of job gains well in excess of 200,000 – is good news for President Obama and bad news for Mitt Romney.

Jobs are coming back fast enough to blunt Republican attacks against Obama on the economy and to rob Romney of the issue he’d prefer to be talking about in his primary battle against social conservatives in the GOP.

The Seven Biggest
Economic Lies

But jobs aren’t coming back fast enough to significantly reduce the nation’s backlog of 10 million jobs. That backlog consists of 5.3 million lost during the recession and another 4.7 million that needed to have been added just to keep up with the growth of the working-age population since the recession began.

If the American economy continues to produce jobs at the good rate it’s maintained over the last three months, averaging 245,000 per month, the backlog won’t be whittled down for another five years — long after Barack Obama finishes his second term, should voters grant him another.

But whether even that good rate continues depends largely on whether consumer demand can be revived. Spending by American consumers is 70 percent of U.S. economic activity. But so far, spending is anemic.

American consumers have replaced worn-out cars and appliances, but little else. They haven’t had the dough. Their wages are still falling, adjusted for inflation. The value of their homes – most consumers’ single biggest asset – continues to drop.

Save the Children Tax

Home values are down by an average of a third from their 2006 peak. Consumers understandably feel far poorer as a result. Declining home prices also mean consumers can’t use their homes as collateral for new loans, as they did before 2008. And even with low interest rates, refinancing is difficult.

Corporate profits are up but the money isn’t flowing to American workers. The ratio of profits to wages is the highest on record – since the government began keeping track in 1947. Not only has the median wage continued to drop, adjusted for inflation, but a far smaller share of working-age Americans is now employed (58.6 percent) than was employed five years ago (63.3 percent). Today’s employment-to-population ratio isn’t much higher than it was at its lowest point last summer, when it dropped to 58.2 percent.

The major driver of the U.S. economy over the past several months hasn’t been consumer spending. It’s been businesses rebuilding depleted inventories. Wholesalers increased their stockpiles again in February, bringing them up almost a quarter from their low in September 2009.

But businesses won’t continue to rebuild inventories unless consumers start buying again. big-time. And consumers won’t resume spending as they did before the recession until they’re far better off financially.

Yet how can they be sufficiently better off when their major asset has shrunk so much and when so few of the economic gains are going to them?

This is the central paradox at the heart of the American economy today. If it’s not resolved, the jobs recovery will stall, as it did last spring.

A year ago, remember, we had another three-month run of good job numbers. Last February, March, and April saw net gains of more than 200,000 jobs a month. But that job boomlet abruptly ended.

At the time most observers blamed the stall on external events – the Japanese earthquake, Europe’s gathering debt woes, and higher gas prices. In reality, it stalled because of the shallow pockets of American consumers.

Another stall this time might be blamed on any number of external events – slower growth in China and India, the unraveling of Europe’s debt-crisis deal, and higher gas prices.

But if another stall occurs, the real reason will be Americans once again ran out of money.

468x60_newsarticles_light_1.gif

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Obama Ohio Campaign Effort Began Months Before Super Tuesday

Evans Liberal Politics
March 8, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

Obama Ohio Campaign Effort
Began Months Before Super Tuesday

Obama for America Adopts
the Ohio Strategy

Obama Ohio Campaign Effort Began Months Before Super Tuesday, The Huffington Post, March 7, 2012, by Sam Stein, used with permission, quoted verbatim, photo of Barack Obama on the campaign trail in 2008 is public domain:

COLUMBUS, Ohio — President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign is, at its heart, a numbers-driven operation. And among the many mathematically based presentations it gives is a slideshow showing five distinct pathways to winning re-election.

public domain photo of candidate Barack Obama on the campaign trail in 2008 against the backdrop of a huge American flag

The slideshow contains geographic breakdowns of the electoral map that use different strategies to amass 270 Electoral College votes. The fourth, and perhaps most attainable, of the strategies is the “Midwest Path.” It involves winning the states Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) won in his 2004 presidential race and adding Iowa and Ohio. The former is likely to end up in the Obama column this November. Ohio, however, is a much more complicated — and for the Obama campaign, scary — proposition.

When it comes to the Buckeye State, the president’s political advisers have been in general election mode for months, undertaking what could be the most extensive presidential campaign ever launched across the state. And it’s being driven, in part, by fear that even exhaustive retail politicking might not be enough.

“There are many ways you can lose this state,” explained one Ohio Democrat operative working on Obama’s re-election campaign.

The operative doesn’t say it, but it’s clear that Kerry’s experience in the state is on his mind.

“I was active on campaigns in 2000 and 2004 and I remember election night knowing that if Ohio went blue we would have had a Democratic president,” said Greg Schultz, Ohio State Director for Obama for America. “Demographics changed a long time ago in Ohio. Where people live changed a long time ago. But for some reason, national campaigns didn’t adopt that new model …. 2004 was hopefully the last reminder that if you put the vast majority of the resources in the big cities, at the peril of not picking up those achievable votes in the exurbs, the suburbs and the rural communities, you will lose the state.”

With Schultz spearheading the effort, Obama’s re-election campaign is once again canvassing the entire state. Though the president won there in 2008, that victory could prove hard to replicate. There are 12 distinct media markets in Ohio, along with numerous demographic groups, university towns and blue-collar enclaves. Even the cities have different personalities. Cleveland is closer to Buffalo than Cincinnati. Cincinnati is more like Lexington than Cleveland.

The Obama re-election team is betting that its best shot to appeal to voters in 88 distinct districts is to go heavy on hyper-local politics. Since April 2011, it has contacted more than 650,000 voters, through meetings, phone calls or old-school canvassing. The campaign has had operatives in the state since March 2009 — three months after the president took office — in anticipation of the six months that lie ahead. It just opened its ninth Ohio office, with plans for a tenth in Youngstown already in the works.

“I have no concern or questions about the infrastructure,” said former Gov. Ted Strickland (D). “Every vote is important and in some of these Republican-leaning areas and counties, there’s just no doubt that the Republican candidate is likely to be favored. But if you can get 47 percent of the vote instead of 36 percent of the vote and you do that over multiple smaller counties and throughout the rural areas, it’s going to make a huge difference.”

Webroot + Hotspot Shield Elite Bundle Offer - Combine Online Security with Anti-Virus Protection. Only $49.96! Over $30 in savings! - 160x600

The bet, in the end, is that even the most deep-pocketed candidate can’t write enough checks to compete with true electoral grunt work. One top Obama operative estimated that it would take Mitt Romney and his allied super PAC $50 million worth of television ads to match the work that Obama’s team is accomplishing on the ground. But whereas the president’s re-election campaign will be doing its fair share of Ohio ad buys itself, Romney has a lot of catching up to do on infrastructure.

No area exemplifies this divide more than Columbus, the capital city located in the center of the state. Obama’s new campaign office there is located on Main Street, in the heart of downtown. Barebones and poorly decorated, staffers sit with their heads down, laptops resting on white plastic folding tables. A big sign marked with the number 318,460 is in one room — the total number of petitions signed in a voter protection drive. The operatives there generally ignore national news, choosing instead to consume information from regional press and Ohio political blogs. If they want to speak directly to voters, it’s simple: they need only walk out the front door.

Romney’s Columbus headquarters — its lone office in the state — is barely located within the city limits. The office, in a strip mall on the western outskirts, is tucked away in the Rivers Edge Corporate Center: “Home of the best tenants in Ohio.” The strip mall is also occupied by Custom Fabricators, a storage and equipment provider, and Mira’s Tailoring & Alterations. There is no foot traffic to speak of. On Super Tuesday, about a dozen staffers munched on donuts and sipped coffee as they furiously made get out the vote phone calls. The walls were decked out in Romney signs and Ohio maps. But not for long: The campaign is soon closing shop and assigning its staff elsewhere.

“We vacate the space after each primary and will re-open an office for general,” said a Romney aide.

Top officials with Obama’s Ohio operation say they’re already witnessing the payoffs of a hyper-local approach. The sense of gloom that existed just one year ago, following a disastrous 2010 midterm election cycle, has dissipated, replaced by mutually shared anger with the state of Republican leadership in Ohio. With a major assist from allied union and progressive groups, the campaign has gathered names, telephone numbers and pledges of support from individuals opposed to Republian Gov. John Kasich’s effort to curb collective bargaining rights and curtail early voting.

“I think there was a level of despair, especially for those of us on the ground already,” said one campaign official. “I was saying, ‘Oh my god, it is going to be a really long two years’ … Since then, you saw people who had voted for John McCain and people who had voted for Kasich who are saying to themselves: this is what these people stand for?”

But it’s not difficult to find problems on the horizon. The governor’s leadership may discomfort Ohioans, but that isn’t necessarily a reason to back Obama. Standing outside a coffee shop in Columbus’ red brick-laden German Village, Patrick Bourland, a blonde-bearded 27-year-old who voted for the president in 2008, said he was ambivalent this time around.

“It’s more like detachment in general with the political process,” he says of his current disposition toward electoral politics. “There is this constant antagonism, obstructionism, contentiousness in Congress, and a seeming opposition to getting things done.”

“I’m not going to say I’m not going to vote for him in the general,” added Bourland, who is currently looking for work. “I just have lacked interest.”

Whether the passion gap Bourland described is a persistent predicament for Democrats, or simply a sign of the fact that the general election is still months away, could end up determining the outcome in Ohio. One top Democrat in the state, speaking candidly in exchange for anonymity, acknowledged that the “base isn’t at 2008 levels of enthusiasm” and likely won’t ever be.

The hope for Obama is that the Republican field, certainly in the Buckeye State, is even worse off.

“I will concede to you that there are some hard-right folks whose major motivation is not the quality of their candidate but their dislike and in some cases even hatred for the president,” said Strickland. “But I think that’s a minority within the Republican Party. I think that moderate Republicans are intimidated and are somewhat passive these days. I don’t sense that they are enthusiastic about any of these candidates. So if there’s an enthusiasm gap, I think it’s more with the Republican moderates than with any other sector of the electorate.”

"Sam Stein is a Political Reporter at the Huffington Post, based in Washington, D.C. Previously he has worked for Newsweek magazine, the New York Daily News and the investigative journalism group Center for Public Integrity. He has a masters from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and is a graduate of Dartmouth College. Sam can be reached at stein@huffingtonpost.com." Evans Liberal Politics thanks Mr. Stein for permission to republish his works on an ongoing basis.

Visit BarckObama.com/Ohio.

See Mitt Romney Swiss Bank Account Will Damage Him In Ohio: Ted Strickland, The Huffington Post, March 8, 2012, by Sam Stein, excerpt quoted verbatim:

“We haven’t even started really talking in Ohio about Mitt Romney having a Swiss bank account and Mitt Romney putting a portion of his wealth, having it invested in the Cayman Island,” said Strickland. “I mean, trust me, that’s not going to go over well in Ohio. Why would any person who aspired to be president, as Mitt Romney has for probably much of his life, open a Swiss bank account? What does that say about his political judgment and what does it say about his commitment to the United States of America?”

See Tom Hanks Narrates Pro-Obama Film, Trailer Released, The Huffington Post, March 8, 2012, by Sam Stein.

See Why the Big Winner in Ohio May Be Obama, US News, March 7, 2012, by Rick Newman.

468x60_newsarticles_light_1.gif

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

All Things Romney: Mitt Romney in the News

Evans Liberal Politics
Feburay 22, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

All Things Romney: Mitt Romney in the News

Evans Liberal Politics, February 22, 2012, compiled and with summaries by Paul Evans, photo courtesy of Gage Skidmore via The Raw Story:

Mitt Romney is either tied or very slightly ahead in the Michigan polls, and about tied with Rick Santorum in Arizona. Santorum continues to hammer at the Obama administration in what to mainstream America appears to be a radical way, yet about half of Republicans think he should be the nominee. It’s not hard for Santorum to repeatedly point to changed Romney positions from a few years ago, and then to question his credentials as a conservative. What a comedown for the once “inevitable” candidacy of Romney! To make matters worse, although Romney took in a good deal of money during the previous primaries in January, he spent almost three times as much, even though he still has a positive balance sheet. Romeny is fighting back hard though: to hold his own in the conservative state of Arizona, he must be doing something right. Here, then, is a compilation of news relating to Mitt Romney: ~ Paul Evans

Mitt Romney: Obama Administration
Has ‘Fought Against Religion’

Gage Skidmore photograph of Mitt Romney

In this Huffington Post article, we see that in order to compete with Santorum among conservative Christian voters, Romney is resorting to the traditional Republican tactic of demagoguery. Obama’s campaign characterized the Romney comment as “disgraceful.”

Romney says spending cuts
will slow economic growth

The Raw Story broke this headline yesterday, and this is a huge break with Republican orthodoxy on the face of it. The devil is in the details, though:

“If you just cut, if all you’re thinking about doing is cutting spending, as you cut spending you’ll slow down the economy,” he said in Michigan. “So you have to, at the same time, create pro-growth tax policies.”

So Romney is not actually calling for not cutting spending, or if there are cuts, he just wants to “balance” these cuts by economically “positive” tax cuts for the rich. That sounds very typical for fiscally conservative Republicans, does it not?

In January, Romney spends
nearly three times his haul

According to CNN, during the four primaries in the month of January, Romney spent a whopping $18.7 million. However he only took in $6.5 million, still somehow leaving his camp with resources of $7.7 million on hand. He came out of the month with wins in two of the four primaries.

Sarah Palin’s 8 best pokes at Mitt Romney

Politico’s video and written summary of Ms. Palin’s surprisingly sarcastic and occasionally witty remarks. The woman appears to be learning. About Romney’s candidacy she said:

“I am not convinced and I don’t think the majority of GOP and independent voters are convinced. He’s still in the 30th percentile… He hasn’t risen above that yet because we are not convinced.”

Mitt Romney talks vice president,
bailout at town hall

Politico: SHELBY TOWNSHIP, Mich. — Mitt Romney today abandoned his efforts to maintain strict control over his campaign’s message, taking questions for nearly 30 minutes at a town hall here.

Fiddling while Rome burns, Romney insists he is keeping an “upbeat” outlook, and steadfastly attends only one event a day, while Santorum maintains a blistering pace of three or four events a day. He characterized the Santorum candidacy as “untested,” and pointedly noted that:

“We had Donald Trump for a while and we had Herman Cain and we had Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich. They’ve all been vetted very carefully. Rick Santorum is now just being seen for the first time.”

CNN/Time poll: Romney
holds narrow lead in Arizona

Politico: Mitt Romney is still in the lead in Arizona — but just barely, according to a CNN/Time poll out this afternoon.

Romney gets the support of 36 percent of likely voters in the state, compared with 32 percent for Rick Santorum. Newt Gingrich comes in third with 18 percent, followed by Ron Paul with 6 percent.

These results are fairly similar to the Arizona Public Policy Polling survey out yesterday, which found Romney with 36 percent and Santorum with 33 percent.

Oddly enough, in its headline, CNN itself took the same data and characterized the contest as “all tied up.” Would this be any sort of indicator of which news organization favors which candidate?

468X60

Romney Facing Unexpected Hurdles in Michigan

NY Times: NOVI, Mich. — This was supposed to be a state, at last, where Mitt Romney could coast. After all, he grew up here. His father, an automobile executive, had been the governor. And the last time there was a Republican presidential primary in Michigan, Mr. Romney won handily.

Yet, with less than a week until Michigan Republicans vote and with polling suggesting that Rick Santorum is mounting a serious challenge, Mr. Romney finds himself urgently pouring resources into his home state — unveiling gauzy television ads aimed at reminding residents of his family roots and rolling out endorsements from a virtual who’s who in Lansing: the governor, a former Senate majority leader, the attorney general, a former attorney general, and on and on.

Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum expected
to be focus of GOP debate in Arizona

Mass.com: The Republican presidential debate in Arizona Wednesday could prove to be a key moment in the 2012 race. The CNN-sponsored debate is the last one before voters head to the polls in 18 states. Debates scheduled for March 1 and March 5 have been canceled, and the next Republican debate is scheduled for March 19 in Oregon.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney is tied with former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum in Michigan and a loss in that state next week could be disastrous to Romney’s campaign. The Arizona debate is expected to be focused on Romney and Michigan and could prove to be a showdown between Romney and Santorum.

Romney reverses course, praises
‘important role’ of labor unions

Sherrod Brown's petition for a constitutional amendment to overturn the Supreme Court's Citizen's United decision

Just last week, the Romney campaign blasted labor unions, saying that “they too often stand as obstacles to growth and fight against the workers they are supposed to serve.”

On the face of it, this is a revolutionary, new position for a major Republican to take. Ah, but he is campaigning in Michigan, now, so all of a sudden the leopard changes his spots and is pro-union. Still, Romney can be reasonable at times, unlike Santorum.

Also See In Republican Race, a New Breed of Superdonor, The NY Times, February 21, 2012, by Nicholas Confessori, Michael Luo and Mike McIntire:

NY Times Summary: An exclusive club in presidential politics includes individuals, couples or corporations that have given $1 million or more to “super PACs.”

UPDATE: See Rick Santorum Mocks Mitt Romney, AP on Huffington Post, February 22, 2012, by Charles Babington:

TUCSON, Ariz. — Rick Santorum is mocking Mitt Romney as a “Johnny come lately to the conservative cause.”

Ahead of Wednesday night’s GOP presidential debate in Arizona, Santorum told a tea party gathering in Tucson that Romney proposed a lower corporate tax rate only after Santorum had done so.

The crowd of 400 laughed and clapped when Santorum said America doesn’t need a leader who has been “a well-oiled weather vane.”

TigerDirect Best Sellers

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Santorum Upsets G.O.P. Race With Three Victories (UPDATED)

Logos57: A Caring Community

 

A Caring Place Where People
May Help Each Other
and Talk Politics or Religion

Santorum Upsets G.O.P. Race
With Three Victories
(UPDATED)

Taken From: Santorum Upsets G.O.P. Race With Three Victories, The NY Times, February 8, 2012, by Jim Rutenberg, and Santorum comes in first in Missouri, Minnesota and Colorado GOP primary races, The Raw Story, February 8, 2011, by Megan Charpentier, excerpts quoted verbatim, with commentary by Paul Evans and Updates below:

OCInkjet.com 250x250 banner,<br /> image is updated by season.

NY Times:

His candidacy all but dismissed just days ago, Rick Santorum won the Minnesota and Colorado caucuses and a nonbinding primary in Missouri on Tuesday, an unexpected trifecta that raised fresh questions about Mitt Romney’s ability to corral conservative support.

His performance added another twist to an unruly nominating contest that has seen Republican voters veering among candidates and refusing to coalesce behind anyone. It came after Mr. Romney scored back-to-back victories in Florida and Nevada that had led to predictions that he was finally on a straight march to the nomination.

The triple result amounted to a stinging denial of Mr. Romney’s candidacy from three states where Republicanism is defined by the evangelicals and Tea Party adherents he has struggled to court this year.

Raw Story:

Santorum spoke in Missouri after the race in Minnesota was called for him, thanking God “for our ability to persevere through the dog days,” his wife (whom he kissed on stage), his kids, his supporters whose votes, he said, “I suspect were heard particularly loudly in Massachusetts,” and the tea partiers who he claimed were the “base of the conservative movement.” Santorum then turned to attacking Obama who, he said, he suspected wasn’t listening because, “Has he ever listened to the voice of the American people?” Santorum went on to say that “he thinks he’s better than you,” a refrain he repeated throughout his speech. He promised, too, that Romney had “the same positions as Obama” on everything from cap and trade to the Wall Street bailouts.

Santorum picked up a theme from his competitor, Gingrich, adding that “Tonight we have an example of what a race looks like when a candidate isn’t outspent 5 to 1 and isn’t subject to negative ads that attack his character,” adding that Romney won’t be able to outspend and out-organize Obama in the fall. And, he added, his campaign was doing well because of his economic plan which he said proved that, “I don’t care about the 99 percent, rich or poor, I care about 100 percent of Americans.” Santorum then turned to the oft-heard complaint from conservatives about the Obama administration’s decision to force religious employers to provide contraceptive coverage to their employees, saying, “When the government gives you rights, unlike when God gives you rights, the government can take you away,” accusing the Administration of actively discriminating against Catholics. — see below:

Paul Evans:
Right Santorum, Obama is going to set out to deliberately alienate a huge block of voters with his strong stance on contraceptives, like that makes sense? Obama did it because a woman’s right to do with her body what she wishes, including prevent pregnancy, is something he believes in, in other words, he did it on principle. I strongly believe that the vast majority of American women would agree with him.

From my own experience talking with many hundreds of people while canvassing for votes in elections, it appears to me that it is Protestant fundamentalists and evangelicals who often take prejudicial positions about Catholic beliefs and the Catholic Church. I have heard some pretty hardened beliefs and positions about this, and sometimes downright bigotry. I do apologize to the vast body of Protestant believers who of course have no such prejudice. I want to add, for those who are not aware of it, that I am an ardent Christian myself, although I have had this doubted or discounted to my face. We should honor our Christian differences in belief, while striving to understand and minimize those differences. Santorum’s statement about Obama’s position in re the Catholic Church was inflammatory, let us hope not deliberately so, but politics is politics.

Moreover, as I suspected, it is the Roman Catholic church hierarchy rather than the Catholic believers themselves who are against contraception. See More Catholics support contraception coverage than other Americans, The Raw Story, February 7, 2012, by David Edwards.

A survey released by the Public Religion Research Institute on Tuesday found that 58 percent of Catholics think businesses should be required to provide health plans with free birth control, compared with 55 percent of all Americans who agreed with the requirement. At 38 percent, white evangelical protestants were the least likely to agree free contraception should be provided by employers.

And so, lo and behold, it is the lead head honcho right wing evangelical candidate who is falsely leading or egging on the presses wrong-headed coverage of this issue. Most Americans agree with the requirement of birth control coverage, just not most white evangelical Protestants. So probably, for Santorum, it is mainly a calculated appeal to his base. However I guess Santorum doesn’t know the statistics. He probably thinks the majority of Americans agree with his radical, Dominionist right wing evangelical positions. They don’t. And that’s why if a man like Santorum, or Ron Paul for that matter, were to get the nomination for the G.O.P., it would basically guarantee an Obama reelection. It would also probably harden the divisions under which our society now labors, and would be a bad thing for America.

How far will evangelicals go in their hysteria over matters of reproductive health? See Dem state senator adds ‘Every sperm is sacred’ clause to ‘personhood’ bill, The Raw Story, February 7, 2012, by David Ferguson. The really amazing thing, to me, is that rather than considering the matter and others like it in any sort of philosophical or rational terms — far from that — these people actually believe these sorts of positions are obvious to any Christian, if not every American. This Democratic state senator is basically competing with Republicans for popularity in a conservative state? No, quite possibly she actually believes firmly in her position. If you look up the history of belief about sperm, eggs and reproduction, it was in ancient Israel that the position was adhered to that all the vitality of a human being rested in the sperm, with the woman basically serving as an incubator. So I guess it may well say something about this in the Old Testament, about which I am not knowledgeable (in these matters). But can Americans not understand that this is an ancient position thoroughly discredited by modern science? ~ Paul Evans

UPDATE: See Senate Democrats Say Obama ‘Reinforced’ His Stance on Contraception Mandate at Democratic Retreat, ABC News The Note, February 8, 2012, by Sunlen Miller:

Following President Obama’s speech at the retreat, a small group of Senate Democrats, mostly women, left the retreat early in order to hold a news conference on Capitol Hill to counter the Republicans’ news conference today at which they called for the mandate to be overturned.

Democrats said they will “fight strongly” to keep the mandate in place.

“It is our clear understanding from the administration that the president believes as we do, and the vast majority of the American women should have access to birth control,” Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said pointing out that 15 percent of women use birth control for medical issues. “It’s medicine, and women deserve their medicine.”

Democrats today called on Republicans to stop using women as a “political football,” and stop defining this debate, as Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., did earlier in the day, as a religious issue.

“It’s time to tell Republicans ‘mind your own business,’” said Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J. ”Ideology should never be used to block women from getting the care they need to lead healthier lives.

“The power to decide whether or not to use contraception lies with a woman – not her boss,” said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y. “What is more intrusive than trying to allow an employer to make medical decisions for someone who works for them?”

Paul Evans: I think right wing ideology, ie the Republicans, are reaching too far on this one. In order to pass legislation, any bill has to get past the conservative group of Senate Democrats known as “blue dog” Democrats. While these several Senators would in fact be likely to go along with legislation limiting abortion, it is my feeling that they will turn a deaf ear on Republican appeals to support legislation limiting a woman’s right to contraception.

UPDATE: See Armed with 3 victories, Santorum goes on attack, The Salt Lake Tribune, February 8, 2012, by Catalina Camia and Susan Page.

Fresh from his three-state sweep, a confident Rick Santorum said he is prepared for an onslaught from Mitt Romney as he tries to make his case that he’s the best conservative to take on President Obama.

Santorum, speaking to CNN Wednesday morning, derided Romney for trying to portray himself as a Washington outsider and for repeatedly talking about his credentials as a former CEO.

The former Pennsylvania senator stressed that Romney’s stands on health care, “cap and trade” legislation and government bailouts are the wrong positions for a GOP nominee.

“Mr. Private Sector was Mr. Big Government when he was out there running for the private sector,” Santorum told CNN.

In a separate interview with CNN, Romney adviser Stuart Stevens said Romney’s campaign will be tougher in making contrasts with Santorum. The goal will be to paint Santorum, a former two-term senator, as a Washington insider.

Paul Evans: I am in no way certain that this is the right approach for Romney. Both men have held high positions as far as most Americans are concerned. Romney will be hitting Santorum as an insider while Santorum will be attacking Romney for past positions, in other words, on his record. It just seems to me that, as radical as the so-called reforms are which Mr. Santorum proposes, Romney primarily needs to attack Santorum’s positions. It seems obvious to me that Santorum’s radiical positions are wrong for America, and I think Romney could make that point very clearly if he just concentrated on it.

468X60

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Scott Rasmussen: Obama very likely to be reelected if trends continue

Logos57: A Caring Community
February 7, 2012

 

A Caring Place Where People
May Help Each Other
and Talk Politics or Religion

Scott Rasmussen: Obama very likely
to be reelected if trends continue

Scott Rasmussen: Obama very likely to be reelected if trends continue, The Raw Story, February 6, 2012, by Eric W. Dolan, quoted verbatim: Logos57: A Caring Community is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news:

Scott Rasmussen of Rasmussen Reports predicted on Monday that President Barack Obama would win the 2012 election if the economy continued to improve.

The latest Rasmussen poll showed Obama with a 7 point lead over the Republican frontrunner, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Fox Business News:
Obama Likely to be Re-elected
If Trends Continue

“The trends are moving in President Obama’s direction,” Rasmussen said during an appearance on Fox Business. “Consumer confidence this morning is at the highest level in more than a year, and by the way it is getting near the highest level of the past four years. A plurality of investors now think the economy is getting better.”

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that the unemployment rate had fallen to 8.3 percent, the fifth straight monthly decline since August. In addition, the private sector added 257,000 jobs in January.

Following the report, Rasmussen found that 37 percent of Americans strongly approved of Obama while 27 percent strongly disapproved.

“The absolute numbers tell one part of the story, but the trends tell another,” Rasmussen explained. “If we continue to get good economic news, the president is very likely to be reelected.”

An ABC/Washington Post poll released Monday found Obama ahead of Romney by 52 to 43 percent.

See Hannity: ‘It’s end time in America’ if Obama re-elected, The Raw Story, February 7, 2012, by Andrew Jones.

Comment: Like that preacher who kept predicting Judgment Day and the end of the world, Hannity will have a strong basic appeal to fundamentalist types, and so his claim may even hang around after the election for some time. Did you ever notice that Fox has had a few of their main spokesmen basically make their appeal as if they were slick preachers (Hannity and Beck, at the least), appealing to those who may not know better? Yet the “end of the world” has been predicted as long as there has been a print medium. It is one of those topics which charlatans like Hannity pitch very well. ~ Paul Evans

In the News: Colorado, Minnesota, and Missouri:
What to Look for in the First Day of Multiple Contests

Colorado, Minnesota, and Missouri: What to Look for in the First Day of Multiple Contests, AP OTUS on Yahoo News, February 7, 2012, by Elizabeth Hartfield:

Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri are hosting their voting contests Tuesday, marking the first day in the 2012 cycle to see contests in multiple states. Colorado and Minnesota will have caucuses, and Missouri will hold a primary, though that state will also hold another voting contest – a caucus – in March.

A total of 76 delegates are at stake; 36 in Colorado, 40 in Minnesota and zero in Missouri. Missouri will hold off awarding delegates until its caucuses on March 17. Colorado and Minnesota will allocate delegates on a proportional basis, meaning that each candidate is likely to receive part of the full slate.

468X60

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Accused of ‘Grandiosity,’ Gingrich steps back and …proposes a moon base (Updated)

Logos57: A Community of Caring

 

Accused of ‘Grandiosity,’ Gingrich
steps back and …proposes a moon base (updated)

Late Night: Stewart, Colbert
ridicule Gingrich’s moon base idea

Updates on Romney/Gingrich
in Florida Below

Late Night: Stewart, Colbert ridicule Gingrich’s moon base idea, The LA Times, January 27, 2012, by Show Tracker staff, excerpt quoted verbatim (with videos):

insignia of Apollo 11 space mission

Earlier this week, presidential ca)candidate New Gingrich promised that, if elected, he would establish a permanent American colony on the moon by the year 2020. On Thursday night, Gingrich’s ambitious proposal drew the jeers of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert.

The moon colony idea was Gingrich’s way of embracing contentions leveled by his rival Rick Santorum in South Carolina last week that he is a “grandiose” thinker.

Stewart marveled at Gingrich’s audacity: “A moon base?! Your solution to being accused of grandiosity is ‘Give me eight years and I’ll have a…moon base?! Did you start with Death Star and got kind of reined in?”

Both hosts blasted Gingrich’s suggestion that the moon colony could eventually become a state. Stewart pointed to remarks Gingrich made in 1993, when he dismissed efforts to make Washington, D.C., a state “crazy.”

Colbert also found some bitter irony in Gingrich’s idea that the moon could become a new manufacturing hub. “America will bring manufacturing to the moon. Ohio? [Totally] out of luck.”

See John McCain: Send Newt Gingrich To the Moon!, ABC News The Note, January 27, 2012, by Arlette Saenz:

LAKELAND, Fla. – Get your space suit ready Newt. John McCain wants to send you to the moon.

“I think we ought to send Newt Gingrich to the moon and Mitt Romney to the White House,” McCain said at a town hall here as he proudly unveiled a newly minted joke. “What do you think about that?”

Also See Gingrich can’t be taken seriously after weird Moon base views and other crazy ideas, Huliq, January 27, 2012, by Dave Masko.

On the Other Hand See Colonizing The Moon: Not Totally Crazy?, The New Republic, January 27, 2012, by Nathan Pippenger.

Comment by Paul Evans: Let’s see: Obama himself enjoined Congress in cutting $500 billion from Medicare, with hundreds of billions more to follow, the Republicans seriously pushed ending National Public Radio (I guess it’s too factual), as well as anything which could be described as a liberal “favorite.” People like Ron Paul want to eliminate half or more of Federal departments (including Education, Commerce and Labor). By all means, let’s line up a hundred billion or so to push a moon colony. Man, some of these Republicans really are nut jobs. Florida, are you paying attention?? Sometimes I wonder if anyone among Republican voters really pays attention, or do they just vote exactly as their preacher or their boss or the local Chamber of Commerce tells them to. Nice going, Newt! As a Democrat I appreciate the opportunity to attack this “lunacy.” Oops, well maybe it really IS lunacy.

Updates on Romney/Gingrich in Florida

UPDATE: Obama Vs. Gingrich? More Reasons GOP Fears The Matchup, NPR, January 29, 2012 by Liz Halloran, excerpts quoted verbatim:

Rothenberg’s latest presidential race calculations show that Gingrich would get clobbered by Obama in the tally of all-important state Electoral College votes, 328-180, with only 30 votes seen as tossups. Those estimates are unchanged since Rothenberg’s similar analysis a month ago.

There are a total of 538 electoral votes; 270 are needed to secure the presidency.

And Rothenberg is now projecting that Romney has lost electoral vote ground to Obama and would be in a dead heat with the president, 237-237, with 64 votes still viewed as tossups.

Obama has picked up strength since Rothenberg’s December presidential rating, which had Romney leading the president 275-217, with 46 tossup votes.

Rothenberg, editor of the Rothenberg Political Report, titled his analysis from earlier this week: “Will GOP Risk Goldwater II With Newt Gingrich in 2012?”

UPDATE: Romney lead over Gingrich up in Florida: Reuters/Ipsos poll, Reuters on Yahoo News, January 29, 2012, by Patricia Zengerle, excerpt quoted verbatim:

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republican White House hopeful Mitt Romney’s lead over rival Newt Gingrich edged up to 12 percentage points in Florida, according to Reuters/Ipsos online poll results on Sunday, as Romney’s front-runner status stabilized and Gingrich continued to slip.

Romney, a former Massachusetts governor and private equity executive, was supported by 42 percent of likely Florida voters surveyed in the online three-day tracking poll, just down from 43 percent in the same poll on Saturday. Romney was at 41 percent on Friday.

But with just two days before the state’s primary on Tuesday, Gingrich’s support was at 30 percent, down from 32 percent in Saturday’s results and 33 percent on Friday.

UPDATE — See Also: Gingrich defiant as Romney’s lead grows in Florida, LA Times, January 30, 2012, by Paul West, Seema Mehta and Maeve Reston.

UPDATE: Santorum’s Hypocrisy
Highlighted by Daughter’s Illness
, Yahoo News Commentary, January 29, 2012, by Andrew Riggio, excerpt quoted verbatim:

COMMENTARY | Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum suspended his bid for the GOP nod to run against Barack Obama when his daughter, Bella Santorum, was hospitalized, according to the Associated Press. Bella suffers from Trisomy 18, a rare genetic disorder in which a baby has some or all of an extra chromosome. While it is always tragic for a parent to face losing a child, the situation highlights a political issue: Santorum’s hypocrisy on health care, abortion and embryonic stem cell research.

InformIT (Pearson Education)

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Data Recoverydata recovery softwareforex tradingforex