Posts Tagged ‘elections’

The Super Rich Get Richer, Everyone Else Gets Poorer, and the Democrats Punt

Evans Liberal Politics
September 25, 2010

 

The Super Rich Get Richer,
Everyone Else Gets Poorer,
and the Democrats Punt

 

The Super Rich Get Richer, Everyone Else Gets Poorer, and the Democrats Punt, Robert Reich.org, September 24, 2010, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

The super-rich got even wealthier this year, and yet most of them are paying even fewer taxes to support the eduction, job training, and job creation of the rest of us. According to Forbes magazine’s annual survey, just released, the combined net worth of the 400 richest Americans climbed 8% this year, to $1.37 trillion. Wealth rose for 217 members of the list, while 85 saw a decline.

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For example, Charles and David Koch, the energy magnates who are pouring vast sums of money into Republican coffers and sponsoring tea partiers all over America, each gained $5.5 billion of wealth over the past year. Each is now worth $21.5 billion.

Wall Street continued to dominate the list; 109 of the richest 400 are in finance or investments.

From another survey we learn that the 25 top hedge-fund managers got an average of $1 billion each, but paid an average of 17 percent in taxes (because so much of their income is considered capital gains, taxed at 15 percent thanks to the Bush tax cuts).

The rest of America got poorer, of course. The number in poverty rose to a post-war high. The median wage continues to deteriorate. And some 20 million Americans don’t have work.

Only twice before in American history has so much been held by so few, and the gap between them and the great majority been a chasm — the late 1920s, and the era of the robber barons in the 1880s.

And yet the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003, which conferred almost all their benefits on the rich, continue.

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Democrats have decided to delay voting on whether to extend them for the top 2 percent of Americans or for the bottom 98 percent until after the mid-term elections.

Democrats have thereby given up a defining issue that could have enabled them to show the big story of the last three decades — the accumulation of almost all the gain from economic growth at the top — and to make a start at reversing it.

When will they ever learn?

Watch Rachel Maddow- Dems miss opportunity in Obama tax cuts, MSNBC video on YouTube — 3:15.

Now On Sale: Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future [hardcover], by Robert Reich, pay only $12.96 (save 48 percent on Amazon.com).

here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future is going to be released September 21, and is available for Pre-ordering at this link (Amazon.com). The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

Robert Reich’s commentaries are available for listening to at Publicradio.com. Thanks to Professor Reich for permission to publish his articles on an ongoing basis.

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National Political Campaign News Headlines and Commentary

Evans Liberal Politics
September 23, 2010

 

National Political Campaign News
Headlines and Commentary


All Your Election 2010 Political News,
Democrats Versus Republicans Edition


Evans Liberal Politics, September 23, 2010, compiled and with commentary by Paul Evans:

“Pledge to America”: The New Republican Agenda


“Pledge to America”: The New Republican Agenda, CBS News, Political Hotsheet, September 22, 2010, by Jill Jackson, quoted verbatim:

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House Republicans, led by John Boehner, plan to unveil their “Pledge to America” (today, Thursday) at a hardware store in Sterling, Virginia. An advanced copy obtained by CBS News reveals few surprises, but gives voters a basic idea of what Republicans will do if they take over the House next year. It is also a clear pledge to the Tea Party with its focus on Constitutional principles and government spending. “With this document, we pledge to dedicate ourselves to the task of reconnecting our highest aspirations to the permanent truths of our founding by keeping faith with the values our nation was founded on, the principles we stand for, and the priorities of our people” the members say in the opening. “This is our Pledge to America.”

Pledge to America: Full Text

The GOP plan is to stop the Bush tax cuts from expiring for all Americans, not just the middle class as many Democrats would like. Republicans would allow small businesses to take a tax deduction equal to 20 percent of their income. And they would repeal and replace health care with “common-sense solutions focused on lowering costs and protecting American jobs.”

The Pledge also promises to reform the way Congress works by requiring each bill to have Constitutional citations and by giving members at least three days to read legislation before it comes to the floor for a vote.

On defense, they promise to fully fund the troops, missile defense and to enforce sanctions in Iran.

Critical Contests: Interactive Map with CBS News 2010 Election Race Ratings

House Democrats were already busy Wednesday afternoon working up a fact sheet to pan the Republican pledge. In a draft version of the fact sheet, Democrats question the GOP’s small business credibility given that Republicans are expected to return from the event to DC tomorrow to vote against a small business lending fund with tax breaks.

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“Ironically, the party that’s voted against small business tax cuts enacted into law by this Congress is actually holding their press event at a small business just outside Washington–and then racing back presumably to vote against the Small Business Jobs Act–crucial to get small businesses hiring and $300 billion in private sector credit flowing,” said Nadeam Elshami, a spokesperson for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The Democrats’ draft also says that the GOP plan will “blow a $700 billion hole in the deficit to give tax cuts to millionaires and billionaires” and “take away patients’ rights” by repealing the health care bill.

The Republican plan would take spending back to 2008 pre-TARP and stimulus spending levels and would put in place strict budget caps. But it’s unclear how much money would actually be saved given the funding promises in the GOP pledge on extending and adding tax cuts, repealing but replacing health care, and increasing defense spending.

Jill Jackson is a CBS News senior political producer. You can read more of her posts in Hotsheet here. You can also follow her on Twitter.

Articles in the News about the “Pledge to America:”


See GOP’s New ‘Pledge to America’: A Pathetic, Destructive Sham, AlterNet, September 23, 2010, by Steve Benen.

UPDATE: See Downhill With the G.O.P., The New York Times, Conscience of a Liberal, September 23, 2010, by Paul Krugman (on the Pledge to America), excerpt quoted verbatim:

Once upon a time, a Latin American political party promised to help motorists save money on gasoline. How? By building highways that ran only downhill.

I’ve always liked that story, but the truth is that the party received hardly any votes. And that means that the joke is really on us. For these days one of America’s two great political parties routinely makes equally nonsensical promises. Never mind the war on terror, the party’s main concern seems to be the war on arithmetic. And this party has a better than even chance of retaking at least one house of Congress this November.

Banana republic, here we come.

See The GOP’s bad idea, The Washington Post, Opinion, September 23, 2010, by Ezra Klein.

See House Republicans Draft Campaign Manifesto, Reuters on The New York Times, September 23, 2010, by Reuters.

Watch Republicans Pledge to Take On Obama, CBS News video on YouTube, September 23, 2010 — 4:13.

See GOP leaders pledge to cut government, taxes, CNN Politics, September 23, 2010, by CNN Wire Staff, with video of Boehner unveiling the “Pledge to America.”

Recommended: Republicans Offer Their Agenda for Midterm Election, The New York Times, September 23, 2010, by Michael D. Shear and David M. Herszenhorn.

Popular from yesterday: Republican ‘Pledge To America’ Centers On Spending Freeze, Tax Cuts, The Huffington Post, September 22, 2010, by Julie Hirschfeld Davis.

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In Related Political Campaign News:


G.O.P. Cites Tax Cuts and Health Care as Main Focus, The New York Times, September 23, 2010, by David M. Herszenhorn: photo is © AP and is from Politico, more on the Pledge to America.

AP photo of Boehner, Cantor and Pence, arch Republicans

With control of the House, the Republicans said they would seek to immediately cancel any unspent money from last year’s $787 billion economic stimulus program, to freeze the size of the “nonsecurity” federal work force, and to quickly cut $100 billion in discretionary spending. But the blueprint, with echoes of the 1994 Contract With America, does not specify how the spending reductions would be carried out.

Comment by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: Of course, this HAS been going on since 1994, in fact, since before Reagan took office in 1980. The Republicans have no new ideas. Just cut taxes (for everyone, so long as the rich fat cats get theirs), slash social programs (discretionary spending), push defense and security spending, and limit the size of government. Same old, same old. Voters, do you really want to go back to the Bush years? Do you want to see a Congress attempting to enact budgets and blueprints with the stamp of Newt Gingrich on them? It’s your choice!

Not all conservatives are in love with the Pledge to America:

See RedState’s Erick Erickson Eviscerates GOP’s “Pledge To America”, Daily Kos, September 22, 2010, by StuHunter:

Tonight, CNN contributor Erick Erickson of RedState, The Republican’s answer to the Daily Kos and its founder Markos Moulitsas just tore apart and ripped into shreds the House GOP’s new plan to be unveiled tomorrow… “Pledge To America.” This is the GOP’s pathetic attempt to recapture Newt Gingrich’s 1994 “Contract With America” which failed miserably and has been aptly renamed “Contract On America.”

See Perhaps the Most Ridiculous Thing to Come Out of Washington Since George McClellan, Red State, September 22, 2010, by Erick Erickson: Erickson gives the Pledge an A+ on rhetoric and a C- on ideas, so it’s not like he absolutely hates it.

See ‘Pledge’ promises fight, gridlock, Politico, September 23, 2010, by Richard E. Cohen, Jake Sherman and Jonathan Allen.

The Ongoing Political Battle:


Health Care Shaping Up as a Central Front in Campaign 2010
(But Is It an Issue Democrats Want to Campaign on?)


See In Effort to Reconnect, Obama Heads Into Backyard, The New York Times, September 22, 2010, by Sheryl Gay Stolberg, photo © The New York Times, excerpt quoted verbatim:

photo of President Obama on the campaign trail trying to connect with voters in Falls Church, Virginia

FALLS CHURCH, Va. — President Obama is trying to reconnect with the American people, and he is using that most American of settings, the backyard, to do it.

Mr. Obama emerged from the back door of Paul and Frances Brayshaw’s tidy white brick house here on Wednesday and trotted down some steps onto their patio under a bright noonday sun with a hearty “Hey, everybody! Hello, hello, hello! Good to see you.” About two dozen guests awaited him in lawn chairs for what was supposed to be a casual conversation on health care and, more broadly, the American economy.

It was Mr. Obama’s third such “backyard conversation” in recent weeks, and there are more in store. Another three backyard drop-ins are planned for next week, when Mr. Obama travels to New Mexico, Wisconsin and Iowa, and there will be more throughout the campaign season — part of what his aides describe as a concerted push to get him out of the White House to mingle with everyday Americans and hear their concerns.

Commentary by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: Since Republicans have made repeal of health care reform a top priority on their campaign agenda, the Obama administration has been attempting to counterattack by connecting with voters and educating them about the benefits of the new health care law. In my opinion, I’m not sure how wise this is and I hope the White House knows what it’s doing here. Last time I checked public opinion it was running rather strongly against the health care reform bill, six months after passage. Rasmussen, which can be counted on the add 5 to 10 points to the right wing positions in their polling (IMHO), has 61 percent of Americans in favor of repealing the health care law. Even Gallop has Americans disapproving of the health care reform law, with 39 percent approving and 56 percent disapproval (September 13, 2010 results). Even accounting for a polling bias by Rasmussen, as the normally unbiased Gallop results show, this sort of public disapproval makes health care reform a difficult thing for Democrats to campaign on. It’s been six months (today) since health care reform passed, and even with benefits of the law just now starting to kick in, at this point Americans have pretty much made up their minds – against the health care reform bill.

Still don’t know what’s in the health care reform bill which passed six months ago? The Kaiser Family Foundation has an excellent Summary of New Health Reform Law and a good Health Reform Implementation Timeline (PDF’s).

By the way, the Pew Research Center is reporting (to liberals) disappointing polling numbers on the public’s position on entitlements in general. This is an issue liberals had hoped would favor Democrats, but that’s not what the polling numbers are saying: According to Pew, “58% favor a proposal that would allow workers under age 55 to invest a portion of their Social Security taxes in personal retirement accounts that would rise and fall with the markets,” while only 28 percent of Americans are against any privatization of Social Security. People, how can you be so dumb?

See For Many, Health Care Relief Begins Today, The New York Times, September 22, 2010, by Kevin Sack, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Sometimes lost in the partisan clamor about the new health care law is the profound relief it is expected to bring to hundreds of thousands of Americans who have been stricken first by disease and then by a Darwinian insurance system.

On Thursday, the six-month anniversary of the signing of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PDF), a number of its most central consumer protections take effect, just in time for the midterm elections.

Starting now, insurance companies will no longer be permitted to exclude children because of pre-existing health conditions, which the White House said could enable 72,000 uninsured to gain coverage. Insurers also will be prohibited from imposing lifetime limits on benefits.

The law will now forbid insurers to drop sick and costly customers after discovering technical mistakes on applications. It requires that they offer coverage to children under 26 on their parents’ policies.

It establishes a menu of preventive procedures, like colonoscopies, mammograms and immunizations, that must be covered without co-payments. And it allows consumers who join a new plan to keep their own doctors and to appeal insurance company reimbursement decisions to a third party.

Some of the Republican Madness:


Think the Republicans are being anything like fair about the issues?

See Republicans Balk at Obama Business Tax Breaks They’ve Backed, Business Week, September 21, 2010, by Catherine Dodge: “Business tax breaks for R&D and capital investments are two proposals Republicans backed in the past, but don’t like as part of Obama’s plan to spur growth.” PROOF that so long as the Repugs can use the economy as an issue to campaign on, they will NOT be for any measures which might improve the economy. Period.

Lies and more lies: See PolitiFact’s The Truth-O-Meter report card on Michele Bachmann, PolitiFact, September 21, 2010, by Lois Jackson: here is a good quote from the article about earlier reports here on Bachman: she “had never earned anything higher than a False” on the “Truth-O-Meter.” You were expecting?

And it’s getting ugly out there. See Ill. man arrested, accused of threatening Obama, AP News hosted on Google, September 22, 2010, by AP, about a man arrested claiming he had an explosive device after threatening the President.

For fun, watch Witless: The True Story of Christine O’Donnell & the Tea Party Women, YouTube video — 1:09.

IMPORTANT: Bill Clinton offers formula for Barack Obama success, Politico, September 23, 2010, by John F. Harris and James Hohman, excerpt quoted verbatim:

NEW YORK —- Bill Clinton said Barack Obama and his fellow Democrats have not been “vigorous enough” in pushing back against Republican distortions, warning that to prevent a midterm debacle, his party must urgently rally around a national message designed to halt the flight of independent voters into the arms of the GOP.

In a POLITICO interview Wednesday, the former president said Democrats must find a better way to frame their case to fiscally conservative swing voters, who abandoned the GOP in 2006 and 2008 but this year have not heard a sustained rebuttal to the Republican argument that President Obama stands for growing deficits and European-style big government.

See Senate Forecast: Republican Takeover Chances Improved, but Democrats Are Building Pacific Firewall, FiveThirtyEight on The New York Times, September 22, 2010, by Nate Silver.

Commentary by Paul Evans: We’ve seen that campaigning on health care or even entitlements is a labor fraught with danger for the Democratic Party. Here’s one idea that might be a little more fruitful. See Obama Aides Weigh Bid to Tie the G.O.P. to the Tea Party, The New York Times, September 19, 2010, by Jackie Calmes and Michael D. Shear. That sounds like an idea: make the whole campaign about the Tea Party, (correctly) tie the whole G.O.P to the Tea Party, and then bore in on their whacky far right Tea Party positions. I wouldn’t so much try to refute Republican ideas a la Bill Clinton’s ideas, above…. I’d smear the bloody cr*p out of them about their Tea Party identity. We’ve seen in 2000 and 2004 that swift boating and smear attacks work all too well with the American voter. Well, I’d swift boat the GOP about their Tea Party identity and allegiances. Sounds a whole lot more promising than trying to campaign on issues which, by and large, the public has weighted in the balance and found wanting. DNC, are you listening?

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Why Elections Are Not a Waste of Progressives’ Time

Evans Liberal Politics
September 16, 2010

 

Why Elections Are Not a Waste of Progressives’ Time

 

Why Elections Are Not a Waste of Progressives’ Time, Common Dreams.org, September 16, 2010, by Norman Solomon, quoted verbatim:

A pithy idea — now going around in some progressive circles — is that elections are a waste of time.

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The idea can be catchy. It all depends on some tacit assumptions.

For instance: elections are a waste of time if you figure the U.S. government is so far gone that it can’t get much worse.

Elections are a waste of time if you’ve given up on grassroots organizing to sway voters before they cast ballots.

Elections are a waste of time if you think there’s not much difference on the Supreme Court between Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Antonin Scalia, or Sonia Sotomayor and Samuel Alito.

Elections are a waste of time if you’re so disgusted with Speaker Pelosi that you wouldn’t lift a finger to prevent Speaker Boehner.

Elections are a waste of time if you don’t see much value in reducing — even slightly — the extent of injustice and deprivation imposed on vulnerable people.

Or, if you see the organizing of protests, community groups, unions and the like as “either/or” in relation to working for the election of better candidates.

Or, if you think the goal of those who struggled and suffered for the right to vote — seeing the ballot as an essential component of democracy — is outdated and rendered moot by present-day frustrations and outrages.

Elections are a waste of time if you think corporate power has grown so immense that state power has become irrelevant.

Or, if you still believe it was smart when some of us progressives figured we had no stake in efforts to defeat Ronald Reagan in 1980 or George W. Bush in 2000.

Or, if you think it doesn’t much matter whether Californians elect to make possible Senator Carly Fiorina and Governor Meg Whitman, or whether Wisconsin voters remove Russ Feingold from the Senate.

Or, if you’d just as soon bypass any plausible path for electing more genuine progressives like Dennis Kucinich or Barbara Lee to government positions.

Or, if you see the raising of political awareness as an alternative to — rather than intertwined with — the building of progressive electoral power to challenge corporate power.

Elections are a waste of time if you don’t realize or care that the powerful forces behind Wall Street and the warfare state are thrilled if progressives retreat from electoral battles.

Elections are a waste of time if you conclude — due to chronic suppression of electoral democracy — that the ideal of electoral democracy should be discarded rather than pursued.

Elections are a waste of time if you think progressives should opt out of electoral struggles for government power, leaving it to uncontested dominance by the heartless and the spineless.

Tea Party, Not Progressives Make a Statement:


Real News Network coverage of elections to the effect that it is the Tea Party and not progressive who have made a statement by their enthusiasm and voter turnout "Tea Party, Not Progressives, Make Statement:" Real News Network audio to the effect that it is the right wing conservatives and not progressives who have made a statement with their enthusiasm and voter turnout. — 10:57

Watch the Real News Network video here.

Norman Solomon is a journalist, historian, and progressive activist. His book “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death” has been adapted into a documentary film of the same name. His most recent book is “Made Love, Got War.” He is a national co-chair of the Healthcare NOT Warfare campaign. In California, he is co-chair of the Commission on a Green New Deal for the North Bay; www.GreenNewDeal.info.

More on the Tea Party and elections: The misguided reaction to Tea Party candidates, Salon, September 16, 2010, by Glenn Greewald, a scathing indictment of Tea Party values, excerpt quoted verbatim:

The “tea party” movement is, in my view, a mirror image of the Republican Party generally. There are some diverse, heterodox factions which compose a small, inconsequential minority of it (various libertarian, independent, and Reagan Democrat types), but it is dominated — in terms of leadership, ideology, and the vast majority of adherents — by the same set of beliefs which have long shaped the American Right: Reagan-era domestic policies, blinding American exceptionalism and nativism, fetishizing American wars, total disregard for civil liberties, social and religious conservatism, hatred of the minority-Enemy du Jour (currently: Muslims), allegiance to self-interested demagogic leaders, hidden exploitation by corporatist masters, and divisive cultural tribalism. Other than the fact that (1) it is driven (at least in part) by genuine citizen passion and engagement, and (2) represents a justifiable rebellion against the Washington and GOP establishments, I see little good in it and much potential for bad. To me, it’s little more than the same extremely discredited faction which drove the country into the ground for the last decade, merely re-branded under a new name.

Concerned about the Tea Party’s strength? Read Women of the Tea Party: Who Are You, and What Do You Want?, The Huffington Post, September 16, 2010, by Peggy Drexler.

Recommended: Enthusiasm Gap Haunts Democrats as November Nears, Open Salon, September 13, 2010, by Kevin Gosztola.

See The Enthusiasm Gap: How Dispassionate Dems And Fired-Up GOPers Are Defining 2010, Talking Points Memo DC, September 13, 2010, by Evan McMorris-Santoro.

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Final Primary Results: Tea Party Rampant, Republican Party Disadvantaged in Fall Elections

Evans Liberal Politics
September 15, 2010

 

Final Primary Results: Tea Party Rampant,
Republican Party Disadvantaged in Fall Elections

G.O.P. Insurgents Win in Del. and N.Y., © The New York Times, September 14, 2010, by Jeff Zeleny, photo © N.Y. Times/Jessica Kourkounis, excerpt quoted verbatim:

The Tea Party movement scored another victory on Tuesday, helping to propel a dissident Republican, Christine O’Donnell, to an upset win over Representative Michael N. Castle in the race for the United States Senate nomination in Delaware.

photo of Tea Party candidate Christine O'Donnell celebrating victory in last night's win in the Delaware Republican Senate primary

Mr. Castle, a moderate who served two terms as governor and had been reliably winning elections for the last four decades, became the latest establishment Republican casualty. Republican leaders, who had actively opposed Ms. O’Donnell, said the outcome complicated the party’s chances of winning control of the Senate.

With all precincts reporting, Ms. O’Donnell won 53 percent of the vote to Mr. Castle’s 47 percent. The primary drew 57,000 voters, a small slice of the overall electorate.

Ms. O’Donnell, a former abstinence counselor who had failed in previous attempts to run for office in Delaware, won the endorsement of Sarah Palin, Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina and other leaders of the party’s conservative wing.

“A lot of people said we can’t win the general election; yes we can!” Ms. O’Donnell said. “It will be hard work, but we can win if those same people who fought against me work just as hard for me.”

The results on the last big night of primaries highlighted the extent to which the Tea Party movement has upended the Republican Party and underscored the volatility of the electorate seven weeks from Election Day.

In New Hampshire, another candidate with strong backing from grass-roots conservatives, Ovide Lamontagne, was locked in a tight battle with his main opponent, Kelly Ayotte, in the Republican primary for Senate.

“In the interest of making sure all the votes are counted,” Mr. Lamontagne told supporters at a rally after midnight, “we’re going to continue to wait this out.” In Delaware, Ms. O’Donnell’s victory touched off a new round of recriminations among Republicans over the direction of their party, raising the question of whether there was still room for moderates and whether the drive for ideological purity would cost the party victories in November. The state and national Republican Party had mounted an aggressive campaign to defeat Ms. O’Donnell, but it fell short, with Mr. Castle unable to rely on independent voters who have long formed his base of support.

“The voters in the Republican primary have spoken, and I respect that decision,” Mr. Castle said, addressing crestfallen supporters who gathered in Wilmington. “I had a very nice speech prepared here, hoping I would win this race.”

In Maryland, former Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. won the Republican nomination for governor, positioning him for a rematch with Gov. Martin O’Malley, a Democrat who defeated him four years ago. Mr. Ehrlich defeated Brian Murphy, an investment executive, who was endorsed by Ms. Palin.

In Wisconsin, Scott Walker, the Milwaukee County executive, won the Republican nomination for governor. He defeated Mark Neumann, a former congressman, and will face Mayor Tom Barrett of Milwaukee, a Democrat, in November.

The contests on Tuesday night were the last big cluster in a seven-month string of primaries that will come to an end when Hawaii votes on Saturday and Louisiana holds a runoff early next month. Seven members of Congress had already been defeated in their bids for re-election.

In Delaware, O’Donnell supporters who gathered at an Elks lodge in Dover began chanting “Christine! Christine!” as returns began to trickle in and her lead steadily climbed. A little more than an hour after the polls closed, the race was called for Ms. O’Donnell.

In an interview, Ms. O’Donnell said she felt confident that she would have the support of Democrats and independents (neither group could vote in Delaware’s closed Republican primary). If elected in November, she said, she would “work to repeal the health care bill.”

Throughout the campaign, Ms. O’Donnell was dogged by reports — many of them generated by members of her own party — that she had trouble with personal finances, had fudged her educational history and was not fit for office. But Ms. O’Donnell continued to rebut, repudiate and push on, with a hefty dose of help from the Tea Party infrastructure and rank-and-file voters who were furious at Washington. ….

Read the full article, here.

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UPDATE: See Tea party wins could derail GOP bid for Senate control, McClatchy, September 15, 2010, by David Lightman and William Douglas, excerpt quoted verbatim:

WASHINGTON — The tea party movement’s upset victory Tuesday by an insurgent conservative in Delaware’s Republican Senate primary puts GOP chances to win control of the U.S. Senate in November in serious jeopardy.

They need to gain 10 seats to run the Senate. Most leading prognosticators had said they appeared to be within reach of that until Tuesday. (Although most analysts say Republicans still have a good chance to gain a majority in the House of Representatives, where they need to pick up 39 seats.)

Delaware’s not the only Senate race in November where Republicans will field a tea party candidate vulnerable to the “fringe” label against well-known Democrats in the Nov. 2 general elections.

Colorado and Nevada face the same scenario, with incumbent Democrats seeking re-election against tea party insurgents who defeated better-known Republican candidates in low-turnout contests.

However, among the Senate seats most analysts expected Republicans to gain was Delaware’s, where the GOP establishment’s choice for Senate nominee was Rep. Michael Castle. A former two-term governor, the popular 71-year-old Castle has won 12 statewide elections and routinely pulls many Democratic and independent votes.

Running, however, in a closed Republican primary Tuesday in which Democrats and independents couldn’t vote, Castle was upset by little-known tea party candidate Christine O’Donnell.

As of Sept. 1, Delaware has a total of 621,746 registered voters. Nearly half are registered Democrats, while another 146,000 are independents.

Despite the intense campaign in the small state, the GOP primary attracted only a 32 percent turnout Tuesday. That means that a passionate but relatively small tea party movement was able to win a majority of a light Republican turnout.

Next, however, O’Donnell must face Democrat Chris Coons in the Nov. 2 general election. He’s the executive of New Castle County, the most populous of the state’s three counties. O’Donnell pulled 30,561 votes Tuesday. In Delaware’s 2006 general election, Democratic Sen. Tom Carper won — with 170,567 votes.

Closed primaries, where only registered party members can vote, tend to reflect the “small, intensely held preferences of fringe groups, and compared to the electorate in open races, the small size of the tea party makes it a fringe group,” said Michael Munger, a political science professor at Duke University.

See National GOP Looks West: NRSC Washing Hands Of Delaware After Christine O’Donnell Win, Talking Points Memo, September 15, 2010, by Christina Bellantoni: "The national Republicans who whispered for weeks that Christine O’Donnell was unelectable are done with Delaware."

UPDATE: But See Four Reasons Why Christine O’Donnell Might Win, Alt Society Liberalism (Google group), September 16, 2010, by Knifefight Afterdance.

UPDATE and Exercise in Amazement: See O’Donnell In 2007: Scientists Have Created Mice With Human Brains!, Talking Points Memo DC, September 16, 2010, by Eric Kleefeld. Nooooo…. it couldn’t BEEE…. Could it???

See Tea Party win hurts Republicans’ Senate chances, Reuters, September 14, 2010, by Reuters staff, excerpt quoted verbatim:

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The string of victories by Tea Party candidates was fueled by broad voter dissatisfaction with President Barack Obama and government in Washington, and left Republicans in turmoil.

“Delaware Republicans chose an ultra-rightwing extremist who is out of step with Delaware values,” said Democratic Senator Robert Menendez, who leads the party’s campaign committee.

The Republican Senate campaign committee issued a terse one-sentence statement of congratulations on O’Donnell’s win. O’Donnell shrugged off the likelihood the committee would not spend any money on her.

“They don’t have a winning track record this season,” she told CNN.

See Christine O’Donnell defeats Rep. Mike Castle in Delaware Senate primary, Politico, September 15, 2010, by Jonathan Martin.

See Christine O’Donnell upsets Mike Castle in Delaware Senate primary, The Washington Post, The Fix, by Chris Cillizza.

See N.H. Senate race too close to call, Politico, September 15, 2010, by Shira Toeplitz, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Former state Attorney General Kelly Ayotte led the field for the Republican nomination for the open New Hampshire Senate seat, in a race that was still too close to call by early Wednesday morning.

Ayotte led attorney Ovide Lamontagne by less than one percentage point, 38.2 percent to 37.5 percent, with just over 85 percent of precincts reporting.

Around 3 a.m., representatives from both campaigns said the race was too close to determine a winner and the candidates would wait until daylight Wednesday morning to hear the final results.

The GOP field also included two deep-pocketed businessmen, investor Bill Binnie and network-server company president Jim Bender, who each received 14 percent and 9 percent of the vote, respectively, despite spending their own money heavily on their bids.

The contest pitted the GOP establishment against grassroots conservatives and tea party activists. Ayotte, the early front-runner who was preferred by national Republicans, sought to fend off a late surge by Lamontagne, who ran with tea party support.

See Election Results Live: September 14 Primary Liveblog, The Huffington Post, September 15, 2010, by HuffPo.

Note by Evans Liberal Politics:According to the latest, updated election results for New Hampshire, Kelly Ayotte now leads with 38 percent, or 46,311 votes, to Ovide Lamontagne’s 37 percent, or 45,352 votes. We will bring you updated results here as they become available. ~ Paul Evans.

Highly recommended: Great piece on GOP political philosophy by David Brooks at the New York Times, The Day After Tomorrow, September13, 2010.

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Suck It Up and Dig In

Evans Liberal Politics
September 9, 2010

 

Suck It Up and Dig In

 

Suck It Up and Dig In, Truthout OpEd, September 9, 2010, by William Rivers Pitt, quoted verbatim:

The “mainstream” news media has, over the last few weeks, been giving us a clinic on the art of the self-fulfilling prophecy. To wit: Democrats are discouraged on the eve of the 2010 midterm elections, liberals are even more so, the right is on fire, and the American people in general are preparing to vent their economic frustrations on the majority party in Congress, and by proxy the president. Virtually every poll, newspaper and network has declared the upcoming vote to be the electoral version of Little Big Horn for the Democratic Party, even though the election is almost two months off.

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Not so long ago, I was calling such dire predictions nonsense. After all, the Republican Party has offered nothing of substance in terms of policy proposals to explain why they deserve to be allowed back into power. The Tea Party insurgency on the GOP’s right flank has knocked off a number of very electable Republicans in primary races all over the country and replaced them with candidates with views so extreme as to make Dick Cheney look measured and reasonable by comparison.

More to the point, I simply refused to believe that the American people in general could possibly be bumfuzzled enough to forget how bad things were in this country not even two years ago due to the pestilence of Republican rule. I couldn’t imagine that the very people who have been suffering the economic consequences of that pestilence, who suffer it today and will suffer it tomorrow, could be damnfool enough to let the wolves back into the yard.

Well, if the prophesies of the “mainstream” news media are as self-fulfilling as they appear, the damnfool bumfuzzles are gearing up to rule the day on the first Tuesday in November. As astonishing as it may sound, the very people who have been getting ruthlessly and deliberately pummeled by the politicians and policies of the GOP are, by all reports, preparing to deliver an axe into the hands of the very headsmen who put them on the chopping block in the first place for fun, profit and power.

I’m sure there are plenty of explanations for why this appears to be happening; political scientists, sociologists and scholars of abnormal psychology will have a field day parsing the whys and wherefores of this phenomenon if the deal does indeed go down. In the end, however, I think Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post got closest to the bone last week in a column titled “The Spoiled Brat American Electorate.” In it, Robinson wrote:

According to polls, Americans are in a mood to hold their breath until they turn blue. Voters appear to be so fed up with the Democrats that they’re ready to toss them out in favor of the Republicans – for whom, according to those same polls, the nation has even greater contempt. This isn’t an “electoral wave,” it’s a temper tantrum.

In the punditry business, it’s considered bad form to question the essential wisdom of the American people. But at this point, it’s impossible to ignore the obvious: The American people are acting like a bunch of spoiled brats.

The nation demands the impossible: quick, painless solutions to long-term, structural problems. While they’re running for office, politicians of both parties encourage this kind of magical thinking. When they get into office, they’re forced to try to explain that things aren’t quite so simple — that restructuring our economy, renewing the nation’s increasingly rickety infrastructure, reforming an unsustainable system of entitlements, redefining America’s position in the world and all the other massive challenges that face the country are going to require years of effort. But the American people don’t want to hear any of this. They want somebody to make it all better. Now.

Chalk it up to the vagaries of the ceaseless revolutions of the 24-hour news cycle. Everything proffered by the “mainstream” news media comes in instantaneous fashion, and their screaming in-the-minute coverage of epic, long-term dilemmas ably serves to create the kind of dull-witted, memory-deficient angst that leads people who have been badly screwed to volunteer for a whole new round of screwing. Chalk it up to fear, to impatience, or to the fact that the GOP and their media allies are Jedi Masters when it comes to crafting political messages that appeal to the gut while being a shortcut to thinking at the same time.

Chalk it up to whatever you like, but unless the political pundits in the “mainstream” and independent media are pulling the 21st century version of “Dewey Defeats Truman,” this electorate appears to have every intention come November of hanging itself with its own hair like Rapunzel when the Prozac runs out, and it is, frankly, sickening to contemplate on any number of levels. Mr. Robinson’s use of words like “brats” and “tantrum” may be harsh, but it is hard to say he is wrong.

Contemplating all of this is hard enough on the soul and the stomach by itself, but amazingly enough, it gets worse. A new poll was released on Wednesday by Democracy Corps that, quite simply, makes me want to eat my own teeth. It re-re-re-reports the oft-repeated “generic ballot” refrain, i.e. in these upcoming midterm elections, a generic Republican leads a generic Democrat by a seemingly insurmountable margin. But within the layered questions in this poll, there is a data point that literally makes me want to throw up on myself. According to Democracy Corps’ survey of “drop-off voters” – a term referring to those who voted in 2008 but are unlikely to vote in 2010 – the Democrats are finally and disgracefully in the lead. By a margin of 47% to 40%, Democratic voters are more likely to refuse to show up at the polls in November, despite everything that is at stake.

47%? I don’t even begin to know what to say. Perhaps there is something in the genetic makeup of Democrats and liberals that makes being in the minority an irresistibly attractive option. I can understand that. Being in the minority in politics is easy; you aren’t responsible for anything, because it’s the other guys who have all the power, and so you can stand on your soapbox and be unbending in your “resistance” without having to deal with pesky nuisances like leadership, compromise, or long-term goals. Perhaps 2008 was nothing more than a temporary power trip for a bunch of self-righteous ego junkies who felt like they needed to be on the winning team after eight years of George W. Bush, but who cannot now stomach the realities of majority control, because it might tarnish their so-called liberal credentials.

I know this much: anyone – be they straight-line Democratic, liberal, progressive, Left or what have you – who believed the election of 2008 would be the final cure for all that ails this nation and this world needs to find another hobby besides national politics. Because if you thought 2008 and Obama would fix everything – in two years! – then politics is just that to you: a hobby, a masturbatory exercise devoid of context or comprehension that makes you nothing more than cholesterol clogging the arteries of progress.

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“Politics is a strong and slow boring of hard boards,” said German sociologist Max Weber. “It takes both passion and perspective.” At this point, it appears that far too many Democratic and liberal voters in this country – 47%? Seriously? – have plenty of passion, but little perspective, and the word “strong” describes them not at all when it comes to dealing with the political difficulties of the day. Could the Democrats in Congress do better? Yes. Should they do better? Yes. Should the same be said for President Obama? Certainly, yes. Is that reason enough for 47% of Democrats and liberals to sit on their hands in November and deliver the nation back to the very people they supposedly would oppose with all their might? If your answer to that question is also “Yes,” then shame on you.

If Democrats and liberals are incapable of summoning the will to keep these right-bent fiends out of power after the eight-year demonstration of what they’re about that we just endured, then they don’t deserve to be anywhere near political power at all. Obama has not fulfilled our hopes and aspirations, and has in several cases betrayed them egregiously. The same can surely be said for Democrats in Congress. But if you’ve allowed yourself to forget how bad things can truly become, then do the nation and the world a favor and follow my advice: find another hobby, and take with you with the 47% who share your lack of conviction. The rest of us will do our best to take up the slack, and God help us all if November turns out as badly as is predicted.

You can do that, or you can suck it up and dig in. There is no alternative.

Liberal Economic News


Senate has 60 votes for the Small Business Bill!!!, Daily Kos, September 9, 2010, by Drdemocrat: “Well this is GREAT news. Voinovich has told Senator Reid that he is going to break the Republican filibuster when the Small Business Bill comes up for a vote on September 14th.” — George Voinovich to be 60th vote!

Amidst Economic Bad News, A Call To Action And Real Hope, Daily Kos, September 9, 2010, by Bob Swern, excerpt quoted verbatim:

We’re less than 60 days out from the mid-terms, and the economic news appears to be getting worse by the day. However, thanks to guidance from Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and DCCC Chair Chris Van Hollen over the past few days, among many others, there’s a real glimmer of hope for Dems amidst these god-awful economic statistics and basic facts (see immediately below); and I’ll get to that in a moment. (Hint: We can’t see the forest–Hoyer and Van Hollen do, however–because the trees are in the way.) Read the article here.

See Standard Economics May Not Apply, The New York Times, Opinion, September 8, 2010, by Russell Robertes, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Faced with Pesident Obama’s latest proposal (some tax cuts for business, more infrastructure spending, higher rates for those with the highest incomes), it is tempting to think like an old-fashioned economist and analyze the various incentive effects of each proposal — their likely impact on spending, investment and so on. Such exercises remind me of someone with cancer estimating the beneficial effects of more exercise or better nutrition — the standard analyses simply don’t apply.

See Fox Calls for Repeal of the 20th Century — 13 Achievements Conservatives Would Roll Back, AlterNet, September 8, 2010, by Media Matters.

See Michael Moore Teaches Rahm Emanuel a F**cking Economics Lesson, AlterNet, September 7, 2010, by Michael Moore.

See Liberal economists say Democrats also eyeing cuts to Social Security, The Raw Story, September 9, 2010, by Sahil Kapur.

See The Tortoise Economy, Robert Reich.org, September 8, 2010, by Robert Reich.

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Issues for Progressives: White House (Finally) Considering Another Stimulus?

Evans Liberal Politics
September 3, 2010

 

Issues for Progressives:
White House (Finally) Considering Another Stimulus?

 

Progressive Breakfast: White House (Finally) Considering Another Stimulus?, Campaign for America’s Future, September 3, 2010, by Terrance Heath, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

White House (Finally) Considering Emergency Stimulus


Politico Reports that the White House is considering an emergency economic stimulus: “The Obama administration is mulling a raft of emergency fixes to stimulate the economy before the midterms, including an extension of the research and development tax credit and new infrastructure spending, according to several people familiar with the situation. Administration officials have been huddling almost continuously during the past week, brainstorming for ideas that would boost employment without hiking the massive federal deficit – with Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner rushing to the West Wing for further consultations late Thursday. The White House press office on Thursday refused to say how much a financial package might be, other than to say it won’t be a “second stimulus.” But the administration will have a tough time selling nearly any package to terrified, Obama-phobic Hill Democrats who increasingly blame the president – and his ambitious, expensive legislative agenda – for their dismal prospects this November.”

It’s (Still) The Economy, Stupid


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Bernanke tells the Financial Crisis Commission that he had no options to stop Lehman’s collapse: “Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told a panel examining the U.S. financial crisis that he had no options to prevent Lehman Brothers’ failure in September 2008 even though he knew its downfall would be “catastrophic” to the financial system and economy. The Lehman failure set off severe market turmoil, spurring debate about whether the government should have done more at the time to halt the investment bank’s collapse. Speaking to the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission on Thursday, Mr. Bernanke said legal and practical considerations prevented taking action, even though ‘I never at any time wavered in my view that we should do absolutely everything possible to prevent the  failure of Lehman.’ The Democratic chairman of the 10-member panel, Phil Angelides, pressed Mr. Bernanke on the move, again calling it a ‘conscious policy decision,’ as he did during the commission’s hearing on Wednesday, citing comments from other government officials.”

Dean Baker considers the latest advice from the IMF, and wonders why these people still have jobs: “If the boys and girls at the IMF can learn a little economics, they would discover that we can run a deficit that is pretty much as large as we want in a period of high unemployment like the present. This does not have to create a debt burden because the Fed can just buy and hold the debt. This way the interest on the debt is paid to the Fed, which is then refunded to the Treasury. If we are lucky this process will generate a little inflation which will lower the real interest rate and reduce the debt burden on households and the government. If they have trouble with the theory, they can see how this works in practice. There is a small island nation where the central bank has bought an amount of debt that is almost equal to its GDP. It’s called “Japan.” Its interest burden is less than 2 percent of GDP and the interest rate on long-term debt is well under 2.0 percent in spite of having a debt to GDP ratio of 220 percent. It is incredible that IMF economists still have jobs. It is even more incredible that anyone in a policy position would waste their time listening to them.”

Ruth Marcus wants us to get shed of the word “shed”: “How did shedding migrate from shaggy dogs to job loss? The Oxford English Dictionary cites The Economist of March 1975, “the industry shed about 100,000 of its workforce.” In the last three months alone, a computer search of news reports shows 2,116 uses of the term in connection with jobs, from Ireland to Fiji. You can imagine how the term took hold. Financial writers became bored with saying the economy lost jobs. Shed is evocative. Shed worked for copy editors trying to cram the news into a headline only a few columns wide. But what might have been compactly colorful is now unnecessarily insensitive—not to mention trite. Lost is a better four-letter word. Even the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the official tallier of the nation’s joblessness, stoops to shed.”

As the summer comes to an end, Liz Schuler explains what a jobless summer means for young people: “So, what does this mean beyond a bunch of teenagers without gas money, a few new video games or an outfit their parents won’t finance? Plenty. A May report in the National Journal described the job plight of today’s young workers as a broken escalator. Instead of young people getting on at the bottom and smoothly traveling to the top throughout their careers, workers already near the top are losing jobs and going backwards, nudging out young people trying to climb on. Older workers who can’t afford to retire aren’t stepping off the escalator to make room for a new generation. And with jobs still disappearing, the escalator has all but stalled. That’s what we see in the teen jobless rate. Teenagers are competing with jobless adults for low-end, entry-level positions. This is especially true where state and local budget crises have destroyed summer jobs programs for teens.”

Peter Boone and Simon Johnson diagnose the problems of the Irish economy and the implications for the global economy: “Ireland, simply put, appears insolvent under plausible scenarios with current policies. The idea that Ireland, Greece or Portugal can cut spending and grow out of overvalued exchange rates with still large budget deficits, while servicing all their debts and building more debt, is proving — not surprisingly — wrong. Such policies leave nations burdened with large debt overhangs that effectively tax businesses and borrowers — because interest rates must stay high to reflect risk. Investors must wonder whether businesses and homeowners can afford these higher interest rates, so banks and investors cut credit lines and reduce lending. This strangles economies, even when the fiscal authorities take tough steps needed to cut deficits.”

Slate’s Daniel Gross writes that the U.S. auto industry is smaller now, but healthier: “With Ford’s restructuring, and the bankruptcies of General Motors and Chrysler, the U.S. auto industry has shrunk and cut costs to the point at which it can make money on a smaller, more realistic number of sales. So far this year, auto sales have risen in spite of tighter credit, an absence of artificial government support and slack overall demand. They’re being spurred by the demand that arises naturally from people who need and want to replace cars—not by the demand that arises artificially when lenders, dealers, manufacturers, and the government offer bribes. In large measure, the activity in the car market is mimicking that of the overall economy, one in which retail sales are rising even as credit card use declines and savings increase. Of course, it’s possible that vehicle sales will fall off a cliff and help lead the U.S. economy back into recession. But the data suggest that the industry is in a pretty decent place, especially considering where it has been. It may be years before the electric car becomes popular, but in the meantime, gasoline-powered cars may have entered an era of sustainable consumption.”

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Reconsidering Iraq


WaPo’s Matt Miller admits to his Iraq mistake: “My fellow Americans: I’m a pundit, not a president, but since it’s a moment for taking stock of America’s role in Iraq, I want to remind you that I blew it. …I supported the war in 2003 because I thought Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. …Still, I’m torn. I can’t help thinking that, 100 years from now, America’s readiness to send its brave youth half a world away to topple a heinous dictator and then flush him out of a hole will be seen as noble. And not just about oil. For better or worse, I lack the moral clarity and strategic certainty of the war’s ardent supporters or foes. Instead, in retrospect, invading Iraq strikes me as a bad decision that the United States has had no choice but to make the best of. Our troops have performed remarkably. Whether they’ve been well served by their political leaders — or their political pundits — is another matter.”

Oil & Water in the Gulf


BP reports that the cost of the spill as hit $8 billion, WSJ: “Oil major BP PLC said Friday it has spent around $8 billion to date in response to the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and expects to resume its relief-well drilling shortly. The sum includes the cost of the spill response; containment; relief-well drilling; the “static kill” operation of providing mud and cementing; grants to the Gulf states; compensation claims paid; and federal costs. No new oil has flowed into the Gulf of Mexico from the Macondo well since July 15, the company said in a statement. BP said individuals and businesses had submitted more than 42,000 claims since the claims processing was transferred to the Gulf Coast Claims Facility on Aug. 23. They relate to compensation sought for damages resulting from an explosion in April on the Deepwater Horizon rig, which caused the U.S.’s largest offshore oil spill. BP has made 127,000 claims payments, totaling about $399 million so far.”

BP also says that limits on drilling are hampering oil spill payouts: “BP is warning Congress that if lawmakers pass legislation that bars the company from getting new offshore drilling permits, it may not have the money to pay for all the damages caused by its oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The company says a ban would also imperil the ambitious Gulf Coast restoration efforts that officials want the company to voluntarily support. BP executives insist that they have not backed away from their commitment to the White House to set aside $20 billion in an escrow fund over the next four years to pay damage claims and government penalties stemming from the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. The explosion killed 11 workers and spewed millions of barrels of oil into the gulf.”

BP has removed the the cap on the leaky remains of the Deepwater rig: “The Obama administration’s pointman on the Deepwater Horizon oil catastrophe Thursday evening announced that BP successfully removed a containment cap that had stopped crude oil from spewing into the Gulf of Mexico nearly two months ago and is expected to remove the well’s dysfuntional blowout preventer later Thursday. ‘Under the direction of the federal science team and U.S. government engineers, BP has completed the capping stack removal procedure _ an important step in the process to remove and preserve the damaged BOP,’ Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said in statement, using the common abbreviation for the blowout preventer. ‘This procedure was undertaken in accordance with specific conditions I set forth in a directive authorizing the capping stack removal and BOP replacement last week. BP will continue to follow these required conditions for the BOP removal procedure, which is expected to commence this evening. I will continue to provide updates as necessary.’”

Another fire on an offshore oil rig in the Gulf may delay lifting the ban on drilling: “The fire on a Mariner Energy oil and gas platform in shallow waters of the U.S. Gulf on Thursday was a major setback for companies hoping for an early end to the government’s drilling moratorium and raised more questions about the safety of offshore drilling. ‘This explosion will make it less likely that the moratorium on offshore drilling will be lifted,’ said Rick Muller, senior analyst for Energy Security Analysis Inc in Boston. The United States is still reeling from the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Interior Department officials declined to comment on whether the Mariner accident would prompt Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to consider expanding the current deepwater drilling moratorium to shallow waters. Such a action would be a blow to the oil industry, which has complained that the department has been too slow to approve permits for shallow water drilling since the Gulf oil spill. The Interior Department imposed a six-month halt on exploratory deepwater drilling in late May after an explosion on April 20 left a well spewing crude into the Gulf.”

Hazing Arizona


Newsweeks Eve Conant reports that the past 24 hours have been rough on Arizona politicians: “It started with Brewer, whose opening statement in last night’s debate with gubernatorial contenders, including Attorney General Terry Goddard, was painful to watch. Whether it was stage fright or just the result of a really bad day is hard to know, but Brewer, known for her brash statements, found herself struggling for words and appeared ill prepared. …Arizona’s other leading tough talker, Sheriff Joe Arpaio, is also out of his comfort zone, and this case—his ongoing dispute with the federal government—could be a lot more serious. He told reporters today that he just needed more time to comply with the feds, who are investigating allegations that his department discriminates against Hispanics. The Justice Department today said it was suing the sheriff for failing—for more than a year—to turn over records as part of that investigation.”

AZ Gov. Jan Brewer stumbled through her first debate: “Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer stumbled out of the gate during her opening statement in the first and potentially only debate in the state’s race for governor Wednesday night. Brewer, who has gained national notoriety for signing into law the country’s toughest provisions for illegal immigrants, awkwardly paused twice during the opening statement of the Clean Elections Debate broadcast on the state’s PBS affiliate. ‘I have … done so much and I just cannot believe that we have changed everything since I’ve become your governor in the last 600 days. Arizona has been brought back from its abyss,’ Brewer said, after appearing to lose her train of thought. Then, after saying, ‘We have cut the budget, we have balanced the budget and we are moving forward. We have done everything that we could possibly do,’ the governor paused for 10 seconds — an eternity in a live televised debate — before looking down at her notes. ‘We have … did what was right for Arizona. I will tell you that we have really did the best that anyone could do,’ she said, visibly flustered.

After her debate debacle, AZ Gov. Jan Brewer ran away from reporters questions about her bogus claims of beheaded bodies in the AZ desert: “Later, in an exchange about the economy, her opponent, Attorney General Terry Goddard, pointed out that Brewer’s fearmongering about violence in Arizona did not do great things for the state’s financial prospects. He then called on Brewer to recant her totally made-up claim that illegal immigrants were running around beheading people in the Arizona desert. Naturally, Brewer evaded the question. Afterwards some reporters had the gall to continue the line of questioning, asking Brewer if she still stood by her completely made up story. She was clearly too flustered to dissemble or lie, so she just ran away.”

More bad news for Brewer. News reports from Arizona say that her campaign has ties to private prisons housing illegal immigrants: “Gov. Jan Brewer’s campaign chairman and policy adviser is also a lobbyist for the largest private prison company in the country.

Chuck Coughlin is one of two people in the Brewer administration with ties to Corrections Corporation of America. The other administration member is communications director Paul Senseman, a former CCA lobbyist. His wife still lobbies for the company.

According to campaign finance records, CCA executives and employees contributed more than $1,000 to the governor’s re-election campaign. The company’s political action committee and its lobbyists contributed another $60,000 to Brewer’s top legislative priority, Proposition 100, a sales tax to help avoid budget cuts to education. Caroline Isaacs from the American Friends Service Committee, which advocates for social justice issues, said the money is evidence of influence the company has on the governor. …Corrections Corporation of America holds the contract with Immigration and Customs Enforcement to lock up illegal immigrants picked up in Arizona. Tough immigration laws such as Arizona’s SB 1070 could send thousands of new bodies its way, and millions of dollars.”

The Justice Department is suing Maricopa County Sherrif Joe Arpia over a bias investigation: “The Justice Department filed a lawsuit on Thursday against Sheriff Joe Arpaio of Maricopa County for not cooperating with an investigation into whether his department was systematically violating the rights of Hispanics. Obama administration officials called the suit the first time in 30 years that the federal government had to sue to compel a law enforcement agency to cooperate with an investigation concerning Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. …The Justice Department issued 51 requests for documents, most of which Sheriff Arpaio’s department ignored, as well as asking for tours of department facilities and interviews with commanders, staff members and inmates. Sheriff Arpaio, who has denied that he engages in racial profiling, has remained defiant of the government’s investigation. His lawyers have repeatedly refused to provide the documents sought by the Justice Department or provide unfettered access to its facilities.”

Politico’s Ben Smith says Arizona Governor’s debate performance is a poor reflection: “Arizona Governor Jan Brewer’s opening statement in last night’s debate reflects either an amazing lack of preparation, or sheer panic.”

Breakfast Sides


A new survey says employers are passing health care costs on to employees: “Score one for the nation’s employers. On average, the total cost of a family health insurance policy rose just 3 percent last year, to $13,770 in annual premiums, according to a survey of employer health benefits released on Thursday by the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit research group. (See updated article.) But the news was much better for employers than their workers, according to the survey, which is conducted yearly by Kaiser with the Health Research and Educational Trust, an organization affiliated with the American Hospital Association. Instead of sharing the pain, as they have generally done in the past, employers chose to keep their costs steady by passing the higher costs onto workers. As a result, the employee contribution toward family coverage rose an average of 14 percent, or almost $500, from what employees paid last year. Workers are now paying nearly $4,000 a year for a family policy, a jump of 47 percent since 2005. Wages have increased by just 18 percent during that time, according to Kaiser. It included a chart detailing the changes over the last five years.”

Michael Scott Moore ponders what it means to be liberal: “Social liberals in America have been tarred by economic liberals (“conservatives”) for being so illiberal about free markets, while true social conservatives resent them for being morally liberal on the one hand, or over-liberal with a tax dollar on the other. Economic liberals in Europe, meanwhile, rarely charge ahead on social justice, because by calling themselves “liberal” they don’t necessarily mean minorities should have equal rights. It’s the economic wing of liberalism that the last few years of financial trouble have bruised so badly. Free markets have gone out of style. (Never mind whether an opaque gambling market for complex derivatives with no real use to the public should be called “free,” if most participants can hardly grasp what they’re doing.) Europeans relate market liberalism to the “Anglo-Saxon” economic model. But that’s another term that slithers around what it means.”

John Dickerson wonders what the president will say to excite Democrats about this campaign season: “President Obama has been slowly turning up his political rhetoric for months. He’s made broad attacks on Republicans and taken specific shots at people like Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. He hasn’t turned the dial up to 11 though—yet. Before his vacation, he warned Republicans he’s going to start. ‘They’ve forgotten I know how to politick pretty good,’ he said before leaving for vacation. He’s likely to start Monday in Milwaukee, Wisc., at a Labor Day rally. What will the new pitch sound like? Will Obama and his aides fully let go of worries about damaging his post-partisan brand? More important, will the president be effective at rallying Democrats to the polls with more partisan rhetoric? Obama clearly enjoys giving a political speech, but his circumstances have changed since he last gave so many good ones. During the 2008 campaign, he was derided as all pretty words and no substance. Now he faces the opposite problem: He’s pushed and passed a heap of big, fibrous legislation but gets criticism (sometimes from himself) for not being very good at communicating.”

The EPA will issue more rules on greenhouse gas emissions: “The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will roll out more regulations on greenhouse gases and other pollution to help fight climate change, but they will not be as strong as action by Congress, a senior administration official said. The agency ‘has a huge role to play in continuing the work to move from where we are now to lower carbon emissions’, said the official, who did not want to be identified as the EPA policies are still being formed. President Barack Obama, looking to take the lead in global talks on greenhouse gas emissions, has long warned that the EPA would take steps to regulate emissions if Congress failed to pass a climate bill. The Senate has all but ruled out moving on greenhouse gases this year, even though the House of Representatives passed a bill last year. In late July, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid stripped climate provisions out of an energy bill, saying he could not get one Republican vote for them.”

Terrance Heath is the Online Producer at Campaign for America’s Future. Prior to his current position he worked as a Blogging and Social Media Consultant for a number of organizations and agencies, as an outgrowth of his work as Blogmaster for EchoDitto, Inc. He stumbled into blogging and social media after starting his own blog, The Republic of T., but cut his teeth as an activist working on LGBT equality and HIV/AIDS issues. In that capacity he worked for the Human Rights Campaign and the National Minority AIDS Council. Terrance has kindly allowed Evans Liberal Politics to publish his works on an ongoing basis. He sums himself up: Black. Gay. Father. Vegetarian. Buddhist. Liberal.

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The Cry for Democratic Moral Leadership and Effective Communication

Evans Liberal Politics
September 3, 2010

 

The Cry for Democratic Moral Leadership
and Effective Communication

 

The Cry for Democratic Moral Leadership and Effective Communication, Truthout OpEd, September 2, 2010, by George Lakeoff, quoted verbatim:

If you have not read Drew Westin’s outstanding piece “What Created the Populist Explosion and How Democrats Can Avoid the Shrapnel in November” on The Huffington Post, AlterNet, and other venues, read it immediately. Westin states as eloquently and forcefully as anyone what he, I, and other progressives have been saying from the beginning of the Obama administration. I agree fully with everything he says. But …

Westin’s piece is incomplete in crucial ways. His piece can be read as saying that this election is about kitchen table economics (right) and only kitchen table economics (wrong).

"All Politics Is Moral"


This election is about more than just jobs and mortgages and adequate health care. All politics is moral. All political leaders say to do what they propose because it is right. No political leaders say to do what they say because it is wrong. Morality is behind everything in politics – and progressives and conservatives have different moral systems.

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In the conservative moral system, the highest value is preserving and extending the moral system itself. That is why they keep saying no to Obama’s proposals, even voting against their own ideas when Obama accepts them. To give Obama any victory at all would be a blow to their moral system. Their moral system requires non-cooperation. That is a major thing the Obama administration has not understood.

The conservatives understand the centrality of morality. They attacked the Obama health care plan as immoral, violating the moral principles of freedom (“government takeover”) and reverence for life (“death panels”). The Obama administration made a policy case, not a moral case. The conservatives have characterized the bailouts as thievery and Obama’s ties to Wall Street as immoral – as being in bed with the thieves. The attacks on government are seen as moral attacks, with government seen as taking money out of working people’s pockets and giving it to people who don’t deserve it. Whether it is the birthers, or the anti-Muslims, or the anti-immigrants or the pro-lifers, the attack is a moral attack. The Tea Party cry is moral – for “freedom” (see my book “Whose Freedom?”), for God, for patriotism. Even jobless benefits are seen as giving money to people who are not working and don’t deserve it. Even Social Security that workers have earned, that are deferred payments for work, are seen as undeserving people “sucking on the tits of the government.”

The moral case is not answered just by good policy that will help people who need help – as Westin proposed. The good policies – extending unemployment benefits, help to small businesses, help for teachers and firemen, limits on credit card rates, restrictions on rate increases and service reductions by HMO’s – in themselves fit a progressive moral system, but don’t in themselves make a case for progressive moral leadership.

Why are so many people about to vote against their interests? The Republicans are not offering kitchen table benefits. When people are voting against their interests, more interest-based arguments don’t help.

Westin’s discussion of “the center” and of populism in general, misses what is crucial in this election. There is no one center. Instead, a considerable number of Americans (perhaps as many as 15 to 20 percent) are conservative in some respects and progressive in other respects. The have both moral systems and apply them to different issues – in all kinds of ways. You can be conservative on economics and progressive on social issues, or conservative on foreign policy and progressive on domestic issues and so on – in all sorts of combinations.

Neuroscience 101, which Westin correctly invokes, tells us that in the brains of such voters, the two incompatible systems inhibit each other, that strengthening one weakens the other and that the stronger one can have its influence spread to other issues. The “swing voters” are really “swing thinkers.” And it is language – moral language, not policy language, heard over and over – that strengthens one political moral system over the other and determines how people vote. The Democrats need to reach the swing thinkers – the people who are moral conservatives on some issues and moral progressives on others – and strengthen their progressive moral views. The kitchen table arguments must become moral arguments as well – arguments about freedom, life, fairness and the most central of American values.

What are those values? They are the values that won the 2008 election for Barack Obama – and they were not just hope and change. Candidate Obama made the case that American is, and has always been, fundamentally about Americans caring about each other and acting responsibly on that care. Empathy, which he proclaimed over and over was the most important thing his mother taught him and is the basis of our form of government. Responsibility is both personal and social. “I am my brother’s keeper,” as he said over and over in the campaign. And thirdly, excellence – doing everything as well as we can, individually and as a nation. That is why we have life, freedom, fairness, equality – and quality – as fundamental values.

We haven’t heard that kind of moral leadership since the inauguration. Americans are longing for it. And those moral values really do motivate every kitchen table policy!

It is morality, not just the right policy, that excites voters, that moves them to action, that creates movements. Legislative action must come from a moral center, with moral language repeated over and over.

What should be avoided, besides policy-wonk and pure-policy discourse? Again, the answer comes from Neuroscience 101. Offense not defense. Argue for your values. Frame all issues in terms of your values. Avoid their language, even in arguing against them. There is a reason that I wrote a book called, “Don’t Think of an Elephant!” Don’t list their arguments and argue against them using their language. It just activates their arguments in the brains of listeners.

Don’t move to the right in your discourse or action. That will just strengthen the conservative moral system in the brains of swing thinkers. Frame your arguments from your moral position.

In addition, beware of the same pollsters and focus group dialers who missed Scott Brown’s moral message to the swing thinkers in Massachusetts and claimed that Martha Coakley would win so handily that she could go on vacation. Just because a message plays well in focus group dialing doesn’t mean it will win elections.

Finally, Democrats need a truly effective communication system. They need unified morally-based framing of issues. They need to train spokespeople all over the country in using such framing and avoiding mistakes. They need to organize those spokespeople. And they need to book them, as conservatives do, on radio, TV, in civic and religious groups, in schools and universities. This is doable, but this late, it will take resolve from the top.

Winning this election will require the right policies and actions, but it will also require moral leadership with honest, morally-based messaging and a communications that will not just blog and knock on doors, but will be there in the districts with the crucial swing thinkers 24/7 day and night.

The Democrats cannot take their base for granted. Only moral leadership backed by actions and communicated effectively can excite the Obama base once more. Without that excitement, the Democrats will lose big.

See 5 Ways the Tea Party Agenda Screws Tea Party Supporters, AlterNet, September 3, 2010, by Adele M. Stan: "In their quest to save the country from liberals, Tea Partiers signed on to an agenda that will cause them untold pain while granting unlimited powers to corporations."

See After Saddam, America’s Next Fake Enemy: Deficits, Truthout, August 31, 2010, by Paul Krugman, Krugman & Co.

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A Look At The Day’s Hottest Races in Tuesday’s Primary Elections – All The Important Results

Evans Liberal Politics
August 25, 2010

 

A Look At The Day’s Hottest Races
in Tuesday’s Primary Elections
All the Important Results

 

Evans Liberal Politics, August 25, 2010, by Paul Evans. This article used material from The Huffington Post, August 24 Primary Election: A Look At The Day’s Hottest Races, August 24, 2010, by Elyse Siegel, excerpts quoted verbatim. Photo of McCain is public domain from Wikipedia, by Raustadt:

Arizona Senate Primary in Focus:


The most closely watched race has to be in Arizona, where perennial Senator and presidential hopeful John McCain beat back a challenge from former U.S. Congressman J.D. Hayworth, who is more of a right wing, Tea Party type than John McCain. McCain spent a whopping $20 million (or $21 million) to beat back the challenge, but has managed to stay fairly comfortably ahead in the polls, and easily won renomination.

Wikipedia photo by Raustadt of 2008 Presidential candidate John McCain

From HuffPo: “‘Do you think it takes that much to win?’ Politics Daily’s Jill Lawrence asked McCain last week. His reply: ‘Well, I don’t know. But I’ve always done whatever’s necessary to win.’”

Well, almost always. The year 2008 comes to mind, Senator.

Now with 99 percent of the vote, McCain has won by a margin of 56 percent to J.D. Hayworth’s 32 percent.

Politics Daily’s Top Five Reason’s Why McCain Was Likely to Come Out On Top:


1. McCain was the Republican presidential nominee just two years ago. People rally around the party’s standard bearer, and there must be a psychological disincentive to rejecting the man you voted for in 2008 for president. More than that, though, being a presidential nominee comes with tremendous institutional advantages, which McCain availed himself of during this primary campaign.

2. J.D. Hayworth was a flawed candidate. Hayworth’s image was damaged when a video of him appearing in an infomercial offering “free money” (YouTube video) surfaced.

3. McCain avoided facing top-tier opponents. Conservative Arizona Reps. Jeff Flake, John Shadegg and Trent Franks all decided not to challenge McCain. Their entry would have likely meant The Club for Growth would have spent millions to defeat McCain. But not only did these three conservatives not oppose McCain — they endorsed him.

Also endorsing and campaigning for McCain was Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl, No. 2 Senate Republican leader, (also from Arizona). Kyl actually became general chairman of McCain’s 2010 re-election bid. (He apparently did a pretty good job, too.)

4. Money. McCain has reportedly spent around $21 million during this primary season — a lot of money, to be sure. Around $7.5 million of that was transferred from his presidential campaign.

5. Sarah Palin. John McCain made Palin a household name when he selected her as his running mate, and she returned the favor by endorsing him and campaigning for him. It is unclear how important her endorsement was. Palin’s support may have helped stanch the argument that Hayworth was the Tea Party conservative. But just imagine if Palin had decided to sit this one out, or worse, to endorse Hayworth.

HuffPo summarized Hayworth’s flawed campaign and McCain’s counterpunching: “As Hayworth touted conservative principles and Tea Party ties, McCain seemed to shift to the right. From immigration reform to repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the longtime Republican lawmaker found himself walking back — and in some cases flip-flopping — on a host of issues.” This harder line taken by McCain on key conservative issues, as well as Hayworth’s mini-scandal on his “free money” video, seemed to blunt the far right Tea Party candidate’s momentum, as McCain’s change of tune did him no harm and probably a lot of good.

Arizona Democratic Primary Election Results for Senate


The Democratic Primary in Arizona features four different candidates:

Voters are choosing between Rodney Glassman, Randy Parraz, John Dougherty and Cathy Eden.

Until recently, Glassman was considered to the the frontrunner in the four-way race; however, a poll recently commissioned by Parraz’s campaign suggested that the Democratic nomination may still be up for grabs.

The New York Time has called this race. With 99 percent of the vote in Rodney Glassman has been called the winner, taking 35 percent of the vote, to Cathy Eden’s 27 percent and John Dougherty’s 24 percent. Randy Parraz was a distant fourth with 15 percent.

On the Republican side, McCain has won the Republican primary in Arizona, and AP has the margin going almost 2 to 1 for McCain. The NY Times, with 99 percent of the vote counted, says the margin of victory for McCain was 56 percent to 32 percent over J.D. Hayworth.

Key Arizona House Races


In the Arizona House 1st District, Ann Kirkpatrick is the Democratic incumbent and ran unopposed. On the Republican side Paul Goser has been projected the winner with 100 percent of the vote in, taking 31 percent of the vote. Kirkpatrick has a big fundraising advantage and the NY Times has this race leaning Democratic.

In the Arizona 3rd House District, Representative John Shadegg, an eight-term Republican, made a surprise announcement earlier this year that he would not seek re-election. Here, after the dust settled, Democrat Jon Hubbard (who raised $776,500 and spent $350,000) will face Republican Ben Quayle, who must have faced a crowded field, winning with 23 percent of the vote. Quayle raised $1,330,000 and spent $915,000 of that. Quayle has the fundraising advantage and the NY Times has this race leaning Republican.

In the Arizona 5th House District, Democrat Harry Mitchell is the incumbent. He raised $1,453,000, spent $817,000 and has $836,000 on hand for the general election. He will be opposed by Republican David Schweikert, who won with 38 percent of the vote. Schweikert has some strange numbers in terms of campaign cash (voodoo economics): The New York Times has Schweikert having raised $408,000, spending $447,500 so far, but with $225,500 cash on hand. That’s some interesting accounting! The Times has this race leaning Democratic anyway.

In the Arizona 8th House District race, the incumbent is Democrat Gabrielle Giffords. There’s some interesting accounting here too: Giffords raised $2,236,000 and spent $1,111,000 but claims to have $1,923,000 cash on hand. Interesting. On the Republican side, Jesse Kelly has won with 49 percent of the primary vote. She must be a good fiscal officer as her accounting makes sense: She raised $566,500, spent $489,400 and has $79,000 cash on hand. The Times has this race leaning Democratic.

Election Results from Vermont:


According to The New York Times, the Democratic race for governor was a tight three-way contest.

With 92 percent of the precincts reporting, state Sen. Doug Racine, and Senate President Peter Shumlin each has roughly 25% of the vote. Shumlin leads by just 260 votes, but the margin has been increasing overnight. Deb Markowitz is only 744 votes further back with 24% of the vote. Matt Dunne trails with 21% and Sen. Susan Bartlett is well back with 5%.

Lt. Gov. Brian Dubie is the only Republican in the governor’s race. He’ll face whomever wins the Democratic nomination, in a state that has gone Republican for governor each of the last three elections.

In Other Tuesday Primaries Around the U.S.


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The Guardian has called the Florida Republican race for nominee to be governor: “Rick Scott will be the Republican nominee for the Florida governor election in November.”

Florida Senate Primary:


More from the Guardian:

Scott spends his way to a win in Florida:

The big result of the night was Rick Scott winning the Republican gubernatorial nomination in Florida, an upset of sorts against an establishment candidate endorsed by (GOP) party leaders, including Jeb Bush. The very wealthy Scott spent something like $50m in the primary and can easily do so again in the general election. Alex Sink is the Florida Democratic nominee and she will need hefty outside support to have a chance.

With 99 percent of the vote in, Alex Sink took 77 percent in the Democratic primary, while on the Republican side, Rick Scott took 46 percent of the vote to Bill McCollum’s 43 percent, representing a defeat for the Republican insider establishment which had strongly backed McCollum. Essentially, Scott bought the election. ~ Paul Evans

Scott’s troubled career as head of a rapacious health insurance company may not endear him to Florida voters, and Republicans may not rally around him, as they have the tougher senate race involving Marco Rubio versus Charlie Crist to concentrate energy on.

The Guardian on the Florida Senate Race:

In Florida, in the US Senate primary – an open seat – there are no surprises in the Republican primary, where Tea Party heartthrob Marco Rubio is running away with it, having had the field largely to himself since Charlie Crist jumped ship to become an independent.

But the Democratic senate primary is the one to watch here, and it’s a mirror image of the Republican gubernatorial race. This time, wealthy evil mastermind Jeff Greene is … ah, let’s see, losing is the word, to Democratic party stalwart Kendrick Meek.

In fact AP has called Florida’s Democratic senate primary for Meek. So, great job Jeff Greene, you may as well have just taken $20m and set fire to it for all the good it has done you.

The low point of Greene’s moronic campaign was when Mike Tyson was forced to speak up to defend Greene. Yes, Mike Tyson – the boxer. When Mike Tyson is a character witness, then you are really in trouble.

See below for Florida Democratic primary election results where Kendrick Meek, a four-term congressman backed by President Obama, has defeated challenger Jeff Greene, a real estate mogul.

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Florida House Races:

In the House Florida 2nd District, with 99% reporting, Allen Boyd, who is the incumbent, appears to be the winner for the Democrats taking 51 percent of the vote to challenger Al Lawson’s 49 percent, which is nonetheless a 2, 426 vote lead. For the Republicans, Steve Sutherland cruised to an easy win over four challengers, taking 47 percent of the vote.

In the House Florida 8th District, of course Democrat incumbent Alan Grayson ran uncontested and will apparently face Daniel Webster, who made an easy victory over several candidates, taking 40% of the vote (a 17 percent margin). Look for a LOT of Republican money to flow into this race against progressive crusader Grayson.

In the House Florida 17th District, historically solidly Democrat, and with 100 percent of the vote in, incumbent Kendrick B. Meek has successfully jumped up to the big leagues by winning the nomination for U.S. Senate. Here for the Dems, Frederica Wilson has cruised to an easy win over several challengers, taking 35 percent of the vote (a 21 percent margin of victory). For the Republicans, the New York Times reports that there was no primary election, and since the Democrat Meek was the incumbent, apparently the GOP will not contest this seat or else the Times didn’t report the nominee.

In the House Florida 24th District, with 99 percent of the votes in, Democratic incumbent Suzanne M. Kosmos has easily won renomination, taking 78 percent of the Democratic vote. On the Republican side, in a race still too close to call, there is a three way race. Sandra Adams leads by some 560 votes and 30 percent of the vote over Karen Diebel, who is getting 29 percent, and Craig Miller who has 28 percent. Tom Garcia and Deon Long round out the field, taking 10 percent and 3 percent respectively.

The Missouri Senate Race may go to the Republican Roy Blunt:

GOP’s Roy Blunt Posts Double-Digit Lead in Missouri Senate Race


Politics Daily reports: Seven-term Republican Rep. Roy Blunt has opened up a double-digit lead for the first time in his race against Democrat Robin Carnahan for Missouri’s Senate seat, according to a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Aug. 23. The seat is being left open by GOP Sen. Kit Bond, who decided not to seek re-election.

Blunt leads Carnahan, the Secretary of State, by 51 percent to 40 percent with 5 percent preferring some other candidate and 4 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4 points.

Additional Late Breaking Tuesday Primary News


See Primary voters back the familiar, The Boston Globe, August 25, 2010, by Matt Viser:

US Senate candidate Kendrick Meek, a four-term congressman backed by President Obama, beat back a Democratic primary challenge from a self-made billionaire in Florida, one of several expected victories last night for the political establishment against insurgent candidates with either deep pockets or a wealth of Tea Party movement support.

…SNIP….

“Floridians sent a clear message: They want a real Democrat representing them in the US Senate,’’ said Meek, who was declared the winner early in the evening over Jeff Greene, a Worcester, Mass., native and real estate mogul. “The naysayers said we couldn’t beat a billionaire, and tonight with your help, we proved them wrong.’’

Throughout this year’s pivotal midterm primaries — from Kentucky to California, Connecticut to Colorado — insurgent outsider candidates have often had the upper hand, tapping into an electorate angry at Washington and dispirited by a deflated economy.

But last night, at least, was one for the establishment, where voters generally backed incumbents whose positions were more carefully groomed and their backgrounds generally less flamboyant than those of their challengers.

Alaska Election Results


According to the New York Times election center,, for all the open seats, U.S. Senate (Lisa Murkowski – R), Governor (Sean Parnell – R), and the at-large House seat (Don Young – R) in Alaska, are for the Republicans the incumbents seeking reelection. With 33 percent of the vote in, Murkowski trails the Republican challenger Joe Miller, who has 51 percent of the vote to Lisa Murkowski’s 49, a close race, while Sean Parnell is doing fairly well, leading with 48 percent of the vote (a 13 percent lead). For the Republican nomination in the at-large House seat, incumbent Don Young seems to be a shoe in, taking 70 percent of the vote so far.

UPDATE: In the Alaska Republican race for U.S. Senate, Lisa Murkowski, the incumbent who replaced the recently deceased Ted Stevens, is still losing to Tea Party challenger Joe Miller, 51 percent to 49 percent. Murkowski outspent Miller 7 to 1, $1,412,500 to $198,800. But Miller greatly benefited from the endorsement of Alaska favorite Sarah Palin. Palin in fact has been able to influence both this race and the Arizona Senate race, where she endorsed Senator John McCain, giving him an easy win. Miller leads by 1,960 votes out of 90,000 cast.

The Democratic (challengers) races are a little more interesting. Scott McAdams (Senate) and Ethan Berkowitz (Governor) are leading their races, with 59 percent and 54 percent of the vote, respectively although these races have not been called. McAdams lead by double digits as two challengers split the rest of the vote. Berkowitz lead by 8 points over Hollis French, who has 46 percent of the vote from Democrats for Governor. The Democratic nominee for the at-large House seat will apparently be Harry Crawford, who ran uncontested. The Times calls all three of these positions as likely to go to the Republican nominee.

The race for Alaska Governor is also decided as to the primary winners. For the Democrats, Ethan Berkowitz has won with 56 percent of the vote, to Hollis French’s 44 percent. On the Republican side Sean Parnell has been called the winner over five other office seekers, taking 49 percent of the vote.The actual election this fall is likely to go to the Republican Sean Parnell, barring a miracle for Berkowitz.

In the race for the House seat open in Alaska, Democrat Harry Crawford ran unopposed. On the Republican side, incumbent Don Young has won over Sheldon Fisher, 70 percent to 24 percent, with 6 percent going to John Cox.

See also Alaska Election Results Provide a Boost to Palin, CBS News, August 25, 2010, by Stephanie Condon, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Conservative insurgent Joe Miller may be on the verge of toppling Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski in the state’s Republican primary, in what could prove to be a significant victory for former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (as well as Miller, of course).

An unknown attorney from Fairbanks, Miller currently holds a slight lead over Murkowski in large part because of his support from Palin, he said Tuesday night.

“I’m absolutely certain that was pivotal,” Miller said of Palin’s endorsement, the Anchorage Daily News reports.

The Miller lead over Murkowski is still holding up 51 percent to 49 percent, with 429 or 438 precincts reporting.

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