July 31st, 2008 John Parisella
The latest tendency with pundits is to interpret Barack Obama’s tight lead as a sign of reluctance among Americans to buy into the senator’s message of hope and change. They go on to assert that this election is really a referendum on Obama. It is as if there is no one else on the ballot.
There is no doubt that Democrats will still control Congress after the November election. This has a lot to do with out-of-touch Republicans, corruption scandals, and general incompetence in dealing with the war effort and the economy. Additionally, Bush’s personal unpopularity adds to the voters’ disenchantment with the party that dominated Congress from 1994 to 2006. If Bush were on the ballot, Obama’s lead would be in double digits.
But Bush is not on the ballot. McCain is, and he is a different kind of Republican. He is a reformer in the Theodore Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan tradition—an ardent conservative who speaks from the right but will govern closer to the center. He is a patriot, a hero, a man of character and substance. His very qualities eliminate any free pass for Obama.
This election is based on change—and not the kind where Americans are asked to choose between the status quo or and a rival party. Rather, the choice is between different brands of change. Whether we like it or not, the real rival to change is doubt. When an incumbent runs for re-election, like Eisenhower, Reagan, Clinton, and Bush, doubt is directed at the challenger. In this election, doubt is directed at both candidates.
Choosing a president is serious business, much more serious than choosing a senator or a congressman. National security, the economy, and issues like healthcare are national in scope. It is normal that, with no incumbent seeking a second term, Americans have concerns and express uncertainty. That is why we have campaigns.
Negative ads like the latest ones by McCain are part of the process. Risky moves like Obama going overseas are meant to answer questions about his capacity to govern. Obama’s response to Pastor Wright allowed us to measure the character of Obama, just as McCain’s support for the surge when it was unpopular was also evidence of character.
While both candidates are men of substance and policy, they are fundamentally character candidates. The voters currently have layers of doubt and, as the campaign moves on, these layers will either disappear or thicken. That Obama is carrying a modest lead has less to do with whether it is a referendum on him and more to do with the fact that doubt is really the current rival on the ballot—and he is addressing it reasonably well.
People are judging McCain as much as Obama these days. This may explain why pro-McCain types are criticizing their candidate’s negative ads. They are right to do so because, in the long run, it brings doubt about who John McCain really is. And that doubt is the biggest threat to his success.
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July 31st, 2008 Thomas Schaller
The "Dr. No" comment suggests a candidate who is either disoriented, dispirited or just plain disconnected.
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July 31st, 2008 Thomas Schaller
The Washington Post columnist recycles a stale debate from the Democratic primary, while the National Journal reporter previews possible problems for Democrats in Denver.
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July 31st, 2008 John Dickerson
The last time a two-term president spoke at his party's nominating convention, he sparked a grand celebration. It was 2000. Bill Clinton was introduced, and the Democrats gathered in Los Angeles went nuts. Instead of taking the stage, though, Clinton first showed up on enormous screens. For the next 30 seconds, the crowd watched as he walked the narrow cinderblock hallway to the podium. By the time he arrived, the popcorn had spilled, the funny hats were askew, and the entire arena was in a deep frenzy.
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July 31st, 2008 Hannah Strange
US rapper Ludacris has many talents, but tact is not one of them, apparently. This sudden discovery has unleashed a spasmodic outrage among US media and political bods, scandalised by the revelation that a - rappers don't like politicians all that much and b - they are a tad over-fond of offensive and misogynistic language. Barack Obama - the one politician who escaped the rapper's ire in his latest recording Politics as usual, which heaps bile on Hillary Clinton, John McCain and George Bush - too appears to share in the collective indignation, despite having admitted in a recent interview with Rolling Stone that while he likes Ludacris as a musician, he worried about his daughters listening to his misogynistic lyrics.
Of course, now he's the Democratic nominee, he is forced to pander to those who are unable or unwilling to distinguish between a candidate's campaign and anything said by those who support him, to whom he has once made a passing reference or who he might have even gone so far as to say hello to, once upon a time. Privately, I imagine, he thinks the whole hoohah is rather ridiculous.
And so should we all. Unless we want to actually start banning all rap, hip-hop and other types of music that may offend our tender ears, along with political satire in all its forms (some of which has been just as cruel to the presidential and primary candidates as Ludacris's latest effort - which, of course, no one is obliged to actually listen to), perhaps we should remind ourselves of those halcyon times before we all had a collective sense of humour bypass.
Read the Ludacris lyrics in question, then continue for my list of a sample of five politically offensive songs that might also need to be retrospectively condemned:
Ludacris - Politics as usual
"Hillary hated on you so that (bleep) is irrelevant...
Paint the White House black, I'm sure it's got them terrified
McCain don't belong in any chair unless he's paralysed
Yeah I said it cos Bush is mentally handicapped
Ball up all his speeches and throw em like candy wraps"
1. Eminem - Mosh against Bush
"Let the president answer a high anarchy
Strap him with a AK-47, let him go fight his own war
Let him impress daddy that way
No more blood for oil, we got our own battles to fight on our own soil
No more psychological warfare to trick us to thinking that we ain’t loyal
If we don’t serve our own country, we’re patronizing a hero
Look in his eyes, its all lies
The stars and stripes, have been swiped
Washed out and wiped and replaced with his own face"
2. Public Enemy - Son of a Bush
"Who voted for that a**hole of your nation? ...
Stuck in a three headed bucket, a trilateral Bush-shit
Sorry ain't no better way of puttin it ...
Hiding inside certified genocide
Ain't that a Bush, repeat ain't that a Bush?
Out of nowhere headed to the hot house
Killed 135 at the last count ... Serial killer kid
Coke is the real thing
Used to make you swing"
3. Eminem - White America
"I am... the ringleader of this circus of worthless pawns
Sent to lead the march right up to the steps of Congress
and piss on the lawns of the White House
To burn the flag and replace it with a Parental Advisory sticker
To spit liquor in the faces of this democracy of hypocrisy
F*** you Ms. Cheney! F*** you Tipper Gore!
F*** you with the free-est of speech
this Divided States of Embarassment will allow me to have
F*** you!"
4. Laquan - Imprison the President
"A Senate cheat, what a feat to beat
Four mill until you buy the seat
Illicit contributions
Political prostritution
Looking for that fix
Peddle influence until it sticks
Are they funds or are they bribes?
I'm talkin about the Keating Five...
"You know Reagan can break the law
Live another day to make a score
Phony cronies steal from HUD
Iran-Contra, political mud
Who can respect the legal system
When any Senator can put the fix in
Every Congressman gets his licks in
And in the White House still sits Dick Nixon
False prophets and demagogues
Living large while the people starve"
And of course...
5. Sex Pistols - God save the Queen
"God save the queen
The fascist regime
They made you a moron
Potential H-bomb
God save the queen
She ain't no human being..
God save the queen
'Cause tourists are money
And our figurehead
Is not what she seems"
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July 31st, 2008 The Editors
More campaign-related opinion for Thursday, July 31.
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July 31st, 2008 Daniel Nasaw
Obama campaign manager David Plouffe gleefully notes the largely negative reaction among "watchdogs in the media" to McCain's Celeb advert. He just now sent out a fundraising note to supporters referring to the "Karl Rove-style ploy", and asking for cash....
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July 31st, 2008 David Lightman
Thursday's ad war revolved around energy, as MoveOn.org announced a 30-second television ad labeling John McCain's energy plan a "gimmick."
McCain has been traveling the country touting his energy plan, which includes lifting the ban on offshore drilling. The ad by MoveOn, which backs Democrat Barack Obama but has no direct connection to the campaign, has a father telling his son how McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, seemed like a principled man.
But the offshore drilling idea, the father said is "not a solution, Mr. McCain. That's a gimmick. We expected better."
Republicans quickly fought back.
GOP spokesman Alex Conant noted that Wednesday, Obama told a Missouri audience that “There are things that you can do individually though to save energy; making sure your tires are properly inflated, simple thing, but we could save all the oil that they’re talking about getting off drilling, if everybody was just inflating their tires and getting regular tune-ups. You could actually save just as much.”
Thursday, Conant said, "a day after Barack Obama told voters to inflate their tires and reject domestic exploration, his special-interest friends are echoing his anti-drilling message on TV. Attacking John McCain’s solutions to America’s energy crisis and offering nothing but tire-maintenance advice will not reduce prices at the pump."
To see the MoveOn.org ad:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3O5fFcM59eY
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July 31st, 2008 Daniel Nasaw
Former Bush speechwriter David Frum explained his overarching theory about the 2008 election in a very astute discussion at conservative think tank AEI today. Frum said the November 2008 election is a referendum on two ideas. One, voters will make...
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July 31st, 2008 Oliver Burkeman
The Republican candidate gets his own minute-by-minute press coverage
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July 31st, 2008 Thomas Schaller
Team Obama lets allies on the left know what it needs them to do (not much) and what contingencies the campaign is anticipating for the Electoral College (all of them).
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July 31st, 2008 By Ed Kilgore
Activists are calling for the heads of conservative congressional Democrats. Wait till George Bush is history, and then decide.
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July 31st, 2008 By Gary Kamiya
McCain's attack on Obama as a defeatist is right out of the Karl Rove playbook. But here's why it won't work.
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July 31st, 2008 By Glenn Greenwald
Pushing conservative Democrats out of Congress could help the party stand up to the GOP.
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July 31st, 2008 David Lightman
Barack Obama has a slight lead in Ohio and Florida, while he's well ahead of John McCain in Pennsylvania, a new Quinnipiac poll of swing states released Thursday found.
"Florida and Ohio are too close to call," the polling firm said.
Obama, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, is up 46-44 in Florida, down slightly from his lead last month. In Ohio, Obaham is also up 46-44, also down.
And in Pennsylvania, Obama leads 49-42, down from his 12 percentage point advantage over McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, in the last poll.
The three states are crucial to both candidates' chances. No president since 1960 has won without taking two of the three states.
To read the poll results: http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x2882.xml?ReleaseID=1196
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July 31st, 2008 Luiza Ch. Savage
From his press release: “While the Canadian government remains shamefully silent on the issue, Senator Roméo Dallaire (Force Commander of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda) is working to boost support for former child soldier Omar Khadr in Washington, where several members of Congress, both Republicans and Democrats, have called for the closure of the detention centre in Guantánamo Bay.
While on Capitol Hill, Senator Dallaire met with several senior members of Congress and administration officials to discuss Mr. Khadr’s case, Representative William Delahunt, Chair of the Subcommittee on International Organizations, Human Rights, and Oversight, and Representative Jerrold Nadler, Chairman of the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties Subcommittee…”
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July 31st, 2008 Julia
Kudos to the ACLU for filing suit on behalf of Annette McWashington Pruitt, an Alabama woman who can't register to vote because of outstanding
court expenses.
Alabama state law allows a person convicted of a crime involving "moral turpitude" to apply for voting rights restoration from the Board of Pardons and Paroles, but the applicant must have paid all fines, court fees, costs, and restitution associated with his or her sentence before becoming eligible to vote. Voting rights defenders say denying the right to vote based on one's inability to pay these fees amounts to income-based discrimination.
Pruitt has two sons serving in the US military. But she can't vote in an election that will certainly affect their future. It's not because she committed a crime, but because she couldn't afford to pay to have her rights restored.
Human rights groups, including Amnesty International, are working to make sure the right now vote is protected for all Americans. Just last week, Amnesty International USA helped register hundreds of voters. When you get down to it, voting rights are human rights.
Or as Amnesty International USA director Larry Cox put it, "There is no better time to rock the vote for human rights than now."
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July 31st, 2008 Oliver Burkeman
One more indicator of who won't be Obama's running-mate
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July 31st, 2008 Andrew Leonard
Global warming, recession, war, healthcare, the energy crisis: A new book argues that Barack Obama has an answer for everything.
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July 31st, 2008 Andrew Leonard
His campaign scores yet another organizational coup: The masters of the economic universe gather in the capital, at the candidate's bidding.
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July 31st, 2008 Matt Spence

The Washington Post has an interesting piece up today about John McCain's apparent inability to stick to his campaign's message.
One can easily argue that it's McCain's freewheeling, off-the-cuff style that appeals to independent voters, but at what point does it cross the line into stepping on your own message? The Post cites as an example the recent speech McCain gave where he attacked Barack Obama on failing to meet the "commander-in-chief" test with regard to his Iraq policy. Later that afternoon, he turned around and called Obama's 16-month withdrawl plan a "pretty good timetable."
This is the sort of mis-step that infuriates aides and creates countless undesirable headlines during a time when McCain appears poised to gain some ground on his opponent. If he's unable to reign himself in during his numerous unscripted campaign moments, expect the next several months to be rocky at best.
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July 31st, 2008 Oliver Burkeman
Obama: too popular to win?; rambling McCain; Paris Hilton's angry parents
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July 31st, 2008 Daniel Nasaw
Two fatal problems with McCain's new attack line
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July 31st, 2008 RealClearPolitics
New York Daily News

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July 31st, 2008 RealClearPolitics
Washington Post

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July 31st, 2008 RealClearPolitics
Wall Street Journal

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July 31st, 2008 RealClearPolitics
The Denver Post

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Rocky Mountain News

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St. Louis Post-Dispatch

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Associated Press

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July 31st, 2008 RealClearPolitics
Associated Press

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July 31st, 2008 RealClearPolitics
New York Daily News

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July 31st, 2008 RealClearPolitics
Wall Street Journal

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The Hill

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July 30th, 2008 RealClearPolitics
The Denver Post

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July 30th, 2008 David Lightman
This only took a few hours: Barack Obama's campaign Wednesday night lashed back at Republican rival John McCain with a new 30-second television ad blasting McCain_titled "Low Road."
It opens with a series of what an Obama press release called "fact checks" of "McCain’s recent litany of false charges." Then "outside observers," which are various media organizations, label various McCain claims untrue and taking "the low road." The ad then goes on a road of its own, asserting McCain is pursuing the "same old politics, same failed policies."
The ad comes hours after McCain's latest commercial missile. "Celeb" rips Obama as a female announcer says, softly, "He's the biggest celebrity in the world," as pictures of tabloid faves Paris Hilton and Britney Spears are shown.
"But is he ready to lead?" the ad asks. "With gas prices soaring, Obama says no to offshore drilling. And says he'll raise taxes on electricity. Higher taxes, more foreign oil, that's the real Obama."
To see the Obama ad: http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/lowroad_ad
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July 30th, 2008 John Dickerson
Over the last few weeks, Barack Obama and John McCain have seemed to get perilously close to agreeing on what to do in Iraq. Obama continues to talk about a 16-month withdrawal but would let military commanders determine the pace of the withdrawal. McCain is also now in favor of a 16-month timeline—as long as the commanders determine the pace of the withdrawal. After the withdrawal, how many soldiers would be left and what would they do? Both candidates agree on that, too. U.S. forces would continue to train Iraqi soldiers, fight al-Qaida, assist Sunni tribal leaders, and fight Shiite militias. How long they would do all of this, and in what numbers, would be up to the commanders on the ground.
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July 30th, 2008 Dan Schnur
Mitt Romney and Tim Kaine are poor running-mate choices for McCain and Obama because they exacerbate the candidates' weaknesses.
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July 30th, 2008 Joan Walsh
Obama had a magical week, McCain had a bad one, but the polls remain remarkably close.
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July 30th, 2008 William Douglas
A day after Sen. Ted Stevens's indictment on federal corruption charges, presumptive Republican presidential nomniee John McCain made the following statement about embattled Alaska senator:
Like every American, Sen. Stevens is entitled to the presumption of innocence. Sen McCain and Sen. Stevens have clashed famously over the appropriations process that Sen. McCain veiws as broken and subject to the type of corruption that has caused voters to lose faith with Washington, and as Sen. McCain mentions on the campaign trail nearly daily, has resulted in former members of Congress residing in prison. Sen. McCain has fought loudly, and often alone, against corruption and wasteful spending. This is a sad reminder that the next president will have his work cut out for him in rebuilding public trust by ending once and for all pork-barrel spending, and by reforming the federal government top to bottom.
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July 30th, 2008 Tish Wells
In John McCain new ad he compares Obama to Britney Spears and Paris Hilton. Seriously?
Link to YouTube ad.
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July 30th, 2008 Alex Koppelman
Politico reports that a Republican who served in George W. Bush's cabinet during his first term has been mentioned by Barack Obama's search team as a potential running mate.
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July 30th, 2008 Julia
[Ed.'s note-- This post was contributed by Rock the Trail Reporter Donny Lumpkins]
Today I was thinking about something I heard Bob Dylan say in a interview. Well, I think that he said it- or maybe some one said it about him. In any case what was said was “you cant be smart and in love at the same time.” The quote has stuck with me since the age of 17. Recently, due to a relationship I had and was “smart” in and with my current love/hate/snooze relationship with the upcoming presidential election, the words of the great Bob Dylan -or who ever said it- (I just wanted to name drop. Shout out to my homie Bob Dylan. ) have been bouncing themselves from corner to corner around my mind like an old screen saver on a clunky desktop monitor.
What I came up with is that regardless of whether it is choosing a relationship to be in or picking a candidate to believe in, the motives and aspirations behind both decisions are very much the same. You're hoping that the person you choose will make your life better. You’re hoping that that person will keep their word and not lie to you. You hope that that person will be better than the one before them and not betray your trust or break your heart.
And most of all you hope that person will be there for you for better or for war, in sickness and in health care, till death or final term do you part.
Now, when I think of the ‘you can't be in love and smart’ thing I can’t help but think of it in political terms. If I had a dollar for every time I fell for the pretty popular girl before I really knew who she was only to regret it in the end; well, I won’t say I would be rich but I would be hood rich. Needless to say basing your opinion on looks alone will work just about as well as a condom with a safe sex pamphlet stapled to it. Looks can be deceiving, and so can the looks of politicians.
Politics, like relationships, are about results. Everyone talks a big game, but when it comes down to it we are all looking for some one who is ‘gonna deliver- right? It’s all good if a person/candidate has you at hello but remember to be smart and save your love till they show you the money(aka the results you trusted them to yield). Then it’s perfectly “ok” to pack up the little gold fish in a zip lock bag, leave smart behind, and follow your love/candidate whole heartedly until the credits role. (Jerry Maguire metaphor?! OOOHHH YEEAAA!!!)
DonnY like Hathaway NOT like Darko-
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July 30th, 2008 The Editors
More campaign-related opinion for Wednesday, July 30.
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July 30th, 2008 Oliver Burkeman
Well, now we know how psephologists across the country will be spending the next few days: digesting the momentous news that Barack Obama has sewn up the crucial "wig-wearing murder suspect" demographic. That's right, America -- Phil Spector endorses...
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July 30th, 2008 Alex Koppelman
Yes, the original report comes from the National Enquirer, but new information lends additional credibility to its article.
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July 30th, 2008 Alex Koppelman
A series of Electoral College maps produced by the company run by the man once known as "Bush's Brain" has Barack Obama narrowly winning the presidency.
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July 30th, 2008 Oliver Burkeman
Here's everything you need to know about possible-or-even-quite-likely Obama vice-presidential choice Tim Kaine, currently the governor of Virginia. Well -- everything except what you really want to know, which is whether or not he's going to be Obama's vice-presidential choice....
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July 30th, 2008 Michelle Austein
In the small towns of the Pennsylvania 4th, hunting is enjoyed by many citizens. Congressional candidates Jason Altmire and Melissa Hart both say they are strong believers in the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which says the government cannot infringe on the right to bear arms.
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