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Current Events => Archives => Politics => Election 2008 => Topic started by: DixieBelle on February 11, 2008, 02:02:42 PM

Title: Party pros face Potomac rebellions
Post by: DixieBelle on February 11, 2008, 02:02:42 PM
Quote
As voters in Maryland, the District of Columbia and Virginia prepare to go to the polls in Tuesday’s Potomac primary, the Democratic and Republican party establishments face rebellions from within their ranks. The outcome of Tuesday’s balloting across our region may pour fuel on the fires behind both insurgencies.

The Democratic rebellion is led by Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, whose campaign looks increasingly like an unstoppable force. Only a year ago, former first lady Hillary Clinton was the odds-on favorite, thanks in great part to her massive backing from among Democratic officeholders and the leadership echelons of the party’s official campaign institutions.

She also enjoyed what appeared to be deep support across the ranks of the party’s activists in the labor unions and ideologues of identity-based politics.

But Obama’s “change” theme perfectly positioned him in South Carolina for the failure of former President Bill Clinton’s crass attempt to pigeonhole the Illinois senator as the reincarnation of Jesse Jackson. Slick Willie’s tactics inspired revulsion by giving voters a rancid taste of the Clinton team’s White House restoration menu. Obama then battled Hillary Clinton to a dead heat on Super Tuesday. He swept the weekend’s contests in Louisiana, Washington state and Nebraska and looks poised to do well here Tuesday, a result that could create a genuine crisis of confidence in the Clinton camp.

On the GOP side, a record turnout of more than 6,600 for the Conservative Political Action Conference at the Omni Shoreham in Washington, D.C., afforded the party’s clear front-runner, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, a unique opportunity to reach out to a group that is critical to his November prospects.

McCain is clearly the Republican establishment’s favorite, but he is deeply distrusted on several counts by many of the party’s conservative rank and file. Despite the pleadings of such notables as Washington Post columnist George Will at CPAC, suspicion remains that, for example, a President McCain would be as aggressive an advocate of congressional — i.e. incumbent — regulation of political speech via the Federal Election Commission as was Sen. McCain, with dire consequences for the First Amendment. Conservative worries on that score equal or outweigh their horror at the prospect of either a revived Clinton presidency or the ascension of an Obama they view as naïve and inexperienced.

McCain’s march to the GOP nomination almost certainly will not be slowed by Tuesday’s results in Maryland and the District, but Virginia Republicans may bolster former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee’s recent rededication of his faith in the power of miracles.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1213263~Party_pros_face_Potomac_rebellions.html?cid=all-hp-featured_editorial

I can't wait for this to be over.  :whatever:
Title: Re: Party pros face Potomac rebellions
Post by: Wretched Excess on February 11, 2008, 02:19:09 PM

isn't it going to be a little awkward if "the outsider" candidates (huckleberry and The Barackstar!) win "the beltway primaries"?

Title: Re: Party pros face Potomac rebellions
Post by: Lord Undies on February 11, 2008, 02:28:12 PM
Half my brain wants Clinton to succeed and half my brain dies laughing at the thought of her failing.  Clinton has been waiting for this her entire life.  I want her to lose and cry and sling things and cuss and writhe and scream and shake uncontrollably (I don't care for her).

But if Clinton gets the nomination, she will be so utterly rejected in November, it will be a republican cakewalk. 
Title: Re: Party pros face Potomac rebellions
Post by: DixieBelle on February 11, 2008, 02:41:43 PM
^I feel the same way. I kind of want the Barackstar shut down. I know Hillary will lose in Nov. I'd pay to be in the Clinton household that night :-)
Title: Re: Party pros face Potomac rebellions
Post by: Wretched Excess on February 11, 2008, 02:48:24 PM
Half my brain wants Clinton to succeed and half my brain dies laughing at the thought of her failing.  Clinton has been waiting for this her entire life.  I want her to lose and cry and sling things and cuss and writhe and scream and shake uncontrollably (I don't care for her).

But if Clinton gets the nomination, she will be so utterly rejected in November, it will be a republican cakewalk. 

I hadn't noticed. :-)

I think we're going to lose in november.  not especially strongly, but if I had to guess, I would guess that we lose.  I think the economy won't suddenly zoom to reagan era levels of growth, which is the only thing that will prevent the MSM from endlessly reporting, and the electorate believing in, a recession, and we will lose.

but I think the nexus of pelosi, reid, and The BarackStar! (or hillary, for that matter, but I would predict the other way around) will create such an incredible "axis of idiocy", that the republicans storm back to take congress in the 2010 mid-terms, and dislodge whichever liberal won the white house in 2008 in 2012.



Title: Re: Party pros face Potomac rebellions
Post by: DixieBelle on February 11, 2008, 03:49:12 PM
^I think that's exactly what will happen. Buckle up guys.
Title: Re: Party pros face Potomac rebellions
Post by: DumbAss Tanker on February 11, 2008, 07:02:19 PM
Obama is actually a stronger enemy in November than Hillary; I'd love to see her lose in the Primaries but we have a much better chance of beating her in Novermber than we do Obama...especially with McCain as our standard-bearer, the 'fourth leg' in that stupid 'three-legged stool' analogy is Libertarian Conservatives and any of them whose pet rock is either First or Second Amendment issues is really unlikely to vote for EITHER the D or the R on the Presidential ballot.