Friday, March 28, 2008

SENATORS BOB CASEY AND JOHN W. McCAIN THINK OBAMA'S THE ONE-- PAUL KRUGMAN KNOWS McBUSH IS CERTAINLY NOT

>

McCain's slick (and deceptive) new Madison Avenue advert-- desperately trying to reassert the dubious proposition that he is heroic and honest-- clearly targets the Democrat he feels he will be facing in November: Barack Obama:



The last line-- "The American president Americans have been waiting for"--  appropriates Obama's populist and widely resonating "We are the change we've been waiting for."  The Chicago Tribune takes that as an example about how the lobbyists who run McCain's campaign have written off Hillary and are putting their anti-Obama game plan into action, a game plan so vicious, mean-spirited, divisive and racist that one of McCain's key advisors left the campaign in disgust when he saw it. With the Bush-McCain "surge" falling apart and Iraq descending into civil war again, McCain finds himself with no choice but to divert attention away from the catastrophe he helped author.

Meanwhile Obama still has to face the reality of a Clinton Machine that may not be able to win, but also will not admit defeat. Her husband blames it on caucuses, implying that only nuts bother going to them. They seem far more comfortable with easily-rigged voting machines-- like the ones in Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant precincts where Clinton won 100% of the vote and Obama won nothing at all. Both campaigns are working delegate-rich Pennsylvania now. Hillary was expecting to romp to victory on the shoulders of Governor Ed Rendell and reactionary congressman John Murtha (right on the war and wrong on every other important issue of the day from women's choice to corruption). But today Pennsylvania's Democratic U.S. Senator, Bob Casey, the man who banished the hated Rick Santorum from national politics in 2006, endorsed Obama.
Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey plans to endorse Sen. Barack Obama for president today in Pittsburgh, sending a message both to the state's primary voters and to undecided superdelegates who might decide the close race for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Dan Pfeiffer, deputy communications director for the Obama campaign, confirmed that Casey would announce his support during a rally at the Soldiers and Sailors Military Museum and Memorial and that he would then set out with the Illinois senator on part of a six-day bus trip across the state.

The endorsement comes as something of a surprise. Casey, a deliberative and cautious politician, had been adamant about remaining neutral until after the April 22 primary. He had said he wanted to help unify the party after the intensifying fight between Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Clinton is so widely viewed as having Pennsylvania locked up and put away that if she stumbles there, the primary season would end on the spot and Obama could get to work fighting off McCain full time.

Meanwhile, sensing that the prolonged and increasingly bitter attacks inside the Democratic Party could cause lasting damage, DNC Chair Howard Dean is now advocating that uncommitted superdelegates make their decisions by the end of June. On CBS today Dean replied to another of the endless process questions newsmen are so enamored of, that most superdelegates have already expressed their choice. "I think that there's 800 of them and 450 of them have already said who they're for. I'd like the other 350 to say who they're at some point between now and the first of July so we don't have to take this into the convention.”

Al Gore also thinks the nomination battle will resolve itself before the late August convention. One of my friends, a moderate Democrat who has been known to vote for Republicans like Arnold Schwarzenegger, said yesterday that he's sick and tired of the entire process and threatened to just tune it out. He was startled when I suggested that that was exactly what he and most Americans should do. The process is way too long and divisive, mostly because of the way the media has chosen to cover it. We get 90% process and gossip and 10% policies and issues. Were it the other way round, it would be worth watching. But corporate media has so dumbed down the voters that attention spans are far too short to focus on real issues. Hysteria and ginned up scandals are far easier for our Infotainment world. That's how we wound up with Bush, as Paul Krugman explains in his Times column today.
When George W. Bush first ran for the White House, political reporters assured us that he came across as a reasonable, moderate guy.

Yet those of us who looked at his policy proposals-- big tax cuts for the rich and Social Security privatization-- had a very different impression. And we were right.

The moral is that it’s important to take a hard look at what candidates say about policy. It’s true that past promises are no guarantee of future performance. But policy proposals offer a window into candidates’ political souls-- a much better window, if you ask me, than a bunch of supposedly revealing anecdotes and out-of-context quotes.

Which brings me to the latest big debate: how should we respond to the mortgage crisis? In the last few days John McCain, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have all weighed in. And their proposals arguably say a lot about the kind of president each would be.

Mr. McCain is often referred to as a “maverick” and a “moderate,” assessments based mainly on his engaging manner. But his speech on the economy was that of an orthodox, hard-line right-winger.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

8 Comments:

At 3:58 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Leahy and Dodd, two socialist bozos making the case. If anyone of the Clinton supporter says its done. Osama is the winner, then I agree. Those two idiots have no say in this and should go back to Russia and take Obama with them. I will never vote for Osama so I guess McCain will be our next president. I have been die hard democrat and there is no way I will be supporting a person who is far left. Enough from Democrats, we are going too far left. Rice's statement is another example of blacks sticking together. Why doesn't whites see this. Osama as a president, this country is going down.

 
At 5:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

well, i'm white and am voting for OBAMA. You are obviously one of the uneducated, white racist of this country. Thank God all of us white people are not as ignorant as you. Tell the truth, you're just jealous because you are not as intelligent and charismatic as a black man. How sick that you would rather see our troops stay in Iraq and our economy continue to go down under McCain just because you are a racist. Hope it's worth it to sell your soul and your country - oh how patriotic you are.

 
At 6:26 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Well, I'm a white educated person who meets one of the demographics of a Obama supporter. I am for Clinton. Obama will never win a General election. With what his wife has said about "never proud to be an American" (notice how she has dropped off the face of the earth lately) and Wrights remarks (Obama needed to totally denounce him, instead he blamed both white and black Americans as racists?). No president was ever elected on an anti-American platform. The Obama supporters are now desparately trying to get Clinton to drop out because they know the tide has turned. Obama has won caucases and States that will go red in the Fall anyway.

 
At 6:48 PM, Blogger DP said...

I'm just impressed how Hillary is handling the pressure to quit from these White Bald public officials. This is how a strong leader of this country ought to be. It ain't over 'till it's over. Everyone of these officials have their own personal vested interest. When Hillary becomes president, they won't be able to muscle her unlike Obama who is soft, weak, and easily intimidated. Remember Jimmy Carter? How can Obama win the general election where he won most of the states who vote consistently Republican in every election? Hillary don't give up. The silent majority is behind you. As a union leader and a long time democrat, I can tell that many labor union members are behind you. So, don't quit. A QUITTER NEVER WIN, AND A WINNER NEVER QUIT. Hillary is a Winner!!!

HILLARY '08

 
At 6:48 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

John McCain probably hopes Obama will be picked because Hillary will be the one to win over him. I was for Obama at first, but he appears to like being in the news too much. He will say anything to be in the news, and often it is not political related. America, don't be afraid to vote for a woman. We have women lawyers, doctors, and the majority of teachers, are women...who teach our children. GO HILLARY!

 
At 9:03 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

hillary is a fighter, go getter, she would make a great president.she knows how to get things done.for her to quit now,and to give in, is not who she is. also would not be fair to all those americans who have not had a chance to vote. let them have their say. Hillary08

 
At 9:16 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

If this bickering continues - McCain will have it easy. If both Democratic candidates can proceed without bashing each other, then go on - let each state have their say.
So far, I am not convinced either one is ready. Hillary says she will work hard for us, Obama says the same thing. Hillary says she is for health reform. So is Obama.Hillary has baggage and would most likely do things much the way her husband did. I do not see her reaching across the aisle. We don't know how Obama will handle the White House because he is so young. But we gave JFK a chance, and he turned out to be very respected.
We forget that Hillary has Bill and Chelsea on the trails campaigning for her - all three get free press every day compared. Obama has definitely been tested and found strong and just as determined.
This does not have to be about race unless people want it to be.

 
At 9:37 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I don't think I can support a person who care more about winning that she does the whole democrate party. Hillary and Bill have shown their true colors. I didn't understand whay they were so hated , but now I see.

How can anyone still trust a person who would lie about being shot at, try and change the rules whenever they don't work to her favor and tell others they don't have to abide by the democratic process.

If she would do all this just to win, what will she be like if she did become President. One thing for sure, if she don't care that she is destroying the party, she certaintly won't care about me or you once she is elected. It is all about her.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home