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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/21/2008 9:36:16 AM
From: michael97123  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
remember Sal Maglie? (g)



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/21/2008 3:54:06 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson is endorsing Sen. Barack Obama for president, calling him a "once-in-a-lifetime leader" who can unite the nation and restore America's international leadership, according to the Associated Press.

The governor's endorsement comes as Sen. Obama continues to build momentum in the contest for superdelegates against Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, even as national public opinion polling shows Sen. Clinton pulling ahead of the Illinois senator amid controversy over statements by his former pastor. As a Democratic superdelegate, Gov. Richardson plays a part in the tight race for nominating votes and could bring other superdelegates to Sen. Obama's side. He also has been mentioned as a potential running mate for either candidate.

cnn.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/21/2008 4:47:10 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
Can SuperDelegates Stop the Scorched Earth Campaigning?
_______________________________________________________________

by Paul Rogat Loeb*

Published on Friday, March 21, 2008 by CommonDreams.org

No matter how well Clinton does in the remaining primaries, her future is going to be in the hands of the superdelegates. It’s time for them to exercise their power to rein in scorched-earth campaigning.

Oregon Congressman Peter DeFazio recently criticized both Clinton and Obama in a public letter for allowing “the long-term goal of beating the Republican nominee [to take] a back seat to the short term goal of proving one’s viability by tearing down the other Democratic candidate.”

“Run the next six weeks of your campaign against McCain,” DeFazio urged, “not against the other Democrat. Go after McCain for his policy positions, not the other Democrat for theirs. Allow the Democratic voters to believe in a campaign that can provide a new direction for this country and stop McCain from continuing the failed policies of the Bush Administration. In the end, it is the candidate who can take the fight to McCain and win that deserves my support and, most importantly, the support of the Democratic Party.”

This is where other superdelegates could help. Since what the New York Times recently called Clinton’s increasingly narrow path to victory depends on her overwhelmingly sweeping those still undecided (aided in part by Rush Limbaugh and Fox supporters crossing over to support her in the remaining primaries, as they have since Ohio & Texas), they could stop the Democratic blood-letting by lining up behind Obama now. At that point, the battle for the nomination would end, and Obama would have seven months to focus on defeating McCain. I’d like to see as many as possible do this, but if they want to wait until the last primaries are run, DaFazio’s letter suggests another alternative.

A significant group of uncommitted superdelegates (and maybe some committed ones) could follow DaFazio’s lead and make a public statement condemning the destructive campaigning. They could make clear that either candidate who attacked the other enough to seriously benefit McCain would immediately lose their support.

Those who signed such a statement would still keep their autonomy. They could still endorse whomever they preferred between Obama and Clinton, and do so in their own time frame. But they’d be making overt what most Democrats are feeling-that the Party can’t afford to tear itself apart in the process of selecting a nominee. It can’t afford to give credence to Republican talking points or so stoke the mutual demonizing that Democratic voters end up staying home, or even vote for McCain. Because the superdelegates would be responding to negative attacks with their votes, this just might put enough teeth into their responses to deter them.

This shouldn’t be necessary. Barack Obama just gave an amazing speech that looked deep into his life to ask the hardest imaginable questions about race, class, and faith, who we are as Americans, and who we want to be. This speech seemed to touch people in a way that’s rare in our political life, and open up at least the possibility of becoming a watershed moment America’s march toward greater justice. I’d have no problem if Clinton continued to compete with Obama by offering her own take on the issues he’s raising and others of similar consequence.

But I doubt that will happen. Given Obama’s nearly insurmountable lead in elected delegates, I suspect Clinton will soon be back pursuing the massive personal attacks that seem her only chance to damage Obama enough to give the superdelegates second thoughts. And the media, especially the broadcast media, will likely buy in, because they’d rather report on mud-wrestling than on political arguments.

Last week, in Harrisburg PA, Hillary whipped up a crowd to boo Obama, something I’ve never witnessed in a Democratic presidential primary. In Youngstown, OH, a couple weeks before, she stood by and said nothing when Machinist’s Union head Tom Buffenbarger introduced her at a rally by calling Obama supporters (in language taken from recycled anti-Dean ads of the right-wing Club For Growth), “latte-drinking, Prius-driving, Birkenstock-wearing, trust fund babies.” And writing the Republican script, she’s argued that she and McCain are ready to be Commander and Chief but Obama is not. If Clinton and her supporters are saying these kinds of things about Obama now, it’s going to be tough for them to turn on a dime and encourage voters to unite behind him come November.

By the same token, to the degree that Obama seriously returns the fire, and continues to do so, that similarly damages Clinton’s chances, should she become the nominee. As a friend who supports Clinton said, the situation risks both the candidates and their passionate supporters becoming “intellectual arms traders in the aid of John McCain.”

So DaFazio’s approach makes sense. But he needs other superdelegates to sign on or issue their own statements, to magnify the impact. They don’t have to entirely ban all drawing of distinctions, because real policy differences exist. But they need to make clear that whatever destructive attacks gain in primary votes, they’ll more than lose them at the convention. Drawing this kind of line may be the only way that the Democrats can begin to pull together again, and end the disastrous stands of Bush’s past seven years.

*Born in California in l952, Loeb attended Stanford University and New York's New School for Social Research, and worked in both places to end the Vietnam War. Loeb has written for a range of publications including the New York Times, Washington Post, USA Today, Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, Psychology Today, and the Christian Science Monitor. His new anthology on political hope, The Impossible Will Take a Little While, was published in 2004 by Basic Books named the #3 political book of that year by the History Channel and the American Book Association, and won the Nautilus Award for best social change book of the year.



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/23/2008 1:21:39 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
Nazi Hal Turner Acknowledges Friendship With Hannity

dailykos.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/24/2008 10:21:12 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
What’s John Edwards Waiting For?

themoderatevoice.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/25/2008 3:03:30 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
Glowing op-ed for Obama by Pittsburgh's own Teresa Heinz Kerry

dailykos.com

Barack Obama understands working families, offers realistic proposals to help them and has the vision to re-inspire America, says philanthropist TERESA HEINZ

post-gazette.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/25/2008 6:03:36 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
The Clintons Have Crossed the Final Line

dailykos.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/25/2008 10:15:38 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
IMO, the Bosnia fake heroism makes Hillary unelectable. Remember the Swift-boat activities in 2004? The right wing is not Obama. They would run ads on Hillary's lie every day all fall.

I really believe Hillary MUST end her campaign for the good of the party. Someone in the superdelegtate Clinton camp has to explain this to her. She cannot win the general election after this lie about her heroism. She did mistake poetry and flowers for bullets. She was caught in a terrible lie.



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/27/2008 5:46:25 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
Is Al Gore the Answer?
____________________________________________________________

By JOE KLEIN
Columnist
Time Magazine
Wednesday, Mar. 26, 2008

Unlike Barack Obama, Bill Clinton does not believe in "the fierce urgency of now." The former President has an exquisitely languid sense of how political time unfurls. He understands that those moments the political community, especially the media, considers urgent usually aren't. He has seen his own election and re-election—and completing his second term—pronounced "impossible" and lived to tell the tale. He remembers that in spring 1992 he had pretty much won the Democratic nomination but was considered a dead man walking, running third behind Bush the Elder and Ross Perot. He knows that April is the silly season in presidential politics, the moment when candidates involved in a bruising primary battle seem weakest and bloodied, as both Hillary Clinton and Obama do now. It's the moment when pundits demand action—"Drop out, Hillary!"—and propound foolish theories. And so I'm rather embarrassed to admit that I'm slouching toward, well, a theory: if this race continues to slide downhill, the answer to the Democratic Party's dilemma may turn out to be Al Gore.

This April promises to be crueler than most. The two campaigns have started attacking each other with chainsaws, while the Republican John McCain is moving ahead in some national polls. At this point, Clinton can only win the nomination ugly: by superdelegates abandoning Obama and turning to her, in droves—not impossible, but not very likely either. Even if Clinton did overtake Obama, it would be very difficult for her to win the presidency: African Americans would never forgive her for "stealing" the nomination. They would simply stay home in November, as would the Obamista youth. (Although the former President is probably thinking: Yeah, but John McCain is a flagrantly flawed candidate too—I'd accept even a corrupted nomination and take my chances.)

Which is not to say that Clinton's candidacy is entirely without purpose now that she is pursuing a Republican-style race gambit, questioning Obama's 20-year relationship with the Rev. Jeremiah "God damn America" Wright. Democrats will soon learn how damaging that relationship might be in a general election. They'll also see if Obama has the gumption to bounce back, work hard—not just arena rallies for college kids but roundtables for the grizzled and unemployed in American Legion halls—and change the minds that have turned against him. The main reason superdelegates have not yet rallied round Obama is that the party is collectively holding its breath, waiting to see how he performs in Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Indiana.

He will probably do well enough to secure the nomination. But what if he tanks? What if he can't buy a white working-class vote? What if he loses all three states badly and continues to lose after that? I'd guess that the Democratic Party would still give him the nomination rather than turn to Clinton. But no one would be very happy—and a year that should have been an easy Democratic victory, given the state of the economy and the unpopularity of the incumbent, might slip away.

Which brings us back to Al Gore. Pish-tosh, you say, and you're probably right. But let's play a little. Let's say the elders of the Democratic Party decide, when the primaries end, that neither Obama nor Clinton is viable. Let's also assume—and this may be a real stretch—that such elders are strong and smart enough to act. All they'd have to do would be to convince a significant fraction of their superdelegate friends, maybe fewer than 100, to announce that they were taking a pass on the first ballot at the Denver convention, which would deny the 2,025 votes necessary to Obama or Clinton. What if they then approached Gore and asked him to be the nominee, for the good of the party—and suggested that he take Obama as his running mate? Of course, Obama would have to be a party to the deal and bring his 1,900 or so delegates along.

I played out that scenario with about a dozen prominent Democrats recently, from various sectors of the party, including both Obama and Clinton partisans. Most said it was extremely unlikely ... and a pretty interesting idea. A prominent fund raiser told me, "Gore-Obama is the ticket a lot of people wanted in the first place." A congressional Democrat told me, "This could be our way out of a mess." Others suggested Gore was painfully aware of his limitations as a candidate. "I don't know that he'd be interested, even if you handed it to him," said a Gore friend. Chances are, no one will hand it to him. The Democratic Party would have to be monumentally desperate come June. And yet ... is this scenario any more preposterous than the one that gave John McCain the Republican nomination? Yes, it's silly season. But this has been an exceptionally "silly" year.



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)3/29/2008 2:36:28 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
The Fear Factor

huffingtonpost.com

Posted March 28, 2008 | 06:09 PM (EST)

By Michael Lux*

No, I'm not talking about the daily Bush/McCain festival of fear about the scary terrorists. And, no, I'm not talking about the 3 AM phone call ad, either.

I'm talking about how many people I know, many superdelegates among them, who are scared to publicly support Obama because of the Clintons' well-known penchant for vengeance.

There are plenty of people in the Democratic Party who think Hillary Clinton would make a better president, and/or a better general election candidate, than Barack Obama. There are also some folks who endorsed Hillary early on, and believe you have to stick with the candidate you endorse until the bitter end. There are even a few, although the number is shrinking daily, who still have not genuinely made up their mind. And some superdelegates in the remaining states want to wait for the voters in their own state to vote before they declare. But there are very few people I talk to who think Hillary can win without an utterly divisive fight that will likely tear the party apart. They know that from the perspective of what's best for the party, it's time to endorse Obama.

What those remaining undeclared folks are telling me in private, though, is that they hope the race will play itself out and Obama will emerge as the clear winner so that they don't have to piss the Clintons and their machine off. They don't want the Clintons and McAuliffe and those donors who signed the letter to stop raising money for them. They don't want Carville and Wolfson to call them a traitor. They don't want all the behind-the-scenes trashing that they know will come.

I am encouraging my friends to come out of their political closet. If all the superdelegates and other influential friends that I have talked to who believe that the best path for the party is for Obama to win a clear victory would come out in is favor, this thing really would be over.

I hope this doesn't start another big flame war -- I almost didn't write it because I am so tired of people attacking each other over this primary race. But I thought it was important for people to know what I'm hearing from people.
________________________________________________________

*Michael Lux is the co-founder and CEO of Progressive Strategies, L.L.C., a political consulting firm founded in 1999, focused on strategic political consulting for non-profits, labor unions, PACs and progressive donors. Previously, he was Senior Vice President for Political Action at People For the American Way (PFAW), and the PFAW Foundation, and served at the White House from January 1993 to mid-1995 as a Special Assistant to the President for Public Liaison.



To: American Spirit who wrote (14772)4/1/2008 4:17:34 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
Obama/Hagel Is Very Much Alive

marcambinder.theatlantic.com