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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (78293)9/16/2008 10:52:54 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Official 2008 Obama/McCain Presidential Debate Schedule

youdecide2008.com

Here is a break down of what each debate will consist of:

1. First Presidential Debate: – Date: September 26 – Site: University of Mississippi – Topic: Domestic and Economic policy – Moderator: Jim Lehrer – Staging: Podium debate – Answer Format: The debate will be broken into nine, 9-minute segments. The moderator will introduce a topic and allow each candidate 2 minutes to comment. After these initial answers, the moderator will facilitate an open discussion of the topic for the remaining 5 minutes, ensuring that both candidates receive an equal amount of time to comment

2. Vice Presidential Debate – Date: October 2nd – Site: Washington University (St. Louis) – Moderator: Gwen Ifill – Staging/Answer Format: To be resolved after both parties’ Vice Presidential nominees are selected.

3. Second Presidential Debate – Date: October 7 – Site: Belmont University – Moderator: Tom Brokaw – Staging: Town Hall debate – Format: The moderator will call on members of the audience (and draw questions from the internet). Each candidate will have 2 minutes to respond to each question. Following those initial answers, the moderator will invite the candidates to respond to the previous answers, for a total of 1 minute, ensuring that both candidates receive an equal amount of time to comment. In the spirit of the Town Hall, all questions will come from the audience (or internet), and not the moderator.

4. Third Presidential Debate – Date: October 15 – Site: Hofstra University – Topic: Foreign Policy & National Security – Moderator: Bob Schieffer – Staging: Candidates will be seated at a table – Answer Format: Same as First Presidential Debate – Closing Statements: At the end of this debate (only) each candidate shall have the opportunity for a 90 second closing statement.

--------------------------------------------------------

All four debates will begin at 9pm ET, and last for 90 minutes. Both campaigns also agreed to accept the CPD’s participation rules for third-party candidate participation.

Each debate will be broadcast on the major broadcast networks, including CBS, NBC, ABC, and FOX. They will also be aired on cable news channels such as CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, and C-SPAN.

We will have full videos of each debate uploaded once they air.



To: American Spirit who wrote (78293)9/17/2008 9:51:20 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
McCain’s Real Running Mate by Paul Begala

dailykos.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (78293)9/17/2008 4:29:07 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 89467
 
McCain struggles to cast himself as economic commander-in-chief

marketwatch.com

Market crisis may be a boon for Obama

By Robert Schroeder, MarketWatch

Last update: 3:32 p.m. EDT Sept. 17, 2008

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- The historic shake-up on Wall Street and gut-wrenching drops in markets this week have thrust the economy back into the forefront of the presidential campaign, and so far it's Sen. Barack Obama who appears better off because of the events, analysts say.

With less than two months until Election Day, both Obama and Sen. John McCain are scrambling to show that they're best-prepared to take the reins and put the economy back on track. But with McCain famously admitting the economy isn't his strongest suit and Democrats gaining the advantage in polls about the economy, the Arizona Republican appears to be in potential trouble despite his current lead in general election polls.

"It helps the Democrats," said Floyd Ciruli, a Colorado-based political analyst. "They tend to be stronger on the economic issues." Moreover, he added, the market troubles take the focus off of the campaign trail's newest star: Gov. Sarah Palin, McCain's running mate. The Democrats "needed this desperately," said Ciruli. Largely unknown before being picked, Palin has stolen the limelight from Obama in recent days.

No more. Now it's the economy that's front and center, and McCain appears to be playing catch-up as Obama is reminding voters he floated a plan to clamp down on financial companies as far back as March. He's also been bludgeoning McCain for his repeated insistence that the economy's fundamentals are strong.

"We are in the most serious financial crisis in generations," Obama said in Golden, Colo. on Tuesday. "Yet Sen. McCain stood up yesterday and said that the fundamentals of the economy are strong."

In fairness to the Arizona Republican, McCain also said the economy is going through "very, very difficult times." He said his administration would clean up Wall Street and reform government. Wednesday morning, the McCain campaign launched a new TV ad slamming Wall Street greed and blaming markets for jeopardizing the economic security of American workers. He took a few shots at Obama as well, painting the Illinois senator as a typical tax-happy liberal.

McCain should keep up that line of attack, analysts say. The "reform" mantra is a smart one, especially when one of McCain's economic strong suits -- increased oil drilling -- is receding as an issue.

"What he mainly needs to do is link whatever he says to his major theme, which is that 'I am a reformer,'" said Ciruli.

McCain has strongly backed expanding offshore oil drilling, a proposal that's won over some voters who have been punished by high gasoline prices. "The energy piece [of the economy], I think, slightly has been tilting to McCain," said Ethan Siegal of The Washington Exchange, a group that researches public policy for investors. But as oil prices retreat, McCain has one less arrow in his economic policy quiver.

McCain is also of course at a natural disadvantage. He aims to follow the unpopular President Bush into the White House, on whose watch, Democrats argue, the foundations for the current mess were laid. Obama is also mocking McCain for embracing regulation after subscribing to a deregulation philosophy for years.

"Despite his eleventh hour conversion to the language of reform, Sen. McCain has subscribed to this philosophy for twenty-six years in Washington and the events of this week have rendered it a colossal failure," Obama said Wednesday. That's not entirely true: McCain voted for the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which tightened accounting rules on companies after the Enron, WorldCom and Tyco scandals.

The problem for McCain, though, is that he also later said he regretted the vote. McCain often touts his record and experience on the campaign trail, while belittling Obama's thinner resume. Obama has less experience, to be sure, which gives him the luxury of floating ideas that sound good. McCain, meanwhile, has his record to promote -- or try to downplay.

McCain has already shifted to the right this campaign season, telling the Republican faithful that he's a true conservative. He now backs oil drilling and President Bush's tax cuts, things he opposed in the past. With the GOP party in the political dumps after eight years of the Bush administration, party members are eager to embrace any Republican with a decent shot at winning the White House.

With the economy in crisis, McCain now appears to be shifting to the left, touting regulation and straying from the usual free-market Republican script. That may be a good response now, to calm investors' and consumers' nerves at a time when markets are shaky and his opponent draws better reviews on the economy. But the risk for McCain is that he will alienate conservatives by trying to out-do Obama when it comes to responding to this crisis.

McCain may believe the economy is fundamentally strong. But if he doesn't get his message right, his campaign is going to look seriously weak.

-Robert Schroeder is a reporter for MarketWatch in Washington.



To: American Spirit who wrote (78293)9/17/2008 7:48:41 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
(CBS) In a sign that John McCain's convention bounce has dissipated, Barack Obama has taken a 48 percent to 43 percent lead over his Republican rival among registered voters in the latest CBS News/New York Times poll...

cbsnews.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (78293)9/17/2008 11:14:35 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
The lying game

salon.com

Like George W. Bush, McCain and Palin have to lie. Because if they told the truth about their policies, they'd lose the election.

By Alan Wolfe

Sep. 18, 2008 | Eight years after the travesty of the 2000 election, in which the media were prone to emphasize Al Gore's exaggerations while letting George W. Bush off the hook, Republican politicians finally are being called out on their dishonesty. "The biggest liar in modern political history," writes Michael Tomasky, the editor of the Guardian America, about John McCain. There are indeed so many lies associated with the Republican campaign that one can pick and choose at random. My favorites are the efforts by the McCain campaign to portray Obama as being in favor of teaching sex education to 5-year-olds and the Spanish language ad accusing him of opposing immigration reform. Your favorites might include McCain's claim that Obama will raise taxes on the middle class or his statement to the women of "The View" that Sarah Palin never requested earmarks.

McCain's propensity to lie has become what political junkies call a meme, an idea or behavior that runs, seemingly unstoppably, from one media outlet to another. Some bloggers offer daily counts of how many falsehoods McCain tells while others wonder why the Democrats do not respond in turn. Even the mainstream press has gotten into the act. One of the pleasures of the 2008 campaign -- I admit they have been few and far between -- is watching all those who once admired John McCain for his truthfulness realize the true depths of his moral depravity. When McCain is linked to Palin, moreover, as he so frequently wants to be, lying experiences something of a multiplier effect. These candidates lie so much that they have taken to lying about their own lies.

Before we get carried away with enthusiasm about all this, though, we should keep two things in mind. One is that we are so quick to label McCain a liar that we tend to forget how much, and with what horrendous consequences, George W. Bush possessed the same character flaw. The other is that Republicans lie so frequently, not because the party just happened to settle upon one serial liar after another to run for high office, but because the form of conservatism to which they all adhere demands that if they are to win they have no choice but to lie.

In the 2000 presidential election, George W. Bush, then something of a political unknown, claimed to be a compassionate conservative and promised the country a "humble" foreign policy. Lies both. Compassionate conservatism was a brilliant campaign slogan, an attempt by Bush to persuade independent voters that he was not a raving madman like Newt Gingrich, who had urged, in true Dickensian fashion, the building of orphanages to solve the welfare problem. Long before the public had ever heard of Rick Warren, Karl Rove understood that the evangelical base of the Republican Party wanted language more uplifting than traditional Republican red meat, and the idea that conservatives were in fact more compassionate than bureaucratic liberals provided it. In actuality, as we now know, Bush wanted to privatize Social Security, the most compassionate program ever adopted in this country, and was simply waiting for the right opportunity to do so.

Bush spoke in 2000 of a humble foreign policy for much the same reason. We now also know that the Bush-Cheney administration was intent on adopting the most aggressive American foreign stance possible, and that the events of Sept. 11, 2001, offered them the public justification for actions they had been secretly planning since taking office. We tend to forget that before Sept. 11, aggressive foreign policy moves were not all that popular. Americans wanted a peace dividend in the aftermath of communism's collapse and seemed hell-bent on turning inward to their private pursuits. In that context, offering them a humble approach while planning a militant one constituted as dramatic a lie as one can imagine.

I would never challenge the argument that John McCain's lies in 2008 are over the top. But if McCain is more serial a liar than George W. Bush, it is a matter of degree rather than kind. Bush's lies, after all, led to thousands of needless deaths, and none of John McCain's lies, at least to this point, have done that. Were he to find himself elected, McCain would no doubt lie about many things, such as whether the United States has engaged in torture or whether Iran is a genuine military threat to the United States. But the bar has been set way too high; given the mendacity of the Bush administration, I am at something of a loss to imagine that a McCain administration could lie more.

Why do Republicans lie so much? Why is McCain following the Bush script? Why, at the very moment when he wanted a "maverick" by his side, did McCain pick a congenital liar to be his running mate? Republicans engage in what I can only call "structural lies." To understand what this means consider this: Just about every significant lie uttered by Republican politicians is designed to make them seem less conservative than they really are.

The current lie du jour of the McCain campaign is that their man will aggressively take on the greed that is causing the collapse on Wall Street. Given McCain's lack of interest in the economy, wealthy campaign contributors, and ideological hostility toward government regulation, this stance is laughable. But McCain's lie unconsciously reveals an important truth, which is that when the economy goes into a tailspin, the public prefers a solution long identified with liberalism. McCain could tell the truth, which is that he is all for the free market and can barely wait until the crisis passes so the rich can go about the business of becoming ever richer. But if he does that, he will lose. McCain wants to win. Therefore he lies.

It is not just the economy that features this structural dynamic. If you were just tuning into the election now -- no doubt there are many Americans who have not quite tuned in yet -- you would think that the Republican Party loves workers, hopes to redistribute income to the lower middle class, embraces immigrants, favors environmental protection, and hates war. Some of the Republican lies, to be sure have nothing to do with policy, such as false estimates of the size of the crowds attending Republican rallies or Sarah Palin's announcement that she had sold the Alaska governor's plane on eBay, but of those that do, the overwhelming majority are designed to make the Republican ticket more humane and moderate than it actually is. Only on foreign policy, where McCain shows no interest in hiding his hawkish instincts, can the ticket claim to be taking an honest position even if the face of public skepticism.

Conservatism is an honorable political philosophy whose most eloquent spokesmen, such as John Adams and Edmund Burke, proclaimed the truth as they saw it. This is a tradition that continues among all those contemporary conservatives who have been appalled at the direction the McCain camp has taken and have been willing to say so publicly. In contrast, the conservative populism that has swallowed up the contemporary Republican Party lies because conservative populism is itself a lie. It claims to be guided by faith when it is run by corruption. It speaks of diversity but remains overwhelmingly white. It uses women to push an agenda that would expose women to harm. It speaks of reform tomorrow to slash the reforms of today. It seeks popular support to enact policies that, if revealed for what they were, would be wildly unpopular.

Like so many of John McCain's critics, I find myself astonished at the sheer brazenness of the lies he tells. But this is not because McCain is more dishonorable than Bush. It is because the conditions under which a truthful Republican could be elected in 2008 are much more difficult than they were in 2000. Through sheer incompetence and cronyism, George W. Bush showed Americans just how dangerous conservatism can be. Because he did, those conservatives who would succeed him face even more difficult obstacles placed in their path to power. In the past, they might have gotten away with lying occasionally. This will no longer do. Expect, therefore, as the country turns to the debates ahead, that John McCain, when addressing issues of foreign policy around which he has been remarkably honest, will begin to lie in that area as well.



To: American Spirit who wrote (78293)9/18/2008 12:29:15 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
What, Me Worry?

slate.com

Why Obama acts like he's 10 points up in the polls.

By John Dickerson

Posted Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2008, at 10:02 PM ET

Barack Obama apparently has not gotten the e-mail. He's supposed to be panicked. He's blowing a historic opportunity. He could lose the election. Worried Democrats have done everything but employ skywriting to get the message across that he needs to do something dramatic. Fast.

If there was a place to get hot and bothered, it was Elko, Nev., where Obama spoke Wednesday afternoon. He stood in the open on a black stage under the midday sun while flies buzzed relentlessly. He didn't appear fazed. He sounded like a man who was ahead by 10 points. He wasn't exactly listless—he implored voters to join his campaign for change and attacked John McCain—but he wasn't urgent or exercised, either. He unveiled no new gambits. The only moment of sparkle came when he questioned whether McCain could make good on his challenge to take on the "old boys' network." With so many former lobbyists in his campaign, said Obama, the old boys' network is what they call a staff meeting.

When this election is over, the Obama campaign's cool demeanor will either be seen as its signature genius ("They kept their heads about them") or its signature flaw ("They failed to respond to their opponent's strategy"). We'll know in 48 days.

Why are they so calm in Obama-land? I can't find an account of the candidate yelling at anyone during the entire campaign, and it's not just the candidate who seems calm. His aides aren't perfect, but given the level of chatter in the political echo chamber doubting their work, you'd expect them to be more snappish or bleary-eyed. There are no blind quotes from disgruntled aides sniping at each other in the press, which seems almost to defy human nature—even in the sunniest organizations, pressure plus high stakes usually creates at least one misanthrope (or, as we like to call them: sources). Even the famously disciplined Bush 2000 operation went squirrely in August under the pressure.

Maybe the Obama campaign is deluded, or spinning. Even if they're really worried in his Chicago headquarters, no one dare let on because voters won't want to elect a candidate whose team can't take the heat.

Or maybe they're not rattled because they've been through this before. If they'd listened to the polls and Democratic experts, they'd never have gotten in the race. In the summer of 2007, there were lots of Obama supporters who thought he should panic a little more, or risk losing to Hillary Clinton. The Obama campaign stuck to its plan and won. Aides often cite this lesson in explaining why they're not going to overreact now.

Obama can also stay calm because he got a break this week. The public focus is now on the economy, an issue where Obama has advantages. It's also harder for McCain to manufacture distractions—it would look out of touch. Plus, the Palin novelty has started to wear off. Obama is back in the lead in some polls. All of this means he doesn't have to do anything flamboyantly out of character to get attention.

Obama can also remain calm on the outside because his campaign is changing in lots of ways to meet the shift in the landscape. The overall strategy and theme are the same—change vs. more of the same—but the campaign has adjusted some tactics. (McCain, by contrast, completely changed strategy by picking Sarah Palin and putting so much emphasis on reform.) Biden is attacking McCain more. To address the criticism that Obama doesn't tell voters precisely how he will help them in the economic downturn, he released a two-minute ad highlighting the specifics of his plans. He's added more into his stump speech, too. Tough ads are also running in swing states, like this one in Pennsylvania that accuses McCain of selling out workers.

On the stump, Obama has stopped talking about Palin, which was distracting him from drawing contrasts with McCain. Obama's polling suggests initial interest in her is diminishing, and his aides scoff at the McCain campaign's contention that Palin has put Iowa back in play as a battleground state. Obama had been comfortably ahead in the state, and it seemed out of McCain's reach, but now McCain is planning a visit to the state based on what his aides say are signs that Palin has re-ignited his campaign there.

Meanwhile, Obama is in Elko, Nev.—just the kind of place you'd go if you were sure of your game plan. Just as Obama focused on caucus contests that came late in the Democratic nominating process, he's focusing on places like Elko in the general election. Tuesday was his third visit there. Elko County hasn't voted Democratic in a presidential election since 1964, but the Obama campaign thinks that a little attention in Elko, where he benefits from an organization built during the Democratic caucuses, could help give him the margin he needs to win a state that Bush carried by only 20,000 votes.

Obama has asked us to look at his campaign to understand how he would govern. Like McCain, Obama has said he will not make Bush's mistake of holding on to dead-end strategies in the face of changing circumstances. So for Obama, who talks so much about change, the question is when and how he will change his own campaign when circumstances warrant. Part of the answer may be found in Elko.
______________________________

John Dickerson is Slate's chief political correspondent and author of On Her Trail.



To: American Spirit who wrote (78293)9/21/2008 7:12:51 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
John McCain is in big trouble

jewishjournal.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (78293)9/21/2008 7:44:03 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
McCain owns 13 cars...

newsweek.com

All the Candidates’ Cars
By Keith Naughton and Hilary Shenfeld
NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Sep 29, 2008

When you have seven homes, that's a lot of garages to fill. After the fuss over the number of residences owned by the two presidential nominees, NEWSWEEK looked into the candidates' cars. And based on public vehicle-registration records, here's the score. John and Cindy McCain: 13. Barack and Michelle Obama: one.

One vehicle in the McCain fleet has caused a small flap. United Auto Workers president Ron Gettelfinger, an Obama backer, accused McCain this month of "flip-flopping" on who bought daughter Meghan's foreign-made Toyota Prius. McCain said last year that he bought it, but then told a Detroit TV station on Sept. 7 that Meghan "bought it, I believe, herself." (The McCain campaign did not respond to multiple requests for comment.)

Obama's lone vehicle also is a green machine, a 2008 Ford Escape hybrid. He bought it last year to replace the family's Chrysler 300C, a Hemi-powered sedan. Obama ditched the 300C, once 50 Cent's preferred ride, after taking heat for driving a guzzler while haranguing Detroit about building more fuel-efficient cars.

McCain's personal ride, a 2004 Cadillac CTS, is no gas sipper, but it should make Detroit happy because it's made by General Motors. "I've bought American literally all my life and I'm proud," McCain said in the interview with Detroit's WXYZ-TV. But the rest of his fleet is not all-American. There's a 2005 Volkswagen convertible in the garage along with a 2001 Honda sedan. Otherwise, there's a 2007 half-ton Ford pickup truck, which might come in handy on the Sedona ranch; a vintage 1960 Willys Jeep; a 2008 Jeep Wrangler; a 2000 Lincoln; and a 2001 GMC SUV. The McCains also own three 2000 NEV Gem electric vehicles, which are bubble-shaped cars popular in retirement communities.

Only the Cadillac is registered in the candidate's name. Cindy McCain's name is on 11 vehicles, though not the one she actually drives. That car, a Lexus, is registered to her family's beer-distributor business and is outfitted with personalized plates that read MS BUD.