Monday’s campaign round-up

Today’s installment of campaign-related news items that wouldn’t generate a post of their own, but may be of interest to political observers:

* No one cared, even a little, but Mitt Romney won the Maine Republican caucuses over the weekend with about 52% support. John McCain was second with 22%, while Ron Paul, who thought he might have an outside shot at a victory in Maine, came in third with 19%.

* The “temperament” issue continues to linger: “Mitt Romney’s campaign is blasting out automated phone calls that feature a recording of former senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania raising questions about John McCain’s ‘temperament’ – a hot-button issue that Romney himself has assiduously avoided. Santorum said in an interview yesterday that he wrote the script himself, and the campaign deferred to him and approved it. ‘I think that to me it is a relevant issue for people to consider,’ he said. ‘I think it’s one without question that factors into his ability to govern, to form coalitions, and to get things done.'”

* There was quite a bit of talk yesterday about a possible “push poll” launched by the Clinton campaign against Obama in California. It looks like it may not have been a push poll after all.

* Mitt Romney’s poised to have a bad day tomorrow, but he at least claims that he’s sticking around past this week. “Looking at the numbers of delegates and the numbers of states, I don’t think somebody is going to walk away with the needed number, so I think this thing goes on well beyond Tuesday,” he said over the weekend.

* Barack Obama attended a campaign event in Boise, Idaho, on Saturday, drawing about 15,000 people — not to mention thousands more who couldn’t get in when the arena hit its capacity. For context, consider that the total number of Democrats who participated in Idaho’s presidential caucuses in 2004 was about one-third the number who showed up for this rally.

* Clinton is tweaking her message: “Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton debuted an almost entirely new stump speech at a raucous rally with 5,000 people in Los Angeles on Saturday morning, meanwhile, replacing her old, policy-heavy remarks with a new overarching message – ‘the America I see’ – and new hits on two of her opponents, Mr. Obama and the Republican front-runner, Senator John McCain of Arizona.”

* Romney wants Huckabee to get out of the way, and Huckabee wants Romney to also get out of the way: “White House hopeful Mike Huckabee denied the Republican presidential race had narrowed to two candidates, Mitt Romney and John McCain, telling journalists at an Alabama campaign stop Saturday that ‘if anybody ought to be quitting, it’s Mitt Romney.’ ‘John McCain hasn’t suggested I step aside. So if Mitt Romney’s going to engage me, which he has, then I feel like the engagement is on,’ said the former Arkansas governor.”

* The New York Daily News endorsed Clinton over the weekend: “Clinton’s time is here now. Her greater seasoning and instinct for taking command of the executive branch – from the Defense and State departments to homeland security and transportation agencies that just might find money for New York – are decided advantages. So, too, her projection of strength. She is the right choice for the Democrats.”

* A surprisingly competitive Democratic primary in New Jersey?

* And Bill Clinton is trying to push back against Ted Kennedy’s support for Obama by criticizing the Liberal Lion’s work with Bush on No Child Left Behind. It’s not an entirely persuasive pitch — Hillary Clinton voted for NCLB.

I had the fortune to be at the Obama event in Boise. That was an incredible experience, and it was the biggest crowd ever at Taco Bell Arena. I think most people in the crowd were getting goose-bumps just thinking that there were that many Dems in Idaho.

  • David writes: “Mark (Levin): I can understand (although I do not agree with) the position that the tax cuts were a bad idea at the time, but that they cannot be repealed without a devastating impact on the economy. That’s not inconsistent. I can also understand the position McCain has taken on immigration — namely, that he still wants a guest worker program like he always did, but he wants to work for one after he convinces Americans that he’s serious about border security.” But this isn’t the position that McCain is taking.

    McCain denies he ever opposed Bush’s tax cuts on class warfare grounds, which is demonstrably false. Why does he deny it, David? He used the argument all over the media. The record is clear. Yes, repealing them would have a devastating impact, as would instituting McCain-Lieberman or a host of other liberal ideas McCain has not renounced. McCain has problems with “managing for profit” and believes the oil companies are evil, and so forth. I take his record in context and see either a hostility to free enterprise and private property, or ignorance about economic matters.

    McCain now claims he didn’t know the intensity of opposition by the American people to his amnesty bill, as he only now realizes border security should come first. That’s a serious point? And even now he won’t flatly state, when asked, that he would not sign McCain-Kennedy if it hit his desk as president. Why not? Could it be because he would sign such a bill if it hit his desk?

  • Romney is not a politician so he doesn’t have the slick delivery others do. But to me this is a positive. The politicians have messed things up…including McCain. We need a change and I think Romney’s the one. He can work with world leaders and will impress them instead of yelling at them with four-letter words like McCain.

    Romney took no pay from Massachusetts and only $1 from the Olympics. He’s spending his own money on the race. I believe he wants this job not for power or money, but to be of service to our country. I support him.

    Congratulations, Maine! Thanks for choosing a man with conservative values for America.
    Mitt Romney’s successful business experience, successful Olympic experience, and successful state governing success set him above all other candidates. His vision of using economic strength to combat terrorist and his Apollo plan for energy independence are also set him above all other candidates. He is a real leader who can lead American to build a strong economic and therefore a strong nation! Hope American people will elect Mitt Romney, the only competent candidate, to be our president.

    How could any moderates and liberals backs war monger McCain. McCain wants to bomb Iran and stay in Iraq for 100 years and promised for more wars. McCain says he wants interest rates to be ZERO out of complete ignorance for how interest rates affect the economy. I’d like to see him say that to retirees on a fixed income. McCain want 10 million illegal immigrants to stay permanently and legal immigrants who can vote do not support it. How could this country be secure if he is in power??? If McCain is nominee, as a republican I would rather vote Clinton than McCain. As least we know Clinton has some intelligence and lead the booming economic. McCain will lead this country to a total ruin with his lack of intelligence and no executive experience. Mitt Romney is an expert in economics and finance and is the man we need as president.

    If anyone can rescue the economy at this point, it would have to be Mitt. The US is $53 trillion in debt, that is $400K per household. The dollar is becoming useless and the Euro is now becoming the credible currency. Along with the national debt, most citizens are also deeply in debt. Tommorow the market is likely going to take a dump. If we don’t have a good economy you can forget foreign policy, fighting wars, or healthcare, funding for top education. The economy needs to be front and center, not religion, steriotypes and other trivial things.

    It’s time to remind the public about the Keating 5. Here the banks are falling appart and the economy is going into recession and we want to reward a slime ball like McCain who was wrapped up with Charles Keating, the guy who tanked Lincoln Savings & Loan, driving a previous recession? Go figure. Given what this did to the economy in the early 90’s, McCain should have just taken a baseball bat to the knee caps of the American people. Mitt is too kind to this power hungry geriatric sellout!
    John McCain has allowed countless billions of American dollars to be siphoned out of this country into Mexico alongside the countless billions of taxpayer dollars spent on health care, education, welfare, crime and mortgage bailouts for illegal aliens. John McCain, in his support for illegal immigration, has allowed Al Qaeda terrorist to use Mexican drug smuggling tunnels to enter the United States and plot to attack Fort Huachuca in southern Arizona. This litany of positions contrary to conservatism and American interests could go on and on.

  • Obama also did a rally in Wilmington, Delaware yesterday that drew 20,000. I was there.. I got within 10 feet of him!

  • linda: “Romney is not a politician so he doesn’t have the slick delivery others do.”

    Unless you’re talking about one of Mitt Romney’s sons, I’m going to have to laugh.

    Ron Paul, who thought he might have an outside shot at a victory in Maine, came in third with 19%.

    Hey, 19% is pretty respectable. Paul apparently is hoping for an upset in Alaska tomorrow, which might be the one place where he could get some traction. Except… Alaska has a closed caucus, and you’d expect Paul would do better with non-GOP support.

  • I know that goosebump feeling, gemstate. When I was twelve, I joined with thousands of others and we all got them listening to Billy Graham. People who tell us we can be better are wonderful to listen to. Inspiration is a gift. I’m just not sure if inspiration – or likeability – is my top criteria for President.

  • Senator Clinton is the velcro candidate. Everything they throw at her sticks. Most of it is speculation and inuendo. The accusations are motivated by people who want her to be a polarizing figure, and do not want her to be president.
    And unfortunately most Americans believe everything they hear.
    My Uncle once cautioned me to believe nothing of what I hear and only half of what I see. Good advice.

  • Obama also did a rally in Wilmington, Delaware yesterday that drew 20,000. I was there.. I got within 10 feet of him!

    Too bad you didn’t get close enough to touch his cloak, it may have cured your leprosy.

  • The stakes are high on Super Tuesday for the republican parties’ presidential contenders, but it could not be higher for them than it is for America.
    It is very important for the voter to do some homework this weekend so that we as a nation do not end up with a severe case of buyers’ remorse on Wednesday morning. We must be true to our roots and not allow the wolves in sheep’s clothing to rob us blind, and deprive us of who we are, and what we represent as a people once enlightened with the vision of Abraham Lincoln, Ronald Reagan, and George Bush.
    There are wolves and they have been running a well coordinated attack, and have already taken some of our associates down. These wolves have us on the run and have begun to strategically divide us, and scatter us in preparation for the final move, the destruction of liberty. They want to chase us down the dark road too socialism. We need to rally around our core principles and adhere to them. We must ensure the safety, and success of our parties’ great but now endangered legacy. We need to rise up with a united voice and cast our vote this coming Tuesday, to the only conservative out there; that man is Mitt Romney. Vote Mitt Romney President of the United States of America in 2008.
    http://libertysfront.blogspot.com/

  • The difference between Romney trolls and Paul trolls is that some of the Romney-ites write in paragraphs.

    The temperament issue is going to do in McCain. He’s the opposite of Obama in that the more one sees of McCain the less they can like him. Case in point, check out this video of McCain trying to liven up his audience with some really awful jokes – http://thinkprogress.org/2008/02/04/mccains-stand-up-comedy-routine/ . He’s going to melt down in the heat of the campaign like ice cream in July. It will be a spectacle.

  • you know if you google “guy smiley” and click “images” you get many pictures of mittens? it’s true. would that the GOP were so generous as to give us mutt to run against. unfortunately mittens will soon fade back into his enormous wealth and secret underwear. sorry, i’m incorrigible.

  • I was just thinking the same thing, RacerX—Obama gets 15,000 in Boise and 20,000 in Wilmington—but Fortress Hillary can only compel 5,000 to appear before her in a place the size of Los Angeles?

    *Evil laughter ensues….

  • “The New York Daily News endorsed Clinton over the weekend.”

    What’s interesting is the much more conservative NY Post endorsed Obama.. is that as “bad” for him as it was for McCain when the NYT endorsed him???

  • Linda the propaganda troll (#3) says:

    It’s time to remind the public about the Keating 5. Here the banks are falling appart and the economy is going into recession and we want to reward a slime ball like McCain who was wrapped up with Charles Keating, the guy who tanked Lincoln Savings & Loan, driving a previous recession? Go figure. Given what this did to the economy in the early 90’s, McCain should have just taken a baseball bat to the knee caps of the American people. Mitt is too kind to this power hungry geriatric sellout!

    For those of us who were a bit beyond running around the playroom in plastic pants back then and remember the facts, the truth is that what screwed the 90s was the Savings and Loan scandal, of which Lincoln Savings & Loan was only one very small part, as good ol’ Republican con artists perfected the arts of flipping homes, inflating prices, screwing things up with S&Ls around the country since they weren’t as closely supervised as the banks were back then – you know, the typical Republican bank-robber/shellgame-artist type of stuff, more sophisticated than the way they brought the Twenties to a screeching halt and less sophisticated than the way they’re bringing this decade to a screeching halt with their crimes – but it’s all the standard Republican flim-flam game.

    But it is nice to see that Linda Troll can use the cut-and-paste function, which proves that modern computers are so user-friendly that bipeds lacking frontal lobes and opposable thumbs can use them just like real people.

  • I don’t suppose anyone is interested in considering that the large crowds for Obama are consistent with people wanting a look at someone they aren’t familiar with, are they? I have to think that a lot of people in Idaho aren’t really sure what to make of this guy, Obama, and given the chance, have come out to see what it’s all about.

    Just a thought.

    I’m not discounting his ability to draw a crowd, just think people should not assume that eveyone in attendance is already among the converted, or the committed. I think everyone who has the chance to see a candidate in person should take the opportunity – it’s just not the same as seeing someone on TV.

  • “I don’t suppose anyone is interested in considering that the large crowds for Obama are consistent with people wanting a look at someone they aren’t familiar with, are they? I have to think that a lot of people in Idaho aren’t really sure what to make of this guy, Obama, and given the chance, have come out to see what it’s all about.”

    My hope is that you’re correct.. I want everyone who isn’t sure about Obama or doesn’t know much about him to go to one of his rallies. Pre-converted supporters (like me) are relatively speaking a waste of space at the rallies, except as cheerleaders.

  • Senator Clinton is the velcro candidate. Everything they throw at her sticks. Most of it is speculation and inuendo.

    Four words: Michigan, Florida, broken pledge

  • Not only did Barack get 15,000 in Boise and 20,000 in Wilmington, he got 25,000 in St. Louis last night.

    And while Billary got 5,000 here in Lohz Ahngeleez, Michelle Obama got 8,000 out at UCLA, where she gave a great speech about the backgrounds of her and her husband, how (while Hillary was getting a nice check for sitting on the board of Wal-Mart and voting to OK all their anti-union policies and their predatory expansion plans that wrecked jobs and livelihoods across small town America) he was turning down major offers from NYC Law Firms – the Editor of the Harvard Law Review gets lots of those – in favor of working in public service and work as a community organizer. Michelle Obama got as great an audience reaction as her husband got in all those other rallies.

    So who’s got the wind at their back with the politics of addition, rather than the politics of subtraction???

  • “Senator Clinton is the velcro candidate. Everything they throw at her sticks. Most of it is speculation and inuendo.”

    Four words: Michigan, Florida, broken pledge

    Three more: AUMF, Kyl-Lieberman

  • I don’t suppose anyone is interested in considering that the large crowds for Obama are consistent with people wanting a look at someone they aren’t familiar with, are they? I have to think that a lot of people in Idaho aren’t really sure what to make of this guy, Obama, and given the chance, have come out to see what it’s all about.

    That would actually be really, really good for Obama because from what I can tell his primary mode of getting people to believe in him as a candidate is hearing him speak live. That’s why the pundits have been leery of his chances on Super Tuesday, after all, because his strength is in the “one-on-one” political arena and his weakness is supposedly in the “mass market advertising” arena.

  • * There was quite a bit of talk yesterday about a possible “push poll” launched by the Clinton campaign against Obama in California. It looks like it may not have been a push poll after all.

    For those who don’t follow links

    It was an interview process designed to figure out what push polls might work.
    A META push poll, of sorts.

    It isn’t the crap itself. It’s the odor you detect before it’s flung at you.
    Just sit tight, it’ll interrupt your dinner hour soon.

  • “Senator Clinton is the velcro candidate. Everything they throw at her sticks. Most of it is speculation and inuendo.”

    Then there’s the Nevada memo given to her precinct captains: “It’s not illegal unless they tell you so.” “GET CREATIVE.” “Don’t be afraid to go negative on other candidates.” Or close the doors at 11:30 even though the rules state noon.

  • Since when is “creative” a bad thing?! I do hope that the next president gets very creative in trying to fix the country.

    I also wonder how many of Obama’s supporters are aiming for some sort of redemption? If he becomes the nominee, I really hope we don’t have to wear robes to his rallies.

  • Tom Cleaver said:
    Linda the propaganda troll (#3) says….

    Come on now, what’s with the name calling? What are you folks … Republicans?

    Linda is misinformed, but with our corporate-controlled media can you blame her? Instead of treating her like a skunk at a picnic, why not try to show her where she’s wrong.

    Here is the reality — SUPPLY SIDE ECONOMICS DOESN’T WORK! You can’t cut taxes and still increase defense spending and maintain adequate discretionary spending without running up huge deficits. Okay, maybe you can, but only if you can come up with enough magical pixie dust that you can sprinkle it over the entire economy. But barring a wholesale slaughter of pixies, there’s not enough “waste, fraud and abuse” — even after seven years of Bush and his cronies — to make up for the lost revenue.

    Our economy has turned into the old joke where two Hindus stranded on a desert island get rich selling coconuts to each other, until a Chinese comes along and gets richer than both of them by acting as their middleman. All our wealth is on paper and we’re producing less and less of tangible things. ENRON was only an extreme example of what our economy has become.

    Romeny the businessman was apparently a genius at playing this game. He got rich buying companies and then letting them (and their worker’s jobs) be dismantled — after taking his cut off the top.
    http://www.coldheartedtruth.com/index.php/UserBlog/2008/01/27/as_bain_slashed_jobs_romney_stayed_to_si

    Our national debt, our trade deficit and our dependence on oil have made the U.S. weak. Sure, we have the weapons to attack just about any second- or third-world county. But China or Saudi Arabia just have to turn the right screws and we’re back in 1929.

    We have the Republicans on the run. So let’s not attack people, let’s attack their ideas. Let’s drive a stake through the heart of Supply Side Economics, “strict constructionism”, the power of the “free market” and all their other bullshit myths.

  • Not only did Barack get 15,000 in Boise and 20,000 in Wilmington and 25,000 in St. Louis, but the Target Center in Minneapolis was sold out–20,000 showed up to see him! I do have to add, the local news channel 4 (WCCO) ten o’clock news led with Mittsy drawing a crowd of about 750 in upscale Edina (Every Day I Need Attention) and spent more time on that then the 20,000 Obama attracted. It looks like its goign to be a fantastic year for the Democrats (btw, Al Franken in now leading Norm Coleman in the polls).

  • The numbers coming to Obama’s rallies are impressive. It’s sort of like judging the worth of a movie by its box office receipts. Reagan had big crowds too.

  • Ron Paul Beats McCain in Maine Caucus, Primed to Win Over 1/3 of State Delegates

    In the race for delegates, Ron Paul appears to closely trail Romney for first place

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    February 4, 2008

    ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA – While most reports about this past weekend’s Maine Caucus focused on the purely symbolic presidential preference poll, in the meaningful race to secure delegates to the state convention Ron Paul is primed to finish second with likely 35 percent of the total delegates.

    Delegates to the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis are elected by the state delegates. Internal results from 10 of 16 counties, including the largest cities of Portland, South Portland, Lewiston, Auburn, Augusta, Waterville, Bangor, and Brewer, show Ron Paul picking up 215 of 608 State Convention delegates so far reported, or 35%.

    “Ron Paul’s strong second place finish in Maine, in which he beat John McCain, is proof that this race is far from over,” said Ron Paul campaign manager Lew Moore. “We’ll continue to battle for every delegate in this wide-open race for the Republican nomination.”

    In the presidential preference poll, with 70 percent reporting, Ron Paul is in third place just two percentage points behind John McCain. However, the Maine preference poll is purely a beauty contest, and in the actual election of state delegates the so-called “frontrunner” McCain is far behind Ron Paul.

  • Nobody cared, even a little about the Maine caucus? I suggest you look at comment #33. He is right, and you are wrong. Do your homework first….the Maine caucus is non-binding. John McCain was barely a blip on the delegate radar.

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