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The Official Midterm Election Thread
I'm done with this Election of Fear. Wake me up when this is over.
I did read an interesting article on how the anti-Obama platform could actually help the President in the long term (the thought being that a campaign needs an enemy, and once you've been voted in on that platform, the need to portray the President as an enemy passes, which makes some sense), so I did a little thinking and research, and did (unofficially) learn that mid-term elections that painted Reagan and Clinton, during their first terms, unfavorably, actually did boost each respective President's chances for re-election.
So maybe this is all much ado about nothing. Then again, isn't that politics as usual???
I did read an interesting article on how the anti-Obama platform could actually help the President in the long term (the thought being that a campaign needs an enemy, and once you've been voted in on that platform, the need to portray the President as an enemy passes, which makes some sense), so I did a little thinking and research, and did (unofficially) learn that mid-term elections that painted Reagan and Clinton, during their first terms, unfavorably, actually did boost each respective President's chances for re-election.
So maybe this is all much ado about nothing. Then again, isn't that politics as usual???

Jackie, when I was in Seattle last week, I had my fill of the Murray and Rossi ads. I grew to dislike both candidates immensely.

The Age of Unreason.

We're kind of fucked this year in Wisconsin.
I'm fascinated by the swing and what Gus said about it, though. Are these people who voted for Obama, mostly, last time, or are some people not as energized and some people more energized and likely to vote? I don't hear people scared as more as I hear people pissed. But it's an interesting issue, too...can people expect a massive turnaround in two years? In 2012 will this whole thing swing back to the Dem side? I have no idea.
I wouldn't call having Russ Feingold being fucked. I would trade Alexi Giannoulious (our Dem Senate candidate and Obama's basketball buddy) for Feingold in half a heartbeat.
Illinois is majorly fucked - $13 billion budget deficit which no amount of cuts/taxes can fix without uprisings in the streets. I'm not happy with any of my options (except maybe Toni Preckwinkle for Cook County Board President) but I'll be voting against the people who want to do away with the minimum wage and ban all abortions.
Illinois is majorly fucked - $13 billion budget deficit which no amount of cuts/taxes can fix without uprisings in the streets. I'm not happy with any of my options (except maybe Toni Preckwinkle for Cook County Board President) but I'll be voting against the people who want to do away with the minimum wage and ban all abortions.
Poor Lisa Murkowski in Alaska is trying to teach voters how to spell her name. As a write-in candidate, she has to be spelled correctly or the vote doesn't count. It didn't help that one of her own campaign staffers spelled it wrong in an ad.


In large part the election prospects for Obama are similar to those of Reagan and Clinton, two other presidents who entered office during times of economic turmoil, and faced midterms while economic difficulties lingered. And likewise, Obama, also a well-liked figure whatever his approval numbers (which are far better than those two previous presidents’ at the same juncture) may suffer a disastrous midterm, and then become highly popular once the economy begins to improve.
What’s so worrisome and distinctive this go around is the severity of the country’s structural economic problems (among other things) and the genuine threat on a long-term basis if some basic, initial steps toward mitigating those problems cannot be achieved due to ferocious, and in some cases outright irrational and ideologically extreme Republican resistance. And if the last Republican caucus wasn’t bad enough, a substantial contingent of fully batshit new Republicans seems to be on the way.
To achieve our best results as a people the country needs two functioning major political parties. At the moment, the Republican Party, overtaken by politics previously marginalized at the fringe (the Birchers, for instance, earlier purged from mainstream conservatism) is mired in a mixture of peculiar pre-enlightenment nostalgia, anti-science convictions, magical economics, nativism, nationalism and all manner of historical mythology, and downright hostility. This is a brand of conservatism entirely out of synch with, and retrograde in comparison with the conservative politics of other modern, industrialized democratic nations (and previous mainstream Republicanism), and its outsized influence here continues to severely limit American progress, and our ability to adapt to a changing world.
Politically at least, it’s relatively sane here in California at the moment. But I’m sick with worry about the rest of you guys.
Boxer is very good. And Moonbeam Brown is better than getting a stick in the eye, which is what you get with Meg Whitman.

This is really interesting, Ken. What about second term?
I think a reasonable question is one of patience; in what period of time can an administration be expected to impact structures and scenarios in a meaningful way? Of course it depends on the structures and scenarios, I guess, but I don't know who in goddamn hell expected everything to turn into roses and sunshine in twenty months. Maybe this is connected to rhetoric, too. Will there be any benefits, though, if the Republicans win the house/senate, you think?

This is really interesting, Ken. What about second term?
I think a reasonable question is one of p..."
Well, there’s only one instance since the Thirties when a first-term president didn’t get creamed electorally in his first midterm election: 2002, when George Bush and the incumbent Republicans were inoculated with 9-11 teflon.
Two term presidents usually don’t fare too well in their final mid-terms either, the result usually attributed to voter fatigue with the long-serving executive. But it’s not the political given the first midterm result is, and seldom as severe. Clinton’s final mid-term was an exception, as Democrats’ performance bucked the trend, though in part that is attributable to Republican overreaching in BlowJob-Gate. Dubya, and Reagan before him did badly in their final midterms.
Generally though, whatever virtues the American electorate may have, patience is not among them, nor any long-term, cohesive approach to voting. At this juncture though, given the disastrous nature of the country’s recent straits, and the clarity with which one can ascertain exactly who was holding power during that collapse, the amnesia, or inclination to vote in protest of immediate circumstances, or whatever reason for the refusal to allow for a reasonable amount of time for policies to come to fruition now, is astonishing.
The hope is, that perhaps before all is said and done the current wave of almost unprecedented craziness, irrationality and downright weirdness will scare some voters straight.

I thought election officials had said that intent would count, as long as they were sure they knew who the person intended.

Sarah Pi wrote: "Lobstergirl wrote: "Poor Lisa Murkowski in Alaska is trying to teach voters how to spell her name. As a write-in candidate, she has to be spelled correctly or the vote doesn't count. It didn't he..."
Oh, I musta missed that.
Oh, I musta missed that.
I don't notice any discernible difference in quality of ads. They're terrible every election year.

Maybe a little more money poured into grammar education would, uh, help, too....

Not quality - there are just many more of them, since corporations can now dump lots of money into them.

:::sigh:::

Yes, I'm easily distracted today...

:::sigh:::"
We had a huge uproar here over a soda tax. It was ridiculous. All of the convenience stores and chain stores got together to protest it. It was the difference between firing firemen and policemen or not, and it still ended up being cut in half as compromise.


http://gawker.com/5674353/i-had-a-one...
Either she loses all support or she gets major sympathy votes. Haven't seen this on major news outlets yet.

Me, too, Jim! I can't get those containers of them from Trader Joe's, because I eat ALL OF THEM in like three days.
And I don't know or care if they're taxed.

I wouldn't put too much into that hope...
And Florida goes to Gore....no, wait!...now it's Bush!...well, actually, we don't really know anymore. Our bad.
I am interested in why the guy is remaining anonymous though. That raises some red flags.

Me, too, Jim! I can't get those containers of them from Trader Joe's, because I eat ALL OF THEM in like three days.
And I don..."
I still pick them up at Trader Joes, they seem to be the best, but I do limit myself to only 4 or 5 a day.

Ha! Good question, Misha!
Jim?

The discrepancy occurred as the result of two factors. First, a significant number of voters thought they had voted for Gore, and told questioners for VNS that is how they voted. However, because of confusion over the infamous butterfly ballot, they had actually voted for Pat Buchanan, or in some cases George Bush. Had the Supreme Court not intervened, and the state been allowed to do a proper recount, those ballots still would have been thrown out.
In the second case, voters told VNS they had voted for Gore and in fact they had. However, because the ballot was confusing, not only did they mark Gore’s name, they also wrote it in to make their intent absolutely clear. Had SCOTUS not interfered, these votes, tens of thousands of which had been thrown out, WOULD HAVE BEEN COUNTED, since, under Florida election law, any ballot on which the voter intent is clear must be counted. Gore was selected on a preponderance of those ballots, and had the recount continued he would have won the state, which clearly was the intent of voters.
Gore winning the popular vote (too) was no fluke.

Republicans have a long history of asserting the prospect (with seldom any actual instances) of voter fraud in order to suppress turnout and also to intimidate voters at polling places.

I know asserting the prospect of voter fraud is SOP for the GOP machiner..."
Oh, my knowledge of Florida 2000 is fairly encyclopedic, though discussing it anew always has a tinge of masochism.
I don’t have any great familiarity with the facts in Ohio in 2004 (I recall there being suspicion), but indeed Kenneth Blackwell has always struck me as a real piece of…work.
I very much object that when I go in Walgreens to buy a soda, there's 13.25% tax.
If I thought that revenue was going to give poor people health insurance, maybe I wouldn't mind. But I have a hard time believing that's where it goes.
If I thought that revenue was going to give poor people health insurance, maybe I wouldn't mind. But I have a hard time believing that's where it goes.

Speaking of conspiracy theories, Ohio, and Bush...
http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTI...
=D

The targeting of heavily Democratic districts, in particular poor, minority areas with voting misinformation is an old and beloved GOP dirty trick. In the Senate election in North Carolina in 1990, the NC Republican Party, on behalf of the Helms campaign, sent out 100,000 such targeted mailings containing warnings based on stated misinformation designed to intimidate voters into staying home.
The FEC gave them a slap on the wrist, but the damage was done (an outcome the GOP correctly anticipated).
So....anyone still undecided on who to vote for? I've made decisions on all the major offices but don't know what to do about the constitutional amendment to have a recall provision for Governor. Oh yeah, and there are about a billion judges we're supposed to cast votes for. Makes no sense. No one knows who these people are except other judges and the lawyers who come before them.
Thanks, Misha. I'm going to go with the bar assoc's recommendations. I also found a blog explaining why they recommend No on a few judges, so that's helpful.
I did my good deed for the day: called 5 registered voters to remind them to vote. (List of voters provided by Obama rally.)
Now I am calling 5 registered Republicans to remind them to vote on Wednesday.
Now I am calling 5 registered Republicans to remind them to vote on Wednesday.
Somehow, when Bill Clinton says this, it sounds dirty.
"If you want the treat, you gotta reject the trick."
(Halloween-themed campaigning for Joe Manchin in West Virginia.)
"If you want the treat, you gotta reject the trick."
(Halloween-themed campaigning for Joe Manchin in West Virginia.)
Kidding. Well, a little. Mid-term election conversation starts...now!