February 2008

Gotta Give the Guy Some Credit

Kirk Watson addresses his appearance on Hardball:

So . . . That really happened.

On Tuesday night, after an important and historic victory in the Wisconsin Presidential Primary by Senator Barack Obama, I appeared on the MSNBC post-election program. “Hardball” host Chris Matthews (who is, it turns out, as ferocious as they say), began grilling me on Senator Obama’s legislative record.

And my mind went blank. I expected to be asked about the primary that night, or the big one coming up in Texas on March 4, or just about anything else in the news. When the subject changed so emphatically, I reached for information that millions of my fellow Obama supporters could recite by heart, and I couldn’t summon it.

My most unfortunate gaffe is not, in any way, a comment on Senator Obama, his substantial record, or the great opportunity we all share to elect him President of the United States.

Had I not lost my mind, here are the accomplishments I would have mentioned:

  • Senator Obama’s fight for universal children’s health care in Illinois.
  • His success bringing Republicans and Democrats together (a huge selling point for me in general) on bills such as the one in Illinois requiring police interrogations and confessions to be videotaped.
  • His leadership on ethics reform in Washington (the bill that lobbyists and special interests are complaining about right now has his name on it).
  • His bill to make the federal budget far more transparent and accessible to Americans via the Internet – we could use that openness in Texas.
  • And his vital work with Republicans to lock down nuclear weapons around the world.

Of course, it would have helped to remember all of this last night. I encourage anyone who wants to know more (especially Mr. Matthews) to log onto texas.barackobama.com.

In the meantime, let’s not lose focus on what’s important in this election. It’s not my stunning televised defeat in “Stump the Chump.” Thankfully, it has nothing at all to do with me.

What’s important is the direction our country is headed. What’s important are the priorities, methods, and, yes, accomplishments of those seeking the highest office in the country.

Senator Obama has a vision for this nation, and we would be fortunate to fulfill it. He has the commitment to work with everyone from across the political and demographic spectrum to achieve it. And he has the strength to defend us, our security, and our values against all who will challenge them.

But most of all, he has the record to prove that all of this is possible. It’s something no one should forget.

. . . Even though I did.

. . . On national television.

Out of Context McCain

The straight shooter, not so straight:

Q. Put in context your comment about spending 100 years in Iraq.

McCain: “As we know all’s fair in politics. The fact is that everybody in the media who follows me and spends a lot of time with me I was talking about after the war is over. Just as after the war was over in Korea, there was a cease fire, we had American presence there. After the first Gulf War, we still have a presence in Kuwait. It’s very clear what I was talking about, after we succeed in this conflict and we are succeeding unless the Democrats are able to pull the plug out and cause a date for withdrawal, then we will succeed in this confilict and we will enter into negotiation and discussion as far as the military and other relationships between our two countries. I think that’s pretty clea

Yes, he wants permanent bases in Iraq:

After the event ended, I asked McCain about his “hundred years” comment, and he reaffirmed the remark, excitedly declaring that U.S. troops could be in Iraq for “a thousand years” or “a million years,” as far as he was concerned. The key matter, he explained, was whether they were being killed or not: “It’s not American presence; it’s American casualties.” U.S. troops, he continued, are stationed in South Korea, Japan, Europe, Bosnia, and elsewhere as part of a “generally accepted policy of America’s multilateralism.” There’s nothing wrong with Iraq being part of that policy, providing the government in Baghdad does not object.

In other words, McCain does not equate victory in Iraq–which he passionately urges at campaign events–with the removal of U.S. troops from that nation. After McCain told Tiffany that he could see troops remaining in Iraq for a hundred years, a reporter sitting next to me quipped, “There’s the general election campaign ad.” He meant the Democratic ad: John McCain thinks it would be okay if U.S. troops stayed in Iraq for another hundred years…..

60% of the public wants out of Iraq in one year.  They don’t have a fantasy of Iraq becoming some a stable liberal democracy.  He doesn’t want a gradual draw down of troops that isn’t happening as Oberweis is claiming.  He wants to stay there and stay there adn stay there.

And why would he want American troops permanently stationed in Iraq?  To start another war in the Persian Gulf:

McCain: I would at minimum consult with the leaders of Congress because there may come a time where you need the approval of Congress and I believe that this is a possibility that is maybe closer to reality than we are discussing tonight.

It’s not some conspiracy theory, it’s what McCain says he’ll do in the middle of a debate. Why does anyone doubt him?  And is Oberweis ready to back another war in the Persian Gulf also?

Another Fine Moment in Bill Pascoe’s Political Career

You get a big name relatively popular with independents Presidential Candidate to come in for a fundraiser and a story breaks about some odd relationship with a lobbyist who has a strikingly similar look to his wife. 

Pascoe has one of the oddest records in politics–mostly losing and losing bizarrely.   

For more fun, think of the puns

Iseman and Maverick

The Iseman Cometh

True story, the most recent McCain mailer was called The Hard Part

Cue up the “the New York Times held it to hurt Republicans” whine any moment…

Bill Foster’s Blue Plate Special

Hiram says it as well as I can:

Today John “I’ve Embraced Bush” McCain will appear in Illinois’ 14th District at a $1,000 a plate fundraiser for GOP Congressional Candidate Jim “Bush has it Right” Oberweis. Jim Oberweis likes to talk about ‘common people’ – but it’s hard to imagine too many of his Oberweis ice cream store workers can fork over $1,000 for a plate of food. Maybe that’s part of the problem. Jim touts his businessman credentials – but his ice cream workers earn minimal wages, and other workers earn less than minimum wage in his stores. Most Oberweis jobs, even the legal ones, just don’t pay very much. Certainly not enough for a $1,000 meal.

Democrat Bill Foster is also a businessman. He co-founded and then ran a lighting manufacturing company that pays good wages and benefits right here in the Midwest – you can see some of the skilled jobs it offers, along with student internships, here. Right now Bill Foster is also holding a fundraiser – a virtual one that he’s calling a “Blue Plate Special” – asking you to donate $5 or more to help him raise funds for his campaign. As poorly paid as some of Jim Oberweis’ employees are, I’d guess some of them still might be able to scrounge up $5 for a better future.

Please donate $5 or more to Bill for a “Blue Plate Special.” Bill isn’t offering the same fare that Jim Oberweis gives his $1,000 contributors, but you’ll feel a lot better about it. Supporting Bill is a positive investment in our future.

Get a “Blue Plate Special” now. You’ll be happy you did.

Hawaii

Trib on Hawaii Caucuses past:

This year, the GOP held its caucuses between Jan. 25 and Feb. 5, and turnout was about 1,700, four times the number in 2004, according to party Chairman Willes Lee.

The high water mark for Democratic caucus participation was 4,900 in 1988. But party officials say that Tuesday’s caucus participation could be triple or even quadruple that mark.

“The caucus turnout here is going to be huge,” Milner said, adding that Obama’s native son status adds to the excitement.

Hawai’i (29 delegates)

51% reporting
Barack Obama 11,691 76%
  Hillary Clinton 3584 23%

Now, we don’t know if the other 50% will have precincts as large as the first 50%, but it looks to be easily more than quadruple the previous high participation.  And it seems certain that the current 3 to 1 loser will have more votes than the entire high water mark of participation in 1988.

How Long Has This Campaign Been Going ON

Long enough for Lynn Sweet to give Obama’s speech a satirical fisking

If you read her comments-first, it’s quite funny. Second, the 45 minute speech is what everyone else gets for saying he doesn’t know substance.

In the Illinois Senate he was a policy wonk. In the US Senate, he’s a policy wonk.  Now, you are all going to be subjected to hearing it until the meme that he doesn’t know policy is dead.  Congratulations. Maybe we can get Bill Clinton to deliver another State of the Union speech too.