Slow through the weekend
Some personal business came up. I might post a bit, but I doubt it. Back Monday.
Call It A Comeback
Some personal business came up. I might post a bit, but I doubt it. Back Monday.
Better Body Armor, not such a big deal
Halliburton execs watching the SuperBowl in style. Big Deal.
As far as I’m aware only one Republican has called for serious investigation into war profiteering and it is Jim Leach. Why is investigating war profiteering not something everyone agrees upon?
So, as Talking Points Memo points out:
The President launches a series of speeches that repeatedly quote the words of Osama Bin Laden to highlight how terrorists want to kill Americans. Then, a week later, he says that catching Osama Bin Laden is not a priority. Words vs. action. Rhetoric vs. reality. The Bush presidency. If only the Democrats knew how to take advantage of the glaring inconsistencies.
?I absolutely do not agree that Iraq is part of the war on terror,? said Duckworth, an Iraq war veteran, at a news conference in Oakbrook Terrace. ?I think a very small percentage of what?s happening in Iraq is terrorist activity. I think most of it is sectarian violence. It?s Sunni fighting Shiites.?
That view drew a raised eyebrow from her Republican opponent Peter Roskam.
?The notion that theater of conflict (in Iraq) is de-coupled from the war on terror, I just disagree with that,? said Roskam, a state senator from Wheaton. ?I?m actually surprised she would say that.?
Roskam agrees with Bush, who stressed in his Monday speech commemorating the five-year anniversary of the 9/11 attacks that Iraq is a key front in the war on terror.
?Al-Qaida and other extremists from across the world have come to Iraq to stop the rise of a free society in the heart of the Middle East,? Bush said. ?They have joined the remnants of Saddam?s regime and other armed groups to foment sectarian violence and drive us out.?
But Duckworth, a Hoffman Estates Army reservist who saw combat action in Iraq, disagreed.
?I think that to try to tie Iraq into the war on terror is a disservice to the real work that has to be done on the war on terror,? she said.
Duckworth lists capturing Osama bin Laden, finishing the job in Afghanistan and enacting the 9/11 Commission recommendations on homeland security as the ?real work.?
Petey and Dick Cheney aren’t up on their reading.
There can be no clearer differentiation between the reality based community and those who have decided to live in a fantasy land. Look at today’s ticker and you’ll notice these aren’t terrorist attacks, this is a low grade Civil War with tons of sectarian violence. Trying to fight it as if it were about terrorists will certainly result in even worse outcomes than we already are stuck with.
What is central to fighting terrorism is bringing down Al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden. Apparently, Bush, and Roskam since he’s following the President’s line, don’t think that’s so important.
Mark Kirk, Jerry Weller, David McSweeney and Andrea Zinga can all join in and explain to the people of Illinois exactly how getting Osama bin Laden isn’t a high priority. I’d love to see that done in a way that doesn’t cause people to either bust out laughing or just start crying.
It’s great that Dan Hynes is calling on Obama to run for President, even if I think that’s a terrible idea for 2008, but the interesting thing to me is what does it mean in terms of Madigan’s slap at Obama a few weeks ago?
Hynes learned an important lesson about organizing and appealing to those voters without strong ties to the regular Democratic operation in 2004. That he’s decided now is the time to bring this up just after a mild dustup from Madigan makes it strange to me.
The very plausible explanation is that watching George Bush fail miserably simply has Dan saying he’s HAD ENOUGH!
Despite much of the RNCC’s mail on behalf of Roskam being truly atrocious, a candidate cannot just respond once to a theme of the other campaign when she has been hit five times on immigration.
Hit back people and hit back more than once. And ignore the bait on Rosie, that’s just base stroking for Roskam. And then microtarget some mail to the Latinos in the District who are growing as a population.
I have some serious reservations about the Big Box law especially at a city level, but Daley was far from genius on this maneuver.
Daley just handed Jackson a stronger hand with SEIU and even if Jackson doesn’t run, SEIU looks to be putting together a slate of strong challengers to pro-Daley alderman. I don’t know if they’ll win and frankly, I don’t think it matters in the short term. What matters is that SEIU is creating a functioning alternative to a failing machine that has no new life and is paralyzed with fear to use the old tools of favors and patronage.
Daley will probably take the trades in terms of support, but they have been severely weakened over the years and SEIU is the single best organizer in Illinois. They are going to form an independent political organization tied to their ideals and not to contracts or jobs and that is a powerful force in politics given that voters are less tied to neighborhoods and wards that they once were. Daley might not lose because of it, but he just gave them an organizing issue and a rallying cry that even if some of the rest of the unions oppose, they cannot argue with the issue. If it’s a victory for Daley, it’s pyrhic for the remnants of his Machine.
It’s not a good time to be a Republican in Illinois
I’ve had a running debate with several good friends and people who correspond with me about the impact of a deeply unpopular President and anger at a Republican Congress on elections in Illinois. The alternative argument is that Rod will reduce that edge and somewhat even out the playing field.
I’d like to declare that I’m right on this today. Rod could still fall, though I don’t think he will and Democrats will still have a very good year in Illinois.
But the most recent Tribune poll found that even in longtime Republican-leaning regions, the GOP no longer might have the upper hand. In the collar counties, 31 percent of voters aligned themselves with Republicans while 29 percent identified with Democrats.
That’s just a stunning number. It is a very good sign for Congressional races in 6, 8, 10, and 11.
Unless the Republicans can effectively localize these races, the national trend is going to be hard to buck. Blagojevich can have relatively low popularity, but this is an election for many that is nationalized over war and corruption at the federal level. The Iraq War is deeply unpopular and that trumps more localized issues.
It’s been a bit crazy around here as I was job hunting, but that is all settled now and I’ll be getting back to a regular schedule.
If the check scandal continues to gain some traction, expect to hear that Democratic loyalists float the idea that it’s okay to vote for Rod because if there is anything in the investigations you get Pat Quinn