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On May 02 2012 01:49 BluePanther wrote:Show nested quote +On May 02 2012 01:21 paralleluniverse wrote:On May 02 2012 01:14 BluePanther wrote:On May 02 2012 01:09 paralleluniverse wrote:On May 02 2012 01:06 BluePanther wrote:On May 01 2012 23:16 Jon Huntsman wrote:On May 01 2012 21:45 BluePanther wrote:I'm sorry, but I don't know anyone in the next generation of likely candidates for political office around me who feel that way. Many agree with me on a lot of stuff, particularly the social stuff. I think the our generation of politicians will draw the line around economic/government theory and foreign relations rather than social issues. Many agree with you on a lof stuff already... On the other side of the political spectrum. You seem to think changing the Republican base's views on climate change, the existence of God, homophobia and probably a dozen other core issues is going to be easier than changing the one thing about the Democrats you dislike (in this case, unions), while they agree with you on the other 90% of things. It's like saying you're willing to enter into a gay relationship because you would rather have sex with men and be willing to put up with the fact that you dislike penises, facial hear, testostrone, etc. In the hope that one day you will develop homosexual feelings, just because you dislike the fact that women get periods but are otherwise 90% perfectly attractive to you. Not really. There is a fundamental disconnect there. I have two good friends running for state assembly as Democrats, and there is not a chance in hell I'd vote for either one of them. Democrats want too much say in the personal lives of individuals. They just do it in ways that are more subtle than the bible thumping sect of Republicans. Look, you can argue with me that I'm a closet Democrat all you want... it's just not true. I know where I stand and I know why I stand there. Yes, I'm absolutely a moderate Republican. I'm proud of being a moderate. But I'm not a Democrat. Like what? I'm rather tired, so I'll just give you one example: Renewable Portfolio Standards. There are many others, but I don't like this type of governance and I believe it's rather paternalistic. It's a very fundamental disagreement over what government is and how it should function. I may write a book about this at some point, I'll be sure to send you a copy if I do That's an economic/environmental policy not a social "I'm destroying your personal freedom" type policy. I've never received a free book from anyone, but I wouldn't mind receiving yours (one day), as I'm intrigued by your apparent "doublethink". Also, I think more moderate and rational conservatives would be good thing in general. As I'm liberal, at least then we would probably agree on most issues apart from maybe economics. But I think you're dreaming. On it's face, it purports to be entirely environmental. But your mandates solution affects me in small ways, such as in fuel prices. To observe your pet project, you're essentially asking me to pay the costs. It dilutes my money, and indirectly my freedom to do with it what I wish (we're talking non-taxed income expenditures here). I'm not saying both sides don't engage in this behavior. I'm just saying that Dems do it in a far more subtle and powerful ways. It's far better politically as well. This is true of basically every single policy ever.
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On an off note, how on earth is Pigovian taxation of negative externalities destroying someone's freedom? The entire point of an externality is that someone is offloading their costs onto someone else.
Taxing someone for the damage they inflict on bystanders actually increases "freedom", not decreases it (whatever the hell "freedom" is). Unless there's a Coasian solution that costs less. Which is sometimes true, but generally isn't for national affairs.
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On May 02 2012 11:49 Jon Huntsman wrote:Show nested quote +On May 02 2012 09:28 Wolvmatt. wrote:On May 01 2012 10:10 Signet wrote:On May 01 2012 10:02 Josealtron wrote:On May 01 2012 09:55 Smat wrote:On May 01 2012 09:37 zachMEISTER wrote:On May 01 2012 09:21 Chytilova wrote:On May 01 2012 07:37 kwizach wrote:Very good article in the Washington Post summing up what most people already know: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/lets-just-say-it-the-republicans-are-the-problem/2012/0/27/gIQAxCVUlT_story.htmlWe have been studying Washington politics and Congress for more than 40 years, and never have we seen them this dysfunctional. In our past writings, we have criticized both parties when we believed it was warranted. Today, however, we have no choice but to acknowledge that the core of the problem lies with the Republican Party.
The GOP has become an insurgent outlier in American politics. It is ideologically extreme; scornful of compromise; unmoved by conventional understanding of facts, evidence and science; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition.
When one party moves this far from the mainstream, it makes it nearly impossible for the political system to deal constructively with the country’s challenges.
“Both sides do it” or “There is plenty of blame to go around” are the traditional refuges for an American news media intent on proving its lack of bias, while political scientists prefer generality and neutrality when discussing partisan polarization. Many self-styled bipartisan groups, in their search for common ground, propose solutions that move both sides to the center, a strategy that is simply untenable when one side is so far out of reach.
It is clear that the center of gravity in the Republican Party has shifted sharply to the right. Well I think that's probably one of the best Washington Post articles I've seen. Underlying this article shows one of the weakness of the US Constitution. It necessitates a two-party system which can under certain conditions (like we are seeing today) be extremely detrimental. Of all the things going wrong in this country I'm being convinced more and more that a multi-party system is really essential. It's funny how that works huh?. Washington always warned us about falling into a battle of the 2-party system. Stating it was ultimately a bad move, and we should steer away from it. Who cares if the Republican party has shifted to the right. If America doesn't want it then they won't get the votes and the party will change to get votes. If the GOP is so fucking crazy and such an outlier then why do people still vote for them? Answer: because they disagree with the other side regardless of how centrist and compromising that side believes itself to be. Maybe if we all just pull together and vote for democrats 5 elections in a row things will get better right? We should just become a one party state and follow the compromising "good" side.. The reason the GOP gets votes is that they are much better at appealing to stupid people than Democrats are. Most Americans don't research all the facts/historical evidence for the views and claims that are spouted out by the candidates, they just vote for whoever their friends/family/church votes for, or for whoever "seems" better. If all Americans actually researched history and data when it comes to taxation and other economic policy and most of the other issues, then the GOP would almost never win elections. But because they don't, they're able to convince 50% of Americans that their economic policies would be good for anyone except the rich, and so they get votes. Actually the Democratic party typically wins the votes of the least educated people. (they also win the most educated people) Republicans do better among people with roughly average intelligence. Granted, "average" is still appallingly stupid. For example, I'd wager Palin's IQ is between 95 and 105. Who the fuck cares about what you guess somebody's IQ is? Seriously, I'm willing to bet the moon has a core of molten monterey jack. That doesn't mean I'm right, or even anywhere close to right. Just because someone is academically educated does not necessarily mean they are intelligent. Most Republican voters have done pretty well for themselves financially because they have entrepreneural minds, whereas a lot of Democratic voters who are academics at university would never know how to make money out in the real world.
Can you verify any of these assumptions with independent, reliable statistics? Because if not then its not more than a bar-room cliche.
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On May 02 2012 03:14 Wegandi wrote:Show nested quote +On May 01 2012 20:21 paralleluniverse wrote:On May 01 2012 19:58 AcuWill wrote: Having an economic discussion with people that think FDR pulled the US out of the Great Depression is completely useless. The data actually shows FDR extended it and it only resolved when interventions were removed. I won't bother trying to post a simple link for it, but you have a line of research to work from to educate yourself. Either way, as you will see below, it is irrelevant to the thesis being supplied that an interventionist economy provides growth and stability.
This is because nobody has bothered to look at WHY we had a Great Depression. It was the FEDERAL RESERVES INTERVENTIONIST POLICIES THAT CAUSED IT.
So even if it were true that interventionist economics pulled the country out of the Great Depression (which it didn't), citing interventionist policies for providing a stable, growing, healthy economy with ANY discussion of the Great Depression is hardly foundation for the arguement that interventionsionist economic policies cause said economic stability and growth as the interventions CAUSED the worst economic situation during the 20th century it in the first place. The Fed did not cause the Great Depression. The cause of the Great Depression was the burst of a massive bubble in stock prices, which led to the crash at the NYSE. The Fed's policy of keeping the interest rates high prolonged the depression. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causes_of_the_great_depressionThe Great Depression was 2 recessions in a row, the first started in 1929 and was caused by the stock market crash, and the recovery was caused by FDR's public spending and policies like deposit insurance and ending the gold standard. The second started in 1937 and was caused by FDR trying to balance the budget, and the recovery from this was caused by World War II: the largest fiscal stimulus in history. So FDR did fix it, then stuffed it up, then WWII came. You are aware that at no time in the 1930s did unemployment ever dip below 14.6%. (caveat it was ~9% in 1930..), and for the majority of the years involved it was above 20%. If you call that a fix, I don't want anything to do with your disastrous economics and value-system.
it was my understanding that the great depression was brought on by the owners of the 3 major banks, Bank of America, Citi group, and Chase pulling all of their money out of the market then after some time buying up the cheap stock. With the fed prolonging the pain through interest rates.
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Or his campaign is taking a gamble on the Republican's focusing on silly supposed "ties" to historic socialism/Marxism while Obama can then capitalize on discussing actual issues. A scenario in which the Republican party's focus on inane crap instead of anything real comes back to bite them doesn't seem too far off.
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At this point, the far right's going to compare him to the Nazis no matter what he does. Nazis did a ton of evil things, but even more things that are just common (eating, or more politically - promote nationalism) and some things that were good (ex - invest in new technologies). No matter what somebody does they can be compared to the Nazis.
For that matter, Obama wants to invest in rail infrastructure. Mussolini made the trains run on time! Hitler loaded people onto trains to take them to concentration camps! Aaaahhhhhhh!
I think his campaign has accepted that he's going to lose the votes of people who are inclined to see him as the American Hitler.
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On May 02 2012 12:45 DeepElemBlues wrote: There's no rule that you have to refer to a President as "President <Last Name>," nor is it considered bad manners to refer to him to as "Mr. <Last Name>" or simply by his last name.
There's no rule, but that doesn't mean it's not deliberately used to subtly shape opinions about Presidents you don't like. People of all political leanings do this, though, so it's not like this disingenuous tactic is owned by any side.
On May 02 2012 12:45 DeepElemBlues wrote: After three years too much time has passed to blame your predecessor.
That's a ridiculously illogical statement. Some things that a predecessor does will not have impacts beyond three years, while others will.
On May 02 2012 12:45 DeepElemBlues wrote: Great polarization is good, it means that a lasting change is coming one way or another and sooner rather than later. At the time people think it's terrible but it's just a sign that the old political orders are not delivering results anymore and people are interested in finding new solutions.
Lasting changes have never come about during periods of great polarization. The most sweeping changes to American policy have always been on the back of bipartisan consensus (even if that consensus was temporary). See No Child Left Behind, or the Patriot Act in the wake of 9/11, etc.
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Dick Morris (Clinton's former adviser) is predicting a landslide victory for Romney:
With most current presidential polls of likely voters showing 9 percent to 10 percent undecided, the question of where the undecided votes go becomes of paramount importance.
To answer this question, I compared the final Gallup polls with the actual results in every race in which an incumbent president was opposing an insurgent since 1964. This included the Johnson-Goldwater race of 1964, the Nixon-McGovern race of 1972, the Carter-Ford race of 1976, the Reagan-Carter-Anderson race of 1980, the Reagan-Mondale race of 1984, the Clinton-Bush-Perot race of 1992, the Clinton-Dole race of 1996 and the Bush-Kerry race of 2004.
In these races, the undecided vote went heavily for the insurgent and the incumbent lost vote share between the final poll and the election, even when the incumbent was winning the contest easily overall. Six of eight presidents seeking reelection performed worse than the final Gallup poll predicted, while one finished the same (Reagan in 1984) and one gained votes (Bush in 2004). Seven of the nine insurgent candidates did better than the final Gallup survey predicted.
• In 1964, Johnson lost 3 points to Goldwater at the end.
• In 1972, Nixon lost 1 point to a third-party candidate.
• In 1976, there was a 4-point swing to Carter.
• In 1980, there was a 3-point swing to Reagan or Anderson.
• In 1984, there was no change between the final poll and the results.
• In 1992, there was a 1-point shift away from Bush. In that contest, there was also a 5-point swing away from Clinton to Perot at the end.
• In 1996, there was a 5-point swing away from Clinton and to Dole or Perot.
• Only Bush in 2004 ran better in the result than in the final poll, by
2 points.
In other words, of the total of
19 points that shifted between the final poll and the election results, 17 points or 89 percent went to the challenger.
The implications of these findings are that the current polls, while seemingly close, portend a strong Republican victory. The RealClearPolitics.com average of the past eight presidential horse race polls shows Obama with a 47-44 lead over Romney. But among likely voters, in the Rasmussen survey (all others were of either registered voters or adults), the president was running behind Romney by 48-44.
But given the historical fact that the final results are almost always worse for the president and almost never better, we really need to focus on the Obama vote share rather than his lead or lack of one against Romney. If Obama is, indeed, getting 44 percent of the vote, he is likely facing, at least, an 11-point loss. If he is getting 47 percent of the vote, he is looking, at least, at a 6-point defeat. (Given the fact that six of the eight incumbent presidents not only lost the undecided, but finished lower than the pre-election survey predicted, it would be more likely that Obama’s margin of defeat would be greater than even these numbers suggest.)
There are other indications of a Republican landslide in the offing. Party identification has moved a net of eight points toward the GOP since the last election. In Senate races, there are currently eight Democratic-held seats where Republicans are now leading either the Democratic incumbent or the Democratic candidate for the open seat.
The predictions of a close election are all based on polling of registered voters — not likely voters — and fail to account for the shift in votes against the incumbent that has been the norm of the past presidential contests.
http://www.dickmorris.com/undecided-lean-to-insurgent/
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On May 03 2012 13:11 xDaunt wrote: Dick Morris (Clinton's former adviser) is predicting a landslide victory for Romney:
Dick Morris was always a conservative except when he served as an advisor for Bill Clinton (who was a personal friend), and mostly "helped" Clinton win re-election by convincing him to adopt Republican policies. Describing him primarily as Clinton's former advisor, when he's a Fox News analyst and conservative writer, is disingeuous at best.
Regardless, his prediction is way too early; it's far from the final Gallup polls he's using as a basis for his argument. Obama hasn't even begun to deploy his sizable war chest, which will certainly make a major impact.
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On May 03 2012 13:11 xDaunt wrote:Dick Morris (Clinton's former adviser) is predicting a landslide victory for Romney: Show nested quote +With most current presidential polls of likely voters showing 9 percent to 10 percent undecided, the question of where the undecided votes go becomes of paramount importance.
To answer this question, I compared the final Gallup polls with the actual results in every race in which an incumbent president was opposing an insurgent since 1964. This included the Johnson-Goldwater race of 1964, the Nixon-McGovern race of 1972, the Carter-Ford race of 1976, the Reagan-Carter-Anderson race of 1980, the Reagan-Mondale race of 1984, the Clinton-Bush-Perot race of 1992, the Clinton-Dole race of 1996 and the Bush-Kerry race of 2004.
In these races, the undecided vote went heavily for the insurgent and the incumbent lost vote share between the final poll and the election, even when the incumbent was winning the contest easily overall. Six of eight presidents seeking reelection performed worse than the final Gallup poll predicted, while one finished the same (Reagan in 1984) and one gained votes (Bush in 2004). Seven of the nine insurgent candidates did better than the final Gallup survey predicted.
• In 1964, Johnson lost 3 points to Goldwater at the end.
• In 1972, Nixon lost 1 point to a third-party candidate.
• In 1976, there was a 4-point swing to Carter.
• In 1980, there was a 3-point swing to Reagan or Anderson.
• In 1984, there was no change between the final poll and the results.
• In 1992, there was a 1-point shift away from Bush. In that contest, there was also a 5-point swing away from Clinton to Perot at the end.
• In 1996, there was a 5-point swing away from Clinton and to Dole or Perot.
• Only Bush in 2004 ran better in the result than in the final poll, by
2 points.
In other words, of the total of
19 points that shifted between the final poll and the election results, 17 points or 89 percent went to the challenger.
The implications of these findings are that the current polls, while seemingly close, portend a strong Republican victory. The RealClearPolitics.com average of the past eight presidential horse race polls shows Obama with a 47-44 lead over Romney. But among likely voters, in the Rasmussen survey (all others were of either registered voters or adults), the president was running behind Romney by 48-44.
But given the historical fact that the final results are almost always worse for the president and almost never better, we really need to focus on the Obama vote share rather than his lead or lack of one against Romney. If Obama is, indeed, getting 44 percent of the vote, he is likely facing, at least, an 11-point loss. If he is getting 47 percent of the vote, he is looking, at least, at a 6-point defeat. (Given the fact that six of the eight incumbent presidents not only lost the undecided, but finished lower than the pre-election survey predicted, it would be more likely that Obama’s margin of defeat would be greater than even these numbers suggest.)
There are other indications of a Republican landslide in the offing. Party identification has moved a net of eight points toward the GOP since the last election. In Senate races, there are currently eight Democratic-held seats where Republicans are now leading either the Democratic incumbent or the Democratic candidate for the open seat.
The predictions of a close election are all based on polling of registered voters — not likely voters — and fail to account for the shift in votes against the incumbent that has been the norm of the past presidential contests. http://www.dickmorris.com/undecided-lean-to-insurgent/
Romney's much too intelligent to throw his hat in the ring if he didn't think he could win it. He's not like McCain, who was a career politician who had a stint in the army. Romney knows that if he wants to be a CEO of a company, he'll be one. He knows that if he wants to be President, and that the incumbent is someone who lacks experience, he'll get it. Obama relied on sentimentality to get elected. Romney isn't an meatheaded Christian like Huckabee who was too afraid to take on Obama becase Huckabee is like Obama - someone who influences people's emotions through hype, rather than rely on intelligence. Huckabee is gambling on the hopes that Obama will win this time so that he can challenge the Presidency in 2016. Mitt knows when a job has to be done, he can do it. You don't get to that level of richness without knowing how to get what you want.
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On May 02 2012 00:54 BluePanther wrote:Show nested quote +On May 02 2012 00:15 Derez wrote:
It's almost as sickening as the influence that business holds over (international) politics. Luckily we have Mitt 'corporations are people, my friend' Romney standing up for the little guy. Unions have downsides, but are also responsible for most of the advances in workplace regulation. If anything, unions are becoming more and more marginalized, due to their demographic make-up and the vast expansion of corporate power.
With all due respect, in America, legally speaking, Corporations ARE people. I know it sounds super confusing, but that's how corporations are treated under the law. What Mitt said was 100% accurate. What people think that saying means... is not what it means.
I always took it to mean that since corporations are owned and run by people they should be treated as people in the same way that we treat small businesses as people.
Or, another way to put it - if you cause a corporation pain that pain is ultimately felt by people (shareholders, employees, etc.). As in, if you 'stick it to the corporations' you are sticking it to the people...
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On May 03 2012 13:42 sunprince wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2012 13:11 xDaunt wrote: Dick Morris (Clinton's former adviser) is predicting a landslide victory for Romney: Dick Morris was always a conservative except when he served as an advisor for Bill Clinton (who was a personal friend), and mostly "helped" Clinton win re-election by convincing him to adopt Republican policies. Describing him primarily as Clinton's former advisor, when he's a Fox News analyst and conservative writer, is disingeuous at best. Regardless, his prediction is way too early; it's far from the final Gallup polls he's using as a basis for his argument. Obama hasn't even begun to deploy his sizable war chest, which will certainly make a major impact. While I don't think it will be a landslide either way (unless the impact of voter registration and ID laws is large), I do think Obama's projected odds are inflated. It's hard to call anyone a favorite at the national level with the extreme amount of polarization today among the electorate; these days getting 53% of the split vote is a huge deal.
I'm still saying unemployment needs to fall to the mid-high 7.X% range for Obama to win. Currently 8.2% and there's pessimism about the upcoming April numbers.
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On May 03 2012 13:59 Signet wrote: While I don't think it will be a landslide either way (unless the impact of voter registration and ID laws is large), I do think Obama's projected odds are inflated. It's hard to call anyone a favorite at the national level with the extreme amount of polarization today among the electorate; these days getting 53% of the split vote is a huge deal.
I don't disagree. I think it's way too early to call this one for either side.
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On May 03 2012 13:44 Jon Huntsman wrote: Romney's much too intelligent to throw his hat in the ring if he didn't think he could win it. He's not like McCain, who was a career politician who had a stint in the army. Romney knows that if he wants to be a CEO of a company, he'll be one. He knows that if he wants to be President, and that the incumbent is someone who lacks experience, he'll get it. Obama relied on sentimentality to get elected. Romney isn't an meatheaded Christian like Huckabee who was too afraid to take on Obama becase Huckabee is like Obama - someone who influences people's emotions through hype, rather than rely on intelligence. Huckabee is gambling on the hopes that Obama will win this time so that he can challenge the Presidency in 2016. Mitt knows when a job has to be done, he can do it. You don't get to that level of richness without knowing how to get what you want. I'm not sure I'd equate a willingness to say whatever people want to hear with intelligence.
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On May 03 2012 14:19 Jumbled wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2012 13:44 Jon Huntsman wrote: Romney's much too intelligent to throw his hat in the ring if he didn't think he could win it. He's not like McCain, who was a career politician who had a stint in the army. Romney knows that if he wants to be a CEO of a company, he'll be one. He knows that if he wants to be President, and that the incumbent is someone who lacks experience, he'll get it. Obama relied on sentimentality to get elected. Romney isn't an meatheaded Christian like Huckabee who was too afraid to take on Obama becase Huckabee is like Obama - someone who influences people's emotions through hype, rather than rely on intelligence. Huckabee is gambling on the hopes that Obama will win this time so that he can challenge the Presidency in 2016. Mitt knows when a job has to be done, he can do it. You don't get to that level of richness without knowing how to get what you want. I'm not sure I'd equate a willingness to say whatever people want to hear with intelligence.
Then you, sir, are ignorant about the level of gullibility of the average voting public. You don't win elections by being true to your beliefs (see Paul). You win them through manipulation. I bet Romney sits in his throneroom every night after work going mua ha ha ha ha whilst sipping on his Mormon wine and one woman on each shoulder stroking his stack of hundred dollar bills. Even Obama says what people want to hear. If he didn't, he would probably still be going to that controversial Church. But instead of standing by his pastor of 20 years, he decides to turn his back on him for the sake of being elected to office. When you're a politician, you say whatever people want to hear. That is intelligence. Stupidity is when you go off offending people left and right and see your donations dry up like a deflated sex doll.
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On May 03 2012 14:30 Jon Huntsman wrote: Even Obama says what people want to hear. If he didn't, he would probably still be going to that controversial Church. But instead of standing by his pastor of 20 years, he decides to turn his back on him for the sake of being elected to office. When you're a politician, you say whatever people want to hear. That is intelligence. Stupidity is when you go off offending people left and right and see your donations dry up like a deflated sex doll. From what I've read, Obama doesn't go to church very often but realized that that doesn't fly in a national election, so he picked a large enough church where he wouldn't have necessarily been noticed and just said he'd been going there for 20 years. His mistake was in not researching the church to make sure that it was mainline protestant with an uncontroversial pastor.
Whichever story is true though, it fits your point that Obama knew he had to tell people what they wanted to hear in order to win the election.
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WASHINGTON -- A prominent Iowa Republican, and a major supporter of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, did not hesitate to answer when asked recently how many of the Hawkeye State's 28 delegates he expects Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) to have heading into the national convention in Tampa this August.
"Twenty," he said.
Conversations with numerous Iowa Republicans confirms the same thing: The state party establishment is dreading a Paul rout on June 15 and 16 at the two-day congressional district/state convention in Des Moines.
"Paul is costing the state a lot of credibility," said Bob Haus, a GOP consultant who most recently headed up Texas Gov. Rick Perry's campaign in the state.
Another Republican operative who works for a statewide official sounded an even more despondent note.
"It does not sound encouraging. The Paul people are in a position to control the delegates, and the result would be chaotic for the Republican Party of Iowa and bring it to a screeching halt, rendering it completely irrelevant to our efforts here," the Republican aide told The Huffington Post. "Nobody would rely on [the state party] for anything."
After the fiasco earlier this year involving the caucus results, Iowans are nervous that if Paul gets a majority of the delegates, it will endanger their first-in-the-nation primary status. On Jan. 3, Romney was reported the winner, only to have the state GOP announce two weeks later that the result was inconclusive, then to reverse again and say that former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum was the victor. The party chairman, Matt Strawn, resigned as a result of the confusion.
Source
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On May 03 2012 13:42 sunprince wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2012 13:11 xDaunt wrote: Dick Morris (Clinton's former adviser) is predicting a landslide victory for Romney: Dick Morris was always a conservative except when he served as an advisor for Bill Clinton (who was a personal friend), and mostly "helped" Clinton win re-election by convincing him to adopt Republican policies. Describing him primarily as Clinton's former advisor, when he's a Fox News analyst and conservative writer, is disingeuous at best. Regardless, his prediction is way too early; it's far from the final Gallup polls he's using as a basis for his argument. Obama hasn't even begun to deploy his sizable war chest, which will certainly make a major impact.
There's nothing disingenuous about referring to Morris as Clinton's former adviser. That's what he is. Sure, he's conservative as far as democratic advisers go. However, I find it funny that you mock Morris for encouraging Clinton to adopt conservative policies when it's that advice that led Clinton to win a second term and be well-regarded as a former president.
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On May 04 2012 03:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:Show nested quote +WASHINGTON -- A prominent Iowa Republican, and a major supporter of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, did not hesitate to answer when asked recently how many of the Hawkeye State's 28 delegates he expects Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) to have heading into the national convention in Tampa this August.
"Twenty," he said.
Conversations with numerous Iowa Republicans confirms the same thing: The state party establishment is dreading a Paul rout on June 15 and 16 at the two-day congressional district/state convention in Des Moines.
"Paul is costing the state a lot of credibility," said Bob Haus, a GOP consultant who most recently headed up Texas Gov. Rick Perry's campaign in the state.
Another Republican operative who works for a statewide official sounded an even more despondent note.
"It does not sound encouraging. The Paul people are in a position to control the delegates, and the result would be chaotic for the Republican Party of Iowa and bring it to a screeching halt, rendering it completely irrelevant to our efforts here," the Republican aide told The Huffington Post. "Nobody would rely on [the state party] for anything."
After the fiasco earlier this year involving the caucus results, Iowans are nervous that if Paul gets a majority of the delegates, it will endanger their first-in-the-nation primary status. On Jan. 3, Romney was reported the winner, only to have the state GOP announce two weeks later that the result was inconclusive, then to reverse again and say that former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum was the victor. The party chairman, Matt Strawn, resigned as a result of the confusion. Source Oh snap. Doesn't look like Paul will get much more than this, but Iowa is looking shaky for the general if this is the case.
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