Showing posts with label Bachmann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bachmann. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Michelle Bachmann Announces She Won't Seek Re-Election in 2014...

Minnesota Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann has announced she will not seek re-election in 2014. The announcement was made via a video on her website earlier this morning.

And as she likes to do so publicly, we can all thank God for this development. Clearly, I've not been a fan of hers. The number of exaggerations, mis-representations, outright lies, etc. are too numerous to chronicle. Visit one of the fact check websites, (Politifact.com or  Factcheck.org), to review how she fares under the microscope.

Michelle, the floor is yours:



I especially like the part where she said her decision not to run again in 2014 was "not influenced by any concerns about recent inquiries into her 2012 presidential campaign."This decision was not impacted in any way by the recent inquiries into the activities of my former presidential campaign or my former presidential staff.”

Perhaps her decision to not run again was partly fueled by the razor thin margin (.012) of victory last time against her Democratic opponent Jim Graves, who she outspent substantially. She claims otherwise in her remarks, saying, “My decision was not in any way influenced by any concerns about my being re-elected to Congress,” she said. “If I ran I would again defeat the individual who I defeated last year.”

Of course, it wasn't Mrs. Bachmann.

Mrs. Bachmann is among the very worst of the GOP/Tea Party leaders. Her willingness to push buttons on everything from "death panels" to Islam "jihadists" seemingly around every corner turned my stomach and to my way of thinking, made things worse for the Country. I do not suspect there's another Presidential run in her future, which has to make anyone running from the Democrats (or the media) a bit sad. Her campaign after reaching its peak at the Iowa straw polls dropped like a rock and she, in my opinion, was revealed to be a lightweight among a lightweight field of GOP hopefuls. She loves to wrap herself in the Bible, the Flag and the ghost of former President Reagan, all at once and all three make an appearance in her announcement video. She takes a few shots at President Obama for good measure and attempts to inocolate herself against the predictable unfair treatment from the media she knows is forthcoming. 


I won't be surprised to see Bachmann wind up on Glen Beck's network, (The Blaze) or Fox News, with an outside chance of a network like CNN grabbing her simply for the ratings she would probably bring. At least for a while. I'm guessing there's also a good chance of a book, a book tour, a bus tour, possibly a documentary, another book, and on and on and on. If Sarah Palin can milk political failure into financial security, why can't Michelle Bachmann?


Sources: 

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Has the media chosen to ignore the Kermit Gosnell abortion trial?

Kermit Gosnell
Has the media chosen to ignore the Kermit Gosnell abortion trial?

Michelle Bachmann thinks so...

Last Thursday, Mrs. Bachmann, (R-MIN) made the following remarks on the floor of the House of Representatives...

“Mr. Speaker, it’s difficult for me to even speak about this subject today,” Bachmann said from the floor of the House of Representatives on Thursday. “I’m a woman who’s been privileged to give birth to five children and I’ve also taken 23 children into my home as foster children.”
Michelle Bachmann
“It’s very hard for me to imagine, Mr. Speaker, that a doctor in this country—a doctor who took an oath to do no harm—would, in fact, kill a woman at his abortion clinic and he would sever the heads off of four babies that were born alive and potentially others, and commit one gruesome act after another and shamelessly the mainstream media has all but gone silent and failed to cover this horrific violence against women,” she said. “No one—Democrat or Republican—believes in violence against women, we abhor it.”
“But there’s nothing that comes close to what’s happened in this abortion clinic in Pennsylvania,” Bachmann continued. “And the officials in Pennsylvania in the State Department unfortunately, it appears, willfully ignored this heinous crime and also it appears that this has been ignored now across our nation.”
“Well, we won’t,” she said. “And I thank God for the men who stood up here today to stand for women and against violence against women. And I lend my voice and my support to that effort as well. I yield back [my time].”
I take issue with Mrs. Bachmann's suggestion that the "mainstream media has all but gone silent and failed to cover this horrific violence against women."
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I don't much care for the style of politician Mrs. Bachmann is. She made such the impression upon me during the health care reform battles of recent years, including her infamous "death panels" that I trust almost nothing she says. Did the media fail to cover this story? Well, its pretty easy to find out. 

I did a google search for "kermit gosnell" under the CNN, CBS, ABC, NBC, FOX, USA Today and Newsmax websites, searching specifically within their news departments. Here's the number of references I found for "kermit gosnell" on each of these websites:

CNN.com - 36 references 
CBS.com - 32 references
ABC.com - 251 references
NBC.com - 115 references
FOX News.com - 283 references
USA Today.com - 21 references
Newsmax.com - 48 references

I haven't read them all but I highly doubt there's a single story/editorial that defends Gosnell's unspeakable actions. (If you're unfamiliar with the story, read the Grand Jury report, its pretty damning to say the least.)  Now, reasonable people can disagree whether this story has gotten the right amount, too little or even perhaps too much coverage. The big three broadcast news organisations, (CBS, ABC and NBC) have an average of 132.7 related stories and articles about this tragedy. Two other news organisations, the USA Today, a national newspaper and Newsmax, a popular conservative news organisation, averaged 35 stories between them. ABC and Fox news were heaviest hitters on this story with an average of 267 related stories from their search. 

I think once again, Mrs. Bachmann is grandstanding and embellishing something that frankly stands on its own. For her to fight this imaginary fight against the evil "mainstream media" doesn't do anyone any good. Its a distraction from the real matter at hand, which is to figure out with a clear eye with Gosnell and his associates did or did not do and then what level of punishment is deserved through our legal system.

Bachmann would have us believe that this is a common occurrence in a land where abortions are legal. Which of course is wrong on many levels. Are their likely other clinics where regulations are not followed? Almost certainly. Might they be as bad as Gosnell's clinic? I hope not. I don't know what la-la land Mrs. Bachmann lives in, or thinks that we all live in, but if she woke up tomorrow and could close all the abortion clinics with a snap of her fingers, the horror stories would be common place and there would be NO place to legally and safely pursue an abortion. Abortions will not stop if you ban abortions. 


Sources: 

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/elizabeth-harrington/2013/04/26/bachmann-media-all-gone-silent-trial-abortionist-kermit-gosnel

http://www.phila.gov/districtattorney/pdfs/grandjurywomensmedical.pdf

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Michelle Bachman gets fact-checked...

Republican Minnesota Representative Michele Bachmann has been "fact-checked" by the Washington Post for remarks she made at CPAC when she made the following claim:


“Here's the truth that the president won't tell you. Of every dollar that you hold in your hands, 70 cents of that dollar that's supposed to go to the poor doesn't. It actually goes to benefit the bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. — 70 cents on the dollar. That's how the president's caring works in practice. So $3 in food stamps for the needy, $7 in salaries and pensions for the bureaucrats who are supposed to be taking care of the poor. So with all due respect, I ask you, how does this show that our president cares about the poor?”
— Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference, March 16, 2013
Click here to read what the Post comes up with upon further review...

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/post/bachmanns-claim-that-70-percent-of-food-stamps-go-to-bureaucrats/2013/03/18/3f85d042-8ff5-11e2-bdea-e32ad90da239_blog.html?wprss=rss_fact-checker

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

...And then there were six...Bachman suspends campaign...

Minnesota Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann has suspended her campaign at a mid day announcement.

Bachmann, coming off a disappointing 6th place performance in last night's Iowa caucus, leaves the campaign after slow but steady decline in the Iowa pools. She won the Iowa straw poll back in August, but in the months since then had seen her popularity and resonance with the Iowa voter decline. With support cratering and financial issues limiting how she could realistically fight on, a decision has apparently been made to step away now. The Associated Press has confirmed Bachmann has canceled all of her appearances in South Carolina, the next State she had hoped to contend in.

Bachmann's ultra conservative message and continued attacking of President Obama, while red meat for the far Right, failed to connect with that segment of Iowa caucus participants, who instead of supporting Bachmann or similarly defined Texas Governor Rick Perry, elected to throw their support behind former Pennsylvania Congressman Rick Santorum.

Perry announced last night that he too was canceling all of his South Carolina appointments and returning home to Texas to "assess" what his path forward should be.

So, that effectively reduces the field from seven down to five, with Jon Huntsman among this group. He won't be for long. He chose to ignore Iowa totally, perhaps out of financial limitations and concentrate on his home state of New Hampshire, where he sits in a distant fourth in most polls. Romney sits with a +40% rating compared to Huntsman's 4th place score of just under 11%.

Which leaves a field of four "serious" candidates remaining. Romney is in a terrific position, with a huge warchest, the best national organisation of anyone still competing, and workable poll numbers everywhere. Santorum needs to develop a national campaign structure almost overnight, which is hard to do. Driving around Iowa in a pickup with a few assistants may have been effective in the midwest, but its not going to work on a larger scale. Ron Paul had to be disappointed with his third place showing last night and while there's signs the GOP mainstream will try to play a little nicer with the Congressman, this isn't going to end well for him. Supporters of Bachmann/Perry will slide to Santorum, not Paul. Finally, Newt Gingrich is also very limited on funds and given how fast his star fell once the Romney-friendly pacs started their media onslaught, its probably over for the former Speaker. He won't leave without a fight, so its must see TV this weekend. Two debates are scheduled, Saturday at 9:00pm on ABC then followed quickly the next morning at 9:00am on NBC's Meet The Press. I suspect Gingrich will extract his pound of flesh over the weekend, come in 3rd place in the NH primary on January 10th, possibly carry on to South Carolina, fall to Romney once more, then drop out.

With Florida's primary coming up on the 31st, I suspect we'll be down to at least three candidates, possibly two if Santorum doesn't get his national organisation and fundraising improved ten-fold. Paul has a good bank account going forward, and doesn't seem inclined to go gentle into that good night.

Barring some unforseen scandal, Romney has the nomination wrapped up by St. Patricks Day.

The pre-season will be over, then comes the main event...


Source:

http://www.nationaljournal.com/2012-presidential-campaign/bachmann-ends-presidential-run-source-20120104

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/04/michele-bachmann-dropping-out-concedes-iowa-caucus_n_1183120.html

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/nh/new_hampshire_republican_presidential_primary-1581.html

Iowa Caucus Wrap-up...

Rick Santorum, Mitt Romney split win in Iowa caucus...


Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney wound up in a photo-finish in last night's Iowa Caucus. Libertarian candidate Ron Paul came in third, followed by Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry and Michelle Bachmann.

The breakdown: (with 99.0% reporting)

1) Santorum 24.6%
2) Romney 24.6%
3) Paul 21.3%
4) Gingrich 13.3%
5) Perry 10.3%
6) Bachmann  5%
7) Huntsman  <1%

 Rick Santorum has to be thrilled with his performance. Just a few weeks ago thought to be dead in the water, Santorum's timing was perfect as he rode a late surge to outperform several other Republicans who had peaked earlier in this campaign season. This finish should help Santorum immensely with financial donations and Santorum heads to New Hampshire. Mitt Romney is also likely pleased with the outcome given that just a few weeks ago, Romney wasn't even trying to compete in Iowa. With the massive lead Romney has in the New Hampshire polls, look for the former Massachusetts Governor to have quite the head of steam as he heads to South Carolina and Florida. 

Ron Paul's 3rd place finish surprised me a bit as I had drank the kool-aid and felt his supporters were more organised and more enthused than anyone else's, but, I was wrong. He's got money so we'll see how the next few weeks plays out for Mr. Paul. 

Coming in 4th was Newt Gingrich, whose fall from grace in the last three weeks was impressive...in a bad way was apparently never a serious threat to finish in the top three, but after outside PAC groups started paying for media buys attacking the former Speaker, his numbers just cratered. 

Behind Gingrich came Texas Governor Rick Perry who entered the campaign months ago with great fanfare, only to (likely) be the first candidate to drop out, announced a change in his plans to head to South Carolina immediately after the Iowa Caucus was over. In his speech late last night, he said he plans to return to Texas and assess what his role in this campaign going forward should be. I think that's Texas code for "I'm done...you boys have fun..."

Last AND least, Michelle Bachmann, who tonight claimed "I am not a politician" had a miserable evening and in her speech afterwards suggested she was going to carry on. To what avail, I don't know. 

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Santorum is still a long, long shot to win the nomination. Romney is in great shape heading to New Hampshire plus various media reports are reporting Arizona Senator John McCain will endorse him tomorrow. Ron Paul will continue to be a novelty candidate but he's not a viable national candidate. Gingrich seems royally pissed at Romney for knee-capping him via PAC media buys, and will probably make it his mission over the next few weeks to return the favor personally. It may make him feel better, but it won't extend his campaign. Perry's done by this time next week. Bachmann should've been done tonight. Jon Huntsman needs a miracle...

Somewhere in Minnesota, Tim Pawlenty is vomiting...

Monday, December 19, 2011

Paul leads in Iowa - Public Policy Polling, 538 Blog...

Paul leads in Iowa - Public Policy Polling:

The latest PPP results reveal a continued slide for Newt Gingrich and good news for Ron Paul...

Ron Paul- 23%
Mitt Romney - 20%
Newt Gingrich - 14%
Rick Santorum - 10%
Michelle Bachmann - 10%
Rick Perry - 10%
Jon Huntsman - 4%

Paul is known for having the best ground game in Iowa of all the candidates. Gingrich, in the last two weeks, has seen his support fall from 27% to 22% to 14%.

The New York Times' Nate Silver's 538 Blog has the following projection:


Ron Paul- 24%
Mitt Romney - 21%
Newt Gingrich - 16%
Michelle Bachmann - 11%
Rick Perry - 11%
Rick Santorum - 10%
Jon Huntsman, misc - 7%

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

GOP Power Rankings 11/22/11...


GOP Power Rankings 11/22/11...


Romney still the guy to beat, field reshuffling every few weeks...


It's less than a year until we go to the polls and vote for the next President of the Unites States. Heading into the debates former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney was considered the front runner by most pundits. Today, after about a dozen GOP debates, I say Romney is still the prohibitive favorite to secure his party's nomination next Summer. Others in the Republican field have had their moments in the spotlight. Michelle  Bachmann winning the Iowa straw poll last August. Rick Perry declaring at the same time and garnering much attention when he did so. Herman Cain riding his charm and his 9-9-9 economic plan to early success earlier this Fall. Others have not had their "moment" yet. Rick Santorum and John Huntsman have avoided large glaring gaffs, but have not gained any serious traction as of yet. The two oldest GOP hopefuls, Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul have each taken their own paths to where they stand today. Paul, with support a foot wide but a mile deep has held fast to his ideals. Gingrich, with his rather inauspicious first few months in the campaign, battled regrettable utterances on Meet The Press about the Ryan Budget Plan, saw his staff quit on him and had to fend off a mostly bullshit thing about his Tiffany's account. Both are interesting men and terribly flawed candidates.

Romney find himself atop this issue of the power rankings for a few reasons. First, he's the best debater of the bunch except for possibly Gingrich. Secondly, with one exception, he's emerged from every debate without a scratch. He's prepared, he's relaxed and he's avoided any significant blunders. Bachmann quickly proved she couldn't sustain her success in Iowa. Perry has had terrible debates and has accordingly, paid a high price in the GOP polls. Herman Cain was flying high until his competitors and outside think-tanks shot his 9-9-9 economic plan full of holes and he was accused of having sexually harassed several former employees/associates from his National Restaurant Association days. The Cain train has slowed a tad, and its unsure if he can reverse the trend before irreversible damage is done to his campaign. Of the other, Gingrich is rising, but the rest of the bunch seem mired in the lower ranges of the field right now.

This weeks Power Rankings: 

1. Mitt Romney-The front-runner...
2. Newt Gingrich-Let's call him Lazarus, ok?
3. Ron Paul-Perhaps the most principled name on this list...
4. Herman Cain-Welcome to the big leagues, Mr. Cain...
5. John Huntsman-Has moments of high appeal, but then...fizzles...
6. Rick Perry-Hasn't come close to living up to his billing...
7. Rick Santorum-Targeting the far Right of the Conservative electorate, small upside...
8. Michelle Bachmann-Seems utterly outclassed by the rest of the field on most issues...

NOTE: We're taking a different approach with our rankings at this time. From a healthy early lead, Romney is so far ahead on the cumulative score its pointless to continue that. From now on, I'll simply rank the candidates how I see them at this time. Giving the most credence toward elect-ability, but also factoring in other more fluid attributes like current issues/events, finances, etc.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Michelle Bachmann: Against child abuse, but not so much bullying?

Is this a reasonable disconnect from Mrs. Bachmann?



Michelle Bachmann:  NBC's Meet The Press, November 13, 2011 on the Penn State child sex abuse scandal...


"I think about my children -- if that was my child -- and I think my automatic reaction would be – even though I'm a small woman – I'd want to go find that guy and beat him to a pulp. I think that's what any parent would want to do when they think about their child."





Michelle Bachmann:  Minnesota State Legislature, 2006 commenting on anti-bullying legislation...

"I think for all of us, our experience in public schools is there have always been bullies," Bachmann said. "Always have been, always will be. I just don't know how we're ever going to get to the point of zero tolerance... What does it mean?... Will we be expecting boys to be girls?"


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 In no way am I attempting to suggest that Michelle Bachmann is pro-bullying. She's not. However, she's always stood against anti-bullying legislation in Minnesota, but now says she'd want to beat to a pulp the guy that may have sexually abused many young boys at Penn State. 


 Sexual abuse of children isn't the same thing as bullying, but in both cases, children are being abused, hurt and scarred in both emotional and physical ways. I wish Mrs. Bachmann would take a fresh look at the anti-bullying subject. While the specifics of the abuse are very different, I think both should enjoy the vigorous protection by law that currently only one of the two scenarios above has in place. 




Sources: 


http://msn.foxsports.com/collegefootball/story/Michele-Bachmann-says-she-would-want-to-beat-Jerry-Sandusky-in-Penn-State-sexual-abuse-scandal-111311


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michele_Bachmann#cite_ref-151

The weakness of the Republican field...

The weakness of the Republican field should be a concern to those Conservatives who are counting on Barack Obama being a one term President.

In about a year, we'll go to the polls and vote for the next President of the United States of America. Our current President, Barack Obama, is by many predictions facing no better than a 50/50 shot to serve another four years. Ask some Conservatives and they'll claim "Obama has no chance" to get re-elected. Citing the sluggish economy, unemployment still over 9%, and tepid support for the President's signature piece of legislation, healthcare's Affordable Care Act, it all adds up to an uphill climb for Mr. Obama. That is real, not imagined. Throw in Obama's approval ratings and you can easily make the case that enough Independents plus virtually ALL Conservatives will send a new person to Washington D. C. to serve as the Commander in Chief next November.

The "Change you can hope for" mantra is mostly retired these days. The fantasy that a relative new face on the national political scene could stroll into our Capital on the mojo from a stirring speech in Boston a few years prior, a sizzlingly efficient campaign for President, and a personal story like none other and fundamentally change how politics and/or the Government works has proven to be just that. A fantasy. Obama loses more than he wins. An obstructionist Congress, an inability to construct an attractive message for the US public on his goals and programs, etc. all add up to a less than stellar first four years and abounding doubt and uncertainty from all sides.

Progressives feel dissatisfied that Obama hasn't fought harder for their causes, while Conservatives feel that Obama is at the very least unqualified and ineffective and quite possibly a Socialist leaning nightmare trying to drag the USA into the European Union. Even with a super majority as he entered office back in 2008, Obama did not have the sway within his own party (probably due to his lack of experience and relationships within his party) to take full advantage. At no time more evident than during the health reform battle, the new President was not only battling Republicans every step of the way, but also Congressional Democrats from Louisiana to Nebraska who wanted/needed special deals to be able to support Obama's Health care reform. The whole process was clumsy and sucked most of the political capital he entered office with. Obama is not what you call popular. Polls suggest that most Americans think Obama is a good person, but not quite heading us in the right direction.

Eight Republicans are each making the case that they should represent the Grand Old Party next year to try and unseat President Obama. These are mostly candidates from the world of Politics. From a sitting Governor (Perry) to former Governors (Romney) to current Congressmen/women (Paul/Bachmann) to former Congressmen (Gingrich/Santorum) and a diplomat (Huntsman). The other candidate Herman Cain, former CEO of Godfathers Pizza, who has worked mostly in the private sector but has a long history of involvement with Government and politicians.

Lots of experience in that field. Which should, you'd think, play to the appetite of the electorate. "Sure, we liked Obama, but he just didn't know how to get things done..." This group of eight Conservatives know how Washington works and should provide Independents with an appealing option for those wanting change. Whoever emerges from this group should absolutely crush Obama in the next election, sending him back to Chicago, Hawaii or wherever the hell he comes from.

Easy, eh?

There's just one problem.

None of these eight folks seem to have that much appeal, at least so far, to the general public. In recent polls, the candidate most likely to represent Republicans, Mitt Romney is just about even with President Obama in head to head comparisons. No one else of that group of eight does as well as Romney does when compared to Obama. Which means whatever message that's being received from the GOP hopefuls isn't connecting with Independents. Maybe it will in time, most people aren't really paying attention yet, but it hasn't yet.

Romney should be the guy who takes down Obama. This, his second kick at the presidential can, seems to be progressing rather nicely and without any major problems. He's got truckloads of money, more endorsements than any other Republican has so far, and well, dammit-he looks Presidential, doesn't he? The debates seem to be no problem for the former Massachusetts Governor and even the presumed Achilles heel of his "RomneyCare" which served as a blueprint for Obamacare, hasn't seemed to be a poison pill. The biggest concern for Mitt Romney is that apparently many Conservatives don't find him Conservative enough. He's evolved a few positions over the years and hard liners dont' known if they can trust him. That's more of an issue during the primary season than it will be during the General Election. Is Romney as Conservative as Rick Santorum or Michelle Bachmann? No, but what will Conservatives do if Romney is what the Party puts up against Obama? Vote for the other guy? No way. They'll vote for Romney just to get Obama out of office and worry about the rest later.

"Anybody but Obama" is more than just a bumper sticker, trust me.

In the early days of this campaign, Michelle Bachmann stormed through Iowa and won the straw poll there as well. A Congresswoman from Minnesota, she is known for saying rather odd things at times and isn't well known outside of her State and hard core Conservative circles. Ridin' high she was, but that very same day Bachmann won in Iowa, another Conservative, a Governor from Texas named Rick Perry announced his candidacy for President. Whooosh, went Bachmann's energy. She's never been the same since. Gov. Perry, a late entry to the field, has not exactly delivered what he was expected to. With consistently poor, at times excruciatingly bad, performances in the debates so far, Perry numbers have dive-bombed as Bachmann did before him. Combine the debate debacles with some questionable policy stances, Mr. Perry doesn't seem to be nearly as attractive now that we know him than when we didn't.

Ron Paul, a long time Texas Congressman with strong Libertarian leanings has done so far, what everyone expected him to do. Less Government, smaller Military, less Foreign Aid (even to Israel), a more diplomatic approach to Iran, etc. Mr. Paul seems the most genuine of the pack. He has been saying the same message for a long, long time. He doesn't shape it to boost his poll numbers, which is honorable. His politics don't have a mainstream appeal within the Republican party, let alone across all Independents.

Newt Gingrich, the former Speaker of the House during the '90's, has had an up and down campaign. Early on, Gingrich made some inartful remarks towards Paul Ryan's budget plan which he then blamed on the media. Then there was a dustup about his credit account at Tiffany's. Then changes in his campaign staff produced rumors that he was about to drop out. Gingrich assumed a low profile and has enjoyed a resurgence of sorts over the last few weeks. Still a long shot, the former Speaker seems to have found a comfort zone over the last several debates, attacking alternately both President Obama and the Media, which are two very easy to swallow messages in Republican circles these days. Its very questionable this will lead to meaningful national approval among independents and Gingrich seems to represent the old guard to the modern voter.

Herman Cain, the businessman, produced a fresh, bold economic plan called 9-9-9. Criticized by many for being too hard on the poor, that idea has failed to give him the national traction he hoped for. The allegations of sexual harassment by several different women from Cain's professional past hasn't hurt him too badly in the court of public opinion...yet. Voters looking for a more experienced person to replace Obama probably don't find Cain's never holding elected office disconcerting. The Cain train may be charming and refreshing to some, but doesn't seem to have captured the imagination of the party, let alone the nation.

Former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum has aggressively planted his flag to the right of just about everyone else in this group, but doesn't seem to be getting rewarded for his effort. Performing terribly in the polls, the Santorum campaign is running out of money and time.

Former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman is running a very weird campaign. Despite being in New Hampshire with a promise to win that state's primary, Huntsman has maintained an oddly low profile in the State. For example, the Huntsman campaign has zero television advertising running in New Hampshire. For a nationally unknown candidate such as he, you'd expect a bigger media push, but there isn't one.

So, if its accepted that Romney will most likely be the guy to go up against President Obama, it will be a romp, right? Nope...

By having what I consider a weak GOP field, Romney isn't being pushed very hard at all. While he's easy to take, he's representative of the big corporate world, which is hardly a popular image these days. I'm not sure Romney excites anyone, either. Barack Obama, even after these lack-luster four years, still knows how to give a speech and raise money. Mitt Romney seems really good at not doing anything dumb to hurt his chances at becoming President next November. Conversely, President Obama is now very accustomed to being under attack, from all sides.

By lacking a more formidable opponent, Romney should slide right through to the nomination. Which sets up a Republican candidate who's barely had to sweat to secure his party's nod, against a sitting President, who has been under attack since day one. Can Romney turn it on when he needs to? Can he match Obama's debating skills, which are assured to be far more aggressive than anything the other Conservatives threw at Romney during the primaries?

I think if Tim Pawlenty had stayed around longer than he did, if Chris Christie, Sarah Palin, Mitch Daniels, etc. had participated in the primary fray with Romney overcoming all of them to secure the Republican Nomination, Obama would likely be toast. But they didn't.

If the economy comes back another 1.5% in the next 8 months, if unemployment falls under 8%, etc...Obama will have plenty of weapons in his arsenal to use against a mostly untried opponent in Mitt Romney. It will be anything but a slam dunk. As Obama cites his various victories, Republican obstructionism, etc. Romney will no longer get the kid glove treatment. It should be quite the show


Sources:

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/obama_administration/daily_presidential_tracking_poll

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWynt87PaJ0

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/07/opinion/sunday/what-happened-to-obamas-passion.html?pagewanted=all

http://www.valleypatriot.com/VP0611ormsby.htm

http://www.mittromney.com/s/welcome

http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/82621-obama-healthcare-plan-nixes-ben-nelsons-cornhusker-kickback-deal

http://www.michelebachmann.com/

http://www.rickperry.org/join-today/

http://www.ronpaul2012.com/

http://www.newt.org/

http://www.hermancain.com/

https://www.ricksantorum.com/

http://www.jon2012.com/welcome/home.html

Sunday, October 23, 2011

GOP Power Rankings 10/23/11...

GOP Power Rankings 10/23/2011...


As we head into late October, we can see the one year mark from the general election not far away. As the debates continue, individual State primaries begin in less than three months. The GOP field hasn't seen anyone leave the campaign trail just yet. As we approach the primaries, we'll see most donations targeted to the candidates that can make a serious case to defeat President Obama next year. Fundraising is key, and a few candidates are in serious trouble on this front. Stars have risen and fallen over the last few months and through it all, Mitt Romney just keeps shining. Currently the #1 candidate to represent the Republican Party to push Obama to the unemployment line, Mr. Romney has money, momentum and most importantly, apparently no equals in the race for the nomination.

NEXT DEBATE: November 9th, 2011 on CNBC...

This week's rankings:

1) Mitt Romney-Yes, Perry and Santorum knocked him around in the last debate, but to what end? Absorbing mostly body blows, Romney leads the pack in Gallups Ballot Support rankings and recognition, sits 2nd in positive intensity to only Herman Cain. Compared to Rick Perry who sits sixth in the positive intensity rankings. Despite the fuss that Bachmann, Perry and now Mr. Cain have generated enough long lasting heat to make things uncomfortable for Romney. Financially, Romney had the second highest donations, $14 Million, which was just under Perry's take of 17 Million. Romney is in good shape going forward...


2) Herman Cain-Mr. Cain got a rough ride at the start of the last GOP debate but was able to hang on long enough to allow the Romney/Perry sideshow take over. Cain has made nice progress over the last several week in both polls and fundraising. Speaking of fundraising, Cain made a personal loan of $175K to his own campaign. Having raised only 2.8M in the last quarter, this is an area where his recent wave of popularity will need to translate to money. While Romney and Perry both brought in at least 14 million, less than 3 million won't cut it.

3) Rick Perry-Last quarter's biggest fundraising champion, Perry has shown an ability to quickly raise some cash, albeit most of it from his home state of Texas. Debates are clearly not his strong suit and his roughing up of Romney seems to have turned off as many as it impressed. Despite his fanfare, Perry's national numbers have slid backwards since he officially joined the campaign, which is a very bad sign. Lots of problems facing Perry right now.


4) Newt Gingrich-Off a slightly stronger debate last week, somehow the former Speaker of the House is still hanging around. Left for dead over the Summer, Mr. Gingrich has a long way to go to entering the upper tier ranks of GOP contenders. Financially, he hasn't reported a total for the third quarter. In the prior quarter, Gingrich reported fundraising of just over $2M dollars. Third in Gallups positive intensity rankings, Gingrich hasn't gone away yet. Developing a taste for surly exchanges with debate moderators, Gingrich may have turned the ship around, but I see him a million miles away from the top three tier.



5) Rick Santorum-Santorum has been scoring points of late with the far Right of the Right and has certainly had his share of favorable moments in the last few debates. While playing to the base may feel good, its highly unlikely Santorum is attracting new voters to his team, as witnessed in the 3rd quarter fundraising number, which were dismal. His fundraising take for the quarter? Less than one million dollars. That will need to be improved upon and quickly for him to survive. His comments a few days ago that he wants the defund all Federal dollars that help pay for contraception won't woo many women to his side. His recent surge might...might...put him on a few candidates short list for VP if they need votes from the far right.



6) Ron Paul-Mr. Paul has no shot. Once he openly suggested that the United States stop sending foreign aid to Israel, any sliver of hope he was holding on to wafted away. I give him credit, he has balls, his stances are compelling to me and his frankness is refreshing. Paul is capable at raising money, with over 8M in 3rd qtr. reporting. He's likely to be around for several months. It will be interesting to see if he can stay relevant in the GOP race for the White House nomination.

7) Michelle Bachmann-Iowa seems so long ago, doesn't it? With her start crashing back to earth, there are problems everywhere. Several of her staff in New Hampshire have quit on her campaign, he fundraising for Q3 came in at just over 4M, but her overall organisation is now over 500K in debt. On top of all that, she has the highest "Strongly Unfavorable" of all the candidates vying for the GOP nomination. Yikes...


8) John Huntsman-Focusing mostly on New Hampshire, Huntsman's has nothing working for at the moment. Last in most of the polls, his campaign is over 800K in debt and that includes a personal loan to his campaign of about 2.5M. The end is fast approaching for Mr. Huntsman.






Overall Rankings: (The lower the score, the better...)
(After 8 rankings...)


1. Romney - 9
2. Perry - 31
3. 
Bachmann - 36
4. Cain - 38
5. Santorum - 55
6. Paul - 59 

7. Huntsman - 64
8. Gingrich - 73

(NOTE: Rankings are compiled by simply adding the rankings each week to a running total of same...)



Sources:

http://www.gallup.com/poll/election.aspx

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/third-quarter-gop-fundraising-totals/2011/10/15/gIQA9gXemL_story.html

http://content.usatoday.com/communities/onpolitics/post/2011/10/huntsman-money-troubles/1

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Thoughts on the GOP Debate...

Mitt Romney is still the undisputed #1 contender to take on President Barack Obama next November. Tonight's debate saw Romney have to work harder to fend off various attacks, mostly from Rick Perry, but fend them off he did. From health care, to job creation, to immigration, etc. Romney emerged mostly intact with little damage sustained.  The charge that Romney knowingly hired illegal immigrants has already been deemed mostly false by Politifact.

Rick Perry was more engaged in this debate, but came across more chippy than Presidential. This was much better than being asleep throughout the evening. Reclaimed at least a top three ranking onstage tonight.

Herman Cain is encouraging American families to do the math themselves on his 9-9-9 plan. Ignore what the experts say. Maybe his plan is very nuanced and no one understands it. Which is bad news for the regular folk who he wants to "do their own calculations." The plan does not seem to do what Mr. Cain claims it will, which is very bad for his campaign's future.

Michelle Bachmann yelling "Anderson!, Anderson! Anderson!" seemed pathetic to me, as is her constant droning on that she was a former Federal Tax Attorney, a Mom, a Christian, an American, a Human, etc. Oh, she also hates Barack Obama...

Rick Santorum continue to not go away. One post debate wrap up called him "the arsonist." Not afraid to get into other candidates faces, he was very forceful throughout the evening. But to what end? When you're polling around 1%, do you really matter?

Newt Gingrich is the guy we all hated getting yelled at by when we were kids. Yes, he's smart. Yes, he knows history. No, I don't think he'll be President, but I'm sticking to my guns on him being a awesome choice for someone's Chief of Staff. He may regret acknowledging that the individual mandate was originally a Republican idea, via the Heritage Foundation back during the Clinton effort to reform health care.

Ron Paul is a dead man walking. Saying out loud we should stop giving aid to Israel is a no-no. He may not even get offered a job in the next Administration for that error.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Bloomberg/Washington Post Debate Comments/Grades...

Having survived last night's GOP debate, some observations and grades...

Mitt Romney - I've followed the NHL for over 40 years and Romney's performance in these GOP debates reminds me of something they used to say about superstar Wayne Gretzky. You could never really hit him. His on-ice vision was so much better than anyone else's, he'd always move out of the way just before he got crushed. Romney is so much smoother, so much cooler than the others its not funny. Add in Gov. Christie's endorsement yesterday and he's the prohibitive favorite to be the Republican nomination in 2012. It will take something of scandalous proportions to see him fall at this point. Grade B+


Rick Perry - The Governor from Texas is slipping with each debate. While there were no mumbling demonstrations last night like in previous debates, Perry was mostly a non factor. Romney scored a huge hit against him when responding about how Massachusetts handled insuring their children compared to how Texas performed. Perry admits debates aren't his strong suit, but unless he can find traction in some other form, he's doomed. If he only performed as well in these debates as his internet ad against Romney was made, well...he doesn't, does he? Grade D


Herman Cain - I have to give this guy credit. Basically coming out of nowhere, he's obviously comfortable in his own skin and has a definite charm about him. His 9-9-9 economic plan hasn't been dismantled just yet by his competition in these debates and he's pretty good at counter punching. Naming Cleveland businessman Richard Lowrie as one of his main economic advisers may bring him some grief over the next few days. Lowrie is a financial planner, not an economist, which is unusual for a national office candidate. Cain is making the most of his opportunity of late. I'm not sure how long this will continue, but he's certainly a factor right now and his performance last night helped him more than it hurt him, for certain. Grade B+


Ron Paul - Once again, failed to move his needle anywhere of significance in last night's debate. His message is unchanged from earlier debates. With all his experience, I can only guess that he's playing a waiting game of sorts. Attack no one too roughly, stick to his message and continue to raise enough cash to carry on into the primaries. Perhaps Mr. Paul is more interested in working for the next President as opposed to being the next President? Grade C


Rick Santorum - To his credit, Rick Santorum is still around. He's intense and is doubling down on his message, not softening it. His scrappy approach is probably essential to his short term survival. I don't think he has a long term to speak of. For Santorum to move up in the discussion, he'd have to start firing shots at the front-runner, Mitt Romney, which he really hasn't done so far. Like Paul, I think Santorum knows this isn't his time, and is auditioning for a position in a new Republican administration. Grade B


Michelle Bachmann - My biggest concern with Bachmann is that she's forever telling us that she matters and is the correct person to lead this Country. I know that's the message that each of the candidates is communicating, but its just not working for her. Her non answer about how to prevent Medicare from wasteful spending (saying that the IPAB Board would make all the important health decisions for 300 million Americans is patently false. She is fading from relevance. If she doesn't win Iowa, I think we see her step away from the campaign. Grade D


Newt Gingrich - He's the scariest guy on the stage. You can count on him to make 2-3 "pronouncements" a debate that scores some points with a few followers but does nothing to advance his cause in terms of securing the nomination. Like Messrs. Paul and Santorum, I think Gingrich is running for a position in Romney's administration more than the actual POTUS job. Grade C


John Huntsman - If the Republicans do take the Presidency in 2012, I hope Mr. Huntsman has a significant position. Despite his position in the pools, I think this is a man with interesting ideas, a good mind and sense of decency. I don't catch him telling bold faced lies, like Mrs. Bachmann did last night. How long he stays in the race is anyone's guess, but unless he dramatically changes his tactics, he'll be one of the first to fall away. Grade C

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Is the race for the GOP nomination already over?


Is the race for the GOP nomination already over?


The Republican National Convention is scheduled for August 27th through the 30th, 2012 in Tampa, Florida. Delegates from all the fifty states will decide on who the person is that should run against President Barack Obama. I expect turnout to be above average as the electorate seems to be more polarized now than in recent years. While in the past, some voters have felt one party or another had to go, this time, there's that plus the issues (to some) of us having a Socialist, a Muslim and a Radical that needs to go. The thought of Barack Obama winning reelection is quite unsettling to some.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

There are daily headlines regarding this field of eight or so candidates for the honor of facing off against Obama in 2012. Make no mistake, no matter who of these eight people wind up with the party's official nomination, ALL will be working toward putting their guy in office. There are jobs to be had, within the potentially new administration and, frankly jobs to be had in the media. To fade away after falling out of contention for the nomination will, I think, carry a high price tag.

A coherent argument could be made that this is already a done deal. While the polls tell us Governor Perry is in the lead, remember that polls are merely a snapshot of how things look today. The real poll isn't for another fourteen months and that one counts. There will be much gnashing of teeth and both dollars and words expended  over the next few months, to be sure. I'm not so sure it will matter a great deal.

I say Mitt Romney has the nomination all but locked up.

Barring a scandal or some unforeseen blunder of epic proportions, I see no path where someone else defeats him.

Tim Pawlenty was supposed to, some felt, be a guy who could match Romney. As the debates started, Tpaw talked a pretty good game and at the second GOP debate, he had a golden opportunity to deliver a direct hit to Romney over his health care plan in Massachusetts. Pawlenty mumbled and for the most part, passed on this chance. Romney was exposed, Pawlenty had a clear shot but refused to take it. For that reason and a few others, mostly financial, we waved goodbye to Mr. Pawlenty several weeks ago.

Next it was Michelle Bachmann who was supposed to be a real threat to Romney. Possessing better and more established street cred among hard core conservatives, we wondered how that matchup might go down. It never materialized. On the day that Bachmann was riding high in Iowa after winning the straw poll, the fortunes of Mrs. Bachmann was undercut by a new face in the race. A savvy Texan strode into Iowa the same weekend Bachmann won and sucked all the air out of Bachmann's balloon. The Bachmann campaign has not been the same since. As Bachmann quickly became virtually irrelevant overnight, Mitt Romney no longer had to waste any bullets on her. Rick Perry took care of that for him.

Speaking of Rick Perry...

Gov. Perry attractiveness seemed to peak somewhere around the time he declared his intention on seeking the nomination. Yes, the polls have been kind to him but he's drawn all the fire that may have been aimed at Gov. Romney. Debating does not seem to be his strong suit and he looked flat out bad the last two debates. His attempt to expose Romney as a guy who changes his tune based on statements in his books, fell flat. It was like he had marbles in his mouth or something. He seems so uncomfortable, so ill-prepared compared to Romney that I don't think a few weeks of debate prep will totally address. He can do better, certainly. Whether he can do so much better as to nullify his recent performances is a question I look forward to seeing answered.

Romney needs a Southern strategy to defeat Obama in the general, and a Romney/Perry ticket would be a very tough one to overcome. Perry would bring along the Tea Party base and give comfort to those who doubt Romney's allegiance to the conservative ideology. If Romney seems to take it easy on Perry over the next few debates, it could be because he wants him to be able to accept a VP offer. If he destroys Perry, then I think that's a signal that Romney has some other idea in mind for both a Southern strategy and a VP nomination. (Marco Rubio anyone?)

That leaves five other known candidates that Romney has to defeat. I see four of them, Ron Paul, Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich and John Huntsman in a group of candidates that can't win the nomination and simply don't match up to Gov. Romney in terms of financial support, size of organisations, boots on the ground, status, etc. Paul has a message that resonates with a small but passionate group of voters, but doesn't seem to have the ability to grow his popularity in any serious way. Santorum has some conservative credentials but again lacks in almost every way when compared to Romney. Gingrich's campaign is a mess. Deeply in debt, mass defections, poor poll numbers, etc. all point towards a failed campaign for the former Speaker of the House. Huntsman showed a glimmer of hope a couple debates ago, but hasn't really demonstrated an ability to capitalize on it whatsoever. Horrific poll numbers, despite his obvious intelligence, the Huntsman campaign seems to be going nowhere fast.

Which leaves us Mr. Herman Cain...

Mr. Cain surprised many with his victory in the Florida straw poll last weekend. Today, a Zogby poll shows Cain ahead of everybody. By a healthy margin of 10% over Perry and 11% over Romney. Its interesting to note this poll was conducted after the Orlando poll but before the straw poll results were announced. Cain is riding high right now and may bump Perry out of the spotlight. As nice as all of this is for the Cain supporters, I have to believe the sheer size of the Romney organisation and coffers means at some point, Cain's campaign is going to run into a wall.

Many questions remain.

Will Romney have to fend off a serious challenge from anyone? Will it be Perry? Cain? Booth of them/none of them? Hard to say, but whatever they throw at Romney, I don't see it doing enough damage to really matter. As long as Mitt Romney can avoid the landmines and nothing scandalous comes out, I think he's the Republican Party's nomination for President in 2012.



Thursday, September 22, 2011

Fox News/Google GOP Debate Comments...

Some thoughts on the latest GOP debate...

Mitt Romney- As usual, didn't really take any major hits. Perry tried to hit him on changing positions in his book but didn't seem to really connect. Romney is much better at this debate game than Gov. Perry is by a fairly wide margin. He may be past the "Romneycare" issue. Grade-A

Rick Perry- I liked his answer on the HPV issue. It was brave to double down on the immigration issue. Also foolish. His attempts at trying to go after Romney didn't in my eyes seem to get him anywhere. Other answers weren't as sharp as Romney's. He'll need to do better next debate. Grade-C

Michelle Bachmann- Rather quiet night for her. Said she thinks Americans should keep 100% of the money they earn. Which makes no sense. Sounded great, but foolish thing to say. Grade-C

Herman Cain- Brutal answer regarding healthcare. No, you wouldn't have died under Obamacare. Grade-B

John Huntsman- Awfully quiet night. Seems to be treading water, perhaps waiting for New Hampshire, which he has predicted a victory. Grade-D

Ron Paul- Nothing really new tonight. He's number three in most polls and seems content to stick it out until the field shrinks. Did make the claim that the Country is bankrupt, which is patently false. Grade C

Newt Gingrich- Apparently the next Vice President of the United States. Or a Chief of Staff in a new Republican Administration. Grade C

Rick Santorum- Seemed pissed off all night. It played pretty well and should keep Santorum around for a while. Santorum adds some spice to these debates but I don't think they make him a more viable candidate. Grade B

Gary Johnson- The shovel-ready comment about his neighbor dogs was the best of the night. Promised to submit a balanced budget in his first year. Didn't say anything that suggested he was out of place.  Grade B

Monday, September 12, 2011

GOP Power Rankings 9/12/11...


Three becomes two?

Mitt Romney and Rick Perry tangle at the Reagan Library, Huntsman fight back, Bachmann wondering what happened...

NEXT DEBATE: Monday,  September 12, 2011. 8:00pm CNN 

This week's rankings:

1) Mitt Romney - Deflected most of Perry's parries pretty well at the debate last week. Didn't say anything full goose, bozo crazy. Great discipline. Perry seems likely to be in the limelight through the campaign. Romney seems to be the party nominee next Summer.   Lots can go wrong of course, but if he stays on course, I think he emerges as the reasonable choice for mainstream Republican voters. (Last Ranking: #1)



2) Rick Perry - Welcome to Rick Perry's Meat Market... You like red meat? We got. Lots of it. How do we get our fresh meat? You get fresh meat by killing things. You hear that roar in the Reagan library last week when they reminded them I'm the king of the executioners? Ohhhh, yeah, that's ME! I killed Michelle Bachmann's momentum, I killed any outside shot Mr. Santorum, Mr. Cain, Mr. Paul or Mr. Gingrich had. This is fuuuunnnnnnn!!! (Does he remind anyone else of Rod Blagojevich? They could be brothers.) (Last Ranking: #2)

3) Michelle Bachmann - Mrs. Bachmann, did you forget there was a Republican debate last week at the Reagan Library? I thought I saw you there, but I wasn't sure. Bachmann has to find a way to elbow herself back into the conversation. Quickly. And leave God out of it, ok? (Last Ranking: #3) 




4) John Huntsman - Performed as well as anyone did at last week's debate. Sounded smart, reasonable and unique. What I didn't like was his refusing to name names when asked which GOP candidates were weak on science. There's a slight opportunity he can push his way into the upper tier if he starts directly challenging the big boys on some of their positions. The next debate will tell us whether his performance at Simi Valley was a preview of coming attractions or a little testosterone surge. (Last Ranking: #9) 






5) Rick Santorum - Similar to Herman Cain's problem, Rick Santorum has to make himself relevant. Perry covers his same basic constituancy but with a lot more appeal, so the climb will be a hard one. I just don't see anything that Santorum can do to push his way into top tier grouping. If he couldn't do it before Perry joined the campaign, I don't think he can do it now. (Last Ranking: #7)

6) Herman Cain - Another candidate struggling to not be left behind the Romney/Perry express.The 9/9/9 economic plan sounded more like a pizza deal than a potential government policy. Mr. Cain, like others, has to create a compelling rivalry with one of the top two guys. He has to make himself matter and thus far, he hasn't.  (Last Ranking: #6) 
 



7) Newt Gingrich - For the second debate in a row, chewing on the ass of the moderators struck the former Speaker as a smart strategy. Its not. Eat before you come out on stage, ok? What an incredible, FUBAR-esque disaster of a campaign.  (Last Ranking: #8) 









8) Ron Paul - It's not working, Mr. Paul. I know you're one of the brighter guys on the stage, but last week's debate did not help. I appreciate where you're coming from but you sound more oddball than Presidential. Paul's not getting a lot of face time at these debates, but he'd better grab some in the next few or it won't matter. He was a long shot from the get go...(Last Ranking: #4) 





9) Sarah Palin - Ughh, the bastards have turned on me! Yup, when other Fox news pundits start taking aim, its not a good thing. Its one thing to lump the expected  shots from the "Lame stream media" but when Karl Rove and Co. start singing the song, its quite another. She may drag this on for a few more weeks, but everything points to her not running. Thankfully.(Last Ranking: #5) 







Overall Rankings: (The lower the score, the better...)

(After 7 rankings...)

 

1. Romney - 7
2. Bachmann - 16
3. Perry - 26
4. Cain - 35
5. Palin - 42
6. Santorum - 46
7. Paul - 48 
8. Huntsman - 56
9. Gingrich - 62

(NOTE: Rankings are compiled by simply adding the rankings each week to a running total of same...)