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U.S. 2012 Election

On Nov 6 Who Will Win President Obama or Mitt Romney ?

  • President Obama

    Votes: 39 61.9%
  • Mitt Romney

    Votes: 24 38.1%

  • Total voters
    63
  • Poll closed .
cupper said:
I can never really wrap my head around how they figured that the electoral college is a better system than popular vote.

Much the same way that a majority of Americans can't wrap their minds around the fact that they don't actually vote for the President and Vice President.

The voting system was divided into three for valid reasons:

The Congress was to deal with the "day to day" issues and reflect the popular will, hence the popular vote.

The Senate was to reflect the interest of the various States, hence Senators were initially elected by the State legislatures. (The conception of the United States was a series of Sovereign States which had pooled their interests and some resources to deal with common issues. The names of the various older states reflects this ("Commonwealth of Virginia"), and until the Civil War, the proper way to refer to the nation was "These United States")

The Presidency was to act as the executive of the entire nation, and the electoral college was used to prevent the more popuolus states form overwhelming the votes of the smaller, less populous states. 
 
Thucydides said:
The voting system was divided into three for valid reasons:

The Congress was to deal with the "day to day" issues and reflect the popular will, hence the popular vote.

The Senate was to reflect the interest of the various States, hence Senators were initially elected by the State legislatures. (The conception of the United States was a series of Sovereign States which had pooled their interests and some resources to deal with common issues. The names of the various older states reflects this ("Commonwealth of Virginia"), and until the Civil War, the proper way to refer to the nation was "These United States")

The Presidency was to act as the executive of the entire nation, and the electoral college was used to prevent the more popuolus states form overwhelming the votes of the smaller, less populous states.

When are they going to try this?
 
Every system of government has its short comings. The founding fathers could not envision the growth of the country and yet the system they devised has worked well for over 2 centuries. Pretty remarkable.
 
cupper said:
I can never really wrap my head around how they figured that the electoral college is a better system than popular vote.

The American Founding Fathers when designing their political system of government looked at other governments and realized that in most cases their electoral systems could result in corruption and/or one person or a group of people gaining to much power.  Thus, they designed they implemented the electoral college where special electors would only be chosen just prior to election day. This would prevent any one group from getting together and trying influence the outcome.* 

In most cases the electoral college and the popular vote usually goes to the same candidate, but in four cases their were elections the president was chosen based on the electoral college when his opponent won the popular vote. The last time thins happened was in 2000 between George W. Bush and Al Gore.

* This is my interpretation of de Tocqueville's description of the electoral college in Democracy in America. From my understanding things have changed since then.
 
Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail, is an interesting analysis, with which I agree, re: why Prime Minister Harper likely hopes that Obama wins again in 2012:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/john-ibbitson/border-deal-built-on-harper-and-obamas-friendship/article2264215/
Border deal built on Harper and Obama's friendship

JOHN IBBITSON

Globe and Mail Update
Published Thursday, Dec. 08, 2011

Geopolitics is all about states protecting and advancing their interests. But it’s also about how politicians get along with one another. The “Beyond the Border” accord has a lot to do with how Stephen Harper and Barack Obama get along.

And it is why this Conservative Prime Minister hopes his Democratic friend gets re-elected president.

Tony Blair confessed in his memoirs that multilateral conferences and foreign visits were the things he enjoyed least about being Britain’s prime minister. Hard on the sleep schedule and worse for the digestion.

But in their 11 official meetings – not to mention numerous phone calls and informal exchanges on the edges of summits – the Canadian Prime Minister and the American President have gotten to like each other.

It may seem a strange match: a former community organizer from Chicago and a former conservative activist from Calgary.

But Mr. Obama has told American reporters that he considers Mr. Harper one of the ablest leaders he has met. Beyond that, the two men have children around the same age. They are both policy wonks and sports buffs.

And Mr. Obama remains extremely popular in Canada, making it possible for Mr. Harper to negotiate deals with the Americans that could never have been contemplated when George W. Bush was in the Oval Office.

During one meeting, the Prime Minister told the President: “We should do something together.” Mr. Obama is committed to doubling exports during his term in office. Why not start by improving trade with your closest partner, Mr. Harper proposed. In exchange, the Prime Minister agreed to negotiate a continental security perimeter.

That conversation led to last February’s launch of the Beyond the Border talks, and those talks led to Wednesday’s unveiling. Over those nine months, external shocks repeatedly threatened to scuttle the whole thing.

The Buy American provisions in a proposed new stimulus bill caught the Canadians flat-footed. A heads-up would have been nice, officials fumed.

Then came news of a new entry fee for Canadians travelling to the United States, even as the negotiating teams were looking for ways to eliminate fees.

Worst of all, Mr. Obama punted a decision on the controversial Keystone oil pipeline until after the election, rather than anger his liberal base, even though Mr. Harper had lobbied hard for its approval.

But the Americans quietly smoothed some of the Harper government’s anger by offering to support Canada’s participation in the Trans Pacific Partnership, a hugely important set of negotiations among Pacific nations that this country has thus far been frozen out of because it refuses to put dairy and poultry subsidies on the table.

Throughout the talks, members of the negotiating teams say they were told to tune out the noise. The Prime Minister was determined not to derail the talks by linking current irritants to more fundamental issues.

Now that the deal is done, the question is how and whether it gets implemented. Though neither Congress nor Parliament needs to ratify these agreements, which in the end are largely administrative, Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird puts the implementation cost at about $200-million annually, and both legislatures will need to appropriate funds.

Mr. Obama will be distracted over the coming year, as he fights for re-election. If he loses that election, a Republican president may have other, conflicting, priorities.

Prime Minister Harper and President Gingrich. The mind reels.

Nonetheless, if both countries stick to it, this agreement will produce a more secure border with freer trade, and with less useless duplication in setting product and safety standards.

Geopolitically, such an agreement is in both countries’ interest. But it helps that the two men call each other Stephen and Barack.


My suspicion is that Prime Minister Harper doesn't see anyone "better" than Obama in the GOP field and, in any event, it is the Congress, not the White House that really matters in most of our bilateral problems and it is likely, after 2012 and 2014, to remain dysfunctional if not downright inept; so "better the devil you know" and so on.

While "it helps that the two men call each other Stephen and Barack," it is not a really important thing. St Laurent and Eisenhower had a good, close working relationship despite the fact, as I understand it, that they were very different men with very different tastes and not given to "liking" one another; they worked well together despite the fact that "Uncle Louis" bluffed "Ike" to get a 50/50 deal on the St Lawrence Seaway. Equally, Mike Pearson and LBJ actively disliked one another, personally, but they too worked productively together - usually through middle men. Both understood the value and importance of the bilateral relationship and each was good enough at his job to understand that personalities didn't matter.
 
 
What are the chances we see a reversal of fortune, with a Dem majority in the House, and a GOP majority in the Senate?

Gallup poll shows anti-incumbent sentiment at all-time high

A new Gallup survey shows that more than three-quarters of registered voters think most members of Congress do not deserve to be reelected – the highest such number in the 19 years that Gallup has asked the question.


Seventy-six percent of registered voters in the Gallup survey said they don’t think most lawmakers deserve to be reelected, while 20 percent said they believe most members of Congress do deserve reelection.

The anti-incumbent mood is shared by independents and members of political parties alike: 82 percent of independents, 75 percent of registered Republicans and 68 percent of registered Democrats said most members don’t deserve to be reelected.

Gallup surveyed 903 registered voters from Nov. 28 to Dec. 1; the poll has a margin of error of four percentage points.

The percentage of voters saying most members do not deserve reelection has been climbing since 2002, when an all-time low of only 29 percent said that most lawmakers should be booted.

Notably, anti-incumbent sentiment has risen sharply since May: The current high of 76 percent is up 13 percentage points from where it stood seven months ago at 63 percent.

As is typically the case, when it comes to reelecting one’s own U.S. representative, voters have a rosier view. Fifty-three percent of registered voters surveyed in the latest Gallup poll said their own House member deserves reelection while 39 percent said otherwise.

Those numbers represent a slide downward from May, when 57 percent said their member of Congress deserves reelection, although the shift is not as marked as the increase in broader pessimism toward Congress as a whole.

Taken together with recent surveys showing the congressional approval rating at a dismal 9 percent, the Gallup poll is a reminder to members that voters are deeply dissatisfied with the 112th Congress, which, as The Post’s Ben Pershing notes, will this month wrap up one of the least productive sessions in recent years.
 
Based on the ground game of the TEA party movement, it is far more likely that RINO Republicans and incumbent Democrats in both houses take heavy casualties. The next Administration will have to learn to live and work with a cranky and inexperienced group of legislators, as well as to adjust the give and take (no dismissing the opposing party by saying "I won", for example), in order to accomplish anything.

Since The United States is a Federal system, I am inclined to think the real action will take place in the "Downline" elections as the TEA party movement takes on State legislatures, municipal and county governments and the lower levels of the Judiciary. Not only will this have a very direct effect on the citizens, but it also fills the bench with a new generation of politicans who will exert influence in their position for years to come, and will provide a pool of candidates for higher levels of government as well.
 
A series of graphs that demonstrate the resuts of this administration's policies. All the Republicans need to do is display these graphs prominently on blogs, bilboards and TV ads...:

http://northshorejournal.org/the-discouraging-unemployment-picture

The Discouraging Unemployment Picture
December 6th, 2011 | 4 Comments

The Bureau of Labor Statistics has a great deal to say about the November 2011 unemployment numbers and the October numbers from the metro areas. The unemployment rate fell to 8.6 percent from 9 percent in November. In October, the unemployment rates fell in 281 of the 372 metro areas the BLS watches.

The pictures tell a far more discouraging tale. These graphs are from the BLS site, using their data. None of the graphs present any sort of encouraging picture for those who are unemployed or those who have given up. And, lots of folks have just given up.

A series of graphs, so go to the link
 
Thucydides said:
A series of graphs that demonstrate the resuts of this administration's policies. All the Republicans need to do is display these graphs prominently on blogs, bilboards and TV ads...:

http://northshorejournal.org/the-discouraging-unemployment-picture

A series of graphs, so go to the link

and then run this 2009 Obama speech clip

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=6jJvkkNmR_8

while in the background show graphs of what the great Obamassiah actually did.

Because  he is an economic genius.
 
An interesting aside, this is perhaps the first time that Space policy has been discussed, and look at the level of vision being displayed here (especially by Newt Gingrich). While mining the Moon is a bit outlandish by current standards, seriously thinking about doing this and providing room for people to take steps to realize this dream may have important spinoffs. (Compare how SpaceX has drastically lowered the price of space launch compared to the current government supported consortium. Now imagine hundreds of small and medium companies vying to creat rugged, low cost devices to operate in the space environment to carry out complex tasks...)

http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/285573/newts-moon-mines-rand-simberg

Newt’s Moon Mines
December 12, 2011 4:31 P.M.
By Rand Simberg

Political debate about space policy is rarely edifying, especially when it arises not from any interest in the subject but from a hamhanded attempt gain a perceived political advantage. That seems to be what happened in the Republican debate on Saturday night.

Asked how his policy positions differed from those of Newt Gingrich, Mitt Romney surprisingly offered as his first example something space-related: “We could start with his idea to have a lunar colony that would mine minerals from the moon. I’m not in favor of spending that kind of money to do that.” Later, he offered another one: “He even talked about a series of mirrors that we could put in space that would light our highways at night. I’ve got some better ideas for our resources.”

As reported by Jeff Foust at Space Politics, Newt’s response was, as usual, swift and expansive:

I’m proud of trying to find things that give young people a reason to study science and math and technology, and telling them that some day in their lifetime that they can dream of going to the Moon, they can dream of going to Mars,” he said. “I grew up in a generation where the space program was real, where it was important, where, frankly, it is tragic that NASA has been so bureaucratized.” He then cited Iowa State University, just up the road from the debate in Ames, as an example of a place doing “brilliant things” that attract students. “I’m happy to defend the idea that America should be in space and should be there in an aggressive, entrepreneurial way.

Where did Mitt get this stuff? Probably from this David Brooks column on Newt’s big-government Hamiltonian conservatism:

His 1984 book, “Window of Opportunity,” is a broadside against what he calls the “laissez-faire” conservatism — the idea that government should just get out of the way so the market can flourish. . . .

Gingrich loves government more than I do. He has no Hayekian modesty to restrain his faith in statist endeavor. For example, he has called for “a massive new program to build a permanent lunar colony to exploit the Moon’s resources.” He has suggested that “a mirror system in space could provide the light equivalent of many full moons so that there would be no need for nighttime lighting of the highways.”

Romney spoke as though these were current Gingrich campaign themes, when in fact they come from a book over a quarter of a century old. It’s also worth noting that this is the only mention that Romney has ever made of space policy in the campaign, other than a cryptic, almost non-sequitur comment at the New Hampshire debate in June, in response to a question posed to Gingrich about the then-imminent retirement of the space shuttle:

I think fundamentally there are some people — and most of them are Democrats, but not all — who really believe that the government knows how to do things better than the private sector.

Presumably the target of that comment was Gingrich, but it’s not clear exactly what Governor Romney meant by it.

Newt’s technophilia has been a fundamental part of his political persona since the beginning of his career, as Michelle Quinn pointed out yesterday at Politico. In the early ’80s, when he wrote the book David Brooks refers to, he was on the board of directors of the L-5 Society, which was formed in the ’70s to promote the settlement and industrialization of space (Barry Goldwater was also on the board; the group later merged with the National Space Institute to become the present-day National Space Society). The idea at the time was that orbital colonies, located at points between the earth and the moon, would pay for themselves by constructing giant satellites in geosynchronous orbit using lunar materials (such as silicon and aluminum from the silicates of the lunar highlands) that would collect solar energy and beam it to earth via microwaves. The orbiting-mirrors concept, called “lunetta,” was originated by the brilliant space visionary (and developer of the workhorse Centaur upper stage) Krafft Ehricke. All of this was based on the assumption that the space shuttle was going to live up to its seventies promise of safe, low-cost routine access to space — a promise that, since Challenger was lost in 1986, it has been clear it would never fulfill.

That was then and this is now, and Newt’s space policy has evolved quite a bit since then, but David Brooks and Mitt Romney seem stuck in the early eighties. I don’t think that Newt is promoting lunettas these days, but he remains interested in lunar mining — as are a number of entrepreneurs. For instance, in April of this year, a new company was formed in Silicon Valley by Microsoft veterans and others to start mining it robotically, with a first lunar landing planned as soon as 2013.

Does lunar mining make economic sense? It depends on the markets, of course. There are rare earths there, which are valuable per pound (a useful trait for a commodity with high transportation costs) and strategically important for the electronics industry, and whose price has been skyrocketing recently due to a monopoly on them by China. Some, such as Apollo geologist/astronaut Jack Schmitt, have long promoted lunar mining as a source for helium 3, an isotope with characteristics preferable to deuterium for fusion (though we don’t currently have the reactor technology for it). But the most compelling argument for lunar mining right now is its ability to dramatically reduce the cost of exploration beyond the earth-moon system by using the water and oxygen trapped in lunar rocks to make propellant — which constitutes most of the mass of the payload for giant rockets such as the planned Space Launch System — as well as for life support. Having propellants in other locations allows full reusability of the vehicles, and could make possible not just the exploration but the settlement of the moon and other bodies. Developing such resources would, in the words of George W. Bush science adviser John Marburger, “incorporate the Solar System in our economic sphere.” That, I suspect, is the vision that Newt has in mind.

I also suspect Governor Romney assumed that Newt was proposing a massive NASA project to build the “lunar colony” that the governor derided as unrealistic pie-in-the-sky (almost literally) in austere times. If so, he knocked the stuffing out of a straw man, because Newt is actually on record as wanting to bypass the agency, if not abolish it outright.

I am for a dramatic increase in our efforts to reach out into space, but I am for doing virtually all of it outside of NASA through prizes and tax incentives. NASA is an aging, unimaginative, bureaucracy committed to over-engineering and risk-avoidance which is actually diverting resources from the achievements we need and stifling the entrepreneurial and risk-taking spirit necessary to lead in space exploration.

Nearly two years ago, when the Obama administration came out with its new plan to shift crew transportation to low earth orbit from NASA to competitive commercial industry, Newt (along with Bob Walker and Dana Rohrabacher) was one of the few Republican politicians to support what should have been an obvious position for a Republican supposedly in favor of free enterprise and competition, while most supposed conservatives were demanding, when it came to human spaceflight, a “public option.”

What does this exchange tell us about the two candidates? I think it provides a window into their mindsets. Newt sees space as a frontier of human opportunity and plenty, and wants to direct space policy toward opening it using the traditional American tools of entrepreneurship and competition (unlike most people on the Hill who care about space, who only do so as a means of national prestige and jobs in their states and districts). It’s hard to tell how Mitt Romney views it, since he has not offered an alternative to Gingrich’s vision, but by denigrating the development of new resources because it’s a little too “far out,” he comes off as someone who not only has given no serious thought to space policy other than as a cudgel against his political opponent, but as a soulless technocrat. To me, it was worse than his ten-grand-bet gaffe.
 
This is going to be a critical battle. Ensuring the integrity of the vote is just as important (if not more so) as any other part of the electoral process. Tha fact the DOJ is fighting against integrity measures is disturbing:

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2011/12/obama-administration-coordinating-with-left-wing-groups-on-voter-fraud.php

Obama Administration Coordinating With Left-Wing Groups on Voter Fraud?

I wrote yesterday about the lightly-attended march in New York, ostensibly on behalf of voting rights, which was sponsored by a broad coalition of left-wing groups and was addressed by several Democratic politicians. While the number of participants was small, the affair had all the signs of a semi-official Democratic Party initiative. Sure enough: Nation magazine notes that Eric Holder will deliver a “major speech on voting rights” tomorrow, and links Holder’s speech to yesterday’s march:

    Tomorrow Attorney General Eric Holder will gave a major speech on voting rights at the LBJ presidential library in Austin. According to the library, “Holder will discuss the importance of ensuring equal access to the ballot box and strengthening America’s long tradition of expanding the franchise.”

    Holder’s speech could not come at a more critical time. Over the last year we’ve witnessed an unprecedented GOP war on voting, with a dozen Republican governors and state legislators passing laws to restrict voter registration drives, require birth certificates to register to vote, curtail early voting, mandate government-issued photo IDs to cast a ballot and disenfranchise ex-felons who’ve served their time. …

    On Saturday, in conjunction with UN Human Rights Day, thousands of activists and concerned citizens in New York City held a march and rally to protest these restrictive new laws. …

    “The march on Saturday was an indication that Americans will not go backwards,” said Judith Browne-Dianis, co-director of the Advancement Project. “We will keep up the momentum to end voter suppression by taking to the streets, to the legislatures and to the courts. We won’t be silenced by those who want to undermine democracy.”

    The Advancement Project has helped gather 120,000 signatures asking the Justice Department “to oppose any discriminatory laws that will disenfranchise voters.” The Justice Department has that authority under the Voting Rights Act.

So you can see how this will all come together. The Democrats will use their constituent organizations to whip up a frenzy of opposition to “voter suppression,” while DOJ launches, or threatens to launch, legal challenges to selected state statutes. This will energize the Democrats’ base by pretending that Republicans are trying to disenfranchise voters. It also may succeed in increasing the illegal votes that Democrats rely on at the margins of close elections.

Democrats want felons to vote, because an overwhelming majority of them will vote Democratic. They want illegal aliens to vote for the same reason. And they want loyal Democrats to vote more than once where they are able to do so. Where there is no voter security, these abuses will increase. So, either through legal rulings or through intimidation, the Democrats want to disable the states from protecting the integrity of the ballot box. It appears that Obama’s politicized Department of Justice will be in the forefront of this effort.

I can’t find any reference to Holder’s visit on the LBJ Library’s web site, but the library is releasing a Voting Rights Act Media Kit tomorrow. That’s probably not a coincidence.
 
The GOP campaign just writes itself, but is there a candidate who can use this effectively?

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2011/12/obama-places-himself-on-the-continuum-of-greatness.php

Obama Places Himself on the Continuum of Greatness

There was an initially-overlooked moment in President Obama’s recent interview with 60 Minutes. Excerpts from the interview were played on television, and CBS posted the interview in its entirety on its web site. Left on the cutting-room floor, it turned out, was a revealing moment when Obama judged himself against the greats of past eras:

    The “60 Minutes Overtime” video shows Obama telling correspondent Steve Kroft:

    “The issue here is not going be a list of accomplishments. As you said yourself, Steve, you know, I would put our legislative and foreign policy accomplishments in our first two years against any president — with the possible exceptions of Johnson, F.D.R., and Lincoln — just in terms of what we’ve gotten done in modern history. But, you know, but when it comes to the economy, we’ve got a lot more work to do.”

So Obama thinks his record so far–nearly three years, not just two–stacks up favorably against any president with the “possible exceptions” of Lyndon Johnson, FDR, and Abraham Lincoln. The man is simply delusional. This is a game one could play for a long time, but let’s just compare President Obama’s record in his first three years (almost) in office with that of Ronald Reagan over the same time. Reagan inherited a worse crisis than Obama: interest rates and inflation at unprecedented levels; our national defenses in a state of near collapse, with the Soviet Union advancing aggressively around the world; recession, high unemployment and a stratospheric cost of living. His solutions to these problems, of course, were quite different from Obama’s approach. Let’s compare how they did.

    Unemployment

President Reagan took office in January 1981 with unemployment at 7.5%. As of December 1983–nearly three years into his term–unemployment was at 8.3%. But by that time, unemployment was dropping fast as a result of the rapidly growing economy. By the summer of 1984, it was down to 5.4%.

President Obama took office in January 2009 with unemployment at almost exactly the same level, 7.6%. As of December 2011, it is 8.6%–a worse performance than Reagan’s, although not greatly so (Interpolation. The numbers are quite a bit higher if you use U3 or U6 measurements). The difference is that in 1983, Reagan had in place pro-growth policies that were quickly putting people back to work. No one thinks that, with Obama’s anti-growth bias dominating the federal government, unemployment will drop to anywhere near 5.4% in the next six or seven months.

    Economic Growth

President Reagan inherited a slow- or no-growth economy from Jimmy Carter. It didn’t take long for Reagan’s pro-growth policies to turn things around. Between 1980 and 1983, America’s GDP increased by 27%. That is the reason, of course, for the plummeting unemployment rate.

President Obama, on the other hand, hasn’t been able to get economic growth moving at all. To be fair, he hasn’t tried to do so, so his failure may be intentional. Over the same period of time in which GDP increased 27% under President Reagan, it has risen by only 2% under President Obama–less than one-thirteenth the rate of growth.

    Inflation

It is hard to imagine if you didn’t live through it, but at the beginning of 1981, most people thought that inflation posed a bigger threat to America’s future than its 8.3% unemployment rate. President Reagan inherited that problem because of the lax monetary policies of the Carter administration. The inflation rate was a stunning 13.58 in Carter’s last year. Reagan fixed it faster than anyone had thought possible, through monetarist policies. By December 1983–the equivalent of where we are now in the Obama administration–the inflation rate had dropped all the way down to 3.8%, stunning accomplishment that was foreseen by almost no one, other than President Reagan and Milton Friedman.

Times are different now. President Obama assumed office at a time of zero inflation and fears of deflation. One can, however, compare changes in the cost of living in the two eras; specifically, the cost of gasoline. President Reagan came to the presidency at a time when there was a severe shortage of oil. Cars would line up at gas stations, sometimes for hours, and it was widely predicted that the world was running out of oil and we would have to transition to “green” energy. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. President Reagan removed the foolish price controls on oil that had been imposed by Jimmy Carter, and the price of energy almost immediately began to plummet. Sure enough: when President Reagan took office, the price of a gallon of gasoline at the pump was $1.25 (much more in today’s dollars). By April 1986, the price of gas had dropped 34%, to $.82. The Democrats of the time were so ignorant of economics that they predicted that lifting price controls would cause the price of gasoline to skyrocket!

When Barack Obama became president in January 2009, there was no energy crisis in progress. The price of gasoline was a manageable $1.83 at the pump. Usually, when gas prices rise it is because the economy is booming and demand for energy therefore increases. During the Obama administration, the economy has cratered and gas prices have risen anyway–a double whammy that many would have believed impossible until they saw how Obama’s “green” cronyism suppressed energy development. Thus, while Reagan’s policies led to a 34% decline in the price of gasoline at the pump, by December 2011 the average price was up to $3.29, an 80% increase in the price of gas, even though the economy was in the tank, and recoverable gasoline in the ground was more plentiful than at any time in world history! One wonders whether any other administration could have produced such an inept result.

This is, as I said, a game that one could play for a long time–compare Barack Obama’s first three years in office with those of other presidents. Obama has repeatedly shown himself to be ignorant of history, so his claim to be the fourth best president, thus far into his term–giving the benefit of the doubt to Abe Lincoln, FDR and Lyndon Johnson–can best be forgiven. The man has no idea what he is talking about. Those who have time to spare could do some research and do a similar comparison of Obama’s “achievements” with those of Ulysses Grant, William McKinley, Calvin Coolidge, Dwight Eisenhower and George W. Bush, to name just a few.
 
Obama’s job-approval rating is highest since summer, Post-ABC poll finds

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/obamas-job-approval-ratings-show-signs-of-improvement-post-abc-poll-finds/2011/12/19/gIQAdArC5O_story.html

After a difficult summer and a contentious fall, President Obama’s job-approval ratings are showing signs of improvement — a crucial indicator of his reelection chances as he seeks to overcome voters’ doubts about his economic stewardship.

A new Washington Post-ABC News poll finds that Americans are still broadly disapproving of Obama’s handling of the economy and jobs, the top issues, but that views of his overall performance have recovered among key groups, including independents, young adults and seniors.

At the same time, the public’s opinion of Republicans in Congress has continued to deteriorate, potentially putting the president in a position to benefit politically from his standoff with the GOP-led House over extending the payroll tax cut.
 
More electoral corruption. This is a very long article, but going to the lingk and reading will give you a much better idea of what citizen groups like the TEA Party movement (much less ordinary taxpayers) are fighting against:

http://www.propublica.org/article/how-democrats-fooled-californias-redistricting-commission
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Quag9dp1Nn4&feature=youtu.be

TV spot the Republicans need to air for the next year. 
This combined with Corzine telling congress he does not have a clue where his client’s money went. 
All the Republicans have to do is play those 2 video clips back to back over and over and over. 

 
In case you missed it, President Obama, during the last Sunday 60 Minutes interview stated that after Lincoln, Johnson and FDR, he was the next best. That segment was edited out (why: too fantastic to believe?) but was included in the online edition.

Cartoon Of The Day – The Most Arrogant President Ever


Michael Ramirez, the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner, has a cartoon showing why Barack Obama is not the fourth best President ever but, he is the most arrogant. Be sure to read each blurb – it’s well worth your time.

If you like political cartoons like I do, be sure to check Mr. Ramirez’s work in his book titled ‘Everyone Has the Right to My Opinion.’ I recently just picked it up myself and it is fantastic.
 
Perhaps some of our American members can comment on this:

http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/story/2011-12-22/voters-political-parties/52171688/1

Voters leaving Republican, Democratic parties in droves
By Richard Wolf, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – More than 2.5 million voters have left the Democratic and Republican parties since the 2008 elections, while the number of independent voters continues to grow.
 
A USA TODAY analysis of state voter registration statistics shows registered Democrats declined in 25 of the 28 states that register voters by party. Republicans dipped in 21 states, while independents increased in 18 states.

The trend is acute in states that are key to next year's presidential race. In the eight swing states that register voters by party, Democrats' registration is down by 800,000 and Republicans' by 350,000. Independents have gained 325,000.
 
The pattern continues a decades-long trend that has seen a diminution in the power of political parties, giving rise to independents as Ross Perot and Ralph Nader and the popularity this year of libertarian Republican Ron Paul.

"The strident voices of both the left and the right have sort of soured people from saying willingly that they belong to one party or the other," says Doug Lewis, who represents state elections officials. "If both sides call each other scurrilous dogs, then the public believes that both sides are probably scurrilous dogs."

Registered Democrats still dominate the political playing field with more than 42 million voters, compared to 30 million Republicans and 24 million independents. But Democrats have lost the most — 1.7 million, or 3.9%, from 2008.

Democratic registration has fared worse than Republicans in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina and Pennsylvania — the eight swing states with party registration. Republican losses are biggest in Nevada, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania.

The decline is due to a variety of factors. People move, people die, people revolt in disgust. Many are stripped from registration rolls by states seeking to remove inactive voters.

By contrast, the number of independents has grown for years and is up more than 400,000 since 2008, or 1.7%. States with big gains: Colorado, Florida, North Carolina — and Arizona, a possible target for President Obama in 2012.

The 2012 winner, says North Carolina elections director Gary Bartlett, will be "whoever is attractive to the unaffiliated voter."
 
It could be that in many states you can only vote in the primary of the party which you are registered, with some states allowing independents to vote in the primary of their choice. Since the GOP has been the big game this time around, and there also being significant dissatisfaction among moderates on both sides of the spectrum, there may be a move within the center to make their feelings known as a backlash against the swing towards the right on the GOP side.

But that is just a guess on my part. However there is a definite anti-incumbent mood down here which will make the next 10 t0 11 months very interesting.
 
Just plain piss poor performance.

Gingrich, Perry disqualified from Va. primary ballot

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/virginia-politics/post/perry-disqualified-from-va-primary-ballot/2011/12/23/gIQA3BZNEP_blog.html?hpid=z1

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich and Texas Gov. Rick Perry failed to submit enough valid signatures to qualify for the Virginia primary ballot, state GOP officials said Friday evening and early Saturday.

The Republican Party of Virginia announced early Saturday that Gingrich and Perry failed to submit 10,000 signatures of registered voters required to get their names on the ballot for the March 6 primary.

“After verification, RPV has determined that Newt Gingrich did not submit required 10k signatures and has not qualified for the VA primary,” the party announced on Twitter.

The rejection is a significant setback for the Gingrich campaign since he is leading the polls in Virginia among likely Republican voters and is seen as a strong contender for the nomination.

Perry’s campaign told state election officials it had submitted 11,911 signatures, and Gingrich’s campaign said it submitted 11,050 signatures. State party officials spent Friday night validating the signatures.

Earlier Friday, the Republican Party of Virginia certified former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and Rep. Ron Paul (Texas) to appear on the ballot.

The four candidates turned in thousands of signatures by the 5 p.m. deadline Thursday.

Jerry Kilgore, former attorney general and chairman of Perry’s campaign in Virginia, said he was disappointed, but that qualifying for the Virginia ballot is a “daunting task.”

“Hopefully, he will do better in other states,’’ he said. “He can focus on other states.”

Candidates had until 5 p.m. to collect 10,000 signatures from across the state, including 400 from each of the 11 congressional district.

Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann, Jon Huntsman and Rick Santorum did not submit signatures and failed to qualify on Thursday, according to state GOP officials.

Virginia, an increasingly important swing state, will hold its primary on Super Tuesday, March 6.

Romney became the first Republican presidential candidate Tuesday to submit signatures for Virginia’s primary election ballot.

On Thursday morning, Gingrich said at an event outside Richmond that his campaign was still collecting signatures, but expected to have enough.

A poll released Wednesday showed Gingrich with a slight lead over Romney among Virginia Republicans in the race for president. The Quinnipiac University poll shows Gingrich at 30 percent and Romney at 25 percent among Republican voters.

President Obama was the first presidential candidate to submit his signatures Dec. 2.

The Democratic Party of Virginia certified his signatures Friday. He was the only Democrat to qualify for the ballot so the State Board of Elections will cancel the primary. All Virginia delegates to the Democratic National Convention will be cast for him, said Brian Moran, party chairman.
 
Romney is sitting pretty right now. >:(
I dont believe the polls or anything the main stream media reports at this stage.Their task is to get Mr Obama re-elected.One little problem though,all those millions of unemployed and employed alike that are watching thier grocery and gas prices spiral upward.Thats all on the Prez.
 
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