That Was
The Week That
Was ... sad business, cyclone and all -- Cyclone Daffodil, no
less. If giving it such a name was designed to appease the Wind Gods ... it
didn't work. The snip of info on how the junta is handling this will piss you
off. But then, we lived through Katrina -- we're already pissed off.
John
Edwards took 7% of the vote last night in W. Virginia; there's speculation that
he will throw his chip to Obama tonight, whose camp has announced a major
endorsement. Meanwhile, Hillary took ownership of the state by 67% [and there
was evidently some shenanigans going on at the polls ... well, duh!.]
Still, Obama got three more Super
D's today along with a nod from NARAL Pro-Choice; Hillary's camp, evidently
blindsided on that one, commented with surprise. He now needs only 17 more
pledged delegates to have the majority ... which won't stop Hil as she picks up
Kentucky and waits to see if he will implode, arguing that the white people are
in her pocket [cynical at least, hubristic at best ... the Blue does not carry
West Virginia, and 7% going to a guy out of the race since February means
they're not so hot on women either.] I don't begrudge her the rest of the states, at this point -- her moment to be selfless came and went -- this has been an egocentric campaign for awhile now. Those who passionately want her deserve to cast their vote, now.
The truly stunning
event of last evening was ANOTHER long-held GOP seat going to a Dem,
this one in Mississippi ... this was the third to cut into their sacred power-holdings and the
second race marred by Pub ads including the Rev. Wright sound-bite [soundly ignored by voters.]
The
Dubby's done 'em in, kids -- big time. The Pub's are beside themselves with
angst, now -- couldn't happen to a nicer group of toadies. I've added a couple
of articles below Harpers; this is worth a big grin of satisfaction. A
BIG one!
Jude
HARPER'S WEEKLY
REVIEW
May 13, 2008
The military junta in Myanmar put the
official death toll
from last week's Cyclone Nargis (Urdu for "daffodil")
at
28,458, while foreign observers, taking into account that
heavy rains
were expected to continue, with malaria,
tuberculosis, cholera, typhoid, and
dysentery to follow,
expected that as many as 100,000 people would die.
Before
distributing foreign-aid packages, the junta re-labeled
them with
the names of its generals; a referendum on a new
constitution that will
perpetuate the junta's rule was not
delayed. "Let's go cast a vote," sang two
female pop
vocalists on state-run television. "With sincere thoughts
for
happy days, let's go cast a vote." John Goodyear, whom
Senator John McCain
had chosen to manage this year's
Republican convention and who once managed
public
relations for the Myanmar junta, stepped down, and one in
four
Republicans voted against McCain in primaries in
North Carolina and Indiana.
Senator Barack Obama crushed
Senator Hillary Clinton in the North Carolina
Democratic
primary, lost by a small margin in Indiana, and then took
the
lead in pledged superdelegates. Clinton pointed out
that she still enjoys
support from hard workers and white
people. "A woman is like a teabag," she
said, quoting
Eleanor Roosevelt. "You never know how strong she is
until
she's in hot water." One hundred seventy-eight House
Republicans
voted against a resolution "celebrating the
role of mothers in the United
States," and Yup'ik-speaking
voters in Alaska demanded better bilingual
election
materials, citing a 2002 ballot in which "natural gas" had
been
rendered as "this gas in the stomach."
U.S. military reports on the
interrogation of four
captured Shia militia members concluded that Hezbollah
was
training small groups of Iraqi insurgents in Iran. John
Bolton,
ex-ambassador to the United Nations, said that
attacking Iran was "really the
most prudent thing to do";
the Iraqi government said that it would conduct
its own
inquiry. "We do not want to start a conflict with Iran,"
said
Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh. "We need
our own government
documentation of this interference, not
from the Americans, not from the
media." The U.S.-backed
government of Lebanon tried to dismantle
Hezbollah's
extensive telecommunications network there, and
Hezbollah
temporarily seized half of Beirut. "The hand that touches
the
weapons of the resistance," said Hezbollah leader
Hassan Nasrallah, "will be
cut off." One Wing, a bald
eagle that lost its other wing in the 1989 Exxon
Valdez
oil spill, died of a heart tumor, shortly after the death
of its
mate, The Old Witch; three northern elephant seals
were found shot in the
head, lying in pools of blood, in
San Simeon, California, near the Hearst
castle. Oil
exceeded $125 a barrel. Refined french-fry grease was 32
cents
per pound, up 20 cents from 2006.
The FBI raided the headquarters of the
Office of Special
Counsel, a federal watchdog agency charged with
protecting
government whistleblowers, and the home of its director,
Scott
J. Bloch, after Bloch was accused of destroying
evidence on government
computers. David S. Addington, Vice
President Dick Cheney's chief of staff,
was subpoenaed by
the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the
Constitution,
Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties, and the Humane Society
of
Mercer County, Pennsylvania, increased to $1,500 its
reward for information
about the torture and murder of a
ten-year-old blind pony named Kahlua. DNA
tests revealed
that a skull long thought to be that of German
playwright
Friedrich Schiller was not his. "Such an exact double,"
said
anthropologist Ursula Wittwer-Backofen, "couldn't
have got into the coffin
just by accident." Three
home-schooled teenagers in Texas were accused of
digging
up the corpse of an 11-year-old boy and smoking pot out of
the
skull. "He regurgitated in his plate of food when I
asked him about it," a
policeman said of one of the
boys. "So I knew there was some truth to the
story."
Mildred Loving, a black woman whose 1958 marriage to a
white man
led the Supreme Court to declare bans on
interracial marriage
unconstitutional, died at age 68, and
two women in Denver, Colorado, were
found guilty of
trespassing after they refused to leave the office of
a
county clerk who denied them a marriage license. "They
held hands as
long as they could," said Rev. Michael
Morran, who was there to conduct the
ceremony, "until the
officers put their hands in handcuffs and led them
away."
Pop country singer Eddy Arnold, known for such hits as
"Make the
World Go Away," died just days before his
ninetieth birthday. "He died," said
Grand Ole Opry star
Jim Ed Brown, "of a broken heart."
-- Sam
Stark
http://harpers.org/archive/2008/05/WeeklyReview2008-05-13
Democrat Travis Childers won Tuesday's Mississippi special election
runoff for Sen. Roger Wicker's (R) former House seat, handing Democrats the
biggest of their three special election takeovers this cycle and sending a
listless GOP further into a state of disarray.
Childers led GOP candidate
Greg Davis 53-47 with more than 90 percent of precincts reporting. Turnout
increased substantially over the 67,000 voters who cast ballots in the April 22
open special election, with more than 100,000 voting in the
runoff.
Childers, who beat Davis 49-46 three weeks ago but came up just
shy of a race-ending majority, joins new Democratic Reps. Bill Foster (Ill.) and
Don Cazayoux (La.) to give Democrats a trifecta of upsets in conservative House
districts over the last two months.
The loss could send shockwaves
through the Republican Party, where murmurs about a leadership shakeup have
become more and more audible.
Democrats are backing up the assertion that
they remain on the offensive in the cycle following a 30-seat gain, which has
historically not been the case after a "wave" election.
Wicker's former
district voted 62 percent for President Bush in 2004 and, by that measure, is
one of the most conservative seats Democrats have taken from the GOP over the
last 18 months, including the 2006 election.
"After three consecutive
special election defeats in districts President Bush twice won easily, it is
abundantly clear the American people have turned their back and shut the door on
the special interest-driven agenda of the Republican Party," said the chairman
of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), Rep. Chris Van Hollen
(D-Md.). "There is no district that is safe for Republican candidates because
President Bush's failed policies have hurt every community in
America."
Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), the chairman of the National
Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), issued a somber and self-reflective
statement following the loss, saying Republicans were "disappointed" and that
they need to prepare to run against Democrats campaigning as
conservatives.
"Though the Democrats' task will be more difficult in a
November election, the fact is they have pulled off two special election
victories with this strategy" in Louisiana and Mississippi "and it should be a
concern to all Republicans," Cole said.
Cole added that "the political
environment is such that voters remain pessimistic about the direction of the
country and the Republican Party in general. Therefore, Republicans must
undertake bold efforts to define a forward-looking agenda that offers the kind
of positive change voters are looking for. This is something we can do in
cooperation with our presidential nominee, but time is short."
Minority
Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) said the result should serve as a "wake-up call" to
Republican candidates around the country.
Childers, the longtime Prentiss
County Chancery Clerk, campaigned as a conservative Democrat and overcame GOP
efforts to tie him to more liberal elements of the Democratic Party, including
presidential frontrunner Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) and Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(Calif.).
Republicans brought out the big guns toward the end of the
race, including a visit from Vice President Dick Cheney on Monday in Davis's
home county of Desoto, where the GOP candidate serves as mayor of the Memphis
suburb Southaven.
Despite Cheney's visit, Childers actually made headway
in Davis's home county, more than doubling his vote from three weeks ago and
partially thwarting a sizeable rise in turnout there. About 7,500 more voters
cast ballots, according to unofficial results, with Childers drawing about 3,000
of them.
Childers drew about 2,000 of the 12,500 votes in Desoto in
April.
Davis and Childers will square off again in November, as they have
already been elected their parties' general election
nominees.
Republicans cried foul Tuesday after the DCCC circulated a
flier stating Davis wanted a statue of Ku Klux Klan organizer Nathan Bedford
Forrest moved to his home city.
Davis's campaign disputed this and
pointed to a 2005 Memphis Commercial Appeal article that states he was willing
to accept a statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis, while another mayor
would accept the Forrest statue. A later New York Times article stated Davis had
welcomed the Forrest statue.
Both national party House committees plugged
more than $1 million into the race, and spending by the candidates and outside
groups like GOP-backing Freedom's Watch pushed the race over $5 million
total.
The NRCC's investment was particularly painful given its stark
cash disadvantage with less than six months to go until the November
election.
The NRCC had just $7.2 million in the bank as of March 31. It
spent $1.3 million in Mississippi.
The Democratic majority in the House
has now expanded to 236-199. ++
The Bell Tolls For Thee,
GOP
Houston Chronicle
5/14/2008
http://tinyurl.com/4hazz5
As a follow-up to yesterday's post on the special Congressional
election in Mississippi, the results are complete, Democrat Travis Childers
defeated Republican Greg Davis by a 54% to 46% margin last night.
As I
mentioned yesterday, the Republicans old tactics of screaming "liberal" and
trying to tie Childers to Barack Obama didn't work. In fact the association with
Obama had just the opposite effect, it increased the turnout of black voters and
assured Davis' defeat. Back to the drawing board GOP.
As an example of
Republican thinking, they brought in Dick Cheney and Trent Lott to make
last-minute pitches for Davis. What was the result of those endorsements?
Turnout in heavily Republican precincts was down. More brilliant strategy. For
more details on spending and campaign tactics read this at Swing State (thanks
eljefebob).
Tom Cole, head of the National Republican Congressional
Committee, couldn't spin this one away, issuing this statement:
"We
are disappointed in tonight's election results. Though the NRCC, RNC and
Mississippi Republicans made a major effort to retain this seat, we came up
short."
But then proving the old axiom that stupid is as stupid does
he added this:
"Republicans must be prepared to campaign against
Democrat challengers who are running as conservatives, even as they try to join
a liberal Democrat majority."
Librul, librul, librul, don't you guys
get it by now, it doesn't work any more, sheeesh. Then in what might be
considered the understatement of the millennia, Cole said this:
"The
political environment is such that voters remain pessimistic about the direction
of the country and the Republican Party in general. Therefore, Republicans must
undertake bold efforts to define a forward looking agenda that offers the kind
of positive change voters are looking for."
Pessimistic about the
direction of the country and the Party in general? Gee Tom, do you think? What
was your first clue? Maybe it was the poll that showed 80% of the country thinks
we're off the track.
But wait, there's more from the Mensa members of
the GOP. House Republicans have unveiled their new strategy for the fall
campaign. From the New York Times:
"In a memo to be sent to
Republican members today, the leadership hints at a new slogan building on the
change message that has already been shown to have political resonance with a
public unhappy with the nation's direction.
It looks like Republicans
will counter the Democratic push for change from the years of the Bush
administration with their own pledge to deliver, drum roll please, "the change
you deserve." The first element of the party agenda developed over the past few
months by the leadership and select party members will focus on family
issues."
So, after months of ridiculing Barack Obama for his message
of change as just a meaningless, feel-good line, the House Republicans in all
their originality have come up with the theme of "the change you deserve." Is it
any wonder they face a Democratic landslide in November?
One more thing,
apparently the GOP research people are brain-dead as well. The words "the change
you deserve" is the marketing slogan for Effexor, an anti-depressant drug.
'Nuff said. ++
"So keep fightin' for freedom and justice,
beloveds, but don't you forget to have fun doin' it. Lord, let your laughter
ring forth. Be outrageous, ridicule the fraidy-cats, rejoice in all the oddities
that freedom can produce. And when you get through kickin' ass and celebratin'
the sheer joy of a good fight, be sure to tell those who come after how much fun
it was."
~ Molly Ivins, 1944 - 2007
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107,
this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes.