truesee's Blog

Obama endorsements don't help Democrats

Obama endorsements don't seem to help Democrats

 



Arlen Specter
AP – Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa., climbs into his car as he leaves his election party after delivering his concession …

CHARLES BABINGTON

Associated Press

Wed May 19, 3:11 am ET

 

WASHINGTON – The role of endorser in chief isn't working so well for President Barack Obama.

Sen. Arlen Specter became the fourth Democrat in seven months to lose a high-profile race despite the president's active involvement, raising doubts about Obama's ability to help fellow Democrats in this November's elections.

The first three candidates fell to Republicans. But Specter's loss Tuesday to Rep. Joe Sestak in Pennsylvania's Democratic senatorial primary cast doubts on Obama's influence and popularity even within his own party — and in a battleground state, no less.

Of course, it's possible that Democrats will fare better than expected this fall. And there's only so much that any president can do to help other candidates, especially in a non-presidential election year.

Still, Obama's poor record thus far could hurt his legislative agenda if Democratic lawmakers decide they need some distance from him as they seek re-election in what is shaping up as a pro-Republican year. Conversely, it might embolden Republican lawmakers and candidates who oppose him.

Obama's track record also raises the question of whether he may be hurting candidates he supports by motivating his foes — such as tea party supporters — to vote. Though this month's AP-GfK Poll shows Americans split about evenly over how he's handling his job, those strongly disapproving outnumber people who strongly back him by 33 percent to 22 percent — not an enviable position for the president's party.

Sestak's victory over Specter is especially embarrassing, because he won by portraying himself and his supporters as being more faithful to the Democratic Party than were Specter and his backers — who included the president, Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell and other high-ranking party officials.

Creating another bruise for Obama and the Democratic establishment Tuesday, Sen. Blanche Lincoln was forced into a runoff in Arkansas' Democratic senatorial primary. Obama supports her bid for a third term, but he is not as closely associated with her campaign as he was with Specter's.

In previous months, Obama's endorsements and campaign appearances weren't enough to save then-Gov. Jon Corzine's re-election bid in New Jersey, Creigh Deeds' run for governor in Virginia or Martha Coakley's campaign in Massachusetts to keep the late Edward M. Kennedy's Senate seat in Democratic hands.

In fairness, Deeds was an underdog from the start, and Corzine brought many problems on himself. But the Coakley loss to Republican Scott Brown was excruciating. She once was considered a shoo-in, and her defeat restored the Republicans' ability to block Democratic bills with Senate filibusters.

Unlike the Corzine, Deeds and Coakley races, Obama made no late-campaign appearances for Specter. But it will be hard for the president to distance himself from Specter's career-ending loss.

Obama campaigned for Specter last September in Philadelphia, where he said, "I love Arlen Specter." Specter used the clip in recent TV ads. Obama also e-mailed his supporters on Specter's behalf, and he was the first person Specter thanked in his concession speech.

Vice President Joe Biden, a Pennsylvania native, made several appearances for Specter. Last week he told a Pittsburgh radio station, "Arlen is the Democratic candidate."

Moreover, Obama was central to an all-important deal with Specter that struck some Democratic voters as opportunistic at best.

Specter had been a Republican senator for 28 years, opposing countless Democratic bills and appointees even if he showed more independence than most lawmakers. Thirteen months ago, however, he concluded he could not win the GOP nomination for a sixth term against conservative Pat Toomey. He and top Democrats struck a deal.

Specter would become a Democrat, giving the party the crucial 60th Senate vote it needed to overcome Republican filibusters, which were frustrating the administration. In exchange, Obama, Biden, Rendell and the entire Democratic hierarchy agreed to support Specter's 2010 re-election, including efforts to clear his way to the party's nomination.

The losers in the deal were any longtime Democrats who aspired to the U.S. Senate. They essentially were told to step aside for an 80-year-old longtime Republican. Pennsylvania's Democratic voters were asked to concur.

Sestak, a former Navy vice admiral first elected to the House in 2006, refused to go along. He plugged away without help from the state or national party. A few weeks ago he trailed Specter by about 20 percentage points in polls of likely Democratic voters.

But Sestak caught fire in the closing days, partly through a TV ad showing Specter campaigning enthusiastically with then-President George W. Bush, who remains deeply unpopular with many Democratic primary voters.

In the past few weeks, the White House has played down Obama's role in the Tuesday primaries, and he spent Election Day in Ohio talking about the economy.

"At some point, you feel like we've done what we can do," senior White House adviser David Axelrod told The Associated Press in an interview. "We do have other stuff going on," he said.

Matt Bennett, a Democratic strategist and vice president of the group Third Way, said he doubts that Democratic lawmakers will panic over Obama's inability to help Specter to a victory.

"Presidents have coattails when their names are on the ballot," Bennett said, and that can't happen for Obama until 2012.

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Obama says country would be worse off if Republicans had...

Obama says GOP would have caused 'deeper world of hurt'

Sam Youngman
The Hill 
05/18/10 01:33 PM ET

President Barack Obama on Tuesday said the country would be worse off if Republicans had thwarted his policies.

"If the just-say-no crowd had won out — if we had done things that way — we’d be in a deeper world of hurt," Obama said in comments in Youngstown, Ohio, according to his prepared remarks.

Obama, riding high after the economy added almost 300,000 jobs last month, warned of darker days ahead even as he castigated Republicans for trying to score political points off of some of the "unpopular" moves Obama said he had to make to spark an economic recovery.

The president, who toured manufacturing company V&M Star, boasted of the jobs being added to the economy because of his $787 billion stimulus package.

Obama, speaking in a critical swing state, said he would not "stand here and pretend things are back to normal or even close." But he added that the situation for Ohioans and the rest of the country would have been worse if Republicans had succeeded in stopping his economic policies.

The president called out the GOP for "predicting and even rooting for failure," and accused Republican lawmakers of hypocrisy for opposing the stimulus package but promoting projects it funds.

"Because even as they tried to score political points by attacking what we did, many of them went home and claimed credit for the very things they voted against," Obama said. "They show up and they cut the ribbons, and send the mailings home touting the very projects they opposed in Washington, and try to have it both ways. Imagine that, in politics?"

Obama took note of the 14 percent unemployment rate in Ohio, which is about four percentage points higher than the national number. He said there are "families having a tougher time than they'd ever imagined."

"Plenty of folks probably aren’t impressed by another president swooping in to talk to you about the economy, either — not when the only headline they want to see is 'You’re hired,' " Obama said.

In advance of the president's speech, the White House warned that Obama would "rebuke Republicans for making a politically calculated decision early on to sit on the sidelines and obstruct any measure aimed to help Americans during these difficult economic times."

Obama spoke on a huge primary day for both parties. Democrats are hoping an improving economy will bolster their changes of retaining control of Congress for the second half of Obama's first term in office.

Several Democrats joined Obama as he offered his remarks, including Ohio Reps. Tim Ryan, Charlie Wilson and John Boccieri and Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland (D).

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Bristol Palin Charges $30,000 per speech

Radar on Line

May 17, 2010 @ 06:58PM 
DNP Random Things

She’s probably the nation’s most famous unwed teenage mom and now, Bristol Palin is taking her experience straight to the bank.

A source close to Palin tells RadarOnline.com exclusively that Bristol has signed with a speakers bureau called Single Source Speakers, charging between $15,000 and $30,000 a speech.

Her first stop will be the Heartbeat International Conference in Orlando, Florida, on May 18

In an exclusive interview with RadarOnline.com, Bristol said she is “excited to go to Orlando and meet the hundreds of pregnancy support providers from around the world that will be attending.”

Palin says she is also writing her first book, which will detail her experiences on the 2008 presidential campaign trails, the notoriety she has faced as a result of her relationship with ex-boyfriend Levi Johnston, and how she is raising their son Tripp as a single mom.

 

LINK TO STORY

http://www.radaronline.com/exclusives/2010/05/exclusive-bristol-palins-new-job-30000-speech

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Rev. Jeremiah Wright claims President Obama 'threw me under the bus'

Rev. Jeremiah Wright claims President Obama 'threw me under the bus' in letter to African aid group

Rich Schapiro
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

 

Tuesday, May 18th 2010, 9:22 AM

 

Then Sen. Barack Obama poses with his pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, in happier times.

Trinity United Church of ChristThen Sen. Barack Obama poses with his pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, in happier times.

He's baaack.

The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama's controversial ex-pastor, threw a hissy fit in a letter to an African aid group, claiming that the president "threw me under the bus" and the White House views him as "toxic."

In a missive obtained by the Associated Press, Wright told Africa 6000 International that the Obama administration would likely ignore his efforts to release frozen funds for use in earthquake-stricken Haiti.

"No one in the Obama administration will respond to me, listen to me, talk to me or read anything that I write to them. I am 'toxic' in terms of the Obama administration," Wright wrote the president of the Pennsylvania-based group, Joseph Prischak, earlier this year.

"I am 'radioactive,' Sir. When Obama threw me under the bus, he threw me under the bus literally!" he wrote. "Any advice that I offer is going to be taken as something to be avoided. Please understand that!"

The White House didn't respond to requests for comment Monday about Wright's remarks.

Several phone messages left for Wright at his Trinity United Church of Christ were not returned. Wright's spokeswoman, his daughter Jeri Wright, did not immediately comment on the substance of the letter.

In the spring of 2008, a video of Wright denouncing American policies in a sermon at his Chicago church threw then-Sen. Obama's presidential campaign into turmoil.

Obama sharply denounced his former pastor's incendiary remarks.

But Wright continued to ignite controversy.

In a speech to the National Press Club in April 2008, he claimed the U.S. government could plant AIDS in the black community, praised Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan and suggested Obama's shunning of his pastor was simply a PR move.

That rant prompted Obama to cut ties with Wright, whom he labeled "divisive and destructive," and leave his church.

Wright's letter was sent Feb. 18 to Prischak, the president of Africa 6000 International in Erie, Pa. Wright subsequently agreed to write a letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on the group's behalf to try to get access to millions of dollars.

 

LINK TO LETTER:

http://www.kansascity.com/2010/05/18/1952979/ex-obama-pastor-obama-threw-me.html

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Is incumbency all it's cracked up to be? Today's races holds the answer

Incumbency loses its edge in three big primary battles

Arlen Specter, Joan Specter, Anthony Hardy Williams, Silvi Specter, Perri Specter, John Dougherty
AP – U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa

Mon May 17, 8:24 pm ET

One major theme to watch for as primary returns start rolling in for Tuesday's key Senate races: Is incumbency all it's cracked up to be?

In most election cycles, holding a seat in Congress is a huge tactical advantage, since sitting lawmakers are usually able to draw on the campaign war chests that national party organizations and congressional campaign groups build up — in addition, of course, to all the time that elected officials spend fundraising on their own.

That advantage shrivels, though, when the electorate seems to be in throw-the-rascals-out mode, as seems to be the case so far in 2010. Rather than coasting into a lavishly funded media push in the homestretch of their primary races, two veteran senators — Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania and Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas — are fighting for their political lives. In Kentucky, the battle for the seat opened by Republican Jim Bunning's retirement is between a candidate endorsed by the state's GOP hierarchy, led by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, and the self-described tea party candidate, Rand Paul. Tuesday's ballot may well signal the depth of popular anger at Washington — and might serve as a bellwether for which party ultimately gains control of Congress in November. Here's a quick primer on the big three Senate races:

Pennsylvania

When Arlen Specter switched parties a year ago, he made no secret of his main motive: political survival. Facing a nasty GOP primary against onetime opponent Pat Toomey, Specter wasn't sure he could win. In any other case, such candor might help a candidate, but not this year. Even though Specter often siphoned off some Democratic support in his previous Republican campaigns, the longtime senator has struggled to convince members of the Democratic base that's he really one of them. In recent weeks, Joe Sestak, a Democratic congressman from the Philadelphia suburbs, has closed the gap with Specter, earning endorsements from groups like the abortion-rights group NARAL and MoveOn.org. And Sestak has been savvy not merely in questioning Specter's party loyalty, but also in joining the chorus of other primary challengers denouncing incumbent politicians and campaigning for a "new generation" in Washington. To counter that argument, Specter has been highlighting his "experience" in his own campaign messages. That's not just a dig at Sestak's limited time in Congress, but also a reminder of Specter's long resume in the Senate. Unfortunately for Specter, that may not be much of a selling point for voters Tuesday.

Arkansas

Heading into the 2010 cycle, Blanche Lincoln was considered a safe bet for re-election. She was a centrist Democrat — a position that played well in Arkansas, a once-liberal state that has increasingly swung right in recent years. But Lincoln's noncommittal positions on big-ticket legislative issues like health care reform earned her the ire of liberal activists and labor unions, including the deep-pocketed AFL-CIO, which began spending money on attack ads calling for her ouster. On Tuesday, she faces Lt. Gov. Bill Halter, who, in spite of getting endorsements from groups like MoveOn.org, says he's not challenging Lincoln from "the left" but more as an outsider — an argument that has traction in this anti-incumbent year. Though polling has been limited, a recent Daily-Kos/Research 2000 poll found Lincoln leading Halter by 9 points, 46 percent to 37 percent. And the race might not be over Tuesday: If neither candidate cracks 50 percent, a runoff would automatically be scheduled.

Kentucky

It's not just Democrats facing spoilers in their own party. When McConnell anointed Secretary of State Trey Grayson as the GOP establishment candidate to succeed Bunning, Republicans thought the race was over. Not so much. In recent weeks, Rand Paul — the son of libertarian Texas Rep. Ron Paul, an insurgent GOP candidate for president in 2008 — has taken a double-digit lead in most surveys. Rand Paul has made his insurgent primary bid a referendum on Washington, tapping the energy of the tea party base. He criticizes Republicans as much as Democrats and has notably refused to say whether he would even support McConnell for a role in Senate leadership should he win. While Grayson was endorsed by Dick Cheney and other key Washington Republicans, Paul picked up a major endorsement of his own: Sarah Palin. In recent days, McConnell, while not quite distancing himself from Grayson, has sought to make nice with Paul. In an interview on Sunday's "Meet the Press," McConnell insisted that the open primary was a good thing for the party — though he insisted a Paul victory had nothing to do with establishment politicians like himself.

— Holly Bailey is a senior political writer for Yahoo! News.

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Sarah Palin-We are all Arizonians

Palin joins Arizona gov. to defend immigration law

stumbleupon: Palin joins Arizona gov. to defend immigration law del.icio.us: Palin joins Arizona gov. to defend immigration law

JONATHAN J. COOPER

May 15, 2010 11:00 PM EST | AP

PHOENIX — As calls spread for an economic boycott of Arizona, the state's governor enlisted the help of former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin on Saturday to defend a new law cracking down on illegal immigration.

Jan Brewer and Palin blamed President Barack Obama for the state law, saying the measure is Arizona's attempt to enforce immigration laws because the federal government won't do it.

"It's time for Americans across this great country to stand up and say, 'We're all Arizonans now,'" Palin said. "And in clear unison we say, 'Mr. President: Do your job. Secure our border.'"

The former Alaska governor appeared with Brewer at a brief news conference on Saturday. The event launched a website that Brewer said was an effort to educate America about border security and discourage an economic boycott of the state.

The site, funded by Brewer's re-election campaign, shows pictures of Brewer and Palin and invites visitors to sign a petition opposing boycotts. It includes a list of politicians and organizations calling for the boycotts and asks visitors to call or e-mail to "let them know that you support Arizona."

"Our purpose today is to help the rest of the nation understand the crisis which confronts our state," Brewer said, citing the presence of human and drug smugglers.

The immigration law takes effect July 29 unless blocked by pending court challenges. It requires police enforcing another law to ask a person about his or her immigration status if there's "reasonable suspicion" that the person is in the country illegally. Being in the country illegally would become a state crime.

"I think for most American people the reaction to this would be, 'Why haven't the police already been doing that?'" Palin said.

Obama and some city, state and foreign governments have condemned the law, which critics say will lead to racial profiling of Hispanics. Brewer on Saturday reiterated her assertion that profiling is illegal and will not be tolerated.

"The president apparently considers it a wonderful opportunity to divide people along racial lines for his personal political convenience," Brewer said.

Arizona Democratic Party spokeswoman Jennifer Johnson said Brewer's the one who has divided people, which she's done by signing controversial bills, and "puts her political survival first every single day."

"Every word she said today was crafted with her Republican primary in mind," Johnson said. "Arizona is just an afterthought."

Brewer automatically became governor last year after former Gov. Janet Napolitano was appointed U.S. Homeland Security secretary. She's found herself rapidly thrust into an international spotlight, the subject of ridicule on the left and praised by anti-illegal immigration activists on the right.

Arizona's law is considered the nation's toughest crackdown on illicit border crossers. It was pushed by illegal immigration hard-liners in the state Legislature, but Brewer has become the public face of the law since she signed it April 23.

Her decision to sign it, announced in a nationally televised press conference, has given Brewer traction in this year's crowded GOP primary for governor.

Some of Brewer's opponents say she's not a true conservative and have hit her hard for demanding a temporary increase in the state sales tax. Her campaign has seized on the immigration bill to bolster her conservative credentials.

Brewer and Palin refused to say whether they'd support a guest worker program that would allow unskilled workers to temporarily work legally in the United States.

Palin is in Phoenix for a previously scheduled speech to a hunters group. She has defended the law on national television and spoken out against boycotts.

This week she railed against a suburban Chicago high school for skipping a girls' basketball tournament in Arizona because of concerns over the new law.

Palin said Wednesday night that people should help the Highland Park team get to Arizona even if the girls have to "go rogue."

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TV Chef Arrested for Hiring Homeless Hitmen to Kill Wife

Celebrity Chef Accused of Soliciting Wife's Murder

Juan Carlos Cruz is set to be arraigned Monday. He is accused of trying to hire a homeless hitman to slit his wife's throat.

Juan Carlos Cruz

 

Juan Carlos Cruz (Santa Monica Police Department)

 

TV Chef Arrested for Hiring Homeless Hitmen


SANTA MONICA -- A former TV chef suspected of recruiting homeless men in an alleged murder-for-hire plot against his wife is set to appear in a Los Angeles courtroom Monday.

Juan Carlos Cruz is expected to be arraigned on charges of soliciting to commit murder.

He was arrested last Thursday and was being held on $5 million bail.

TMZ says it obtained a series of text messages between Cruz and the homeless men he allegedly tried hiring to kill his wife. TMZ also reports that Cruz allegedly wanted the men to cut his wife's throat.

In the meantime, friends and neighbors of Cruz say they can't believe the allegations against him.

The 48-year-old Cruz formerly hosted the Food Network's "Calorie Commando."

He was arrested Thursday on suspicion of solicitation to commit murder, according to Santa Monica Police Sergeant Jay Trisler.

Co-workers and his neighbors in Westwood describe Cruz as a devout churchgoer, a community volunteer and a dedicated husband.

On Friday, May 7th, police officers were contacted by homeless men who said the suspect solicited them to commit murder. The men agreed to help officers in an investigation, in which details of the murder-for-hire method, where and when the individual was to be killed, and the terms of payment, were uncovered, Trisler said.

The victim whom Cruz intended to be murdered has been notified.

Cruz is a Knights of Columbus member who attends St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church and volunteers his time at "Love 4 Paws," a program that provides animals to sick children.

Cruz's wife, Jennifer Campbell, is his high school sweetheart and works long hours as an attorney, according to neighbors.

Cruz came to the United States at age 3, the youngest of three sons of immigrants from the Dominican Republic, and grew up in Arcadia.

He created the TV show, "Crusing in the Kitchen," that aired on a local California public-access station. That led to a featured appearance on the premiere season of Discovery Health Channel's "Body Challenge," on which he shed 43 pounds. He lost 15 more pounds after the show ended, according to his biography.

Cruz submitted a clip of the show to the Food Network. In 2004, the network signed him to produce the television show "Calorie Commando," in which guests challenged him to prepare their favorite meals with fewer calories while retaining the taste -- dishes included peanut butter cookies. His motto became "Keep the taste while you trim your waist."

Cruz produced 39 episodes of "Calorie Commando" before it was canceled in 2006.
LINK TO VIDEO OF JUAN WITH HIS WIFE:
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