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Posts Tagged ‘Senate’

Ashley Judd not running

by Phantom Ace ( 4 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Election 2014, Progressives, Special Report at March 27th, 2013 - 7:32 pm

This is one of the best news republicans had received in while. Ashley Judd announces that she will not challenge Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnell for his Kentucky Senate seat. This is one less seat the GOP has to defend. This also prevents OFA from expanding the electoral playing field on the back of star power.

Update: Ashley Judd has announced via Twitter that she will not run for Senate. “After serious and thorough contemplation, I realize that my responsibilities & energy at this time need to be focused on my family,” she wrote.

Actress Ashley Judd has decided not to pursue a bid for the Kentucky Senate race, according to two sources familiar with her decision.

A source close to Judd said that Secretary of State Allison Lundergan Grimes’s interest in potential race made the decision not to run easier. “The timing just wasn’t right,” said the source.

This was really a close call. Too many on the Right dismissed Ashley Judd’s chances. But they underestimate OFA’s ability to use celebrity star power to turn out Low Information voters. Mitch McConnell and the Republican Party are breathing a sigh of relief. Now they can focus on holding or even picking up seats.

 

Obama to dine with Senate Republicans

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 48 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Food and Drink, Humor, OOT, Politics at March 6th, 2013 - 11:08 pm

Obama to Dine With Senate GOP
[via]

Republican Senators were directed to provide their own transportation (as did our Prezzy) unlike us peons whose transportation is paid for by tax dollars. Maybe I got that one wrong, but it’s too late to correct it in time for
The Overnight Open Thread.

Senate Republicans vow no more Akins!

by Phantom Ace ( 181 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, Republican Party at November 19th, 2012 - 11:10 am

For the 2nd electoral cycle in a row, The Republicans blew opportunities in senate races. The turning point in in the 2012 race, was Todd Akins winning the nomination for Senate in Missouri. The Democrats made this possible by supporting Todd Akins with ads. He went on to defeat John Brunner and Sarah Steelman. The latter 2 were electability and would have easily defeated Sen. Claire McCaskill. The Democrats knew that Akins was not an electable. The gambit work as Akins made offensive comments about rape and went on to lose. Senate Republicans now vow that there will be no more Todd Akins in future elections.

Read their lips: no more Todd Akins.

In the wake of the GOP’s Election Day beatdown, influential Republican senators say enough’s enough: Party leaders need to put the kibosh on the kind of savage primaries that yielded candidates like Akin — and crippled Republican prospects of taking the Senate in two straight election cycles.

It’s time, they say, for Washington bosses to be more assertive about recruiting and then defending promising candidates. They argue that it’s critical to start enlisting local conservative activists as allies and to ease the tea party versus Washington dynamic that’s wreaked havoc on the party.

All easier said than done, of course. Tea party types have relished showing the chosen candidates of the Washington establishment a thing or two — and it’s hard to see them laying down arms overnight. But after a sure-bet election in 2012 turned into an electoral disaster, Republicans say resolving their primary problem is, well, their primary problem.

Now, top Republicans are considering splitting the difference between the heavy hand they wielded in 2010 that prompted sharp blowback from the right and their mostly hands-off approach of 2012. Both strategies produced a handful of unelectable candidates, so senators are gravitating toward a middle ground: engage in primaries so long as they can get some cover on the local level.

One thing I dispute from this article is that Todd Akins was a Tea party candidate. He wasn’t since the Tea Party in Missouri supported Sarah Steelman. Akins was from the Santorum/Huckabee/Bush big government Progressive wing of the GOP. He would have lost a run off election. That is what is needed, mandatory run off elections if no candidate gets 50%. This will prevent a loon like Akins or an obvious false flag candidate like Sharon Angle from getting near a Senate candidacy.

Another item needed to make sure the Senatorial 2010 and 2012 debacles is message discipline. All new candidates should be given instructions on how to answer trap questions. Hopefully the GOP learned its lesson for 2014 and there will be no more Akins/Angle ssituation.

1 Week to go!

by Phantom Ace ( 115 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Elections 2010, Open thread, Polls, Progressives, Republican Party at October 26th, 2010 - 9:00 pm

Well in about a week America decides, do it want to continue the Leftist/Progressive direction it has been going in since 1989? Or will go back to the path Reagan and for a brief moment the 95 Gingrich Congress was persuing. The choice is ours to get back on that Conservative course.

As it stands If the election was held today:

The House is at 223 Republicans, Democrats are at 178 and there 34 Toss ups. This and the generic poll average indicates the GOP will win the House. The question is, by how much?

The Senate stands at 51 Democrat and 49 Republicans without any toss ups. If West Virgina and Washington go the other way, it would be 51 (R) – 49 (D).

The Governor races stand at 30 Republicans and 20 Democrats without any toss ups.

We should not rest on laurels, we have to get out there and vote.

Here is what I think is the most effective commercial I have seen since the Reagan era.

Let’s discuss the election.