Two Questions for the Obama Spin Machine on Day of Pennsylvania Primary …

1. Why downplay chances to win Pennsylvania?

2. Why is Obama currently running even with Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain (actually, losing 48 percent-46) in … get ready … MASSACHUSETTS?!!!

(Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., is plus-15 percent over McCain in the same poll.)

FYI to all readers of my blogs — those who agree, those who don’t agree, even those who don’t read them and hit the delete button:

Please read below two reports that just were posted today, the day of the Pennsylvania primary, before the returns are in: one by ABC News reporter and political editor Jake Tapper; and another by Boston Herald columnist and radio talk show host Michael Graham.

P.S. The answer to the two questions asked above is — Barack Obama currently shows serious weakness in the general election vs. John McCain in battleground states Democrats must win to defeat Sen. McCain in November (e.g., Ohio, Pennsylvania, Florida) as compared to Sen. Clinton.

That is a fact.

Thus: These two pieces are MUST-READS for all superdelegates who want to defeat John McCain in general election … and who know that this is not a race to decide student body president but president of the United States


ABC’s Jake Tapper: Why Can’t Obama Win Pennsylvania?

http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2008/04/why-cant-obam-1.html

There’s this presumption out there, it seems to me, as if it’s just a CRAZY notion that Sen. Barack Obama, D-Illinois, would be able to win the Keystone State, like the idea is INSANE, just unfathomable, as if the state consists of Bill, Chelsea, and les freres Rodham.

I don’t begrudge the Obama campaign for successfully setting Sen. Clinton’s bar so high — that’s its job — and of course I understand that in order for Clinton to have a real shot, she needs a big W so as to eat away at Obama’s 800,000 popular vote lead, and to make the argument to super-Ds that states such as Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Florida are a problem for him.

Fine, fine.

But what’s so crazy about the idea that the Democratic frontrunner — flush with cash and outspending Clinton 3-to-1, running against a candidate with such high unfavorable ratings — should be able to win a blue state primary?

Just because Clinton has the support of the governor and the mayors of the two largest cities? So what? This isn’t about Ed Rendell.

After Obama swept Wisconsin, doing well if not winning in key traditionally Clinton-backing constituencies — labor voters, seniors, white women, Jews — his campaign put forth the notion that he was about to put this thing to bed. But then the dynamics returned to what they had been — seniors, women, whites, and blue-collar voters for her; educated voters, blacks, young voters and men for him.

Why can’t the frontrunner win working class voters?

The Obama campaign may likely spin tonight’s outcome as a W for him as long as she doesn’t win by 25 points. I, for one, ain’t buying it.

—————-

Fact is Obama’s risky
Even Mass. Democrats starting to take notice

By Michael Graham

http://BostonHerald.com/news/opinion/op_ed/view.bg?articleid=1088709

Barack Obama, meet John Adams.

Adams noted during the Boston Massacre trial that “Facts are stubborn things.” And it appears that, for the moment, the facts have caught up with Obama here in Massachusetts.

How else to explain the amazing, astounding and unthinkable results of the latest SurveyUSA presidential poll: Republican John McCain is tied with Barack Obama in the Bay State.

The last Republican to win Massachusetts? Ronald Reagan. The last Republican before that? Dwight Eisenhower. Even George McGovern managed to carry Massachusetts in 1972, the one Democratic holdout in Richard Nixon’s 49-state landslide.

Replace “McGovern” with “MoveOn.org” and you’ve seized the essence of the Obama candidacy. He’s the most liberal U.S. senator, advocating tax increases on the “wealthy” and enjoying the support of Gov. Deval Patrick, Sen. Ted Kennedy, The Boston Globe-Democrat and every 9/11 conspiracy kook in the People’s Republic of Cambridge. He’s got all the players in Massachusetts behind him except the ones who actually vote.

While Hillary Clinton soundly beats McCain in Massachusetts in the new SurveyUSA poll, 56 percent to 41 percent, the Obama/McCain number is 48 percent to 46 percent, well within the margin of error.

A Democrat struggling here in 2008? An unpopular war, a collapsing housing market and $4 gas — if Britney Spears were running as a Democrat, she’d pull at least 50 percent of the Massachusetts vote.

Sixty percent if she kept her clothes on.

Holly Robichaud, the “Lone Republican” of Boston Herald fame, blames Patrick for Obama’s woes. “We’ve already elected one inexperienced candidate running on a vague platform of hope in Massachusetts, and it’s not working out. This is a classic example of ‘Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me.’ ”

Not a bad theory, given that SurveyUSA also found only four in 10 residents approve of the job Gov. Patrick is doing.

But I think that the question driving Obama’s numbers down of late — Clinton passed him in Gallup’s national head-to-head this past weekend for the first time in weeks — is that liberals wonder if he can give them that which they crave most.

Not socialized medicine. Not surrender in Iraq. Not even higher taxes on evil, rich, white oil company executives.

What they want is victory — at virtually any cost.

Typical Americans want to know if Obama, a liberal community activist with little political or executive experience, is tough enough to face our enemies in a troubled world. Massachusetts Democrats could not care less — they just want to make sure he’s tough enough to take on McCain.

And because the answer is “probably not,” Obama is struggling among what should be his most ardent admirers. Massachusetts liberals like him as a guy, and they certainly support his politics. But they really hate losers. Especially after the last eight years.

From the 2000 election controversy — “selected, not elected” to “Bush lied, people died” — the Democratic passion for victory is palpable. The sting of 2004, when exit-poll reporting had John Kerry supporters cheering at 4 p.m. and crying at midnight, is a painful memory.

For a while, Obama was the golden child. His campaign allegedly inspired Obamacans to abandon the GOP in red states like Montana. As long as he looked like a winner, the Obama Express could not be stopped.

Now, it’s the post-Rev. Wright Obama — insulting “clinging” rural voters, running attack ads of questionable veracity, making public statements on things from gun control (for it) and higher taxes (for them, too) that are demonstrably untrue.

This may be the righter “left” way to govern, but is it the way to beat McCain?

Until Democrats have an answer, Hillary Clinton won’t be dropping out of the race. Why should she?

Tags Barack Obama Barack Obama Barack Obama presidential campaign Barack Obama presidential primary campaign Candidate Position Conservatism in the United States Conservative Hillary Clinton caucuses and primaries Hillary Rodham Clinton John McCain John McCain Natural Disaster Pennsylvania Democratic primary Person Career Person Location Person Party Politics Presidents of the United Nations Security Council Quotation Republican Party United States Voting Result

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Most Popular

Load more