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November 3, 2008 8:21 AM

Starting Gate: Calm Before The Storm?

In 2000, revelations that then-Governor George W. Bush has been arrested for driving while under the influence helped rock the final weekend of that presidential campaign. In 2004, it was a last-minute video tape from Osama bin Laden that helped inject late drama into the race. In 2008, about all we had to chew on over the last weekend was Barack Obama’s lead in the polls and John McCain’s appearance on “Saturday Night Live.”

To say this campaign is winding down to an anticlimactic finish, however, is to ignore the history of presidential elections over the past two decades. With a large turnout election brewing, millions of votes already cast, and still a full day before the polls open, this is just the calm before the storm – regardless of what the final outcome may be.

Frantic last-minute campaigning has led to a mind-boggling itinerary for the candidates in the race and there is some evidence that the race is tightening oh-so-slightly, if not on the national level, then in the battlegrounds. It looks for all intents and purposes to be a field tilted heavily towards the Democrats. But it ain’t over yet.

Encouraging signs for McCain and Republicans remain viable. Obama, for all his advantages, hovers right around or below 50 percent in many of the polls in key states, even those which he leads. The McCain campaign hopes that their opponent has reached his high-water mark in that regard and that they will pick up the vast majority of undecided voters, leaving their path to 270 Electoral Votes alive.

They have some reason for the optimism. No Democrat has won the White House with 50 percent or more of the vote nationally since Jimmy Carter narrowly did so in 1976. Bill Clinton failed to win a majority of the vote in either of his elections and while John Kerry received more votes than any Democratic candidate ever, he fell short of the White House in Ohio.

Anyone paying attention to the last two presidential elections understands all-too well that the path to the presidency is through the Electoral College, not the popular vote. The battlegrounds of this race remain almost exclusively in Republican territory but it is, indeed, Republican territory and it won’t be given up easily. Early voting and polls indicate Democrats are poised to make some tremendous gains but it they won’t come easy.

Campaigns are full of surprises and unexpected results. No campaign understands that better than Obama’s. Their loss in New Hampshire during the primaries, despite a ten-point lead in the polls, should be more than enough to serve as a reminder of what can happen on Election Day. Get ready, because one way or the other, tomorrow is going to be one heck of a ride.

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Tags:
Obama ,
McCain ,
Election Day
Topics:
Starting Gate
October 31, 2008 8:17 AM

Starting Gate: Campaign Fatigue Cure

If you’re still looking for just that right costume for the Halloween party tonight, you might want to consider going as the economy or maybe a 401k plan or upside-down home mortgage.

Or maybe, among select company, go as one of the presidential candidate. People seem to find plenty to be frightened of there (in the newest CBS News/New York Times poll, 57 percent of likely John McCain voters said the thought of Barack Obama being elected “scared” them – 47 percent of Obama supporters said the same of McCain).

No doubt you’ll see a lot of Obama and Sarah Palin lookalikes out on the trick or treat circuit tonight but it’s a pretty good bet that most voters are ready for this never-ending election to finally come to a conclusion. The campaigns can’t afford to let up now – in fact they’re in the midst of their final blitzes, revving their get-out-the-vote machines to full throttle and blitzing the battleground states with visits.

If you’re living in a safe state for one candidate or the other, then you’re relatively sheltered. Sure, you get the election blitz by turning on the news and you might be in the midst of down-ballot or local issue elections that can be just as intense as a presidential campaign. But if you’re in a battleground state like Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia or Florida, there’s virtually no place to hide.

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Tags:
Obama ,
McCain
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Starting Gate
October 30, 2008 8:17 AM

Starting Gate: Hope Or Irrational Exuberance?

Barack Obama opened his campaign with a message of “hope” and “change” and he’s closing it the same way. What’s changed from here to there is not what he’s pitching but the circumstances in which he’s selling it.

Two years ago, Obama opened his argument largely based on his initial opposition to the war in Iraq, targeting a Democratic Party whose opposition to that war had grown exponentially since Howard Dean used it to propel his campaign in 2004. Now, he’s closing it amidst an economic crisis and signs of a deep and lasting economic recession. In both cases, public sentiment has been strongly on his side, but is it real “change” or a case of what Alan Greenspan once called “irrational exuberance?”

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Tags:
Obama ,
McCain ,
ad ,
reality check
Topics:
Starting Gate
October 29, 2008 9:55 AM

Starting Gate: Hogging The Oxygen

What can $150 million raised in September do for a campaign? Well, for starters, it allows Barack Obama to put the pedal to the metal in the final week of the campaign and make it much more difficult for John McCain to stage what at this point would have to be considered a comeback.

One-day-at-a-time thinking starts to grow in magnitude when there are just a handful of them left and Obama’s financial situation is helping him to suck a little of the oxygen out of the dwindling time. The Democratic nominee will air a 30-minute television ad on three networks tonight – CBS, NBC and Fox. Little official is known about the content of the ad but it’s the first time a major party candidate has taken such a chunk of expensive airtime (Ross Perot did it in 1992).

The ad is likely to draw a large amount of speculation and attention throughout the day and heading into Thursday. On top of that, Bill Clinton will appear with Obama for the first time in the campaign – another sure headline-grabber – and the candidate is slated to hit the Daily Show as well (for those younger voters who might miss the news).

John McCain’s campaign has certainly shown a penchant for stealing away some of the attention Obama gets (remember their “celebrity” ads launched amidst Obama’s foreign trip this summer). But with time so short, the bar of “surprises” rises ever higher and the risk of appearing gimmicky grows.

The timing could hardly be better for Obama to rev things up as glimmers of hope are starting to pop up from McCain’s standpoint.

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Obama ,
McCain ,
ad
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Starting Gate
October 28, 2008 9:51 AM

Starting Gate: One Week To Go

John McCain and the rest of the Republican Party are in dire need of some good news as campaign 2008 enters its final week. They aren’t getting any.

The guilty verdict handed down in the trial of Alaska Senator Ted Stevens yesterday was just the latest blow to a party reeling from a political environment that threatens to bring deep and lasting damage in just seven days.

Stevens, who faced a tight re-election fight even had he been acquitted on corruption charges, is now clearly on the verge of defeat that could get Democrats one step closer to winning a 60-seat, filibuster-proof majority. That feat would leave the GOP with very little power with which to oppose legislation, judicial nominations or the Democratic agenda from sweeping through Congress.

Discord in the McCain campaign continues to leak into the press. Anonymous finger-pointing between Sarah Palin’s camp and McCain advisers may be taking place at lower levels of the campaign but it’s had a polarizing effect on a party that needs every last bit of energy directed towards turning out their voters on Election Day.

Already playing defense in must-win states like Florida and Ohio and GOP strongholds like Indiana, Colorado and Virginia, the RNC yesterday went up on the air in Montana – yes, Montana. A poll last week found Barack Obama with a slim lead in the Western state and Republicans must be seeing something that concerns them enough to divert precious resources into a state that should have been locked up before the race began.

Is there anything out there that constitutes good news for the McCain campaign?

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Tags:
McCain ,
Obama ,
Palin
Topics:
Starting Gate
October 27, 2008 10:16 AM

Starting Gate: Closing Time

With just a little over one week left in this marathon presidential campaign, the candidates will spend their dwindling time dashing from one battleground state to another looking for the votes that could swing the election one way or the other.

That they’ll be almost exclusively traversing territory President Bush won in 2004 indicates where the campaigns believe the race to be at the moment – and the candidates’ arguments are telling as well. John McCain’s message at the end of the campaign comes in three basic parts – convince voter that he is, in fact, not George Bush, convince them that Barack Obama is going to raise their taxes and get them to give second thought to putting a one-term senator in the White House.

Obama’s closing argument, which he begins laying out in a speech today, is a much different one. “In one week, you can put an end to the politics that would divide a nation just to win an election; that tries to pit region against region, city against town, Republican against Democrat; that asks us to fear at a time when we need hope. In one week, at this defining moment in history, you can give this country the change we need,” Obama will say according to prepared remarks.

“[T]he change we need isn’t just about new programs and policies,” he will continue. “It’s about a new politics – a politics that calls on our better angels instead of encouraging our worst instincts; one that reminds us of the obligations we have to ourselves and one another.”

This is the “transformational” message that first attracted attention to Obama and launched his campaign.

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Tags:
McCain ,
Obama
Topics:
Starting Gate
October 24, 2008 10:11 AM

Starting Gate: Palin’s Rising Star?

There seems to be a consensus within political circles that John McCain’s selection of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate has turned into a political drag on his campaign.

The evidence is convincing. Despite the initial splash and favorable reaction to her acceptance speech at the Republican convention, she hasn’t worn well with voters. Her favorable rating in the latest CBS News/New York Times poll stands at just 31 percent, nine points below her unfavorable rating. Polls universally show that majorities of voters don’t believe she’s “qualified” to be president, should that become necessary. Many say they don’t even believe she’s prepared to be vice president.

After a spate of interviews in which she appeared to be confused or not answer question, Palin’s list of critics has grown to include conservative columnists and pundits and even members of her own party. Her selection was one of the primary reasons Colin Powell listed when explaining his decision to endorse Barack Obama over McCain, his longtime friend. And the recent revelation of the GOP’s $150,000 shopping spree seems to have further diminished her political standing.

And yet Palin remains by far the most intriguing candidate in the race for Americans.

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Tags:
Palin ,
Obama ,
McCain
Topics:
Starting Gate
October 23, 2008 10:11 AM

Starting Gate: How Did They Get Here?

The backbiting is setting in early among some Republicans who see very little good news of late. Much of it began a couple of weeks ago when some of the conservative intelligentsia in Washington broke ranks on the John McCain’s selection of Sarah Palin as his running mate, openly criticizing the Alaska governor.

Some Republicans were reportedly incensed over news that the party had spent $150,000 to outfit Palin and her family for the campaign (almost always via anonymous quotes, of course). The McCain campaign’s strategy has been second-guessed at every turn with no lack of hindsight advice over decisions made.

The candidate himself dipped a toe into the blame-game pool today in an interview with the Washington Times, criticizing President Bush and Republicans in congress for creating the circumstances the party finds itself in now.

“We just let things get completely out of hand,” McCain tells the paper. He had no shortage of items on his list, citing “spending, the conduct of the war in Iraq for years, growth in the size of government, larger than any time since the Great Society, laying a $10 trillion debt on future generations of America, owing $500 billion to China, obviously, failure to both enforce and modernize the [financial] regulatory agencies that were designed for the 1930s and certainly not for the 21st century, failure to address the issue of climate change seriously."

Of all the finger-pointing that has gone on so far, McCain’s complaints are probably the most accurate.

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Tags:
Obama ,
McCain ,
Bush
Topics:
Starting Gate
October 22, 2008 9:41 AM

Starting Gate: On The Wrong Side Of Big ‘Mo

There are plenty of signs pointing toward a decisive victory for Barack Obama in less than two weeks. The campaign is now being played out almost exclusively in those traditional Republican states John McCain must win, Democrats hold a huge advantage in new voter registration, he’s being outspent at a rate never before seen in presidential politics and the polls aren’t tightening the way many expected, at least not yet.

In case the McCain campaign needed one more reminder of the position they’re in, consider this: Barack Obama has raised over $600 million for his campaign and the Republican camp finds itself besieged with outrage this morning over a report that they’ve spent $150,000 on a makeover for Alaska Governor Sarah Palin and her family since she was selected for the ticket in September.

This is what being on the wrong side of political momentum looks like. The Politico breathlessly reported last night that the Republican National Committee spent $150,000 in shops like Neiman Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue to “clothe and accessorize” Palin and her family for the campaign trail. Spending money on such personal items may run afoul of campaign laws although the McCain campaign says the clothes will be donated to charity after the election.

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Tags:
Palin ,
Obama ,
McCain
Topics:
Starting Gate
October 21, 2008 9:49 AM

Starting Gate: Testing Time

Everyone thought Sarah Palin would have been the vice presidential candidate to say something that knocked their campaign off-stride but it’s Joe Biden who’s giving the political world something juicy to chew on.

Discouraged over depressing poll numbers, unsettling economic news and even dissension within party ranks, Republicans were delighted to have Biden’s recent remarks about Barack Obama fall into their laps.

“We’re about to elect a brilliant 47-year old senator president of the United States of America,” Biden told Democratic fundraisers in Washington state on Sunday according to reports. “Remember I said it standing here if you don’t remember anything else I said. Watch, we’re gonna have an international crisis, a generated crisis, to test the mettle of this guy. … As a student of history and having served with seven presidents, I guarantee you it’s gonna happen. I can give you at least four or five scenarios from where it might originate. And he’s gonna need help."

John McCain and Republicans gleefully jumped on the remark, contending that it showed even Obama’s own running mate views him as untested and inexperienced. “We don't want a president who invites testing from the world at a time when our economy is in crisis and Americans are already fighting in two wars," McCain said in Missouri yesterday.

Democrats were quick to do damage control, contending that all presidents are tested and making sure to point out that Biden finished his remarks by saying that anyone who tests Obama will discover that he has “steel in his spine.” But it’s not a comfortable moment for Biden to be raising the issue in any case.

While Obama has gotten high marks for his debate performances and in most surveys is now seen as having cleared the bar of being able to handle a crisis, McCain retains an edge when it comes to the candidate seen as more prepared to be president and on the Commander-in-Chief question. Biden’s remarks play right into the hands of Republicans who’ve been looking for a way to revive the issue ever since the economic crisis came to dominate the campaign.

If the McCain campaign can continue to find ways to ratchet this theme up in the minds of voters, it could become a potent one for them. But time is growing short and the economy remains the number one issue by far, something that’s helped Obama and hurt McCain throughout this fall. They’ll likely need at least one or two more things to happen in order to really elevate it but if they do, we might look back on Joe Biden’s comments as the start of it all.

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Tags:
McCain ,
Obama ,
Biden
Topics:
Starting Gate

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