Delaware Liberal

Thursday Open Thread

It’s that time again, the time when we open a thread for you to play. Play away, but remember, play nice!

With all the natural disasters unfolding right now, I don’t know how much you’ve been following the flooding in Nashville. It’s very, very severe. Landmarks like the Grand Ole Opry and the Country Music Hall of Fame have been flooded. Below is a video showing a house floating down the highway. It’s I-24, and it’s a section of road that I’ve driven many, many times. Horrific.

You know one of the strangest parts? It’s being reported that piranhas have escaped from tanks in a restaurant at the Opry Mills Mall (also a place I’ve visited many times). It’s just what they need around there – piranhas.

Politico reports on a poll done by a Republican polling organization showing Republicans are in trouble with their messaging:

Republican voters want Congress to repeal the healthcare overhaul, aren’t convinced that climate change is happening, and don’t think illegal immigrants should have a way to become citizens or that President Barack Obama has improved the United States’ global standing – all stances that put them at odds with the majority of voters, according to a new survey by Resurgent Republic.

Resurgent Republic, a 501(c)4 non-profit founded by GOP operative Ed Gillespie, provides polling and research intended to assist conservatives and Republicans. Though no consensus emerged among its panel members, some suggested messaging solutions included calling for “amending” – rather than “repealing” – the healthcare overhaul, talking about “legalization” rather than “amnesty” in any discussion about providing illegal immigrants a path to citizenship, and not denying that climate change is taking place.

On each issue, the contrast between views of Republicans and independents was striking. For instance, the Resurgent Republic poll of 1,000 likely voters found that only 35 percent of respondents agreed with the approach of the GOP members of Congress who sounded the call to “repeal and replace” the health care reform legislation passed in March. Among respondents who identified themselves as Republicans, however, support for a repeal-and-replace strategy was 67 percent, compared to 36 percent among independent respondents.

Republicans continue to be held hostage by their base. We’ll have to see how this plays out in November. I think the election results are going to depend highly on how the economy is doing.

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