Tuesday Open Thread [10.16.12]
The candidates for governor of Delaware squared off in a debate Tuesday morning on WDEL. Unfortunately I was at work and missed it. Was anyone at Widener to see the debate or did you listen on WDEL?
"Nearly two-thirds say they do not need any more information before Election Day, and barely one in eight is undecided or says there is a chance he could change his vote. Even as voters overwhelmingly perceive that Romney won the first debate, the vast majority say their opinion of the president did not shift as a result." "But more people changed their views of Romney, largely in a positive direction. Overall, more than twice as many say their opinions of the former Massachusetts governor improved than say they worsened as a result of the debate. The strongest reaction is among Romney backers, 70 percent of whom say Denver made them think more highly of the GOP nominee."This poll is not an outlier. Other polls showed the President retaking the national lead from Romney as the latter's debate bounce fades. Here is our new map:
Duke Brooks, a spokesman for the Sussex County Republican Committee, said committee members learned about two weeks ago of rumors involving allegations of serious criminal conduct by Bodenweiser about 20 years ago.Hopefully this odious man named Eric Bodenweiser is gone from our politics forever. And hopefully Christine O'Donnell and her insane group of Teabaggers currently running the Republican Party in this state are gone too. But if they insist, despite this humiliation, to continue inflecting our body politic with their cancer, then next time hopefully they will more fully vet their candidates.
Having slept on it, and read this morning's ruminations from near and far, I haven't had any blazing new insights on last night's vice-presidential debate, but am convinced more than ever that Biden's performance, whatever its effect on swing voters, dispelled a dark cloud over the Democratic tribe. And that's not just because it might have interrupted Romney's "momentum" or countered the president's "loss" last week. In retrospect, what dispirited an awful lot of Democrats about the first presidential debate was that it emblemized the fear that in an intense, high-stakes battle with an ascendant and radicalized conservative movement, progressive elected officials just didn't have the willingness or ability to make a full and passionate case for their own cause. That was at the heart of criticisms not only of the president's demeanor, but also of his many missed opportunities to rebut Romney and expose the rickety substructure of the mendacious self-presentation Moderate Mitt was attempting. And this is obviously a complaint that's been just under the surface of mixed progressive attitudes towards Obama and many other Democratic leaders for years now.Damn straight. We want fighters. The President let us down last week but he can recover. I know he is not as fiery as Biden and has a more measured "keep cool and calm" temperament, but the moment calls for righteous indignation and a fervent defense of all the good he has done. He is the most accomplished President since President Roosevelt. That is not spin, that is the fact. He needs to forcefully defend all he has done and will continue to do. He failed last week but hopefully he was taking notes on Air Force One while he was watching his Vice President fillet Congressman Ryan. Sure we don't expect Biden's laughter and eye rolls and the Biden Smile. But we expect the Obama smile and the patented Obama "That's Not True." I can hear it being said forcibly in my mind because the President has said it before. Now is not the time for politeness. Or kindness. If Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan are going to lie they need to be called on it repeatedly. By the way, here is a pic of the President on Air Force One watching the debate: