Roundup of campaign doings
Add comment January 31st, 2008
Josh Marshall does the honors:
Applesauce
Pat Cunningham offers an unabashedly liberal perspective on national politics. A note of caution: The language gets a litttle salty on some of the sites to which this blog links. So, don’t say you weren’t warned. By the way, this blog’s name is inspired by the Will Rogers quote, “All politics is applesauce.” |
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2 comments January 31st, 2008
It’s one thing for campaign partisans to misquote or otherwise misrepresent a rival, but it’s especially outrageous when a so-called respectable news shop does it.
Take the case of ABC News, which has quoted Bill Clinton out of context to make it appear that he favors a slow-down of the U.S. economy to help fight global warming.
Steve Benen has details HERE.
4 comments January 31st, 2008
John McCain gets pretty high ratings from conservative groups — his lifetime score with the American Conservative Union, for example, is 82.3 percent — but lots of cultural conservatives still hate him.
Why? Well, I think it goes beyond the issues of immigration and campaign-finance reform (on both of which, by the way, President Bush took the same stance as McCain but without suffering as much animus from the far right).
The arch-conservatives will never admit this, because it sounds so ridiculous, but I think their great disdain for McCain has something to do with some of the terms he uses in his public utterances, as when he said this the other night when he won the Florida primary:
“I am confident we will succeed in this contest and in the bigger one in November against anyone the Democratic Party nominates.”
Do you see the problem there?
He referred to the “Democratic Party.” Real Republican conservatives call it the “Democrat Party.”
Rabid rightists seem to think that “Democrat” as an adjective somehow sounds less euphonious, less respectable and more pejorative than “Democratic.” So, grammatical considerations notwithstanding, they misuse the one word and shun the other. And when they hear McCain use these words correctly, it grates on them.
The genesis of this Democrat-as-an-adjective silliness is not entirely clear. According to one theory, it all started with Sen. Joseph McCarthy, the infamous red-baiter and witch-hunter of a half-century ago. Others say it can be traced to the late 1950s when a man named Meade Alcorn, chairman of the Republican National Committee, issued a directive to his minions to thereafter avoid use of the word “Democratic.”
McCarthy’s example or Alcorn’s admonition, whichever it was, has been heeded to this day among the party’s more zealous elements. And woe to he or she who dares stray from this orthodoxy.
Jay Nordlinger, managing editor of the conservative National Review Online, has written of the guff he gets from some readers for his refusal to misuse “Democrat.” John L. Perry of the even more rightist NewsMax.com also refuses to go along with those who “abuse consciously or misuse ignorantly” the D-word.
The late Sen. Sam Ervin once said: “I have been trying to reform Republicans all my life and have had virtually no success, but I would like for them to adopt good grammar and quit using the noun ‘Democrat’ in lieu of the adjective ‘Democratic.’ If I can teach the Republicans that much grammar, I will feel that my effort to educate them has not been entirely in vain.”
Add comment January 31st, 2008
I mean no disrespect when I say President Bush is not my commander in chief. I’d say the same if Hillary Clinton was president.
A U.S. president is commander in chief only of the nation’s mililtary, not the civilian populace.
Garry Wills explains it HERE.
Add comment January 31st, 2008
Josh Marshall WONDERS WHY Romney isn’t buying TV time in the Super Tuesday states.
I wonder, too. Maybe he’s tired of blowing his kids’ inheritance.
UPDATE: Well, it looks like Mitt is buying TV time after all. At least, that’s what it says HERE.
1 comment January 31st, 2008
More than ever, the American people think the war in Iraq has NOT BEEN WORTH THE COST in money and lives.
The presidential candidates would do well to take note.
Add comment January 31st, 2008
Ladies and gentlemen, place your bets at any window.
We’re in the semifinals, and soon the field will be reduced to two contestants for the big showdown.
Whom do you like?
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