Daily Kos

Limbaugh calls for Hoosiers to break law

Mon May 05, 2008 at 03:29:23 PM PDT

Rush Limbaugh has re-initiated "Operation Chaos" after briefly placing it on "pause", asking his listeners to vote for Hillary Clinton in the Indiana primaries in order to prolong the Democratic nomination process.  This has been known for several days now.  It is not such an issue in North Carolina because registered Republicans may not vote in the Democratic primary (only independent voters can) and registration changes are due more than a month before the election.

Louisville Courier-Journal Endorses Obama

Sun May 04, 2008 at 03:45:08 AM PDT

The Louisville Courier-Journal -- the largest newspaper in Kentucky and one which has significant readership in Southern Indiana -- has just endorsed Barack Obama in advance of the Indiana and Kentucky primaries.

Voters v Media: a concerning result

Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 09:16:50 PM PDT

The MSNBC evening lineup (especially Road to the White House) gave a fair amount of play tonight to a couple of results from the new NBC/Wall Street Journal Poll. This was sort of like a non-partisan push poll: voters were read a series of nine negative statements -- three for each of the three remaining candidates -- and asked about their level of concern on each one.

MSNBC spent most of their time focusing on two of these issues -- what I call "Obama/bitter" (his recent comments on religion and guns) and "Obama/values" (his associations with Jeremiah Wright and William Ayers). You might assume, from having seen the programming, that these were the foremost concerns to their poll respondents. But of course they weren't.

Jim Geraghty reveals his hand

Mon Apr 28, 2008 at 10:02:35 PM PDT

The National Review seems to particularly enjoy blogging about Jeremiah Wright.  I can sort of imagine the gang watching Wright's performance together, as they sip on a morning Chablis and kick their feet up on their desks, showing off their argyle socks.

Jim Geraghty -- otherwise known as the Dude Who Leaks Shitty Exit Polls -- had a particularly harsh critique of Wright and Obama today.

Krugman calls out Clinton on the gas tax ... or not [UPDATED]

Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 09:33:22 PM PDT

I'd have to say that for all the different ways that the Clinton campaign has irked me over the course of this campaign, for the most part Hillary Clinton has avoided putting out specious policy proposals that might compromise the progressive agenda.  While there have been a couple of exceptions -- I think her proposed mortgage rate freeze, for instance, is terrible economics -- in general I have agreed with the vast bulk of her domestic policy proposals.  For the record, I also think she's in the right headspace on the issue of health care mandates, although if you get into the economic nitty-gritty, I think there are decent arguments that implementing mandates without overhauling privatized medical insurance might not have the desired effects in terms of passing savings along to consumers.

Bayh nets Obama 31 New Superdelegates

Thu Apr 24, 2008 at 01:09:05 AM PDT

Apologies if this has been blogged already, but I just noticed that Evan Bayh, Clinton surrogate extraordinaire, has declared that Superdelegates should follow the will of their constituents.

The following item is from yesterday's Washington Post:

Clinton's Popular Vote Math

Wed Apr 23, 2008 at 04:16:58 PM PDT

Let's start by looking at the state of the popular vote, since those are the only metrics that Hillary Clinton has any realistic shot of winning.

Below is a table of the remaining primaries, and Clinton's projected margin of victory (or defeat) in each of them. The margins come from a straight, unweighted average of all polls that were released in April. I cheated in Montana, which doesn't have any polls, and plugged in a +10 for Obama.

SurveyUSA-PA: Clinton +6; Quinnipiac: Clinton+7

Mon Apr 21, 2008 at 05:02:27 AM PDT

http://www.nbc10.com/...

Obama closes gap from 14 points to 6.  Survey USA is now highly consistent with other polls of the state.

The survey concluded that Clinton will finish with 50 percent, 6 percentage points ahead of Obama. The margin of sampling error is 3.8 percent.

Looking only at SurveyUSA numbers and ignoring the polls that have been released by 12 competing pollsters in Pennsylvania, Obama gained ground in a week when he was largely on defense and off-message. Last week, SurveyUSA had Clinton ahead by 14 points. Monday, in a poll conducted using the identical methodology, SurveyUSA found Clinton ahead by 6 points.

Facts and myths about late deciders

Sun Apr 20, 2008 at 03:29:30 PM PDT

EDIT: Data excluded Arkansas before and has been fixed.

Yesterday, I presented a case that late deciders in Pennsylvania might be more inclined to break toward Hillary Clinton. This conclusion, indeed, seems to have become something of the conventional wisdom.

However, if we remove things from the context of Pennsylvania, it would be a mistake to conclude that Clinton has some inherent and inevitable advantage with late-deciding voters. Let's do what we always do here, which is to look at the numbers.

Dear George

Thu Apr 17, 2008 at 04:07:44 PM PDT

This might seem strange coming from someone who runs a website dedicated to the horse race elements of the campaign.  But George Stephanapolous has it wrong in his interview today with TPM's Greg Sargent:

   Asked to defend the fact that policy didn't come up for the first 40 or so minutes of the debate, Stephanopoulos said:

   "We decided to focus at the top on the issues that had been at the center of the debate since the last debate. Everything we brought up in that front section had not come up since the last debate. And they all focused on the same theme -- which candidate would be a stronger Democratic candidate in November."
   "This is the core question for the campaigns, and a lot of Democratic voters right now. That's why we decided to lead with it."

Local AFSCME leaders stage demonstrations outside PA Obama offices

Mon Apr 14, 2008 at 12:12:21 AM PDT

I'm not really sure whether this is a at all a big deal, but I thought it was worth posting.

Apparently, AFSCME organizers staged a series of demonstrations outside Obama headquarters in Pittsburgh, Altoona, and several other Pennsylvania cities today, attempting to stir up controversy around Barack Obama's "bitter" remarks.

Report: Carter, Gore to endorse Obama, or ask Clinton to concede

Sat Apr 12, 2008 at 04:26:53 PM PDT

This report is from the Scotsman, the same paper that published Samatha Power's "monster" comments.

It is a credible paper, but as a foreign source, it probably deserves an extra level of scrutiny.

Note that all sources in the article are anonymous.  

EDIT: It's also not clear that the Scotsman's sources believe this would happen before Pennsylvania.  In fact, the implication more seems to be that this is how the endgame might play out after Pennsylvania.

Contemplating the Unity Bounce

Fri Apr 11, 2008 at 01:55:57 AM PDT

Chuck Todd opines that the general election numbers for the Democrats are presently at their floor:

Currently polls show McCain either narrowly ahead or even with both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. It is impressive considering how poorly the GOP, and specifically the president, are viewed by the public.

   But it is a faux lead. If the de facto Democratic nominee is clear within the next 4-6 weeks, that person will see a poll bounce. And according to GOP pollster Steve Lombardo, it could be one heck of a bounce, like post-convention. He anticipates the Democratic candidate will move up 10 points once the primary race is over. [...]

   The initial bounce will set the polling numbers – the floor and ceiling – for the Democrats, who clearly have the generic advantage this cycle. Those parameters will dictate the morale within the GOP base.
   If McCain’s is hanging in, behind by 10 or so points, then it is clear he will have a shot. If the bounce pushes the Democratic nominee to as much as a 15 point lead, it may be very demoralizing to the GOP.

The Momentumless Primary

Sun Apr 06, 2008 at 11:25:17 PM PDT

A week ago, Barack Obama led Hillary Clinton by 10 points in the Gallup Daily Tracking Poll. I asked the readers at fivethirtyeight.com whether they expected today's poll -- it's April 6th -- to show a lead of greater than 10 points for Obama, or fewer.

I was sort of trying to goad people into taking the over. After all, we're all used to hearing about the importance of "momentum" and trendlines. Obama had gone, over the span of about 10 days, from being 7 points behind, to roughly tied, to 4 points ahead, to 10 points ahead. Wasn't it logical that he'd be some number larger than 10 points ahead after another week's worth of "momentum"? Wasn't the headline that Obama was pulling away with the race?

But most people did not take the bait, and said they expected Obama to be fewer than 10 points ahead. Which, as it turns out, was the right answer. In today's Gallup Tracker, Obama is 3 points ahead of Hillary Clinton:

Poll

When did you decide on your PRESENT choice for the Democratic nomination?

21%276 votes
8%104 votes
6%84 votes
17%216 votes
11%142 votes
6%83 votes
20%257 votes
5%71 votes
1%13 votes
0%8 votes
0%9 votes

| 1263 votes | Vote | Results

Halperin: Hillary doesn't think the black guy can win

Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 01:20:36 AM PDT

Before we dive into this, let me say what this is not.  It's not any kind of a gaffe, or any kind of a "gotcha" moment.    It's my interpretation of a journalist's interpretation of some conversations he's had with Hillary Clinton and her close advisers.  The journalist is Mark Halperin, who by most accounts is fairly close with the Clintons, even if he can sometimes lapse into douchebaggery. The interview is with Jane Skinner, who is a host on Ed Rendell's favorite network.

Rasmussen, Survey USA, Enthusiasm and Likely Voters

Mon Mar 31, 2008 at 10:20:03 AM PDT

Rasmussen and Survey USA are responsible for the vast majority of polling data that we've seen so far on the general election. Fortunately for us, they also happen to be two of the historically most accurate pollsters.

However, as I've alluded to a couple of times, there have come to be some systematic differences in the numbers each Democrat has received from each agency. The difference is particularly notable for Hillary Clinton.

Clinton and the authenticity card

Sat Mar 29, 2008 at 10:35:43 PM PDT

Authenticity is a rather subjective concept.  Attempts to define it usually wind up running around in circles:

This eye-opening but muddled volume tells companies to remain true to self or, at least, to appear genuine, arguing that in a world increasingly filled with deliberately and sensationally staged experiences... consumers choose to buy or not buy based on how real they perceive an offering to be. Everything that forms a company's identity—from its name and practices to its product details—affects consumers' perceptions of its authenticity. Juggling philosophical concepts, in-depth case studies and ad slogans, Gilmore and Pine (The Experience Economy) run into trouble with a chapter called Fake, Fake, It's All Fake, which eviscerates the entire idea of authenticity: Despite claims of 'real' and 'authentic' in product packaging, nothing from businesses is really authentic. Everything is artificial, manmade, fake. The argument is unexpected and perhaps brilliant—yet rather confusing, since most of Authenticity argues that businesses should strive to not only appear authentic but to be so.

It's the Moving Goalposts, Stupid

Thu Mar 27, 2008 at 09:35:37 PM PDT

Quite honestly, I've been getting annoyed with certain kinds of diaries around here.  These are the diaries that insist that Hillary Clinton should withdraw from the Presidential race.  Hillary has every right to continue her campaign for as long as she pleases.  


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