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    links for 2010-06-11

    • Conservative Republican Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, who has represented Irvine and the rest of the 70th Assembly District for about six years, lost his race for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate on Tuesday. It wasn't much of a surprise. Carly Fiorina, the winner, is wealthy and well connected to the big political donors in the state.

      But DeVore campaigned hard and built an impressive fundraising base of his own, albeit from smaller donors. Many of them saw DeVore, an advocate of nuclear power and a Tea Party favorite, as their only option. DeVore's approach to governing is simple: there ought to be less of it.
      +++++++
      There had been talk of this run for months as his Senate campaign collapsed. But, is it enough?

      (tags: Chuck_DeVore)
    • By winning the Republican primary resoundingly against two tough and skilled opponents, Carly has proven herself to be a tenacious and energetic campaigner whose competitive spirit was on full display Election Night. Having worked with Carly for almost a year, I have learned that you can’t bridle Carly’s energy – you just hold on and go with the flow. Voters will learn soon enough that Carly is the Mohamed Ali of 2010: she’ll “float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.” Most importantly, Carly will defeat Barbara Boxer in November.

      How will we achieve this Republican version of the impossible dream? The answer is simple, really. It’s the same way we always win, which is to run a complete campaign that measures itself again four basic elements of successful campaigns: the candidate, the issue environment, organization and money.

      I didn’t just make this up; I learned it from the best, Stu Spencer.
      +++++++
      If you want to win in California, read it all.

    • With all of this as prologue, it's been interesting to see Romney work to repair relationships with his rivals. He not only campaigned for McCain during the general election in 2008, but he has endorsed him in the Arizona Senate primary.

      Yesterday, in a USA Today op-ed criticizing Obama's handling of the BP oil spill, Romney slipped in the following two paragraphs:

      We saw leadership on Sept. 11, 2001. Then as now, black billows seemed to come from the center of the earth. Lives had been lost. The environmental impact was immeasurable. The looming economic impact from lost tourism was incalculable. Into the crisis walked Rudy Giuliani. While that was an incomparable human tragedy, how the mayor led New York City to recover is a useful model for the president.
      +++++++
      Because Rudy is doing events in New Hampshire. And, head to head with Rudy, Romney will lose the GOP nomination.

    • Fresh off her decisive victory in the Republican Senate primary this week, Carly Fiorina found herself in the national spotlight Thursday — for criticizing her opponent's hairdo.

      Chatting with an aide and having her makeup applied before a TV interview Wednesday, the newly minted GOP nominee was caught dissing Sen. Barbara Boxer's hairstyle — unaware that the camera was rolling. Fiorina said she heard from a friend that day who saw Boxer on TV. The person "said what everyone says, 'God, what is that hair?' " Fiorina said, letting out a long laugh. "So yesterday."

      At that point, someone pointed out to Fiorina she was being recorded, and a look of "uh-oh" came over the candidate's face. The four-plus-minute video of Fiorina, in which she also knocks GOP gubernatorial nominee Meg Whitman's decision to appear on conservative Sean Hannity's TV program so soon after the primary, is here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cTk3XIrZ3w.
      +++++++
      A Gaffe or a calculated ploy?

    • Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown has compared billionaire GOP nominee Meg Whitman's saturation campaign effort to that of a Nazi minister of propaganda.

      "It's like Goebbels," Brown told Doug Sovern of KCBS radio in the Bay Area, referring to Joseph Goebbels. "Goebbels invented this kind of propaganda. He took control of the whole world. She wants to be president. That's her ambition, the first woman president. That's what this is all about."

      A Brown spokesman did not dispute the statement but said Brown does not believe Whitman is comparable to Goebbels. Whitman's campaign manager Jillian Hasner called the remarks "deeply offensive."

      The remarks, posted on Sovern's blog Wednesday, were made before Tuesday's primary when Sovern ran into Brown while bike-riding.
      ++++++
      No mudslinging, eh Jerry?

  • Barbara Boxer,  Carly Fiorina

    CA-Sen Poll Watch: Barbara Boxer 48% Vs. Carly Fiorina 43%

    The Hindenboxer sailing over the Golden Gate Bridge

    The latest Rasmussen poll has Republican Carly Fiorina within striking distance and incumbent Senator Barbara Boxer below 50 per cent.

    Democratic incumbent Barbara Boxer and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina both receive small bounces in support following their parties’ nominations for the U.S. Senate race in California.

    The latest Rasmussen Reports statewide telephone survey of Likely Voters shows Boxer picking up 48% support over Fiorina’s 43%. Five percent (5%) would vote for some other candidate and another five percent (5%) are undecided.

    These polls will be bouncing all over the place before Labor Day. But, it remains – Senator Barbara Boxer is extremely vulnerable.

    Boxer, who is seeking a fourth six-year term, has yet to reach the 50%
    level of support in the general election. The good news for Boxer is
    that she has the power of incumbency on her side in a state that trends
    Democratic. The bad news is that she remains stuck in the 40s. At this
    stage of the campaign, any incumbent who earns less than 50% of the vote
    is considered potentially vulnerable.

    More good news for the Democrat is that 50% of California voters oppose a
    repeal of the health care reform law and only 46% in California favor
    repeal of the plan. Nationally, most voters support repeal.

    Fiorina picks up 80% of the vote from those who strongly favor repeal,
    while Boxer is supported by 75% who strongly oppose it.

    The nominees are tied among voters not affiliated with either major
    political party.

    And, Carly Fiorina is within the margin of error in the poll.

    This statewide telephone survey of 500 Likely Voters in California was conducted on June 9, 2010 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/-4.5 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence.

    As far as favorability vs unfavorability:

    Boxer is viewed Very Favorably by 21% and Very Unfavorably by 37%. These reviews are slightly worse for Boxer than they were a month ago.

    Fiorina’s ratings are 15% Very Favorable and 18% Very Unfavorable, showing little change from before the primary.

    At this point in a campaign, Rasmussen Reports considers the number of people with strong opinions more significant than the total favorable/unfavorable numbers.

    Stay tuned…..

  • Barack Obama,  Day By Day

    Day By Day June 11, 2010 – We’ll Always Have Paris



    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    Didn’t President Obama say he wanted to restore America’s credibility in world affairs? So, why not party with world leaders and win them over in this way?

    You say this won’t work with miscreants, tyrants and dictators. I think you are right.

    But, American voters elected a rookie, a blank slate candidate in Barack Obama. He had NO executive experience and NO foreign policy experience. Maybe it is better to keep him in Washington hosting parties then REALLY screwing up America’s interests.

    2012 and the Presidential elections cannot come too soon.

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