• Del.icio.us Links

    links for 2010-10-05

    • The wage claim against Republican gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman filed by her former housekeeper says the employee estimates she is owed approximately $6,210 for mileage and hours of work she says Whitman didn't compensate.

      Nicandra, or Nicky, Diaz Santillan, says on a one-page wage claim filed with California's Department of Industrial Relations that she was "only paid for 15 hours per week, yet I worked 18 hours at a minimum, per week." It also says she didn't get mileage reimbursement.

      The claim says that the unpaid wages Diaz claims are for work performed between Sept. 30, 2007 and June 19, 2009. She says she was paid $23 an hour.
      +++++++
      Chump change to Meg Whitman. Wonde if she even dared asked her former employers for the pay off?

      Doubtful because it is outrageous.

      Nicandra needs to be deported.

      (tags: Meg_Whitman)
    • Gloria Allred may have opened a can of worms when she introduced Nicky Diaz Santillian, gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman’s housekeeper, who is apparently an illegal immigrant. Allred is already being accused of using a client for personal publicity purposes, instead of legally protecting the illegal housekeeper, as required by law. And now, law enforcement agencies are focusing on Santillian and her fraudulent documentation and identification.

      One agency is the California Department of Motor Vehicles, which always investigates when someone is caught with a bogus California driver’s license. DMV insiders are asking if the DMV will do the same with Santillan?
      +++++
      Say hey Jerry Brown. You going to prosecute?

      (tags: Meg_Whitman)
    • Democrats are pushing back these days with polls and political scenarios, trying to change the national narrative and force handicappers onto the defensive.

      There is a Democratic mini-surge going on, we are told, as some campaigns produce poll numbers showing they have been prematurely written off as, well, dead.

      This often happens, though I must acknowledge that it didn’t happen in 2008, when Republican campaign strategists and consultants were brutally honest with themselves in acknowledging that their candidates were going to get slaughtered in the fall elections. How refreshing that was.

      This cycle, many Democrats I talk with acknowledge that big defeats are inevitable, but they then go on to argue their candidate is the one who is going to survive, pointing either to a new poll, the presence of a third-party candidate on the ballot or the alleged unelectability of the GOP challenger.
      ++++++++
      Surging to 45% = loss no matter what. Big deal.

      (tags: democrats GOP)
    • California officials are cutting off use of state-issued welfare debit cards at casinos across the country and on cruise ships, in the wake of Times reports that the aid cards have been used to spend or withdraw millions of dollars in benefits at popular vacation spots including the Las Vegas strip and on ships sailing from ports around the world.

      More than $69 million meant to help the needy pay their rent and clothe their children was accessed in all 49 other states, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Guam, according to data obtained by The Times from the California Department of Social Services.

      The department instructed the vendor that administers the debit card program to make the changes Monday afternoon, in response to a report in The Times’ Monday edition.
      ++++++
      Big government inefficiencies. Too little and too late. California needs welfare reform

      (tags: California)
  • Democrats,  GOP

    Election 2010 Poll Watch: For the GOP Is It 1894 All Over Again?

    According to Michael Barone, it may very well be.

    Late yesterday, Gallup came out with new numbers on the generic ballot question—which party’s candidates would you vote for in the election for House of Representatives? Among registered voters Gallup shows Republicans ahead by 46%-42%, about as good a score as Republicans have ever had (and about as bad a score as Democrats have ever had) since Gallup started asking the question in 1942.

    However, Gallup also shows the results for two different turnout models. Under its “high turnout model” Republicans lead 53%-40%. Under its “low turnout model” Republicans lead 56%-38%.

    These two numbers, if translated into popular votes in the 435 congressional districts, suggest huge gains for Republicans and a Republican House majority the likes of which we have not seen since the election cycles of 1946 or even 1928. For months, people have been asking me if this year looks like ’94. My response is that the poll numbers suggest it looks like 1994, when Republicans gained 52 seats in a House of 435 seats. Or perhaps somewhat better for Republicans and worse for Democrats. The Gallup high turnout and low turnout numbers suggest it looks like 1894, when Republicans gained more than 100 seats in a House of approximately 350 seats.

    No matter the Democratic Party spin, the basic fundamentals are there for a massive pick up of seats for the Republicans.

    American voters are unhappy with Obama, the Congress and the direction of the country. They will vote angry on November 2nd and throw out a goodly number of Democrat incumbents from the Congress.

  • Barbara Boxer,  Carly Fiorina

    CA-Sen Poll Watch: Barbara Boxer 49% Vs. Carly Fiorina 45% – Race a Toss-Up

    fiorinaboxerb CA Sen Field Poll Watch: Barbara Boxer 47% Vs. Carly Fiorina 41%

    Republican Nominee Carly Fiorina and California Democrat Senator Barbara Boxer

    So says the latest Rasmussen Poll.

    Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer’s bid for reelection in California against Republican challenger Carly Fiorina is once again a toss-up.

    The latest Rasmussen Reports statewide telephone survey of Likely Voters shows Boxer picking up 49% of the vote, her highest level of support since mid-July. Fiorina earns 45% support. Two percent (2%) prefer some other candidate, and five percent (5%) are undecided.

    Two weeks ago, Boxer held a similar four-point edge – 47% to 43% – over Fiorina, the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard. In surveys since February, Boxer, a member of the Senate since 1993, has earned 42% to 49% of the vote. Fiorina has picked up 38% to 48% support in those same surveys.
     
    The latest numbers move this race from Leans Democrat to Toss-Up in the Rasmussen Reports Election 2010 Senate Balance of Power rankings.

    The survey of 750 Likely Voters in California was conducted on October 3, 2010 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 4 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence.

    The fact that Carly Fiorina is this close after two weeks of statewide negative ads by Boxer gives her hope in this race. Fiorina’s statewide television ad campaign is just beginning and although early voting started yesterday in California there is plenty of time.

    I will stick to my prediction that this race will come down to last minute television and on the ground GOTV.

  • Barbara Boxer,  Day By Day

    Day By Day October 5, 2010 – Credit



    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    Another Soviet-style five year plan that has FAILED. What a surprise?

    Not really.

    President Obama was a virtual unknown to American voters when he beat the old man, John McCain. Americans were traumatized by the LEFT media carping on President George W. Bush and McCain was more of the same.

    Conservative media warned America about the Far Left orientation of Obama – like his association with Jeremiah Wright and William Ayers. But, voters punted and elected him anyway. Hope and Change, you know.

    But, the chickens have come home to roost and the United States continues to suffer from very high unemployment and a no growth economy.

    So, what is Obama’s economic plan again?

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