Del.icio.us Links

links for 2009-10-02

  • Fresh from a humbling loss in last year’s presidential election, Sen. John McCain is working behind-the-scenes to reshape the Republican Party in his own center-right image.

    McCain is recruiting candidates, raising money for them and hitting the campaign trail on their behalf. He’s taken sides in competitive House, Senate and gubernatorial primaries and introduced his preferred candidates to his top donors.

    (tags: McCain)
  • The news that Whitman backed and endorsed Boxer — considered Public Enemy Number One for the GOP in California — comes just days after the eBay CEO faced heat over her failure to vote for decades. She assured grassroots activists at the state GOP convention last week of her solid Republican credentials.

    "I'm a Republican, and you'll find I'm a darn good one,'' she told them. "I've committed myself to running for one of the toughest chief executive jobs on the planet because I believe Republican ideals, truly and consistently applied, will save this state."

  • The trick for any gubernatorial hopeful is to be liberal or conservative enough to win a party nomination but centrist enough to capture independents' support. The three Republicans, Meg Whitman, Steve Poizner and Tom Campbell, all carry the moderate label, much to the chagrin of conservative GOP activists, while Brown will hew to the center, taking the "netroots" left for granted, as long as his only rival, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, languishes.

    Ultimately, the November 2010 contest may hinge more on personality, money, campaign tactics and image than any major ideological cleavage. Brown would portray himself as the seasoned professional while his Republican foe would define him as an overaged retread.

  • Sen. Thomas Carper (D-Del.), a member of the Senate Finance Committee, told CNSNews.com that he does not “expect” to read the actual legislative language of the committee’s health care bill because it is “confusing” and that anyone who claims they are going to read it and understand it is fooling people.

    “I don’t expect to actually read the legislative language because reading the legislative language is among the more confusing things I’ve ever read in my life,” Carper told CNSNews.com.

  • At a conference sponsored by Hoffenblum's publication, the Republican identified eight congressional seats and 13 state Assembly seats as competitive. Nearly all of those Assembly seats and more than half of the congressional seats are now held by Republicans.

    "I think this is going to be when we find out if the Republican Party has any life left in it whatsoever as far as being a statewide competitive party," said Hoffenblum, whose publication tracks and handicaps races throughout the state.

    A drop in Republican registration and an influx in decline-to-state voters who have not traditionally voted with the GOP have put some districts formerly considered "safe" Republican seats into play.

    "I think it's going to be a very, very difficult road on the Republican front if they don't do something about registration, something to appeal to decline-to-state voters, many of whom are Latinos and Asians who have not been voting Republican for the last four election cycles," Hoffenblum said.

  • U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., said today there will be a "public option" in whatever health insurance reform bill comes out of Congress.

    "We are going to have a public option before this bill goes to the president's desk," Reid said in a conference call with constituents, referring to some kind of government plan.
    "I believe the public option is so vitally important to create a level playing field and prevent the insurance companies from taking advantage of us," he said.

    Reid also mentioned the inclusion of incentives for healthy behavior, something suggested by Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev.