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    • Boxer has an eight-point lead over both former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina (48 percent to 40 percent) and Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, R-Irvine (47 percent to 39 percent).

      Among likely voters in the GOP primary, Campbell leads at 27 percent, with Fiorina at 16 percent and DeVore at 8 percent. Campbell leads among likely voters with household incomes both below and above $80,000, and among both men and women. This survey of likely voters includes the 12 percent of independent voters who say they will choose to vote on a Republican ballot.

      The margin of error for the 1,223 November likely voters is three percentage points, and the margin for the 425 Republican primary likely voters is five points.
      +++++++
      DeVore's spin is the funniest yet and Trevino is beclowning himself again. DeVore has no polling support, no name recognition and no campaign money.

      When will he withdraw?

    • Meg Whitman’s growing lead in the Republican primary for governor is worse news for Jerry Brown than it is for Steve Poizner.

      The former eBay CEO has jumped out to a huge 41 percent to 11 percent lead over Poizner, the state insurance commissioner, in a poll released last night by the Public Policy Institute of California.

      The survey gives Brown an increasingly narrow 41 percent to 36 percent lead over Whitman in a November match-up, but those numbers aren’t nearly as worrisome to the attorney general as Poizner’s weak showing.
      +++++++
      Steve Poizner should withdraw and let Meg beat Jerry Brown by 10 points.

    • Jerry Brown promised to "mix it up" this morning on his weekly call into San Francisco radio station KGO. And mix it up he did. Listen here.

      The attorney general and undeclared Democratic gubernatorial candidate was asked about San Francisco Mayor and former gubernatorial candidate Gavin Newsom's recent remark that Brown didn't appear to have "fire in his belly" for the race.

      Brown responded, "He's been giving a lot of advice to the president and now me, and I'm sure there'll be others because when you don't have a lot to do, you can start checking out what other people have been doing.

      "I appreciate the advice, and I'm going to be examining my intestinal fortitude here."
      +++++++
      Ol' Crusty Brown ain't going to be the next California governor. He failed the first time around.

      (tags: Jerry_Brown)
    • The White House ordered the Justice Department to consider other places to try the 9/11 terror suspects after a wave of opposition to holding the trial in lower Manhattan.

      The White House took the action hours after Mayor Bloomberg called Attorney General Eric Holder to say he would "prefer that they did it elsewhere."

      "It would be an inconvenience at the least, and probably that's too mild a word for people that live in the neighborhood and businesses in the neighborhood," Bloomberg told reporters.

      "There are places that would be less expensive for the taxpayers and less disruptive for New York City."

      State leaders have railed against a plan to try Khalid Shaikh Mohammed in Manhattan federal court since Holder proposed it last month.

      The order to consider new venues does not change the White House's position that Mohammed should be tried in civilian court.
      +++++++
      Better not be Los Angeles….

    • The university at the centre of the climate change row over stolen e-mails broke the law by refusing to hand over its raw data for public scrutiny.

      The University of East Anglia breached the Freedom of Information Act by refusing to comply with requests for data concerning claims by its scientists that man-made emissions were causing global warming.

      The Information Commissioner’s Office decided that UEA failed in its duties under the Act but said that it could not prosecute those involved because the complaint was made too late, The Times has learnt. The ICO is now seeking to change the law to allow prosecutions if a complaint is made more than six months after a breach.

      The stolen e-mails , revealed on the eve of the Copenhagen summit, showed how the university’s Climatic Research Unit attempted to thwart requests for scientific data and other information, and suggest that senior figures at the university were involved in decisions to refuse the requests…

    • If President Barack Obama hoped his State of the Union speech would revive the health care debate on Capitol Hill, signs of movement were not immediately apparent Thursday.

      Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) said health care reform “is on life support, unfortunately,” and the president should have been more specific with how Democrats should move forward.

      “He should have been more clear, and I am hoping that in the next week or two he will because that is what it is going to take if it is at all possible to get it done," Landrieu told reporters. "Mailing in general suggestions, sending them over the transom, is not necessarily going to work.”

      The president's criticism of the Senate in the speech was "a little strange, a little odd," Landrieu said.
      +++++++
      Put a fork in Obamacare

      (tags: Obamacare)
    • A new PPIC poll (2,001 RVs, 1/12-19, MoE +/- 2%) of the landscape in California shows that former Rep. Tom Campbell's (R) decision to switch from the gubernatorial to the Senate race has changed the dynamic of both races, as he now leads a more crowded Senate field while former eBay CEO Meg Whitman has jumped to a commanding early lead in her bid for governor.

      In general election matchups, meanwhile, Democrats are favored in both. But neither candidate — Attorney General and former Gov. Jerry Brown and incumbent Sen. Barbara Boxer — tops 50%.

      Republican Primary Matchup: Governor
      Whitman 41
      Poizner 11
      Und 44

      Republican Primary Matchup: Senate
      Campbell 27
      Fiorina 16
      DeVore 8
      Und 48
      +++++++
      Nothing new here from the California Field Poll

    • The majority of California voters are aware of the Tea Party protest movement sweeping the country but don’t identify with it, a new Field Poll shows.

      The nonpartisan, statewide survey shows that 61 percent of California registered voters have heard of the Tea Party movement. But only 12 percent say they have a lot of identification with the movement, and 16 percent say they have some identification with it.
      For example, more than half of the Republicans, 56 percent, say they identify strongly or somewhat with the Tea Party movement, compared with 11 percent of the Democrats.

      Likewise, 64 percent of voters who consider themselves “strongly conservative” sympathize with the Tea Party movement strongly or somewhat. Only 10 percent of voters who regard themselves as “strongly liberal” do.

      (tags: Tea_Parties)
  • Barack Obama,  Day By Day

    Day By Day January 28, 2010 – iPad the Resume

    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    The i-Pad from Apple looks promising and the Obama Presidency does NOT. The State of the Union address last night paved no new ground and was more of the same – Obama rhetoric and no substance.

    When Al Melquist voted for Barack Obama in 2008, the unemployed software engineer was drawn to the politician’s charisma and promise of solutions for the nation’s economic woes and wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    In the time since, Melquist has given up looking for work. The house in Las Vegas where he lived sits empty and bank-owned after his landlord didn’t make mortgage payments for 13 months. He is burning through his savings and doing Web site work to make ends meet for his family of five, while working on his own startup.

    Millions of Americans like Melquist tuned in to the president’s State of the Union address Wednesday night, aching for solutions but wary – aware that in too many places voters are no better off today than when they lifted Obama into the White House.

    Many have become so disillusioned with their economic situations that they are tired of all the politics and promises and want action.

    “He just says so many things,” the 41-year-old Melquist said of Obama. “I just don’t trust what he says is actually going to happen.”

    This is the sentiment of many Americans. Obama has become just another politician.

    Congressional Democrats are already feeling the ire of their constituents. Congressional majorities may change this Novbember but if Obama persists in taking the country towards MOR#E government he will end up like Jimmy Carter – a failed one term President.

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