If you ever want to look up which states are voting on which dates this year, click on this page at the Project Vote Smart site.
Useful chart with primary election dates
- Sunday, Jan 13 2008
- desmoinesdem
- 0 Comments
If you ever want to look up which states are voting on which dates this year, click on this page at the Project Vote Smart site.
I urge all of you to click on this diary by MyDD user Silver Spring, who analyzed the county-level results from Iowa and New Hampshire.
I am not convinced by all of the arguments in this diary, but it is a great piece of work. I have asked Silver Spring to cross-post here, so I can promote it to the front page. In the meantime, you all should head over to MyDD and read it for yourself.
I haven’t yet had a chance to dig into the county-level results from Iowa, so I greatly appreciate this effort.
This kind of in-depth analysis sets the blogs apart from superficial mainstream media coverage.
Thanks to Betsy for the roundup. -desmoinesdem
Once again the writers at the state community blogs are busy staying on top of local and state news and bringing local flavor to national news. It takes longer each week to pull this together because I find myself caught up in reading the excellent coverage provided by these state blogs.
Find an interesting post and jump in the conversation. If you don’t see your state represented here, check out the state blogroll at Open Left or MyDD.
The rest is after the jump.
Continue Reading...Dennis Kucinich and some Republican I’ve never heard of demanded full hand recounts of the results from the New Hampshire primary, and they will get their wish.
I welcome this news. I doubt there were any serious irregularities in how votes were counted, but anything that restores people’s faith in the election process is good in my view.
In case you haven’t been following this story on other blogs, some Obama supporters have alleged that voting machines were rigged to hand victory to Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire.
Yesterday Bill Richardson announced he was ending his presidential run and dropping out of the race. Richardson was hoping to do well Nevada next week, but was polls weren't favorable. Richardson had nothing to gain to by getting blown out in Nevada. Plus, the New Mexico legislative session is starting up soon and he can get back to his duties as Governor.
Richardson was one of my final 3 choices. Out of all of the candidates, I agreed most with his plan for Iraq. Richardson understands that US troops in Iraq are targets, stuck in the middle of a civil war, and unfortunately are adding fuel to the fire over there. He also was very strong on education issues. He had the strongest position against NCLB, saying the law is unworkable and needed to be tossed out. He pushed for a minimum wage for teachers of $40,000.
In the end, Richardson's campaign was too focused on the issues and lacked an overriding theme. Richardson should have used his background as a diplomat and made diplomacy the them of this campaign. He could have created a vision of bringing people on all sides together to successfully end the war in Iraq, solve immigration, improve education. Instead he focused on his plans to solve these issues.
Continue Reading...Oh, my. Watch this ad Mike Huckabee is currently running in Michigan (hat tip to noneed4thneed).
Key line:
I believe most Americans want their next President to remind them of they guy they work with, not the guy who laid them off.
Michigan is must-win for Mitt Romney, whose father used to be governor of the state. That line should be devastating for him.
Huckabee has long been despised by the Club for Growth set. He wisely decided that as a presidential candidate, he would do better to advocate for middle-class interests rather than pandering to the business wing of the GOP. Noneed4thneed put up this amazing clip of Huckabee on Hardball a few months ago. It’s worth watching. I still can’t believe a Republican presidential candidate is willing to say his party should stop being “a wholly-owned subsidiary of Wall Street and the corporations.”
If you missed this a few weeks ago, take Politico’s “populist pop quiz” and try to guess which quotations are from Huckabee and which are from John Edwards.
I do worry about the prospect of running against Huckabee. He is a strong communicator, and he could pull Reagan Democrats his way.
On the other hand, a lot of moderate Republicans would probably vote Democrat if he were the nominee. Also, it shouldn’t be hard for our candidate to make the public understand what a truly awful idea the “fair tax” is.
Continue Reading...I'm not watching, but if you are, please share your impressions of that crowd.
While I still think Edwards would be our best candidate against the Republicans, lately I've been thinking that if we only could choose among the front-runners, Obama would do better against Huckabee, while Hillary might do better against McCain. Either of them would crush Romney. What do you think?
UPDATE: I caught most of the rerun on Fox. Apparently the focus group liked Thompson, which amazes me. Huckabee is clearly the superior communicator in my mind. He has a talent for keeping your attention without overdoing it.
MyDD user desmoulins, who has been trained as a temporary precinct chair for the upcoming Nevada caucuses, posted this useful diary on the differences between the Nevada caucus rules and the ones drafted by the Iowa Democratic Party.
I encourage you all to click the link and read his diary, along with the discussion thread. We would benefit from incorporating some of the changes Nevada Democrats have made.
One key difference is that in Nevada, only supporters of non-viable candidates will be able to switch to a different corner during the realignment period. That will cut down on the gamesmanship whereby precinct captains of viable candidates direct a small number of people to a rival corner in order to change the delegate count.
UPDATE: desmoulins put up this interesting post about the campaign on the ground in Nevada:
It’s one of those rare days when I largely agree with David Yepsen’s latest column: Parties must probe caucus complaints, make fixes. He points out that any problems with the way the caucuses were run will be fodder for those who will try to deprive Iowa of first-in-the-nation status for the next campaign.
Already the Republican Party will be looking to ditch Iowa, because the GOP establishment can’t stand Mike Huckabee. If Hillary Clinton becomes the Democratic nominee and wins, or if Barack Obama becomes the Democratic nominee and loses, the Democratic Party establishment will also have the knives out for Iowa.
Yepsen suggests moving the caucuses to Saturday at 5 pm, a time when fewer shift workers are on duty and young families may find it easier to get a baby-sitter. I would support that change.
Yepsen lists some of the alleged problems with the caucuses, but he left out some very disturbing problems I’ve heard about. One of the most troubling reports, written by observers in a precinct on Des Moines’ south side, maintained that counting was rushed to prevent second-tier candidates from becoming viable.
I was also sorry to hear some accounts of bullying the supporters of non-viable candidates. Daily Kos user neia was disturbed by what happened at the caucus in Strawberry Point (northeast Iowa). While I am sure this is the exception, not the rule, the Iowa Democratic Party should train precinct chairs to prevent anyone from exerting undue pressure on caucus-goers during the realignment period.
UPDATE: This Daily Kos diary includes more allegations about irregularities:
http://www.dailykos.com/storyo…
Several people have asked me what happened at my precinct caucus. I told part of the story last week, but in case anyone is interested, the longer version is after the jump.
Use this as an open thread to tell the story of your precinct caucus, whether or not there were problems with the way it operated.
Continue Reading...Barack Obama is sitting pretty ten days before the Nevada caucuses, having snagged the endorsements of the Nevada chapter of the Service Employees International Union as well as the Culinary workers and their parent union, UNITE HERE. UNITE HERE is the first national union to endorse Obama.
In September, the national SEIU was very close to endorsing Edwards, but backed off and left the decision to state chapters. Since then, 11 state chapters of the SEIU have backed Edwards, and four or five have backed Obama.
We are seeing the consequences of Iowa failing to deliver for John Edwards. The Nevada unions were ready to jump in for him if he had won here. He also would have been helped in Nevada by the California SEIU, which has already endorsed him. But now that the Nevada SEIU is behind Obama, state chapters backing other candidates can’t send their members to campaign in Nevada.
Edwards was never likely to do well in New Hampshire, but he would have had a real shot at Nevada with union backing. Now he is forced to focus on South Carolina, where he is substantially behind Obama and Clinton in the polls.
If Obama does win the nomination and the presidency, I seriously doubt he will do much for labor unions. That would interfere with his posturing as the bipartisan president pushing a unity agenda.
But it isn’t the first time labor unions have picked the candidate they viewed as most likely to win, rather than the candidate most likely to become their champion. That’s the way the world works.
UPDATE: Over at MyDD, Jonathan Singer wonders if these endorsements post a danger to Obama by raising his expectations in Nevada, where he has trailed Clinton in the polls:
http://www.mydd.com/story/2008…
SECOND UPDATE: Daily Kos user greenmountainboy was just in Nevada and has this to say:
Continue Reading...The union workers and precinct captains are PISSED that their leaders pulled this crap of not supporting Edwards. They continue to run house parties for him and love the man. The power structure (Clinton and Obama) know that if Edwards gets any roots in ANY ONE of these states they are in for a real fight. If that happens watch how quickly Clinton and O’Baby join forces for “change”.
Well, the results coming in have been surprising so far, at least on the Democratic side of things. Clinton up with a quarter of the vote in. Was there anyone predicting that?
You can track live results here from CNN.com. Jerome Armstrong’s got an interesting discussion going here saying that with Clinton making the contest this close in NH that we’ve still got a tough race going on to February 5th…and even beyond.
So, what’re your thoughts? How fluid are things? What’s next?
I got this e-mail from a fellow Sierra Club member:
Continue Reading...Now that the caucuses are behind us, there is another way to get involved in energy and environmental issues. We have a special treat for you this month – international global warming spokesman and Iowa native Dr. James Hansen of NASA will be returning to Iowa the week of January 14th to testify against the construction of a new coal burning power plant in Marshalltown. We need your help today to convince Governor Culver and the Iowa Utilities Board to listen to the scientific experts, and the people of Iowa, and reject the construction of this major new source of pollution. Our leaders should choose a clean, efficient energy future that will help Iowa’s economy grow. They should put off any decision on dirty, expensive coal until we determine if efficiency and renewable power are sufficient to power the state. Please take thirty seconds to contact the Iowa Utilities Board by clicking on the link below:
http://capwiz.com/iowacci/issu…
Then let us know you wrote the Iowa Utilities Board by just replying to this email (mark.kresowik AT sierraclub.org). An even more powerful action would be writing a letter in hard copy and faxing it to the Governor’s Office at 515-281-6611 (fax) or sending it to:
Governor Chet Culver and Lt. Governor Patty Judge
State Capitol
Des Moines, IA 50319
515-281-5211 (phone)
Best yet, come testify in person to the Iowa Utilities Board starting at 10:00 AM on Monday, January 14th at the Whitehall Auditorium on the grounds of the Iowa Veterans Home (1301 Summit St, Marshalltown) .
According to a recent survey nearly four out of five Iowans think that “Iowa should focus on increased (energy) conservation steps and more fuel efficiency to reduce demand for electricity before it constructs new coal-fired power plants” (http://plainsjustice.org/survey-iowa-voters-say-no-new-coal/). Coal burning power plants are the single largest source of global warming pollution in the United States and Iowa is over-dependent on this dirty form of energy. The first step we need to take to combat global warming is to stop the construction of proposed coal plants in Marshalltown and Waterloo and invest in energy efficiency and renewable energy. The Governor should continue his pledge to make Iowa the renewable energy capitol of the world and stop these plants. Please contact the Iowa Utilities Board and the Governor today:
http://capwiz.com/iowacci/issu…
You can also hear Dr. Hansen and other expert witnesses for the Office of the Consumer Advocate and Plains Justice – who have concluded unanimously that the Marshalltown plant is unnecessary and will in fact put Iowa ratepayers at far greater risk than more prudent alternatives – in person on January 16th at 7:00 PM at the State Historical Building (600 East Locust) in Des Moines or January 17th at 7:00 PM at Old Brick (26 E. Market) in Iowa City.
So it’s the day before the important New Hampshire primary. What is the political press obsessing about? Whether Hillary Clinton teared up and what the other candidates had to say about it.
It goes back to what CBS correspondent Chip Reid revealed not long ago:
Let’s face it – a lot of what political reporters report on is mistakes.
Please, journalists, stop insulting our intelligence. I don’t care if you think getting emotional is a mistake. It’s ridiculous for you to ask other candidates to comment on Hillary’s emotion. The only purpose of a question like that is to trick them into committing a gaffe.
None of this trivia has anything to do with who would be the best president. Try reporting on some issues for once.
Continue Reading...Last month I put up this post on Republican culture, inspired by an article about a Republican focus group watching a presidential debate.
Reading this piece by Joe Klein today, I noticed that the Republican focus group watching the latest debate preferred Mitt Romney to John McCain. Among other things,
They just adored his position on illegal immigration (their dials plummeted when McCain said we had to be “humane.”)
No, we sure wouldn’t want to be humane in our approach to a complicated issue affecting the lives of millions. That’s Republican culture in a nutshell.
Continue Reading...There has been a flurry of blog posts and news stories talking about the entrance polling and the results of the caucuses. The basics we know include things like record turnout and a surge in the number of youth showing up to the Democratic caucuses, as well as ‘no party’ folks changing their registration to Democrat.
I don’t have the capacity nor the will power to significantly examine all of the results county by county, candidate by candidate. But I can direct you towards some very interesting information.
First of all, if you’d like some detailed results and would like to see some maps, feel free to check out CaucusResults.com which has the detailed information about the results courtesy of the Iowa Democratic Party. If you provided some information to the party prior to caucus night by visiting IowaCaucusResults.com then you should’ve received an email notification with a password so you could log in. If you didn’t and would like to be able to see the information, feel free to email me and I can get you logged in.
Secondly, one of the big things that we’ve seen talked about is the amount of youth turnout for the caucuses. Whether you call youth 17-24 year olds or 17-29 year olds it seems pretty clear that folks my age showed up and participated. Iowa Student Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) put out a release talking about the numbers (which can be found here) and it clearly shows how the youth support was another cushion of support for Barack Obama. The Register examined the same thing here, while also noting the evangelical Christian support that helped Huckabee. The Register also provides a county map that shows which candidate won which county, including counties that are “ties” (at least according to percentage totals). The breakdown follows like this:
Looking specifically at the four counties where there were ties, they were ties because the number of delegates for first place were evenly divided. Three were tied for Clinton and Edwards; one was split for Clinton and Obama.
Finally, and I think this is one of most fascinating posts and discussion about the caucus results, go over to the Daily Yonder and read their post about how Democratic and Republican candidates did in rural Iowa. Edwards’ strategy focused heavily on rural Iowa, and while it paid off for him a bit, it wasn’t the deciding fact simply because of the turnout Barack Obama was able to bring about in both urban and rural Iowa. Fascinating piece of information alert:
“Both Edwards and Clinton won more votes in rural Iowa than in urban Iowa.”
I’ll leave that little bit of information to you guys to figure out what it means in the grand scheme of things in this presidential race. Any other interesting demographics or information you think we should talk about?
Continue Reading...Winners
Losers
Feel free to call me out on these and offer your own thoughts and reactions. We all know I can be wrong from time to time. And if you’re curious, Time’s Mark Halperin offers his grades of the candidates here.
Continue Reading...Update: The liveblog and commentary is in the comments section. Go there, participate.
I’ll be offering some of my commentary on tonight’s debate here at BH either here on the front-page or in the comments. Feel free to drop in comments whenever you please and share your thoughts.
Right now the Democrats and Republicans are on stage for a huge photo op. Interesting image…
Cross-posted at Political Forecast.
Maybe I’ve missed something in my absences from blogging over the past few months, but has the Register ever really done a serious news or feature piece on Iowa’s bloggers and citizen journalists? I mean, I know we threaten their credibility and their readership by getting scoops, insight, and news out faster sometimes–not to mention that our commentary is sometimes more consistent and better written than their columnists’–but it almost seems like there is an intent to ignore the contributions that bloggers in Iowa have had both before the caucuses and in previous elections or issues. Today, in their features section, they profile one citizen journalist who has been vlogging for PurpleStates.tv (she had to audition to get the gig) and one guy who has been doing it for MTV. Don’t get me wrong, their efforts are valuable…but what about the folks who do this on their own time and don’t necessarily live off of it?
The folks at Iowa Independent have been doing regular news and political reporting since May, and other bloggers on both sides of the aisle have been part of the debate and policy discussion in Iowa politics for a few years now. Other papers across the state, as well as national papers and news magazines, have highlighted our growth and commented on our contributions.
Simply put, why can’t Iowa’s paper of record recognize or examine the Iowa online community for what it is and report back to the people of Iowa on it? I don’t want the media attention, the scrutiny, the interviews, the publicity; I just think that some of us deserve the recognition for the contributions we make. Two of my former colleagues at Iowa Independent have already talked a bit about this subject (see Chase Martyn’s initial post here and read Ben Weyl’s abbreviated response here) and I think it is one worth further discussion as we continue to build Iowa’s blogosphere.
This week’s round-up comes courtesy of Betsy at BlueNC. -Chris
Happy New Year and Congratulations to Iowa Democrats on the excellent turnout for yesterday’s caucuses.
Below is an abbreviated roundup for our 50-State community blogs. Enjoy reading up on what’s important in states across the country. Onward to New Hampshire!
Go to the extended entry to read more…
Continue Reading...UPDATE (3:40 PM): I just got a fundraising email from Joe Trippi on behalf of the Edwards campaign. Seems like they’re going to keep piling on the money today. -Chris
I’m not one big on making releases front-page material here on BH, but I’ll try to condense this release from the Edwards Campaign to something we can talk about, with the full release available here:
“We have been absolutely overwhelmed by the response to Sen. Edwards’ strong finish in Iowa,” said Edwards’ senior strategist Joe Trippi. “We’re on track for our best online fundraising day ever, since www.JohnEdwards.com went up a year ago – and half of the contributions we’re seeing are from new donors to the campaign. That speaks volumes to the strength of John Edwards’ message of standing up and fighting for the middle class.”
The campaign first saw an uptick in online fundraising late last night, as the results from Iowa’s first-in-the-nation contest began rolling in. The surge continued overnight, and by 8:45am ET this morning the campaign’s online contributions had already topped the previous day’s day-long total. Between the hours of 10:00am and 11:00am ET today, the campaign experienced its best online fundraising hour ever.”
I’m not sure what this means in the grand scheme of online fundraising for the top-tier Democrats, or even the Edwards campaign itself since there aren’t really specific numbers and totals. However, I think it will be really interesting to see what Obama and Clinton are seeing in terms of their own online fundraising and I hope they put out some information about those numbers soon.
A couple other quick facts from the Edwards campaign:
Those are some pretty impressive figures. Let me know if you hear of any more numbers or interesting stories.
Continue Reading...