Category Archives: Politics: US: 2008 Elections

Sounding Presidential

Old news to many, I suppose, but yesterday Presidential candidate John Edwards gave a remarkably good speech — I mean remarkably good — on military power, foreign affairs, Iraq, and the 'war on terror'.

I was going to try to quote the good bits, but there are a lot of good bits, so I'll just suggest you go read it: John Edwards for President-Remarks As Prepared For Delivery At The Council on Foreign Relations.

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 1 Comment

John Edwards to Organize War Protest Memorial Day Weekend

Democratic Presidential hopeful John Edwards is starting a new effort to “support the troops and end the war” and he's registered a very long domain name to organize it: supportthetroopsendthewar.com: Support the troops. End the war. Take action May 26th, 27th, 28th.

Take Action May 26th, 27th, 28th

As citizens, we honor and support our troops for their service and sacrifice.

As Americans, we are blessed by that sacrifice and support, which keeps us safe and keeps us strong.

As patriots, we call on our government to support our troops in the most important way it can – by ending this war and bringing them home.

This Memorial Day weekend, we will all take responsibility for the country we love and the men and women who protect it. We will volunteer, we will pray, and we will speak out. Each of us has a responsibility to act, a duty to our troops and to each other. Support the troops. End the war.

The site invites people to sign up for demonstrations and other activities in their neighborhoods.

I heard about this because for reasons never explained to me I was invited onto a very brief one-way conference call in which Edwards announced the initiative. He didn't talk long, but he said all the right things: that the movement to end the war was more important than a political campaign, that the point of the event was to support the troops by bringing them home.

My favorite two Edwards soundbites from the call:

“We're going to reclaim patriotism.”

“The best way to serve our troops is to end this war.”

Edwards also has a YouTube promo for the event.

Now I feel bad that I'm going to be at a conference in Bologna over Memorial Day weekend. So I won't be demonstrating in Miami. But I do agree that the time has come to be visible, and I'm going to have to find other ways to do that.

Posted in Iraq, Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 3 Comments

A Romney Moment?

Perennial Presidential candidate George Romney's defining moment, however unfairly, was when he said in 1967 he'd been “brainwashed” about the Vietnam War. It followed the sometime Michigan Governor around for the rest of his long and endlessly diminishing political life.

Like father, like son? Forty years later George's son Mitt, also a former Governor, is running for the GOP nomination. And he just said something really weird:

In France, for instance, I'm told that marriage is now frequently contracted in seven-year terms where either party may move on when their term is up. How shallow and how different from the Europe of the past.

I don't care if he's tripping, or getting his information from watching French sex comedies, but surely this level of ignorance about Europe ought to disqualify someone from serious consideration for national office?

Or, is it really the case that in the modern GOP this sort of ignorance about Europe — especially France — almost serves as a platform?

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 5 Comments

Obama MySpace Update

Micha Sifry is all over the Obama/MySpace story. Latest update is at techPresident — Obama's MySpace Mess: Enter the Shovel Brigade.

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 1 Comment

‘Rudy is Nuts’ Story Gaining Traction

Vanity Fair does Crazy for Rudy.

No, that is wrong: virtually every Full Rudy veteran expects the implosion to happen any second. It's in some bizarro parallel reality that the Rudy campaign achieves verisimilitude and even—strange, too, when you consider the cronies and hacks who surround him—appears, at times, adept.

It's a Catch-22 kind of nuttiness. What with all his personal issues—the children; the women; the former wives; Kerik and the Mob; his history of interminable, bitter, asinine hissy fits; the look in his eye; and, now, Judi!, his current, prospective, not-ready-for-prime-time First Lady—he'd have to be nuts to think he could successfully run for president. But nutty people don't run for president—certainly they don't get far if they do.

And, speaking of banana republics, there was Rudy's extra-legal plan to set aside the 2001 mayoral election (after his term limit had been reached, so he couldn't run again) and, by legislative acclamation (thwarted only at the last minute), extend his term.

Still, say what you want, Rudy's fearlessness or kookiness does break through the political clutter and leave a powerful impression—that may be the biggest part of the political job.

The wives: if Rudy's marital history isn't crazy, it's surely way over the line of middle-class domestic political norms. You can't marry your second cousin (Regina Peruggi, now president of Kingsborough Community College) and, on top of that, annul the deal, as though this were the 18th century. You can't, in a public snit, break up with your wife in a news conference (provoking that wife, Donna Hanover, to call a counter–news conference where she suggested he was a public liar and adulterer). You can't carry on, as we used to say, in front of everybody, not without some major contrition—not if you want a political future.

Or can you?

The bit about the Mayoral election is why I think the man is a dangerous figure, one without the fundamental small-d democratic DNA we desperately need in our leaders. Romney, Hagel, even Huckabee would be far less likely to do something really really weird to us.

Of course, that's not what the media are going to focus on. Nor the keeping his mistress on the city payroll (Wolfowitz, anyone?). No, they're getting all worked up about that story about Rudy and the Ferret.

Rudy_Giuliani.jpg ferret.jpg

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 1 Comment

The Battle to Control Barack Obama’s Myspace

When the campaign decided to do a hostile takeover of the all-volunteer Barack Obama MySpace page, the guy who set it up and got 150,000 friends (many sent over by the campaign), asked for $40,000 and a commission on future MySpace ads. It seems the campaign didn't counter-offer, it just got MySpace to give them control of the page address (but not its content or friends list). And now the campaign has to rebuild the list from scratch.

Jerome Armstrong writes Obama blows into MySpace. Here's the Barack Obama blog's discussion of the “new and improved” Obama MySpace page. And the Kossacks weigh in.

While not all the facts are clear, one obvious divide in all this is what the 'sweat equity' in building up a volunteer site based on a candidate's name is worth. Some say zero — the candidate has the moral and maybe legal rights to the use of his name (the law isn't so clear here, however. so long as there is no misrepresentation nor profiting going on, the use may be perfectly legal.) Others say that the failure to treat volunteers with the same consideration as media consultants when the volunteers deliver better goods is a sign of being behind the times.

If $40K was too much for a campaign with millions in the bank, a really smart candidate operation would have counter-offered a few bucks and dinner with the candidate…

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 8 Comments