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| 7/30/2011 |
Why Voters Tune Out Democrats BARACK OBAMA can’t catch a break from the American public on the economy, even though he prevented a depression and saved global capitalism. Perhaps the president finds solace in knowing he’s not alone. During this period of economic crisis and uncertainty, voters are generally turning to conservative and right-wing political parties, most notably in Europe and in Canada. It’s perplexing. When unemployment is high, and the rich are getting richer, you would think that voters of average means would flock to progressives, who are supposed to have their interests in mind — and who historically have delivered for them. During the last half-century or so, when a Democratic president has led the country, people have tended to experience lower unemployment, less inequality and rising income compared with periods of Republican governance. There is a reason, however, that many voters in the developed world are turning away from Democrats, Socialists, liberals and progressives. My vantage point on voter behavior comes through my company, Greenberg Quinlan Rosner, and its work for center-left parties globally, starting with Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign in 1992. For the last decade, I have worked in partnership with James Carville conducting monthly polls digging into America’s mood and studying how progressives can develop successful electoral strategies. (I am also married to a Democratic congresswoman from Connecticut, Rosa L. DeLauro.) (New York Times) | |||
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keywords: ABC, Austria, Bailouts, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Canada, China, Connecticut, European Union, Extremists, Financial Crisis, France, Greenberg Quinlan Rosner, Immigration, Italy, James Carville, Nancy Pelosi, Netherlands, Norway, Ohio, Rosa Delauro, Sweden, Tea Party, US Supreme Court, United Kingdom, United States, Wall Street
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| 5/27/2010 |
President Obama under fire for BP spill response President Barack Obama is on the defensive over his presidential multitasking, for refusing to scrub his schedule of events that seem peripheral — even trivial — compared with the unfolding catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico. As oozing oil fouls Louisiana’s marshes, Obama has committed to maintaining the semblance of a regular schedule, adhering to his walk-and-chew-gum style of crisis management even as criticism of his administration mounts. (Politico) | |||
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keywords: Barack Obama, Barbara Boxer, Big Oil, Bill Clinton, Bobby Jindal, British Petroleum, Coal, Dana Perino, Daniel Kessler, Darrell Issa, Debbie Stabenow, Deepwater Horizon, Dick Cheney, Fox, George W Bush, Greenpeace, Gulf Of Mexico, Hurricane Katrina, James Carville, Louisiana, New Orleans, North Korea, Oil Spill, Ronald Reagan, San Francisco, Sean Hannity, South Korea, US Congress, United States, Washington DC, West Virginia, White House
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| 1/8/2010 |
Carville: Airport scanners can 'measure my penis' But Carville isn't worried about his privacy: "I don't care. I'm up in the air all the time, like George Clooney," (The Hill) | |||
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| 2/4/2009 |
Campbell Brown: No Bias, No Bull Bailout Pay Cuts; Madoff Warnings Ignored? QUESTION: That seems as if people that the president called shameless last week are being allowed to go on the honor system. I mean, what is the accountability? You said accountability. What is the teeth? I mean, what happens if these people violate it? Do we yank the money back? Do we bankrupt the firms? Do we fire the executives? ROBERT GIBBS, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: I will get clarification from Treasury on that, but I don't -- I mean, first of all, the beginning and the end of these is not just putting something on a Web site. (CNN) | |||
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keywords: 9/11, Al-qaeda, Ali Velshi, American International Group, Bailouts, Bank Of America, Barack Obama, Bernie Madoff, CNN, Campbell Brown, Citigroup, Detainees, Dick Cheney, Edelman, Edmund Burke, Financial Crisis, George W Bush, Guantanamo Bay, Harry Markopoulos, James Carville, John Ridley, Marijuana, Merrill Lynch, Michael Phelps, Michelle Obama, Morgan Stanley, National Public Radio, Newt Gingrich, Olympics, Paul Begala, Robert Gibbs, Rush Limbaugh, Securities And Exchange Commission, Super Bowl, Terrorists, Tony Blankley, Torture, United States, Usa Patriot Act, Wall Street, Whistleblowers, White House
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| 4/5/2008 |
Come, O Come, Emanuel: It ain't over till it's over. But at some point soon, someone may have to not-so-gently tell Hillary time is up. Enter 'Rahmbo.' Rahm Emanuel has been described as a street fighter with a killer instinct—as explosive, profane, wired and ruthless—sometimes as a compliment, sometimes not. But no one has ever cast him in the role of elder statesman, at least up until now. Emanuel, a 48-year-old congressman who grew up, somewhat weirdly, to study ballet and practice Chicago politics, has generally adapted to his situation in a combative, not diplomatic, manner. As an indifferent high-school student, he badly cut his finger on the beef-slicing machine at Arby's. That night, after his high-school prom, he jumped into Lake Michigan. The tip of his finger became infected and he nearly died. Ever since, Emanuel has relished raising his hacked-off middle figure at his foes. In conversation with almost anyone about anything, Emanuel uses the F word like a sergeant in a World War II motor pool. Emanuel would never be confused with Averell Harriman, who, in a gentlemanly way, stood up to presidents from FDR to LBJ. Still, someone may have to deliver the bad news. When the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives voted articles of impeachment against Richard Nixon in the summer of 1974, it fell to the GOP's grand old man, Barry Goldwater, to go to the president and say, "Mr. President, this isn't pleasant, but you want to know the situation and it isn't good." Goldwater told Nixon that there were, at most, 18 votes to acquit in the Senate—and then twisted the knife by saying that he himself was undecided. (Newsweek) | |||
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keywords: Al Gore, Averell Harriman, Barack Obama, Barry Goldwater, Bill Clinton, Bruce Reed, Chicago, David Axelrod, Denver, Florida, Franklin D Roosevelt, Heath Shuler, Hillary Clinton, Howard Dean, Howard Fineman, Illinois, Indiana, James Carville, Joe Sinsheimer, Joffrey Ballet, John Kerry, Lake Michigan, Lyndon Johnson, Michigan, Middle East, Naftali Bendavid, Nancy Pelosi, North Carolina, Patti Solis Doyle, Pennsylvania, Rahm Emanuel, Richard Nixon, Ted Kennedy, Terry Mcauliffe, US Congress, United States, Vernon Jordan, Washington Post, White House, World War II
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