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  • 1/25 - Hawaii Republicans
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CLICK HERE FOR DELEGATE COUNT

McCain
28.8
Huckabee
18.7
Romney
15.2
Giuliani
12.2
Thompson
9.2
Paul
4.1
Clinton
41.7
Obama
33.2
Edwards
12.7
McCain +2.9%
Clinton +21.0%
McCain +6.8%
Clinton +22.3%
Clinton
48.5
Giuliani
45.5
Clinton
47.0
Thompson
42.0
Clinton
45.0
McCain
48.5
Clinton
49.8
Romney
44.3
Clinton
51.3
Huckabee
42.0

Why the Ref's Poll Averages Are Superior


Yahoo! News: Politics News

Author assumes guise of 10-year-old to punk famous (AP)
AP - Over the years, "Little Billy" learned much from the country's top minds.

Highway deaths drop to lowest levels since 1950s (AP)
AP - U.S. highway deaths have fallen to their lowest levels since the 1950s, as more motorists bought into buckling up and embraced safety innovations. A sour economy that dampened traveling instincts also was a contributor.

Success of lone gunmen may shift al-Qaida strategy (AP)

FILE - This December 2009 file photo released by the U.S. Marshal's Service shows Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab in Milan, Mich.  On Christmas Day, a passenger on a Northwest Airlines flight bound for Detroit tried to blow up the plane with plastic explosives in his underwear. He failed, yet the very attempt shook the U.S. government, set federal agencies against each other and triggered months of political second-guessing.  (AP Photo/U.S. Marshal's Service)AP - On Christmas Day, a passenger on a Northwest Airlines flight bound for Detroit tried to blow up the plane with plastic explosives in his underwear. He failed, yet the very attempt shook the U.S. government, set federal agencies against each other and triggered months of political second-guessing.




CBC: Obama not listening (Politico)
Politico - Tensions are rising as the caucus tries to stem the high unemployment rate among African-Americans.

POLITICO Interview: Karl Rove (Politico)
Politico - Mike Allen speaks with Karl Rove about his new book "Courage and Consequence."

Toyota troubles put spotlight on US safety agency (AP)

Toyota Prius vehicles are seen for sale Wednesday, March 10, 2010, in Hayward, Calif. The government sent investigators Tuesday to examine a Prius that sped out of control on a California freeway, and Toyota said it wanted to interview the driver as the besieged automaker dealt with a high-profile new headache that raised questions about the safety of its beloved hybrid. A day after state troopers helped the car slow to a stop and its driver to emerge unharmed, Toyota could shed no new light on what might have gone wrong. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)AP - Toyota's massive recalls are prompting Congress to reconsider whether the nation's auto safety agency has lived up to its mission of protecting motorists.




Democrats, White House close in on health bill (AP)

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) speaks about healthcare reform at her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 4, 2010. REUTERS/Jose Luis MaganaAP - A final agreement nearly in hand, President Barack Obama and Democratic leaders are about to embark on one last sales job that will determine the outcome of the president's signature health care overhaul.




Ex-freshman, veteran kingpin equal Democratic woes (AP)

FILE - This Tuesday Oct. 14, 2008 file photo shows Eric Massa, Democratic candidate for New York's 29th Congressional District in Rochester, N.Y. One is a former Democratic freshman who was little known outside his Corning-Olean-Pittsford, N.Y. district. The other, a 20-term Democratic kingpin from Harlem, known to New Yorkers and anyone following tax bills. But now, Republicans — looking for any opening to regain control of the House — are portraying newly resigned first-termer Eric Massa and veteran Charles Rangel as dual symbols of Democratic ethical misconduct. (AP Photo/David Duprey, File)AP - One is a former Democratic freshman little known outside his Corning-Olean-Pittsford, N.Y., district. The other, a 20-term Democratic kingpin from Harlem, is widely known to New Yorkers and anyone following tax legislation.




'Little Billy's Letters' at a glance (AP)
AP - Excerpts from the responses by prominent figures to letters from "Little Billy," the grade-schooler alter ego of prankster Bill Geerhart, appearing in the book "Little Billy's Letters":

Chief Justice John Roberts and Obama White House: a tit for tat (The Christian Science Monitor)

FILE - In this Sept. 29, 2009, file photo, Chief Justice John Roberts sits for a new group photograph with other Supreme Court judges at the Supreme Court in Washington. For a short time Thursday, March 4, 2010, Washington buzzed over a rumor reported exclusively by an online gossip Web site with no particular Supreme Court expertise that Chief Justice John Roberts was considering stepping down. He is not resigning, as even the Radar Online site quickly concluded in backing away from its own story. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)The Christian Science Monitor - It’s starting to look like the Hatfields versus the McCoys. Except, in this instance, it’s two branches of government duking it out: the judicial branch (Chief Justice John Roberts) versus the executive (President Obama).




How the AP-GfK poll on Obama was conducted (AP)
AP - The Associated Press-GfK Poll on President Obama, the direction of the country and health care was conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Media from March 3-8. It is based on landline and cell phone telephone interviews with a nationally representative random sample of 1,002 adults. Interviews were conducted with 702 respondents on landline telephones and 300 on cellular phones.

43 Somalis die in capital after 2 days of warfare (AP)

Somali government soldiers cross a street during heavy fighting with Islamist insurgents in northern Mogadishu, Somalia, Thursday, March 11, 2010. Islamist insurgents and government forces battled for a second day in the Somali capital. (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh)AP - Heavy fighting between Somali insurgents and pro-government troops has killed at least 43 people over two days, as African Union peacekeepers used tanks to help the beleaguered government beat back an insurgent attack, officials said Thursday.




UK court grants bail to ex-Bosnian vice president (AP)

FILE - Then senior Bosnian politician Ejup Ganic attends a news conference in Tuzla, Bosnia, in this May 5, 2007 file photo. A British court granted bail to the former Bosnian President Ejup Ganic Thursday March 11, 2010. The 64-year-old was arrested March 1 at London's Heathrow airport on a Serbian warrant in connection with the 1992 death of Yugoslav army troops in Bosnia.  (AP Photo/Amel Emric, File)AP - Britain's High Court on Thursday granted bail to former Bosnian Vice President Ejup Ganic, who was arrested at London's Heathrow Airport on a Serbian war crimes warrant earlier this month.




Obama to sign order to execute export-doubling strategy (AFP)

Job seekers and employers come together at the Inland Empire Career Fair in California in February 2010. US President Barack Obama will sign an executive order Thursday to put into action his ambitious strategy to double American exports to ease an unemployment crisis at home, officials said.(AFP/Getty Images/File/David Mcnew)AFP - US President Barack Obama will sign an executive order Thursday to put into action his ambitious strategy to double American exports to ease an unemployment crisis at home, officials said.




House rejects bid to pull troops from Afghanistan (McClatchy Newspapers)
McClatchy Newspapers - WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives rejected a resolution Wednesday that called on President Barack Obama to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan by year's end.

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The Ref's Daily Political Brief

Can Hillary control Bill? 

Romney Goes Spanish in Miami

GOP Candidates Take Over Florida - Biggest Issue . . . The Economy - And Where is the Secret Service?

Huckabee and Chuck Norris: McCain is Too Old and is Huckabee in it to Win or as McCain's Sidekick?

McCain Leaves the Door Open to the Media

Edwards Implies that Obama and Hillary Can't Win in the Fall

The Ref's Calls

____________________________________

DEMAGOGUERY VERSES REASON

Barack Obama shocked many when he said the following of Ronald Reagan: "He tapped into what people were already feeling, which was, ‘We want clarity, we want optimism, we want, you know, a return to that sense of dynamism and entrepreneurship that had been missing.’” 

John Edwards apparently filled with shock upon hearing these words as evidenced by his own words.  According to the New York Times Edwards said, "“When you think about what Ronald Reagan did to the American people, to the middle class, to the working people . . . (he) created a tax structure that favored the very wealthiest Americans and caused the middle class and working people to struggle every single day.”  Edwards Attacks Obama for View of Reagan, NYT, 1/18/08.

Why did Obama shock people when spoke positively of Reagan?  Shock resulted because the far left has linked Reagan to all of the perceived evils of corporate America such as greed, racism, sexism and blind American superiority.  The words of Edwards demonstrate this link clearly.

Ostensibly Obama aims to truly change the course of this nation.  Edwards responded in reactionary fashion.  Obama's words manifest a vision that relies less on class and racial antagonism and more on cultivating a shared American identity.  Whether that vision survives the campaign and can win in such a hostile Democratic environment, however, remain major questions. 

But if Obama genuinely attempts to bridge the divide in action as well as in rhetoric, he represents a potential force that can genuinely shape America's future.  Obama must do more than speak the language of optimism to enact this change, but must face down the race and class demagogues that attempt to dominate the Democratic Party.  The Ref - Jan. 18, 2008 

 

____________________________________

HARDBALL ATTEMPTS TO CREATE ITS OWN REALITY

Hardball consistently stretches the truth or deliberately states untruths to push its agenda. Chris Matthews has made no secret of his support for Barack Obama or his disgust with Mitt Romney and the entire Republican field with the exception of McCain. 

Tonight Hardball's chief correspondent David Schuster, presumably a reporter, described Romney’s reaction to a question from a reporter as an eruption. Romney's reaction resembled nothing like an eruption, but merely a slightly annoyed but calm response.  See the video here

This instance of media bias represents a perfect example of the kind of distortion that makes many of us skeptical of the media.  Chris Matthews is a commentator but David Schuster is not.  Hardball regularly masks commentary as reporting.  It is this practice to which we object.  The Ref - Jan. 17, 2008  

Also, Chris Matthews Admits He Went Too Far in Criticizing Hillary:  Matthews: I Wronged Clinton With Remark - Newsmax, AP | 1/17/08

____________________________________

THE NEXT BIG REPUBLICAN RACE

Now that Romney has won Michigan we know he will remain a competitor in the race until at least February 5th, Super Tuesday. We cannot say the same of any other Republican hopeful because they all need wins to raise money and remain competitive. 

Because Romney represents the one constant we can reach two major conclusions. First, Romney will benefit from the South Carolina primary regardless of who wins. While some believe that Romney's chief competitor is McCain, he actually loses more votes to Huckabee and Thompson. Both Huckabee and Thompson receive primarily votes of conservatives who would likely split more toward Romney than McCain.

If McCain wins South Carolina and Huckabee finishes in second place, Thompson will likely drop out and Huckabee will be substantially weakened. As a result Romney will gain some votes from both Thompson and Huckabee. McCain, however, will gain few votes from other candidates until Giuliani drops out. 

The second conclusion we can reach is that McCain must win conservative votes to win the nomination. He is in the same battle for conservatives in which Romney, Huckabee and Thompson are engaged. Conservatives rule the Republican Party and they will decide who takes the nomination. Michigan represented McCain's most favorable remaining state because of its loose voting rules.  The remaining calendar features mostly states that allow only Republicans to vote for the Republican nomination. Losing Michigan hurt McCain significantly.

The one major remaining question is who can win the conservative vote? Once a candidate receiving conservative votes drops out, probably Thompson, those voters will go somewhere. McCain must take a sizable portion of them to stop Romney. The next big race, therefore, is South Carolina. Watch where Thompson finishes. If he finishes third or below the race for the newly freed up conservatives begins.  McCain has not fared well with conservatives in the past.  We will see if he or Romney can win them.  For now, watch South Carolina.  The Ref - Jan. 15, 2008   

 

____________________________________

THE CLINTONS ARE NOT RACISTS

The debate over Bill Clinton's comments has gotten out of hand. It seems that the argument will come to an end after the Nevada Democratic debate where Obama and Hillary agreed that they will put it behind them. Hopefully the parties they represent will allow it to die. 

The controversy highlights the new political variables that now exist because a black candidate has a legitimate shot at winning a major party's nomination. These new variables present an opportunity to put a great deal of racial tension behind us, but also present the risk of inflaming them as well.

It serves no person or group well when the media or a candidate decides to use the race card. Certainly the media deserves some blame in this case as does Senator Obama's campaign, as Senator Obama acknowledged in Tuesday's debate by agreeing that his campaign had attempted to push the story.

Perhaps this will be the last time during the nomination process when racial tension flares so significantly. If it happens again the Democrats are on their way back to 1968 when the tensions within the party manifested into riots at the national convention.  The Ref - Jan. 15, 2008

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