AK-AL: ATR: Don Young like a “rat head in a Coke bottle”

A bad day for Don Young is a good day for America. Thank you to Grover Norquist for helping to deliver a bad day to Young by declaring him a Tax Pledge Violator

Don Young (R-Alaska) violated the solemn oath he took to his constituents by voting for H.R. 2642, the Blue Dog Tax Hike. […] “Republicans that vote for tax increases are like rat heads in Coke bottles,” said Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform. “They ruin the Republican brand for all members. It should be readily apparent to a former ’Hero of the Taxpayer Award’ recipient that you don’t vote for tax hikes.”

Bless Grover’s heart. And give money to Sean Parnell.

AK-AL: ATR: Don Young like a "rat head in a Coke bottle"

A bad day for Don Young is a good day for America

A bad day for Don Young is a good day for America. Thank you to
Grover Norquist for helping to deliver a bad day to Young by

declaring him a Tax Pledge Violator

Don Young (R-Alaska) violated the solemn oath he took to his
constituents by voting for H.R. 2642, the Blue Dog Tax Hike. […]
“Republicans that vote for tax increases are like rat heads
in Coke bottles,”
said Grover Norquist, president of
Americans for Tax Reform. “They ruin the Republican brand
for all members. It should be readily apparent to a former ’Hero of
the Taxpayer Award’ recipient that you don’t vote for tax
hikes.”

Bless Grover’s heart. And
give money
to Sean
Parnell
.

Crossposted from
The Next Right

AK-AL: Don Young claims endorsement of group that trashes him

Turns out that Don Young is lying with a new ad claiming the endorsement from a group that has not given it. From the Anchorage Daily News

Now, Young has been running radio ads boasting that he landed an award from Taxpayers for Common Sense, a Washington D.C.-based watchdog group that combs through appropriations bills to root out government waste.

As the article noted, TCS has tried to shame them:

Taxpayers for Common Sense did give Young an award in 2003 — but it isn’t the kind of honor most members of Congress brag about. The group awarded Young their Golden Fleece Award for his backing of the Ketchikan-to-Gravina Island bridge, which became a powerful symbol of out-of-control spending and associated many Republicans with the worst excesses of earmarking.

audio_package(‘http://media.adn.com/smedia/2008/07/25/12/DonYoungCommercial.source.prod_affiliate.7.mp3,’,”,”);

 Get this clown out of Congress. Give money to Sean Parnell.

Also, we are gratified to note that Young won’t be getting a "Hero of the Taxpayer" award from ATR in 2008:

Meanwhile, Norquist points out that even though Young achieved hero status for his 2007 votes, he will not for his 2008 votes. Young voted to support a war supplemental funding bill that includes an expansion of the GI Bill and additional unemployment benefits adding up to more than $71 billion over the next decade.

 

The beginning of the end of the end for Gordon Brown

If you thought losing 3 special elections was bad …

Last night the Scottish National Party won a by-election (like
our special elections) in Glasgow East. A friend who is a Tory
operative sent me a facebook message in shock last night:

the SNP are about to win a ‘special election’ in labour’s 4th
safest seat in parliament! like the GOP gaining pelosi’s seat in
San Francisco!

The all-things-leftist Telegraph put it
this way
:

If Gordon Brown, as now seems likely, loses the next election to
David Cameron, this will be seen as the moment he knew the game was
up.

Noting that the candidate wasn’t the problem, they
continued:

This loss was not about her, it was about the Prime Minister. It
was about a Labour party that has lost its way and now seems to
inspire only disdain, even among its heartland supporters.

We are seeing the end of the post-Cold War center-left swing in
Europe perhaps best symbolized by Tony Blair. Center-right
governments are in charge in Italy, Germany, France, Sweden, and,
soon, the UK.

PA-11: Seeing the future in Lou Barletta

A model for winning Hillary districts

Earlier this week, I sat down with Lou Barletta, the mayor of
Hazelton, PA — just named
PA’s Mayor of the Year
— and the GOP nominee for Congress in
PA-11 against Paul Kanjorski, an old-school, corrupt, machine
Democrat. I know a little bit about the region, as my mom spends a
bunch of time with her cousin who lives just outside of the
district. At the end of June, I spent the better part of the day at
the Anthracite
Museum
, where I learned about the coal mining industry that
used to be the economic core of the district.

About 15 seconds into talking to Barletta, I thought “wow. This
guy has something special.” I am very cynical about politicians,
especially Congressmen. They don’t have to be very charismatic or,
often, smart. Barletta is both. And I was disinclined to like him
because I disagree with
his hard-core immigration position, which could well put him over
the top in this race
.

Throughout the conversation, I learned more and more about the
district, Barletta, and Kanjorski.  I think that we can win
this seat with this guy, even in this environment. His campaign
released
a poll
that shows him up 47-42, which the DCCC believes enough
to put up
ads against  him.

The upshot is that if you want to the GOP pick up a seat,
give
Lou Barletta some money
. If you want to stop illegal
immigration, give
Lou Barletta some money
. If you to get rid of a
corrupt Democrat who gives taxpayer dollars to his campaign staff
and family
, give
Lou Barletta some money
. If you want to
highlight Democratic use of earmarks
, give
Lou Barletta some money
. if you want to
stop a Democrat who admits to lying about the war for political
gain
give
Lou Barletta some money
. If you want to stop a Democrat who
says
one thing about our security in Washington and another at home
,
give
Lou Barletta some money
,  If you want to send a message to
Congress that we need to develop more domestic energy sources,
give
Lou Barletta some money
. Or if you want to support
a model of conservative government at the local level
, give
Lou Barletta some money
.

But there is a very deep thing going on here that might be the
best reason of all. If you want to send a message that playing
along with Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi is no way to represent
god-fearing, hard-working, working-class values, then give
Lou Barletta some money
. Barletta may offer a concrete model of
how to win in a district like gave Hillary Clinton 75% of the
Democratic primary vote.

I am going to write a lot more on Barletta. I think that he is a
model for how we can continue to cut into Democratic districts in
Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Michigan. But in the mean time, give
Lou Barletta some money
.

Cross-posted from
The Next Right
.

PA-11: Seeing the future in Lou Barletta

Earlier this week, I sat down with Lou Barletta, the mayor of Hazelton, PA — just named PA’s Mayor of the Year — and the GOP nominee for Congress in PA-11 against Paul Kanjorski, an old-school, corrupt, machine Democrat. I know a little bit about the region, as my mom spends a bunch of time with her cousin who lives just outside of the district. At the end of June, I spent the better part of the day at the Anthracite Museum, where I learned about the coal mining industry that used to be the economic core of the district.

About 15 seconds into talking to Barletta, I thought "wow. This guy has something special." I am very cynical about politicians, especially Congressmen. They don’t have to be very charismatic or, often, smart. Barletta is both. And I was disinclined to like him because I disagree with his hard-core immigration position, which could well put him over the top in this race.

Throughout the conversation, I learned more and more about the district, Barletta, and Kanjorski.  I think that we can win this seat with this guy, even in this environment. His campaign released a poll that shows him up 47-42, which the DCCC believes enough to put up ads against  him.

The upshot is that if you want to the GOP pick up a seat, give Lou Barletta some money. If you want to stop illegal immigration, give Lou Barletta some money. If you to get rid of a corrupt Democrat who gives taxpayer dollars to his campaign staff and family, give Lou Barletta some money. If you want to highlight Democratic use of earmarks, give Lou Barletta some money. if you want to stop a Democrat who admits to lying about the war for political gaingive Lou Barletta some money. If you want to stop a Democrat who says one thing about our security in Washington and another at home, give Lou Barletta some money,  If you want to send a message to Congress that we need to develop more domestic energy sources, give Lou Barletta some money. Or if you want to support a model of conservative government at the local level, give Lou Barletta some money.

But there is a very deep thing going on here that might be the best reason of all. If you want to send a message that playing along with Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi is no way to represent god-fearing, hard-working, working-class values, then give Lou Barletta some money. Barletta may offer a concrete model of how to win in a district like gave Hillary Clinton 75% of the Democratic primary vote.

I am going to write a lot more on Barletta. I think that he is a model for how we can continue to cut into Democratic districts in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Michigan. But in the mean time, give Lou Barletta some money.

A different view on the left versus right online debate

In the regular debate about about how the right can catch up online, several points are often missed. The first is that the left has developed a movement based on the interconnectedness of people inside the movement. People get recruited, energized, and leveraged. This may or may not be as much a function of larger demographic and political trends, as it has something to do with the netroots specifically.

At the same time, the right has often been better at campaign mechanics, especially in recent years. Our assumption seems to be that if we get enough people to go and vote in this country — which we still believe is just right of center — then we can win. If McCain wins, it will probably be because his ideas are basically in line with a just-right-of-center country, while Obama’s may not be.

In recent years, our political-technological innovations have focused on turning out normal people at unbelievable levels. In that context, I want to highlight something from Jose Antonio Vargas hints at this in his piece on Cyrus Krohn and the RNC:

[…] Then-Rep. Bobby Jindal was an attractive candidate, Krohn says, and it was projected to be a tight race. For 3 1/2 months, using online micro-targeting and data-matching, he identified a set of voters and turned them out to the polls.

Statewide turnout for the Louisiana race was 46 percent. Of those voters who interacted with Krohn’s online targeting — he won’t say how much of the total vote — 76 percent voted, he claims. Krohn says he’s not suggesting that the RNC is responsible for Jindal’s win. What it does suggest, however, is that the model could have significant impact on voter turnout, he adds.

Technology should lower the costs of things that campaigns already do, and those lowered costs should allow new ideas and techniques. The 72-hour program massively increased the efficiency of the GOP’s GOTV efforts, at the same time that the RNC and Bush-Cheney got better at recruiting more volunteers to do those things.

The Louisiana story makes clear that we likely still have significant advantages here. Our GOTV is almost certainly tremendously more efficient, helped by the things that Cyrus is working on, existing technologies like 72-hour, and non-electoral technology developments. These efficiencies will allow us to stretch our precious GOTV dollars and volunteer time by deploying them where they make the most incremental difference in actually delivering the next vote.

If this ends up being a close election, or a very close election, it is going to come down to electoral technology. Maybe it will be ACORN crashing the rolls and delivering illegal voters. Maybe it will be Cyrus massively increasing turnout and optimizing our GOTV through what he is doing. Maybe it will be just that they recruit and register and vote more people than we do, or vice versa. But my hunch is that if we win a nail-biter, what Cyrus is doing will deserve a big chunk of the credit.

I don’t want to downplay what the left is doing at all. We clearly are not competing with them in this space. Social media should give us more opportunities to communicate with voters and future voters alike. And we should be able to exploit the efficiencies and new modes of communication to better organize people.

But in some places, we are doing very, very well. And Jose’s story on Cyrus should make that clear.

So that’s how Obama counts to 10. He’s President now

This popped my eyes out:

With layers of Secret Service agents, they zipped through Amman Tuesday in a motorcade of 20 vehicles.

I now see how he gets to the 10 in:

"The objective of this trip was to have substantive discussions with people like President Karzai or Prime Minister Maliki or President Sarkozy or others who I expect to be dealing with over the next eight to ten years," he said.

But a reporter had to remind his staff that he is not President yet:

“But he is not president of the United States,” a reporter reminded the adviser.

 

Cancelling markups to avoid votes on energy

How afraid are the Scaredy-crats of getting on the record?

Today, Senator Robert “Sheets” Byrd (D-KKK/WV) cancelled a
markup in the Senate Appropriations Committee. Why? He even told
us.
To avoid a vote on energy
:

Given the uncertainty in how the oil and gas drilling
issue is currently playing out on the Senate floor
, I have
decided to postpone the July 24th appropriations markups at this
time,” Byrd said in a statement.

Earlier, Boehner noted “clear majorities” in both houses, but
that the Dems were afraid of them. From
The Hill
:

Boehner stressed that there are “clear majorities” in both
chambers of Congress to support greater energy exploration, but
blamed Democratic leadership for preventing votes on such
issues
.

“The only thing standing in the way of what we want are Nancy
Pelosi, Harry Reid and Barack Obama,” Boehner said.

I am going to coin a new word: Scaredy-crats

If Michigan is tied, then John McCain will be President

Jonathan Martin gets a new Michigan poll via the Detroit News:

New poll numbers out from the Detroit News have the Michigan race between Obama and McCain very competitive with a chunk of voters still on the sidelines.

Obama is up 43-41, but 12% of voters said they’re undecided.

My gut is that if undecideds are that high, John McCain is President.  Michigan is a lot of electoral votes and we saw throughout the primaries that Obama never really closed well. The undecideds always broke hard against him.

Obviously, it is far too early to be making statements like this,  but this and this New Hampshire poll suggest that McCain is very much in this.