McCotter on the 2008 issue environment

On Friday, I sat down with Rep. Thad McCotter (R-MI), the Chairman of the House Republican Policy Committee. We had a reasonably wide-ranging discussion. You can watch all of the segments here, and I will be posting them regularly here and at Redstate. In this one, McCotter explains that the issue environment may not be as bad for us as we may think.

 

What do you think? Do you buy this? I confess to being somewhat skeptical.

McCotter on Obama’s problems in Michigan

On Friday, I sat down with Rep. Thad McCotter, the Chairman of the House Republican Policy Committee. We had a faily wide ranging coversation, and I will be posting pieces over it over the next couple of days here and at The Next Right. McCotter thinks that Obama will have a difficult time in Michigan where (1) the alliance between unions and environmentalists is quite weak and (2) his elitism will be a problem. Here’s some video:
See all the interview segments here.

AK-SEN, AK-AL: The changing environment in Alaska

A Democratic consultant in Alaska told me that the politics up there are fascinating. You have a civil war in the Republican Party between the old guard and new reformists. And you have a Democratic Party that is targeting the old guard. The consultant admitted that if Governor Sarah Palin continue to box them out on reform, ethics, and a degree of populism, it will be very hard for the Democrats to win any races. The News-Miner has a great wrap of these races.

The good news is at the House level, Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell is looking to defeat incumbent Rep. Don Young (R) in the primary. Parnell is up 37-34 over Young in the primary. In addition, Parnell defeats the likely Democratic challenger, 43-38, while Young loses 58-38.

On the other hand, the Senate seat is looking quite bad. Democratic candidate Mark Begich is up 51-44 over Ted Stevens. I have heard that Begich’s advisors biggest fear is that Stevens would get out and be replaced by a young, less-crooked Republican. They don’t think that they could beat a generic Republican.

I think that these polls bear a lesson for us. If Republicans are serious about small government, clean government, and reform, we can win. John McCain is showing life in a horrific environment with precisely this formula. And it is working in Alaska. Will anyone in Washington notice?

More on Jim Johnson: Obama bundler, lobbyist, and shady mortgage executive

Earlier, I introduced Jim Johnson, the head of Barack Obama’s vice presidential search team. He is also a lobbyist, operative for Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale (is this the change we need?), representative of a former head of state, bundler for the Obama campaign, and disgraced mortgage executive who mistated Fannie Mae profits to get a bigger bonus. Oh yeah.

Today, the NY Sun tells us that he also got sweetheart mortgages from bankrupt (legally, not merely in other ways) mortgage dealer Country Wide Financial:

James Johnson, one of three people tapped by Mr. Obama recently to oversee the search for his running mate, took at least five real estate loans totaling more than $7 million from Countrywide Financial Corp. through an informal program for friends of the company’s CEO, Angelo Mozilo, the Wall Street Journal reported Saturday.

But I am sure that Barack Obama sees nothing wrong with that. After all, he got a subsidy on his own house from now-felon, then-FBI investigation target Tony Rezko.

So next time Barack Obama complains about the Housing crisis, ask him about his Vice Presidential search guy who gets sweetheart deals. Or even about his own sweetheart deals. He hasn’t answered enough questions there only, “like eight questions.” We agree with the Chicago Sun Times that that is not enough.

SEIU: Things to fear in an Obama presidency

I have been meaning to write about this for a while, but just haven’t gotten to it. One of the more politically frightening things that I have read recently was Todd Beeton’s write up of SEIU’s Secretary-Treasuer Anna Burger’s speech to the SEIU convention in Puerto Rico two weeks ago. I can’t find the text of the speech anywhere, but Todd has excerpts. It focused on "Card Check" or the "Employee Free Choice Act" which would end the use of secret ballots in the votes to unionize shops. From Beeton:

And the key reason it is so important:

It is the fuel — the opening — for SEIU to change our growth curve from 100,000 to a million or more workers a year.

Which ought to be enough to scare anyone. More union members means more union dues spent on politics. It is clear that the unions get this incremental approach.  Read on after the jump.

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What seems like a minor technical change is actually something that gives them political access to potentially transformational political power. Back to Beeton:

That in itself, Burger argues, makes the Employee Free Choice Act larger than any one single issue, even more important than healthcare.

We are the leaders of the fight for healthcare. We are the biggest healthcare union in our three nations because we fight for it every single day. It’s time that the United States and Perto Rico join our sisters and brothers in Canda and win quality, affordable healthcare for every man, woman and child in 2009!

And:

The passage of the Employee Free Choice Act, Burger argues, will make the difference between incremental change and transformational change, because it will allow the creation of a movement that will not only demand that change, but enable it. So, the Employee Free Choice Act is more important than healthcare because without it, there is no healthcare reform, or at least not the real reform we want and need. Same goes for every other progressive legislation we hope to pass in the post-Bush era.

Imagine a world where five years after the Employee Free Choice Act is signed into law, SEIU is organizing a million or more workers a year and the labor movement has added 20 million members to its ranks. Through the Employee Free Choice Act we’ve built a principled, permanent workers movement that will redefine politics for the next century.

This is permanent majority language. However, when we were talking about permanent majority, we were talking about moving assets into the hands of more Americans. (this is the ownership society that Barack Obama belittles) This vision is about coercively moving more and more Americans into political organizations which use their precious financial resources in a way that they neither control nor even understand.

Given what is likely to happen in the Senate this cycle, this should be taken as dire warning of what an Obama presidency would mean for our society and our economy.

In addition, it is a call to arms both in the 2008 election for Senate seats and the White House, but also for analysis and data collection. The unions and their lackies in the Demcratic party are intent on a path that will destroy our productivity for a significant period of time. We need to document where we are and what happens.

OH-18: Dailey up double digits

The Madison Project reports that Columbus’s ABC 6 (WSYX) is reporting a poll they commissioned that Fred Dailey is up by double digits over incumbent class-of-2006 Democrat Zack Space. (I can’t find the poll on the site, but Dailey’s site has the screen shots)

According to the poll, Dailey is at 46%, while Space is at 32%.

That would put one district not just in play but seemingly in the GOP column. In any case, help Dailey out.

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Not buying Obama’s hyPACrisy

Yesterday, Erick wrote about Barack Obama’s misleading statements on his campaign not taking money from PACs. It is interesting how the press is not buying his lies. First, he will take money from MoveOn’s PAC. So the guys who insult our soldiers are ok. More examples. The very liberal Baltimore Sun’s Swamp blog responds to the line that “[Lobbyists] don’t fund my campaign” with the somewhat skeptical response “Lobbyist Ban not for All Dems”:

Well, at least not on the presidential level.

The Obama campaign confirms that two other arms of the national party – the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee – will continue to accept lobby and PAC money this election. That’s the same position as presumptive Republican nominee John McCain and every affiliate of the Republican National Committee, who all accept lobby and PAC dollars.

More examples of Obama losing this fight below the fold.

USA Today:

The DNC policy announced Thursday does not ban lobbyists from holding top positions within the organization.

Lottie Shackleford, a vice chairman of the DNC, is a lobbyist for insurance firms State Farm and Allstate as well as student lender Sallie Mae. Shackleford did not respond to messages seeking comment.

Paxton declined to comment when asked whether Shackleford’s role conflicted with Obama’s lobbyist restrictions. Obama spokesman Bill Burton did not respond to messages seeking comment.

Obama caves under Palestinian pressure

Earlier, Mark Kilmer noted that Hamas expressed displeasure at Barack Obama’s speech to AIPAC. So what did Obama do? He caved to Hamas.

The Washington Post reported it as “Obama Backtracks on Jerusalem” and Reuters as “Facing criticism, Obama modifies Jerusalem stance“. WaPo:

Facing criticism from Palestinians, Sen. Barack Obama acknowledged today that the status of Jerusalem will need to be negotiated in future peace talks, amending a statement earlier in the week that Jerusalem “must remain undivided.”

So let’s make this very clear. Under pressure from Palestinians and terrorists, Obama caves on perhaps Israel’s most fundamental issue. Not a good sign for those meetings with Ahmadinejad.