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Conservatives Mistake George Washington for Napoleon
Fox News and other conservatives have once a again shown a reckless disregard for both history and fact checking by claiming that Newsweek’s latest issue portrays President Obama as Napoleon. Looks a bit more like General George Washington’s formal military dress to me. But, I just report, you decide.
Here’s a clip from the tail end of the Fox News discussion which includes an even less flattering comparison to Obama.
UPDATE: In all fairness I should report that the Huffington Post made the same mistake…
Election 2012 Take-Aways
It’s more productive to act upon polls than to try to explain them away.
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Republicans aren’t the only ones with lots of money to throw at elections.
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White guys need to learn to play well with others. The playground is getting crowded
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Extremist candidates say extreme things. And then they lose.
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You can’t redistrict the whole country.
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People who warn us we can’t keep doing the same thing and expect different results seem to keep doing the same thing.
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47% who thought economy was the major issue didn’t believe Republicans were the ones to deal with it
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We need a new definition for the word pundit. “An expert” just doesn’t seem appropriate anymore
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In 2012 Your Vote Means Something
Political pundits across the nation have been talking about the incredibly high stakes for 2012 election but none of them had any idea they’d get THIS high:
Full disclosure: The terms of the bet do not require a complete shaving of my head. I can keep a quarter inch or so of ground cover.
That’s right folks, we at Politigraphs have a friendly wager going that will result in one of us shaving.
If (read as: when) Mitt Romney wins, the old man will shave his head including cutting off the ponytail he’s had for decades. Many would argue this should have happened several years ago, but it appears our long national nightmare may soon come to an end.
If the unthinkable should occur and President Obama is re-elected, I’ll be shaving my face and will once again look like an Oatmeal character. Trust me folks, this is NOT a good look for me.
So when you step into the voting booth on November 6th (my birthday by the way), remember what’s at stake for our nation.
The Loser
Are You Better Off Now Than You Were Four Years Ago?
A quick look at the graph above would indicate the answer is no. Income is lower and prices are moderately higher. Home prices have fallen and the poverty rate has risen. The odd man out in this scenario is consumer sentiment which has risen sharply compared to four years ago (although still not near the 1996 baseline).
The answer to the disparity between reality and consumer sentiment may be that consumers are looking at recent trends as opposed to comparing two snapshots in time. Four years ago we were in the midst of a recession whose worst effects were yet to come. Today we are in a very slow economic recovery. Whether the pace of that recovery is enough to reassure voters who aren’t as well off as they were four years ago remains to be seen.
Rose-Colored Glasses and the (Unintended) Consequences of Elections
The 2012 election presents us with a bit of a quandary. Conventional wisdom states that America is a center-right country and has been drifting further right since the Reagan years. In addition unemployment is high, the economy is struggling and the majority of Americans believe the country is headed in the wrong direction. 2012 should be a banner year for Republicans and a disaster for the incumbent Democratic president. And yet the polls show Obama beginning to widen his lead over Romney and the odds for Republicans capturing the Senate dwindling.
Republicans – and Democrats – are left wondering how such a thing is possible.
The answer may be the rose-red colored glasses through which the far right views the world.
Every setback is blamed on the liberal media, skewed polling or candidates that didn’t run as “true conservatives.” Every victory is a mandate for the far right’s agenda and a purging of moderate elements within the Republican Party. The latest example is the 2010-midterm elections. The far right’s mantra became, “elections have consequences.” Sometimes, as the Republicans are learning, those consequences are not what they intended.
As the chart above shows, in a non-rose-colored reality, the results of midterm elections during a president’s first term appear to have no value as a predictor of his likelihood of being reelected. Ignoring history, the far right claimed the 2010 elections as a great repudiation of Obama, the “Liberal Agenda” and even moderate Republicans.
The results are a paralyzed and unloved (10% approval rating) Congress and a string of extreme-right presidential candidates (Bachmann, Cain, Gingrich and Santorum) whose only distinction was their inability to win even within the Republican Party. What they did accomplish was to convince more electable candidates that 2012 wasn’t a good year to be remotely moderate within the Republican Party.
And so the Republicans are left with Mitt Romney whose efforts to find love among a base that refuses to embrace him has alienated many of the moderate voters he needs to be elected. It’s not too late for him “go rogue” and to turn things around but, in the Republican Party of 2012, truly going rogue would mean a sharp turn towards the center and I don’t see that happening.