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How the GOP Sabotaged Itself: 2012's Real Story Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=19173"><span class="small">Michael Cohen, Guardian UK</span></a>   
Tuesday, 06 November 2012 15:57

Cohen writes: "As America's demographic facts shifted in favour of Democrats, the GOP chose instead to paint itself into an ideological corner."

Mitt Romney addressing the US Hispanic Chamber of Commerce in Los Angeles, in September; but Latino voters are expected to favour Obama by a margin of at least 30 points. (photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)
Mitt Romney addressing the US Hispanic Chamber of Commerce in Los Angeles, in September; but Latino voters are expected to favour Obama by a margin of at least 30 points. (photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)


How the GOP Sabotaged Itself: 2012's Real Story

By Michael Cohen, Guardian UK

06 November 12

 

s America's demographic facts shifted in favour of Democrats, the GOP chose instead to paint itself into an ideological corner

Barring a complete and systematic failure of pretty much every single polling organization in America, Barack Obama will be re-elected president of the United States Tuesday night.

Still, no matter what happens on Tuesday - and even if Mitt Romney pulls off the most extraordinary political surprise in the history of American presidential campaigns - the more than 18-month slog for the White House provides us with rather clear outlines on the changing nature of the US electorate and the ideological positioning of the two parties. While it would be incomplete and, indeed, probably incorrect to call this a realignment election, there are a number of crucial takeaways from campaign 2012 - and they augur much brighter days ahead for Democrats than for Republicans.

The Republican party's continued descent into madness

The single most defining element of American politics over the last four years is that the Republican party has fallen out of the crazy tree and hit every branch on the way down. It is no longer even appropriate to say the Republican party is dominated by its conservative wing; but rather, that the GOP is controlled by its extreme, radical wing.

The shift of the Republican to the far, far right is not a recent development. Instead, it is reflective of a four-decade shift in ideological orientation in the GOP: from a party once torn between distinct conservative and moderate wings, to one in which moderates have gone the way of dinosaurs and VCRs. But there is no question that in the past four years, the extremism of the GOP has increased dramatically - so much so that their most recent president, George W Bush, is persona non grata in the party because he is viewed as too moderate and not sufficiently conservative. Imagine that.

For years, the national Republican party emboldened this wing of the GOP and made it the vanguard of its efforts to maintain national power. That group now holds ideological sway in the Republican party. In the naked pursuit of short-term partisan gain, the Republican party has unleashed forces that it can no longer fully control.

The result is a set of policies that not only are radical, but also are out of step with the mainstream of American politics. This includes everything from efforts to privatize Medicare, eviscerating social security, rejecting any role for fiscal policy other than cutting taxes, and taking the position that illegal immigrants should not receive amnesty but rather "self-deport". This is not to mention the GOP's growing extremism on abortion rights and reproductive health in general.

Republicans once aspired to, and briefly held, the mantle of a party of ideas. Today, the GOP in its deference to the ideological rigidity of its radical wing has reached a position where Republicans have no serious ideas for reforming healthcare, creating jobs, stimulating the economy, or fixing the nation's crumbling infrastructure. They also have no proposals for achieving energy independence and certainly no thought as to how to save the planet - particularly since they reject almost unanimously the science underpinning global warming. (Well, I take that back: Republicans have one policy for all these issues - cut taxes and trim regulation.)

This has forced their party standard-bearer, a technocratic moderate from Massachusetts, to become a caricature of a modern conservative. In the process, Romney has adopted a host of toxic policy positions and rhetoric (remember the 47%) that has dramatically undermined his candidacy. It's always difficult to beat an incumbent president; it's even more difficult when you're not a very good politician. But when your own party hangs around your neck policy positions that narrow, rather than increase, your chances of being elected, it becomes a herculean task.

To be sure, one of the most important drivers of the Republican's rightward turn has been the unceasing obstructionism toward President Obama's agenda. From early on, the GOP decided that, for political reasons, it must oppose everything he wanted to do. It was an approach that kept the economy under-performing but did help return Republicans to power in the House of Representatives in 2010. Blanket opposition to Obama's policies and, in particular, economic stimulus is pretty much the only reason this election is even close.

If Obama is to win on 6 November, it's possible that Republicans will, at least in the near term, narrow their steadfast hostility to him. Indeed, even against their better judgment, they may find themselves compromising with the White House on the Bush tax cuts and sequestration, just as they compromised on the payroll tax cut in 2012, over the 2011 budget showdown and even on the debt limit.

Providing Obama with the stimulus he has so desperately sought, for the past four years, might even suddenly seem acceptable, particularly if a boost in the economy helps incumbent congressional Republicans keep their constituents happy - and their jobs in place, at the next midterm elections in 2014. Of course, that doesn't mean anyone should get their hopes up: Republicans will still continue to oppose any use of government power and resources to ameliorate social inequalities. And as we get closer to midterm elections in 2014, as well as the next presidential race, it's quite possible, even likely, that GOP obstructionism and obstinacy will get worse.

If Romney wins, congressional Republicans might be even less inclined to compromise, but it won't matter much. No one expects them to take back control of the Senate, which means the Republicans' far-right agenda will go no further than the House of Representatives (at least for the first two years of a Romney presidency). If Republicans were to take back the Senate in 2014 (a possibility that can't be completely discounted), this would be a very different story. One could expect them to make a desperate push to enact some variation of the Ryan budget - and probably succeed.

Still, one of the great ironies of this election - and the capture of the GOP by its extreme wing - is that if Romney were to emerge victorious, he would be protected from having to enact a more radically conservative agenda … by Harry Reid. In fact, if Romney were to win, he might even end up being a fairly popular and successful president.

Demographics Are Destiny

The problem for Republicans, however, is what happens if he loses. In no area of American politics are Republicans more vulnerable and Democrats in better position to capitalize than when it comes to the country's changing demographic make-up.

Consider, for a moment, this paradox. On Tuesday night, Barack Obama could potentially lose white voters by 20 points. He's going to get crushed among white men - and he's still likely to be re-elected, maybe even comfortably.

The reason for this is clear: among non-whites, Obama enjoys an extraordinary advantage. Aside from winning practically the entire African-American vote, Obama is likely to prevail among Hispanic voters by considerably more than 30 points. The latest Latino Decisions poll has him up nearly 50 points.

Among younger voters, he is likely to dominate as well. In short, among the demographic groups that represent the future of the American electorate, Democrats enjoy an enormous edge - and one that will only become more pronounced.

It's not hard to understand why this has happened. Young people who came of age in the Bush years naturally gravitated toward Obama. Moreover, these voters tend to be aligned on social issues with Democrats. On the flip side, GOP positions on immigration have alienated Hispanics and moved them toward the Democrats. Beyond young people and minorities, women voters have increasingly turned their back on the GOP because of its uncompromising stances on abortion and reproductive health, as well as the party's attitude toward poverty programs and maintaining the social safety net.

Republicans have, for decades, relied on the support of whites, religious and cultural voters, and on rural residents. If Obama were to win Tuesday, it would provide conclusive evidence that this is no longer a 50.1% coalition - and that for Republicans to win back the presidency, they must broaden their share of the electorate.

But here's the rub: there is no easy way for them to do it. Even if Republicans could find a way to work with Obama on an issue like immigration reform (an unlikely scenario considering the die-hard opposition of the Tea Party), a legislative victory for the president would only serve to strengthen his support in the Hispanic community. If Republicans oppose reform, however, they will only dig their hole deeper with the fastest growing demographic group in the country. In fact, if Obama were smart, he would make the Dream Act and comprehensive immigration reform one of his first legislative priorities in 2013.

On abortion and reproductive health, it's virtually impossible to imagine any sort of compromise coming from the GOP. And so long as the party has Senate candidates talking about "legitimate rape" and children born as a result of rape being gifts from God, things are likely to get worse for the Republican party, before they get better. The same goes for gay marriage and other social issues.

A Bluer Map

The Democrats' evolving political coalition has also shifted the electoral map in a bluer direction. In states like Nevada and New Mexico, Democrats enjoy a huge advantage because of those states' large Hispanic population. Similar trends can be seen in Colorado, Florida and even Iowa. It is not hard to imagine that Democratic dominance among Hispanic voters will soon put Arizona and even, potentially, Texas in play.

In places like Ohio, Virginia and North Carolina, the Democrats' overwhelming advantage among minority voters and, increasingly, among college-educated whites - another key element of the emerging Democratic coalition - has put these states into play and even leaning blue.

Flip the map for a second to look at it from a Republican perspective and things get ugly quickly. Look, for example, at the 2000 electoral map. Of the states won by Al Gore that year, only Iowa and perhaps Wisconsin are even in play this cycle. Conversely, seven states that Bush won that year are swing states or leaning Democratic. From a starting point of 271 electoral votes (one more than the bare minimum needed to win a national election), Republicans have seen their electoral map narrow rather than widen.

A Recovering Economy

There is one final consideration. As the economy has steadily improved, so, too, have President Obama's approval ratings. All economic indicators indicate that this will be a continuing trend, which means that if Obama were to win Tuesday, he would see his political standing rise as unemployment continues to fall. (Of course, if Romney were to win, he would be the beneficiary of this improving economy.) Throw in the fact that as Obamacare becomes the law of the land and provides a new entitlement for middle-class Americans, the Democrat's long-term policy advantage could be strengthened even further.

None of this is meant to suggest that Republicans won't continue to be a competitive national party. The problem, however, is similar to that faced by Democrats 20-30 years ago: when your base is shrinking, how do you appeal to a broader cross-section of the electorate?

The fact is, there is no easy way for Republicans do it. The GOP needs desperately to reform itself, to cast aside its most radical and extreme wing, and to moderate its policies to appeal to an electorate that is dramatically changing. Democrats simply need to continue the policies - and political approach - that has given them a political advantage going into election day.

What this means is that, should Romney lose tomorrow and Obama emerge victorious, we may be on the cusp of a dramatic shift in national politics.

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Christie Lashes 'Know-Nothing, Disgruntled' Romney Aides Print
Tuesday, 06 November 2012 15:48

Haberman writes: "After HuffPo's Jon Ward last night quoted a Mitt Romney campaign source, complaining that Chris Christie hadn't taken time to come to their rally in Pennsylvania, about 20 miles from the Trenton statehouse, on Sunday night, a Christie source told me that Romney had been personally told shortly after the storm that Christie couldn't travel because of the devastation in his state."

Chris Christie wants Washington politicians to worry about disaster relief before budget cuts. (photo: AP)
Chris Christie wants Washington politicians to worry about disaster relief before budget cuts. (photo: AP)


Christie Lashes 'Know-Nothing, Disgruntled' Romney Aides

By Maggie Haberman, Politico

06 November 12

 

fter HuffPo's Jon Ward last night quoted a Mitt Romney campaign source, complaining that Chris Christie hadn't taken time to come to their rally in Pennsylvania, about 20 miles from the Trenton statehouse, on Sunday night, a Christie source told me that Romney had been personally told shortly after the storm that Christie couldn't travel because of the devastation in his state.

And this morning, Christie made that clear, via HuffPo:

"I told Gov. Romney at that time that if the storm landed as predicted that it was going to be catastrophic to New Jersey and unprecedented," Christie said. "I said to him, 'Listen, Mitt, if this storm hits the way I think it's going to, I'm off the campaign trail from here to Election Day.' And he said to me, 'Chris, of course. Do your job, don't worry about me. I'll take care of things.' So all this other noise, I think, is coming from know-nothing, disgruntled Romney staffers who, you know, don't like the fact that I said nice things about the president of the United States. Well, that's too bad for them."

"He told me last Sunday night that he expected no other political travel or help from me over the course of the remaining time between then and the election, if in fact the storm hit the way it was projected," Christie continued. "If it missed us, I would have been happy to go out on the road and help him. But it didn't."

This level of frustration from Christie, who has been criticized privately by Romney insiders for a week now since he praised Obama, was pretty predictable once it all spilled out into the open. If Romney loses, there may still be some who hope to blame Christie, but most Republicans have avoided doing that publicly, given the magnitude of the storm and the New Jersey governor's star power in the party.

If Romney wins, things may be different.

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FOCUS | In Ohio, Premonitions & Provisional Votes Rule the Night Print
Tuesday, 06 November 2012 13:45

Warren writes: "Last night, after the rally, a source close to Governor Kasich reflected this Ohio realpolitik, telling me that 'If we know who won Ohio tomorrow night, it's not good news. If we know by Thanksgiving, it might be good news. I can definitely see this thing going to the provisional ballots.'"

We could be in store for a hand recount of provisional ballots in Ohio. (photo: AP)
We could be in store for a hand recount of provisional ballots in Ohio. (photo: AP)


In Ohio, Premonitions & Provisional Votes Rule the Night

By Mark Warren, Esquire

06 November 12

 

side from not being able to see anything on the TV but bullshit ads, everybody in Ohio - Democrats, Republicans - seems to enjoy being the center of the universe. And on the last evening, everyone came to them. Springsteen and Jay-Z softened the crowd for the president downtown here, Marshall Tucker opened for Romney across town. (Younger people: There is no shame in having to Wikipedia "Marshall Tucker.")

And nothing says "Fanfare for the Common Man" quite like nosing your private jet into an airplane hangar full of adoring supporters. As Aaron Copland blasted over loudspeakers, the Republican crowd, which had come by the busload and had waited in a line a quarter-mile long to get in, roared One more day!, and the giant doors of the hangar opened, and with a great gust of freezing air, there was Mitt Romney's ride. A succession of Ohio Republicans had spoken, led by Governor John Kasich, who says that he has adopted the philosophy that "you don't grow the government, you grow the people." There was senate candidate Josh Mandel, the state treasurer who looks like the most precocious high-school senior in all of Ohio, who might just be old enough to vote for himself. Mandel's got an enthusiastic little chirp, to contrast with Sherrod Brown, the guy he's trying to beat, who always sounds as if he just ate a lawn-mower blade. But perhaps the biggest roar came when Lt. Governor Mary Taylor said that her message to Obama is, "You don't have to go home, but you can't stay here!"

On the last evening of the most expensive campaign, the Republicans had assured themselves that they were just gonna do this thing, right? Right?! While there was certainty in the crowd, there was a shade of doubt in the giant room all the same, which was not helped by Romney himself trying out a new peroration to a pretty good speech: "A new tomorrow begins tomorrow..."

One shouldn't have to stop and figure out an applause line before applauding.

And with the sun this morning, just ask any professional Democrat here, and he'll tell you with confidence that Obama will win by a small but convincing margin in the state. Ask any Republican professional, and all he will say is that it's gonna be very close.

Last night, after the rally, a source close to Governor Kasich reflected this Ohio realpolitik, telling me that "If we know who won Ohio tomorrow night, it's not good news. If we know by Thanksgiving, it might be good news. I can definitely see this thing going to the provisional ballots." These provisional ballots, the source hastens to add, usually go 64%-36% Democratic.

The source then went on to give a premortem: "The Jeeps in China thing was very, very dumb," in that the enormous blowback wasn't worth any possible benefit.

And this person carefully distanced Governor Kasich from now-infamous Secretary of State Jon Husted, saying that actually if the governor has a rival in this state, it's Husted. It all goes back to a fight over control of the state party that Husted and his allies lost, the source says. And as for the secretary's new notoriety as the poster boy for voter suppression, the source looks mystified. "It's really weird, because Husted was actually out in front early in his term on liberalizing early voting. He took heat from a lot of conservatives - they thought he'd gone too far - and so what the world got to witness was his course correction, where he went too far in the other direction. If he had just stuck to principle, chances are you never would have heard his name."

Meanwhile last night, over at the Renaissance hotel downtown, on the first floor by the portraits of the Ohio presidents - Harding, Grant, Taft, and McKinley - the escalator waited to take all the most significant Republicans in the most significant state upstairs to the Woody Hayes Ballroom to celebrate or mourn. And last night, all was quiet. The second floor was empty, the room a shambles of half-made preparations - signs on the floor, lights hung, press riser mid-construction, all dimly lit by boxy chandeliers overhead. Tonight, the world will be watching. But there's work yet to do.

ELECTION DAY ON THE POLITICS BLOG: LIVE FROM EVERY SWING STATE...

  • FLORIDA: Charles P. Pierce with the Voting-Rights Watchdogs

  • OHIO: Mark Warren Traveling with Governor John Kasich (and with Romney)

  • NEW HAMPSHIRE: Margaret Doris in 5-Vote Territory (and with Romney)

  • VIRGINIA: Elizabeth Sile in the Uncertain Suburbs

  • NEVADA: Jason Whithed in Sheldon Adelson Country

  • WISCONSIN: Joe Tarr with the Trained Poll-Watchers

  • NORTH CAROLINA: Aaron Gwyn on the Church Hereafter

  • IOWA: Kyle Minor on the Last-Minute Battleground Road Trip

  • COLORADO: Sam Levin at the Last Victory Party (and with Obama and Romney)

  • ...AND PENNSYLVANIA: Isaiah Thompson on the Blue State That Would Be Red

PLUS: Tom Junod in Chicago with Obama, Margaret Doris in Boston with Romney... and John H. Richardson in Breezy Point with Sandy Victims Voting

ELECTION NIGHT ON TWITTER: LIVE FROM EVERY ANGLE...

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Whatever It Takes, Get Out and Vote! Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=22195"><span class="small">Michael Winship, Bill Moyers & Company</span></a>   
Tuesday, 06 November 2012 09:08

Excerpt: "Your individual vote is more important than ever, making your voice heard despite the money spent on this election - obscene billions - and no matter the cynicism, falsehood and other heinous behavior displayed in this pursuit of power and influence."

The cover of the Nov. 12, 2012 issue of The New Yorker. (illustration: New Yorker Magazine)
The cover of the Nov. 12, 2012 issue of The New Yorker. (illustration: New Yorker Magazine)


Whatever It Takes, Get Out and Vote!

By Michael Winship, Bill Moyers & Company

06 November 12

 

week has passed since Hurricane Sandy struck, and the short subway ride uptown this morning almost seemed normal, except for the bigger crowds getting on at Penn Station and Times Square - commuters from outside Manhattan where wind and storm surge water damage were so much worse and all too often deadly. Overheard conversations were filled with stories of how people had coped.

I live in Greenwich Village and thought I was ready for the worst - hatches battened down with emergency food, water, batteries, flashlights, transistor radio, etc. I’ve stayed put through 9/11, blackouts, blizzards, even other hurricanes. Nonetheless, I wasn’t prepared for the electricity and heat leaving us for five nights. I thought for sure they would be back the next day. Or the next… or the next…

But we were stuck in that trendy new Manhattan neighborhood - SoPo, as in "South of Power" - and when a friend and colleague offered shelter, warmth and electricity on the upper West Side, the invitation was gratefully accepted. From that outpost (for the most part, life went on as usual once you got above 34th Street and Herald Square), we watched unfold the disaster and accompanying tragedies and acts of heroism and community.

We also watched people vote. Or try to vote, in Ohio and Florida, where lines were long and attempts to suppress the right to cast a ballot are ongoing. Or in flood-stricken New Jersey, where Governor Chris Christie announced that people can vote via e-mail as if they’re casting an absentee ballot from overseas - but still need to download the ballot, print, fill it out and fax or scan it back to the board of elections; a task not easy to accomplish even under the best of conditions.

Yet whatever it takes, your individual vote is more important than ever, making your voice heard despite the money spent on this election - obscene billions - and no matter the cynicism, falsehood and other heinous behavior displayed in this pursuit of power and influence. The illustrated cover of this week’s issue of The New Yorker magazine says it all. Titled "Undeterred," it shows a determined flood survivor in water up to his backpack, shining his flashlight through the darkness onto a sign: "Vote Here Vote Aqui."

Its illustrator, Adrian Tomine, told the magazine’s Mina Kaneko:

"For all its really horrible effects, I feel like the storm has made real a lot of issues in the election that were hypothetical… global warming; and Is Obama enough of a leader to handle a natural disaster?; and Do we need FEMA? It’s really interesting, and in a way useful, to see a lot of these things become actual issues that are right at hand."

"Right at hand" - potent reminders of the role of government and politics in a civil society, especially when that society is in distress.

This will be the 11th presidential election in which I’ve voted. Every four years around Election Day, I look at a certain short piece of writing and read it again, the way some people trot out Dickens’ A Christmas Carol on December 25th. In fact, we used part of it in an essay Bill and I wrote just before the 2008 election:

"It will be quiet on Tuesday. No speeches. No motorcades. No paid political announcements. It’s a very special day, just for grown-ups. America votes Tuesday… and… on Tuesday, the shouting and the begging and the threatening and the heckling will be silenced. It’s very quiet in a voting booth. And nobody’s going to help you make up your mind. So - just for that instant - you’ll know what the man you’re voting for will do a thousand times a day for the next four years. Now it’s your turn."

Eloquent and to the point. Written in 1968 by an advertising man working for Richard Nixon, five years before the Watergate scandal revealed that any trace of the belief in democracy so beautifully expressed in the words above had been erased by corruption, avarice and hubris. And yet, as Bill noted, "When I say our votes matter, I speak not out of some mystical belief in ‘the will of the people’ but because elections - imperfect as they are, twisted and smattered by smears and lies and counter-lies galore, subject to distortion and manipulation - elections offer an alternative to violence, they keep us from coming apart altogether…"

"Democracy - this is still the most radical idea ever let loose in the world - that masses of people, so feared and loathed by monarchs of old, so distrusted by moneyed and political elites, should be charged with self-government, and get on with it, imperfectly, crudely, but with the idea of creating a prosperous society that leaves no one out. That’s not mystical, either. It’s been at the heart of the American experience, the hope that sustains one generation to the next. Every election is an effort to retrieve that radical idea and breathe new life into it."

So please vote! Find out where to vote here. If you’re having a problem voting or need assistance, call 1-866-OUR-VOTE (Spanish: 1-888-839-8682). And visit "The Fight to Vote" section of this website to get and respond to the latest insight on voter suppression tactics nationwide.

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Letter to a Non-Voter Print
Monday, 05 November 2012 14:48

Moore writes: "I don't know if we can get it back, but I do know that Mr. Romney would love the chance to complete the final elimination of the middle class and the American Dream."

Portrait, Michael Moore, 04/03/09. (photo: Ann-Christine Poujoulat/Getty Images)
Portrait, Michael Moore, 04/03/09. (photo: Ann-Christine Poujoulat/Getty Images)


Letter to a Non-Voter

By Michael Moore, Open Mike Blog

05 November 12

 

get it - and I don't blame you. You're fed up and you could care less whether Tweedledee or Tweedledumber wins on Tuesday - because on Wednesday, your life will be the same, unchanged, regardless who is president. Your mortgage will still be underwater. You will still owe $50,000 on your student loan. Your son will still be in Afghanistan. Your daughter will still be working two jobs to make ends meet. And gas will still be at $4.

Four years ago you gave in and voted - and you voted for Obama. You wanted to believe he would go after the Wall Street crooks who crashed the economy - but instead the banks that were "too big to fail" four years ago are now even bigger and more dangerous. You thought there'd be universal health care - but the new law only went so far (with most of it not taking effect until 2014). You were tired of war and homeland security measures that violated our civil liberties - but we're still in Afghanistan, we're sending in drones to Pakistan and basic constitutional rights to privacy and fair trial have been ignored. And you thought you'd have a middle-class, good-paying job like your dad had - but you didn't know that Goldman Sachs was Obama's #1 private campaign donor in 2008, and well, he was beholden to corporate America in more ways we cared to think about.

So, I get it why you've had it with all these politicians and elections. In the end, it doesn't really seem to be our country any more. It's run by those who can buy the most politicians to do their bidding. Our schools are made a low priority and women are still having to fight for just the basic human rights we thought they already had.

So, it's hard for me to ask you for this very personal favor. It's ok if you say "no," but I'm hoping you don't.

I cannot believe it is possible that, after a group of rich plutocrats wrecked the economy, threw people out of work and stole our future, we may actually hand the keys to our country over to...a rich Republican plutocrat who made millions by throwing people out of work! This is insane, and despite all the legitimate criticisms of Obama, he is nothing like the tsunami of hate and corporate thievery that will take place if Mitt Romney is president. As bad as it feels now, it will only get worse. I need your help to stop this.

I can't promise you that your life will get better, easier under Barack Obama. I do think he cares and I know for sure that if the other guy is sitting in the Oval Office, I can guarantee you that not only will your life not get better, it will get much, much worse. Don't take my word for it. Just ask your parents what life was like before a 30-year pillage by the Republicans of the middle class. Your parents bought a house and eventually owned it outright. They weren't in debt. College was free. They bought a new car every 3 or 4 years. They took vacations and were home for dinner by 5 or 6 PM. They had a savings account in the bank. They didn't live in fear of not knowing if they'd even have a job next year.

That's all gone. I don't know if we can get it back, but I do know that Mr. Romney would love the chance to complete the final elimination of the middle class and the American Dream.

He must be stopped. Take 20 minutes on Tuesday and go vote. If you don't want to do it for your country, then do it for me! It's the only favor I'll ever ask of you.

Thanks for taking the time to read this. I know that you care, and care deeply, about your future and your kids' future. You have every right to be cynical about all this. And you hold the power to stop the bastards who plan on squeezing every last dime out of you that they can. Take a stand. And make a statement to those who are hoping against hope that you'll stay home on Tuesday. Your presence at the polls is what they fear most.

Go scare the s**t out of them! For me.


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