Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons

Townhall.com The Blogspot for Political, Conservative and Republican Blogs and Bloggers


Tuesday, May 13, 2008
When Does Hillary's Leverage Run Out?
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 3:50 PM

An open question to my fellow bloggers...

Obviously, she's been considerably bolstered in her dream to plow on by the revelation that fully 67 percent of Democratic voters wish her to plow on. Even among Obama voters, the number's in the 40s. Talk about some validation. I'm particularly amused by the fact that the American electorate continues to mystify the Washington punditry and media by not acting in the manner pundits prescribe for the Democratic Party. It mystifies Beltway types so much, in fact, that the defiance of Democratic voters is the lede in this story:
Pushing back against political punditry, more than six in 10 Democrats say there's no rush for Hillary Clinton to leave the presidential race – even as Barack Obama consolidates his support for the nomination and scores solidly in general-election tests.
"Why aren't they listening to us???" the media asks overtly and a little pathetically in this story.

The media turned the fire hose of negative commentary on Hillary post-Indiana and -N.C., as predicted, partly because they knew she'd fare well in Kentucky and particularly West, by God, Virginia, thereby extending the justification for her Veritably Mathematically Impossible, by God, Campaign. They hoped to make their criticisms, get the supers 'rats jumping off the ship, so to speak, and that the combination would impress upon her the need to leave the race.

Her plaudits for dropping out, from both the media and Obama, would have been great indeed had she done it pre-West Virginia, but the costs to her outweighed the benefits. Why quit while you're sorta-kinda ahead (in the ridiculous parlance of this ridiculous campaign, that is) for a couple days?

Now, she'll whoop up in W.V. and likely in Kentucky next week (she's leading by 25 percent), and her argument for her "broad coalition" will limp along despite the fact that Obama's superdelegate count is rising faster than the thrill up Chris Matthews' leg.

She'll lose in Oregon, which has 52 delegates to give, and she's trailing in South Dakota (June 3), but she's likely to take Montana and Puerto Rico, and she's leading her states by larger margins than Obama leads his.

Given how far she's come and the fact that there are only 21 days left until the end of primaries, period, at what point do the benefits of dropping out outweigh the benefits of staying in, and how's the Obama campaign gonna make it worth her while? Add to the scales the fact that Democratic voters are pretty pumped about getting to have a say in this process, and the people of the remaining few primary states would be disproportionately ticked by having their chances revoked at the very end of this improbable process, and you've got a very delicate situation. (Don't you love the way the Democrats devised this system?)

We're dealing with a pretty small window, here, in which she'll bolster her standing with a couple strong wins and he'll continue to scrape away at superdelegates, bolstering his own.

Perhaps Clinton just continues to rock on until June 3rd, then using the dual bargaining power of being both a potentially destructive annoyance to the party throughout the summer and the idea that the party owes her for having energized new voters and for her potential to keep blue-collar types within the ranks.

Does she settle on one of these bargaining chips-- either the diligent party servant or the dangerous candidate scorned? I think we all know which might suit her better.

And, at what point is her bargaining power greatest? Does she ever lose her leverage, or are the Clintons so powerful that regardless of her behavior, she's guaranteed a pay-out or a position at the end of all this? Thoughts, guys? The clock is a-tickin' on this thing. Just thinking out loud.







Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Gaza for Obama
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 2:58 PM
Here's the video of the al-Jazeera report as a companion to AC's report:





Friday, May 09, 2008
So, Maybe That 'Hamas Endorsed Obama' Talking Point Wasn't So Unfair?
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 7:05 PM
Still a bit of a cheap shot from the man who says Jeremiah Wright's off-limits, but Obama's associates always do speak loudly about his priorities. Today, an adviser gets canned for hangin' with Hamas:

A Middle East policy adviser for Barack Obama has left the campaign after acknowledging having held talks with Hamas, FOX News confirms.

The Times newspaper in London first reported Friday that the campaign was severing ties with the adviser, Robert Malley.

Malley said he had been in contact with the Palestinian group, but only through his work for a “conflict resolution think tank,” and not on behalf of the Obama campaign, the newspaper reported.

I'm sure this has nothing to do with Obama's actual policies or feelings about Hamas, of course.





Thursday, May 08, 2008
Hillary Letter to Obama: Hey, Shouldn't We Totally Seat those FL and MI Delegates, Disenfranchiser?
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 4:07 PM

The Democratic race has devolved into note-passing:
In an open letter to her Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton asks Barack Obama to help her "arrive at a solution that honors the votes of the millions of people who went to the polls in Florida and Michigan." ...

Your commitment to the voters of these states must be clearly stated and your support for a fair and quick resolution must be clearly demonstrated.
Must, huh?

An Obama spokesman said, "I'm sorry, what was that? We were too busy pickin' up your superdelegates to read your letter."

Okay, no spokesman said that, but he should have.

In e-mails from the campaign today and yesterday, both Hillary herself and Bill Clinton have indicated she'll be in until June 3.





Thursday, May 08, 2008
Reason 56,783 You Should Be Pumped Your Tax Dollars Are Paying for NPR
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 2:53 PM

On the Diane Rehm show yesterday: David Rothenberg, philosopher, musician, and "expert in inter-species duets," who has written a book called "Thousand-Mile Song," which chronicles the magic of whale songs and his attempts to perform with the whales by broadcasting his own music underwater. Mmm-hmm.

Rehm offered a 51-minute interview with him, which included these incisive questions. Only on NPR...
How are you physically playing this clarinet along with the whales?

Was there any indication that the whales found what you were doing interesting?
At one point, a caller suggests that perhaps the whale songs are a form of prayer, at which point we get this doozy from Diane:
Do you think it could bring peace to the world through prayer?
It was so utterly ludicrous as to border on parody. Yes, Diane, whale songs broadcast around the world will undoubtedly stop the genocide in Darfur, the bloodlust of al Qaeda in Iraq, the nuclear ambitions of Ahmadinejad, and let's not forget the unchecked imperial lust of the United States of America, which is likely what she had in mind.

Either whale songs or Obama should do the trick. Come to think of it, Obama's foreign policy is about as unintelligible as whale songs. Peace is on the way! Suggesting that praying to Jesus or a Judeo-Christian God would bring peace would likely have gotten her fired, however.

I listen so you don't have to. But you're paying for it!
 




Thursday, May 08, 2008
Happy Birthday, Israel!
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 12:58 PM

John McCain on the 60th anniversary of Israel's independence:
"I join all Americans in offering my heartiest congratulations to the Israeli people on the 60th anniversary of their state's founding. When President Harry Truman recognized the new State of Israel 60 years ago, he formalized a deep and enduring relationship between two great peoples. In so doing, President Truman undoubtedly knew that the Jewish state would face great challenges in its early years, and he signaled American partnership in the face of these threats.

"Yet those tests were not confined to the early years after Israel's independence. Challenges to Israel have perhaps been the norm, rather than the exception, and its people have been tested in the crucible of conflict time and again. Those threats continue, and it is incumbent upon all free people to stand by Israel in her defense of our common values and ideals. Survival in the face of these enduring trials would be impressive; flourishing would seem out of the question. Yet Israel has thrived, and her people have built a nation that is an inspiration to all those who cherish freedom.

"The close and enduring U.S.- Israel relationship has thrived as well, and I am proud to support the vital ties between our two countries. Our bond will be of great importance in order to continually fulfill that aspiration sounded so eloquently in the HaTikva: 'to be a free nation.' As Israelis celebrate 60 years of independence, let no one doubt that, while the challenges will continue, Israel will survive and it will flourish. There will always be an Israel, and there will always be a vital bond between our two peoples."







Thursday, May 08, 2008
On Like Donkey Kong
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 11:27 AM
Here I am on O'Reilly last night, talkin' the Left blogs, Right blogs, and the few pro-Clinton blogs left out there. 




Wednesday, May 07, 2008
McGovern Urges Clinton to Get Out
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 10:55 AM
MSNBC's reporting it, though I can't find a story link yet.

Here's one. The former supporters begin to find their way to the door.





Wednesday, May 07, 2008
HuffPo Goes After Laura Bush for Answering Questions at Press Conference
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 10:55 AM

Laura Bush held a press conference two days ago, in which she addressed the disaster in Burma. After she had talked about that for a few minutes, the press asked her about her daughter Jenna's upcoming wedding this Saturday in Crawford, Texas.

And, can you believe it? Laura had the temerity to entertain their questions! The Huffington Post objects to the "insensitivity:"

Laura Bush Discusses Daughter's Wedding During Myanmar Press Conference

MSNBC never changed the chyron from "First Lady talks about deadly cyclone in Myanmar," so it made for an awkward visual, but that's not exactly Laura's fault. She didn't even venture near the subject until the press mentioned it.

I think the Bush family has handled this wedding well. It's been low-key, with very few details of Jenna's dress or favors or arrangements coming out. I think it's better they held it in Crawford instead of the White House, which would have been a predictable opening for obnoxious Lefties to complain about the Bush family's insensitivity in wartime. Having it in Crawford gives it a family feeling instead of a political one.

In fact, now that I think of it, the only place I have read details about the wedding on a regular basis has been Huffington Post, where there have been no fewer than six posts about the impending nuptials over the past couple months, all with the implication that Jenna should just skip it altogether.

Get over it, HuffPo. They're about the only people who care about this wedding, evidently, and it's clear they think the fact Jenna's even celebrating her nuptials is "insensitive."

Congrats, Jenna!





Wednesday, May 07, 2008
Comeback of the Campaign
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 10:10 AM

Whatever you think about the claim that the McCains didn't vote Bush in 2000, this is a doozy of a push-back, from McCain aide Mark Salter on Arianna Huffington's story:
"Why would she make something up? Because she's a flake, and a poser, and an attention-seeking diva. And that's on the record."
Awesome.

Mark Steyn on the dust-up:
I'd be more impressed by this "straight talk" if it wasn't just as obvious in July 2000 that Arianna was "a flake, and a poser, and an attention seeking diva", when Senator McCain agreed to appear as the keynote speaker at her flaky attention-seeking posers' "shadow convention" (shadowing the GOP one, that is).
The LAT claims to find another witness to the Cindy McCain denial of Bush:
Another woman who attended the 2001 dinner said Tuesday that Cindy McCain had told her she could not bring herself to vote for Bush. The source said she did not want to be identified, so as not to alienate the McCains.
Sounds unlikely to me. John McCain's too friendly with the left sometimes, but he's no out-and-out Chafee.





Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Hold Up: Obama May Win Indiana?
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 11:55 PM

Momentum means nothing in this campaign. It never has. Sheesh.

Something strange is going on in Lake County, where the totals reporting is very slow. The earliest numbers from there, 28 percent reporting, show that Obama is winning by 74-25. If the margin holds in Lake County, according to Karl Rove, Obama could steal Indiana out from under her late tonight.

Could this early morning really be the end of the never-ending primary?

Regardless of the Indiana outcome, the pressure for Hillary to get out of this race is going to be tremendous for the rest of this week. I think it's pretty much a matter of how quickly this thing ends, now, not whether it will end before Denver.

Barone assessing Lake County's reporting: "If indeed we're not dealing with votes that were manufactured by something other than the volition of individual voters." Mmm-hmm. It does sound rather odd.





Tuesday, May 06, 2008
The Obama Rally, from Two Angles
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 11:00 PM
Reynolds Coliseum on N.C. State's campus seats 12,400 people. It did not seat that many tonight. Behold, the power of political staging:

The Obama rally, as seen on TV:

Photobucket

The Obama rally as seen from the other end of Reynolds:

Photobucket

Those tables in between my position and the rally you saw on TV are about a quarter full of milling, bored, tired reporters. The rally took up maybe a quarter of the floor space in the arena. Part of running a decent campaign is knowing how big a crowd you might have and planning accordingly so as not to embarrass yourselves with a woefully understuffed venue.

I realize it's standard practice to rope off an area of a venue for crowd-wrangling and appearances, but this is a little drastic. McCain's event at the Wait Chapel at Wake Forest today was nicely filled if not overflowing, but I imagine if he had held it at Groves Stadium and filled only the endzone seats, someone in the media might have said something about it. Obama doesn't have such worries, I guess.

I really didn't expect Obama's margin of victory tonight, even being from Durham, where I'm subject to the a high population of the ultimate in latte liberals. The urban turn-out must have been truly remarkable and a lot of it likely showed up in early voting. I would have thought the rural vote would counteract Obama's strengths much better than this.

Update:
Another lovely bumper sticker, at the Obama rally:

Photobucket

Don't question their patriotism!





Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Obama Takes the Stage
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 9:25 PM

RALEIGH, N.C.-- Obama plays the unity card early, congratulating Hillary on what looks to be a probable win in Indiana (to shouts of "Not yet! Not yet!), calling her a tough opponent, and insisting that the party will come together for either candidate to defend against McCain's "third Bush term."

Is it just me or does it look weak to start talking right off the bat about what might happen if "one of us" loses? It seems to me Hillary wouldn't give that rhetorical ground in a similar position.

I'm sitting in the upper level bleachers at Reynolds Coliseum, where they sequestered the late arrivers once the floor and bleachers in the TV shot were properly staged and all the press had been ushered in. There's a group of about 100 enthusiastic Obama supporters up here who are witnessing the staging of a political event for the first time and finding it curious. They're craning their necks to see down into the approximate 1/4 of the coliseum filled with the stage, supporters, and press. That area is curtained off and blocked off for spectators in the upper levels except for right behind Obama, where the upper decks are packed. Directly below them is the virtually empty other 3/4 of the gym floor and lower bleachers.

"Why'd they set it up like this?" people keep asking. I'm sure it looks very full on TV. For what it's worth, I think the Obama rally I attended in New Hampshire was bigger than this.

I'm glad to see that Obama has taken care of white-people placement and is surrounded by pink shirts. Maybe it's a "Victoria's Secret PINK" promotion this time instead of A&F, ABC?

Obama's sounding a bit more lofty than he has in the past week, and noticeably adding some toughness to his voice, it sounds like. "This is the time to END IT," he  says of politics as usual. Much less laconic than I've heard from him before. "We will end it by telling the truth. We will end it by telling the truth forcefully, repeatedly, confidently." I will call this his new "cojones" voice. It's falling a bit flat for me, but it looks like he's trying.

Update: That was it? Gone are the days of the 45-minute acceptance speech, huh? Has he learned humility? I would have expected him to act more like a winner, what with the media poised to do in Hillary tomorrow. But perhaps he's preserving his nice-guy image and letting the press do the dirty work for him.

Update:
There were smatterings of grumbling and booing for Hillary, relatively quiet and under control, whenever Obama mentioned her. They were quelled pretty quickly, but there was definite discontent, and even some snickering at times.





Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Fox Calls N.C. for Obama
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 7:50 PM
No word on the margin. He won black voters, 91-6, economy voters 58-40ish (Check that. I think I got that reversed.), change voters 77-20-something.





Tuesday, May 06, 2008
The Red Star of Hope Beckons Obamacoms
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 7:40 PM
Photobucket

I've heard about the so-called "Obamacans," Republicans who allegedly fall head over heels for Obama's message of hope.

I'm assuming the sign above, spotted in Durham, is targeting "Obamacoms," the 20-something, untucked, college-educated students of Marx and fans of Che who respond to the red star with a proletariat pang in their little, free hearts.

Perhaps it was designed for the "portion of the hardcore left that thinks Wright and Ayers are a feature, not a bug."

Anyone else seen this sign before?





Your Blog Postings:
Last updated 32 Minutes 56 Seconds Ago
Last updated 38 Minutes 4 Seconds Ago
Last updated 40 Minutes 40 Seconds Ago
Last updated 42 Minutes 2 Seconds Ago
Last updated 57 Minutes 27 Seconds Ago
 

Archives of our Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs

Blog Search



Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs Townhall Blogs
Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Columns Columns
Your Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs Your Blogs
By Month
 November 2009
 October 2009
 September 2009
 August 2009
 July 2009
 June 2009
 May 2009
 April 2009
 March 2009
 February 2009
 January 2009
 December 2008
 November 2008
 October 2008
 September 2008
 August 2008
 July 2008
 June 2008
By Issue
 A Culture of Life
 Budget & Government
 Campaigns & Elections
 Education
 Energy & Environment
 Faith & Family
 Foreign Affairs
 Health Care
 Immigration
 Jobs & Economy
 Judges & Courts
 Media & Culture
 Property Rights
 Safety & Security
 Science & Technology
 Second Amendment
 Social Security
 Tax Relief
Advertisement

Comments Comments

Stupid LDS KG
 Re: Pelosi: Buy a $15,000 Policy or Go to Jail
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
Rep Oberstar MN
 Re: The Undecideds
  By Patrice
The docs shut them down
 Re: Dem Leader Hoyer: We'll have the votes by this evening
  By Patrice
Vampire Ref
 Re: Health Care Throwdown: Palin vs. Pelosi
  By Eugene
Davie the Bircher
 Re: Maine vote repeals gay marriage law
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
Axeman
 Re: Pelosi: Buy a $15,000 Policy or Go to Jail
  By NOTW
NeoZionistTool
 Re: Maine vote repeals gay marriage law
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
David
 Re: Maine vote repeals gay marriage law
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
Nancy"face of pure evil" Pelosi,,,,,
 Re: Health Care Throwdown: Palin vs. Pelosi
  By colt.45
A final thought
 Re: Maine vote repeals gay marriage law
  By David
More lies
 Re: CBO: PelosiCare Cost Estimate = $3 Trillion Over 10 Years
  By Patrice
Crosseyed
 Re: Health Care Throwdown: Palin vs. Pelosi
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
NeoZionistTool
 Re: Health Care Throwdown: Palin vs. Pelosi
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
Here's anuddun
 Re: Maine vote repeals gay marriage law
  By David
Teabagger
 Re: Health Care Throwdown: Palin vs. Pelosi
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
NeoConScum and dreadnaught
 Re: Maine vote repeals gay marriage law
  By David
Yeah trolls
 Re: Pelosi: Buy a $15,000 Policy or Go to Jail
  By Tea Party
"axe up his butt"
 Re: Health Care Throwdown: Palin vs. Pelosi
  By cottoneyed
TeaParty...
 Re: Health Care Throwdown: Palin vs. Pelosi
  By NeoConScum
I guess it does take an
 Re: Health Care Throwdown: Palin vs. Pelosi
  By cottoneyed

The Latest on Town HallThe Latest on Town Hall


Blog Roll Blog Roll