Sunday, August 24, 2008
Obama-Biden
Obama tapped a 25 yr. senator for vice-president,Joseph Biden. Obama addressed his critics' complaints of inexperience by adding Biden, 20 yrs. his senior, and who is considered part of the Washington establishment. Obama defeated Hillary Clinton largely with his mantra of fundamental and deep change. Choosing Biden seems to be a timid choice. Biden himself sought the Dem. nomination early in the race, but withdrew. At that time, when Clinton was the front runner, Biden had this to say about Obama; "Here you have for the first time in all American history a woman or African-American poised to be the next President, and there's no way to break through that." With Biden as vp candidate,there are 3 sitting US senators on the tickets, with McCain's choice unannounced. Since the election of 1900, only 2 sitting US senators have been elected President.Warren Harding in 1920 and John Kennedy in 1960. That total is sure to grow in November. Current polls say McCain and Obama are even.
Saturday, August 23, 2008
The Democrats' upcoming convention will make history, as the nominee for the first time since 1788 will not be a white male. Obama,if indeed the nominee, will have considerable doubts by the voters to overcome. His inexperience and fast rise raise questions as to the true substance of the man.Voters have little knowledge of his record and past much preceding his contest with Hillary Clinton. As I see it, his challenge is to convince voters he can deliver on his promises. Congress after the election can either help, hinder, or do nothing for the next President. The economy needs attention, and the next President will be expected to take action. Lofty rhetoric by partisan politicians at the conventions means little to nothing to middle-class and poor Americans caught in a deepening recession. Americans look to the President for domestic management.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Clinton at Democratic Convention
News reports state Hillary Clinton will have her name placed with Obama for a vote by the delegates for the nomination. Although Obama has enough delegates pledged to him to win, how solid is the commitment to him? Ex-President Bill Clinton undoubtedly wields influence as the only Democrat to serve 2 full terms as President since FDR. Obama is only 47,has been elected only once,as Senator. My feeling is if he loses this election, he can reasonably expect to be around for 5 or more elections. McCain, in contrast, is 72. This roll of the dice is his last chance.If he loses, he will almost certainly not get another nomination. McCain is old enough to be Obama's father.McCain has been in Congress since 1983, giving him 25 yrs. experience.McCain was flying combat missions in Vietnam in the mid-sixties as a Navy pilot, while in the same time frame Obama was probably riding his bicycle,playing tag, and doing all the things a boy of 6 or 7 does. Obama must realize middle-class Americans are struggling in an economic uncertainty, yet I don't see him addressing it. Most Americans are worse off than 4 yrs. ago,myself included.Historically, that gives the advantage to the out of power party,in this case Democrats. I believe the candidate that can convince the electorate he will address the uncertain economy with competant action will emerge the winner.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Obama on vacation
Apparently,the Democrats desire a quiet period before their convention August 25.Obama vacations in Hawaii,while Hillary Clinton makes statements suggesting an open convention,Bill Clinton refuses to acknowledge Obama as the nominee,and Hillary Clinton's campaign manager makes statements that if the media had revealed John Edwards' extra-marital dalliances prior to the Iowa caucuses,Hillary Clinton would have defeated Obama in Iowa instead of finishing third behind Obama and Edwards.The Clintons apparently will not simply bow to Obama without making some noise.It should be interesting how the convention goes.Obama has enough delegates to be nominated on the first ballot,but the actual vote at the convention must yet be taken.Could the Clintons perhaps engineer a surprise?We shall see in 2 weeks. McCain,meanwhile,campaigns in Pennsylvania.
Friday, August 8, 2008
Character of the candidates
As I can see it,both candidates have good characters.McCain went through torture,physical and mental,as a prisoner of war.Years of abuse by Viet Cong captors must make anything in politics seem tame.Obama surely must have endured taunts and mockery in his youth because of his mixed race.Politics at their high level is bare-knuckled.At this point in this presidential race,there is no distinct advantage one has over his opponent.Polls indicate a statistical stalemate.I certainly am undecided.
Sluggish Economy
Neither candidate seems to really address the most important issue to most Americans,the fact that layoffs in most sectors of the economy continue.Good paying jobs are daily being cut.Gas prices are making working-class Americans cut back on spending.Consumer confidence is low for most Americans.Federal deficits balloon daily.Retired citizens and those on fixed incomes are squeezed in a vice of inflation and low interest rates.Yet the government will bail out the financial lenders and banks that foolishly loaned billions in the sub-prime mortgage fiasco that directly contributed,if not cause,the present foreclosure crisis in which of homeowners cannot afford their monthly mortgage payments.
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