Sunday Stuff – August 22

Wedge issues divide politicians from independents – by Ed Hornick

Bringing up divisive issues that distract from fixing the country’s economic woes will only create cracks in the bridge between the two major parties and independents, said Omar H. Ali, an independent voting analyst and professor at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro.

Independents, he said, are the watchdogs and “conscience of America” when it comes to issues like the economy. The blame game over who caused the economic recession only highlights what is wrong in American politics today, Ali said.

Wanted: A few stand-up candidates – by David Broder

The Democrats seem determined to teach us the price of vacillation, while the Republicans are bent on instructing us on the rewards of obstruction. What a helluva choice awaits in the November election.

This is my sour August reflection on the two months of travel ahead of me on the campaign trail — a search for candidates who may lift the gloom and restore some faith in the principled politics so lacking in Washington these days.

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Millard Fills More

Millard Fillmore was the 13th President of the United States (1850-1853). He was the last member of the Whig Party to be President. Millard Fillmore is also my porn name. (Check out the series, “My Millard Fills More” coming via a spam email near you.)

The Whigs died out in the 1850′s, splitting over slavery. But in today’s crazy political climate, they’re back as the Modern Whig Party. I think it is safe to assume they’ve come together on that messy forced servitude issue.

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Obama finding out who his friends are

A nice take in the NYT on the ever-morphing class of political pundits in general, and their reaction to President Obama’s speech on the BP spill in particular.

Perhaps it’s time for the President to stop worrying so much about being a consensus-builder, and move forward in the confidence that the better half of the American conscience will follow. Sort of like being “the decider,” except this one actually reads newspapers and uses the interwebs.

Whatever direction Obama goes, this could be a critical point in his presidency – akin to when Clinton moved beyond the health care debacle of his first term.

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A young Pat B., circa 1968. He would probably go postal if he saw the world as it is today - and in your heart you know he's right because he has the numbers to back it up.

Pat Buchanan was devastatingly prescient on immigration changing the fabric of our culture and country, and the savage impacts of NAFTA (Pat’s segment starts around the one-minute mark). On the informal CZ scale of “People everyone seems to dislike while they haven’t read a Dayam Thing He’s Actually Written,” Buchanan is probably #1, with the possible of Ann Coulter — but only because Ann has a bigger penis.

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Dems Greene with envy after S.C. Senate shocker

Talk about sore losers. The Democrats are now leading the charge to “investigate” the stunning primary victory of Alvin Greene, who’s now the Democratic nominee for the South Carolina Senate race.

Almost as sexy as the other Al Green(e).

Greene, whose verbosity rivals that of a Dixie Cup, is ten kinds of awesome. First, he has no discernible political experience; he’s an unemployed veteran, is facing charges of felony obscenity, and, apparently came from nowhere. And won 58 percent of the vote!

This Keith Olbermann interview is hilarious, mostly because Olbermann can’t bait him or lure him into any traps. Who knows whether or not Greene is a GOP plant (he faces GOP incumbent Jim DeMint in the November general election) but perhaps the larger lesson is this: almost anyone running as an outsider and/or against a Democrat is going to get widespread public support.

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California Dreamin’ on the CZ vision

It’s the ideal CZ-style move – and the people of California have apparently passed Proposition 14, which would radically change elections in the nation’s biggest state, and its trend-setting bellweather, to boot.

Though Prop. 14 will likely be challenged by a cadre of attorneys, much like Props 215 and 187 were tied up in court. But the inspiration is undeniable. Essentially, this new law, if it sticks, will allow an open primary between members of all parties, with the top two vote getters getting to face off in the general election.

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His election was the first shot in the Tea Party Revolution. But Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown (R) is turning out to be – gasp! – a moderate!

Ummm, yeah. Kind of.

Read the dirty details here! Somewhere, Phylis Schlafly is clubbing a baby seal in heaven, probably with a depleted uranium rod.

Brown even gets what must be regarded as the “Kiss of Death Quote” from Charles Schumer!

Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, said he and his staff were recently invited to a Friday afternoon “happy hour” on the terrace of Mr. Brown’s office.

“If you had to pick from a handful of Republicans who you can work with and who will be predisposed to do something together,” Mr. Schumer said. “He is one of them.” (more…)

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