AFP Politics Blog – Monday, Feb. 9, 2009
Posted by afp on February 9, 2009 · Leave a Comment
- News: Voter-restoration bill passes Virginia Senate, Monday, 7:40 p.m.
- News: Shannon earns AG endorsements, Monday, 7:22 p.m.
- News: House GOP talks up transportation-funding plan, Monday, 7:22 p.m.
- News: Moran picks up endorsement of former Democratic Governors’ Association director, Monday, 2:45 p.m.
- News: Poll suggests support for stimulus, Monday, 2:45 p.m.
- News: Family Foundation statement on defeat of legislation on public prayers, Monday, 2:45 p.m.
- Video: President Obama talks stimulus, Monday, 12:55 p.m.
- Video: Gov. Tim Kaine on the stimulus plan, Monday, 12:55 p.m.
- News: Remarks of President Obama at Elkhart, Ind., town hall on stimulus, Monday, 12:55 p.m.
- News: Bowerbank gets more LG endorsements, Monday, 12:55 p.m. Read more
Filed under AFP News · Tagged with aclu virginia, attorney general, barack obama, brian moran, economic recovery, family foundation of virginia, gallup, gov. tim kaine, jon bowerbank, president barack obama, steve shannon, stimulus, tim kaine
The AFP Blog – Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2009
- Citizens meeting on county reassessments still on, Tuesday, 1:02 p.m.
- Remarks by President Obama and Sen. Gregg on the announcement of new Commerce secretary, Tuesday, 1:02 p.m.
- Poll shows Americans support stimulus, Tuesday, 10:15 a.m.
- North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Iran top persecutor watch list, Tuesday, 10:15 a.m.
- Valley native debuts artisan work in Harrisonburg, Tuesday, 10:15 a.m.
- ShenanArts presenting Children’s Letters to God, Tuesday, 10:15 a.m.
- Songwriter pushing community partnerships, Tuesday, 10:15 a.m.
- New restaurant coming to Downtown Harrisonburg, Tuesday, 10:15 a.m. Read more
Election ’08: Obama, Warner get nod in final pre-election polls
Story by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
Gallup and Larry Sabato are calling it a Barack Obama landslide, and a summary of the other major national polls has the Democrat on the verge of making history.
Gallup’s final pre-election estimate has Obama winning 55 percent of the vote to Republican John McCain’s 44 percent. Sabato, the University of Virginia political-science professor known for his Crystal Ball predictions, is giving Obama 364 votes in the all-important Electoral College to McCain’s 174.
Filed under Government/Politics · Tagged with barack obama, cnn/opinion research, gallup, jim gilmore, john mccain, larry sabato, mark warner, rasmussen reports, zogby
White House ’08: The Obama Effect
Posted by afp on October 14, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Column by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
Not a day goes by that I don’t hear from an Obama-Biden supporter about the Wilder Effect – or what some folks call the Bradley Effect, the basics being a major-party candidate who is African-American whose support in pre- and post-election polling registers higher than actual performance in the polls.
“We’re going to need a bigger cushion than we have now.” “Didn’t you see the study by Stanford University?” “We’re doomed if we’re not up big.” This is the gist of what I get from Democrats who are much like fans of the sports teams at my beloved alma mater, the University of Virginia, who are used to seeing the boys in orange and blue race out to big leads in big games only to cough it up in the late stages for reasons seeming to have to do more with the color of their uniforms than anything else about them.
And it’s hard to deny that there will be some impact from the Wilder Effect - we in Virginia call it that because of our 1989 governor’s race, won by African-American Doug Wilder by less than half a percentage point when all of the pre-election polls had him winning by a margin of eight to ten points in his race with former attorney general (and Waynesboro native) Marshall Coleman, the Republican nominee. The Bradley Effect is so named for former Los Angeles mayor Tom Bradley, who had a similar lead in the pre-election polling over Republican Tom Deukmejian and actually lost his 1982 California governor’s race. (So maybe the Wilder Efffect represents something of an improvement in the intervening seven years, since he actually won.)
Just as I said that not a day goes by that I don’t hear from an Obama supporter fretting over what might happen, neither does a day go by where I don’t see something on the race front that is as we used to say back in the ’90s the kind of thing that makes you go hmmm … . A discussion on a recent Augusta Free Press thread of race issues included a comment from a reader suggesting that she’s not sure she can trust a “person of color with different values than mine” with her vote. And then there was the disturbing phone call that I received in my capacity as the volunteer chairman of the Waynesboro Democratic Committee from the city voter registrar’s office about a local Democrat who had been in the office three times to get voter-registration forms and had raised objection that he was not allowed to leave the office with more than he was being alloted. “You know how they get,” the caller said, referring to the objections that had been raised, and when I said I didn’t know what the caller was referring to, “Well, you know how people of color are, when they’re feeling that they’re being victimized.”
I’m not talking about people on the far-right fringe of the Republican Party here, just as we’re not seeing people we could classify as wingnuts introducing the speakers at McCain-Palin rallies referring to Obama openly as “Barack Hussein Obama” to loud cheers and jeers and calling Obama himself a “terrorist” to more of the same. The new chair of the Republican Party of Virginia, Jeff Frederick, is the cheerleader in those efforts here in Virginia, telling volunteers getting ready to do door-to-door canvassing for McCain-Palin in Prince William County that Obama and 9/11 terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden have in common that “both have friends that bombed the Pentagon,” invoking in Obama’s case his tenuous ties to ’60s radical William Ayers, a former member of a domestic group that in 1972 planted a bomb in a restroom in the Pentagon.
McCain himself refused to repudiate the statement, saying he would “have to look at the context of his remarks” first. Neither have I heard from any of my friends in the Virginia GOP calling for Frederick to apologize or back off or tamp down his incendiary words.
Is there any way that this “he’s a terrorist, he has a funny-sounding name, he’s one of those people who go around feeling victimized persons of color, he’s one of them” line of attack can’t have an impact on Election Day? I think there’s no doubt that it will. The Stanford/Associated Press review that has been talked about far and wide last month pegged the negative impact on Obama’s poll numbers based on race factors at as much as six percentage points. But a Gallup survey released last week, while confirming that 6 percent drag on Obama’s numbers, looked at the flip side as well, at the positive impact of Obama’s race at 9 percent, with the bump coming from significantly increased support from nonwhite voters. And another survey, conducted by Public Policy Polling, suggests that Obama’s gains in Virginia and other Southern states is based as much as if not more on shifts in the white vote than the nonwhite vote.
I think in the end that the two diverging trends will likely cancel each other out, in spite of the greatest efforts of Obama’s detractors, and in large part due to the dignity with which Obama has handled the run of smears from the other side.
If things play out as I foresee them, it will mark the dawn of a new day in American politics that we will look back as having begun a couple of years ago when this neverending ’08 White House cycle got under way.
No more Wilder Effect, no more Bradley Effect.
The Obama Effect. Has a nice ring to it. Don’t you think?
Filed under Government/Politics · Tagged with barack obama, gallup, jeff frederick, john mccain, race, stanford university
Winners and Losers: McCain, $528,000, ‘Drill, baby, drill’
Posted by afp on October 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Compiled by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
LOSER: McCain campaign loses a friend in John Lewis
I was sitting in the press box at Scott Stadium on Saturday at halftime of the UVa.-ECU football game when I saw something in my e-mail in-box from the John McCain campaign that caught my attention.
“Congressman John Lewis’ comments represent a character attack against Governor Sarah Palin and me that is shocking and beyond the pale,” began the statement attributed to McCain, which went on to throw fire at Lewis, who just a couple of months ago was one of the three “wise people” that McCain would listen to in a time of crisis, for comments from the Georgia Democrat and ’60s civil-rights icon that accused the McCain-Palin campaign of “sowing the seeds of hatred and division” with its repeated Barack Obama smears.
I learned this after a quick Google search to see what it had been that Lewis had said about McCain that could earn this kind of rebuke. And then thought … yeah, and so what did he say that was so wrong again?
You say a guy is “different,” you have your warmup acts at rallies refer to him by his middle name, you play up a tenuous connection with a ’60s radical to the point where your supporters say in McCain-Palin town halls that they’re scared to bring their kids up in an Obama-Biden America, and boo you when you chide them on that point, and you still want to say you’re not “sowing the seeds of hatred and division”?
This is shameful, folks, and beneath the dignity of John McCain and the presidency of the United States of America.
LOSER: The train of thought in this line item on tonight’s Waynesboro City Council meeting agenda
Maybe you can figure it out.
“Consider setting a Public Hearing for Monday, October 27, 2008 to hear comments on amending the Fiscal Year 2009 General Fund Budget in an aggregate amount of $528,000.00, and to amend the terms of the annual Appropriation Ordinance 2008-50 to allow intra-fund budget adjustments thereby reducing General Fund Expenditures in the amount of $528,000 and reducing General Fund Revenues in the amount of $528,000.”
On second glance, it seems pretty cut and dried to me. Something about $528,000.
LOSER: “Drill, baby, drill”
Remember the Republican National Convention, set against the backdrop of Hurricane Gustav and the expected spike in gas prices that would result from another massive storm shutting down oil refineries in the Gulf of Mexico? And how Republicans were quick to pounce with a week of “Drill, baby, drill” for the TV cameras?
With gas prices back in the not-quite-as-exploitative range these days, “Drill, baby, drill” seems to have lost its resonance, as is indicated in a recent Gallup survey that has the number of Americans citing high gas prices as the most important problem facing their families dropping from 29 percent in July to 12 percent in October.
Which wouldn’t be so bad if certain candidates weren’t still stumping for votes on “Drill, baby, drill.”
Filed under Government/Politics · Tagged with barack obama, drill baby drill, gallup, john lewis, john mccain, waynesboro city council
Poll Watch: Another poll shows Obama up significantly in Virginia
Story by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
A Public Policy Polling survey released yesterday gives Barack Obama a solid 51 percent-to-43 percent lead over John McCain in Virginia, the third poll of the week that gives the Democrat a solid working lead.
The same poll gave Democrat Mark Warner a commanding 58 percent-to-31 percent margin in his race with Republican Jim Gilmore for Virginia’s open U.S. Senate seat.
The poll shows independent voters breaking sharply for both Obama and Warner – 49 percent to 37 percent for Obama over McCain in the presidential race and 66 percent to 20 percent for Warner in the Senate race.
Another interesting tidbit from the numbers – the favorability/unfavorability ratings for vice-presidential candidates Joe Biden and Sarah Palin have flipped since the Republican National Convention. Palin had been viewed favorably by 42 percent of voters and unfavorably by 40 percent of voters after the RNC; those numbers are now 37 percent and 46 percent, respectively. Biden had been viewed favorably by 38 percent and unfavorably by 27 percent after the RNC; those numbers are now 43 percent and 26 percent.
***
The national polls
- Gallup: Obama 51 percent, McCain 41 percent
- GW/Battleground: Obama 51 percent, McCain 43 percent
- Rasmussen: Obama 50 percent, McCain 45 percent
- Hotline: Obama 48 percent, McCain 41 percent
- Reuters: Obama 48 percent, McCain 43 percent
- Fox News: Obama 46 percent, McCain 39 percent
AFP Poll Average: Obama 49 percent, McCain 41.8 percent
Filed under Government/Politics · Tagged with barack obama, fox news, gallup, gw/battleground, hotline, jim gilmore, john mccain, mark warner, public policy polling, reuters
Waynesboro: Moran stumps for Obama, Warner, has eyes on ’09 prize
Posted by afp on October 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment
Story by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
The last time Virginia went Democratic for president, gas was 25 cents, The Beatles were about to make their debut on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” Ronald Reagan was still a Democrat, and Brian Moran was 5 years old.
“A lot has changed, but this year, Virginia is going to elect Barack Obama,” said Moran, a candidate for the 2009 Democratic Party gubernatorial nomination, who was in Waynesboro last night to watch the second presidential debate of the 2008 general-election season with voters at the Waynesboro Democratic Committee Election Headquarters.
Moran addressed the group during a lull in the debate, which was, in the minds of more than a few observers, full of lulls, picking up during a question from a participant from a retiree about the sacrifices that the presidential candidates would ask of Americans to help get the country out of its current economic doldrums. Moran noted that President Bush likes to play down the notion that Americans need to make any sacrifices, but in fact, “The president asked our veterans to make sacrifices. He certainly asked the many men and women who have fought in Iraq and Afghanistan, who have suffered injuries and even in some cases death. But he’s only asked our military to serve. He has not asked Americans to pay for the war,” Moran said.
In an interview with The Augusta Free Press and The News Virginian afterward, Moran explained why he thinks Democrat Barack Obama seems to be connecting with voters as well as he has been. According to the latest Gallup daily-tracking poll, released this afternoon, Obama currently has his biggest lead of the general-election campaign, pulling the support of 52 percent of Americans to 41 percent for Republican John McCain.
“They’re looking for somebody who is empathetic, who understands what they are going through. And I think Barack Obama has done the best job of responding to their concerns,” said Moran, a member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Northern Virginia, where Obama is running particularly well in his bid to win the state’s 13 electoral votes. A SurveyUSA poll released on Monday that had Obama winning statewide by 10 points in the head-to-head with McCain had the Democrat up 24 points in Northern Virginia. Moran gave debate watchers some insight into McCain’s NoVa troubles, on the subject of earmarks, federal appropriations for local projects that McCain has derided as wasteful and promised to cut across the board if elected. “Everything thinks that money is just wasted, that it’s research on pygmie monkeys or something. Well, it’s not,” Moran said. “In one case in Northern Virginia, our Republican congressman and our Republican senator, John Warner, have asked the federal government for $150 million to pay for rail out to Dulles Airport, which is an extremely significant rail project for not just Northern Virginia but all of Virginia. And that’s a part of the earmark. John McCain voted against it. So Chris here asked me how we’re doing in Northern Virginia. We’re doing very well,” Moran said.
Moran is confident that Obama’s strong showing in the polls in Virginia will hold up. “The reason we’ve done well in Virginia is as Democrats we’ve done well responding to people’s everyday needs – children’s health insurance, education, public safety. That’s why I think Virginia is poised to elect Barack Obama. One, Barack Obama is such a tremendous candidate. And two, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine have laid the groundwork for a Democrat being victorious in Virginia,” Moran said.
As to his own race for the ’09 gubernatorial nomination, Moran sounded confident in addressing his chances to win the race, which currently includes Moran and Bath County State Sen. Creigh Deeds as the announced candidates. “I am really enjoying it,” Moran said. “I have a passion for public service. I’ve enjoyed my success in the legislature, and I am really looking forward to competing against the Republican nominee,” Moran said.
He responded to a reporter’s question on the subject of another possible entrant in the race, former Democratic National Committee chair Terry McAuliffe, with humor. “Three’s a crowd?” Moran said, and smiled.
Filed under Government/Politics · Tagged with barack obama, brian moran, gallup, survey usa, waynesboro, waynesboro democratic committee
- A A A
-
-
-
Recent News
- Squirrels make it two in a row
- Sam Caucci: Colleges need to do a better job of preparing students for the job market
- Ken Plum: General Assembly goes off a cliff
- VDOT rolls out new, improved 511
- Sox offense powers W
- Augusta Health earns Chest Pain Center Accreditation
- Minor League Roundup: Richmond breaks skid, ‘Cats, Sox win












