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Entries in Rupert Murdoch (1)

Friday
Oct172008

Friday Buffet: From the Campaign Trail to Iraq

PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION WATCH-LIST

Four Signs That This Race is Over

1. Joe the Plumber Goes Down the Drain

On Wednesday night, John McCain's economic shtick was that he was the President who would look out for "Joe the Plumber", a working-class fella from Ohio who apparently would not be able to buy his business under Barack Obama's tax proposals. Joe Wurzelbacher instantly became the newest celebrity of Campaign 2008

Unfortunately for McCain, the New York Times became more than a fan Lewis, one of the leaders of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement, actually wrote:

Mr. Wurzelbacher had never held a plumber’s license, which is required in Toledo and several surrounding municipalities....His full name is Samuel J. Wurzelbacher. And he owes back taxes, too, public records show. The premise of his complaint to Mr. Obama about taxes may also be flawed, according to tax analysts. Contrary to what Mr. Wurzelbacher asserted and Mr. McCain echoed, neither his personal taxes nor those of the business where he works are likely to rise if Mr. Obama’s tax plan were to go into effect, they said.

[OTHER FAMOUS JOES WHO COULD SAVE MCCAIN: Joe Pesci, Joe Louis, Joe and the Volcano, Joe Mama, Joe 90, and (hat tip to Liam Kennedy) Joe Soap]

2. One Last Wild Cultural Swing

Following on from the "Culture Wars" theme: FiveThirtyEight.com took the line, immediately after the debate, that McCain lost his early advantage in the debate when he took a pop at Congressman John Lewis of Georgia.

A man I admire and respect -- I've written about him -- Congressman John Lewis, an American hero, made allegations that Sarah Palin and I were somehow associated with the worst chapter in American history, segregation, deaths of children in church bombings, George Wallace. That, to me, was so hurtful. And, Senator Obama, you didn't repudiate those remarks.



So, the issue is not that the McCain-Palin rhetoric with their question, "Who is Barack Obama?" and the answer, "Palling around with terrorists....This is not a man who sees America like you and I see America,”, was prompting crowd responses of "traitor" and "terrorist...kill him".

Instead, it's Big John who is the victim? Hmmm....

Here's what

What I am seeing reminds me too much of another destructive period in American history. Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and division, and there is no need for this hostility in our political discourse."



George Wallace [segregationist Governor of Alabama and Presidential candidate in 1968 and 1972] never threw a bomb. He never fired a gun, but he created the climate and the conditions that encouraged vicious attacks against innocent Americans who were simply trying to exercise their constitutional rights. Because of this atmosphere of hate, four little girls were killed on Sunday morning when a church was bombed in Birmingham, Alabama.

Well, the way I read it, Lewis was not accusing McCain and Palin of the crimes of the 1960s. Instead, he was warning that character attacks on Obama with the clear message that he is "un-American" and the (unstated) reminder that he is a black un-American are not exactly conductive to good-neighbourly relations . If the language was over the political line (and the Obama campaign quickly pointed this out), Lewis' allegation doesn't stand up to the Republicans' own guilt-by-association tactics.

It's not my reading that matters, however, but the reaction of the American public. And, judging by the hysteria coming from Charles Krauthammer in the Washington Post, the GOP's last cultural gambit --- please vote for us because we've been terribly wronged --- has failed.

2A. One Last Wild Cultural Swing --- UPDATE

Charles Krauthammer fades away screaming as Saturday Night Live features "the crazy McCain-Palin Rally Lady".


3. The First Swallows of the Electoral Autumn

Leave aside the snap polls that showed --- even on Fox --- Obama "winning" the debate by a 2:1 margin amongst undecideds. FiveThirtyEight.com has some dramatic numbers on Obama's margins in five states allowing early voting:

                       % Voting Early       Margin amongst Early Voters              Margin in Polls

New Mexico         10%                            Obama +23%                             Obama  +6%
Ohio                    12%                            Obama +18%                             Obama  +4%
Georgia                18%                            Obama +6%                              McCain +11%
Iowa                     14%                           Obama +34%                             Obama +10%
North Carolina         5%                           Obama +34%                             McCain  +5% 

Even if you pop a couple of grains of salt on these numbers, say, that pro-Obama folks are quicker to get to the mailbox, Obama's lead --- even in what should be "safe" Republican state of Georgia and North Carolina, which McCain has to win to have any hope --- is ominous if you're a Big John backer.

4. Crossing to the Other Side

The Times of London --- that's right, the staunch defender of Thatcherism in the 1980s, flagship newspaper of Rupert Murdoch --- endorses Obama. (By the way, so did the Washington Post.)

A Necessary Correction

 

JM writes from London:

 

"As a fervent reader of your Journal, I must complain about the glaring omission in the Sarah Palin Flowchart (Watching America, 16 October). You forgot THE WINK that tells the fellow travellers that 'I've got this one right' and the rest of us, 'What am I doing here?'"

 

Happy to set the record straight, JM. Consider the flowchart amended with a special SP wink aimed straight at you. 

 

TODAY'S IRAQ CELEBRATIONS

 

Michael Gerson, former Bush speechwriter (and thus one of the scribblers behind the American adventure in Iraq), is the latest columnist to give General/King David Petraeus a big kiss:

 

Petraeus may be uniquely capable of convincing our friends in the region of America's long-term commitment, precisely because he didn't leave Iraq to its fate -- because he is the man who stayed.

 

In the Times of London, Richard Beeston has the classic line, "Without the distractions of the bombings and shootings, it is easier to see Iraq for what it really is." Which is bit like asking, "Apart from the shooting, Mrs Lincoln, how did you like the play?"

 

Meanwhile...