Post by Deleted on Oct 30, 2014 2:23:03 GMT -6
Ok,,, Yes, I've said it before and I meant every word,,,,The Dems are going to lose and they can feel it!
They don't want Obama around them, not in their Sates and not in their Cities. They first thing these incumbents need to do, round up all the illegals they took in from Obama into their cities and ship'em out for all to see. Now that would get most of their voter's back.
This poor sickly looking Alaska Dem. Senator is trying his Damnedest to get a vote, I don't he even knows what a pool cue is.
Looks like the older gentleman would rather sake hands with a Snake than him.
Right, he says that now, but try and get a permit to drill there, Not Going To Happen! The Senator is Pandering, it's what they want to hear!
You say their distancing themselves, Their Running Away as Fast and As Far as They Can!
Right he's Pro Gun and Pro Oil and Gas Development,,,, During Election year and only because Obama told him it was OK!
www.latimes.com/nation/politics/la-na-begich-obama-20141029-story.html#page=1
Really,,,, Have you taking your Sticker Off Yet?
They don't want Obama around them, not in their Sates and not in their Cities. They first thing these incumbents need to do, round up all the illegals they took in from Obama into their cities and ship'em out for all to see. Now that would get most of their voter's back.
This poor sickly looking Alaska Dem. Senator is trying his Damnedest to get a vote, I don't he even knows what a pool cue is.
Looks like the older gentleman would rather sake hands with a Snake than him.
The simple question is at the top of many minds this grumpy election season, even among the 1,000 or so high school students gathered for a televised debate: "How will you work to reach across partisan lines to accomplish real goals?"
Incumbent Sen. Mark Begich, a Democrat in a tight race, started his answer by shoving his party's president gently under the campaign bus, talking about the need to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling, anathema to the Obama administration.
Only then did he get around to his record of working with anyone, "no matter who they are." Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, a libertarian and tea party favorite. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent and self-described socialist. And, always, the senior senator from the Last Frontier.
Incumbent Sen. Mark Begich, a Democrat in a tight race, started his answer by shoving his party's president gently under the campaign bus, talking about the need to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling, anathema to the Obama administration.
Only then did he get around to his record of working with anyone, "no matter who they are." Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, a libertarian and tea party favorite. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent and self-described socialist. And, always, the senior senator from the Last Frontier.
"Lisa Murkowski and I, Republican and Democrat, this last year voted 80% together," Begich boasted, a claim he makes at campaign stops from Barrow to Ketchikan. "No other senators in a split delegation in the country have that kind of voting record."
Begich invokes his Republican counterpart so often that Murkowski sent him a cease-and-desist letter when he ran an ad calling them a "great team." But the name "Obama" rarely escapes his lips — and only then when a prospective voter mentions the president first.
Like many Democrats locked in tight races, Begich is betting that his odds of victory go up the more distant he seems from President Obama. But few Democrats this election season face the kind of hurdles that stand between Begich and a second term.
Begich invokes his Republican counterpart so often that Murkowski sent him a cease-and-desist letter when he ran an ad calling them a "great team." But the name "Obama" rarely escapes his lips — and only then when a prospective voter mentions the president first.
Like many Democrats locked in tight races, Begich is betting that his odds of victory go up the more distant he seems from President Obama. But few Democrats this election season face the kind of hurdles that stand between Begich and a second term.
Only a third of Alaskans approve of the job Obama is doing, among the lowest rates in the country and almost 10 percentage points below the nation as a whole. And then there is the simple fact that politics in this vast, sparsely populated state bears scant resemblance to that practiced in what people here describe as "Outside" — or the Lower 48 when they're feeling generous.
"Mark Begich is pro-gun, pro-choice, pro-oil and -gas development, pro-gay marriage," said campaign spokesman Max Croes. "Those are four things that perhaps don't make sense in deep blue California or deep red Wyoming. But here in Alaska, that's where the majority of the people are.... [Begich] is running for Alaska."
"Mark Begich is pro-gun, pro-choice, pro-oil and -gas development, pro-gay marriage," said campaign spokesman Max Croes. "Those are four things that perhaps don't make sense in deep blue California or deep red Wyoming. But here in Alaska, that's where the majority of the people are.... [Begich] is running for Alaska."
www.latimes.com/nation/politics/la-na-begich-obama-20141029-story.html#page=1
Really,,,, Have you taking your Sticker Off Yet?