Thanks to Obama's incredible community organizing skills, and the fact
that even stalwart red states are READY FOR CHANGE, it looks likely
that Obama will win Nevada.

Democratic Party registration is now 76,000 more registered voters; in
2004, there were more Republicans than Democrats.  Bush won by 21,000
votes.  All Obama has to do is keep the  Dem votes from the last
election and get a third of the newly registered Democrats, and Nevada
will vote BLUE in the presidential race this year!

Oh, and John McCain?  He's been running around like a chicken with his
head cut off, flitting here, flitting there, with little in the way of
apparent strategy or plan, and certainly not the ability to get things
done like Obama can.

Oh, and McCain chose Sarah Palin as his VP, which is his worst
decision on the most important decision he will make in the most
important political race of his lifetime.

---------------------------


(BEGIN QUOTE)

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-nevada30-2008sep30,0,342781.story
>From the Los Angeles Times

CAMPAIGN '08

In Nevada, Democrats are on a roll
Obama has built one of the most formidable political operations the
state has ever seen, and party registration is up. Even so, the
presidential race there remains a dead heat.

By Mark Z. Barabak
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

September 30, 2008

RENO — By just about any measure, now is a fine time to be a Democrat
in Nevada.

Barack Obama has built one of the most formidable political operations
the state has ever seen. Party registration is soaring. The Republican
governor, Jim Gibbons, may be the most unpopular state executive in
the country.

The economy, which thrived for decades, is in frightfully poor shape
-- for months Nevada has led the nation in home foreclosures, and
unemployment stands at a 23-year high -- handing Democrats a bludgeon
with which to pound the GOP.

For all of that, however, the state's presidential race is a dead
heat, making Nevada one of a dozen or so states that could decide the
contest between Sen. John McCain and the senator from Illinois.

The numbers are going Obama's way. There are 76,000 more registered
Democrats than Republicans statewide, and the party has posted big
gains in the Las Vegas and Reno areas, where most voters reside. Four
years ago, registration tilted Republican, and President Bush won
Nevada by 21,500 votes.

"All Obama needs is to get a third of those new Democrats and those
numbers turn around," said Eric Herzik, who teaches political science
at the University of Nevada, Reno.

But the numbers tell only part of the story in the nation's
westernmost battleground.

Nevada is a state with a broad libertarian streak, an aversion to
taxes, affection for guns and open contempt for its major landlord,
the federal government, which controls 90% of state land. All of that
makes it tough for a Democrat to compete statewide -- even one who
isn't black and with an odd-sounding name.

Given those pluses and minuses, there may be no better test of Obama's
campaign strategy than here in Nevada, a state that has gone with the
winner in all but two presidential elections over the last century.

To win the White House, Obama hopes to dramatically boost the number
of voters in November, pulling in casual participants as well as those
-- particularly young people -- who have never cast a presidential
ballot.

It is a calculated risk; one advantage for McCain, here and elsewhere,
is that Republicans tend to be much more certain to show up on
election day.

"Democrats have done a tremendous job increasing registration," said
Chuck Muth, a GOP strategist in Carson City. "The big question is
whether they'll be able to turn those people out."

The answer could depend on people like Lori O'Neil. The 52-year-old
single mother earns minimum wage overseeing housekeeping at Elko's
Motel 6. She skipped the last two presidential elections but has
registered this time to vote for Obama. The economy -- "tough
times . . . rough for everybody," she said -- was a big reason.

"Food. Gas. Everything goes up, and it just gets harder and harder
every day," O'Neil said, leaning over a wooden barricade at an Obama
rally this month in Elko. The Democrat, she said, "seems to be for us
poor people out there."

To ensure that O'Neil and others like her make it to the polls, the
Obama campaign has built perhaps the largest turnout operation in
Nevada history. In the past, Democrats tended to rely on organized
labor to handle their grass-roots and get-out-the-vote efforts. That
worked well in Las Vegas and Clark County, where building trades and
the Culinary Union, representing tens of thousands of casino workers,
enjoy considerable clout.

But Republicans often made up the difference by winning handily in
Washoe County, which includes Reno, and swamping the Democrats in
Nevada's 15 other counties, known collectively as "the rurals." Bush
carried some of those counties by 3 to 1 or better in 2000 and 2004.

This time, the Obama campaign is counting on labor to supplement its
organizing efforts. The campaign has opened 14 state offices, hired
about 100 paid staffers and recruited more than 3,500 volunteers, many
trained in neighbor-to-neighbor outreach.

The McCain campaign has opened nine offices. It will not discuss staff
levels. "At the end of the day, we'll be fully staffed with everything
we need in place," said McCain spokesman Rick Gorka, who reported a
surge in volunteers after Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin joined the
Republican ticket.

Democrats started with a big organizational edge as a result of the
presidential caucuses in January, which were a major event in the
party's nominating fight. The campaign was ugly -- there were attack
ads and court fights -- and the result was a split decision, with Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York winning the most votes and Obama
claiming the most delegates. But the caucuses produced a huge turnout
by Nevada standards -- 116,000 compared with 8,500 four years ago --
and created a strong foundation for November.

In Washoe County, for instance, Democrats have narrowed the GOP's long-
standing registration edge to about 2,300 voters, compared with a GOP
lead of 14,500 in the last presidential race. Registration continues
until mid-October. Obama plans to stop in Reno today.

Republicans, by contrast, have been in disarray. The caucuses, pushed
forward to coincide with the Democratic contest, drew only about a
third as many participants; McCain finished third behind former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Rep. Ron Paul of Texas.

This summer, the national party had to step in to ensure a pro-McCain
delegation was seated at the convention in St. Paul, Minn. (Some
Republicans fret McCain could lose Nevada if Paul supporters stay
mad.)

The governor, embarrassed by a series of scandals, has been sidelined
from the presidential contest; McCain passed over Gibbons and made the
lieutenant governor, Brian K. Krolicki, chairman of his Nevada
campaign.

Still, the Arizona senator enjoys certain advantages, not least a
contrarian image that has distanced him from the unpopular president
and suits many in a state where "Live and let live" is the unofficial
motto.

"I don't think any Republican outside of McCain would stand a
snowball's chance of winning," said Gorka, citing the GOP's "bad
brand" and "the drag of the White House."

For all his success, Obama continues to labor under the image of a
national Democratic Party many equate with big government and higher
taxes, two things fiercely opposed by Nevadans -- especially the large
number of independents who often decide state races.

Robert Kirkbride, one of those independents, said McCain might not
represent "a big difference from what we have now," but at least
that's better than what his opponent offers.

"Obama is talking about change, but his only change is higher taxes,"
said Kirkbride, 46, a software engineer with tattoos running down his
ropy arms. "McCain may end up raising taxes too, but at least not
right away."

Obama has said he would cut taxes for 95% of working families and
increase them only for individuals making more than $200,000 and
families making more than $250,000 a year. McCain opposes any tax
hikes and would make permanent the tax cuts enacted under Bush.

Guns are another big issue -- more than 1 in 3 Nevada households
contain at least one firearm -- and even though Obama promises to
support the 2nd Amendment right to bear arms, he didn't help his cause
by telling a Pennsylvania crowd this month that he couldn't confiscate
anybody's guns "even if I wanted to" because there were insufficient
votes in Congress. The McCain campaign has made sure that quote and
its qualifier get widely circulated.

Yucca Mountain, a perennial issue in federal races in Nevada, has
gotten comparatively little notice. Obama opposes the nuclear waste
dump, proposed for a site 90 miles from Las Vegas. McCain has voted in
favor. But analysts say most voters are too preoccupied to care much.

Race, however, is a factor in the contest, which some discuss more
frankly than others. Andy ("No last name, dear, I have my reasons") is
a Democrat who supported Hillary Clinton but can't abide Obama.

"He'll do everything -- no offense to the Negroes -- for the Negroes
and cut the whites down to nothing," the retired casino worker, 67,
said between errands in downtown Reno. She doesn't like McCain any
better and may stay home on election day.

But the biggest challenge facing Obama may be connecting with Nevada
voters in a way the patrician John F. Kerry and diffident Al Gore
never did.

"There's a gut feeling," said Herzik, the professor. "Do I feel this
person understands the West, understands Nevada, understands me as a
Nevadan?"

Asked about competing against a pair of Westerners, Obama responded
with a quip. "I'm Western," he told the Reno Gazette-Journal in an
interview this month. "I'm from Hawaii. You don't get any more Western
than that."
(END OF QUOTE)
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