The Republican Obstructionist agenda is anti-American.
Their primary goal: They want the President and The United States to fail.
What then? A return to the failed Bush policies which caused the
econimic collapse.

Vote Democrat!

On 11/1/10, Cold Water <[email protected]> wrote:
>       Grim Dems await huge House losses
>       By: Alex Isenstadt
>       October 31, 2010 04:53 PM EDT
>
>       The last TV ads have been cut. The final polls have been conducted.
> The end-of-campaign expenditures are being made.
>
>       Now, for Democratic consultants and campaign officials who have
> plotted and strategized for months to preserve the embattled House majority,
> there’s nothing left to do but sit and wait for the expected horrors of
> Election Day to unfold.
>
>       There is nearly uniform consensus among Democratic campaign
> professionals that the House is gone — the only question, it seems, is how
> many seats they will lose.
>
>       While few will say so on the record for fear of alienating party
> officials or depressing turnout, every one of nearly a dozen Democratic
> House consultants and political strategists surveyed expect a GOP majority
> to be elected Tuesday — the consensus was that Democrats would lose
> somewhere between 50 and 60 seats.
>
>       A senior party consultant who was on the low end with his predictions
> said the party would lose between 40 and 50 seats. On the high end, one
> Democratic consultant said losses could number around 70 seats.
>
>       All spoke to the grimness of the mood.
>
>       “It sucks,” said Dave Beattie, a Florida-based Democratic pollster who
> is working on a slate of competitive House races and who acknowledges that
> the lower congressional chamber is lost. “I’m resigned to the fact that it
> sucks.”
>
>       While there was optimistic talk within party circles early this month
> that the electoral environment was improving for the party, the operatives
> said those conversations don’t take place anymore.
>
>       “If some Democratic consultant told you they are feeling better, they
> must have dropped some heavy drugs,” said a senior pollster who is working
> for candidates in competitive races. “It’s hard.”
>
>       The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee this week launched
> something of a last-ditch offensive to save some of its incumbents,
> purchasing airtime to defend endangered members like Iowa Rep. Dave
> Loebsack, Illinois Rep. Bill Foster and New Jersey Rep. John Adler — all of
> whom are highly vulnerable but whom party officials believe could ultimately
> prevail.
>
>       The committee also sought to shore up incumbents who until recently
> were not thought to be in electoral peril: Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva, Iowa
> Rep. Bruce Braley and North Carolina Rep. Mike McIntyre.
>
>       Still, among those in the Democratic consulting class, there’s a
> gloomy acknowledgment that many of the incumbents the DCCC has spent
> millions of dollars to protect won’t be coming back to Congress.
>
>       “Everybody that is tied will lose, and everyone that is ahead by a few
> points will lose because of the GOP wave,” said one party media consultant
> who is involved in a wide array of House races. “There are going to be some
> surprises.”
>
>
>       Some strategists have resigned themselves to an election night that
> will bring an early end to the promising careers of Democrats they
> shepherded to victories in 2006 and 2008.
>
>       “In a wave election, part of the problem is that you feel powerless.
> Everything I feel I know how to do, that I’m trained to do, I can’t do. And
> that feeling is pervasive,” said the pollster. “There’s a sense that there’s
> nothing you can do about it. When you know your friends are on the chopping
> block, it’s hard.”
>
>       “There’s nothing worse than talking to an incumbent member of Congress
> who’s been cut off by the DCCC and who has no money,” said another
> Democratic consultant who has worked on crafting some of the party’s TV ads
> this cycle. “It’s like talking to a dead man walking.”
>
>       But Nov. 2 will also bring a welcome end to a rough final stretch that
> left many party strategists frustrated. Some talked about having to switch
> campaign strategies multiple times in hapless attempts to raise rock-bottom
> poll numbers.
>
>       “It’s a 24-hour labor,” said John Anzalone, an Alabama-based pollster
> who works closely with the DCCC. “In 2006 and 2008, everything was going
> your way. This is brutal.”
>
>       There is ongoing debate within Democratic circles about when, exactly,
> the party lost its handle on the electoral environment. Some consultants say
> they realized they lost the House in early October, when it finally became
> apparent that incumbents couldn’t move their poll numbers.
>
>       But others say the electoral map hardened this spring, after the House
> passed a health care bill that remains deeply unpopular among voters.
> Democratic campaign officials say it is no accident that there are few
> Democrats in moderate-to-conservative districts who have promoted their
> support for the health care measure on the campaign trail, and most don’t
> even acknowledge it.
>
>       “To a lot of folks, it was a symbol of government,” said Beattie, the
> Florida-based pollster. “It’s not about the content for most voters.”
>
>       Already, the finger-pointing is beginning. With outside conservative
> groups pouring millions of dollars into races across the country, some
> operatives singled out liberal interest groups for not engaging in the
> election.
>
>       “If there’s one person to blame, it’s the liberal groups who said they
> would get involved early but they didn’t,” said the media consultant. “I
> think they’ve been totally unhelpful.”
>
>       But, most of the consultants said, much of the post-election scrutiny
> would surround President Barack Obama and a White House political operation
> that over the past two years struggled to sell an ambitious agenda that
> turned out to be radioactive to a wide swath of the electorate.
>
>       “Here’s the part of this that bothers me the most: This is not an
> embracing of Republicans. It’s a rejection of Democrats,” said Andrew Myers,
> a veteran Democratic pollster who worked on several House campaigns.
>
>
> http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=03A44CBF-0C07-448A-99CB09FC8163E166
>
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Tommy

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