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We? As in the republican party, the conservative party or the teabagger party?
Speaking of teabagging parties, right-wing leader; michelle bachman is calling on all righties to pack your cars, get on a bus, hitchhike or walk to Washington and join her for another exciting teabagger party!
Bring your mis-spelled signs, hay forks and torches, your bull-horns, pots and pans to knock together, your lunatic grandmas, beer and chewing tobacco, a stick 'n whittlin' knife, your local street preachers and don't forget your teabags. Party leaders; glen beck and rush limpbaugh might show up and also too; sarah palen. You might even get your face on Faux Newz too! This'll wow all your ex-friends back home that didn't show up, those commies.
Ahh, it's gonna be great, probably.
It may be kinda cold but that's okay because there'll be plenty of screaming and shrieking and a healthy dose of walking around in circles to keep you warm. For the more durable and laid-back crowd, there'll be plenty of good 'ol fashioned standing around and sitting on tail-gates and car hoods.
Sarah! Sarah! Sarah! Be there or be square!
We, indeed! No, the best thing me and mine could ever wish for is a Palin/Bachmann ticket. Then the DP would sweep the polls in such a way unseen since LBJ sent Barry Goldwater packing to Arizona/DC.

Teabagging seems to have run its course as a warm weather phenomenon, the last "flash mob" was hardly a flash and definitely no mob, more like a lighting a flashlight at noon and a few dozen. Guess the teabaggers showed their true colors, having been unable to decide who could out-crazy the next, and bored, ultimately, at no overt racism and Glenn Beck being too jowly up close. Not even the skinny one in Big N Rich or the karate man can save this odd doing.


A martyr, yes, the baggers need a martyr! That would save the most fruitful experiment in poor taste and silliness.
Jeb Bush would not be my choice. Jimmah Carter presaged the coming of Reagan. An even more arrogant and less accomplished President appears well on his way to doing the same.

The tea partiers are, in the main, the same disaffected voters that supported Ross Pierot. Leave it to the Democrats to heap distain upon millions of demonstrators. Do so, at the peril of holding office, again.
quote:
Originally posted by Blaknwite:
We? As in the republican party, the conservative party or the teabagger party?
Speaking of teabagging parties, right-wing leader; michelle bachman is calling on all righties to pack your cars, get on a bus, hitchhike or walk to Washington and join her for another exciting teabagger party!
Bring your mis-spelled signs, hay forks and torches, your bull-horns, pots and pans to knock together, your lunatic grandmas, beer and chewing tobacco, a stick 'n whittlin' knife, your local street preachers and don't forget your teabags. Party leaders; glen beck and rush limpbaugh might show up and also too; sarah palen. You might even get your face on Faux Newz too! This'll wow all your ex-friends back home that didn't show up, those commies.
Ahh, it's gonna be great, probably.
It may be kinda cold but that's okay because there'll be plenty of screaming and shrieking and a healthy dose of walking around in circles to keep you warm. For the more durable and laid-back crowd, there'll be plenty of good 'ol fashioned standing around and sitting on tail-gates and car hoods.
Sarah! Sarah! Sarah! Be there or be square!


It looks like most of the "mis-spelled" words around here are coming from your post. I'm sorry. There's only so much garbage the trash receptacle of my eyes can take before they start overflowing, causing me to retaliate with harsh words.
quote:
Originally posted by Blaknwite:
We? As in the republican party, the conservative party or the teabagger party?
Speaking of teabagging parties, right-wing leader; michelle bachman is calling on all righties to pack your cars, get on a bus, hitchhike or walk to Washington and join her for another exciting teabagger party!
Bring your mis-spelled signs, hay forks and torches, your bull-horns, pots and pans to knock together, your lunatic grandmas, beer and chewing tobacco, a stick 'n whittlin' knife, your local street preachers and don't forget your teabags. Party leaders; glen beck and rush limpbaugh might show up and also too; sarah palen. You might even get your face on Faux Newz too! This'll wow all your ex-friends back home that didn't show up, those commies.
Ahh, it's gonna be great, probably.
It may be kinda cold but that's okay because there'll be plenty of screaming and shrieking and a healthy dose of walking around in circles to keep you warm. For the more durable and laid-back crowd, there'll be plenty of good 'ol fashioned standing around and sitting on tail-gates and car hoods.
Sarah! Sarah! Sarah! Be there or be square!


Wow, this person who still cannot write a correct sentence dares to make fun of others? Is this person the true face of Liberalism? If he is then nobody has any need for fear. Ignorance it this level in benign.
Forgive the gray man.

His preoccupation with sexual fantasies causes him to lose the slightest grip on reality.

The truthers are all for protest of the government, except when its not one they organized.

The governor races today may predict the 2010 turn of events for the libs.

I believe even CBS or MSNBC can report that accurately.
A bankrupt state's governorship and one district are a mandate on nothing save what they are represented to be prima facie: one governor and one member of the House.

The Republics' noise machine has tried to make this so, but this is not the midterm election by a long stretch.

Virginia flip flops like a wet noddle in its governorship, and is not the same as NJ and the House, so this is apples and oranges, add in the Fox Faktor and this is a farce with some snake previously unknown candidate being the teabagger of choice, there having been no primary for this special election.
It IS important to the Obama administration. Why do you think he has not sent more troops to Afghanistan? Aude, the mistake that you and most of the left make is lumping all "the people" into the Republican fold. Perhaps you should have attended a tea party or town hall meeting. "We the people" are not happy with the Republican leadership either. If the Republicans don't notice this they too will see a change in the coming elections.
quote:
Originally posted by Aude Sapere:
A bankrupt state's governorship and one district are a mandate on nothing save what they are represented to be prima facie: one governor and one member of the House.

The Republics' noise machine has tried to make this so, but this is not the midterm election by a long stretch.

Virginia flip flops like a wet noddle in its governorship, and is not the same as NJ and the House, so this is apples and oranges, add in the Fox Faktor and this is a farce with some snake previously unknown candidate being the teabagger of choice, there having been no primary for this special election.


Your posts are usually better. This one reads as if written by poor BNW.

New Jersey is bankrupt because its been run by Democrats for so long. California, Michigan, and DC are other obvious examples. NY state soon to follow.

Wet noodles don't flip and flop, they just lay there. As a previous inhabitant of Virginia, I remember well how the Democrats crowed over the election of a Democrat governor.

If the Republicans score a trifecta, it will be seen as a warning to the Democrats, no matter how the MSM spins it.

If the 10th congressional district race in California goes Republican, as well, there will be long faces at the WH. Pelosi will have to increase her botox injections.
From the London Telegraph comes the same conclusion:

"For his part, Mr Obama is engaging in acts of deference to the Democratic majority in Congress – as a Chicago machine politician probably has to, for genetic reasons – that are exceeded only by his acts of deference to the unions, who have never had it so good, and who were the reason for his absurd decision to put tariffs on tyres imported from China.

By the time you read this you will know whether the Democrats have lost a series of key elections held yesterday, including the governorships of Virginia and New Jersey. If they do, it will reinforce the point that Mr Obama won last November because he was not the heir of George Bush, and for no other reason. The President starts to risk comparisons not just with Jimmy Carter, but with Lyndon Johnson, felled by a combination of a foreign war and welfare reform, and even, with his list of enemies, Richard Nixon. The problem may be one of immaturity and inexperience. If so, he had better learn fast. For, at this rate, next year's congressional elections start to look more than challenging for him."


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/com...le-to-celebrate.html
Even more just from A Google

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NorthJersey.com: Races an early test of Obama influence
Nov 3, 2009 ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the ... campaign manager David Plouffe said Tuesday on NBC's "Today. ... WASHINGTON (AP) — In a very early test of President Barack Obama's political influence, ...
www.northjersey.com/.../Races_...Obama_influence.html - 7 hours ago - Similar
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Races in today's election an early test of Obama influence
Nov 3, 2009 ... Races in today's election an early test of Obama influence, ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the 2010 midterm ...
www.azcentral.com/.../20091103electionrdp-ON.html - 7 hours ago - Similar
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ELECTION ROUNDUP: Today's races an early test of Obama influence ...
Nov 3, 2009 ... ELECTION ROUNDUP: Today's races an early test of Obama influence ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the 2010 ...
www.grandforksherald.com/event/article/id/139663/ - 42 minutes ago - Similar
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Nationwide races an early test of Obama influence | NorthWest ...
Nov 3, 2009 ... Ballot measures, local races heat up today's Wash. election. WASHINGTON, D.C. -- In a very early test of President Barack Obama's political influence, ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the ...
www.nwcn.com/.../Nationwide-ra...uence--68848327.html - 4 hours ago - Similar
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Dailyworld - Races an early test of Obama influence
Nov 3, 2009 ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the 2010 ... Obama campaign manager David Plouffe said Tuesday on NBC's "Today. ...
content.usatoday.net/dist/custom/.../InsidePage.aspx?... - 8 hours ago - Similar
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Races an early test of Obama influence :: WRAL.com
Nov 3, 2009 ... President Barack Obama's political influence a year after his ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the 2010 midterm elections. ... Plouffe said Tuesday on NBC's "Today." "These are local races. ...
www.wral.com/news/political/story/6334852/ - 12 hours ago - Similar
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Races an early test of Obama influence - BostonHerald.com
Nov 3, 2009 ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the 2010 ... David Plouffe said Tuesday on NBC's "Today." ”These are local races. ...
www.bostonherald.com/.../20091...home&position=recent - 4 hours ago - Similar
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Races an early test of Obama influence - Examiner.com
Nov 3, 2009 ... 10 hrs ago: Races an early test of Obama's political influence ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the 2010 midterm elections. ... Plouffe said Tuesday on NBC's "Today." "These are local races. ...
www.examiner.com/a-2301266~Rac...Obama_influence.html - 2 hours ago - Similar
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Races an early test of Obama influence - Netscape Celebrity
Nov 3, 2009 ... And the races certainly won't predict what will happen in the 2010 ... Obama campaign manager David Plouffe said Tuesday on NBC's ``Today. ...
channels.isp.netscape.com/celebrity/story.jsp?idq=/... - 7 hours ago - Similar
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Races an early test of Obama influence | World news | guardian.co.uk
Races an early test of Obama influence. Digg it. AP foreign, Tuesday November 3 2009. LIZ SIDOTI. AP National Political Writer= WASHINGTON (AP) — In a ...
www.guardian.co.uk/world/feedarticle/8788007 - 5 hours ago
Or if you prefer more well known,

msnbc.com home

updated 2 hours, 18 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama's political influence a year after his election is being tested as voters cast ballots in Virginia and New Jersey, two states he's worked hard to keep in Democratic hands. A handful of congressional and mayoral races and a same-sex union initiative also are among the featured face-offs this Election Day.

Obama has sought to ensure that Democrats not only win the governor's races but also pick up a GOP-held congressional seat in upstate New York. In doing so, Obama raised the stakes of a low-enthusiasm off-year election season — and risked political embarrassment if any lost.

All three could.
...................................................

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election 2009, election day, republicans, democrats, scozzafava, corzine, obama, van hollen, white house
Agree there.
No more Bushes or Clintons for at least 100 years.

One more link for Audie.


Election 2009: Test of Obama clout in NJ, Virginia
AP

By LIZ SIDOTI, AP National Political Writer Liz Sidoti, Ap National Political Writer – 25 mins ago

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama's political clout was on the line Tuesday as Virginia and New Jersey chose governors in contests that could serve as warning signs for Democrats about the public's mood heading into an important midterm election year.

Elsewhere, Maine voters weighed in on same-sex marriage in a closely watched initiative, and New York and California picked congressmen for two vacant seats. A slew of cities selected mayors, and Ohio voted on allowing casinos.

One year after Obama won the White House in an electoral landslide and Democrats expanded their majorities in Congress, much of the focus was on Virginia and New Jersey, where Democratic control was in danger despite hefty campaigning by Obama himself.

The outcomes were sure to feed discussion about the state of the electorate, the status of the diverse coalition that sent Obama to the White House and the limits of the president's influence on the party's base of support — as well as on moderate lawmakers he needs to advance his legislative priorities.

As if on cue, Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid indicated Tuesday that lawmakers may not complete health care legislation this year, missing Obama's deadline on his signature issue and pushing debate into a congressional election year.

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