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Midterm Talking Points

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by mc mark, Apr 11, 2006.

  1. mc mark

    mc mark Contributing Member

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    Republican talking points for the midterms

    Democrats will raise the white flag on Iraq
    Democrats will raise your taxes
    Democrats will immediately launch impeachment proceedings

    Democratic talking points for the midterms

    Bush incompetence and the failed war
    Republican ethics and the culture of corruption
    Exploding Federal spending and energy prices
    Immigration

    discuss...
     
  2. No Worries

    No Worries Contributing Member

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    Republican talking points for the midterms

    Gays are bad and have an agenda, like adopting straight orphans and converting them into being gay satanists.

    Mexicans are stealing stuff and Democrats want to make sure they keep on stealing.

    Democrats will let the Constitution get in the way of protecting America from terrorist threats.

    The Democratic anti-war talk emboldens our enemies abroad.

    Did I mention that Gays are bad? Did I mention dirty, illegal, thieving Mexicans?
     
  3. basso

    basso Contributing Member
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    you forgot gay mexican satanists.
     
  4. Saint Louis

    Saint Louis Member

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    gay mexican satanists who travel with snakes on airplanes
     
  5. rimrocker

    rimrocker Contributing Member

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    Saturday, my place.

    After Circle in the backyard and the sacrificing of a goat, we'll go down to where teens cruise and actively promote the homosexual agenda to a young, impressionable audience.

    Seriously though, did anyone read Disgby's post today at Firedoglake...

     
  6. Deckard

    Deckard Blade Runner
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    Good news for Democrats this Fall... they can talk about this:


    Poll Finds Bush Job Rating at New Low
    An Election-Year Blow to the GOP


    By Richard Morin and Claudia Deane
    Washington Post Staff Writers
    Tuesday, April 11, 2006; A01

    Political reversals at home and continued bad news from Iraq have dragged President Bush's standing with the public to a new low, at the same time that Republican fortunes on Capitol Hill also are deteriorating, according to the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll.

    The survey found that 38 percent of the public approve of the job Bush is doing, down three percentage points in the past month and his worst showing in Post-ABC polling since he became president. Sixty percent disapprove of his performance.

    With less than seven months remaining before the midterm elections, Bush's political troubles already appear to be casting a long shadow over them. Barely a third of registered voters, 35 percent, approve of the way the Republican-led Congress is doing its job -- the lowest level of support in nine years.


    The negative judgments about the president and the congressional majority reflect the breadth of the GOP's difficulties and suggest that the problems of each may be mutually reinforcing. Although the numbers do not represent a precipitous decline over recent surveys, the fact that they have stayed at low levels over recent months indicates that the GOP is confronting some fundamental obstacles with public opinion rather than a patch of bad luck.

    A majority of registered voters, 55 percent, say they plan to vote for the Democratic candidate in their House district, while 40 percent support the Republican candidate. That is the largest share of the electorate favoring Democrats in Post-ABC polls since the mid-1980s.

    This grim news for the GOP is offset somewhat by the finding that 59 percent of voters still say they approve of their own representative. But even these numbers are weaker than in recent off-year election cycles and identical to support of congressional incumbents in June 1994 -- five months before Democrats lost control of Congress to Republicans.

    As Bush and the Republicans falter, Democrats have emerged as the party most Americans trust to deal with such issues as Iraq, the economy and health care. By 49 to 42 percent, Americans trust Democrats more than Republicans to do a better job of handling Iraq.

    Democrats also hold a six-percentage-point advantage over the GOP (49 percent to 43 percent) as the party most trusted to handle the economy. Their lead swells to double digits on such as issues as immigration (12 points), prescription drug benefits for the elderly (28 points), health care (32 points) and dealing with corruption in Washington (25 points).

    The public divides evenly on only one issue: terrorism, with 46 percent expressing more confidence in the Democrats and 45 percent trusting Republicans on a top voting concern that the GOP counts on dominating.

    But there is plenty of time left before Election Day for Republicans to take back ground they have lost to Democrats -- or for Democrats to solidify their recent gains. In the past year, public attitudes toward Bush and the Republicans have been driven by the news. Bush's popularity rebounded at the end of last year in response to the democratic elections in Iraq and renewed optimism about the economy at home -- only to stumble as the deadly insurgency continued and scandals in Congress and the White House drove down perceptions of the president and his party.

    A total of 1,027 randomly selected adults were interviewed April 6 to 9 for this survey. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus three percentage points for the overall results.

    Bush's job approval rating has remained below 50 percent for nearly a year. Perhaps more ominous for the president, 47 percent in the latest poll say they "strongly" disapprove of Bush's handling of the presidency -- more than double the 20 percent who strongly approve. It marked the second straight month that the proportion of Americans intensely critical of the president was larger than his overall job approval rating. In comparison, the percentage who strongly disapproved of President Bill Clinton on that measure never exceeded 33 percent in Post-ABC News polls.

    The public is even more critical of Bush's performance in specific areas. On six of seven key issues, fewer than half of the respondents approve of the job Bush is doing, while majorities express dissatisfaction with him on Iraq (62 percent), health care (62 percent) and immigration (61 percent).

    Four in 10 -- 40 percent -- say Bush is doing a good job with the economy, down eight percentage points in a month. One reason for the drop may be the recent sharp increase in fuel costs. Fewer than one in four approve of his handling of gasoline prices, virtually the same as last summer when gas prices topped $3 a gallon. Overall, 44 percent said the increases are causing "serious hardship" in their family, up significantly from August.

    Half of the public now disapproves of the way Bush is handling the fight against terrorism, an issue on which majorities of Americans had typically given him high marks until last year.

    The depth of public dissatisfaction with Bush and the highly partisan nature of the criticism are underscored by public attitudes toward efforts by some in Congress to censure him or impeach him for his actions as president.

    Democratic and Republican congressional leaders view both scenarios as remote possibilities. Still, more than four in 10 Americans -- 45 percent -- favor censuring or formally reprimanding Bush for authorizing wiretaps of telephone calls and e-mails of terrorism suspects without court permission. Two-thirds of Democrats and half of all independents, but only one in six Republicans, support censuring Bush, the poll found.

    Last month, Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.) introduced a resolution in the Senate to censure Bush. A majority of Americans, 56 percent, said his move was driven more by politics than by principle.

    Calls to impeach Bush are not resonating beyond Democratic partisans. One-third of Americans, including a majority of Democrats (55 percent), favor impeaching Bush and removing him from office. But more than nine in 10 Republicans and two-thirds of independents oppose impeachment.

    The ongoing bloodshed and political chaos in Iraq continue to drag down support for the war, the survey found. Barely four in 10 -- 41 percent -- say the war is worth fighting, down five percentage points since December. Although more than half of Americans think troop levels in Iraq should be decreased, only 15 percent are calling for an immediate withdrawal, a figure that has not varied much over the past year.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/10/AR2006041000259_2.html


    I'll say something... Bush and the GOP are in freefall, and this Fall they will lose their majority in Congress.



    Keep D&D Civil.
     
  7. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Contributing Member

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    Substance:

    Bush incompetence and the failed war
    Republican ethics and the culture of corruption
    Exploding Federal spending and energy prices
    Immigration
    _________________

    Fluff:

    Democrats will raise the white flag on Iraq
    Democrats will raise your taxes
    Democrats will immediately launch impeachment proceedings
     
  8. mc mark

    mc mark Contributing Member

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    Geez Beltane isn't for another couple of weeks. You getting an early start? ;)

    Regarding your article that's some messed up ****.
     
  9. No Worries

    No Worries Contributing Member

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    Did I mention dirty, illegal, thieving Mexicans?

    Update:

    Did I mention dirty, illegal, thieving, irresponsibly breeding Mexicans?

    There it is.
     
  10. rimrocker

    rimrocker Contributing Member

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    And the winners are... Gays, Abortion, and Flag Burning... serious stuff for serious times.

    (via Billmon)
     
  11. wnes

    wnes Contributing Member

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    If you were in GARM long enough, the thread title would read like "Midseason Tanking Points."
     
  12. mc mark

    mc mark Contributing Member

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    From Josh –

    It all started earlier this evening when TPM Reader HH was on the receiving end of one of Dole's blast emails begging contributions for the Republican senate committee.

    Says Dole, in her pitch: "If Democrats take control of the Senate in '06, they will cancel the Bush tax cuts, allow liberal activist judges to run our courts and undermine all Republican efforts to win the War on Terror. Even worse ..." Now, here you know it's got to be bad. Even I got a little worried and considered sending in some money since losing the War on Terror for America would already be a pretty bad thing for the Democrats to do. But ... well, let's rejoin Dole in mid-moonbat. "Even worse, they will call for endless congressional investigations and possibly call for the impeachment of President Bush!"

    And there you have it. Democrats won't stop at surrendering to the terrorists. They'll go as far as investigating President Bush!

    That is the election, at least from the vantage point of the White House and the party they control. The president can't afford to lose either house of Congress. Because they've just got too many bad acts and secrets to conceal.

    It's even more important than the War on Terror.

    -- Josh Marshall

    So let's have it republicans! What’s more important?

    Winning The War on Terror?
    Stopping Democrats from gaining a majority of congress?
     
    #12 mc mark, May 4, 2006
    Last edited: May 4, 2006
  13. FranchiseBlade

    FranchiseBlade Contributing Member
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    I am surprised that there aren't too many talking points on the fact that Jack Abramoff visited the Whitehouse on almost 200 occasions in Bush's first 10 months in the Whitehouse.

    That is almost every single workday for 10 months.

     

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