The Golden Report

Thoughts. Musings. Observations. Insight. The Golden Report.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Friday's Campaign Update

11 Days left

4pm Update

 

·         Obama is on the air with his first TV ad in support of a Senatorial candidate—Jeff Merkley in Oregon (Gordon Smith, the moderate Republican incumbent has, ironically, included Obama in his campaign advertisements this year)

·         The  young woman who claimed that she was attacked by an Obama supporter in Pennsylvania earlier this week—and who had a “B” carved into her face—apparently fabricated the entire story and will face charges by police

·         Former President Bill Clinton is campaigning for Obama in Arkansas today. Arkansas and Alaska are the final two states in the country that Obama has not visited during the course of his 2-year long campaign

·         It’s true that the McCain campaign is investing everything that they have in the state of Pennsylvania. A loss there will be fatal to their candidacy. A win will still present an uphill challenge—but right now it is the only pathway to victory

·         Earlier this week, Kentucky’s largest newspaper, the Louisville Carrier-Journal endorsed Democrat Bruce Lunsford over Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell; polls are very tight in this state

·         33 states in the country will have an early voting option at some point next week—in many states it closes by next weekend in preparation for the national vote on Tues. Nov. 04th. The Obama Campaign held a conference call this afternoon during which they expressed extreme confidence that they are winning the early vote

Friday's Campaign Update

11 Days Left

1pm Update

 

·         Gallup Daily Tracking Poll (Likely Voter Model): Obama 51%/McCain 44%

·         Gallup Daily Tracking Poll (Traditional Voter Model): Obama 50%/McCain 45%

·         Gallup Daily Tracking Poll (Registered Voter Model): Obama 50%/McCain 42%

·         GWU/Battleground Daily Tracking Poll: Obama 49%/McCain 46%

·         Reuters/CSPAN/Zogby National Head-to-Head: Obama 51%/McCain 41%

·         Rasmussen Swing State Poll: North Carolina: McCain 50%/Obama 48%

·         Real Clear Politics Average: Obama up 7.4%

·         Note: All 3 Gallup Polls have McCain losing one point from the poll taken yesterday—Obama’s support has remained consistent

 

·         How much media will Sarah Palin’s policy address on childhood disability get today?

·         The stock market will likely be the lead story on the evening news tonight. After dropping 500 points shortly after the open, the Dow is now down 300 points as we are about an hour away from entering the critical 2-4pm trading range, when anything is possible.

·         Obama in Hawaii. Joe Biden & Michelle Obama picking up the slack on the trail—watch for any critical media of their performances.

 

AND WE ARE STILL LOOKING FOR A MEDIA NARRATIVE FOR THIS WEEK. HOW WILL IT BE REMEMBERED? LIKELY THAT IT IS ENDING IN ABOUT THE EXACT SAME POSITION WHERE IT BEGAN.

 

Charlie Cook's NJ Column: "What If..."

THE COOK REPORT

Obama Swinging For The Fences

By every metric, the Democrat's presidential campaign looks as if it is headed for the upper deck.

by Charlie Cook

Saturday, Oct. 25, 2008



For a political analyst, the normal posture this time of year is much like a baseball umpire's: hunched over, peering carefully as the ball approaches the plate, watching for whether it breaks left or right, whether it's coming in high or low. But, these days, we analysts are more like outfielders, watching in awe as a ball seems on a trajectory to not only clear the fence but very likely land in the upper deck.

By every metric, Barack Obama's presidential campaign appears headed for the upper deck. Polls (both national and state-by-state), organization, money, and momentum are all running strongly in Obama's favor. At this point, one wonders whether Obama's winning margin could be greater than Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton's 5.6-point win over President George H.W. Bush in 1992, more than Bush's 7.7-point win over Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis in 1988, or more than Clinton's 8.5-point win over Sen. Bob Dole in 1996. Even higher on the landslide roster is California Gov. Ronald Reagan's 9.7-point victory over President Carter in 1980 and Gen. Dwight Eisenhower's 10.9-point win over Adlai Stevenson in 1952.

Certainly, the 2008 presidential contest could reverse direction and result in victory for John McCain. But at this point, he would have to be the beneficiary of something quite dramatic for that to happen.

As this campaign has shifted from a surprise-around-every-corner situation to one more akin to watching concrete set, many observers have begun playing "What if?" If McCain had picked someone other than Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate, would he now be higher in the polls? If the senator from Arizona had waged this battle more as John McCain 1.0, the 2000-vintage candidate who was more of a maverick and less of a partisan than the 2008 version, could he have succeeded because he was less tied to his Republican Party and less joined at the hip with President Bush?

These are interesting questions, but they avoid one unmistakable fact: This is a toxic political environment for Republicans. That's why they will probably lose at least seven seats in the Senate and at least 20 in the House. Having former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney or former eBay CEO Meg Whitman or even Mother Teresa as McCain's running mate would not have changed that. And, with Bush's job-approval rating in a recent Gallup Poll at 25 percent, my National Journal colleague Ronald Brownstein has noted that McCain would need the support of one-third of all voters who disapprove of Bush's performance in order to reach 50 percent in a general election. With Republican Party identification down from parity four years ago to a 10-point deficit, this race would have been incredibly hard for the Republican nominee no matter what.

Although this contest was very competitive over the summer and could have gone either way before the stock market crashed and the credit markets seized up, arguably it has become virtually unwinnable for McCain. The nation's economic problems feel very personal and very painful for nearly everybody who has looked at their 401(k) or other retirement account statements and seen that a quarter or more of their retirement savings have evaporated. Many voters even held stock in venerable companies, including some of those long considered among the safest around, and have watched in horror as those investments turned almost worthless.

For voters who may end up working many more years than they had planned, or who have lost money set aside to send their children or grandchildren to college or to start or expand a business, it is far easier to blame anyone wearing a red Republican jersey than to dwell on thoughts about which presidential nominee has had more experience on national security issues or has spent more time contemplating the situation in the Middle East.

Of course, this election isn't over. Something could transform it from one focused on an economic recession to one obsessed with national security or some other topic that would give McCain a fighting chance. But with the growing popularity of early voting, that "something" would have to be very big and happen very soon to have the power to change the trajectory of Obama's campaign.

For now, what is so jarring about the tempo of this election is its shift from turbulent to placid, from shocking to inevitable. Perhaps that is a fitting end to this weird campaign year.

 

Friday's Campaign Update

Just 11 Days Left

10am Edition

 

·          Former Republican Massachusetts Governor Bill Weld endorses Obama today—probably will have a great solidifying effect in New Hampshire

·          The top paid McCain Campaign official in the first two weeks of the month, as reported in financial disclosure reportes filed with the FEC last night, was Amy Strozzi, Sarah Palin’s makeup artist, who earned $22, 800

·          Former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, who published a revealing book titled “What Happened” in early summer, endorses Barack Obama

·          Rasmussen Daily Tracking Poll: Obama 52%/McCain 45%

·          Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking Poll: Obama 50%/McCain 43%