Posts Tagged ‘Massachusetts Miracle’

Brown outpolls Kerry, Obama

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Matt Viser and Frank Phillips

Most popular official in survey; For incumbents, message is mixed

US Senator Scott Brown, who only months ago was a little-known figure even within the tiny band of Republicans in the state Senate, not only catapulted to national stature with his upset US Senate victory, but is today the most popular officeholder in Massachusetts, according to a Boston Globe poll.

After less than five months in Washington, Brown outpolls such Democratic stalwarts as President Obama and US Senator John F. Kerry in popularity, the poll indicates. He gets high marks not only from Republicans, but even a plurality of Democrats views him favorably.

The support for Brown, whose victory became a symbol of voter anger, is consistent with widespread sentiment that incumbents in Massachusetts and Washington “need to be replaced with a new crop of leaders.’’ That statement was supported by 50 percent of those polled, while 28 percent said they trust the incumbents.

Yet there’s one surprising consolation for Bay State Democrats who hope to defuse the voter backlash. When asked whether they will vote for a Democrat or Republican in their own congressional district in November, 42 percent of likely voters say they will vote for the Democrat and 27 percent will vote Republican.

While those polled tend to favor the nine Democratic incumbents running to keep their US House seats in November, Republicans can take hope in the state’s only contest for an open seat, being vacated by Democrat William Delahunt. Voters in the Southeastern and Cape and Islands communities that make up the district are evenly divided on whether they will vote for a Republican or Democrat.

The survey of 558 adults in Massachusetts, including 497 likely voters, was taken June 17-23 by the University of New Hampshire’s Survey Center.

Brown’s backers can be heartened by the depth of his support.

Asked their opinion of Brown, 55 percent of those polled said they view him favorably, only 18 percent unfavorably. His rating among Republicans is 79 percent favorable, 3 percent unfavorable. And 55 percent of independents — the majority of the state’s voters — say they like him, while only 11 percent have an unfavorable opinion. The poll has a margin of error of 4.2 percent.

Despite the fact that his election in January was a crushing blow to both the state and national Democratic party, 41 percent of Democrats say they view Brown favorably, and 32 percent, unfavorably.

In contrast, Kerry was viewed favorably by 52 percent of those polled and unfavorably by 37 percent of the respondents. And in a sign that Obama is a polarizing figure even in Massachusetts, 54 percent of the respondents view him favorably and 41 percent unfavorably, according to the polling data.

Read more at boston.com……

Rachel Maddow to Challenge Sen. Scott Brown in MA.?

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010


I just received an email from Sen. Scott Brown’s office that said that there is talk in MA. Democratic circles that the Party is talking to MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow about the possibility of running against Scott when his partial term in the Senate expires.


Ms. Maddow lives in Western Massachusetts and her high visibility as a news anchor has peaked the interest of Democrat apparatchiks in the state. No word on whether or not she is interested in running.

If we conservatives are right about Obamanomics and his new Health Care bill being economy flatteners and job killers, by the time Ms. Maddow is ready to hit the rubber chicken circuit, the voters will be so completely turned off by All Things Democratic that they will reward Sen. Brown with a full term.

~~John Cronin~~

Michael Savage: Sarah Palin Is Unelectable

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

I realize this post may be controversial, but I sincerely believe that Palin cannot win the Republican primaries. If she would then leave the GOP to run on a third party ticket, she will be responsible, more that any other person, for a second Obama term. I ask her supporters to think this through and to not insist that a charismatic and inexperienced politician with a very thin resume be put in charge of the world’s biggest economy and strongest military. The voters did that in 2008 and we can all see what that gets us. Lectures from hostile governments, a broken economy, an empty Treasury and political drift and stagnation.

If you really think that Sarah Palin should be President, don’t throw her to the sharks before she is ready to fight them off……and you can be assured the sharks will come after her in 2012.

As Dr. Savage says, we need an experienced person who understands how to get a bill through Congress, how to get a legislative agenda actually passed into law. The inexperienced politician we have in the Oval Office now has been stalemated for almost a year and he still has a Supermajority in the House and, but for the Massachusetts Miracle of Jan. 19, he’d still have one in the Senate.

So, in 2012, lets pick someone who has a proven and time-tested track record, someone who has allies in the House and Senate who will help the new President get his/her agenda passed…..and who can start to repair the damage done to this country by Obama & Co.

~~John Cronin~~

Just Say No

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

As you know President Obama wants to have yet ANOTHER marathon talk-fest about his dead in the water health care “reform” bill.  He has invited the Pubbies to sit down and in a “systematic” way go over the various points of his Medicus Maximus bill to see if any “common ground” exists.  I sincerely hope Congressional Republicans are smart enough to see this for the setup that it is.  The only point of this dreary, tiresome exercise in futility is to paint the GOP as the “Party of No.”

When I was making calls for Scott Brown’s campaign, one dyed-in-the-wool Democrat said we were the “Party of No.”  I did not respond to his sarcasm but the thought did go through my head that being the ” party of no” was a very reasonable stance to take when considering the awful implications for society from this disastrous bill.

I urge the GOP to remain the “Party of No,” not for craven political reasons, but because it is good for the country.  There is a very strange political philosophy that has tried to ingrain itself in Washington since the 2008 elections.  It is almost self-destructuve in it’s attempt to remake the economy and society in a way that is anathema to a vast majority of Americans.  You know this, I know this and poll after poll reflect it.  And yet the lemmings of the Democrat Party have, until the Massachusetts Miracle was pulled off, continued to follow the lead of a rogue President who seems wedded to noxious bills that have been rejected by the voters, who have gone to great lengths to express their displeasure about the direction the country is headed in.

Hopefully the Republican leadership will reamin committed to their policy of united opposition to Obama’s attempt to wreck the Health Care industry and in the process, the economy.  I predict that grateful voters will reward the GOP with big gains in both Houses of Congress this November.

Sometimes just saying “No” is a good thing.

~~John Cronin~~

Scott Brown Demands to be Sworn in Right Away

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

I had the chance to listen to some of Rush’s show today during lunch and he was talking about the breaking story that Scott Brown has changed his mind about waiting until Feb. 11 to take his Senate seat.

At first, Sen. Brown was OK with the 11th because it would give him time to hire staff, but according to Rush the Dems may be trying to pull off another one of their corrupt, backroom deals and have the lame duck, Paul Kirk, vote on some as yet unknown bill that you and I will not like.

It is hard to put into words the utter contempt with which I view the national Democratic Party. They are like a puppy that is not yet house broken……if you take you eyes off the little booger for 30 seconds, it makes messy on the carpet.

I’ll breath a sigh of relief when Scott Brown is firmly ensconcsed in office and ready to end the Dems super majority in the Senate.

~~John Cronin~~

Sen.-elect Scott Brown is demanding to be seated as early as Thursday — a week earlier than he had initially planned.

Brown, who won his special election Jan. 19, sent a letter Wednesday afternoon to Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick and Secretary of State William Galvin asking them “certify without delay” his results so he can be seated Thursday.

Daniel Winslow, Brown’s legal counsel, said in the letter he wanted the results certified no later than 11 a.m. Thursday so that he can deliver a copy to the secretary of the Senate in time to be given the oath of office that afternoon.

This marks a change of heart for the Republican, whose swearing-in would end the Democrats’ yearlong supermajority. “He has been advised that there are a number of votes scheduled prior to that date. For that reason, he wants certification to occur immediately,” Winslow wrote.

A Republican leadership aide said that the Senate’s ability to swear in Brown “depends on what the governor does. If he doesn’t sign the certificate, he won’t be sworn in.”

A Brown spokesman says the senator-elect is eager to vote on President Barack Obama’s nominations for GSA administrator, solicitor general and a top slot on the National Labor Relations Board – all of which have some Republican opposition.

The Massachusetts secretary of state finished his certification of the official election results Wednesday — but they still must be approved by the governor’s council and signed by Patrick and Galvin. The Boston Globe reports the governor is away from the Statehouse because of several pre-scheduled events and that Patrick plans to certify the election at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow, which would allow Brown to travel to Washington.

Read more at Politico

Obama Lays Egg

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

In the parlance of Broadway critics from a by gone era, when a new show flopped, the expression was that the producer and the director “laid an egg.”

From what little I have seen of the SOTU address, in my view, this was an omelet.

Much has been written and spoken by the chattering class and the “ink-stained wretches” about Bill Clinton’s famous rightward migration after he and the Dems of his day got hammered in the ’94 Republican election sweep.  Many pundits have recently speculated about whether or not Obama would rip out a page from the Clinton playbook and morph into a “New Democrat” and co-opt traditionally Republican policies like tax cuts, fiscal responsibility and a strong response to the threat we face from the Jihadists.

After viewing some of the address, it is apparent that Obama is either a committed hard left idealogue or a slow learner.  After lopsided Republican victories in New Jersey, Virginia and the historic win in Massachusetts, Obama still has not gotten the message.  The voters are tired of the profligate spending, the endless “stimulus” bills, the attempted hijacking of the health care industry, the dangerous handling of the terrorist trials and finally….the empty promises.

I said from the jump that I would not watch the address in it’s entirety.  It’s just too painful.  But that’s the thing when it comes to Obama, after you get the “formula” down, you can pretty much predict what he’s going to say.  No need to waste an hour of my time listening to the same stump speech.  I don’t need a teleprompter to follow along with his speeches, I pretty much have them memorized by now.

~~John Cronin~~

Too Much of a Bad Thing: Mark Steyn

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010


By:  Mark Steyn

So what went wrong? According to Barack Obama, the problem is he overestimated you dumb rubes’ ability to appreciate what he’s been doing for you. “That I do think is a mistake of mine,” the president told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos. “I think the assumption was if I just focus on policy, if I just focus on this provision or that law or if we’re making a good rational decision here, then people will get it.”

But you schlubs aren’t that smart. You didn’t get it. And Barack Obama is determined to see that you do. So the president has decided that he needs to start “speaking directly to the American people.”

Wait, wait! Come back! Don’t all stampede for the hills! He only gave (according to CBS News’s Mark Knoller) 158 interviews and 411 speeches in his first year. That’s more than any previous president — and maybe more than all of them put together. But there may still be some show out there that didn’t get its exclusive Obama interview — I believe the top-rated Grain & Livestock Prices Report — 4 a.m. Update with Herb Torpormeister on WZZZ-AM Dead Buzzard Gulch Junction’s Newstalk Leader is still waiting to hear back from the White House.

But what will the president be saying in all these extra interviews? In that interview about how he hadn’t given enough interviews, he also explained to George Stephanopoulos what that wacky Massachusetts election was all about:

“The same thing that swept Scott Brown into office swept me into office,” said Obama. “People are angry and they’re frustrated, not just because of what’s happened in the last year or two years but what’s happened over the last eight years.”

Got it. People are so angry and frustrated at George W. Bush that they’re voting for Republicans. In Massachusetts. Boy, I can’t wait for that 159th interview.

Presumably, the president isn’t stupid enough actually to believe what he said. But it’s dispiriting to discover he’s stupid enough to think we’re stupid enough to believe it.

Read More at NRO

The Meaning of Brown

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Charles Krauthammer

WASHINGTON – On Jan. 14, five days before the Massachusetts special election, President Obama was in full bring-it-on mode as he rallied House Democrats behind his health care reform. “If Republicans want to campaign against what we’ve done by standing up for the status quo and for insurance companies over American families and businesses, that is a fight I want to have.”

The bravado lasted three days. When Obama campaigned in Boston on Jan. 17 for Obamacare supporter Martha Coakley, not once did he mention the health care bill. When your candidate is sinking, you don’t throw her a millstone.

After Coakley’s defeat, Obama pretended that the real cause was a generalized anger and frustration “not just because of what’s happened in the last year or two years, but what’s happened over the last eight years.”

Let’s get this straight: The antipathy to George W. Bush is so enduring and powerful that … it just elected a Republican senator in Massachusetts? Why, the man is omnipotent.

And the Democrats are delusional: Scott Brown won by running against Obama not Bush. He won by brilliantly nationalizing the race, running hard against the Obama agenda, most notably Obamacare. Killing it was his No. 1 campaign promise.

Bull’s-eye. An astonishing 56 percent of Massachusetts voters, according to Rasmussen, called health care their top issue. In a Fabrizio, McLaughlin & Associates poll, 78 percent of Brown voters said their vote was intended to stop Obamacare. Only a quarter of all voters in the Rasmussen poll cited the economy as their top issue, nicely refuting the Democratic view that Massachusetts was just the usual anti-incumbent resentment you expect in bad economic times.

Brown ran on a very specific, very clear agenda. Stop health care. Don’t Mirandize terrorists. Don’t raise taxes; cut them. And no more secret backroom deals with special interests.

These deals — the Louisiana purchase, the Cornhusker kickback — had engendered a national disgust with the corruption and arrogance of one-party rule. The final straw was the union payoff — in which labor bosses smugly walked out of the White House with a five-year exemption from a (“Cadillac”) health insurance tax Democrats were imposing on the 92 percent of private-sector workers who are not unionized.

The reason both wings of American liberalism — congressional and mainstream media — were so surprised at the force of anti-Democratic sentiment is that they’d spent Obama’s first year either ignoring or disdaining the clear early signs of resistance: the tea-party movement of the spring and the town-hall meetings of the summer. With characteristic condescension, they contemptuously dismissed the protests as the mere excrescences of a redneck, retrograde, probably racist rabble.

You would think lefties could discern a proletarian vanguard when they see one. Yet they kept denying the reality of the rising opposition to Obama’s social democratic agenda when summer turned to fall and Virginia and New Jersey turned Republican in the year’s two gubernatorial elections.

The evidence was unmistakable: Independents, who in 2008 had elected Obama, swung massively against the Democrats: dropping 16 points in Virginia, 21 in New Jersey. On Tuesday, it was even worse: Independents, who had gone 2-to-1 Republican in Virginia and New Jersey, now went 3-to-1 Republican in hyper-blue Massachusetts. Nor was this an expression of the more agitated elements who vote in obscure low-turnout elections. The turnout on Tuesday was the highest for any nonpresidential Massachusetts election in 20 years.

Democratic cocooners will tell themselves that Coakley was a terrible candidate who even managed to diss Curt Schilling. True, Brown had Schilling. But Coakley had Obama. When the bloody sock beats the presidential seal — of a man who had them swooning only a year ago — something is going on beyond personality.

That something is substance — political ideas and legislative agendas. Democrats, if they wish, can write off their Massachusetts humiliation to high unemployment, to Coakley or, the current favorite among sophisticates, to generalized anger. That implies an inchoate, unthinking lashing-out at whoever happens to be in power — even at your liberal betters who are forcing on you an agenda that you can’t even see is in your own interest.

Democrats must so rationalize, otherwise they must take democracy seriously, and ask themselves: If the people really don’t want it, could they possibly have a point?

“If you lose Massachusetts and that’s not a wake-up call,” said moderate — and sentient — Democratic Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana, “there’s no hope of waking up.”

I say: Let them sleep.

Read More at townhall.com

Behind The Meltdown In Massachusetts

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

By MICHELLE MALKIN

By early afternoon on Tuesday, several hours before the polls closed on the special Senate election in Massachusetts, the Democrats had already thrown in the towel and started throwing punches. At each other.

There was more finger-pointing among Bay State and Beltway Democrats than in a “Three Stooges” marathon. More backstabbing than all of the “Real Housewives” combined.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs confessed that President Obama was “frustrated” and “not pleased” by the closeness of the race after his salvation mission to Boston over the weekend. Operatives lashed out at Democratic candidate Martha Coakley’s listless, gaffetastic campaign. Capitol Hill buzzed with rumors that White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel was blaming the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and liberal pollster Celinda Lake for ignoring electoral alarm bells.

‘Political Malpractice’

In response, Coakley’s team leaked a memo blasting national Democratic brethren for failing to aid them “until too late.” Another Democratic Party official counter-jabbed to Politico that Coakley had “been involved in the worst case of political malpractice in memory.”

On the sidelines, Democratic Rep. Barney Frank took to the airwaves to call for sabotaging Senate rules and ending the filibuster in anticipation of losing the magic 60th vote for the government health care takeover plan.

Democratic Rep. Steny Hoyer trotted out the old blame-the-GOP card — incoherently arguing that GOP candidate Scott Brown’s surge among conservatives, independents and once-reliable rank-and-file Democratic voters in the deep-blue state of Massachusetts was a backlash against Republican obstructionism.

“I think what the public is angry about is they see, first of all, an opposition for opposition’s sake,” Hoyer told reporters in D.C. If Democrats continue to cling to that outer-space nonsense, the shock they will suffer in the November 2010 elections will make Jan. 19 look like a spa day.

Tea Party Triumph

Brown’s surge is an unmistakable victory for tea party activism. Online fundraising over the past few weeks buoyed the campaign and put Brown in the national spotlight. Buzz over a possible “Massachusetts Miracle” persuaded national Republican organizations to belatedly transfer funds for phone and mail get-out-the-vote operations targeted at independent voters.

There was nothing particularly “clever” about Brown’s election strategy, as White House senior adviser David Axelrod put it, or “radical,” as hysterical Massachusetts Democratic Sen. John Kerry put it.

Brown ran a simple mainstream Republican campaign aided by nationwide grass-roots support. The tea party movement once derided as “tiny” and “fringe” reportedly filled Brown’s coffers with small donations totaling $1 million a day for the last week, according to TheDailyCaller.com.

Read more at investors.com

Energized Brown mocks desperate Dems

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

GOP upstart state Sen. Scott Brown took aim at Democratic opponent Attorney General Martha Coakley’s presidential bailout this afternoon, telling a packed hall of rowdy supporters he would stay connected to them and not embrace Washington, D.C. insiders.

“They put in a distress call to Washington, and the next thing you know, Air Force One is landing at Logan,” Brown said of President Obama’s Boston visit today. “The party bosses gave the president some bad information. This Senate seat belongs to no one person and no one political party, it belongs to the people of Massachusetts.”

Brown, bolstered by a last-minute campaign surge in the polls, reminded the crowd of over 2,000 people that he is their candidate.

“I’m Scott Brown, I’m from Wrentham, I drive a truck and I’m asking for your vote,” he said. Then he referenced Obama’s come-from-behind presidential campaign. “After all, who ever heard of a guy from Wrentham getting elected to the U.S. Senate? But as the president might remember, upsets like that have been known to happen.”

Brown was serenaded by his daughter, former “American Idol” semi-finalist Ayla Brown, backslapped by Red Sox [team stats] ace pitcher Curt Schilling [stats], and pumped up by former “Cheers” know-it-all John Ratzenberger during the electric rally.

“This to me feels like the clubhouse on the morning of Game Seven,” said Schilling. “We know we’re going to win, but we have to play the game anyway . . . Rarely do we feel like we get a chance to make a difference. This is one of those times and we cannot miss this opportunity.”

Supporters inside the rally came from across the state and even the country. Evan Hecht, 62, took a late-night plane from Walla Walla, Wash., to support Brown.

“I want to volunteer in Boston to help elect Scott Brown – a man I do not know, a man I have never met - because I want to do whatever I can to restore a balance of power in the United States Senate,” Hecht said.

Tea Party activist Jeff McQueen drove from Michigan to join with other Tea Party activists to support Brown.

“It’s historic. If Brown wins this it stops the whole health care bill,” McQueen said.

The rally followed a day-long campaign swing in western Massachusetts, starting in Holyoke and West Springfield and ending in Worcester.

O’Connor: Can the Clintons save Obama and the planet?

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

Colleen O”Connor, in her piece for the SDNN, says that:  “Obama has lost the trust of the majority of Americans.”  This perception has been spreading month by month and it is graphically depicted in the trend line of Rasmussen Reports Presidential Approval charts.

Craig Edwards and I have been talking about this for months on our www.solidprinciples.com podcast. To wit:  Obama has not shown the political smarts of an amateur running in a  small town board of aldermen election.  No politician can afford to create a basic level of mistrust with the voters for obvious reasons.  Now, I say obvious, but evidently it is not so obvious to the pols who inhabit the fever swamps of Washington, D.C.

They have shown a casual disregard for the opinions of the vast constituency that is middle America.  For all the reasons that Ms. O’Connor talks about in her article.  And they are getting predictable results.  They are all sinking like stones.

If Scott Brown and his “brigade” can pull off the “Massachusetts Miracle” this Tuesday, then Colleen O’Connor’s call that Obama may be, not a one term President, but a half-term President, will be well on it’s way to fulfillment.

~~John Cronin~~

San Diego News Network

By:  Colleen O’Connor

To state the obvious:

Obama is in trouble.

Health care is in trouble.

Haiti is in trouble.

And, on Tuesday, the state of Massachusetts may send a Republican to the Senate in Ted Kennedy’s old seat, which means all Democrats in Congress are in trouble.

So which SWAT team does President Barack Obama turn to? The Clintons.

The very same Clintons that the leaders of the currently, very unpopular Democratic leadership (read: Speaker Peloisi, Majority Leader, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emmanuel, Presidential Advisor, David Axelrod, Economic Adviser, Larry Summers, etc. etc.) all trashed during the 2008 Presidential campaign.

Now, these same people are clinging to the Clinton lifeboat.

To be more specific:

Obama is now below 50 percent approval rating in a raft of polls. Can’t blame the “vast right wing conspiracy” for those results.

The Congressional ratings, the Speaker’s ratings, and Harry Reid’s numbers all suggest early retirements, or imminent electoral defeat, for a host of Democratic incumbents.

The Obama’’s favorability rating is tanking, due to closed door meetings on health care; the broken promises of transparency; the troika deals of Geithner, Summers, and Axelrod-that gave the big banks billions in bonuses from the use of taxpayer money-and a penchant for “breezy arrogance,” and inflated claims on jobs “created or saved.”

In short, Obama has lost the trust of the majority of Americans-as have a host of incumbent politicians.

Read more: sdnn.com

Can Brown shock the world?

Friday, January 15th, 2010

SCOTT BROWN IS SURGING IN THE POLLS!  KEEP POURING IT ON UNTIL THE POLLS CLOSE ON JANUARY 19. 

Politico
By: Martin Kady II

Scott Brown may be on the verge of shocking the world.

It’s hard to underestimate how big a blow it would be to Democrats if a little-known Republican state senator rolls in and snags Ted Kennedy’s Senate seat — as Congress struggles for final passage of Kennedy’s lifelong cause of health care reform.

Brown has momentum in the polls, he’s getting help from outside Republican forces, and he’s raising tons of money in the final days. His opponent Martha Coakley, the Democratic attorney general, has made gaffe after gaffe — including a badly timed fundraiser with lobbyists in Washington and making fun of Brown for working the crowds in the cold outside Fenway Park.

The Boston Democratic Party machine may very well pull this out by Tuesday’s special election, but Republicans already feel as if they’ve won a moral victory by making it close.