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Obama’s 1st national ad (sans Minnesota)

Friday, June 20th, 2008

When Barack Obama launched his first advertisement of the general election campaign this week, it was notable where his strategists decided to air it — and more to the point in this supposedly purple state, where they opted not to.

The Democratic Party’s likely presidential nominee is running the ad in a dozen battleground states, but also in six that lean heavily Republican: Montana, North Dakota, Indiana, North Carolina, Georgia and Alaska. Conspicuously missing from the list of battlegrounds are such presumed battlegrounds of Minnesota, Washington and Oregon.

And it’s notable that Minnesota was on the list of states where John McCain targeted his first ad last week. All of which raises a couple of (at this point unanswerable) questions: Does the Obama team assume Minnesota’s in the bag? Does McCain’s really, truly think the state is going to be competitive in November?

In any case, here’s the ad, a soft and fuzzy paen to America, American values and Obama’s American roots.

McCain odds and ends…

Friday, June 20th, 2008

One of the enduring (and endlessly frustrating) limitations of the dead-tree version of this newspaper is the finite amount of space we’ve got in which to give you the news. No problem here, though. So here are some bits and pieces about John McCain’s visit to the Twin Cities Thursday, his first campaign stop of the year.

First, the pool reports (one reporter on the inside, filing to everyone else) from the Straight Talk Express ride from MSP and then the fundraiser McCain held at the Minneapolis Hilton:

On the Straight Talk Express from the airport to the hotel in Minneapolis, Sen. johnmc.jpgJohn McCain said that his campaign has decided that it will accept public financing for the general election. “We will take public financing,” Asked what his thinking was, he said, “Because we decided to take public financing.”

McCain also expanded on comments yesterday about whether he would reconsider opposition to drilling in ANWR. He said if given new information he would of course consider it, but that he remains opposed to drilling. Detailed quotes available to anyone who wants them. If enough requests, I’ll send another pool report.

On the bus, most of the questioning was done by two local reporters. Gov. Tim Pawlenty and his wife, Mary, were aboard, and one of the reporters asked McCain in several ways whether Pawlenty was being considered for VP. McCain praised the governor but declined to say whether he was on a short list or give any other insight into the matter. He said there really isn’t a short list.

The other reporter asked a series of questions along the lines of “if you could have any super power, what power would you want” and “what is the worst thing you ever did as a youth. (McCain didn’t name a super power but spoke of his awe for Mohammed Ali; he could not manage to decide which of the things he did at the Naval Academy would be the worst.) He was also asked what he wanted his epithet [sic] to be: “Served his country honorably.” Favorite TV shows: He mentioned “24,” “The Tudors” and “Damages.”

There were about 75 people at the fund-raiser in Minneapolis, and the room was at least half empty when Sen. John McCain addressed the group. He spoke for just under 20 minutes, including several questions and answers.

In his introductory remarks, he predicted protestors would appear at the town hall meeting later this evening.

“Americans are asking us to stop yelling at each other,” he said. “That’s what they want us to do. Sit down together, work out these issues.”

He praised Gov. Tim Pawlenty as “one of the finest governors in America,” a comment which drew hearty applause.

In thanking the assembled for their support, McCain made clear that he needs their money.

“Thank you for your support. Thank you for being here. It means a lot, it means a lot .We are probably going to be outraised in this campaign, but thanks to your support… we’re going to be competitive. I’ve never been in a competitive race where I wasn’t outraised.”

“We’ve got enough to run this campaign.”

“We have a small staff. When I say small it’s about 300 people now that we are in the process of hiring for our entire campaign. Sen. Obama has over a thousand and it’s growing. So I can assure you that we will make sure your support goes where it’s most needed and frankly that’s to media. and to organizing get out the vote and absentee ballot programs. Those are the things that win and lose elections. I’m grateful for your support.”

He then pivoted to Obama’s decision to opt out of public financing.

“As you know after the scandal of Watergate we enacted certain reforms and one of those was the ability of a candidate in the general election after the primary to take public financing. In other words a certain amount of money is given and then campaigns are run on those. Well today Senator Obama, for the first time since the Watergate era reforms any candidate has decided he will not take public financing, and the interesting thing about that is that a little over a year ago there was a questionnaire sent out to me and to Sen. Obama and said, ‘If your opponent will take public financing, will you?’ and I said, ‘Of course.’ And he signed his name to a piece of paper that said if the Republican nominee takes public financing then he would too. Well–and he signed his name to it. You know, this campaign is supposed to be about trust– supposed to about trust and taking people’s word for things. Sen. Obama, because obviously his status has changed from what was clearly not a frontrunner status to one that now has the ability to raise a lot of money, he has reversed his position on that. He has reversed his position on a number of issues and so this is going to be a hard campaign my friends. I have to give you straight talk. It’s going to be hard.”

Among McCain’s repeated shots at Barack Obama was this one, citing Obama’s willingness to meet with hostile foreign leaders: “There are stark differences between us and this campaign will draw them out … My record and my principles are closely aligned with those of Ronald Reagan. I believe he is a good role model.”

The 13th and final question of the night broached the Tim Pawlenty-for-vice-president issue, with the questioner asking McCain what the governor’s prospects are.”I knew we should have stopped - this meeting is adjourned,” McCain cracked.
Without directly answering, he returned to a formulation he has repeatedly used to describe Pawlenty as “the next, new generation of the Republican Party of America. He has a place in the future of the country and the future of the Republican Party.”

Reactions from folks in the crowd?

Don Dame, a mechanical engineer and pilot from Woodbury, said he was uncommitted before the town hall meeting. Afterwards, despite disagreeing with McCain on global warming, he said he was backing him. Obama doesn’t have enough experience, he said.

“The more you hear about the guy, the better you like him. He is a straight talker. McCain says things that people can believe,” Dame said. “How many politicians are willing to tell the truth to people, because it’s going to cost them votes?”

Mark Swanson, a former naval officer who lives in Becker, Minn., and works as an engineer for Medtronic, asked McCain what he thought about Rep. Michele Bachmann’s plan to reduce gas prices to $2 per gallon. McCain had raised his eyebrows and said, “I eagerly look forward to seeing that. I’ll try to read it tonight.”

Said Swanson, who had been for McCain and left the meeting even more enthusiastically for him: “When you see him face-to-face, all the press reports that say he’s not conservative go by the wayside. I don’t hear him being wishy-washy or doubtful … He impresses me very much as an idealist.”

Brian Davis, the environmental attorney who said he was for McCain before the town hall, said he was even more impressed with McCain afterwards.

And daughter, Jennifer, the frustrated Hillary supporter? She’s still undecided, but she said that McCain had risen in her eyes. She said she thought he was sincere and straightforward, and she liked what he said about the environment and following through with the war.

“The intimacy of the setting allowed me to feel his energy and his passion,” she said. “I believe in his character and his integrity, and that’s huge for me.”

The Clintons’ spin on the Veepstakes — and some pushback

Monday, March 10th, 2008

First Hillary Clinton, then husband Bill, have repeatedly floated the balloon that Barack Obama might make a great Number Two on a presidential ticket headed by none other than Hillary Clinton. Obama’s short answer so far: Thanks but no thanks.

Hillary Clinton’s most recent forumlation came over the weekend in Mississippi, when she told barackhill.jpgvoters, “I’ve had people say, ‘Well, I wish I could vote for both of you’. That might be possible some day, but first I need your vote.”

Her husband chimed in the same day, calling a Clinton-Obama ticket “an unstoppable force.” As per NBC News: Clinton said that Hillary believes that if there was a way to “unite the energy and the new people” that Barack Obama has attracted with the appeal he said his wife has shown in “small town and rural America, they’d “be hard to beat.”

Over the weekend, the blogosphere and pundits went nuts, pointing out the obvious contradiction: A big chunk of Clinton’s kitchen sink barrage of Obama consists of her contention that he’s too green and unqualified to be Commander in Chief …. uh, but he’s perfectly acceptable to become the person one heartbeat away from the job?

The New York Daily News’ Michael Goodwin (no friend of the Clintons), put it this way: “It’s a dream team all right, as in dream on. It’s a fantasy because, in the Clintons’ pitch, naturally, she is on top of the ticket and Obama is her No. 2. That’s rich of her, considering that Obama leads in both the delegate race and the popular vote. Forget those pesky voters - Hillary has declared herself the winner!”

Time’s Karen Tumulty put it succinctly: “There’s one big problem with the Clinton campaign encouraging all this talk of a dream ticket: It undercuts their argument that Obama is not prepared to be Commander-in-Chief. If they really believe that to be the case, how could they justify putting him in a position where he is one tragedy away from the job?”

You get the idea. Even as his wife’s campaign was busily tearing down Obama, comparing him to none other than special prosecutor Kenneth Starr (who’d have thought in a million years the Clintons would be the first to invoke the memory of you-know-who), Bill Clinton airily dismissed the negative back-and-forth this way: “That’s politics.”

Monday afternoon update, via the New York Times:

Senator Barack Obama implored voters here today to discount the political chatter about him joining the Democratic presidential ticket with Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, declaring: “I don’t know how somebody who’s in second place can offer the vice presidency to someone who’s in first place.”
“If I’m not ready, how is it that you think I should be such a great vice president?” Mr. Obama said. “Do you understand that?”

Go to the tape, courtesy of MSNBC:

There he goes again…

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Gov. Tim Pawlenty spent the weekend schmoozing with other Republican politicos at the Arizona home of Sen. John McCain, once again fueling speculation about his political future.

macpaw.jpgThe name of Pawlenty, one of the national co-chairs of McCain’s presidential campaign, has persistently popped up on short lists of potential vice-presidential running mates for the Arizona senator.

McCain and Pawlenty have consistently dismissed speculation about Pawlenty’s future role, saying they’ve never discussed it.

The presence of Pawlenty at McCain’s vacation home outside Sedona was noted Monday in several political blogs, which had been buzzing about the weekend off the campaign trail.

Among the other GOP officials who stopped over the weekend were longtime McCain ally Sen. Lindsay Graham, of South Carolina, and South Dakota Sen. John Thune (who’s also ended up on some vice-presidential lists).

The weekend was billed as a chance for McCain to kick back before the primaries Tuesday that are expected to clinch the Republican nomination for him. Characteristically, he also served up barbecue for the traveling press corps he used to jokingly refer to as his “base.”

Here are a few of the blog accounts of the get-together in the desert.

From The Swamp.

Politico’s take. (scroll down)

And Fox News…