Showing posts with label The Buzz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Buzz. Show all posts

Friday, May 14, 2010

Charlie Crist's sister, Margaret Wood, will run his independent U.S. Senate campaign

Hmm-m-m... Margaret Wood? Can't honestly say that I've ever heard of her but... I was anything but in news junkie mode yesterday, since I was busy all day due to my nephew Mario graduating from the University of Miami down in Coral Gables, with the afternoon ceremony at the on-campus Bank United Center, which is where the basketball Hurricanes play.

Fortunately for all involved, the building's A/C was blasting on a day that was nice and sunny for photographs afterwards, but also very hot and humid, especially for those of us wearing suits in cars packed with relatives and breaking in some new dress shoes.


Because of the terrific party my sister threw for Mario at her new home in Pembroke Pines for family and friends, I didn't see a single TV news broadcast all day, the first time that's happened in many years when I wasn't traveling.
(It was actually disorienting to be honest.)

So when I read this afternoon at the
Washington Post's 44 blog, subtitled, Politics and Policy in Obama's Washington, http://voices.washingtonpost.com/44/ that Florida governor Charlie Crist is entrusting his political future to his sister, Margaret Wood, I must admit, I was a bit dumbstruck.
But then I wondered if I was simply the last person to hear about this.

I used to have the widget for the
44 blog on my blog but it often had technical problems, so I had to toss it overboard, just as I did the Ben Smith blog widget from POLITICO for similar reasons.

But when I read in the post that the news came out of an interview Crist did with the St. Pete Times Editorial Board, I knew that ace political reporter Adam Smith -no relation- would likely be all over the story, and, of course, he was, in their great politics blog, The Buzz, which I've long been a regular reader of.



44 blog of the
Washington Post
Crist says his sister will manage his Senate campaign

by Felicia Sonmez
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/44/2010/05/crist-says-his-sister-will-man.html


The Buzz politics blog of the St. Petersburg Times
Charlie Crist hires a campaign manager
Posted by Adam Smith at 05:06:37 PM on May 13, 2010 http://blogs.tampabay.com/buzz/2010/05/charlie-crist-hires-a-campaign-manager.html

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Why is this unfavorable story on Kendrick Meek missing from the Herald, Sun-Sentinel and local Miami TV newscasts?


So you remember my post here of last Monday,
titled, The nexus of South Florida taxpayer
dollars,
sports teams and stadiums:
Dolphins owner Stephen
Ross' checkbook,
with the ProPublica story I posted on pols using
sporting event tickets for fundraising purposes
-something I heard and saw for myself all the time
while living in the D.C. area for 15 years when the
Redskins won two Super Bowl titles in Joe Gibbs'
first term
- and specifically, Congressmen and
Super Bowl tickets?

Well, there's news, and it's exactly what you
thought it'd be, not that any Miami-area
reporters were doing much actual reporting
or investigating during their Super Swoon
mode, when they were swallowing whole all
the PR nonsense they were being spoon-fed.
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2010/02/nexus-of-taxpayer-dollars-sports-teams.html

Monday ProPublica had a follow-up story
to that article last week I posted and it touched
close to home, though you'd never know it judging
from the reaction of the s
omnambulant Miami
news media to this news about Kendrick Meek
But Alex Leary of the St. Petersburg Times
noticed.


------

Pro Publica
http://www.propublica.org/ion/reporting-network/item/congressional-fundraising-at-super-bowl-stays-out-of-the-limelight-208

Congressional Fundraising Stays Out of the Limelight at Super Bowl

by Marcus Stern and Sebastian Jones,
ProPublica - February 8, 2010 4:27 pm EST

The Indianapolis Colts take on the New Orleans Saints during Super Bowl <span class=XLIV on Feb. 7, 2010 at Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla. (Doug Benc/Getty Images)" width="475">
The Indianapolis Colts take on the New Orleans Saints during Super Bowl XLIV on Feb. 7, 2010 at Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla. (Doug Benc/Getty Images)

Was it the two feet of snow that blanketed Washington during the days leading up to the Super Bowl? Or was it the unintended consequence of our Super Bowl Blitz [1], a two-week telephone survey that ProPublica conducted with the help of its readers, trying to find out which members of Congress would be attending this year’s big game?

In any case, at least two Super Bowl fundraising events scheduled by members of Congress were scrubbed at the last minute or moved to undisclosed locations. Invitations to those parties, which had been circulated two or more weeks before the game, promised Super Bowl tickets to contributors who gave either of the lawmakers $5,000.

Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., had coupled his offer with an invitation [2] to join him over Super Bowl weekend at the posh Doral Golf Resort and Spa in Miami. Among the activities planned for the weekend was a poolside luncheon. Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., had promised contributors lunch at Joe’s Stone Crab, a popular South Beach eatery.

Rep. Kendrick Meek, D-Fla., did show up at the Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables, Fla., for his fundraiser [3] on Saturday afternoon. ABC News, which partnered with ProPublica in an effort to find out where the members of Congress got their Super Bowl tickets, also showed up at the hotel. But surprised Meek staffers quickly shut the door and asked the crew to leave.

The result was one of those delicate media moments that occur when politicians expecting privacy are confronted by a network news team hoping to film them. As the camera continued rolling in the hallway outside the event, Meek’s staffers peeled name tags off the lapels of the congressman’s departing guests. When Meek headed for his car, ABC’s news crew peppered him with questions about how he got the Super Bowl tickets he offered to partygoers who contributed $4,800. He didn’t have answers.

What we learned from this exercise is that even when the venue is America’s most public sports spectacle, politicians largely succeed in remaining invisible, especially when their activities include fundraising. It quickly became apparent that they feel they’re entitled to privacy when they’re accepting campaign money from contributors.

The Super Bowl is one of thousands of events each year where lobbyists and others with business before the federal government provide campaign contributions to lawmakers in an attempt to ingratiate themselves and gain access. Candidates for Congress raise $1 billion every two years, primarily through these types of private get-togethers.

The Super Bowl presents a special opportunity, because tickets to the game aren’t sold to the general public. A small number—1,000 this year—are sold to people who enter and win a lottery the league conducts. The rest are distributed at face value (either $800 or $1,000 this year) by the NFL and its 32 member teams as they see fit, under a shroud of secrecy.

Most fans are forced to get their tickets on Web sites like StubHub, where a ticket for the nosebleed seats sold for about $1,800. Yet lawmakers like Conyers, Meeks and Meek have no trouble getting tickets, not only for their personal use but also to exchange for contributions that are four or five times the face value of the tickets.

On Sunday, a Meek staffer said the campaign had bought about 10 tickets from the NFL at face value for the congressman and his contributors. However, it remains unclear where Conyers and Meeks got their tickets, how much they paid for them and how much they netted by using them in their fundraising activities.

“Any time politicians are getting something that’s not available to the average fan, I think the public has right to question that,” said Jordan Kobritz, an expert in sports marketing and ethics at Eastern New Mexico University. “I think it’s favoritism. I think it’s a way to raise money. I think it’s one reason why it’s so hard to displace an incumbent politician. They have access to these tickets. They can raise the funds that a challenger cannot raise.”

Reps. Mike Pence, R-Ind., and Steve Scalise, R-La., attended the Super Bowl, but it was unclear whether they held fundraisers. Their staffs did not reply to inquiries. Scalise told the New Orleans Times-Picayune he got his tickets from DirectTV, which carries NFL games. Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., attended the game, reportedly with his two sons, but his staff could not say how he got his tickets.

The political festivities surrounding the Super Bowl have been more circumspect since 1995, when Congress imposed a $50 limit on the value of gifts that lawmakers could accept, lobbying experts say. The parties became even tamer in 2007, when Congress outlawed gifts of any value after the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal.

But while the restrictions tamped down the activities, they didn’t eliminate them. Access is one of the most powerful tools available to lobbyists, and campaign contributions remain one of the most reliable ways to get that access.

Three of the lawmakers who came to Miami had home state teams in the Super Bowl—Pence and Bayh of Indiana and Scalise of Louisiana. But they also all hold positions on committees that could make them potentially helpful to a range of industries, whether on regulatory, tax or spending matters.

Scalise is on the Energy and Commerce Committee, which is vital to several major industries. Pence is the third-highest-ranking member of the House GOP leadership. Bayh sits on committees that oversee the banking, housing and energy industries.

New York Congressman Meeks sits on the Financial Services Committee, which is playing a crucial role in the nation’s rebound from the 2008 credit crisis.

Florida’s Meek, now in his fourth term, is important because he’s a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee. And he has his eye on the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Republican George LeMieux.

Meek’s spokesman, Adam Sharon, said there is nothing wrong with a lawmaker’s buying tickets at face value from the NFL. “This is simply an opportunity for us to say thank you to our top supporters,” Sharon said. “There is no conflict of interest.”

But with the NFL’s activities increasingly monitored by agencies like the Federal Communications Commission and various congressional committees, some object to the league making tickets available to elected officials.

“This is something that I would see as being unethical” because the tickets aren’t available to average fans, said Kobritz, the sports ethics expert.

For years, the NFL has lobbied Congress for an exemption from the nation’s antitrust laws. That could boost the NFL’s revenue by giving it greater leverage in negotiations with broadcasters. It could also give the league an advantage in its dealings with vendors and players.

The NFL is already an $8 billion-a-year business thanks to revenue from selling broadcasting rights to the networks and DirectTV, ticket sales, stadium concessions and the sale of league apparel.

Frustrated in its efforts to get Congress to act on its antitrust agenda, the NFL is urging the Supreme Court to use a case now before it, American Needle Inc. vs. the NFL, to exempt the league from antitrust laws.

The NFL’s political action committee, Gridiron-PAC, raised more than $310,500 last year, much of it from team owners. It gave $244,500 to candidates, including $5,000 to Conyers, who as chairman of the Judiciary Committee is a point man for antitrust issues in the House.

Jonathan Godfrey, the Judiciary Committee’s communications director, twice told ProPublica that he would try to find out where Conyers’ leadership PAC got its Super Bowl tickets, how many it had and how much it paid for them. He said he would get back to us. He never did. When we spoke with Godfrey today, he still didn’t know if Conyers went to the Super Bowl or if he held a fundraiser.

The NFL also has been tight-lipped about ticket distribution.

“We make a very limited number of tickets available for purchase by request to a variety of people, including elected officials,” said Jeff Miller, the league’s in-house lobbyist in Washington. “Rep. Conyers did not request tickets from our office. If he obtained tickets, it would have been from another source.”

The NFL offered Rep. Anh “Joseph” Cao, R-La., tickets to the Super Bowl, but he turned them down in favor of an invitation to the watch the game with President Obama at the White House, according the Times-Picayune. The paper also reported that Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, a Republican, would attend the Super Bowl with tickets provided by the New Orleans Saints.

In Indianapolis, the Colts offered tickets to a broad array of public officials, including 32 legislators, four members of Congress and 26 city-county councilors, according to The Indianapolis Star.

At some point, depending on whether they file monthly, quarterly or semi-annually, anyone in Congress who used campaign or leadership PAC money to pay for their tickets will have to file a campaign finance report listing the expenditure. But it might be impossible to find. The line giving the reason for the expense is unlikely to say “to pay for Super Bowl tickets.” More likely, it will say something vague like “fundraising expense.”

******

The Super Bowl Blitz is part of a continuing effort here at ProPublica to try to reveal the circumstances surrounding campaign contributions and the very private exchanges that take place between lobbyists and members of Congress. If you missed out on the Blitz but want to get involved in similar events, sign up here [4] and we’ll notify you of our next project.

This story was a ProPublica/ABC News collaboration.
ABC News: Producers Vic Walter, Megan Chuchmach and Asa Eslocker
ProPublica: Marcus Stern, Sebastian Jones, Amanda Michel, Lisa Schwartz, Kitty Bennett, Scott Klein and Krista Kjellman Schmidt.

The following news organizations jumped aboard: American Public Media, California Watch, Crain’s New York Business, Huffington Post Investigative Fund, Investigate West, MinnPost, New England Center for Investigative Reporting, Orange County Register, Raleigh Public Record, Sunlight Foundation’s Party Time, Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, WHYY, WNYC’s Brian Lehrer show.

We were assisted by individual reporters and editors at the following publications: Juliana Keeping, AnnArbor.com; Brent Gardner Smith, Aspen Daily News; Jake Torry, Columbus Dispatch; Laura Bischoff, Dayton Daily News; Malia Zimmerman, Hawaii Reporter; Warren Cooper, Hunterdon County Democrat; Kathleen McLaughlin, Indianapolis Business Journal; Lara Cooper, Noozhawk.com; Erin Siegal, Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism; Michael Collins, Scripps Howard News Service; Thomas Blinkhorn, Valley News; Edward Marshall, WBBM TV, Chicago; WHRV radio, Nofolk, Va.; Brent Wistrom, Wichita Eagle; Charlie Foster, Youth Radio; Wendy Norris, WesternCitizen.

The following individuals made many calls: Michael Alcantar, Rahul Bali, Amy Biegelsen, Jim Brice, Al Cannistraro, M. Coyle, Casey Cunniff, Robert Davey, Debbie DiMaio, Tim Duda, Sandy Gonzalez, Sherrie Jossen, Neelima June, David Kagan, Hee Jin Kang, Memrie King, Trent Larson, Lionel Logan, Laura Marsan, Cathy McMullen, Robert Melder Sr., Jeff Mende, Ted Michel, Matt Muma, Krishna Murphy, Charles Normann, Michael Olsen, Arash Payan, Diana Perparos, Nicole Pilar, EJ Rotert, Nancy Sheldon, CoConnie Snyder, Jacquelin Sufak, Claire Taylor, Jane Leatherman Van Praag, Sharon Whatley, Paul Wilczynski, Jane Wylen, John Zavesky.

Write to Marcus Stern at Marcus.Stern@propublica.org [5].


St. Petersburg Times

The Buzz
politics blog
Where did Meek get Super Bowl tickets?
Posted by Alex Leary at 04:57:37 PM
February 8, 2010

ABC news was in Miami to investigate political fundraisers built around the Super Bowl. Here is part of the report:

Rep. Kendrick Meek, D-Fla., did show up at the Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables for his fundraiser on Saturday afternoon. ABC News, which partnered with ProPublica in an effort to find out where the members of Congress got their Super Bowl tickets, also showed up at the hotel. But surprised Meek staffers quickly shut the door and asked the crew to leave.


Read the rest of the story and the reader comments at: http://blogs.tampabay.com/buzz/2010/02/where-did-meek-get-super-bowl-tickets.html

--------------

Here's the Herald search I did on Kendrick Meek
and what the results were as of 12 Midnight Tuesday
morning.
Nothing about the fundraiser.

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When I first moved to D.C., before he was named
HUD
Secretary, the Washington Post annually
wrote
about Jack Kemp's fabulous GOP
Super Bowl parties,
when he was still a Buffalo area
congressman.
One of my female housemates in
Arlington was from his district and was from a
family that had worked campaigns for him from
the beginning of his political career. She was
both
a Bills and ballet fanatic.

Kemp was a great guy, too, with a very friendly
and professional
staff, which came in handy since
people from all over the country visiting D.C.
were ALWAYS walking into his office!

Kemp was someone that everyone on The Hill
liked, regardless of their position, because he
treated everyone with respect and didn't put
on airs, like many far-less well-known people
on the Hill did -and still do.
Even Dems I thought I really liked -until I
actually got the chance to see them up-close!

This nuanced and insightful David Broder
article on Kemp from last year, following his
death, is spot-on.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/06/AR2009050603318.html

Washington Post
The Life of His Party

By David S. Broder
May 7, 2009

On the very day last week that Jack Kemp, the former quarterback, congressman and 1996 vice presidential candidate, succumbed to cancer, other Republicans were honoring the example of his life by launching a search for new ideas and broader constituencies.

Eric Cantor, the young Virginian who may come closest to Kemp's level of intellectual ambition and political energy in the current Congress, played host at the first of a promised series of policy sessions, along with former governors Jeb Bush of Florida and Mitt Romney of Massachusetts.

Welcome as their enterprise is in a landscape notably barren of GOP ideas, they were a pale carbon copy of what Kemp provided an earlier generation of Republicans.

In the understandable nostalgia for Ronald Reagan, who restored Republicans to the White House and led the final, successful stages of the Cold War, it's been too easy to forget that for much of the 1970s and into the 1980s, it was the young Jack Kemp who fired up the grass roots on his weekend speaking forays and who gave a thoroughly beaten minority party the ammunition for its comeback -- even as he built cherished friendships across the aisle.

Kemp was, in my judgment and in the eyes of many other reporters, one of the most consequential and likable politicians of that era.

His signal contribution was proselytizing for supply-side economics, the belief that lowering marginal tax rates would spur economic growth, replenish revenue, overcome deficits and fuel a widely shared prosperity.

He made that the centerpiece of the Reagan economic program and -- as the ringleader of a talented group of backbenchers, including Trent Lott, Newt Gingrich, Dave Stockman and Vin Weber -- challenged the Old Guard congressional leadership and set the stage for more than a decade of Republican ascendancy.

Those are the things for which the Republican Party owes Jack Kemp. As one who was never persuaded that Kemp was right in his economic theories, I came to value him for something more basic in human terms and far rarer among Republicans. As much as any public figure I have ever known, Kemp burned with a passion to make the American dream real for everyone -- without regard to race, religion or national origin.

A product of a middle-class California upbringing, a success as an athlete and therefore well-to-do, Kemp often said that he learned in the locker rooms of the San Diego Chargers and the Buffalo Bills that teamwork was colorblind.

He carried that belief into politics and was outspoken in denouncing those "country-club" Republicans who opposed affirmative action and supported restrictive immigration laws. That's why he was campaigning for John McCain in South Carolina the last time I saw him.

Kemp was nothing if not conservative, but he believed that if those principles were valid, they must be tested and applied, not only in gated suburbia but in the inner cities. In Congress, he co-sponsored "enterprise zones" legislation with African American and Hispanic Democrats. And as secretary of housing and urban development under the first President Bush, he drove the White House crazy, lobbying for programs to revive blighted areas that were no part of Bush's constituency.

In an early profile of Kemp, I compared him to Hubert Humphrey -- "long-winded, gregarious, super-energetic, overscheduled, optimistic, in love with ideas and people, ranging unconfined from issue to issue, an outsider who became part of the political establishment almost despite himself, a partisan battler who hates to hurt anyone's feelings." He sent me a note thanking me for finding similarities to the Democrats' happy warrior.

President Obama commends empathy, and Kemp had it in abundance. He and Bob Dole had quarreled bitterly about economic policy; Dole was never a supply-sider. But when Dole invited Kemp onto his ticket and made him his traveling companion, Kemp was moved by the simple courage Dole showed every day in coping with his grievous war wounds.

When I saw him in his hotel room at the San Diego convention, Kemp asked me, "What's the first thing I do when I make a speech?"

"You take off your jacket and roll up your sleeves," I said, having seen the ritual a hundred times.

"You know," he said, "Dole's wounds -- he can't even do that for himself." And Jack Kemp wept.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Is Obama's idea of party unity in FL, purging -without binging?; Miami-Dade Dems

As is so often the case in South Florida the year 2008, in order to get some interesting Florida political news (rumors?) about what's going on, I had to avoid today's Herald and Sun-Sentinel and go Back to the Future.
Or, as in this case, failing to have a flux capacitor of my own, going back to the Hallandale Beach Blog email inbox from Friday.

Friday morning, shortly before Noon, John Kennedy of the Orlando Sentinel's always informative Central Florida Political Pulse wrote, per a warning from Florida superdelegate Jon Ausman about a possible portent of things to come in the Sunshine State, now that Senator Obama is the party's nominee.

In case you've forgotten, Ausman was the first Florida non-politician to speak at last Saturday's DNC Rules & Bylaws kangaroo court of an inquisition.
In my opinion, watching the proceedings on C-SPAN rather than Obama-leaning MSNBC, Ausman spoke FAR TOO MUCH about the princely entitlements of the superdelegates, and how the rules of the party's charter prevent anyone -well, not then currently living at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue- from preventing that crew of self-serving super heroes from having a vote on the convention floor, even if their own state is shut-out from participating.

Well, that is unless an individual superdelegate has been convicted of something serious like, you know, sedition or assassination or something other-worldly. (Then he only has a half-vote.)
It seemed a wee bit too precious and self-indulgent for a guy who should've taken the offensive by talking from the p.o.v. of the Florida vox populi that turned out in record numbers just five months ago.
Remember them and their intentions?

On the other hand, unlike most Florida Dem party leaders and pols, like House Minority Leader Dan Gelber and Senate Minority Leader Steve Geller, Ausman was publicly encouraging a public discussion among Florida Democrats of what the logical consequences would be of moving the FL Primary, so that there'd be no room for excuses or recriminations in the future.
You know, our reality the past few months?

Here's the true proof of that: personal attacks against Ausman by the get-along gang across the state that brooks no disagreement, in a September 14th post in The Buzz, the excellent politics blog of the St. Pete Times: http://blogs.tampabay.com/buzz/2007/09/ausman-stikes-b.html

A different approach was that of FlaPolitics http://www.flapolitics.com/ supporting Ausman's call for double-dipping: from August 31, 2007
http://www.flapolitics.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=2066
"What’s important here is the concept of the possibility of Florida getting a double dip at selecting the next Democratic nominee. I don’t know about you, but I like it."

If Ausman's current allegation is true, it's about what I expected from Team Obama, frankly, which just makes it the latest in a series of reasons why I couldn't possibly vote for him when I had the chance to in January.
And why, five months hence, I won't vote for him in the general election, despite my particular disagreements with Senator McCain on aspects of his public policy.
No Kool-Aid for me, thanks, I'm a Coke Classic guy.

Future posts here as well as over at South Beach Hoosier will not only discuss McCain and Obama's relative merits on policy issues, but observations from my own extensive political campaign background -which I've hinted at here and there in the past, but otherwise kept under wraps-and how political lessons learned then, might just apply here as well.

I suspect that many of you who read this post fairly regularly will be quite surprised in the future by my observations on local Dade County Democratic Party politics and local media circa 1976 and 1984.

Ruminations and observations on prominent Dems like Dade Dem chair Mike Abrams, George DePontis, Seth Gordon, Alfredo Duran, State Senator Jack Gordon -the anti-Geller from my own p.o.v.- as well as the old Dade County Democratic Party HQ at the McAllister Hotel (built in 1913) in downtown Miami on Biscayne Boulevard, between N.E. 1st Street and N.E. 2nd Street.

For photos of the once grand hotel, including back before Bayfront Park existed, see http://www.pbase.com/donboyd/image/77141162 and http://scholar.library.miami.edu/miamidigital/search/allGalleryPages.php?IDtitle=1171&objNo=000028&seqNo=0001&IDmainrecord=338

Before we made the move in 1976 from The McAllister to the Dade County Carter-Mondale campaign HQ in my hometown of North Miami Beach, on NE 167th Street and NE 6th Avenue, behind the inviting smells of the Krispy Kreme, for a number of months, due to a serious lack of storage space, most of the party's files, docs, and ephemera were stored in my bedroom closet for safekeeping.

This included the party's institutional memory, including lots of archival letters and photos from Dem VIPs from the deep and recent past, including George McGovern letters to longtime friend and fellow South Dakotan and Dolphins owner Joe Robbie, back when he was the Dade party chair.

When Robbie, the man now known to most South Floridians for being the JR in JRS, ran for governor of South Dakota in 1956, whom do you suppose was his campaign manager but a young and earnest George McGovern!

Trust me, I'll be a lot more honest and self-effacing in those posts and observations at South Beach Hoosier and here, than the semi-rants I occasionally read over at the Miami-Dade Dems site, http://miami-dade-dems.blogspot.com/
I'll admit to feeling a case of envy for the technology they have now, which folks at party HQ back then would've killed for.

On the other hand, I also think that Mike Abram's wonderful British-born sister-in-law, Teresa Abrams -wife of David Abrams and Mom of Ian- our enthusiastic office manager and head honcho at Dem HQ and then campaign office, could have, along with the help of my then-high school self, written circles around the dismal output I see these days at M-DD, since they seem to mistake anger for prose and passion, but I'm getting ahead of myself.

I'll also endeavor to write a bit about what I witnessed first-hand in early 2000 while living in Arlington of the media's great love affair with McCain.
I'll spotlight a huge McCain "Straight Talk Express" event in Old Town Alexandria, where I also spent quite some time sitting and talking to a very charming woman, who turned out to be John McCain's sister-in-law, the wife of his brother.

Some pundit on TV recently said -I forget whom- that the three greatest love affairs ever were between:
1.) Abelard and Heloise
2.) Romeo and Juliet, and
3.) the American press corps and John McCain in 2000.

The latter's more accurate than you think, especially when nationally known print and TV reporters are bringing their kids with them to cover McCain rallies.
Not their teenage kids, their little kids!
_________________________________
Florida Democrats Fret About Fate Of Obama Delegates
Think the Florida Democratic primary fight is over?
Think again. There's apparently only been a pause while state party activists look for a new battlefield.
They may have found one Friday.Tallahassee activist Jon Ausman is sending out e-mail warnings that the Barack Obama campaign is considering replacing some or all of the 67 Florida delegates already selected to represent the campaign at the party's national convention in Denver.

To read the rest of the post, go to http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/news_politics/2008/06/florida-democra.html

Be sure to read the comments below it, as Brenna James throws cold water on the notion that the trip and associated costs to Denver for the National Convention are "free" as stated by the Obama Corps of Keystone Kops.


The Miami Herald's Naked Politics blog has this take on Ausman's warning: http://miamiherald.typepad.com/nakedpolitics/2008/06/activist-warns.html

Also see Democratic Convention Watch at http://demconwatch.blogspot.com/ for convention news and and the Palm Beach Post's Michael C. Bender on the role of $$$ in potential FL unity. http://www.palmbeachpost.com/state/content/state/epaper/2008/06/07/m1a_obama_0608.html


As for national polls which show Senator Obama defeating Senator McCain, and which many Obama supporters place great stock in, consider this:
"President Johnson could win more than 65 per cent of the votes at his party's National Convention, easily turning back the combined forces of Senator Robert F. Kennedy and Eugene J. McCarthy, a survey by The New York Times indicated today..."

The date? March 24, 1968.

Real life always gets in the way of destiny.
Especially political destiny.
Just ask former Virginia Senator George Allen.

He was THE man whom many of the sharpest and most experienced political folks I ever met and trusted in Washington thought would be standing exactly where John McCain is right now.