Breaking: Heath Shuler (D, NC) cuts and runs.

On February 2, 2012, in Barack Obama, by Cougar01

And it sounds like it’s not to run for Governor of North Carolina, either .  The relevant text: This was not an easy decision. However, I am confident that it is the right decision. It is a decision I have weighed heavily over the past few months. I have always said family comes first, and I never intended to be a career politician. I am ready to refocus my priorities and spend more time at home with my wife Nikol and two young children. Translation: redistricting had doomed Heath Shuler, anyway , and it’s a bad year to be a Democrat in North Carolina.  Just ask Bev Perdue . Moe Lane ( crosspost ) PS: Man, Charlotte’s going to be all kinds of fun during the Democrats’ convention this year, huh?  Whose idea was that, anyway?  Joe Biden’s?  It kind of feels like a Joe Biden kind of decision.

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Breaking: Heath Shuler (D, NC) cuts and runs.

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Breaking: Heath Shuler (D, NC) cuts and runs.

On February 2, 2012, in Barack Obama, by FlodinCeglinski711

And it sounds like it’s not to run for Governor of North Carolina, either .  The relevant text: This was not an easy decision. However, I am confident that it is the right decision. It is a decision I have weighed heavily over the past few months. I have always said family comes first, and I never intended to be a career politician. I am ready to refocus my priorities and spend more time at home with my wife Nikol and two young children. Translation: redistricting had doomed Heath Shuler, anyway , and it’s a bad year to be a Democrat in North Carolina.  Just ask Bev Perdue . Moe Lane ( crosspost ) PS: Man, Charlotte’s going to be all kinds of fun during the Democrats’ convention this year, huh?  Whose idea was that, anyway?  Joe Biden’s?  It kind of feels like a Joe Biden kind of decision.

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Breaking: Heath Shuler (D, NC) cuts and runs.

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Charmaine Yoest’s Victory for Life

On February 2, 2012, in Barack Obama, Congress, by DixiePeters

Sarah Kliff of The Washington Post gives credit where credit is due : After the Susan G. Komen Foundation for the Cure’s decision to defund Planned Parenthood, attention has focused on its Vice President for Policy, Karen Handel. She joined the group last January after a failed run for governor in Georgia, where she had advocated defunding Planned Parenthood. But there’s another woman who deserves equal credit: Americans United for Life President Charmaine Yoest. It’s her group that issued a report last fall, ” The Case for Investigating Planned Parenthood ,” that led to a probe by the Energy and Commerce Committee. And it’s that investigation that puts Planned Parenthood in violation of Komen’s new policy that bars funding of groups under investigation. Stipulate

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Reagan Lost First Six Contests in 1976

On February 1, 2012, in Barack Obama, Ronald Reagan, by Onoshobishobi

Every presidential campaign is different… except that it isn’t. Just a reminder amidst the hoopla that in 1976 Gerald Ford won Iowa and the next five primaries — Florida included. The calls for Ronald Reagan to withdraw were deafening. Reagan refused to withdraw. Number seven — North Carolina — was the charm. From that moment forward the race see-sawed back and forth all the way to the Kansas City Convention. I was there for that. Frenetic, fevered, a battle royal. Ford pulled it out by 117 votes. And then.… November. Ford lost.

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Reagan Lost First Six Contests in 1976

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The good news from Iowa and New Hampshire

On January 9, 2012, in Barack Obama, by Cougar01

[Posted by Karl] Lost amid the GOP’s internal squabbles is the good news on the other side of the ledger: Pres. Obama is not faring well in either Iowa or New Hampshire. According to the NBC/Marist poll , “[v]oters divide about President Obama’s job approval rating.  45% of registered voters in Iowa approve of the job the president is doing in office while 43% disapprove, and 12% are unsure.”  Oh, sure they’re unsure.  His approval rating is only 39% among Iowa independents , who are the largest bloc in the state. NBC/Marist finds worse results for Obama in New Hampshire.  Only 40% of registered voters in the Granite State approve of the job Obama is doing, while 49% disapprove (10% are “unsure”).  Only 41% of New Hampshire independents approve .  Again, that’s the largest bloc in the state. For all of the criticism Iowa and New Hampshire get, it seems like some forget they are swing states.  PPP’s Tom Jensen , looking at a potential Obama vs Romney contest in swing states including IA and NH, tried to be optimistic, but added an important caveat: [O]ur polls and probably everyone’s polls are actually worse for Obama than they look right now.  That’s because a disproportionate number of the undecideds in Obama/Romney polling are Republicans. Romney’s not their first choice for the nomination so they’re being stubborn and saying they’re undecided for the general, even though it’s pretty much a certainty that they’ll end up voting for the GOP nominee in the end.  We saw this situation in reverse in 2008, where strong partisans of Obama and Clinton refused to say in early polls that they’d vote for the party nominee if their favored candidate didn’t get it. Of course pretty much all of those folks ended up voting for Obama in the end. Right now when you look at the undecideds in Obama/Romney nationally only 18% of them approve of Obama while 63% disapprove… I also suspect Jensen’s analysis — that Obama will only need just one out of Ohio, Florida, Pennsylvania or North Carolina to win — is overly optimistic for Obama.  He used PPP’s numbers from all of 2011, while the most recent USA Today/Gallup Swing States poll  had Obama losing to Romney (and Gingrich), even before adjusting for the “undecided” factor. Some pundits have cutely quipped during and after various GOP debates that the winner was Obama.  The polls in Iowa and New Hampshire suggest otherwise. –Karl

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The good news from Iowa and New Hampshire

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