Author Topic: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread  (Read 45125 times)

Soul Crusher

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #200 on: June 22, 2011, 04:52:19 AM »
Poll: 3 in 10 sure they'll vote Obama (Americans rejecting Obama's Socialist Agenda)
Politico ^ | 6/22/2011 | By JENNIFER EPSTEIN




Americans are growing increasingly more frustrated with President Barack Obama’s handling of the economy and only 3 in 10 say they are certain they will vote to re-elect him in 2012, a new poll finds.

Just 23 percent of those surveyed for a Bloomberg News poll released Wednesday say they are hopeful about the economy because they see signs of improvement, while 25 percent say they are fearful things are getting worse and 51 percent are cautious because nothing seems to be happening.

Those signs of economic pessimism aren’t helping Obama’s reelection bid.

Sixty-one percent of Americans say they believe the president will have had a chance to make the economy “substantially better” by the end of 2012, while 37 percent say he won’t have. Forty-four percent of Americans say they are worse off than they were when Obama took office, while 34 percent say they are better off and 21 percent say they are doing about the same.

While 30 percent of Americans say they will vote for Obama, 36 percent say they definitely won’t vote for him. Among likely independent voters surveyed, just 23 percent say they are certain they will vote for Obama while 36 percent say they are sure they will seek out another candidate.


(Excerpt) Read more at politico.com ...


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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #201 on: June 24, 2011, 07:31:09 AM »
Barack Obama declares support for gay rights but not marriage (the rookie Hussein gets heckled)
Telegraph ^ | 6/24/11




Barack Obama declares support for gay rights but not marriage

Barack Obama has touted his efforts to advance gay rights and promised further progress, but stopped short of declaring his support for legalising same-sex marriage.

7:00AM BST 24 Jun 2011


The US president received an enthusiastic reception from gay supporters at a New York fundraiser, but a few dozen gay rights protesters outside the hotel and a handful of hecklers inside the ballroom where he spoke served as reminders of frustration that he has not done more for their cause.


"I believe that gay couples deserve the same legal rights as any other couple in this country," Mr Obama said to loud applause from a crowd of about 600 at the "Gala with the Gay Community" event.


**SNIP**


Several people briefly heckled the president's speech, screaming, "Say yes to marriage!" when he described his initiatives on gay rights.


About 30 gay rights protesters gathered outside the hotel, chanting, "Obama, Obama, let mama marry mama."


Louis Flores, 38, said he was "angry and disappointed" that Mr Obama had not done more on gay marriage. "We should all be holding the president to his campaign promise."


(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #202 on: June 24, 2011, 08:07:14 AM »
President Obama and the re-election panic of 2012
Cedar Rapids Gazette ^ | June 23 2011 | Bob Haus


________________________ ________________________ __

When you step back and look at the news over the past several weeks, you’d have to come to the conclusion that President Barack Obama is in pretty serious electoral trouble. He and his Administration know it, right down to his last czar.

- The American economy is anemic at best. We are a full year past our “Summer of Recovery” that President Obama promised. He’s admitted that “shovel ready projects” were harder to find than he anticipated, and in fact they really never existed anyway.

- The President has embroiled us in yet another foreign conflict, Libya, which has all the outward signs of serious mission creep and a clear lack of focus. He’s even overruled his White House legal advisors on Congress’ role in the “conflict”, and is attempting to push the War Powers Act further than President Lyndon Johnson did during Vietnam. He’s starting to make President Richard Nixon look relatively isolationist.

- The much vaunted Wall Street reforms haven’t reformed anything, except pushing crushing new regulations and government mandated fees on America’s small financial institutions…the very institutions that should be infusing capital into America’s small businesses.


- The days of massive federal stimulus spending are gone, and the states are now left to clean up the mess from the Administration’s binge.

Electoral speed bumps and sinkholes await him in virtually every important state in the country. Ruy Teixeira wrote yesterday about President Obama’s very real problem with the white working class:

There will be a lot of white working class voters showing up at the polls next November, and the degree to which they support (or abandon) President Obama could very well make or break his reelection.

In 2008, during his otherwise-solid election victory, Obama lost the white working class vote by 18 points. In 2010, however, things got much worse: Congressional Democrats’ experienced a catastrophic 30 point deficit among the same group. While the first number is a figure Obama could live with repeating, the second could very well prove fatal.

With 14.9 million Americans out of work, this potential electoral fatality becomes very real. The picture is even worse for the President when you consider the “real unemployment rate,” the number of unemployed and underemployed who want full time work, stands at 18.6% of the American workforce.

By a ten point margin, Americans think they are worse off now than when President Obama was elected. Two-thirds of the American public thinks the country is headed in the wrong direction.


The Obama Panic has kicked into high gear. The President has announced that he’s pulling the “surge” troops out of Afghanistan, accelerating the withdrawal of our troops. He’s also planning to release 30 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve…which will fuel the United States for less than two days. And these actions were taken over the objection of his military advisors, and despite the fact that the price of gasoline has dropped for over 20 consecutive days.

The President is flummoxed. More “beer summits” and golf outings are unlikely to stop this slide. Nothing in his career has seemingly prepared him for the Presidency.

Americans are quickly making up their minds on the President, if they haven’t already done so. Soaring oratory and lofty catchphrases don’t matter much when you don’t have a job.


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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #203 on: June 24, 2011, 09:55:45 AM »
What Obama donors ate last night
Politico ^ | 6/23/11 | Caitlin McDevitt


________________________ ________________________


What did Obama supporters get for $35,800-a-plate at Thursday night’s DNC fundraising dinner at Manhattan’s swanky Daniel restaurant?

The menu included Maine lobster salad with roasted beets, a duo of Black Angus beef, braised short ribs with spinach and roasted tenderloin with stuffed potato and hen of the woods.The wines poured: a 2009 Sandhi Santa Barbara Chardonnay ($28 per bottle according to the winery’s website) and a 2008 Copain Anderson Valley Pinot Noir Tous Ensembles (also under $30 per bottle according to pricing online.)For dessert, guests were treated to


(Excerpt) Read more at politico.com ...





________________________ ______________________


Obama is for the regular working guy?   ::)  ::)

roccoginge

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #204 on: June 24, 2011, 11:04:35 AM »
There should be a Democratic primary also.

Dos Equis

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #205 on: June 25, 2011, 08:27:49 AM »

garebear

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #206 on: June 27, 2011, 03:22:45 PM »
Is that all the information that you guys can come up with?
G

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #207 on: June 27, 2011, 03:24:16 PM »
Obama is going to lose in 2012 like dukakakis did. 

Vince G, CSN MFT

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #208 on: June 27, 2011, 05:08:17 PM »
What Obama donors ate last night
Politico ^ | 6/23/11 | Caitlin McDevitt


________________________ ________________________


What did Obama supporters get for $35,800-a-plate at Thursday night’s DNC fundraising dinner at Manhattan’s swanky Daniel restaurant?

The menu included Maine lobster salad with roasted beets, a duo of Black Angus beef, braised short ribs with spinach and roasted tenderloin with stuffed potato and hen of the woods.The wines poured: a 2009 Sandhi Santa Barbara Chardonnay ($28 per bottle according to the winery’s website) and a 2008 Copain Anderson Valley Pinot Noir Tous Ensembles (also under $30 per bottle according to pricing online.)For dessert, guests were treated to


(Excerpt) Read more at politico.com ...





________________________ ______________________


Obama is for the regular working guy?   ::)  ::)


I've been to the Republican Fundraisers and they serve just about the same food.  If you're paying 38,000 a plate then they are not going to be serving tacos and kool-aid


BTW, I wasn't a guest.  I just did security....good tips.   ;D
A

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #209 on: June 27, 2011, 05:18:49 PM »
Vince - you think if you said you were a major supporter of obamas and drove 50 people to the polls yet didn't have the cash to attend and only had 100 dollars they would let you in? 

Vince G, CSN MFT

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #210 on: June 27, 2011, 05:38:28 PM »
Vince - you think if you said you were a major supporter of obamas and drove 50 people to the polls yet didn't have the cash to attend and only had 100 dollars they would let you in? 

There's no doubt that all of these $38,000 fundraiser dinners that both the Democrats and Republicans are for the benefit of lobbyists and special interest groups to advance their agendas.  That's just the way politics work.  A large donation carries influence on laws that are being past. 

The key to fundraising is to have a method for everyone.  Rich people eat fancy dinners at ballrooms, middle class citizens gets an outdoor barbecue and maybe a handshake, and poor folks get to watch TV and hear them debate. 

See how it works.  The wealthy run the country, the middle fights for the scraps, and the poor just hopes and prays for better. 
A

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #211 on: June 29, 2011, 03:36:46 PM »
WASH POST: WHITE HOUSE CHEF FOR SALE; OBAMA COURTS BIG DONORS
http://www.drudgereport.com ^
Posted on June 28, 2011 3:54:17 PM EDT by kcvl

President Obama and top White House aides are waging a behind-the-scenes push to win over skeptical big-dollar donors — whose early money is needed to help fund a dramatic summertime expansion of his battleground-state machinery.

officials are working to broaden Obama’s network of “bundlers,” the well-connected rainmakers tasked with soliciting big checks from wealthy donors, while seeking to preserve the aura of a grass-roots movement by luring back the kind of small Internet donations that helped shatter fundraising records four years ago.

Obama and his aides are leveraging every asset available to a sitting president — from access to top West Wing officials to a possible food tasting with the White House chef.

Much of the fundraising in recent weeks has occurred at targeted events designed to appeal to specific groups, many of which have expressed frustration with administration policies, including Jews, gays and business leaders. Obama has attended 28 fundraisers from coast to coast — a pace that could continue, or even accelerate, over the next several months.

The West Wing charm offensive shows how Obama’s White House, which has eschewed Clinton-style traditions of feeding donor egos with Lincoln bedroom overnights and frequent phone calls from the president, is adjusting itself for a campaign that needs to overcome low approval ratings and a sour economy.

“They were more skewed toward their base,” said Steven Green, a former Samsonite chief executive and donor to Bill and Hillary Clinton’s campaigns who hosted an Obama fundraiser in Miami this month. “Now they realize that there is this large group of donors out there, and for better or for worse, they need to cater to them. To be frank, I think it’s somewhat new to them, and they’re not quite sure how to address that donor base. [The donors] are pretty high-maintenance.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/obama-pushing-behind-scenes-to-win-over-big-dollar-donors/2011/06/24/AGO5NGoH_print.html

(Excerpt) Read more at drudgereport.com ...

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #212 on: June 29, 2011, 03:43:10 PM »
Obama Films Campaign Ad In White House, Possibly Violating FEC Laws?
realclearpolitics.com ^ | June 27, 2011
Posted on June 27, 2011 9:58:50 PM EDT by Free ThinkerNY

Obama 2012 campaign: President Obama himself makes an unexpected announcement about the upcoming "Dinner with Barack" contest.

To participate in the contest you need to donate at least $5 to the campaign and your name will be raffled off to enjoy a dinner with the President, airfare and accommodations included. In a new web video, Obama announced Vice President Joe Biden will also be attending the dinner.

There is one problem, however.

This campaign ad was most likely recorded in the White House, which may have violated FEC campaign finance laws.

(Excerpt) Read more at realclearpolitics.com ...

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #213 on: June 29, 2011, 03:56:52 PM »
Obama Campaign Signals Fundraising Fail
by KEITH KOFFLER on JUNE 29, 2011, 12:54 PM
The Obama campaign appears to be signaling that its fundraising totals for the second quarter of the year – the first since President Obama announced for reelection – will not be as robust as the campaign would like.

In an email to campaign supporters today, President Obama unmistakably sought to downplay money.

We’re closing the books on the first fundraising quarter of the 2012 race at midnight tomorrow.

A lot of folks will be interpreting our numbers as a measure of this campaign’s support.

They’re not wrong, but they are wrong about why.

We measure our success not in dollars but in people — in the number of everyday Americans who’ve chosen to give whatever they can afford because they know we’ve got more work to do.*

Campaign officials revealed during the last week that they have set a target of raising $60 million for the quarter from at least 450,000 donors.

But even $60 million would not seem to be a very ambitious goal for Obama. He raised the same amount during the second quarter of 2007, just after he announced his 2008 campaign.

The campaign is hoping to raise up to $1 billion total for the 2012 election.

The email reiterates a call for donors to give at least $5 in order to be automatically entered into a raffle for dinner with Obama and Vice President Biden.

* Bolding is mine, not the campaign’s.



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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #214 on: June 29, 2011, 04:03:23 PM »
Jewish Dems losing faith in Obama
By: Ben Smith
June 29, 2011 04:32 AM EDT

David Ainsman really began to get worried about President Barack Obama’s standing with his fellow Jewish Democrats when a recent dinner with his wife and two other couples — all Obama voters in 2008 — nearly turned into a screaming match.

Ainsman, a prominent Democratic lawyer and Pittsburgh Jewish community leader, was trying to explain that Obama had just been offering Israel a bit of “tough love” in his May 19 speech on the Arab Spring. His friends disagreed — to say the least.

One said he had the sense that Obama “took the opportunity to throw Israel under the bus.” Another, who swore he wasn’t getting his information from the mutually despised Fox News, admitted he’d lost faith in the president.

If several dozen interviews with POLITICO are any indication, a similar conversation is taking place in Jewish communities across the country. Obama’s speech last month seems to have crystallized the doubts many pro-Israel Democrats had about Obama in 2008 in a way that could, on the margins, cost the president votes and money in 2012 and will not be easy to repair. (See also: President Obama's Middle East speech: Details complicate 'simple' message)

“It’s less something specific than that these incidents keep on coming,” said Ainsman.

The immediate controversy sparked by the speech was Obama’s statement that Israel should embrace the country’s 1967 borders, with “land swaps,” as a basis for peace talks. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seized on the first half of that phrase and the threat of a return to what Israelis sometimes refer to as “Auschwitz borders.” (Related: Obama defends border policy)

Obama’s Jewish allies stressed the second half: that land swaps would — as American negotiators have long contemplated — give Israel security in its narrow middle, and the deal would give the country international legitimacy and normalcy.

But the noisy fray after the speech mirrored any number of smaller controversies. Politically hawkish Jews and groups such as the Republican Jewish Coalition and the Emergency Committee for Israel pounded Obama in news releases. White House surrogates and staffers defended him, as did the plentiful American Jews who have long wanted the White House to lean harder on Israel’s conservative government.

Based on the conversations with POLITICO, it’s hard to resist the conclusion that some kind of tipping point has been reached.

Most of those interviewed were center-left American Jews and Obama supporters — and many of them Democratic donors. On some core issues involving Israel, they’re well to the left of Netanyahu and many Americans: They refer to the “West Bank,” not to “Judea and Samaria,” fervently supported the Oslo peace process and Israel’s unilateral withdrawal from Gaza and believe in the urgency of creating a Palestinian state. (Arena: Are Jewish voters still pro-Obama?)

But they are also fearful for Israel at a moment of turmoil in a hostile region when the moderate Palestinian Authority is joining forces with the militantly anti-Israel Hamas.

“It’s a hot time, because Israel is isolated in the world and, in particular, with the Obama administration putting pressure on Israel,” said Rabbi Neil Cooper, leader of Temple Beth Hillel-Beth El in Philadelphia’s Main Line suburbs, who recently lectured his large, politically connected congregation on avoiding turning Israel into a partisan issue.

Some of these traditional Democrats now say, to their own astonishment, that they’ll consider voting for a Republican in 2012. And many of those who continue to support Obama said they find themselves constantly on the defensive in conversations with friends.

“I’m hearing a tremendous amount of skittishness from pro-Israel voters who voted for Obama and now are questioning whether they did the right thing or not,” said Betsy Sheerr, the former head of an abortion-rights-supporting, pro-Israel PAC in Philadelphia, who said she continues to support Obama, with only mild reservations. “I’m hearing a lot of ‘Oh, if we’d only elected Hillary instead.’”

Even Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who spoke to POLITICO to combat the story line of Jewish defections, said she’d detected a level of anxiety in a recent visit to a senior center in her South Florida district.

“They wanted some clarity on the president’s view,” she said. “I answered their questions and restored some confidence that maybe was a little shaky, [rebutted] misinformation and the inaccurate reporting about what was said.”

Wasserman Schultz and other top Democrats say the storm will pass. (Related: Debbie Wasserman Schultz: Jewish voters will stick with Obama)

They point out to anyone who will listen that beyond the difficult personal relationship of Obama and Netanyahu, beyond a tense, stalled peace process, there’s a litany of good news for supporters of Israel: Military cooperation is at an all-time high; Obama has supplied Israel with a key missile defense system; the U.S. boycotted an anti-racism conference seen as anti-Israel; and America is set to spend valuable international political capital beating back a Palestinian independence declaration at the United Nations in September.

The qualms that many Jewish Democrats express about Obama date back to his emergence onto the national scene in 2007. Though he had warm relations with Chicago’s Jewish community, he had also been friends with leading Palestinian activists, unusual in the Democratic establishment. And though he seemed to be trying to take a conventionally pro-Israel stand, he was a novice at the complicated politics of the America-Israel relationship, and his sheer inexperience showed at times.

At the 2007 AIPAC Policy Conference, Obama professed his love for Israel but then seemed, - to some who were there for his informal talk - to betray a kind of naivete about the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians: “The biggest enemy” he said, using the same rhetoric he applied to American politics, was “not just terrorists, it’s not just Hezbollah, it’s not just Hamas — it’s also cynicism.”

At the next year’s AIPAC conference, he again botched the conflict’s code, committing himself to an “undivided Jerusalem” and then walking it back the next day.

Those doubts and gaffes lingered, even for many of the majority who supported him.

“There’s an inclination in the community to not trust this president’s gut feel on Israel and every time he sets out on a path that’s troubling you do get this ‘ouch’ reaction from the Jewish Community because they’re distrustful of him,” said the president of a major national Jewish organization, who declined to be quoted by name to avoid endangering his ties to the White House.

Many of Obama’s supporters, then and now, said they were unworried about the political allegiance of Jewish voters. Every four years, they say, Republicans claim to be making inroads with American Jews, and every four years, voters and donors go overwhelmingly for the Democrats, voting on a range of issues that include, but aren’t limited to Israel.

But while that pattern has held, Obama certainly didn’t take anything for granted. His 2008 campaign dealt with misgivings with a quiet, intense, and effective round of communal outreach.

“When Obama was running, there was a lot of concern among the guys in my group at shul, who are all late-30s to mid-40s, who I hang out with and daven with and go to dinner with, about Obama,” recalled Scott Matasar, a Cleveland lawyer who’s active in Jewish organizations.

Matasar remembers his friends’ worries over whether Obama was “going to be OK for Israel.” But then Obama met with the community’s leaders during a swing through Cleveland in the primary, and the rabbi at the denominationally conservative synagogue Matasar attends — “a real ardent Zionist and Israel defender” — came back to synagogue convinced.

“That put a lot of my concerns to rest for my friends who are very much Israel hawks but who, like me, aren’t one-issue voters.”

Now Matasar says he’s appalled by Obama’s “rookie mistakes and bumbling” and the reported marginalization of a veteran peace negotiator, Dennis Ross, in favor of aides who back a tougher line on Netanyahu. He’s the most pro-Obama member of his social circle but is finding the president harder to defend.

“He’d been very ham-handed in the way he presented [the 1967 border announcement] and the way he sprung this on Netanyahu,” Matasar said.

A Philadelphia Democrat and pro-Israel activist, Joe Wolfson, recalled a similar progression.

“What got me past Obama in the recent election was Dennis Ross — I heard him speak in Philadelphia and I had many of my concerns allayed,” Wolfson said. “Now, I think I’m like many pro-Israel Democrats now who are looking to see whether we can vote Republican.”

That, perhaps, is the crux of the political question: The pro-Israel Jewish voters and activists who spoke to POLITICO are largely die-hard Democrats, few of whom have ever cast a vote for a Republican to be president. Does the new wave of Jewish angst matter?

One place it might is fundraising. Many of the Clinton-era Democratic mega-donors who make Israel their key issue, the most prominent of whom is the Los Angeles Israeli-American billionaire Haim Saban, never really warmed to Obama, though Saban says he will vote for the Democrat and write him a check if asked.

A top-dollar Washington fundraiser aimed at Jewish donors in Miami last week raised more than $1 million from 80 people, and while one prominent Jewish activist said the DNC had to scramble to fill seats, seven-figure fundraisers are hard to sneer at.

Even people writing five-figure checks to Obama, though, appeared in need of a bit of bucking up.

“We were very reassured,” Randi Levine, who attended the event with her husband, Jeffrey, a New York real estate developer, told POLITICO.

Philadelphia Jewish Democrats are among the hosts of another top-dollar event June 30. David Cohen, a Comcast executive and former top aide to former Gov. Ed Rendell, said questions about Obama’s position on Israel have been a regular, if not dominant, feature of his attempts to recruit donors.

“I takes me about five minutes of talking through the president’s position and the president’s speech, and the uniform reaction has been, ‘I guess you’re right, that’s not how I saw it covered,’” he said.

Others involved in the Philadelphia event, however, said they think Jewish doubts are taking a fundraising toll.

“We’re going to raise a ton of money, but I don’t know if we’re going to hit our goals,” said Daniel Berger, a lawyer who is firmly in the “peace camp” and said he blamed the controversy on Netanyahu’s intransigence.

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #215 on: June 30, 2011, 09:20:45 PM »
Obama Jabs Republicans and Raises Cash in City of Brotherly Love
June 30, 2011 7:13 PM

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ABC News' Jon Garcia and Devin Dwyer report:

PHILADEPHIA - President Obama served up some political red meat to campaign contributors in Philly tonight, bashing his Republican challengers while picking up more than a million dollars for his campaign and the Democratic party.

“This campaign is at its early stages, I’ve got a day job, I’ve got other things to do,” Obama told about 800 supporters at a downtown hotel ballroom. “But while I’m working there will be candidates parading around the country. And they’re gonna do what they do which is they’re gonna attack here in Philadelphia, they’re gonna attack. They won’t have a plan but they’re going to attack.”

But the American people, Obama insisted, didn’t want to hear the back-and-forth of politics “as we’ve come to know it.”

“They are less interested in hearing us exchange insults about the past, they want us to exchange ideas about the future,” he said. “That’s the contest I’m looking forward to because I know that’s the contest that America needs and, by the way, that’s the contest that we will win.”

“I know there’s some of you who are frustrated because we haven’t gotten everything done that we said we were gonna do in two and a half years,” Obama explained.  

“There are times when I feel frustrated but we knew this wasn’t going to be easy. … There will be times where we will stumble just like we stumbled sometimes during the first campaign,” he said.

“It’s only been two and a half years. I got five and a half years more to go,” he said to wild applause.

His speech was punctuated twice by hecklers, including some AIDS activists who have now made it a practice to interrupt Obama’s campaign events.  Both times the hecklers were shouted down by Obama supporters.

Obama was also to address a smaller crowd at a bigger-dollar fundraiser at the home of David Cohen, a vice president at Comcast Corp., in the Mt. Airy neighborhood of Philadelphia.  

The fundraisers, no. 34 and 35 for Obama this year, come as part of an 11th hour push for donations before the close of the first major financial reporting period of the 2012 cycle.

The campaign had set a goal of $60 million by June 30. It's required to formally report its total by July 15 with the Federal Election Commission.

A ticker on the campaign's website showed more than 489,000 individual contributors to the campaign so far - well ahead of 180,000 contributors at this point in 2007.  During the same quarter in 2007, Obama raised $33.1 million.

Pennsylvanians have a history of opening their wallets for Obama. During the 2008 campaign, he raised $11.4 million in Quaker State, including $8.5 million in the Philadelphia metro area, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.






What a farce.     Disgusting. 

garebear

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #216 on: June 30, 2011, 09:24:20 PM »
Obama Jabs Republicans and Raises Cash in City of Brotherly Love
June 30, 2011 7:13 PM

PrintRSSSHARE:EmailMore
ABC News' Jon Garcia and Devin Dwyer report:

PHILADEPHIA - President Obama served up some political red meat to campaign contributors in Philly tonight, bashing his Republican challengers while picking up more than a million dollars for his campaign and the Democratic party.

“This campaign is at its early stages, I’ve got a day job, I’ve got other things to do,” Obama told about 800 supporters at a downtown hotel ballroom. “But while I’m working there will be candidates parading around the country. And they’re gonna do what they do which is they’re gonna attack here in Philadelphia, they’re gonna attack. They won’t have a plan but they’re going to attack.”

But the American people, Obama insisted, didn’t want to hear the back-and-forth of politics “as we’ve come to know it.”

“They are less interested in hearing us exchange insults about the past, they want us to exchange ideas about the future,” he said. “That’s the contest I’m looking forward to because I know that’s the contest that America needs and, by the way, that’s the contest that we will win.”

“I know there’s some of you who are frustrated because we haven’t gotten everything done that we said we were gonna do in two and a half years,” Obama explained.  

“There are times when I feel frustrated but we knew this wasn’t going to be easy. … There will be times where we will stumble just like we stumbled sometimes during the first campaign,” he said.

“It’s only been two and a half years. I got five and a half years more to go,” he said to wild applause.

His speech was punctuated twice by hecklers, including some AIDS activists who have now made it a practice to interrupt Obama’s campaign events.  Both times the hecklers were shouted down by Obama supporters.

Obama was also to address a smaller crowd at a bigger-dollar fundraiser at the home of David Cohen, a vice president at Comcast Corp., in the Mt. Airy neighborhood of Philadelphia.  

The fundraisers, no. 34 and 35 for Obama this year, come as part of an 11th hour push for donations before the close of the first major financial reporting period of the 2012 cycle.

The campaign had set a goal of $60 million by June 30. It's required to formally report its total by July 15 with the Federal Election Commission.

A ticker on the campaign's website showed more than 489,000 individual contributors to the campaign so far - well ahead of 180,000 contributors at this point in 2007.  During the same quarter in 2007, Obama raised $33.1 million.

Pennsylvanians have a history of opening their wallets for Obama. During the 2008 campaign, he raised $11.4 million in Quaker State, including $8.5 million in the Philadelphia metro area, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.






What a farce.     Disgusting. 
Obama could physically beat you. I mean, with his hands. Just kick your ass, kid.
G

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #217 on: June 30, 2011, 09:29:56 PM »
I hav zero doubt I could take him in a physical confrontation.   

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #218 on: July 01, 2011, 06:53:15 AM »
..Obama campaign rollout hasn’t all gone as planned
Political Reporter
By Rachel Rose Hartman | The Ticket – Thu, Jun 30, 2011

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-campaign-rollout-hasn-t-gone-planned-153618053.html;_ylt=AuAekXxKvvmiCxY1uZejlyKyFz4D;_ylu=X3oDMTM5YjdtNTBqBHBrZwM1MjQzY2YzYy1lOWM5LTM2NTctYmZlYy0zNjc4NTkxNGMzOTMEcG9zAzUEc2VjA01lZGlhVG9wU3RvcnkEdmVyA2FmMzM4MjgwLWE





Obama at a DNC fundraiser in May (Charles Dharapak/AP)
It's been a little less than three months since President Obama announced his 2012 re-election campaign. While that carefully choreographed rollout was hardly a surprise, the Obama campaign team has run into some early unexpected bumps in run-up to 2012.

Just this week, the Obama camp was forced to defend using the White House as a backdrop for a re-election campaign commercial after some questioned whether the White House was improperly blurring the lines between the presidency and the campaign. (The Obama camp, for the record, cited past precedent and said there was nothing improper about the White House imagery in the spot.)

Below we review this and other recent presidential campaign blips:

• Filming at the White House: National Review Online's Jim Geharty on Monday questioned the apparent politicization of the White House after  a newly released campaign commercial used it as a backdrop to promote a raffle for dinner with Obama. Other news outlets questioned the legality of the filming and whether it violated campaign finance laws. But the White House quickly stepped in to defend the location choice, telling Real Clear Politics the following: "The raffle isn't the type of fundraising that would be off-limits under the law, there was no direct appeal for donations, the video was shot in the residence portion of the White House, and his predecessors have acted similarly."

You can watch the video in question below:


• Report: concern over small donors: The Obama campaign has decided to strongly target wealthy donors under the expectation that the grassroots small donors who boosted him to a win in 2008 may not step up this cycle, the Los Angeles Times reported this week. Both major parties in this cycle are pushing hard to reel in big-ticket donors in the wake of the 2010 Supreme Court Citizens United ruling, which legalized some political groups to raise unlimited anonymous funds. The new Obama program, called "Presidential Partners," asks supporters to donate $75,800 to the Obama Victory Fund (a joint project with the Democratic National Committee). Donors in this elite class would be maxing out on their allowable contributions to political parties for the 2012 cycle, meaning they can't donate to congressional party committees. The Obama campaign followed up with the Times to dispute the newspaper's findings saying the president's upcoming finance report will show that the number of small donors has dramatically increased compared to this time in 2008.

• Memo revealed granting appearance of donor access: The Obama campaign instructed the White House to give a top donor the appearance of access to the administration, the Huffington Post reported earlier this month. A private memo indicated that the donor, Full Sail University CEO Ed Haddock, was to be made to feel as if he had a direct "in" with the administration. "Ed needs and wants an ongoing point of contact inside the White House to periodically give input," the memo reportedly stated. The memo raised questions about the Hatch Act, which technically prohibits federal employees from engaging in partisan political activities. "It is an inappropriate memo," Fred Wertheimer, Founder and  president of the group Democracy 21 told the Huffington Post. "And as we head into the campaign season and the political money raising season the Obama campaign should be extra careful about creating the potential impression that access is being provided for campaign contributions and fund raising."

• Economic woes drag down poll numbers: When the president announced the killing of Osama bin Laden, the development was widely hailed as not only an international victory but a major coup for Obama's 2012 election campaign. But any bin Laden-related polling bounce for Obama quickly faded as unemployment and economic woes continued to grip the American public. A poll released this month showed Obama tied with former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney due to voter anxiety about the economy. This week, Obama is busy trying to broker an 11th-hour deal with Congress to raise the national debt ceiling.

UPDATE 3:20pmEST: Story updated to include the Los Angeles Times' follow-up story in which the Obama campaign claimed smaller donors are on the rise compared to figures for this time period in 2008.

Other popular Yahoo! News stories:

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #219 on: July 01, 2011, 06:57:44 AM »
I hav zero doubt I could take him in a physical confrontation.   

What is your credentials?

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #220 on: July 01, 2011, 07:01:59 AM »
What is your credentials?


Black Belt  Oyama Karate (3 years)

A year of BJJ

2nd Degree in current art been training for 5 years. 

Good natural lift numbers. 


 
 

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #221 on: July 01, 2011, 01:02:54 PM »

Campaigner-in-Chief Scolds Congress for Work Ethic
By Chris Stirewalt


Published June 30, 2011
| FoxNews.com


“They're in one week, they're out one week. And then they're saying, ‘Obama has got to step in. You need to be here.’ I’ve been here. I’ve been doing Afghanistan and bin Laden and the Greek crisis. You stay here. Let’s get it done.”

-- A visibly indignant President Obama talking to reporters about claims that he has shown insufficient leadership on his request to increase the federal government’s $14.3 trillion debt limit.

President Obama told reporters that he found it “amusing” when people say he needs to show more leadership on the fiscal impasse in Washington, but there was little mirth evident in the president on Wednesday.

Obama swiped and swatted at Republicans for intransigence, reprising his previous attack lines on fiscal confrontations, suggesting that Democrats were ready to make sacrifices but Republicans were radical and self-seeking. The president suggested that Republicans were just expressing opposition to tax increases to fire up their political base and get on “cable news.”

That stuff is pretty much expected in Obama’s Washington. The president often calls into question the motives of everyone but himself. Republicans, he claims, are fixated on 2012 while he is intent on governing.

Those Obamaian flourishes get bipartisan eye rolls inside the Beltway because they are so patently political themselves. Everybody in Washington is always thinking about the next election, especially the campaigner in chief.

The president is attending two fundraisers in Philadelphia tonight – the 36th and 37th fundraising events of his presidency. His wife, meanwhile, is hitting a trio of fundraising events while on an official trip to visit the families of Vermont National Guard members.

By comparison, President George W. Bush had held fewer than a half-dozen such events at this point in his first term.

As the president tries to amass another record-breaking campaign war chest, he has been pushing the envelope not just of the time he’s spending hustling cash but the lengths he’s gone to in order to do so.

Obama has come under criticism for using the White House to record a campaign video for a fundraising raffle for donors to win dinner with him and Vice President Biden. Fundraisers have also offered food tastings with the White House chef and access to other trappings of executive power as ways to lure big-dollar donors.

The Clinton scandals of selling access to the people’s house to high-dollar donors had previously squelched that kind of mercantilism, but the huge financial goals set by Team Obama are driving the administration into some riskier behavior.

Newly released White House visitors’ logs show a second Democratic National Committee event was held in the White House this year – even before the now controversial executive briefing given to Wall Street donors in March.

The Obama campaign has been trying to downplay fundraising expectations for the second quarter of the year, which ends today. Anything short of $60 million in combined fundraising for Obama’s campaign and the DNC would be a disappointment given the unprecedented lengths to which Obama has gone to raise money.

But, again, this is not a new thing. Obama has mostly been in campaign mode since taking office but frequently accuses his opponents of being politically motivated instead of being imbued with the national interest. As the election draws nearer, this line will grow increasingly strained, but it is old hat.

The new wrinkle on Wednesday was that Obama expanded the argument to actual hours on the job. He accused Congress of being neglectful of their work by taking vacations while he was busy dealing with killing Usama bin Laden and helping avoid the looming insolvency of the euro.

That was weird.

Obama played golf twice last weekend, is getting ready for a long summer vacation and has been on an increasingly active tour of 2012 swing states to give remarks about green energy, auto bailouts and stimulus spending. These are all normal things for presidents to do, but strange that Obama would cast himself as overworked and Congress as a bunch of goldbrickers.

Aside from sounding whiny, it also lays the president open to criticism for every golf outing, fundraiser, swing-state visit, family getaway and the like that he engages in. He played into the hands of his critics by framing the argument on their grounds.

It will be easy enough for Senators (except for the politically vulnerable ones who are missing out on parades and fundraisers) to stick around next week and wait for word of a deal. It will be hard for Obama to defend his schedule having now held it up as a metric by which one’s national service can be measured.



Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/06/30/campaigner-in-chief-scolds-congress-for-work-ethic/#ixzz1QsyV42aL



________________________ ________________________ __


What a farce and a fraud.   

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #222 on: July 01, 2011, 02:07:48 PM »
Posted at 10:05 PM ET, 06/30/2011
Obama raises more than $1.2 million in Philadelphia
By Perry Bacon Jr. and Cecilia Kang
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/44/post/obama-raises-more-than-1-million-in-philadelphia/2011/06/30/AGbI5nsH_blog.html





PHILADELPHIA — President Obama raised more than $1.2 million at two campaign fundraisers here Thursday night, the last events of his money-raising blitz in this early stage of the 2012 campaign.

Campaign officials said about 800 people, each giving at least $100, attended the first event, at a Hyatt hotel. Later in the evening, Comcast’s executive vice president, David L. Cohen, hosted about 120 people in his home for a dinner, each of the attendees giving at least $10,000 for Obama’s reelection campaign.

Among the attendees were Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter (D). Dinner was arranged by restaurateur Stephen Starr, whose popular eateries include Morimoto and Buddakan.

Cohen, a longtime Democratic operative, has successfully sheparded the regulatory review of Comcast’s merger with NBC Universal earlier this year.

He is not the only high-tech or telecom executive to show early support for Obama’s reelection bid. In San Francisco last spring, Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff hosted a fundraiser for the president in his home, and Google executive Marissa Mayer has hosted a reported $30,000-a-head Democratic fundraiser featuring Obama last October.

The money raised in Obama’s Philadelphia events will count toward the president’s total for the second quarter of 2011, the first three months of fundraising for his reelection campaign. His aides have said they are looking to raise more than $60 million during this period, which could be more than the entire Republican field combined.

In his remarks, Obama stuck largely to his usual campaign speeches, making little reference to the battle in Washington over raising the debt ceiling and reducing the long-term federal budget deficit.

“I’m prepared to bring our deficit down by trillions of dollars. That’s with a ‘t’ – trillions,” he said at the Hyatt. “But I will not reduce our deficit by sacrificing our kids’ education. I’m not going to reduce our deficit by eliminating medical research being done by our scientists. I won’t sacrifice rebuilding our roads and our bridges and our railways and our airports. I want Philadelphia to have the best, not the worst.”


________________________ ________________________ ____



Now we know why Halperin was fired.     Disgusting. 


FUCK YOU EVERY OBAMA VOTER AND SUPPORTER ON THIS BOARD.     

Vince G, CSN MFT

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #223 on: July 01, 2011, 05:01:31 PM »

Black Belt  Oyama Karate (3 years)

A year of BJJ

2nd Degree in current art been training for 5 years. 

Good natural lift numbers. 




 
 



Obama: Secret Service, Seal Team 6...hell the entire military

Advantage:  Obama ;D
A

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Re: Official Barack Obama Re-Election Thread
« Reply #224 on: July 01, 2011, 06:27:01 PM »
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Obama's Goose is Simmering
Nolan Chart ^ | May 27, 2011 | EJ Moosa
Posted on July 1, 2011 6:48:08 PM EDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Over the next year you are going to hear a lot of rhetoric about Obama and how no one can beat him. About how weak the Republican field of candidates are, and how they are too weak to make a difference. Obama has likely already lost in 2012. He just doesn't know it yet, and those around him are unwilling to tell him.

I am going to go out on a limb (although it is a rather large solid limb from where I am sitting), and tell you that you have little to worry about(unless John McCain gets back in and wins the nomination). What's in the pot is Obama's Presidential goose.

Here's the rationale:

The economic outlook is weakening. It is weakening rather quickly. This weakening is going to show it's ugly head in the Summer and Fall of 2012. Corporate profit growth, what I believe is the key to employment growth is weakening rather rapidly. When year over year growth rates fall below 6%, private sector employment shrinks. Corporate profits today are only slightly higher than in the third quarter of 2006. With six million fewer private sector employees working today to get to the same level of profits, there is no hope to return those jobs under the current US economic structure. The rate of profit growth needed to return all those folks to work is simply not going to happen.

First quarter corporate profits were released this week. Year over year corporate profit growth slipped from 29.16% at the end of 2010 to 21.47% at the end of first quarter 2011. At this rate, we are six months from signalling a contraction in total private sector employment four quarters down the road. The growth rate was 35.37% at the end of the third quarter of 2010. This was profit growth compared to very weak quarters from the previous years. So the easy comparisons are way over.

There is nothing on the American economic horizon that would allow us to speculate that corporate profits are poised to rebound their growth over the next six months. Companies like Lowe's and Cisco and others are already drastically lowering their outlook for the rest of 2011.

Government debt, more regulations for business, Obama's administration stepping in and stopping the free movement of corporations from one state to another to improve profitability, higher fuel costs, higher food costs, and other items are just some of the reasons I feel that fewer dollars will be flowing to the bottom line, not more.

So this is what is going to turn the heat up on Obama's goose cooking as we speak. Over the next 12 months, we will hear relentlessly about the Obama recovery. We will hear about the jobs growth we have had and the Obama administration will, of course, dismiss any ideas that it is weakening. They will say it is not where they would like it, but it is headed in the right direction. They are very wrong. By surrounding himself with people that haven't a clue on what drives the private sector economy, there is no sense of cause and effect in the White House. So there are no efforts to address the problems we face in the economy. At least not real solutions that affect the real causes.

There is nothing that this administration can do in the short term to turn this around, even if they were to understand and grasp these concepts. It takes at least a year for the changes made to start to be felt within the economy. But when you have a political party such as the democrats that attacks the very item that drives job growth, and I am talking about profits, you know they do not understand. You cannot attack profits and promote job growth at the same time. At least not in the private sector.

I predict that just at the final stages of the Presidential Election cycle kick off, the often touted Obama Recovery will gasp it's last breath. The most important thing is that Obama will own this outright. The days of blaming Bush will be over. Obama may try, but we will have become immune to it's effects. He will have taken too much credit to be successful a second time at the Blame Bush game.

The Obama administration will not be able to offer any steps, plans or promises to improve the situation. If his opponents are smart, they will use snippets of his own speeches against him. The American people, once again facing higher unemployment, will have had enough. Hope for Change will not be enough.

A word or two on the Republican candidates: Those that are dropping out of the race before it has even started likely do not understand the dynamics of profits, employment growth and the economic cycle any better than Obama. So it is good they are going. If they did understand, they would realize that the last person standing in the Republican Party will be odds on favorite by September 2012.

We are simply not going to support a sitting President in office as unemployment rises. The Obama recovery was not strong enough to erase the memories of the last downturn. For most of us, these memories are painful and fresh.

While some will be shocked at the outcome for a President that was so loved by mainstream media, you will have known that Presidential goose has been cooking for months. They will blame racism, hate, greed, and anything else than can throw.

But you and I will know better.   










I think he's gone.