Saturday, January 26, 2008

The Democratic Race

National Journal: A very interesting article on the Democratic Race, lets hope the article is right when it says about the election process, " Nasty, brutish, and long is an ominous combination for Democrats. " Lets hope Obama gets tougher with the Bill and Hillary Clinton and wins the nomination and if up against Romney beats him, if its Hillary the other way around.

Florida Polls - Update



Its election day on tuesday in Florida, as stated my prediction that Romney should win by a healthy margin, but lets have a look at the latest polls from Florida, the RCP average of Polls has the following result, McCain 26.1%, Romney 25.6%, Giuliani 17.7% , looking at the individual polls the race is quite close between McCain and Romney, the margin between them is from a tie to 3% lead for McCain. Thus my prediction is running counter to individual polls and the average of polls from RCP. One simple reason for this, MONEY, unlike the early states, Florida is about getting your political adds on the TV, big state, people get their views from the TV. Thus still sticking with Romney.

Bill Clinton v Elite Media

Vanity Fair: Has a go at the former President, nice to see that the Elite Media finally see the Clinton Machine for what it is, power and winning, dignity out of the window as long as the Clinton's win.

Edwards for A.G ?


Robert Novak: Reports that Obama is thinking of placing John Edwards as Attorney General if elected President. This is a very bad idea, its like putting Bill Clinton in charge of a bordello. Edwards would pander so much to left it could cost Obama his re -election.

Romney Money



Time: Looks at the Romney spending during the election, he outs spent the rest of the filed, the article states the following on Romney and Florida, " But Florida is the first state money really can buy. " As predicted I think Florida will go for Romney, Romney has the money to spend and he is spending it like its confetti, Romney then can challenge on Super Tuesday, its down to the delegate count in the end.