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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!On his radio show today, Rush Limbaugh listed his "Top 10 Moderate Moments" -- a list he first introduced on Nov. 3, 2009. According to Limbaugh, these are the "moderate moments" to remember: 10: "Newt Gingrich doing a PSA on global warming with Nancy Pelosi in 2008." 9. "Bush-Quayle '92." 8. "Dole-Kemp '96." 7. "Ford-Dole '76. Do you see a pattern here?" 6. "Jumpin' Jim Jeffords jumps from the Republican Party." 5. "Arlen Specter switches parties." 4. "Richard Nixon resigns in disgrace." 3. "Dede Scozzafava endorses the Democrat, Owens, in New York 23." 2. The McCain campaign of ...
Former House Majority Leader Dick Armey, a leader among conservatives vying to set the direction of the Republican party, said a 10-point checklist being proposed to determine whether a candidate merits GOP support is "not a litmus test" but an effort to ensure the party's ability to win future elections by presenting a true alternative. ...
RINOs and conservadems are cutting quite a swath these days -- making demands, frustrating their colleagues, wielding clout and even influencing elections. Not surprisingly, the nicknames aren't terms of endearment. GOP conservatives disparage GOP moderates as Republicans In Name Only. Democratic liberals apply the conservadems label to party brethren they consider obstructions to President Obama's agenda.It would make perfect sense for a lot of the misfits to switch parties. But that would mean sacrificing their dissident status and the attention that goes with it. It would also mean less ...
New York Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava was chosen by upstate party leaders to run for an open House seat in a special election last week. National Republican leaders decided she was too liberal and generated so much money and support for third party conservative Doug Hoffman that Scozzafava dropped out the Saturday before the election and endorsed the Democrat. She talked to Politics Daily's Jill Lawrence Wednesday about her future and the future of the GOP. ...
There was a piece in the Washington Post Tuesday about how the name of Dede Scozzafava -- the upstate New York Republican who got run out of a congressional race by conservative activists -- has joined such other luminaries as onetime Supreme Court hopeful Robert Bork in seeing their names turned into political verbs. ...
Republican leaders in New York are raising the possibility of "punishing" state Rep. Dede Scozzafava, who withdrew from the race for Congress in New York's 23rd district and endorsed a Democrat, the Los Angeles Times' Top of the Ticket reports. Scozzafava endorsed Bill Owens after national Republicans backed third-party candidate Doug Hoffman and undermined support for her campaign. Conservatives said Scozzafava, who supports gay rights and abortion rights, was too liberal to run as a Republican. New York Assembly Minority Leader Brian Kolb has been holding meetings with Scozzafava, in which ...
So, how did the pollsters do in their final surveys before the key off-year races in predicting the results? ...
(Nov. 4) -- Forget what voters told exit pollsters. Tuesday's election is being analyzed as a referendum on President Obama. Republicans Bob McDonnell in Virginia and Chris Christie in New Jersey captured governor's seats that were held by Democrats. Obama won both states a year ago. He campaigned hard for Gov. Jon Corzine in New Jersey and made appearances for Creigh Deeds late in the campaign, despite some bad blood between the Virginia Democrat's campaign and the White House. Many headlines Wednesday morning portrayed the vote results as bad news for Obama. "It sends a clear signal that ...
The Republicans got the press, but the Democrat got the votes in the special election in New York's 23rd Congressional District. On an otherwise dismal night for his party, Democrat Bill Owens captured 49 percent of the vote. Conservative Doug Hoffman won 45 percent of the vote, while Republican Dede Scozzafava picked up a crucial five percent, even after dropping out of the race. Owens, an Air Force retiree and lawyer, will become the first Democrat in more than 100 years to hold the seat, leaving the New York congressional delegation with just two Republicans in its ranks. Democrats were ...
Once you whip up a mob, can you control it? That may be Sarah Palin's next problem. Before the votes were counted Tuesday night, the former Republican vice presidential candidate was already something of a winner. Though her candidate in the special election for a House seat in upstate New York, Doug Hoffman, lost to Democrat Bill Owens -- in an area that hasn't sent a Democrat to the House since the 1800s -- Palin, by intervening in the race, had established herself as a successful ideological power broker. At first, Hoffman was merely a third-party conservative candidate in New York's 23rd ...
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