
WSJ’s John Fund…
Here are a couple of good items from today’s Wall Street Journal Political Diary E-mail from FR friend John Fund… … Read More
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Here are a couple of good items from today’s Wall Street Journal Political Diary E-mail from FR friend John Fund… … Read More
Your Five Days After Campaign Advice… You shoulda listened to me. Uhh, okay, that was really unfair. So, let’s move on. Watch for my San Diego Winners and Losers here in the next few days. In the meantime, a brief post-election pot-pourri from the San Diego area…
A San Diego Sweep… Revolution 2010 may have been ignored by most California voters, but in San Diego there were conservative and GOP victories in a number of key races, not the least of which is a Republican winning a long-held Dem seat on the San Diego City Council. Jim Sills at SD Rostra shares his musings on the top wins:
Conservatives take all the "Big 5" races in San Diego’s election showdown____
So, What Do We Do Now?… Much was made during the election — at least by the proponents — of the sheer devastation the City of San Diego would face if the Prop D sales tax increase failed.… Read More
This isthe followup to mycomments of last Thursday.
As bad as it was for Republicans Tuesday, one can see that, still, voters on one hand, are for limited and accountable government. What am I talking about? The election in California was a total wipeout. Yes, of course it was on the statewide offices. But we look to the propositionsand one can see the roots of a conservative, keep-government-off-my-back mentality.Now the logic of placing the candidates in statewide office in that same election that defy those tenets of limited and accountable government, is the voter schizophreniathat election experts and party officials are always trying to get a handle on. So it happens again in California as it appears 8 or even all 9 statewide elections will go to Democrat candidates.Even then,several good propositions passed and bad ones were stopped.
My own favorites were that Prop 20 passed and Prop 27 was soundly defeated, meaning the redistrictingprocess will be at least 90% cleaner than it has been with… Read More
It was a Republican tsunami nationwide, that turned into a riptide when it hit California, and sucked the Republicans in this state into the ocean. The question is why? How could a year that began with so much promise fall apart so completely?
The loss was complete. Even if Steve Cooley is able to pull out of his embarrassing showing against the weakest Democrat ever to run for Attorney General, it is no great victory. $140 million for Governor, and other millions for the various other seats. Never has so much been spent on so few to accomplish so little. We could have all gone home, watched football, saved the money, and still done just as well as we did in this election. What went wrong?
I have my own theories, and they begin with Arnold Schwarzenegger. Meg Whitman began her campaign sounding like Schwarzenegger, and ended up losing. Schwarzenegger has given the Republicans a bad name in California. The country showed its dislike of Obama by voting against his candidates throughout the country. The state showed its dislike of Schwarzenegger by voting against Republicans.
On a national… Read More
From today’s Wall Street Journal opinion page…
The Two Left Coasts: Why the GOP wave didn’t wash over New York and California. Tuesday’s GOP landslide didn’t spare many Democrats, but it did stop at the state lines of California and New York. These coastal exceptions deserve some explanation, because they illustrate the difficulties Republicans will face if they fail to reform entitlements, taxes and public spending. In California, Senator Barbara Boxer cruised handily to a fourth term, defeating Carly Fiorina by nine percentage points and change. Democrats also notched a victory with Jerry Brown’s restoration to the Governor’s mansion; he… Read More
As we all know, when we all went to bed last Tuesday night, the Attorney’s General Primary between Steve Cooley and Kamala Harris was too close to call. Since that night, Harris has held a slim lead over Cooley. Well, not any more… AG UPDATE – COOLEY LEADS AGAIN! TO: Interested Parties FR: Kevin Spillane, Senior Consultant, Steve Cooley for Attorney General 2010 DT: November 5, 2010… Read More
As California Republicans sift through the ashes post-election day, we can look to the good that did result and some of the indicators of why the public may have voted how they did. Yep, we as Republicans sure lost all nine statewide elections though there is some hope for Attorney General, being only 9000 votes behind right now.
In D.C. picking up the gavel with 61 or so in the House is the single most important accomplishment for the next 2 years for the country. Republicans moving from 41 to 47 in the US Senate certainly will give strength to stopping bad Obama/Dem policies. Though the lost opportunities in Colorado and Washington among others are very disappointing, we did gain in places like Illinois’s Obama seat and the Wisconsin/Feingold seat.
Backhere inthe Golden state, we can see pickups in 2 Congressional seats if the votes to be counted in 2 valley seats swing our way.We did well in the State Senatewith Anthony Cannellaholding the 12th seat [of Jeff Denham’s], a seat with a 19% or so Democrat advantage.Cannella is a great guy who will be one of my favorites… Read More