THE NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL CORRECTNESS


Threats to freedom of speech, writing and action, though often trivial in isolation, are cumulative in their effect and, unless checked, lead to a general disrespect for the rights of the citizen. -George Orwell

Monday, December 1, 2014

THREE MARTINI LUNCH: DECEMBER 1, 2014

National Review's Jim Geraghty joins host Greg Corombos. Today's topics: Early voting trends in the Louisiana Senate runoff spell bad news for Mary Landrieu, how the GOP will respond to Obama's executive orders on immigration, and Ferguson protesters block traffic in major cities nationwide.



Landrieu not seeming to enjoy exciting runoff race
In the days following the election I heard some muted, yet marginally optimistic talk from Democrat activists who felt that the gloom and doom predictions for Mary Landrieu in the runoff were being overstated. The logic went something along these lines: once the media fever had broken and the massive flow of national dollars dried up, people would mostly go back about their daily lives. Under these conditions, her supporters felt, Mary could get back to the retail politicking where she has always excelled. Unfortunately for them, with every poll that comes out it seems to become clear that Barack Obama is still a big old albatross hanging around her neck, and she just can't shake him loose.
President Barack Obama may not be on Louisiana's Senate runoff ballot, but it's clear his widespread unpopularity in the state stands as Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu's biggest hurdle to a fourth term.
Landrieu led an eight-candidate primary, but her 42 percent was only 16,000 votes ahead of Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy and far short of her 2008 totals when she won without a runoff. Exit polls explain the collapse: Landrieu got votes from 18 percent of whites, while nearly three out of four white voters said they strongly disapprove of the president.
"It's not so much a Mary thing as it is a Democrat thing and Obama thing," said restaurant owner Dean Gehbauer of Thibodaux.
If anything, the end of the general election may have hurt Landrieu. The public is still being flooded with advertisements reminding them of everything that's on the line, and external Republican forces really have nothing else to occupy their time these days, so they may as well make her miserable. Cassidy is well placed for funding, while all the Democrats saying lovely things about Landrieu don't seem to eager to flush additional millions into her special election.
Plus, it doesn't help her case too much when her own staffers are throwing her under the bus at every turn. Her Washington chief-of-staff Don Cravins was caught on video saying that liberals had nothing to worry about. If she wins another term, she'll be staying right in Obama's hip pocket...
Also read:

'Arrest them all': D.C. Ferguson protesters block traffic on I-395

'Traffic going nowhere': Ferguson protesters shut down D.C.'s 14th Street Bridge

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