Intoxination

4 Weeks To Go – It's Crunch Time!

There have been a slew of new polls come out in the last couple of days. Instead of going through each one and doing graphs and highlighting points (that would make a huge post), I have decided to link to them.

For the highlights

America is starting to look more blue, but we still have 4 weeks to go (exactly), which is a life time in politics. We still must work hard and try to get the message out on more than Foley.

According to today’s Washington Post, Bush plans on using the North Korea nuclear test as a tool to “scare” Americans into voting for Republicans.

GOP officials are urging lawmakers to focus exclusively on local issues and leave it to party leaders to mitigate the Foley controversy by accusing Democrats of trying to politicize it. At the same time, the White House plans to amplify national security issues, especially the threat of terrorism, after North Korea’s reported nuclear test, in hopes of shifting the debate away from casualties and controversy during the final month of the campaign. These efforts are aimed largely at prodding disaffected conservatives to vote for GOP candidates despite their unease.

This is a grey area. It could either help or hurt the GOP. The Democrats need to get out and emphasize the fact that it was Bush who choose a new diplomatic position with North Korea and caused this tension. If the Democrats are successful at that point then the Republicans will end up shooting themselves in the foot using this issue. Put it this way. The last 2 elections have had terrorism and fear as the central front. Americans are tough and tired of being scared. I don’t think North Korea testing a bomb is enough to make the fear card trump all other issues, but it could be close.

Another point this article highlights is the Gerry Studds defense of the GOP:

The NRCC is highlighting Democratic leaders who supported former representative Gerry E. Studds (Mass.), who was censured by the House in 1983 after admitting to sexual contact with a male page a decade earlier; Studds went on to serve in Congress until 1997. “It is important to contrast how Republican leadership is handling the situation with problems with one of its own, and how Democrats did,” said former RNC chairman Ed Gillespie, a close White House ally.

The counter talking point on this issue should be simple.

The Democrats hardest job right now is to out noise the right wing noise machine. They need to stay on message. The talking points the NRCC has put out for Foley are starting to backfire. People are tired of these talking points, and if the Democrats fire back with a strong argument against their talking points then the Republicans will have to reorganize. That will put a serious damper on their damage control.

Exit mobile version