New Hampshire Aftermath

My initial reaction is, “Shit. It’s going to be Clinton-Obama ticket.” Obama’s power is completely lost as a warm bucket of spit.

Never doubt the laziness of the electorate and the fact that young people don’t vote and “movement candidates” always fail.

At first I was thinking that Edwards was going to drop out after a loss in South Carolina, but now I’m thinking that he won’t. I think he might just stay to the end, or at least until after Super Duper Tuesday. My fear right now: Edwards finishes second, behind Hillary.

If Edwards was was to drop out after South Carolina, I don’t think enough of his supporters are going to break for Obama. Yes, they’re sympathetic but I don’t think that will translate to a 17% advantage for Obama. Instead they’ll fall inline behind the establishment.

People always fall in line.

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More Detailed Iowa Aftermath: The Democrats

Everyone except Edwards, Hillary, and Obama are done. They were all DOA, and yet we’ll still have to waste time with them in the Nevada “debate.”

Hillary lost Iowa. Hillary is trying to spin it as “I was always behind in Iowa.” Yeah right. She was the front runner, until Obama beat her. Obama won, and Hillary lost. The takeaway coverage is, “She lost. She lost big. She had the money, and the organization, and the voters rejected her. They want change, and she’s not it.” There’s no silver lining in the Clinton coverage.

Hillary is not done though. You can’t count her out. She still has the money and she still has the organization.

Clinton tried to go negative against Obama earlier in the campaign, possibly about the Rezko land buy, and it didn’t go anywhere. Obama held a press conference, said he wouldn’t be swift boated, and the press walked way saying “Wow. Nice guy professor Obama can take a punch and throw a punch,” and it ended. If Clinton goes negative now, the coverage won’t be “Ooo! Didn’t know that about Obama!” it’s going be “Hillary is getting desperate and mean. She’s looking like a loser. Like a drowning person desperately thrashing about trying to grab at anything.” If Hillary goes negative, she’s sunk. Hillary’s only chance is to go positive.

However, Hillary has a big problem with going positive though. She doesn’t provide a reason to vote for her. Her arguments have been “I have experience the of being First Lady and a one term US senator, and a number of years of unspecified experience that magically inflates to whatever the situation requires” (35(!) years of experience I think she said today.), “I have a vagina,” and “I’m electable because the Republicans know all my flaws and so does the rest of America.” In the last days of the Iowa campaign she tried to embrace the “change” mantra and failed. Clinton doesn’t represent change, she’s the status quo. For Hillary Clinton saying she represents change is just as absurd as Romney saying today, “[P]eople want change in Washington, not in the White House, in Washington.”

Hillary’s main hope is for Obama to have some lackluster debates, then for her to throw in some zinger, but not too much of a zinger, and basically coast by on name recognition and some “Maybe Obama isn’t quite ready” talk. The key to a Clinton victory isn’t her attacks, or even her surrogates attacking, either one of which would be a death knell for her campaign. It’s going to be outshining Obama at a debate, which frankly can be done.

Edwards is playing the post Iowa coverage right. He’s making sure that everyone knows he was outspent, and finished second. What can Edwards do to win? I’m not sure. Perhaps he can capitalize on an Obama fumble and people realizing that Clinton is the status quo, and not the change they’re looking for. Bottom line, Edwards can’t win on his own, but he’s not dead yet.

Obama hast to just keep what he’s doing, avoid looking bored at the debates, and the nomination – and the presidency – are his.

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w00t Iowa

With 95% of precincts in, it looks like my dream outcome happened. *Happy Dance*
Let it be known, that my predictions this year have come true. Of course, four years ago, I said, “Can anyone beat George W Bush? Yes. ANYONE can.” Apparently that wasn’t true.

According to MSNBC, new voters showed up in droves, and caucused for Obama. 51% of caucus goers wanted a candidate for change, and they saw, contrary to what Hillary wants you to believe, that Hillary is the status quo.

Suck it Hillary.

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Last Minute Iowa Predictions

I already filed my predictions for the national nominations, but with 1 hour 25 minutes and 51 seconds left before the caucusing according to MSNBC, I feel the urge to post my predictions for Iowa.

Republicans
  1. Huckabee
  2. Romney
  3. McCain
Democrats (Dream Outcome)
  1. Obama
  2. Edwards
  3. Clinton
Democrats (Greatest Fear)
  1. Clinton
  2. Edwards
  3. Obama

I’m leaning a bit towards my greatest fear for the dem side since Joe Scarborough rightfully pointed out that every campaign that depends on young people and new voters turning out fails spectacularly, because those people simply don’t turn out. Edwards is playing it smart by focusing on rural Iowa and gaming Iowa’s mini electoral college for all its worth. I also think senior Clinton advisor Ann Lewis was playing it smart when she talked about all the old women they were going to truck in. Old folks are who shows up to vote. However Clinton isn’t the second choice for anyone, so that could hurt her. Also boding ill for Clinton is the the whole lowering expectations that her campaign is putting out, so I’m going to say:

Democrats (Final Prediction)
  1. Obama
  2. Clinton
  3. Edwards

But I’m hoping for my dream outcome.

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Election Predictions

GOP
Huckabee wins in Iowa. Romney wins in New Hampshire because he’s a New Englander, but Huckabee has all the buzz. Huckabee wins the confederacy, and thus the nomination.

Giuliani? Never places above third.

Dems
Don’t know. Whoever wins Iowa gets the buzz, and cascades across the entire nation. Just like in 2004, rural Iowans pick the nominee. Since I have to predict something, uh… Obama in a tight one. Edwards won’t take the veep position two elections in a row. Hillary won’t take veep either. Like on the GOP side, the veep is no one in the race.

If Hillary manages to coast by on name recognition to the nominee, Obama is the veep.

Take away: Huckabee is the real deal, and could easily win the presidency.

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