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Obama Takes Lead in Presidential Race


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Supported by Republicans, Obama Takes Lead in Presidential Race

Sen. Barack Obama is THE leading 2008 presidential candidate, per a late May 2007 Zogby poll.

Reported the Angus-Reid Global Monitor:

"At least 46 per cent of respondents would support the Illinois senator in head-to-head contests against four prospective Republican nominees.

"Obama holds a three-point edge over Arizona senator John McCain, a six-point lead over former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, and a 17-point advantage over both former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and actor and former Tennessee senator Fred Thompson.

"In other contests, both New York senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and former North Carolina senator John Edwards lead Romney and Thompson, but trail Giuliani and McCain."

The reason for Sen. Obama's dominance against potential Republican 2008 contenders for the White House? Republicans themselves.

Republicans for Obama

Seems that the senator from Illinois is rapidly developing a following among Republicans disenchanted with their own party's candidates.

In fact, one of the fastest growing campaign websites is Republicans for Obama, which presently counts chapters in 11 states, including Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania and Colorado.

And now comes word that Republican Colin Powell may join the Obama for President groundswell.

The retired 4-star Army General and beleaguered Secretary of State under George W. Bush revealed that he's quietly been providing Sen. Obama with advice on foreign affairs. When asked yesterday on NBC's Meet the Press if he will support the Republican candidate in 2008, Powell cagily replied:

"I’m going to support the best person that I can find who will lead this country for the eight years beginning in January 2009."

Reagan Democrats, Obama Republicans

Martin Linsky, lecturer at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and former Republican legislator, recently gave his views to the New York Post on Obama's appeal:

"Obama has the potential to appeal to Republican voters the way Reagan appealed to Democrats, and that the emergence of a group like Republicans for Obama... should be taken 'as a real signal, and not aberrational.'

"He offers his own anecdotal evidence: 'Last week, I asked three Republican friends of mine, 'If you had to send a check to someone right now, who would it be?' And they all said: 'Obama.' So. That's interesting.' "

The London Times reported last month that a number of Bush supporters in 2004 have defected to the Obama camp for 2008.

"Tom Bernstein went to Yale University with Bush and co-owned the Texas Rangers baseball team with him. In 2004 he donated the maximum $2,000 to the president’s reelection campaign and gave $50,000 to the Republican National Committee.

"This year he is switching his support to Obama. He is one of many former Bush admirers who find the Democrat newcomer appealing."

And on June 6, 2007, Newsweek's political blog reported:

"Mark McKinnon, a senior media adviser to McCain--who led George W. Bush's ad efforts in 2000 and 2004, and remains one of the sitting president's closest friends--has told the McCain campaign that he would quit if Obama wins the Democratic nomination. "

Fresh Thinking, Civility, Bipartisanship

None of this surprises me. I see it in my own family. My daughter and her husband, both independent-thinking moderate Republicans, admire Obama above all other 2008 candidates.

Last December, one of their friends spied the senator, sitting alone, lunching in a sub sandwich shop in Honolulu. They gingerly approached him, and said he was quite nice, a low-key "normal" guy.

In particular, that's what generations X and Y want: normal, accessible, common sense. All without the baby-boomer-style animosity and regality of the Clinton and Bush 2 administrations.

They, and many of their friends in the 25-to-35-year-old age bracket, are attracted to Obama's fresh thinking, and his cool civility and unwillingness to indulge in attack-dog political warfare as usual.

The GOP hasn't (yet?) offered such a candidate for 2008, and cigar-chomping, slow-drawling actor Fred Thompson certainly won't fit the "fresh" profile.

Commented 29-year-old Republican John Martin, a Navy reservist, to the New York Post:

"I see Obama as representing a different kind of politician...

"I think a lot of us are just really wary of the Republican Party and are looking for something new. His message of bipartisanship, of appealing to more than just 51 percent of the voting population, is, I think, what we need."

Don't Snicker, Democrats

Obama Republicans? Don't snicker, Democrats, and don't besmirch Sen. Obama's heartfelt drive for bipartisanship while retaining basic progressive values.

It just may be the winning formula for putting a Democrat back in charge of the White House.

Democracy is a device that ensures we shall be governed no better than we deserve.

 

George Bernard Shaw

 

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Posted

That would be a good outcome, IMO. Hillary, much as I think she'd make a good president in terms of doing the job, would be disastrous in terms of trying to heal the rifts in America.

Truth is important

Posted

We still have a long way in front of us. If Obama wins it will certainly be historic. Senators have rarely ever won the presidency - although they have been nominated often. The last senator that won the White House was JFK in 1960. On top of that, Obama is not only a senator - he is a freshman with no real accomplishments as a senator.

Anyone remember the Riverboat Veterans for Truth or whatever they were called? The fight for the White House is going to be tough. I think Hilary is prepared for it and there really isn't anything about her that the public doesn't already know. However political parties often choose the candidate their base likes the best and not the one that would be most likely able to win the general election.

Pastoral Family Counselor... Find me at www.PostumCafe.com 

Author of  Peculiar Christianity

Posted

Last I heard, the dems had a debate and Hilary emerged from that the clear leader. That was about a month ago though.

I prayed for twenty years but received no answer until I prayed with my legs.

Frederick Douglass

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