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EDITOR OF REDSTATE

Obama Campaign is Like a Chicken With its Head Cut Off

We’re two weeks away and signs point to the Obama campaign flailing about like a chicken with its head cut off — or more precisely Florida, North Carolina, and, of all things, Virginia cut off. Colorado too seems to be slipping out of Obama’s reach making Ohio more and more necessary. Paul Ryan has begun making incursions into Western Pennsylvania, which gets Ohio media markets, but also helps Republicans in Pennsylvania — something Obama cannot do for Democrats.

Within a week, the Obama campaign will probably trot out some blonde somebody with Gloria Alred to claim Mitt Romney and his five sons have all been sharing her. It will be their October Surprise. No doubt Eric Holder will be enlisted to drum up a few indictments too. They’ll pin their hopes on last minute fiction.

The Obama campaign is desperate and scared. Desperate and scared campaigns, like animals. tend to lash out. We’re seeing signs of that now with the “binders full of women” nonsense among other things. The Obama campaign has made a near fatal — quite possibly fatal — mistake. The campaign has been run on what Barack Obama has done for people without barely a hint of what he will do in his second term. People want to vote for something. Obama has given them nothing to vote for — just reminders of a past that includes a whole lot of unemployment and a still deeply unpopular take over of the American healthcare system. At least there’s Big Bird and Sandra Fluke.

What’s more, Mitt Romney and the GOP both are benefiting tremendously from Team Obama’s pride. The Obama campaign cannot, out of pride, admit it is losing key states. Consequently, the campaign continues to pour money into states like Florida that have fully slipped away. The Obama campaign is also hoarding Democratic Party funds that could be spent on other races. An unwillingness to let go of states and money and an inability to help other Democratic campaigns is not just costing Barack Obama, but is costing the Democratic Party as a whole.

The United States House of Representatives will not fall to Nancy Pelosi as a result. The United States Senate remains in play as a result. Republicans just need to rally to guys like Todd Akin, whether they want to or not. The Obama campaign’s pride will be the Democratic Party’s fall.

COMMENTS

  • tngal

    But their ground game is working so well! Sandra Fluke spoke to a throng of ten whole people at the Sak-n-Sav Saturday in Reno. Crowd control really had their hands full keeping the horde back, I’m sure.
    http://www.rgj.com/article/20121020/NEWS19/310200053/Fluke-takes-center-stage-Reno

  • jerseygalnny

    Speaking of Sandra Fluke… hilarious short commentary on her and her crowd of 10 http://fundamentalrefounding.ning.com/forum/topics/sandra-fluke-speaks-in-reno-draws-10-people Do women not see that they are used by the Democrats? Geez… Guess it is the same as with blacks. Most women I know, among the apolitical ones, are looking at the grocery bill, and the price for a fill-up.

    Yeah the Dem campaign seems to be imploding. I was cautiously optimistic, I am now leaning optimistic.

  • commonsenseobserver

    For that to work, it must be a NOVEMBER surprise.

  • rbdwiggins

    The Republican Party, and Mitt Romney in particular, should give Sandra Fluke and the DNC a gold certificate of achievement.

    They’ve done more to close the gender gap than any Republican outreach program.

  • rbdwiggins

    Last minute? The Obama campaign is pinning their hopes on nearly four years of fiction.

    On a more serious note: If the margin gets any wider, the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee should begin to advance the Romney’s coattail narrative.

  • tngal

    Waaay passed leaning optimistic. I’m leaning giddy.

  • renl57

    In the end, it all comes down to Ohio.

    I don’t see a believable roadmap to 270 electoral votes that doesn’t include Ohio. (Because those aren’t independent trials; failure to win enough blue-collar votes in Ohio suggests Romney may not win enough in other states too.)

    So I’m cautiously optimistic, I could still see a plausible scenario where Obama manages to win re-election by winning Ohio (barely) to a total of 272 electoral votes.

  • rkinroanoke

    I questioned this the other day on a different site after PPP came out with O up 1 in Ohio. This is Ohio as a snapshot:
    Governor – R
    Lt. Gov -R
    State Senate – 66%+ R (23/33)
    State Assy – 60+% R (50/99)
    House of Reps (pending this year’s election where they lose two seats) 13/18 R
    Senate – 1R, 1D and the D is in a fight for re-election.

    yet PPP had their sample as D+8 and this has O up 1.

    How does this make sense?? State and Local go R but they will vote D in the national election?

  • ipeduto

    Looks like Romney is gaining in popular votes – now if Ohio’s electoral votes can be his, all will be well. Otherwise, look out Americans!

  • Kyle-MI

    Unfortunately Kasich has poor approval ratings partially due to the tough reforms he has had to put in place to clean up the Ohio fiscal mess left to him by the Dems. Also, keep in mind that the Dems were in power because, prior to Gov. Strickland (D), Gov. Taft (R) made a complete mess of everything GOP. It has still left a bad taste in everyone’s mouth. And I think beneath the surface there is still tension between the newer more conservative GOP and the old line establishment types.

  • westcoastpatriette

    Chickens with their heads cut off. Perfect description. No one fit that description better than Stephanie Cutter — whoever she is — when she was spewing hatred at Bret Baier on Fox feigning outrage at Romney for calling out the O on his incompetent handling of Benghazi. Her hysterical hatred and aggressive response to Bret nearly set his hair on fire he was so shocked.

    Keep it up, Dems. It will cement your exile into the wilderness for a good long while when the Americans get to see — up close and personal — just how ugly you really are.