Howard Dean

Posted at 12:00pm on May 6, 2008 Clinton Will Break the Democratic Party to Save It

You See, Obama has to be Cleared Away by the Hand of Hillary! like the McGovernites of Old. Now She will have to Burn this Party.

By Mark I

The Huffington Post has an update to their story of this past weekend saying that the Clinton campaign has confirmed that it plans to use a May 31st meeting of the Democratic Party’s Rules and Bylaws Committee to try and seat the entire Michigan and Florida delegations at the Democratic National Convention. The Clinton campaign estimates that seating of the entire delegations from the two disputed states will give her a pledged delegate lead of around 55 delegates over Sen. Barack Obama.

In a statement released in response to the story, the campaign did not deny that it intended to exercise what the Huffington Post characterized as the "nuclear option." It only objected to the notion that the plan was a secret one.

There is no secret plan....The Clinton campaign has been vocal in stating that the votes of 2.5 million people must be respected. Hardly a day goes by when a Clinton official doesn't publicly declare that the votes of Michigan and Florida count and that the delegations from those states should be seated.

If the campaign follows through on this, it may be left to the ultimate superdelegate, DNC Chairman Howard Dean, to decide the Democratic nomination. Denver is going to be fun.

Read on…

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Posted at 12:27pm on May 4, 2008 Re: Dean on Germany

By Neil Stevens

Hopefully we can use this quote to illustrate that we are occupying Iraq in exactly the same sense we are occupying Germany: Sure, we're occupying space, but in both cases we are there at the pleasure of the elected governments.

Posted at 9:07am on May 4, 2008 Howard Dean called our presence in Germany "occupation"

By Soren Dayton

I am watching Fox News Sunday. Howard Dean just said that our troop presence in South Korea and Germany are an "occupation."

I think that Obama used the same words the other day. And this seems to be standard lefty messaging:

McCain repeatedly and constantly evokes the long-term occupations of Korea, Japan, Germany, or Kuwait when discussing Iraq.

Posted at 7:48am on Apr. 30, 2008 FactCheck.org Agrees - DNC Takes Over Obama's Lies

By California Yankee

On Monday I went after Howard Dean and company for picking up Obama's lies with another less than truthful ad.

Now FactCheck.org has examined the Democrat's latest prevarications and found, once again, that the Democrats' ad "twists" what Senator McCain actually said:

The ad twists the sense of McCain's words by showing images of war, when he was really talking about a peaceful troop presence. Imagine how different the ad would seem if it showed images of, say, American troops walking the streets of Tokyo or Seoul and had included what McCain said about "Americans ... not being injured or harmed or wounded or killed."

Anyone who didn't already know the fuller version of McCain's answer could easily be fooled into thinking that McCain would be perfectly happy to see the war continue. McCain has said quite clearly that he considers Democratic proposals for a quick withdrawal from Iraq to be "surrender," and so deadly fighting could well continue longer under a President McCain than under either a President Hillary Clinton or a President Obama. But what the DNC ad conveys is the opposite of what McCain said.

Read on, there's more.

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Posted at 10:38am on Apr. 28, 2008 DNC Takes Over Obama's Lies

By California Yankee

Howard Dean and Company pick up the lying where Barack Obama left off.

Barack Obama, after being beat up by numerous factcheckers for grossly misrepresenting Senator McCain's "100 Years" comment, finally dropped that distortion from his stump speech. Obama stopped using that discredited attack because it became obvious to all, even the admittedly Obamamania infected main stream media, that Obama's misrepresentation of McCain's comment was a "serious distortion to the point of rank falsehood."

Now the Democratic Party is out with an ad that not only continues the "Distortion," "Rank Falsehood," "Seriously Misleading" statements and "Outright Lying" about McCain's 100 year remarks, the Democrats' new ad is illegal as well:

New DNC Ad Quotes Sen. McCain Responding To A Question On How Long The U.S. Will Be In Iraq With The Words: “Maybe 100. That Would Be Fine With Me.” (DNC Website, www.democrats.org, Accessed 4/27/08)

Read on, there is more.

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Posted at 1:29pm on Apr. 26, 2008 Obama, lobbyists, and the DNC

Will the DNC repudiate Obama's core message?

By Soren Dayton

Barack Obama and Howard Dean have been attacking John McCain for not being able to controlling the NC GOP. Let's see if Obama and Dean can control themselves.

Obama's central message has been the reform of Washington by not accepting money from lobbyists. But reports from USA Today makes clear that the message is a fraud:

Although Obama refuses direct campaign contributions from "Washington lobbyists," he takes money from lobbyists' spouses and holds fundraisers at the offices of law firms that lobby Congress. He won't touch money from PACs or lobbyists representing big oil and drug companies, but he happily accepts huge amounts of money from executives at those companies and many others. In fact, he's relying on two oil company executives to raise $50,000 apiece for his campaign.

This is old news, but it looks like Obama and Dean may have crossed a line. You see, the other day, they created a joint fundraising committee. So what?

The question for reporters will be this. Will Obama's first action as the de facto leader of his party will be to repudiate his fundamental message in the primary? See, here's the fundamental question. Will that committee take money from lobbyists? The DNC has made quite a lot of money of lobbyists, but let's see how bad this could be.

Read on.

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Posted at 4:54pm on Apr. 18, 2008 Under pressure, Dean starts to come unraveled

Watching Howard Dean scream in slow motion

By Soren Dayton

Today, Howard Dean did something very silly. He demanded that John McCain apologize for something that Tom Tancredo said about immigration and the Catholic Church. For real.

Several problems with this. First, Tancredo has not endorsed McCain. Second, McCain's position is reasonably close to the Catholic Church's.

So what is going on? Dean's failures at the DNC are leading to his unraveling. Read on.

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Posted at 12:11pm on Apr. 11, 2008 The Best Argument Against Romney

By Dan McLaughlin

OK, I've laid off Romney for a while, but I can't resist the final kiss of death:

"Mitt Romney was the candidate I feared the most," [Howard] Dean said at a press conference to unveil recent internal DNC polling on McCain, the expected Republican nominee.

Dean said in the early stages of the presidential race he thought Romney was the candidate to beat, in part because of his personal wealth, and also because he viewed Romney as the most articulate candidate who would "say anything" to win the nomination.

The two men share a geographical tie: Dean was governor of Vermont from 1991-2003, while Romney was governor of nearby Massachusetts from 2003-2007. "I know him from New England and I thought he was a better candidate than Republicans thought he was," the DNC chairman said.

So what does Dean identify as McCain's key weakness?

Dean said Democrats are "absolutely going to target" McCain as a flip-flopper, citing McCain’s initial opposition to the Bush tax cuts, which he now supports, as an example.

Pure political genius, that Howard Dean. H/T

Posted at 9:46am on Apr. 3, 2008 And they wonder why their numbers are slipping in Michigan?

By RightMichigan.com

Cross-posted on Right Michigan at www.RightMichigan.com.

What's a brother got to do to get a little love around here?  And no, that's not a Tom Athans joke.  I'm talking about Michigan, the Democrat National Committee, the two kids they have pulling hair and name calling in their primary contests and their chairman, Howard Dean.  

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Posted at 2:56am on Mar. 30, 2008 Quotes That Catch My Fancy

By Pejman Yousefzadeh

"The real issue is this," Dean said in March 2004, when endorsing formal rival Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., "Who would you rather have in charge of the defense of the United States of America, a group of people who never served a day overseas in their life, or a guy who served his country honorably and has three Purple Hearts and a Silver Star on the battlefields of Vietnam?"

--Howard Dean in 2004. As noted by Jake Tapper immediately after that passage:

McCain, by the way, has been awarded the Silver Star, the Legion of Merit, two Bronze Star Medals, a Purple Heart and the Distinguished Flying Cross.

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Posted at 4:01pm on Mar. 29, 2008 McCain's Service Matters -- A Lot

Just Ask Howard Dean

By California Yankee

UPDATE:Republican National Committee Chairman Robert M. "Mike" Duncan calls on Hillary and Obama to denounce Dean's despicable attack on Senator John McCain's military service:

Yesterday, Howard Dean continued a pattern of making reckless statements attacking John McCain's character and integrity. Almost 24 hours later, Senators Obama and Clinton have yet to denounce the attack politics of their party's national chairman. Both Senators Clinton and Obama claim to repudiate the old politics of attack and smear, and yet neither has stood up and spoken to the issue. So today, I call on both Senators Obama and Clinton to denounce Howard Dean for stating that Senator McCain is a 'blatant opportunist' for discussing his record of military service with the American people.

What are the odds Hillary or Obama will do the right thing?

Howarddean_2
Yesterday I took Howard Dean, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, to task for calling John McCain an opportunist for using images of his military service.

Jack Tapper
points out that Dean saw things differently in 2004, when he thought military service was less opportunistic:

"The real issue is this," Dean said in March 2004, when endorsing formal rival Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., "Who would you rather have in charge of the defense of the United States of America, a group of people who never served a day overseas in their life, or a guy who served his country honorably and has three Purple Hearts and a Silver Star on the battlefields of Vietnam?"

McCain has been awarded the Silver Star, the Legion of Merit, two Bronze Star Medals, a Purple Heart and the Distinguished Flying Cross.

Can anyone say "Yeaaaahhhhhhghhhh"

Via Jack Givens at Ft. Hard Knox and Kevin Gregory at McClatchy Watch.

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Posted at 5:17pm on Mar. 28, 2008 The President Americans Have Been Waiting For

The Democrats Call McCain's Military Service Opportunistic

By California Yankee

As Hillary and Obama continue their ever more negative fight to challenge Senator John McCain for the presidency, McCain launched the first TV ad of the fall campaign.

The ad highlights McCain's experience, character and optimistic vision for our future:

JOHN MCCAIN: Keep that faith. Keep your courage. Stick together. Stay strong. Do not yield. Stand up. We're Americans. And we'll never surrender.

ANNCR: What must a president believe about us? About America?

That she is worth protecting?

That liberty is priceless?

Our people, honorable?

Our future, prosperous, remarkable and free?

And, what must we believe about that president?

What does he think?

Where has he been?

Has he walked the walk?

You can watch the ad below:


Read on. There's more.

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Posted at 6:53pm on Mar. 2, 2008 A Brief Historical Reminder to Howard Dean

The 1850s are just fine by me, thanks

By Ben Domenech

Howard Dean seems pretty proud of himself this weekend, having come up with the best quip he's had in ... well, ever. He says since the GOP nominee is an old white guy, that today's Republican Party "looks like the 1950s and talks like the 1850s.”

That's all well and good for Dr. Dean. But for those who actually care about history, you may recall that John McCain spent most of the 1950s at the Naval Academy, learning how to fight and if necessary die for his country. And as more than one friend pointed out to me this weekend, we all seem to recall that particularly in the 1850s, Democrats were in the wrong, and Republicans were actually kind of, you know, in the right. The most famous Democrat and most famous Republican of the time, of course, provide easy examples:

Lincoln Douglas

That is the real issue. That is the issue that will continue in this country when these poor tongues of Judge Douglas and myself shall be silent. It is the eternal struggle between these two principles - right and wrong - throughout the world. They are the two principles that have stood face to face from the beginning of time; and will ever continue to struggle. The one is the common right of humanity and the other the divine right of kings. It is the same principle in whatever shape it develops itself. It is the same spirit that says, "You work and toil and earn bread, and I'll eat it."

I think in this case, the Republicans of the 1850s are fine by me. For his part, Dr. Dean and Stephen Douglas can have a nice sit down and talk about how wonderful it is to be a diminutive blowhard on the wrong side of history.

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Posted at 11:37am on Feb. 7, 2008 How The Mighty Have Fallen . . . And Other Campaign News

By Pejman Yousefzadeh

The race for the Democratic Presidential nomination has changed quite a bit, hasn't it?

Democratic Sen. Barack Obama has raised $3 million for his presidential campaign in the 24 hours since the first polls closed on Super Tuesday night.

Obama, riding a wave of fundraising both from large donors and small Internet contributors, also raised a stunning $32 million in January.

Meanwhile, rival Hillary Rodham Clinton acknowledged Wednesday that she loaned her campaign $5 million late last month as Obama was outraising and outspending her heading into Feb. 5 Super Tuesday contests. Some senior staffers on her campaign also are voluntarily forgoing paychecks as the campaign heads into the next round of contests.

The Cult of Obama will get a kick out of this. (For the record, I don't think that there is a cult of Obama, just people who really, really like him. And why not? He may be the liberal Reagan and if I were a liberal, I would want a liberal Reagan too.) Of course, one wonders if the following words were kept in mind by the Clinton campaign when it decided to take a loan from its own candidate:

At a stop in Iowa in December, Bill Clinton raised the issue of funding his wife's campaign. He told a crowd, "They say you couldn't stop me from spending all the money I've saved over the last five years if I wanted to, even though it would clearly violate the spirit of campaign-finance reform."

Duly violated. Meanwhile, the Clintons are looking to March to save them, but if February becomes all about the juggernaut the Obama campaign has become, March may do nothing to save them. Still, it remains a significant possibility that neither Clinton nor Obama will be able to go to the Democratic National Convention with enough delegates to get the nomination on the first ballot. This makes Howard Dean nervous and excitable, and we all know what happens when Howard Dean gets nervous and excitable.

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