US Election Coverage 2008



GOP mwaka jana wote walikuwa wanajiandaa kushindana na Hilary baada ya Iowa wanaanza kuswitch gear.
 
How come Obama's speeches lack substance? It's always "I want change", "I am going to change politics", "Change, change, change...ad infinitum". This plus his past is why I believe this man not capable. If you also look at his rallies, it's usually White women who go crazy over him. This reminds me of what Nyerere said which is along the lines "if you like candidate's face go drink tea with him". Africans on the other hand see Obama as a messiah who will single handedly lift them out of misery which could not be further from the truth.
 
Ndugu Ukweli,
Substance gani unayotafuta babaangu? Sikiliza kwanza ile hotuba yake wakati wa convention ya wademocrat 2004, halafu usikilize mahojiano yake katika vipindi vya waandishi wa habari, kama bado unatafuta substance basi shikamana na Kichaka
 
Truth here the answer:

Even Conservative Media Chorus Sings Obama's Praises
By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 8, 2008; Page C01

Barack Obama, now the media's odds-on favorite to win the White House, is drawing effusive praise from the chattering classes. "You'd have to have a heart of stone not to be moved by this. . . . This is a huge moment," one commentator wrote.
An unreconstructed liberal? An African American hungering for a racial breakthrough? No, it was David Brooks, the conservative New York Times columnist, and he's got plenty of company on the right.
The media overall are being swept up by a wave of Obamamania, in which normally hard-bitten journalists watch the orator in action and come away dazzled by his gifts. A New York Times piece Saturday compared the Illinois senator to JFK and Martin Luther King in the same paragraph. A Newsweek cover story out yesterday gushed that Obama, "tall and handsome and blessed with a weighty baritone, knows how to bring along a crowd while seeming to stay slightly above it." The journalistic scrutiny usually visited on instant front-runners has been replaced by something akin to a standing ovation.
What's more, the applause extends even to pundits on the right, many of whom routinely denigrate Democratic politicians and yet are strikingly warm toward Obama. There is gratitude, to be sure, that he seems poised to knock off their longtime bete noire, Hillary Clinton -- especially if he wins today's New Hampshire primary -- but also admiration for his inclusive approach to politics and for his sheer talent.
"Who's not proud of this kid?" says Amanda Carpenter, national political reporter for the conservative site Townhall.com. "He has a story people feel good about."
In the wake of Obama's remarks about unity on the night of his Iowa caucus victory Thursday, MSNBC's Joe Scarborough, a former Republican congressman and self-described conservative, called it "one of the most remarkable speeches I've ever seen."
Bill Bennett, the conservative author, said on CNN that it was a "remarkable breakthrough" for "Barack Hussein Obama, a black man," to win in a "rural, white farming state." Rush Limbaugh added his voice on the radio, saying that Obama and Mike Huckabee, the Republican winner in Iowa, "had really uplifting, inspirational speeches."
The Weekly Standard called Obama "the classiest candidate on the Democratic side." Peggy Noonan, the former Ronald Reagan speechwriter, wrote in the Wall Street Journal that Obama had won "with a classy campaign, an unruffled manner, and an appeal on the stump that said every day, through the lines: Look at who I am and see me, the change that you desire is right here, move on with me and we will bring it forward together."
What explains these cross-party kudos?
"There's clearly a matter of heart going on here," Bennett says after his morning radio show. "He's a cool guy, a handsome guy, has a fabulous voice. A leading Democratic candidate, a black man in America, and he does not talk about race, does not play the race card. It appeals to the better angels of all our natures."
Scarborough dismisses the notion that some conservatives are talking up Obama in the belief that he would be a weak general-election opponent. "I get e-mails from Republicans, who've never voted for a Democrat before, saying they were tearing up during his Iowa speech," he says from New Hampshire. "I don't think they're being calculated and cynical. This is so damn great for America."
The story line -- "a biracial kid with an absentee father whose improbable path carried him from Hawaii to Indonesia to Chicago to Washington," as Newsweek put it -- has a movie-of-the-week quality for news outlets. The New York Post's headline screamer yesterday, over a picture of Clinton, was "PANIC." By contrast, the Boston Herald's front page blared: "BARACK STAR."
Few liberal columnists are shedding tears over the difficulties of Clinton, who has no natural cheering section in the press. And African American writers -- The Washington Post's Eugene Robinson wrote that Obama's speech gave him "goose bumps" -- are understandably excited.
Not all conservatives have hitched a ride on the Barackwagon. "There's a lot about the Obama movement I find offensive," says National Review Editor Rich Lowry, who predicted two months ago that his campaign was going "nowhere." "There's a messianism -- 'I embody change' -- that if a Christian conservative was saying those things, people would be scared."
But even as a "self-absorbed" Obama spouts "airy cliches," Lowry says, he found himself standing on tiptoe at a recent Obama speech. "It's really something magical," he says. "You're almost not an American if you don't feel stirred by what his victory would represent symbolically. Here's a guy who 50 years ago couldn't have gone in certain restrooms and motels."

Obama's conciliatory tone may also be a factor. He speaks of transcending red and blue states with a coalition that includes Republicans and independents, while Clinton, who has been hammered by the right since her husband's 1992 campaign, boasts about battling the "Republican attack machine."
Some major conservative voices have paid only fleeting attention to Obama -- Fox's Bill O'Reilly says he "ran an excellent campaign in Iowa" and is "very charismatic" -- because they are more engaged in relishing Clinton's defeat. The Standard's cover story this week, with a shot of Bill and Hillary, is "The Fall of the House of Clinton." But that means Obama has been spared, at least for now, the kind of frontal assault that might otherwise greet a surging liberal Democrat.
For some conservative commentators, Obama, 46, embodies the turning of a different kind of page, as the candidate himself has argued. In an Atlantic cover story last month, right-leaning blogger Andrew Sullivan called Obama's candidacy "a potentially transformational one. Unlike any of the other candidates, he could take America -- finally -- past the debilitating, self-perpetuating family quarrel of the baby boom generation that has long engulfed all of us."
Even Huckabee, in ABC's Republican debate Saturday, acknowledged: "We have to recognize that what Senator Obama has done is touch at the core of something Americans want. . . . He has excited a lot of voters in this country. Let's pay respect for that."
Many journalists have a personal fondness for John McCain, who holds a narrow lead in the polls for New Hampshire's Republican primary, based on his round-the-clock accessibility going back to their rides on the Straight Talk Express in 1999 and 2000. Obama has few such relationships with national reporters, who are more in the role of passive observers of a stellar performer.
Politico columnist Roger Simon, in New Hampshire last weekend, contrasted "a compelling, almost mesmerizing, speech" by Obama, who offered few specifics, with an event in which "Clinton talked about issue after issue in almost mind-numbing detail" while part of the audience filtered out.
If Obama becomes the Democratic nominee, the conservative media are not likely to urge his election by acclamation. There will be plenty of emphasis on his liberal positions and, in an echo of Clinton's criticism, his lack of national experience.
"This is a guy probably to the left of Hillary," Bennett says.
"Do I think he's right on the issues? No," Carpenter says. "But there's a perception you can work with him."
Lowry sees Obama as an elusive target: "No one's really got anything on him because he hasn't really done anything yet. He doesn't have any battle scars. You can blast Obama for what I'd consider an outrageous left-wing statement and it just doesn't get conservatives charged up the way blasting Hillary does."

Source—Washington Post, January 8, 2008
 
Capitol Hill,
Thank you. And as Perry Mason used to say: "I rest my case."
 
Mark Penn atapona baada ya leo?
(6:32 p.m. ET)

Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman told FOX News Tuesday that the New York senator plans to soon bring in "a lot more top-level advisers," even as former Bill Clinton advisers Paul Begala and James Carville earlier denied reports that they are on tap.

Clinton aasirishwa na media
Video


GOP Concerns and worries
 
kwenye polling station moja Hilly kapewa, "he he ho ho status quo is gotta go." By saa mbili hivi EST tutakuwa na matokeo ya awali.
 
Truth,
defend this as well


RON PAUL: MARTIN LUTHER KING WAS GAY PEDOPHILE


http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=e2f15397-a3c7-4720-ac15-4532a7da84ca
 
Haya kaeni mkao wa kula na kunywa kabla ya CNN hawajaanza kutuwekea matokeo rasmi ya ushindi mkubwa wa Obama. Sijui Mama atabwaga manyanga au ataendelea kusuasua, lakini shughuli bado nzito kwa Obama.

[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8x5JqZNYpRQ[/media]
 
Niliona kwenye TV na sasa nimepata kimaandishi hii quote kweli akina Clinton wamepanic!!!🙄
Bill Clinton kaanza kubishana na waandishi wakongwe kama akina Lou Dobbs!
Kazi kwelikweli!
GO OBAMA GO!
 
10% ya precincts zimeshaingia inaonyesha mama ana 37% Obama 36% lakini sasa hivi polling zote zimefungwa so in few minutes tutajua
Exit poll zinampa Obama ushindi
 
Bill akiamua kwenda negative atajivunjia hadhi yake kubwa aliyokuwa nayo US na hata dunia nzima, afanye kampeni ya nguvu lakini kumshambulia Obama haitawasaidia.
 
IN my view, Bill kwenda on the attack imeonyesha uchu wa madaraka wa hubby and wife team, it is going to hurt Hillary's chances.
 
Truth,
defend this as well


RON PAUL: MARTIN LUTHER KING WAS GAY PEDOPHILE



http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=e2f15397-a3c7-4720-ac15-4532a7da84ca

More allegations and no evidence to back them up. Ron Paul calls Martin Luther King his hero. Why would he do that after calling him a gay pedophile as your article alleges? Makes no sense plus Ron Paul is against racism. I encourage everyone to visit (http://www.ronpaul2008.com/issues/) to learn what Ron Paul stands for.
 
The Clinton camp claims it has a bombshell on Obama. I wonder what could it be. Few possibilities come to mind.

1) Obama dealt drugs at some point in his youth. He has already admitted to using drugs.

2) He is cheating on his wife and has kids outside his marriage.

3) He belongs to a radical (Black Panther type) group that hates White people.

4) He has accepted bribery.

5) He fabricated his academic record.

Hillary Clinton's camp said it would expose Obama and I can't wait to see that.
 
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