Archive for the ‘Democratic Party’ Category

Democratic Party Rallies Around Obama

Posted by Matt Ortega | June 7, 2008 | Comments (0) »

In a few short days since clinching the nomination, the Democratic Party is quickly rallying around Senator Barack Obama (D-Illinois).

On Saturday afternoon, Senator Hillary Clinton (D-New York) endorsed her former primary opponent in a beautifully-written and masterfully-delivered speech at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C.

It was a speech for the ages as Senator Clinton touched upon the many themes of her campaign and that, although she did not capture the nomination, the glass ceiling has “18 million cracks in it” — a reference to the number of primary votes the junior senator from New York received.

Democrats are uniting behind Senator Obama while Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) struggles to solidify the Republican base and keep his distance from an unpopular president, a Party unfit to govern that Americans are fleeing from in droves and whose platform he will run on in November — simultaneously.

DNC Adopts Obama Fundraising Guidelines

Posted by Matt Ortega | June 5, 2008 | Comments (0) »

Thousands of Americans have donatedSenator Barack Obama and the Democratic National Committee announced that the national Democratic Party will adopt the self-imposed fundraising restrictions set by the Obama for America campaign: no money from Washington lobbyists or federal political action committees.

In response, thousands of Americans heard the call and joined the campaign.

Speaking in Bristol, Virginia, Senator Obama received a standing ovation from the thousands on hand to listen to him speak when he announced the agreement. On the subject of special interests, Senator Obama says:

They do not fund my campaign and they will not fund our party.

MS-01: Democrats Take Another Deep Red District

Posted by Matt Ortega | May 13, 2008 | Comments (0) »

In the special election run-off for Senator Roger Wicker’s (R-Mississippi) former House seat, Democrat Travis Childers was declared the victor. This makes three seats in deeply Republican districts flipping to Democrats and we are not even into the summer yet.

President Bush carried the First Congressional District of Mississippi with 62 percent of the vote. Childers won the seat by eight points, 54-46.

It is important to note that the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) dropped roughly $1.3 million of their $7 million cash on hand in an eight point drubbing in an R+10 district. NRCC Chair Rep. Tom Cole (R-Moore, Okla.) did not even try to spin the crushing defeat. It is simply stunning and goes to show the Everest that Republican candidates face in November.

The defeat leaves Republicans with less than 200 seats in the House — 199.

Swing State Project asked readers to draft the NRCC press release and outlined just how big of a victory the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) and Rep.-elect Childers secured for Democrats.

A number of conservative bloggers are avoiding the Mississippi special election run-off altogether but a few chimed in with their takes.

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