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Choose the presidential nominee for the dems in '08
Lets try that again. Please vote for the most appealing.
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Still no trout option!
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Ugh, a trout option would be welcome here.
Bayh or Warner I think The rest are retreads (Kerry/Edwards/Feingold) or too liberal (Clinton) Edit: or Too New (Obama) |
No Al Gore? Invalid poll....
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Ok, who voted for Hillary? Fess up.
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I voted for Bayh, but that could be the Hoosier in me.
That, and the fact that none of them really inspire me too much. Warner and/or Obama could be interesting choices however, though Obama may be too new on the scene. Warner's record in Virginia was pretty good though. I'd prolly vote for Clinton though, if she were the dems candidate in '08. If for no other reason than I liked Bubba. I'd also vote for Gore in a heartbeat. But please God not Kerry again...I mean crap, he makes Gore look charismatic! |
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I don't see Giant Douche or Turd Sandwich anywhere on this list.
I'd probably vote for Mark Warner in lieu of the others. |
Trout in '08.
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Hillary might be a good running mate. Palatable enough for the moderates and a good setup for her to become President.
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Im pretty shocked so many for Obama; there's zero chance of that happening imo.
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Where is "none of the above." That list is just about as depressing as a potential Republican candidate list. Bush-Gore. Bush-Kerry. How can it get worse? But then I consider the possibilities for 08.
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I did...she'll never win the White House. I hope she wins the primary |
I think that it will eventually turn into a Hillary vs Warner race at the end, and most likely Hilary has the right people in place in order to win the primary. The rest of these guys don't really do much for me, Edwards isn't going to be able to pull his class warfare nearly effectively enough this time.
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Interesting results so far. I had to vote for Feingold, but I seriously doubt he'll be much of a contender.
Once the primaries get closer, I think there'll be a split between Hillary supporters and a more or less "Anyone but Hillary" group that will try to consolidate behind one guy. (Along the same lines as everyone rallying behind Kerry at the last minute to knock off Dean.) |
My answer to this would depend on the Republican candidate. :D
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Missing a lot of candidates.
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I would have voted for Mark Warner, but just today he announced that he is not interested in running for president, as it would entail too much of a sacrifice of his family life.
You know, I think I just figured out the problem with democracy: anyone interested in running for public office is most likely not suitable for holding public office--no normal person would subject himself or herself to that sort of scrutiny or life. Still, democracy is better than the alternatives (although I wonder if we wouldn't be better off picking names out of a hat.) |
I'd vote for Byah and maybe Vilsack. I'd want to know more about their economic policies and stance on the current military activities though. At this point, if a sensible democrat campaigned with a pledge not to raise taxes, a decent immigration policy and not pull out of Iraq (I don't mind making strategy changes though), I'd probably vote for him. Byah looks like the closest fit given his record.
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I was pretty surprised by that as well. Certainly with all the votes that Feingold has made in the senate the GOP would have little trouble trying to paint him as very left of center. But he does have the not voting for the iraq war going for him which could be huge in '08 (at least in the primary). He also has the Feingold-McCain campaign finance reform going for him but that was a while ago. He also plays well in the midwest which would help. |
Looking at that list again...that's a pretty sad list of candidates.
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I was looking for the Balsack/Douchebag ticket, but guess I'll have to wait until 2012...
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If I was a betting man, I'd bet on Al Gore.
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I was looking for Gore, he'd get my vote.
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i wouldn't mind Kerry running again. i think with hindsight being what it is, we'll have realized his way couldn't have been any worse circa 2004 than what we have now. we've liberated nothing and made a bad situation worse, and the price of our oil is still high.
his entire campaign should be "I told you so". |
The problem with Kerry is that the "haughty northeastern liberal" tag doesn't play well across the heartland. Also, people aren't really in favor of having a true politician (something Kerry's voting record suggests) leading the country at a time of war.
If I were advising the democrats, I would throw out any candidate not from a red state. At a minimum, maybe you end up stealing that one red state (which might be the difference in the election). I think there is a strong desire to see a democrat as president by many people, but they don't want the "anti-Bush" from the NE. They just want someone they view as more sensible, but won't go nuts in changing things. |
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yep |
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Being "Not Bush" may have helped in 04, but it may not mean much in 08. |
I'm still baffled, how is Hillary in second place? Are those all votes from Republicans, or does someone actually want to defend her?
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The interesting thing with this quote, being part of the "Clinton club" shouldn't have hurt Gore as Clinton WON the state of Tennessee in 1996: And, wouldn't you know it... 1992 as well! |
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Seriously - one of the dirty secrets in that the Democrats don't really need the South to gain the presidency. They'll get the inner West, slowly but surely. A former New York Post writer of all people has a book out on the GOP's complete shift to the "Southern-fried morality" as compared to its more western, libertarian outlook - "The Elephant in the Room."
http://www.rhsager.com/thebook/ |
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It's unfortunate to read that Warner won't be running.
In general, my views aline so that I vote for Republicans more often than Democrats. But I was so happy with Warner as Governor of Virginia that I voted for Kaine largely on the fact that he was under Warner. I think he'd make an intrigueing candidate, a candidate that I would think might even give him a chance at VA as I think he really gained a ton of respect here. |
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You are forgetting that Gore, thinking that people didn't like Clinton in 1999 & 2000 decided to run AWAY from Clinton. He didn't let Clinton campaign for him. He had to put Clinton on in the Dem Convention, but gave him a 'meh' spot. He basically tried to run on the "I'm not Clinton" campaign and it cost him dearly. If he had embraced Clinton and let Clinton hit the campaign trail for him (as Clinton wanted to do), Gore would have been President in 2001. |
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The more I think about, I think Clinton *may* have won re-election in 1998. My thought process was that most people still liked Clinton as a person, they were just tired of the drama with him in the White House. Still, I think that speaks more to his likeability than anything else and likeability isn't something that often transfers to a running mate. Although, I do think Gore would have won running away if there was no Monica scandal in 1998.
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I would vote for Gore again. Especially if he sticks to his guns on environmental issues.
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If Hillary wins the Dem nom, I'd have to vote Republican.
That being said, I highly doubt she will win it. Country's not ready for a woman pres yet, especially once that inspires antagonism to the level that she does. |
Now that I've thought it through, I really hope Gore runs. He may be the only one that could stop Hillary.
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Wow. Interesting that Obama and Hillary are the leaders in this poll. As a conservative, I can tell you that most of us in the middle portion of the country would vote Republican if either of those candidates were the Democratic nominee. Those two are very polarizing figures and would probably cause people to vote Republican simply because they didn't want either Hillary or Obama in the White House.
Democrats need to start finding candidates that more moderate conservatives like myself would actually consider voting for. I, like many Republicans, am willing to vote for the other party's candidate if they just put up a decent one. Hillary and Obama are definitely no-go's for me. |
I think most people are mistaken on the reasons why Gore did not carry Tennessee. I can't speak for the entire state, but I can speak for the 60-80 family and friends who live there (all on the eastern half of the state if it makes any difference.. not sure). They all voted against Gore, not because of Clinton or Bush or anything other than they felt betrayed by Gore.
Gore was pretty popular when elected into the senate, ran on some platforms that people were interested in, and once he got into office, he went much further liberal in their opinions than what he ran as. The majority of them felt he lied and betrayed them. I also grew up in the Southeast, as a "conservative democrat" which in the end makes me pretty moderate on most issues. I didn't vote for Gore in the election vs Bush, not because I liked Bush but because I didn't like Gore. I didn't vote for Bush this last election however. Don't get me wrong, I don't know every thought of every Tennessean, but my family had some nice heated debates over thanksgivings about this topic. :) |
Bill Maher for President!
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I would think the environment, and it's relationship to foreign policy (as in, independence from oil), would be the major focus of his campaign, if he were to run. |
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All the Dem's need to do is pick up a couple thousand votes in a border state to win. |
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