Sunday, October 12, 2008

Republicans Getting Scared, Court Obama Voters

Nice, you know things are getting bad when Republicans are starting to worry about their own reelections in parts of America.

The difficulties of the McCain campaign have led some Republican leaders to express concern that he could end up dragging other Republican candidates down to defeat. “If Obama is able to run up big numbers around the country,” said Mr. Anuzis, the Michigan party chairman, “the potential for hurting down-ballot Republicans is very big.”

One sign of that has emerged in Nebraska, where Representative Lee Terry, a Republican, ran a newspaper advertisement featuring words of support for him from a woman identified as an “Obama-Terry voter.”

The only way for things to get done is to finally come together.
After a turbulent week that included disclosures about Gov. Sarah Palin and signs that Senator John McCain was struggling to strike the right tone for his campaign, Republican leaders said Saturday that they were worried Mr. McCain was heading for defeat unless he brought stability to his presidential candidacy and settled on a clear message to counter Senator Barack Obama.

Republican leaders are worried the McCain campaign is heading towards defeat.

Tommy Thompson, a Republican who is a former governor of Wisconsin, said it would be difficult for Mr. McCain to win in his state but not impossible, particularly if he campaigned in conservative Democratic parts of the state. Asked if he was happy with Mr. McCain’s campaign, Mr. Thompson replied, “No,” and he added, “I don’t know who is.”

Many Republicans are unhappy about his recent negative ad attacks, and now at 100% negative ads running. Why?

In Pennsylvania, Robert A. Gleason Jr., the state Republican chairman, said he was concerned that Mr. McCain’s increasingly aggressive tone was not working with moderate voters and women in the important southeastern part of a state that is at the top of Mr. McCain’s must-win list.

“They’re not as susceptible to attack ads,” Mr. Gleason said. “I worry about the southeast. Obama is making inroads.”

Because right now the election is all about undecided voters, and moderate voters aren't responding well to the negative ads. Negative ads are put out so either sides supporters have things to "talk" about. Propaganda if you will. But negative ads don't really work to gain someone's vote.

“The main thing he needs to do,” said Vin Weber, a former Republican congressman from Minnesota, “is focus on a single message — a single, concise or clear-cut message, and stick with that over the next 30 days, regardless of what happens.

“He’s had a lot of attack lines. But it’s time to choose.”

Vote Obama!

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2 Comments:

Blogger Cerulean Bill said...

How do you know that attack ads don't work with undecideds? I'm not arguing either way, just curious.

October 12, 2008 7:24 PM  
Blogger FriendlyFred said...

Sorry, was a Freudian slip, I corrected the line. Changed to "... and moderate voters not responding well to." Instead of "undecided" it should've been "moderate."

October 13, 2008 12:03 AM  

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