Tony
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2003
- Messages
- 15,410
It is tangential, but I think the evidence is complete, comprehensive, and categorical that Bushco lied about the strength of evidence for WMD. Lots of other people believe that and while I can understand why a Republican elite might not be comfortable with expressing that idea and I can understand why a Democrat might not express the idea out of respect for the presidency I personally think that a Democrat that criticizes other Democrats for being critical of Bushco for misleading the country with respect to WMD just has his priorities in the wrong place....the [continuing ad nasum] debate about 'bush lied!'/'did not!' is a bit too tangental, dontchathink?
Wouldn't it be like getting a veterial decease?
I misspelled “venereal .”What do dead veterinarians have to do with this?![]()
Apart from the moderate part, how does the above description distinguish Lieberman from any other Democratic senator?In his three terms in the Senate...other than being a "moderate" from a NE state, has Lieberman done/accomplished that would qualify him to be president? He's no leader. He is remarkably uncharismatic. He is remarkably lacking in any vision save "elect Joe Leiberman". He is remarkably lacking in real legislative accomplishments.
OK, I'll play.Guys, Gals, I want strategy forecasts.
Don't make me talk in all caps or change font size or color.
I'll do it...I swear!
Seriously, assume Lieberman runs in 06 as an ind because he loses the Dem nom for the seat tomorrow. What will be his strategy and that of the dems and reps?
After we set that in stone, we can move on to the '08 pres ticket.
and after that we can continue the 15,000,000 post running thread series on how bush lied/did not.
OK, I'll play.
Lieberman will run as the middle way, all for one and one for all candidate, but will call himself an "Independent Democrat."
Lamont will run as the "real Democrat," and continue to hammer away at Lieberman on the war and on being out of touch with the folks.
The Republican will show up at a campaign event having coming straight from the casino, and will have fogotten to remove his gambling disguise.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehost/54344d7eaea0deaa.jpg[/qimg]
It'd be less of the Dems, probably. He'll get a lot fewer Dem votes than he'll get in the primary. But'll it'll be a lot bigger % of the Republicans. Their candidate is a non-starter, even for kneejerkers. My joke was no small exaggeration. The joke on the Republicans is that no one remotely primetime bothered, thinking that Lieberman was a lock. Who'd have thunk a Democrat would come up with bright idea of challenging Joe Lieberman, while serious Connecticut Republicans wouldn't have considered it.
I liked all three but see you couldn't resist the dig. No prob...but what, pray tell, do you think the outcome between registered Dems, Inds and Reps for Lieberman?
I'm going to suggest
Dems: 35 -- less than the polls currently suggest but if he loses the nod, he'll lose at least 10 points in the vote too. I may be underestimating.
Inds: 50 -- that's the only guess I can possibly have...they are Inds, afterall.
Reps: 35 -- again, perhaps another overestimate over the number of non-kneejerk party members. I think it's about right. I'll bet on this number more than the others.
Given the demographic makeup, I'm not sure that's enough. It will be close.
It'd be less of the Dems, probably. He'll get a lot fewer Dem votes than he'll get in the primary. But'll it'll be a lot bigger % of the Republicans. Their candidate is a non-starter, even for kneejerkers. My joke was no small exaggeration. The joke on the Republicans is that no one remotely primetime bothered, thinking that Lieberman was a lock. Who'd have thunk a Democrat would come up with bright idea of challenging Joe Lieberman, while serious Connecticut Republicans wouldn't have considered it.
OK then. In general election the Lieberman Party candidate gets 50% of independents, 30% of Democrats and 70% of Republicans.Good and cool. Still, let me get you to commit to some numbers. Hey, we can both revamp our numbers as the primary concludes and the dirt and ads begin to fly in ernest. Just an initial guess, like mine, for now. If nobody else wants to play pure analysts, at least we two can.
OK then. In general election the Lieberman Party candidate gets 50% of independents, 30% of Democrats and 70% of Republicans.
Here's a breakdown of voter registration in Connecticutt
Republican 438,554
Democrat 670,356
Minor Party 4,465
Unaffiliated 876,538
http://www.sots.ct.gov/RegisterManual/SectionVIII/SOV04Enroll.htm
The number of unaffiliated strikes me as strange. Any thoughts on why that is and what Lieberman's strategy should be with regard to it.
The Republican will show up at a campaign event having coming straight from the casino, and will have fogotten to remove his gambling disguise.
Emphasis mine. So you mean your joke was a large exaggeration?hgc said:My joke was no small exaggeration.
Guys, Gals, I want strategy forecasts.
Don't make me talk in all caps or change font size or color.
I'll do it...I swear!
Seriously, assume Lieberman runs in 06 as an ind because he loses the Dem nom for the seat tomorrow. What will be his strategy and that of the dems and reps?
After we set that in stone, we can move on to the '08 pres ticket.
and after that we can continue the 15,000,000 post running thread series on how bush lied/did not.
Well, I skipped to '08 because that is the subject of the thread.
In '06 I think he will lose the primary. If he does, and then runs as an independent, he will probably lose to the Republican. I doubt he would stand ANY chance in getting the '08 nomination as a Democrat since the party would feel that he screwed them by splitting the ticket in the '06 senate race. Lieberman would have shown that he has no party loyalty so you can bet the Democratic Party would turn on him.
If he doesn't run as an independent, he will lose the '08 nomination for all the reasons stated in earlier posts.
If he does manage to win his senate seat in '06, he possibly could win the nomination but I doubt it. Too old, too uncharismatic.
Anyway, history tells us senators don't win Presidential elections anymore. You need to be a governor or VP (Bush, Clinton, Bush, Reagan, Carter, Nixon, Johnson). We have to go back to Kennedy to find someone elected PResident that was not either a VP or a governor.