Perdue’s Probability of Winning a Second Term as Governor of North Carolina: 45%

by johndavis, August 29, 2011

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Aug-24-Perdue-IPD.mp3|titles=Aug 24 Perdue IPD] Gov. Perdue’s Probability of Winning 2nd Term in 2012: 45% Post: August 24, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 22 NEW Premium Monthly Subscription! Due to popular demand, a monthly rate for the $245 half-price Premium Annual Subscription to the John Davis Political Report is now available at $23 per month (cancel at
[More...]

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Aug-24-Perdue-IPD.mp3|titles=Aug 24 Perdue IPD]
Gov. Perdue’s Probability of Winning 2nd Term in 2012: 45%

Post: August 24, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 22

NEW Premium Monthly Subscription! Due to popular demand, a monthly rate for the $245 half-price Premium Annual Subscription to the John Davis Political Report is now available at $23 per month (cancel at any time).

Click HERE to PRINT Subscription Reply FormSubscribe online HERE!

 

“The governor wins the support of only two-thirds of Democrats. a fifth of whom defect to McCrory.”

Tom Jenson, Public Policy Polling,
August 17, 2011 Press Release “McCrory maintains 8-point lead over Perdue”

This is the first look by the John Davis Political Report at Gov. Perdue’s probability of winning a second term as Governor of North Carolina in the 2012 elections.  A dozen key political and economic variables have been used in the Investor’s Political Daily – Governors Race algorithm that suggests her probability of winning.

Bottom Line:  If the election for governor were held today, Perdue’s probability of winning would be only about 45%.  As you will see when you open the chart, it’s hard to find any good news for Governor Perdue at this point in her administration.

The Investors Political Daily – Governors Race Report, will be updated Wednesday through Election Day in November 2012.

Click here to view PDF of Key Variables for Perdue’s Probability of Winning a 2nd Term.

Seven sources were used to compile the dozen political and economic indicators used in the algorithm. They include Gallup for the two national economic indicators, the North Carolina Employment Security Commission for the latest unemployment numbers, the North Carolina State Board of Elections for the fundraising numbers, Public Policy Polling and Civitas for the North Carolina poll numbers, Pollster.com for Obama’s job approval in North Carolina, and Investors Political Daily for Obama’s probability of winning in North Carolina.

Each of the 12 economic and political variables has their own weight in the algorithm with the highest weighted variable being “Fundraising.”  Gov. Perdue barely defeated GOP nominee Pat McCrory in 2008 despite outspending him 2-to1 in one of the best turnout years for Democrats in modern political history.  Midyear reports filed with the North Carolina State Board of Elections show Perdue raising $1.3 million, meager  compared to the $1 million reported by McCrory.

In addition to “Fundraising,” the variables carrying the most weight in the algorithm include “North Carolina Unemployment,” “Perdue’s Job Approval,” “Perdue v/s McCrory Trial Heat,” “Obama’s probability of winning in North Carolina,” and the “leaning of Independent voters” in the governor’s race.

Again, this report will be updated each Wednesday for the remainder of the election cycle.

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report!

 

 

John N. Davis, Editor

- END -

 


NEW Premium Monthly Subscription! Due to popular demand, a monthly rate for the $245 half-price Premium Annual Subscription to the John Davis Political Report is now available at $23 per month (cancel at any time).

Click HERE to PRINT Subscription Reply FormSubscribe online HERE!

Afternoon Update: In Memory of Zeno Edwards: Best Counter-Attack Ad Ever; Obama’s Probability of Winning Update

by johndavis, August 23, 2011

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Aug-23-IPD-ZENO.mp3|titles=Aug 23 IPD ZENO] Afternoon Update Post: August 23, 2011       3 PM “I don’t need people like you lecturing me about morality.” Dr. Zeno Edwards, DDS, Washington, North Carolina September 30, 1926 – August 20, 2011 Quote from 1998 TV ad during race for NC House as a Democrat In Memory of Zeno Edwards: Best
[More...]

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Aug-23-IPD-ZENO.mp3|titles=Aug 23 IPD ZENO]

Afternoon Update Post: August 23, 2011       3 PM

“I don’t need people like you lecturing me about morality.”

Dr. Zeno Edwards, DDS, Washington, North Carolina
September 30, 1926 – August 20, 2011
Quote from 1998 TV ad during race for NC House as a Democrat

In Memory of Zeno Edwards: Best Counter-Attack Ad Ever!

Former state Representative Zeno Edwards, a Washington dentist who served four terms in the North Carolina House of Representatives (two as a Republican and two as a Democrat) died Saturday.  He will be remembered, as Rep. Bill Owens, D-Pasquotank, so aptly described him in an AP story this weekend, as one who “always spoke his mind and stood his ground.”

In 1998, Edwards taught us this political lesson: never attack the character of a candidate with impeccable character if that candidate is one who always speaks their mind and stands their ground. His Republican opponent, Rep. Sandy Hardy, learned that lesson the hard way.

Character Attack Campaign Led by Character-Challenged Gingrich

In the fall of 1998, Republicans in NC and around the U.S. ran ads reminding voters of the affair between President Clinton and a 21-year-old White House intern Monica Lewinsky.  They also tried to bring down Democrats running for the state legislature with TV ads tying them to Bill Clinton, suggesting that legislative Democrats approved of Clinton’s “poor conduct.”

The nationwide ill-conceived attack campaign was led by none other than the character-challenged Newt Gingrich, then Speaker of the U.S. House, who was engaging in an extramarital affair with a member of his staff while criticizing Clinton for his affair.

GOP political strategists assumed in 1998 that the American people could be duped into believing that Republicans had greater personal character qualities than Democrats.  They forgot the time-honored lesson: Those who live in glass houses should not throw stones.

In fact, Speaker Gingrich was the most unpopular national political figure of the entire decade of the 1990s.  The percent of American voters with a favorable impression of Newt Gingrich’s brand of leadership never broke the mid-forties during 1998.  Meanwhile, Clinton’s favorable numbers soared to over 70 percent after the articles of impeachment were voted on by the U.S. House in December of 1998 … higher than Ronald Reagan’s ever were!

The Ad: “Politicians like you are a public nuisance.”

Rep. Zeno Edwards’ GOP opponent in 1998 was Rep. Sandy Hardy, a Pitt County attorney.  Hardy was one of the Republicans who made the mistake of trying to bring down a North Carolina Democrat by tying them to Clinton in campaign ads.

Edwards ran the best counter-attack ad I have ever seen (for the times).  It was set at his home in Washington. He was sitting on a couch with his wife Rosemarie.

Transcript:  ”My opponent claims that because I’m a Democrat that I approve of President Clinton’s poor conduct.  That’s nonsense.  Mr. Hardy, I’m 72 years old. I’ve been married to the same lady for 49 years. You are 37 years old, and you have never been married.  I don’t need people like you lecturing me about morality. Politicians like you who talk about character and don’t know the meaning of the word are a public nuisance.”

After the dust settled in November 1998, Democrats had won an upset comeback victory by not losing what they had and by making surprise gains.  For the first time since 1934, the party in the White House picked up Congressional seats during a mid-term election year.

Here in North Carolina, U.S. Senator Lauch Faircloth, R-Sampson County, lost to political novice John Edwards, D-Wake County, and the GOP lost the majority party advantage in the NC House to the Democrats … including Democrat Zeno Edwards.

Attack Politics 101:  Never attack the character of a candidate with impeccable character if that candidate is one who always speaks their mind and stands their ground.

Click here to view the Zeno Edwards counter-attack ad.

Obama’s Reelect Potential – Investors Political Daily Update 49%

The Investors Political Daily model for tracking President Obama’s potential for reelection continues to show him in the running at 49%.  See report with 12 political and economic indicators here.

President Obama’s “Job Approval” is at its lowest point since his swearing in according to Gallup, now at 38% approval; 54% disapproval.  Gallup notes by way of comparison that in August before they were re-elected, Ronald Reagan had a 43% “Job Approval” and Bill Clinton had a 46% “Job Approval.”

The major variables keeping Obama in the running for a second term are the historic low “Job Approval” of Congress (13%), which includes congressional Republicans, and the unsettled GOP presidential field.  Right now, far more people are supporting Obama than approve of the job he is doing.

Gallup has rated congressional “Job Approval” since 1974.  The three-decade average approval is 34%.  Although Obama’s “Job Approval” is a dismal 38%, his numbers are three times greater than those of the US Congress.  Among Independent voters, only 9% approve of the job the US Congress is doing.

Obama’s probability in North Carolina remains at 44%.  He is still in the running for a 2nd term but is not likely to carry North Carolina.

Perdue’s Reelect Potential – Coming in Tomorrow’s Investors Political Daily

Tomorrow’s Investors Political Daily will use 12 key economic and political variables to forecast Gov. Beverly Perdue’s likelihood of winning in 2012.  Look for 3 PM release.

Last Night’s Keynote: NC Agribusiness Council’s 42nd Annual Meeting

I had the pleasure and honor to deliver the keynote address last night at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the NC Agribusiness Council.  The title of my remarks was, Eight Plus Ten Equals Twelve: How the Political Lessons of 2008 Plus those of 2010 suggest the Likely Winners in 2012. If you are interested in a political speaker, click here to check on my availability.

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report!

NEW Premium Monthly Subscription! Due to popular demand, a monthly rate for the $245 half-price Premium Annual Subscription to the John Davis Political Report is now available at $23 per month (cancel at any time).

Click HERE to PRINT Subscription Reply FormSubscribe online HERE!

Tagged with:
 

Obama’s Probability of Carrying North Carolina in 2012: 44%

by johndavis, August 18, 2011

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Aug-18-IPD-Obama.mp3|titles=Aug 18 IPD Obama] Post: August 18, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 21 “You can’t bring home the bacon now because the pig is dead.” Fmr. Wyoming Republican U.S. Senator Alan Simpson, Co-chairman of the Simpson/Bowles Debt & Deficit Commission Investors Political Daily: Obama’s Probability of Carrying NC in 2012 is 44% This is the first
[More...]

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Aug-18-IPD-Obama.mp3|titles=Aug 18 IPD Obama]

Post: August 18, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 21

“You can’t bring home the bacon now because the pig is dead.”

Fmr. Wyoming Republican U.S. Senator Alan Simpson,

Co-chairman of the Simpson/Bowles Debt & Deficit Commission

Investors Political Daily: Obama’s Probability of Carrying NC in 2012 is 44%

This is the first look at President Obama’s probability of carrying North Carolina next year using a dozen key political and economic variables.

Click here to view PDF of Key Variables for Obama’s Probability of carrying NC.

If the election for president were held today, Obama would only receive about 44% support in North Carolina.

As you will see when you open the chart, although Obama’s numbers are lousy the Republicans are not much better.

  • 56% of “independent voters” in NC disapprove of the job Pres. Obama is doing; 38% approve
  • 38% of NC voters tend to favor Democrats; 40% tend to favor Republicans
  • 39% of NC voters supported raising the debt limit with deep cuts (Obama’s position)
  • Unlike the US as a whole, more North Carolinians support the Tea Party (42%) than oppose it (37%). Nationally, 51% of voters see Tea Party unfavorably; 31% favorably

Obama Lost Favor with Voters Immediately After Taking Office

Last June 10, 2010, I wrote a report titled, Walking on Oily Water in a Sea of Disappointments.  It was about why Obama’s “Job Approval” had plummeted to quickly.  The list is still relevant:

POST JUNE 10, 2010

Obama Disappoints: Average Weekly Job Approval Reaches All-Time Low in June

The great hope for change in Washington has been reduced to great disappointments following political disaster after political disaster.  It’s little wonder that President Obama’s job approval rating is only 44%, a 52-week low.  According to Gallup, Obama’s weekly average job approval has reached a new low as well, 46%, from a weekly average of 65% this time a year ago.[i]

  • He ran as a man of great courage but has become a defensive scapegoater
  • He ran as a friend of the environmentalists but authorized more offshore drilling
  • He ran as a dove but has morphed into a hawk on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
  • He ran as a uniter but has become a partisan wrecking ball with his legislative agenda
  • He ran as a centrist but is governing as a liberal surrounded by liberals
  • He ran as a man of the people but put his priority, healthcare, ahead of their priority, jobs
  • He ran as a man who would close Gitmo and would not hire lobbyists … ha!
  • He ran as a leader committed to fiscal responsibility but is overseeing a doubling of the national debt (projected at $19 trillion by 2015); “unsustainable” said Bernanke 6/10
  • He ran against Wall Street but recapitalized their bonuses with taxpayer money
  • He ran as an economic and jobs stimulator but unemployment/underemployment is still at 20%,[ii] with almost all of the new jobs in May being temporary with the Census Bureau
  • He said his would be the most transparent administration in history yet he manages the news media with connivances, stonewalling and defensive double-speak

Obama would be well served to closet himself for a while at the White House and ponder Ralph Waldo Emerson’s sage caution, “What you are speaks so loudly, I cannot hear what you say.”

Obama’s potential for reelection is still within striking range, although more and more — in order to stay in the running — he has to rely on voter dissatisfaction with all parties and all elected officials … especially those in Washington D.C. associated with the nation’s debt and jobs crisis.

Our national financial position is so weak that it prompted Alan Simpson, fmr. Wyoming GOP U.S. Senator and Co-chairman of the Simpson/Bowles Debt & Deficit Commission to retort, “You can’t bring home the bacon now because the pig is dead.”

Next week Investors Political Daily will look at Gov. Perdue’s probability of a 2012 win.

- END -


[i] http://www.gallup.com/poll/139337/Obama-Weekly-Approval-Average-Dips-New-Low.aspx

NEW Premium Monthly Subscription! Due to popular demand, a monthly rate for the $245 half-price Premium Annual Subscription to the John Davis Political Report is now available at $23 per month (cancel at any time).

Click HERE to PRINT Subscription Reply FormSubscribe online HERE!

Obama’s Probability of Winning in 2012: 48%; Congressional Republicans and Tea Party Hurting GOP

by johndavis, August 12, 2011

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Aug-11-IPD-Obama.mp3|titles=Aug 11 IPD Obama] Post: August 12, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 20 “I’m going to keep at it until every single American who wants a job can find one.” President Barack Obama, Johnson Controls, Holland, Michigan, 8/11/2011 Nothing wrong with our country. Something wrong with our politics. Yesterday, in Holland, Michigan, while touring a battery
[More...]

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Aug-11-IPD-Obama.mp3|titles=Aug 11 IPD Obama]

Post: August 12, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 20

“I’m going to keep at it until every single American who wants a job can find one.”

President Barack Obama, Johnson Controls, Holland, Michigan, 8/11/2011

Nothing wrong with our country. Something wrong with our politics.

Yesterday, in Holland, Michigan, while touring a battery facility, President Obama announced that he would release new proposals for job creation “week by week” to stimulate hiring.  “I’m going to keep at it until every single American who wants a job can find one,” Obama said.

Obama also seized the bully pulpit yesterday to chide political leaders for partisan gridlock.  “There is nothing wrong with our country. There is something wrong with the politics,” he said.

Whether Americans will be encouraged by Obama’s “job for every American” pledge, most Americans probably agree with his statement, “There is something wrong with the politics.”

In the aftermath of the debt debate, the President and the Congress are seeing their lowest approval ratings.  However, August polling shows that the Tea Party and Republicans in Congress are hurting the GOP’s chances at defeating Obama in his race for a second term.

  • Pres. Obama’s job approval is an anemic 43.3%, with 50.4% disapproving (a new low)
  • Congressional job approval is only 16.8%, with 77% disapproving (a new low)
  • A record 20-year low 21% say most in Congress deserve re-election (a new low)
  • Overall support for the Tea Party has dipped to 25% (a new low)
  • Despite Obama’s low numbers, 41% approve of his jobs policy when compared to the 26% who approve of the jobs policy of the Republicans in Congress.

Investors Political Daily Shows Obama’s Probability of 2012 Win is 48%

Last August, the John Davis Political Report unveiled a new feature Investors Political Daily.  A dozen key political and economic trends were tracked daily to give readers a sense of how the elections were likely to unfold.

Thanks to tracking by Investors Political Daily, the John Davis Political Report projected the winner in 47 of 47 North Carolina Senate races (3 races were toss ups), and correctly projected the winner in 111 of 115 North Carolina House races (five races were toss ups).

No one called the legislative races earlier or more accurately.

The Investors Political Daily this election cycle features 12 key economic and political variables.  They will be update daily where practical (Obama Job Approval) or as soon as the updates are available (Unemployment).

Click here to view PDF of Key Variables for Obama’s Probability of Win in 2012:

  • Economic conditions in US … excellent, good, fair, poor
  • Obama job approval
  • Presidential generic ballot
  • National party favorability ratings
  • Job creation index
  • Generic Congressional ballot
  • Independent voters
  • Jobs policy approval
  • Consumer spending
  • National party ID
  • Tea Party opinion
  • Unemployment

Next Week’s Investors Political Daily:

  • Obama’s Probability of Winning NC in 2012
  • Perdue’s Probability of Winning NC Governor’s Race

- END -

NEW Premium Monthly Subscription! Due to popular demand, a monthly rate for the $245 half-price Premium Annual Subscription to the John Davis Political Report is now available at $23 per month (cancel at any time).

Click HERE to PRINT Subscription Reply FormSubscribe online HERE!

The Beatings will Continue until Morale Improves; Morale Improves with a Diet of Peas and Satan Sandwiches

by johndavis, August 4, 2011

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/JDPR-Beatings-Will-Continue.mp3|titles=JDPR Beatings Will Continue] Post: August 4, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 19 “We’ve earned the threat of a downgrade.  If we don’t make significant changes in the way we operate; if we don’t cut spending on entitlements, if we don’t make real cuts in defense spending, if we don’t reform the tax code, then we
[More...]

[audio:http://www.johndavisconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/JDPR-Beatings-Will-Continue.mp3|titles=JDPR Beatings Will Continue]

Post: August 4, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 19

“We’ve earned the threat of a downgrade.  If we don’t make significant changes in the way we operate; if we don’t cut spending on entitlements, if we don’t make real cuts in defense spending, if we don’t reform the tax code, then we are definitely on our way to becoming a second rate world power.”

Erskine Bowles, Telephone Interview, 8/4/2011
Co-chairman of President Obama’s Debt & Deficit Commission;
former Chief of Staff to President Clinton and President of the UNC System

Interview with Erskine Bowles, Co-chair of President Obama’s Debt & Deficit Commission, on when we can expect to see those Now Hiring signs

I called Erskine Bowles yesterday to get his take on when we can expect businesses to dust off and hang those Now Hiring signs in light of the signing of the debt limit deal.  “When we get the confidence up,” he said, “Small business can’t grow … can’t create jobs … without money.  We’ve got to get banks back in the business of lending money,” adding, “A big part of it is truly this whole confidence factor.”

With ongoing concern about a downgrade of the nation’s AAA credit rating still lurking in the shadows and chilling the private sector’s “confidence factor,” I asked, “When are we going to get beyond the threat of a potential downgrade?”

“We’ve earned the threat of a downgrade,” he replied, “And if we don’t make significant changes in the way we operate; if we don’t cut spending on entitlements, if we don’t make real cuts in defense spending, if we don’t reform the tax code, then we are definitely on our way to becoming a second rate world power.”

That’s when it hit me.  What Bowles was saying was that the agony and ugliness of the debate in Washington D.C. over raising the debt ceiling was merely a beginning … a first step.  “You can’t finish what you don’t start,” he said, “That’s why I’m a bit optimistic; we’ve taken the first step.”

In other words, what Bowles was saying was that the beatings will continue (more uncompromising debate by liberal and conservative recalcitrant extremists) until the morale improves (consumer and investor confidence), and the morale will improve (consumer and investor confidence) only after a diet of distasteful peas and “Satan sandwiches” (more painful cuts in programs and services; tax reform that includes added revenue).

“I’m so proud of you son … but don’t mess with my Medicare.”


Erskine Bowles returned my call yesterday from a taxicab in New York City.  He had been in Vancouver the night before, speaking to an audience of business leaders from around the US.  “I told those folks last night in Vancouver that the problem is real, the solutions are all painful, there is no easy way out … but we have to take it.”

Then he chuckled a bit and said, “The American people are like my momma.  She’s 91 years old; she lives there in Greensboro.  She tells me how proud she is of the work I’m doing for the country; she reminds me that my daddy was a fiscal conservative.  And then she adds, ‘but don’t mess with my Medicare.’”

We both got a good laugh, and then returned to the serious issue of the national economic crisis.

It’s time to “eat our peas” … and our “Satan Sandwiches”


Throughout the debt ceiling debate, President Obama pushed for a larger deal in the $4 trillion range that included cuts and reforms in programs and services, including the Pentagon, Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security.  He also advocated an increase in revenues coupled with tax reform that targeted the wealthiest Americans and corporations.

In mid-July, at a White House press conference, Obama reminded Republicans of the need for a big deal.  “I’ve been hearing from my Republican friends for some time it is a moral imperative to tackle our debt and deficits in a serious way,” Mr. Obama said. “What I’ve said to them is, let’s go.”  Then he added, “We might as well do it now; pull off the band aid.  Eat our peas.”

If accepting a bigger bipartisan debt ceiling deal was analogous to eating peas for some, the smaller bipartisan debt ceiling deal was much more distasteful for others.   Representative Emanuel Cleaver, II, D-Missouri, chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, described the debt ceiling bill as a “Satan sandwich.”  “This is a Satan sandwich. There’s no question about it,” Cleaver said, “because there’s nothing inside this sandwich that the major religions of the world will say deals with protection for the poor, the widows, the children. It’s not in here.”

Call it what you will, but there is near-universal consensus today that the nation is at risk of going into default and becoming a second-rate world power unless everyone accepts the premise that “… the solutions are all painful, there is no easy way out … but we have to take it.”

The Tea Party forced a nation in denial to accept the consequences of sovereign debt, but must now end their own denial of the necessity of new revenue as a critical part of the shared sacrifice that is to become the remedy for recovery.

You’ve got to give it to them folks.  The Tea Party has forced a nation in denial to see the negative consequences of sacred cow budgeting and unchecked borrowing.  It took them six years of relentless rebellion to finally get the entire nation and all of its leaders … conservatives and liberals … to agree that the economic crisis could bring down our nation.

The Great Tea Party Rebellion of the 21st Century wrecked Republicans in 2006 and 2008, emasculated members of Congress at Town Halls in 2009, demolished Democrats in 2010, and leveled the leadership in the debt ceiling debate of 2011 … but it may crumble under the weight of callous recalcitrance in 2012.

In April 2008, Barack Obama alienated tens of millions of middle-income Americans frustrated over the government’s role in economic hard times with this statement at a San Francisco fundraiser:  “It’s not surprising, then, they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.”

What President Obama now knows is that they were “bitter” about leaders who said one thing and did another on economic issues … such as jobs and the stifling cost of government.  They were “bitter” about Republicans who disappointed them time and again with their pork barrel spending and deficit spending.  They were “bitter” about out-of-control growth of national indebtedness to foreign powers and the lack of political courage by Democrats and Republicans to take on structural deficiencies with entitlements like Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

Obama knows that his poor judgment in dismissing the “bitter” and putting his priorities ahead of the priorities of the voters cost the Democratic Party dearly throughout the nation in 2009 and 2011, and cost him personally in the loss of respect and support for his leadership.

If the Tea Party makes the same mistake, putting their priorities on revenues ahead of the priorities of the voters … jobs and sovereign economic stability … then they will suffer the same loss of respect and support as the President and the Democratic Party have had to face.

“I’m about to enter the tunnel,” Bowles said from his taxicab in New York City yesterday, “so I’ll talk to you later.”  Although the conversation ended, I was keenly aware that the debate of the past few months was just a first step … just the beginning of the conversation that we must continue as a nation; just the beginning of a diet of “peas” and “Satan sandwiches;” a diet of sacrifices that we all must make … including the Tea Party … to restore the morale and confidence of consumers to spend again and investors to lend again and business to dust off those Now Hiring signs and hire again.  May God bless the United States of America.

- END -

Subscribe to the John Davis Political Report here.