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When Trustworthiness is an Unreasonable Expectation for Leaders, the Skill Set for the Most Important Problems becomes the Standard

by johndavis, May 1, 2012

When Trustworthiness is an Unreasonable Expectation for Leaders, the Skill Set for the Most Important Problems becomes the Standard “Those are my views, and if you don’t like them, well then, I’ll change them.” Allegedly by Mitt Romney, Presumptive GOP Presidential Nominee Post: Tuesday, May 1, 2012       Vol. V, No. 15      3:13 pm I
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When Trustworthiness is an Unreasonable Expectation for Leaders, the Skill Set for the Most Important Problems becomes the Standard

“Those are my views, and if you don’t like them, well then, I’ll change them.”

Allegedly by Mitt Romney, Presumptive GOP Presidential Nominee

Post: Tuesday, May 1, 2012       Vol. V, No. 15      3:13 pm

I heard that Mitt Romney ended his speech last weekend to a group of the GOP faithful by saying, “Those are my views, and if you don’t like them, well then, I’ll change them.” That bit of humor reveals Romney’s biggest problem among fiscal conservatives: you can’t trust him to be the conservative he now claims to be; too much history of flip-flopping to the contrary.

During the last decade, the nation trusted Republicans with all of the power and they let us down.  Under Republican President George W. Bush, and a Republican congress led by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) and U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL), Republicans spent money like crazed liberal Democrats and started The Great Recession that cost us 8.5 million jobs and brought our country to the brink of bankruptcy.

Who can be trusted?  Is trustworthiness too much to expect in our political leaders?

In the fall of 2008, there was only one other option on the ballot: the Democrats.  So, we put them in charge with great hope for change in Washington and a restoration of our country’s financial integrity.  Well, that turned out to be the proverbial fox guarding the henhouse.

Now we are stuck: do we keep the big spending liberals in power who have not figured out how to get us back on our own two feet or do we put the big spending conservatives in power who knocked us off our feet in the first place?

Have we forgotten that during the administration of Republican President George W. Bush we went from a budget surplus to a national debt of $4.9 trillion?  Have we forgotten that the banking crisis, subprime mortgages crisis, real estate crisis, Wall Street meltdown, bank bailouts, auto manufacturing crisis, and The Great Recession happened on the Republican watch?

So, how about trustworthiness?  Who can I trust to do the right thing by the country?

Unfortunately, that’s like asking, who is more trustworthy to do the right thing: the Republicans in the U.S. House or the Democrats in the U.S. Senate? Got the picture? Trustworthiness is an unreasonable expectation for elected officials.  Both have proven themselves untrustworthy.

Political Math: Obama’s Job Approval is High because Bush’s was so Low

Last week, Gallup’s job approval number for Barack Obama’s was 50%.  Per Gallup, his average for April was 47%President Bush had a job approval of 25% in the fall of 2008.

I am persuaded that the ONLY reason President Obama has sustained a near-50% job approval in the midst of high unemployment and a debilitating sovereign debt crisis is a fear of giving the country back to the Bush team.

The Bush team is the Albatross around Romney’s neck. That’s why Jeb Bush, arguably the most competent and level-headed Republican on the American political stage today, cannot be seriously considered as Vice President.  Wrong last name.  Who would want a third Bush term?

The only way that President George W. Bush had such a historic low 25% job approval is that Republican voters in 2008 agreed with Democrats and Independents that Bush and his team were responsible for the economic crisis and could no longer be trusted to manage the country.

Why would we put that group back in charge?  When President Bush was sworn in on January 21, 2001, Gallup polling showed that only 22% of Americans thought that the most important problems facing the country were economic.  When President Obama was sworn in on January 20, 2009, Gallup polling showed that the number of Americans who thought that the most important problems facing the country were economic and grown to 86%.

That’s why Romney must distance himself from all things Bush.

Republicans and Democrats have Different Priorities/Worries

So, what are the most important problems of the day?  According to Gallup, the only replies with a 10%-or-greater group of voters to the question, “What do you think is the most important problem facing this country today? are:

  • Economy in general                           32%
  • Unemployment/Jobs                           25%
  • Dissatisfaction with Government       12%
  • Federal budget deficit/debt                11%

All other problems are single-digit numbers. Only 9% said health care was the most important problem; only 8% named Fuel/Oil Prices as the most important problem; 5% said Education; 2% said Taxes; 2% said Immigration/Illegal Aliens; 2% said War; 1% said National Security; 1% said Crime/Violence; 1% said Abortion.

So, which one of the two candidates likely to face off in this fall’s presidential contest has the skill set to take on the most important problems of the day?

It all comes down to the skills to deal with the most important problems of the day, and, with few exceptions, that comes down to your party affiliation. A March 28, 2012 study by Gallup shows a distinct difference in how Democrats and Republicans answered the “most important problem” question.

  • 84% of Republicans said Federal Spending/Budget Deficit was an issue that worried them “a great deal.” Only 42% of Democrats agreed.
  • 71% of Republicans said Size and Power of the Federal Government worried them “a great deal.” Only 31% of Democrats agreed.
  • 46% of Republicans said Availability/Affordability of Health Care worried them “a great deal,” whereas, 69% of Democrats were worried about health care.
  • 34% of Republicans said Hunger and homelessness worried them “a great deal,” whereas, 53% of Democrats were worried about the poor.

Look at where Democrats, Republicans … and Independents Agree

The political value of the Gallup study is not just in seeing where the parties disagree, it’s in seeing where they agree:

  • Both parties are highly worried about the Economy, Gas Prices and Unemployment
  • Neither party is highly worried about Crime, Drugs, Environment, Terrorism, Race Issues

But perhaps the greatest political value of the Gallup study is in seeing where Independent voters come down on the issues that both parties see as important.

  • Independent voters are not nearly as worried about the Federal Spending/Budget Deficit issue (56%) as Republicans (84%), although more concerned than Democrats (42%).
  • Independent voters are not nearly as worried about the Size and Power of the Federal Government issue (40%) as Republicans (71%), although more concerned than Democrats (31%).
  • Economy, Gas Prices and Unemployment are important to all three groups.
  • Independent voters are more worried about the Availability/Affordability of Health Care issue (61%) than Republicans (46 %), much closer to the Democrats (69%).

Bottom line, since voters do not trust either party anymore, the 2012 winners will be those who make the best case that they have the skill set to deal with the issues relating to the Economy, Unemployment and Gas Prices. And, the winners of the all-important Independent vote will be those who can add Availability/Affordability of Healthcare to their list of core competencies.

It strikes me that as of today, May 1, 2012, presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney has the perfect skill set for the problems of the day provided he’s willing to flip-flop one more time and take credit for being the architect of Obamacare, to lock in the Independent vote, and provided he joins the American majority in its fear and loathing of a third Bush term by distancing himself from anyone associated with the Bush administration.

That should not be a stretch for a pathological flip-flopper who allegedly ended his speech last weekend by saying, “Those are my views, and if you don’t like them, well then, I’ll change them.”

– END –

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report

John N. Davis, Editor


If you are not a subscriber, please consider subscribing.  The Premium Annual Subscription is $245.  You can subscribe online at www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622.  P.S.:  Need a speaker?  Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel.  Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties.  Inquire about availability here.  JND


North Carolina is Romney’s to Lose; Obama Abandoned by his Army of Enthusiastic Young Volunteers Discouraged by Unemployment

by johndavis, April 19, 2012

North Carolina is Romney’s to Lose; Obama Abandoned by his Army of Enthusiastic Young Volunteers Discouraged by Unemployment “The central question is likely to be whether Obama can turn out as many young people in this college-heavy state as he did in 2008. With massive 18-29 turnout, North Carolina looks doable for Obama. Without it,
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North Carolina is Romney’s to Lose; Obama Abandoned by his Army of Enthusiastic Young Volunteers Discouraged by Unemployment

“The central question is likely to be whether Obama can turn out as many young people in this college-heavy state as he did in 2008. With massive 18-29 turnout, North Carolina looks doable for Obama. Without it, probably not.”

The Washington Post, The Fix, Chris Cillizza, April 16, 2012

Post: Thursday, April 19, 2012       Vol. V, No. 14      1:13 pm

President Obama cannot win a second term without the army of enthusiastic young campaign volunteers responsible for his first victory, and thus far they are nowhere to be found.  They have not abandoned the cause, they have abandoned the leader of the cause.

On April 16, 2012, Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza, editor of the politics blog The Fix, argued in a story The 9 swing states of 2012, that if Obama does not get a large turnout of young voters in North Carolina, he is not likely to carry the state in 2012.

Well, Obama is not likely to carry the state.  The facts tell the whole story:

  • Obama carried North Carolina by only 14,179 votes out of 4,310,623 cast in 2008
  • New registered voters in the 18-to-24-year-old age group in 2008 totaled 317,584
  • CNN exit polls show 17% of all North Carolina voters in 2008 were 18-to-29-year-olds
  • Barack Obama won 72% of the 18-to-29-year-old-voters to John McCain 28%

Bottom line:  Without the young voters in North Carolina doing the hard work of registering and turning out voters in record numbers in 2008 … especially during the early voting periods of the May Primary and the November General Election … Obama never would have won.

Obama Defeated Clinton and McCain in North Carolina with Young Volunteers

On May 6, 2008, Primary Election Day exit polling here in North Carolina was so conclusive that the moment the polls closed the national networks declared Barack Obama the winner over Hillary Clinton.

David Plouffe, President Obama’s campaign manager, revealed the campaign secrets in his book The Audacity to Win.  Plouffe recalls the 14-point blowout in North Carolina this way:  “As the returns came in, we could see the traces of our strategy’s design: by registering over 100,000 new voters, producing strong turnout among African-Americans and young voters, and winning college-educated whites thanks to our stand against the gas tax, we made ourselves unbeatable in North Carolina.”[1]

The unconventional strategy of targeting atypical voters in unlikely places like North Carolina continued throughout the fall.  Obama knew he could not defeat a Republican presidential nominee in the Old North State with TV ads, no matter how much money he spent.  His only hope was a massive ground game, registering and turning out non-traditional voters.

The Obama campaign had 47 headquarters in our state in 2008, with 400 paid staff in the twenty-something age group managing the army of thousands of enthusiastic young volunteers.

When the dust settled and the numbers were tallied in North Carolina following the November elections, 967,804 new voters had been registered during the year, with nearly 8 in 10 registering either as a Democrat or Unaffiliated, pushing our state to over 6 million registered voters for the first time ever.

New African-American voters totaled over 304,708; new voters in the 18-to-24-year-old age group totaled 317,584 … early voters in the fall of 2008 totaled 2.6 million of the 4.3 million votes cast (only 984,000 voted early in 2004), more than voted on Election Day.

Obama Has No Coattails

In the fall of 2009, only one year after millions of young voters throughout America carried Barack Obama to victory, we discovered that Obama had no coattails.  Young voters did not turn out for the Democrats in the two governor’s races in Virginia and New Jersey.

Despite numerous pleas from the president during personal visits, only 8% of the 18-to-24-year-old voters turned out in New Jersey in the race that Republican Gov. Chris Christie won (17% in 2008), and only 10% of the 18-to-24-year-old voters turned out in Virginia in the race Republican Gov. Bob McDonald won (21% in 2008).

In a revealing story in Data-Net, July 2011, titled Young Adult Voting: 2010 falls short of 2008 by Eliza Kern, managing editor of reesenews, the “student powered” digital news publication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, it was reported that in the 2010 midterm elections in North Carolina, 18-to-25-year-olds “made up only 5% of the population who voted.”  Kern points out that the turnout rate of young voters in 2010 was only 17%, “… as compared to a 60% turnout rate for citizens older than 66.”

Noting that young Republicans turned out at a significantly higher rate than Young Democrats in 2010 (24% compared to 17% for young Democrats), Kern writes, “… it does raise questions as to the depth of young Democrats’ commitments to their party and their president that was so widely touted after the 2008 election.  This question of their commitment will remain highly relevant in the upcoming 2012 reelection campaign.”

Republicans will not take North Carolina for Granted in 2012

No one thought Obama could win North Carolina in 2008, so Republicans took this state for granted.  McCain/Palin didn’t campaign here until the very end, and then it was too late.

The brilliance of the Obama campaign in North Carolina in 2008 cannot be overstated.  They operated under the radar with a ground game only, thereby not alarming the opposition with a high profile TV ad campaign.

Obama has little chance of carrying North Carolina in 2012 in part because he has lost the surprise factor.  But the main reason Obama has virtually no chance of carrying North Carolina in 2012 is that he does not have the army of enthusiastic young volunteers to do the hard work of registering and turning out voters.

Youth employment in America is at a 60-year low.  Over 18% of Americans aged 18 to 24 are unemployed.  According to an April 19, 2012 NPR story, Educated And Jobless: What’s Next For Millennials”, “Only 55 percent of people ages 16 to 29 have a job — the lowest percentage since World War II. A quarter of people between ages 25 and 34 are living with their parents, and new numbers out this week say people under 35 are worth 68 percent less than they were 25 years ago.”

Obama may be able to raise enough money to rent the 47 headquarters he had in North Carolina in 2008, and he may be able to pay for 400 workers again to staff them, but he can’t buy the army of enthusiastic young campaign volunteers responsible for his victory.

Young voters have not abandoned the cause of hope and change, they have abandoned the leader of the cause.  Without them, he cannot carry North Carolina in 2012; without them he cannot win a second term as president of the United States of America.

– END –

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report

John N. Davis, Editor


[1] The Audacity to Win, page 229.

[2] Union contributions and independent expenditures database provided by Civitas Institute

[3] http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/indexp.php

[4] The Wall Street Journal, SEIU Campaign Spending Pays Political Dividends, May 16, 2009

If you are not a subscriber, please consider subscribing.  The Premium Annual Subscription is $245.  You can subscribe online at www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or complete the subscription form here and mail to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622.P.S.:  Need a speaker?  Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel.  I moderated a panel Wednesday for the Independent Insurance Agents of NC featuring David Parker, Chair of the NC Democratic Party, and Robin Hayes, Chair, NC Republican Party. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties.  Inquire about availability here.  jnd


Super PACs a Super PROBLEM for NC Politicians: 1,000 high-dollar contributors wiped out by 1 Super PAC contributor

by johndavis, February 24, 2012

Super PACs a Super PROBLEM for NC Politicians: 1,000 high-dollar contributors wiped out by 1 Super PAC contributor The Hypocrisy of Congressman David Price’s Moral Outrage Post: Friday, February 24, 2012       Vol. V, No. 7      11:13 am Joe Democrat and Joe Republican Get $1 Million Imagine 1,000 high-dollar contributors writing a check for $1000 each
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Super PACs a Super PROBLEM for NC Politicians: 1,000 high-dollar contributors wiped out by 1 Super PAC contributor

The Hypocrisy of Congressman David Price’s Moral Outrage

Post: Friday, February 24, 2012       Vol. V, No. 7      11:13 am

Joe Democrat and Joe Republican Get $1 Million

Imagine 1,000 high-dollar contributors writing a check for $1000 each and giving them to Joe Democrat, all breathing a collective sigh of relief knowing that once again they have secured their power in North Carolina with a million-dollar financial advantage.  Now, imagine 1 contributor writing a check for $1,000,000 and giving it to Joe Republican’s Super PAC.  That’s the new political reality of funding campaigns in North Carolina.

Allowing Super PACs to raise and spend unlimited amounts of money independently may be a bad rule for our Democracy, but in 2012 it is the rule.  Ignoring Super PACs is unilateral disarmament.  President Obama came to that conclusion last week.  He came to a similar conclusion four years ago when he changed his mind about limiting his campaign spending to public funding.

Obama’s decision to abandon public funding in 2008 allowed him to spend $760 million to John McCain’s $358 million.  It’s why he won.  He is not giving away that advantage.

David Price’s Moral Outrage Rings Hollow

North Carolina Congressman David Price, D-Orange wrote an opinion piece in this week’s US News and World Report, Super PACs Strike at the Heart of Democracy, in which he says that Super PACs are “a culmination of a decades-long campaign by conservative groups and corporate interests” to gain undue influence in politics.

Where was David Price’s moral outrage over the century-long undue influence by liberal groups and corporate interests when it was being used by Democrats to keep their majorities in the legislature, on the courts and in the executive branch here in North Carolina?

Where was David Price’s moral outrage over undue influence of outside money in North Carolina politics when $5,032,908 was being spent by unions in 2008 on North Carolina candidates, $4,532,540 of which was spent by public employee unions and their affiliated unions?  Here are the facts:[1]

 

  • SEANC is Local #2008, affiliated with SEIU (Service Employees Int’l Union)
  • SEIU invested $1,810,566 in NC candidates in 2008
  • Democrats enjoyed $1,760,556 of SEIU’s money, or 97%; Republicans 3%
  • SEIU gave the North Carolina Democratic Party over $1 million
  • SEANC (State Employees Assn. of NC) contributed $243,706 to NC candidates
  • Democratic candidates received $218,956 of SEANC money, or 90%
  • Republican candidates received $24,750 of SEANC money, or 10%
  • NCAE (NC Association of Educators) contributed $265,330 to 200 NC candidates
  • Democratic candidates received $245,980 of NCAE money, or 93%
  • NEA (National Education Association) invested $2,212,936 in NC candidates
  • 100% of NEA’s $2,212,936 went to help Democrats; Republicans 0%
  • NEA ran a $1.7 million independent expenditure campaign for Bev Perdue

Where was David Price’s moral outrage over the undue influence of money in politics when North Carolina Democrats received 97% of the outside public employee union money and 100% of the National Education Association’s $2.2 million in 2008?

  • United Auto Workers union gave the North Carolina Democratic Party over $100,000
  • DRIVE, the Teamsters union, contributed $361,617 to NC Democrats
  • IBEW (International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers) gave $36,500 to Democrats
  • UFCE (United Food and Commercial Workers) contributed over $100,000 to the Democratic Party of North Carolina

If Congressman David Price would go to the website, www.opensecrets.org, and do a search on the largest political independent expenditure groups, he would discover that SEIU was #1 on the list of the Top 100 all-time biggest spenders in 2008.[2] In 2008, SEIU spent $85 million to influence the outcome of elections, and was rewarded by President Obama with support for the Employee Free Choice Act legislation and top White House jobs including political director, and positions on the NLRB and the president’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board.[3]

In 2006, SEIU spent $635,000 in North Carolina elections on TV and radio ads, mailings, opinion polls, and Get-Out-The-Vote phone banks – more than ANY BUSINESS PAC in NC.  In 2004, SEIU spent $650,000 just on NC legislative races.

SEIU also contributed more than 10% of the total budget of FairJudges.net to run ads statewide for NC Supreme Court candidates in 2006; 3 of 4 were Democrats.  FairJudges.net was one of the most unfair stunts pulled by Democrats in modern history.  Step 1: Create public funding laws for Supreme Court candidates.  Step 2: After the candidates have accepted public funding spending limits, create an independent expenditure committee that allows five times the number of ads to be run on behalf of your candidates.  Where was Congressman David Price’s moral outrage then?

NEA and the NCAE invested $1,846,219 to help Beverly Perdue win the governor’s race in 2008. Where was Congressman David Price’s moral outrage then?

In addition to decrying the outside special interest liberal groups’ undue influence over the politics of this state, those “corporate interests” that he is linking to conservative groups have always given a disproportionate share of their money to Democrats, who along with other liberal groups, have helped Democrats defeat Republicans for decades.

During my 25 years of tracking campaign money in North Carolina, I can safely say that if it had not been for “corporate interests,” Republicans would have had a majority in the General Assembly well before 2010, and would have had at least half of the 10-member Council of State.

Finally, Price writes that “outside groups shouldn’t be able to spend unlimited amounts of money to hijack the marketplace of ideas and drown out other voices, including those of candidates themselves.”   No group can surpass the Democrats in North Carolina when it comes to hijacking the marketplace of ideas and drowning out other voices to gain undue influence.

Price concludes by writing that the “first steps in restoring integrity in our democracy” are a different balance on the U.S. Supreme Court and/or a constitutional amendment.

If Congressman David Price wants to restore integrity in our democracy he needs to begin by looking in the mirror.

– END –

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report

John N. Davis, Editor


[1] Union contributions and independent expenditures database provided by Civitas Institute

[2] http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/indexp.php

[3] The Wall Street Journal, SEIU Campaign Spending Pays Political Dividends, May 16, 2009

 

If you are not a subscriber, please consider subscribing.  The Premium Annual Subscription is $245.  You can subscribe online at www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or complete the subscription form here and mail to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622.P.S.:  Need a speaker?  Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel.  I moderated a panel Wednesday for the Independent Insurance Agents of NC featuring David Parker, Chair of the NC Democratic Party, and Robin Hayes, Chair, NC Republican Party. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties.  Inquire about availability here.  jnd


Implications of Erskine Bowles’ Decision NOT to Run for Governor; NC Democrats Continue Steep Decline as GOP Ascends to Dominance

by johndavis, February 4, 2012

Implications of Erskine Bowles’ Decision NOT to Run for Governor; NC Democrats Continue Steep Decline as GOP Ascends to Dominance Post: February 2, 2012       Vol. V, No. 6    UPDATED  FEBRUARY 3, 2012 “So right now, McCrory retains the edge, even against the strongest Democrat.  But Bowles would have the potential to bring in
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Implications of Erskine Bowles’ Decision NOT to Run for Governor; NC Democrats Continue Steep Decline as GOP Ascends to Dominance

Post: February 2, 2012       Vol. V, No. 6    UPDATED  FEBRUARY 3, 2012

“So right now, McCrory retains the edge, even against the strongest Democrat.  But Bowles would have the potential to bring in a lot of money from across the country to quickly make this a race.” Public Policy Polling, January 30, 2012, More on the NC governor’s race

Bowles Was the Biggest Threat to McCrory; Lt. Gov. Dalton Trails by 15 Points

I can hear the champagne corks popping all over the state as backers of former Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory’s campaign for the GOP nomination for governor celebrate today’s decision by Erskine Bowles not to seek the Democratic Party’s gubernatorial nomination.  According to polling conducted last weekend by Public Policy Polling, Bowles was the only serious Democratic candidate who polled within 10 points of McCrory, trailing McCrory only 44-42.

Lt. Gov. Walter Dalton of Rutherford County, state Rep. Bill Faison of Orange County and former Congressman Bob Etheridge of Harnett County have announced their intentions to run for governor in the Democratic primary.  The Public Policy Poll shows Dalton and Etheridge trailing McCrory by 15 points (50-35); Faison by 19 points (50-31).  Former state Treasurer Richard Moore, still considering the race, trails McCrory by 11 points (47-36).

McCrory, the presumptive Republican Party nominee in the race for governor, made his formal announcement in Greensboro Tuesday, January 31, 2012, vowing to put an end to the Democrats’ “scandal-ridden good old boy (and girl) network and fix the state’s broken economy.”

Erskine Bowles was more than a serious threat to McCrory’s quest to be governor, his candidacy would have reinvigorated the North Carolina Democratic Party by attracting much needed national money and talent.  Now, the steep political decline continues for Democrats as NC Republicans ascend to dominance.

Bowles Would Have Reinvigorated a Democratic Party in Disarray

The North Carolina Democrats have been in political disarray since losing the state Senate and House to Republicans in 2010 … a first in 140 years.

Compounding the loss of political dominance by Democrats is the fact that Gov. Perdue has proven to be a weak governor and a drag on their candidates.  Further, Perdue has been tripped up time and again by allegations of campaign improprieties and the investigations and indictments of key staff and supporters.

“Bev Perdue’s retirement has clearly helped Democratic chances of holding the Governor’s office this fall,” said Dean Debnam, President of Public Policy Polling.

There is no greater evidence of how the political fortunes of North Carolina Democrats have diminished than the campaign finance report filed this week by Sen. Martin Nesbitt, Senate Minority Leader, the most powerful Democrat in the Senate.  Nesbitt’s January 2012 report filed with the NC State Board of Elections shows that he raised only $52,264 as of year-end 2011.  At the same time two years ago, January 2010, then Senate President Pro Tem Marc Basnight reported raising $1,519,768.

Mid-year 2011 campaign finance reports showed Republicans in the NC Senate with a 10-to-1 fundraising advantage over the loyal opposition party, a historic first, with NC House Republicans raising four times the money of their Democratic counterparts.

Republicans have Power, Money and Friendly Districts

Power has always meant money; money means you have the resources to hold on to your base of candidates, win most of the close races in “swing” districts, and even raid the opposition’s base and pick off a few of their seats.  Republicans have the power, the money … and the districts.

Last November, the United States Justice Department preapproved the Republican-drawn legislative and congressional district maps, virtually assuring Republicans a majority of the seats in both houses of the General Assembly throughout the decade.  Two weeks ago, a 3-judge panel ruled against several plaintiffs, including the NAACP, who were trying to delay the May 8 primary elections based on allegation that the maps would re-segregate the state and diminish the influence of black voters.

These two rulings add to the list of legislative and judicial redistricting wins for the North Carolina GOP and suggest that the maps will withstand any future litigation.

Further evidence of a downward spiral for North Carolina Democrats came today as the leading Democrat in the NC House, Minority Leader Joe Hackney, announce that he would not seek reelection.   Hackney, who served as Speaker of the House two terms, brings the total number of Democrats not seeking reelection in the NC House to 9, with more to come due to incumbent Democrats double-bunked into the same district.

McCrory has High Favorability Ratings & $2 Million in the Bank

According to polling conducted last weekend by Public Policy Polling, not only was the hypothetical race between Bowles and McCrory a virtual tie, 46% of North Carolina voters said that they are “generally leaning toward voting for a Democrat in the race for governor, with 45% saying they will vote Republican in the governor’s race.”

However, with Bowles out and no other Democrat within striking distance of McCrory, the presumptive GOP nominee’s political fortunes will soar … especially his fundraising.

Favorable findings for McCrory in the Public Policy Polling survey last weekend include:

  • McCrory has high name recognition (76%) at the starting gate, with many more voters having a favorable opinion (45%); only 31% an unfavorable opinion
  • In a state where 24% of all registered voters are Unaffiliated, Independent voters see McCrory positively by a 55%/25% spread

The year-end 2011 report filed with the NC State Board of Elections shows that McCrory raised $2.6 million from 6,120 contributors last year, and has a little over $2 million cash on hand.

Bowles would have had no problem playing catch-up with fundraising.  In both his 2002 and 2004 losing races for U.S. Senate seats won by Elizabeth Dole and Richard Burr, he spent $12.7 million and $13.4 million respectively, with $6.8 million coming out of his own pocket in 2002.

Now, Democrats will struggle all year to raise a competitive war chest in the Governor’s race.  They simply do not have a superstar like Bowles to re-energize their financial base.

Without a SuperSTAR like Bowles, the Best Hope for Democrats is a SuperPAC

There was a news story last week about SAS co-founder and CEO Jim Goodnight hosting a fundraiser for Lt. Gov. Walter Dalton.  Goodnight is generally recognized as the wealthiest man in the State of North Carolina and one of the wealthiest in the world.

Goodnight has a passion for education, especially elementary and secondary.  The Public Policy Poll from last weekend notes a potential liability for McCrory, “his close ties to the unpopular Republican legislature and the cuts they’ve made to education.”

A U.S. Supreme Court ruling two years ago in the Citizen’s United case declared that wealthy individuals like Goodnight and corporations like SAS can spend an unlimited amount of money influencing the outcome of political races … provided they spend it independently and not in collusion with the campaigns they are attempting to help.

With the steep decline in the prowess of the North Carolina Democratic Party, and the rapid ascendancy of the Republican Party as the dominant political party, there are only two recovery options for the Democrats:  an exceptionally inspirational leader with fundraising muscle or a massive infusion of independent working political capital.

I do not see the exceptionally inspirational leader with fundraising muscle on the list of statewide Democratic candidates.  Disagree?  Well, who would you say is the Jim Hunt of 2012?  That leaves recovery option #2: a massive infusion of independent working political capital.

That’s where the Jim Goodnights of the state meet with the Citizen’s United decision; unlimited funding for everything the party lacks resources to do better than the Republicans … from voter registration and early voting turnout to unlimited millions in advertising dollars targeting every vulnerable Republican in the state.

You can already count on outside money pouring into the state with the upcoming Democratic National Convention in Charlotte and the fact that President Obama likes North Carolina.  And, you can count on outside union money pouring in from the coffers of the NEA (teachers), AFSCME (government employees) and SEIU (service employees).  But all of that money will pale in significance to the money now allowed under the Citizens United decision.

In the absence of a superstar like Erskine Bowles, the best hope for North Carolina Democrats is a SuperPAC.  The traditional 10-to-1 advantage in total legislative campaign funds raised by the majority party is now chump change compared to the potential for a tsunami of outside SuperPAC funding.

There is a new political paradigm in North Carolina politics: the SuperPAC.  If the GOP is to continue its ascendancy to political dominance, they must also embrace this new political reality in campaign funding.

Candidate filing begins on February 15, and ends on February 29.  The primary is May 8.

Transcript of statement by Erskine Bowles released to AP this morning:

“I will not be a candidate for Governor.  I’ve spent a lot of time trying to think what is the right thing for me to do.  I don’t think anyone questions my love for North Carolina or my efforts to make our State a better place to live, work , or raise a family . I’ve done my best in this regard and I plan to continue to do so . There are lots of ways to make a difference , lots of ways to add to the community woodpile . I’m excited about helping our State’s and Nation’s leaders move North Carolina and our Country forward .  We’ve got big challenges and great opportunities.  I’m confident if we can get folks to put politics aside , and pull together , not apart , there are no problems we can’t solve working together.  Erskine Bowles”

– END –

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John N. Davis, Editor

 

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UPDATE – Governor Perdue: from Dumb Luck to Lame Duck; Slim Odds of Winning a Second term as Governor of North Carolina

by johndavis, January 30, 2012

UPDATE – Governor Perdue: from Dumb Luck to Lame Duck; Slim Odds of Winning a Second term as Governor of North Carolina Post: July 28, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 18    UPDATED JANUARY 26, 2012 “What if I decide instead to spend my last two years doing what I think is right. Veto any bill I
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UPDATE – Governor Perdue: from Dumb Luck to Lame Duck; Slim Odds of Winning a Second term as Governor of North Carolina

Post: July 28, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 18    UPDATED JANUARY 26, 2012

“What if I decide instead to spend my last two years doing what I think is right. Veto any bill I don’t like. Go out as a principled fighter and leader, not just another politician. Go out on my own terms, unlike most politicians. Then go make a lot of money and enjoy life.” Imaginary musings of Gov. Perdue as envisioned by Democrat consultant Gary Pearce, Talking About Politics, March 3, 2011

EDITOR’S NOTE 1/26/2012: Today’s news that Gov. Beverly Perdue will not seek reelection comes as no surprise.  Throughout her administration, polls have put her 10 points behind in a rematch with her GOP rival Pat McCrory, and her job approval in the mid-30s, with the number of North Carolinians disapproving of the job she is doing near or above 50%.  Eventually, her negative ratings raised so much doubt about her re-electability that many of her financial backers switched their support to Republican Pat McCrory.

The erosion of her financial support was the straw that broke the camels back.  Last November 2, the News & Observer carried a story titled McCrory nabs Perdue backers, in which many of her former supporters talked about why they were jumping ship.  Here are two examples:

“It’s absolutely nothing personal,” said Democrat George Jones, a former mayor of Jacksonville and Perdue backer and the host of a McCrory fundraiser.  “Bev has swung hard to the left,” he continued. “I can’t support her policies and the direction she’s pursuing for this state.”

Another former supporter, Danny McQueen, a Morehead City furniture store owner, said, “She had an opportunity to work with Republicans and she chose not to do that. … That’s the reason that I switched.”

Last year, the July 28 John Davis Political Report titled, Governor Perdue: From Dumb Luck to Lame Duck, concluded, “I submit that after a dismal year of ineffective leadership, as judged by chronic low job approval and favorability ratings … as judged by one major legislative failure after another … retiring after this term is her only choice.  She is a lame duck.”

What follows is that report in its entirety, so that you can see that the handwriting has been on the wall for a long time:

Governor Perdue: from Dumb Luck to Lame Duck; Slim Odds of Winning a Second term as Governor of North Carolina

Post: July 28, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 18

“What if I decide instead to spend my last two years doing what I think is right. Veto any bill I don’t like. Go out as a principled fighter and leader, not just another politician. Go out on my own terms, unlike most politicians. Then go make a lot of money and enjoy life.” Imaginary musings of Gov. Perdue as envisioned by Democrat consultant Gary Pearce, Talking About Politics, March 3, 2011

This Week’s Veto Overrides Signal the Inevitable Decision for Governor Perdue

With all due respect, if Governor Beverly Perdue cannot stop the veto overrides of the budget and some the most significant pieces of reform legislation in decades … including Regulatory Reform, Medical Malpractice Reform, Medicaid/Health Choice Provider Requirement, and today’s Abortion reform … then she needs to seriously reconsider a run for a second term.

Gary Pearce, one of North Carolina’s most successful Democratic campaign consultants and author of the biography of Jim Hunt, ruminated in his blog in March that Perdue just may be looking at her situation and thinking that if she didn’t run she could do as she pleased, veto any bill she didn’t like, and go out on her own terms.  “Then go make a lot of money and enjoy life,” surmised Pearce.  He ended his blog with, “That’s not a bad life choice.”

I submit that after a dismal year of ineffective leadership, as judged by chronic low job approval and favorability ratings … as judged by one major legislative failure after another … retiring after this term is her only choice.  She is a lame duck.

Should Perdue Run? Numbers Say “No” Despite Record of 10 Wins and “1 Loss”

Governor Beverly Perdue, a Craven County Democrat, is one of the most successful campaigners in North Carolina history.  She has won every race “except one,” including two terms in the N.C. House, five terms in the N.C. Senate, two statewide bids for Lt. Governor, and her 2008 race against Treasurer Richard Moore for the Democratic Party nominee for governor.

In 2008, Perdue failed to win the race for governor against GOP nominee Pat McCrory, but was handed the keys to the mansion anyway thanks to historic voter registration and turnout by the Obama campaign for President.  Dumb luck.  No President Obama; no Governor Perdue.

  • Perdue’s relatively weak candidacy when compared to McCrory can be seen in the fact that even after outspending him $14.9 million to his $6.7 million during a terrible turnout year for Republicans and an Obama-driven historic turnout year for Democrats, she barely won in what was the closest governor’s race in America.  Dumb luck.
  • In a mid-July 2011 poll by the Democratic firm Public Policy Polling, only 34% of North Carolinians approved of Perdue’s performance as governor; 49% disapproved.
  • PPP poll: “Independents disapproved by a wide margin.”  Only 31% of NC’s Independent voters approve of Perdue’s performance as governor; 57% disapprove.
  • PPP poll: “Perdue trails McCrory statewide (39% to 47%).”
  • PPP poll: “McCrory’s advantage is built on a massive lead among Independents,” (57% to only 28% for Perdue).

Further evidence of a weakened candidacy is the campaign fundraising report filed this week with the NC State Board of Elections.  Perdue reported raising $1.3 million, with an outstanding debt to herself and her husband of $776,500 and cash on hand totaling $1.3 million.  McCrory reporting raising a little over $1 million, with $940,000 in the bank.

A strong incumbent Governor seeking a second term would have raised considerably more than $1.3 million by now … and certainly should have raised a lot more than the challenger.

Forecast: Obama Wins White House in 2012 Without NC; Perdue Loses.

It’s very important to remember that Obama won North Carolina by only 14,177 votes out of 4.3 million.  North Carolina was Obama’s closest win despite a weak Republican opponent and a year-long commitment of millions of dollars to a ground game second to none in state history … as measured by new registrations of African Americans, young voters and a record voter turnout.

The Obama campaign opened 47 headquarters in North Carolina and hired over 400 paid staff.  These young professionals were responsible for a record early voting total of 2.6 million (only 984,000 voted early in 2004), more voters than on Election Day.  Seven out of 10 of the early voters were either Democrats (51%) or Unaffiliated (19%).  African Americans comprised 28% of early voters, as compared to only 19% in 2004.

Yet despite Obama’s investment yielding hundreds of thousands of new registered Democrats and millions of early voters in 2008, Perdue defeated McCrory by only 145,021 votes out of 4.27 million. It was just dumb luck.

Even if the economy begins to recover, Obama’s job approval numbers return to a safe 50%, and he wins the White House, he is not likely to carry North Carolina.  If Obama can’t carry North Carolina, Perdue can’t win the governor’s race; especially as a lame duck.

– END –

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John N. Davis, Editor

 

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Romney: Viewed as Most Likely to Beat Obama; Least Likely to Satisfy Conservatives on Managing Federal Budget … but Most Acceptable. Will Libertarian Uprising Dash GOP Presidential Hopes in NC?

by johndavis, January 15, 2012

New Hampshire GOP Primary Voters: Republicans 49%; Independents 47%; Democrats: 4%; Conservatives 52%; Moderates/Liberals: 48%. Evangelical Christians: 22%. New Hampshire GOP Primary Results: Romney: 39% (97,399); Paul: 23% (56,601); Huntsman: 17% (41,796); Gingrich: 10% (23,329); Santorum: 9% (23,204); Perry: 1% (1,762) “That’s one thing, they are telling the truth, because we are dangerous to the
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New Hampshire GOP Primary Voters: Republicans 49%; Independents 47%; Democrats: 4%;

Conservatives 52%; Moderates/Liberals: 48%. Evangelical Christians: 22%.

New Hampshire GOP Primary Results: Romney: 39% (97,399); Paul: 23% (56,601); Huntsman: 17% (41,796); Gingrich: 10% (23,329); Santorum: 9% (23,204); Perry: 1% (1,762)

“That’s one thing, they are telling the truth, because we are dangerous to the status quo of this country.”

Ron Paul, Tuesday, January 10, New Hampshire “Victory Speech”

Romney: Viewed as Most Likely to Beat Obama; Least Likely to Satisfy Conservatives on Managing Federal Budget … but Most Acceptable.  Will Libertarian Uprising Dash GOP Presidential Hopes in NC?

Post: Friday, January 13, 2012     Vol. V, No. 2

Romney’s NH GOP Primary Win Not as Big as “Acceptable” Win this Week

The most significant presidential campaign development this week was not Mitt Romney’s decisive win in New Hampshire.  After all, he is New Hampshire’s “homeboy” as described by fellow GOP presidential contender Jon Huntsman.  And, only about half of New Hampshire’s GOP Primary voters were either Republicans or self-described conservatives.

Tuesday’s NBC Exit Poll shows that only 49% of the New Hampshire Republican Primary voters think of themselves as Republican.  Those who think of themselves as Independent made up 47% of the GOP primary voters; 4% think of themselves as Democrats!

The same exit poll shows that 48% of the New Hampshire GOP Primary voters think of themselves as either Moderate (35%) or Liberal (13%).  Only 52% of New Hampshire Primary voters consider themselves Conservative!  Only 22% say they are evangelical Christians.

So, what motivated New Hampshire GOP Primary voters to give Mitt Romney a big win?  Answer: He is viewed as the most likely to defeat President Obama in November.  Note: His conservative bona fides were considered the least important in New Hampshire.

  • Can defeat Barack Obama                     35%
  • Has the right experience                                    26%
  • Has strong moral character                    22%
  • Is a true conservative                            13%

A combined 82% of New Hampshire GOP Primary voters polled said that they are either “Dissatisfied, but not angry” with the Obama administration (42%), or “Angry” with the Obama administration (40%).  Why?  It’s because a combined 95% are “Very worried” about the direction of the nation’s economy (69%), or are “Somewhat worried” (26%).

Bottom line:  New Hampshire GOP Primary voters had two things on their mind when they gave Romney the big win Tuesday, other than being their “homeboy,” he has the best skill set to deal with their #1 issue, the economy (62%), and he is the most likely to defeat Obama (61%).

Big win for Romney Tuesday, but not as significant as Tuesday’s Gallup poll.

Gallup: 59% of Republicans See Romney as “Acceptable” Nominee

Far more significant than the New Hampshire GOP Primary win for Romney is a new Gallup survey released Tuesday showing that 59% of all Republicans around the country see Romney as an “acceptable GOP nominee for president.”  According to Gallup, Romney is “the only candidate with majority support on this measure.”

The same survey shows only 46% of the nation’s Republicans see Gingrich as an acceptable nominee, and only 45% see Santorum would be acceptable.  A majority of Republicans around the country say that Perry, Paul, and Huntsman are unacceptable as the GOP nominee.

The most positive result of the Gallup survey for Romney fans is that the same number of conservative Republicans found Romney an acceptable GOP nominee (59%) as Moderate/Liberal Republicans.  That is a major breakthrough for Romney.

Bottom Line:  Mitt Romney is the only GOP contender with broad acceptability across ideological lines among the nation’s Republicans.  That decisive support can be seen in Gallup tracking polls that show Romney leading all other GOP contenders by better than 2-to-1 (Romney 34%; Santorum 15%; Gingrich 14%; Paul 13%; Perry 5%; Huntsman 2%).

Will Libertarian Uprising Dash GOP Presidential Hopes in North Carolina?

According to Gallup’s tracking on the question, “If the election were held today …,” President Obama would defeat Romney by 50% to 48%.  Same result if Gingrich were the nominee.

Here in North Carolina, if the election were held today, Obama would defeat Romney by one point, 46%/45%, would tie Santorum 46%/46%, and would defeat all other GOP contenders by 5 points or more, according to polling by Public Policy Polling from January 5 – 8, 2012.

The biggest threat to the Republican presidential game plan in North Carolina is a Libertarian uprising. You can see that threat clearly in the Public Policy Poll, showing that Libertarian Presidential candidate Gary Johnson, former two-term Governor of New Mexico, would get 8% of the vote in North Carolina, most of which would hurt Romney if he is the GOP nominee.

Johnson announced his switch to the Libertarian Party in late December at a news conference in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  “I have been a Republican my entire life,” he said. “I don’t view this as leaving the Republican Party as much as the Republican Party has left me.”

The least likely voters to concede the GOP nomination this year are the Ron Paul self-described “dangerous” supporters.  “I sort of have to chuckle when they describe you and me as being dangerous,” Paul said with a big grin during his “victory speech” Tuesday night, “That’s one thing, they are telling the truth, because we are dangerous to the status quo of this country.”

That “status quo” clearly includes the Republican status quo.

Obama’s Best Hope for a Second Term

My view is that Obama will not do nearly as well in North Carolina as he did in 2008, when he won by only 14,171 votes out of 4,310,789 cast.

He has lost the surprise factor, lost the enthusiastic support of his base (African American voters excepted), and has raised serious doubts about whether he has the credentials for dealing with the most important issues facing the next president: managing the nation’s budget crisis, managing the nation’s debt crisis, and managing the nation’s private sector competitiveness crisis … all three critical to the nation’s jobs crisis.  Even if he wins a second term he is not likely to carry North Carolina.

Obama’s best hope for a second term is a GOP divided by the Ron Paul Libertarians, the Rick Santorum social conservatives and the Tea Party congressional Republicans who have helped drive the job approval of the U.S. Congress to historic lows.

Our nation’s problems are bigger than party or ideology.  Irresponsible members of both parties got us into the mess were are in, and irresponsible members of both parties are keeping us in it.

What is the definition of irresponsible members?  It is: Those members who think their party or their ideology is more important than bipartisan collaboration on managing the nation’s budget crisis, managing the nation’s debt crisis, and managing the nation’s private sector competitiveness crisis … all three critical to the nation’s jobs crisis.

President Obama’s best hope for a second term is a dysfunctional Congress and a divided GOP.

– END –

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report

John N. Davis, Editor

 

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Biggest Story of 2011: Tea Party Snatching Defeat from the Jaws of Victory

by johndavis, December 22, 2011

“The 2010 election results were a mandate to put partisan exceptionalism and fringe policy initiatives aside and focus on the national debt/deficit spending crisis and the jobs crisis.” John Davis Political Report, December 21, 2011 Biggest Story of 2011:  Tea Party Snatching Defeat from the Jaws of Victory; Implications for 2012 Results in a 40%
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“The 2010 election results were a mandate to put partisan exceptionalism and fringe policy initiatives aside and focus on the national debt/deficit spending crisis and the jobs crisis.”

John Davis Political Report, December 21, 2011

Biggest Story of 2011:  Tea Party Snatching Defeat from the Jaws of Victory; Implications for 2012 Results in a 40% GOP Nation

Post: December 21, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 34

And the Wall Street Journal Agrees!

If you go back and read all 2011 John Davis Political Reports, you will find this consistent drumbeat: the best hope for President Obama’s re-election success is the Tea Party faction of the U.S. House Republican Caucus.

Yesterday’s rejection of a bipartisan Senate bill to extend the payroll-tax cut is another example of how House Republicans are making the same mistake Obama made: thinking the election results were a mandate for partisan exceptionalism and fringe policy initiatives.  Wrong.

According to Gallup’s three year average, only 40.4% of Americans are Republican or Lean Republican.  The same study shows only 39.8% of Americans are conservative.  Where does the House GOP Caucus get the notion that those who are struggling financially care which party is responsible for putting them back to work; responsible for getting the country out of debt?  Does it matter to most if it’s conservatives or moderates or liberals who come to the rescue?

The 2010 election results were a mandate to put partisan exceptionalism and fringe policy initiatives aside and focus on the national debt/deficit spending crisis and the jobs crisis.

House Republicans are driving independent voters away, thereby jeopardizing all Republicans.

Today’s Wall Street Journal agrees.  In an editorial titled, The GOP’s Payroll Tax Fiasco, WSJ concludes, “We wonder if they [U.S. House Republicans] might end up re-electing the President before the 2012 campaign even begins in earnest.”

The nation is only 40.4% Republican; 39.8% conservative.

The 2010 election results were a mandate to put partisan exceptionalism and fringe policy initiatives aside and focus on the national debt/deficit spending crisis and the jobs crisis.

What Part of a 4-to-1 Obama Approval vs Congress Approval is Confusing?

I have shown time and again throughout 2011 that it’s the President not the Congress who Americans trust more to solve the country’s biggest problems of the day: sovereign debt and jobs.  All year, the congressional job approval numbers have hovered in the low teens, near 10%, while the President’s job approval has hovered in the low 40s.

Today, Real Clear Politics shows Congressional Job Approval at 12.5%; President Obama’s Job Approval at 46.5%.  What part of a 4-to-1 Presidential Job Approval over Congressional Job Approval do Republican members of the U.S. House not get?

A new Washington Post-ABC News Poll shows Congressional Democrats getting a 27% job approval rating, with only 20% approving of the job Congressional Republicans are doing.  On the other hand, President Obama gets a 49% approval rating.

Ummmmmmm, let’s see.  Congressional Republicans get a 20% approval rating and President Obama gets a 49% approval rating.  How is that likely to play out in 2012?

The most ominous poll number I have read all year for uncompromising fiscal conservatives like the U.S. House Republican Caucus is a Gallup survey that shows that Independents, by almost 2-to-1, believe that it’s “more important to compromise” in order to get things done (52%) than it is to “stick to beliefs,” even if little gets done (27%).

In 2012, look for the Tea Party conservatives to continue to be a disruptive force in the Republican Party.  If they continue to insist on their own priorities, as Obama and his fellow Democrats did when they put health care over jobs and the national budget crisis, they will suffer the same fate in November of 2012 as Democrats did in 2010.

  • The Tea Party is on track to help re-elect President Obama
  • The Tea Party is on track to limit the likely GOP U.S. Senate majority to 1 or 2 seats
  • The Tea Party is on track to help Democrats pull off an upset U.S. House turnover
  • The Tea Party is on track to cut the GOP potential for statewide pickups in NC in half (Council of State, 1 Supreme Court and 3 Court of Appeals races).
  • The Tea Party is on track to keep the NC Senate and House from winning veto-proof super majorities (they will still win the majority in both chambers if districts stand)

Fortunately for likely GOP Gubernatorial nominee Pat McCrory, Perdue is still on track to lose in a rematch because she is so weak that even the Tea Party can’t screw that race up!  According to the latest Public Policy Polling survey, Perdue’s approval rating stands at 37% (about where its been since she took office) and she lags McCrory in the governor’s race by 10 points (50-40), about where its been since she took office.

All in all, Republicans are in for a big year in 2012 at the federal and state levels provided they can convince the Tea Party that giving up half of what they want to get half of what they want is the way progress is made in a Democracy.

– END –

Merry Christmas! Happy Hanukkah! Happy New Year!

I can’t thank you enough for reading the John Davis Political Report this year.  I am all too aware that you expect me to get it right … every time.  That’s what I strive to do each week.

May God Bless You and Your Family!!!

John N. Davis, Editor

 

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Like WWII, the U.S. Must Fight and Win Two Wars: The U.S./European Sovereign Debt War and the U.S./Asian Global Competitiveness War. How to Win the Jobs War with 1,700 Rupees

by johndavis, December 7, 2011

“The global war for jobs determines the leader of the free world. If the United States allows China or any country or region to out-enterprise it, out-job-create it, out-grow its GDP, everything changes.  This is America’s next war for everything.” Jim Clifton, Chairman & CEO, Gallup; The Coming Jobs War Like WWII, the U.S. Must
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“The global war for jobs determines the leader of the free world. If the United States allows China or any country or region to out-enterprise it, out-job-create it, out-grow its GDP, everything changes.  This is America’s next war for everything.”

Jim Clifton, Chairman & CEO, Gallup; The Coming Jobs War

Like WWII, the U.S. Must Fight and Win Two Wars: The U.S./European Sovereign Debt War and the U.S./Asian Global Competitiveness War.  How to Win the Jobs War with 1,700 Rupees

Post: December 7, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 33

Underdog to Superpower: WWII Model for Winning Today’s Economic Wars

Today, we honor those who lost their lives in the Japanese bombing raid on our ships and airfields at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941, and those who died in the ensuing battles in the two great theaters of World War II, the European and the Asian-Pacific.

Up until today, 70 years ago, most Americans were isolationists.  Despite daily news of the devastation in Britain and other European nations during two years of attacks by Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, we didn’t want to get involved; didn’t want to make the sacrifices.

Frankly, we were ill-equipped to get involved after a decade of 25% unemployment, low personal income and tax revenues during The Great Depression.  Foreign trade was down to half of what it was before the nation’s worst economic crisis; crop prices were cut in half as well.

Until I read a review of the book Pacific Crucible: War at Sea in the Pacific, 1941-1942 by Ian W. Toli, in The Wall Street Journal on November 26, I did not realize how unprepared we were to engage in global conflict.  According to Toli, the United States was an underdog during the first year of the war with Japan in terms of inferior numbers of men, inferior equipment, warships, planes and technology.

However, immediately after Pearl Harbor the United States became a nation united in purpose and willingness to sacrifice.  We were united by the threat to our country and our freedoms; united by the realization that if we did not win both wars our right of self-determination would be in the hands of an occupying power.

Within two years, the United States was transformed from underdog to a military superpower because of unity, sacrifice, ingenuity and productivity … and many war heroes.  Consider these facts from Pacific Crucible: War at Sea in the Pacific, 1941-1942:

  • Two years after Pearl Harbor, the United States was producing 89,000 aircraft a year
  • The U.S. built 40% more aircraft annually than the British and Germans combined
  • The U.S. built 29,000 tanks in 1943, twice as many as the Germans
  • In 1943, the U.S. built 369 major warships, five times the combined totals built by the British, Germans and the Soviet Union
  • Two years after Pearl Harbor, the U.S. built 2,000 cargo ships, 13 times the number lost to German U-boats that same year

Two Must-Win Economic Wars: Sovereign Debt and Global Jobs Competitiveness

Today, our nation is fighting two economic world wars on two fronts just like in WWII.

The Sovereign Debt Front is being fought by financially irresponsible countries like the United States and the “European Theatre” countries like Spain, Greece, Italy and Portugal.  Those countries can’t pay their sovereign debts; they fund their budgets with borrowed money thereby raising concerns worldwide about fiscal competence and trustworthiness.

The second front is the Global Jobs Competitiveness Front being fought by the United States and the “Asian-Pacific Theatre,” in countries like China and India.

The consequences of losing either war are as potentially devastating as they were during WWII.

A bankrupt country is a defenseless country that cannot well maintain the health, education and general welfare of its citizens.  Businesses and industries in a bankrupt country bear the disruptive and costly burden of public sector instability, limiting their ability to compete with their peers in financially stable nations.

So, how do we win both wars?

Solutions: Unity, Sacrifice, Innovation, Productivity … and Medal of Honor Winners

The greatest problems limiting the ability of the United States to win both economic wars are:

  • No unity of Purpose (partisan/ideological estrangement)
  • No willingness to Sacrifice (you go first)
  • No interest in Innovation (not in my job description)
  • Manufacturing Productivity (that’s an offshore thing)
  • No Medal of Honor Winners (am I my brother’s keeper?)

On November 22, in my report titled, Dear Lord: We Thank Thee for the Blessing of the Super Committee, I stated that the U.S. Congress has confirm what 90% of Americans already know: our nation’s greatest obstacle to winning the debt and jobs economic wars is political gridlock.  I concluded that the only solution is to throw out all Senators and Representatives who are not willing to compromise … especially the Republicans and the Democrats.

For clarification:  The intent is not to get rid of the ideological extremists in both camps, the most liberal and most conservative, the intent is to get rid of all who refuse to collaborate and compromise.  We cannot win these two wars without leaders willing to sacrifice for the common good.

Any Republican who says “No” to $10 in cuts to $1 in taxes needs to be replaced.  Here’s why:  You may be able to win the sovereign debt war with cuts in programs and services, but you cannot win the global jobs competitiveness war without investment paid for with new revenue … governmental investment in infrastructure, especially educational infrastructure.

Any Democrat who says “No” to putting every program on the table for cost cutting reform, especially all entitlement programs, needs to be replaced.  Here’s why:  You may be able to win the global jobs competitiveness war with investment in infrastructure paid for with new revenue, but you can’t win the sovereign debt war without cuts in programs and services … especially entitlements.

How to Win the Global Jobs Competitiveness War with 1,700 Rupees

India’s Department of Human Resources sponsored a competition worldwide for a $10 smart tablet computer.  The goal was to get 220 million children online in India, a very poor county where few could afford a $500 Apple iPad or even a $199 Kindle Fire.

After five years, no one had come up with a $10 smart tablet.  However, a London-based company Datawind did develop one for 2433 Indian Rupees (INR), about $47.  With a $15 subsidy from the government, the tablet, named Askash, is available to teachers and students for 1,700 Rupees, about $32.

Datawind is making 100,000 units a month, giving Indian children word processing, web browsing and video conferencing capabilities … for 1,700 Rupees.  Production capability will increase over time with the goal still being to get all 220 million of India’s children online.

As far as the $10 goal, it’s still on the table.  “The intent is to start a price war,” said Datawind’s chief executive, Suneet Singh Tuli.

I have always wondered what would happen if everybody in the world had immediate access to all of the information in the world.  Well, we are about to find out … India is about to find out.

War for Global Jobs is America’s next War for Everything

Jim Clifton, Chairman and CEO of Gallup, in his new book, The Coming Jobs War, writes, “Losing World War II would have ended America as the world knew it, not to mention much of the democratic Western world.”  He writes, “It was a war for America’s very freedom, for the West’s freedom, for leadership of the free world. It was a war for all the marbles. Everything was on the line, and a loss would have changed everything.”

Clifton concludes, “The global war for jobs determines the leader of the free world. If the United States allows China or any country or region to out-enterprise it, out-job-create it, out-grow its GDP, everything changes.  This is America’s next war for everything.”

The Next Economic Empires, the Potential Societal Hell

As to leadership, Clifton says that “traditional leadership through politics, military force, religion, or personal values won’t work in the future like it has in the past.”

Here’s why:

“As of 2010, the world has a total gross domestic product (GDP) — or the sum of countries’ total goods and services for one year — of $60 trillion. Of this, the United States has nearly $15 trillion or about 25%, which is huge. Over the next 30 years, the global GDP will grow to an estimated $200 trillion. So a new $140 trillion of customers, employees, new businesses, and equity will come into the global mix. The global war for jobs will be an all-out battle for that $140 trillion because within that sum of money is the next evolution of the best jobs in the world. Within that $140 trillion will rise the next economic empires, as well as the potential for societal hell.”

For emphasis: “Within that $140 trillion will rise the next economic empires, as well as the potential societal hell.”

December 7: A Salute to all Veterans

On November 9, I was honored by my friend Glenn Jernigan with an invitation to attend a Salute to the Veterans at the Capital City Club in Raleigh.  I had the distinct pleasure of sitting with Medal of Honor award winner Joe Marm.  Since 1861, the Medal of Honor has been awarded by the President of the United States to our nation’s bravest Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen.

You can read Marm’s story here.  It’s a story of one man risking his life in the heat of battle during the Vietnam War for the greater good of his company and country.  Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty.

Throughout the year, the nation has watch the 535 members of the U.S. Congress fighting the legislative battles in the effort to win the two economic world wars our country is engaged in: the war against sovereign debt and the war for global jobs competitiveness.

Can you name a single member of the U.S. Senate or U.S. House willing to sacrifice their party or their ideology for the greater good?  Willing to make the kind of sacrifices that would earn them a “Medal of Honor” in the war against sovereign debt and global jobs competitiveness.

I didn’t think so.  That’s why they are in trouble next year with the American voters.

Today, as we honor those who lost their lives in the Japanese bombing raid on our ships and airfields at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941, and those who died in the ensuing battles in the two great theaters of World War II, the European and the Asian-Pacific, may we remember that winning takes unity of purpose, a willingness to sacrifice, innovation, productivity … and a few Medal of Honor winners.

May God bless all who have served … and all who are serving.

– END –

Thank You for Reading the John Davis Political Report!!!

John N. Davis, Editor

 

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Dear Lord: We Thank Thee for the Blessing of the Super Committee; The Best Way to Get Rid of a Bad Law is to Enforce It

by johndavis, November 22, 2011

Post: November 22, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 32 “The best way to get rid of a bad law is to enforce it.” Sam Johnson, Chairman NC House Appropriations Committee 1969; Johnson, Hearn, Vinegar, Gee & Glass, Raleigh, NC Dear Lord: We Thank Thee for the Blessing of the Super Committee; The Best Way to Get
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Post: November 22, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 32

“The best way to get rid of a bad law is to enforce it.”

Sam Johnson, Chairman NC House Appropriations Committee 1969; Johnson, Hearn, Vinegar, Gee & Glass, Raleigh, NC

Dear Lord: We Thank Thee for the Blessing of the Super Committee; The Best Way to Get Rid of a Bad Law is to Enforce It

Post: November 22, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 32

As We the People Prepare for Thanksgiving, May We Also Prepare our Ballots

As we the people prepare for Thanksgiving, may we give thanks for the U.S. Congressional Super Committee for confirming what we already knew: our nation’s greatest problem is a gridlocked Congress and the only solution is to throw them out … especially the Republicans and the Democrats.

Sam Johnson, a distinguished Raleigh attorney who chaired the North Carolina House Appropriations Committee in 1969, instructed me many years ago, “The best way to get rid of a bad law is to enforce it.”  Johnson’s Law applies to everything in life.  If you want to get rid of a bad preacher, put them on TV!  If you want to get rid of a bad governor, let them govern.

If you want to get rid of fiscally irresponsible Members of Congress, let them manage the budget.

But what about the president, isn’t he equally responsible for the inability of our national leaders to come up with a plan to deal with our debt/deficit/jobs crisis?  The voters say it’s the Congress.

Today’s Real Clear Politics average “Job Approval” for Congress is 12.3%, with 81.7% disapproving of the job Congress is doing.

Today’s Real Clear Politics average “Job Approval” for President Obama is 44.1%, with 49.1% disapproving of the job the president is doing.

No matter what we think the truth is about who is to blame for the failure of the debt/deficit/jobs crisis negotiations, the fact is that nearly four times as many Americans blame Congress for the failure than the president.   Who is more likely to be punished politically, the guy with the 44.1% job approval or the guys with the 12.3% job approval?

This Congress has proven beyond any shadow of a doubt that they are incapable of leading this country out of our economic crisis and into a future of global competitiveness with the emerging economic superpowers.

A Bankrupt Country is Defenseless, Illiterate, Unhealthy and Uncompetitive

The U.S. Congress has given the American public no other choice than to replace them.  Why?  Because they have proven time and again that their party or their ideology is more important than the greater good of the United States.

A bankrupt country is a defenseless country.  We are rendering our country bankrupt, and therefore defenseless, with sacred cow defense spending.  This Congress has sold us out to the Pentagon and the military industrial complex.

A bankrupt country cannot educate its children.  We are rendering our country bankrupt and threatening our overall literacy with sacred cow education spending.  This Congress has sold us out to the education bureaucracy and teachers unions.

A bankrupt country cannot promote the general welfare of its citizens.  We are rendering our country bankrupt and our most needy vulnerable with cradle to the grave sacred cow social programs, retirement packages and health care entitlements.  This Congress has sold us out to greedy public employee unions and greedy special interest groups … like SEIU and AARP.

A bankrupt country cannot create an entrepreneurial environment for global private sector free market competitiveness.  We are rendering our country bankrupt and our businesses uncompetitive with bailouts of our banks, automobile manufacturers, housing lenders and insurance companies.  This Congress has sold us out to Bank of America, GM, AIG, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

A bankrupt country cannot create an entrepreneurial infrastructure of great universities and public/private partnerships for innovative thinking and long-range problem solving for a new generation of young adults by bankrupting our country with tax loopholes and low marginal rates for those who have benefited the most from the freedom to compete for profit in America.  This Congress has sold us out to those who can afford to game the system … and those who turn statesmen into cowed wimps with ploys like the Taxpayer Protection Pledge.

It’s Time for a New Generation of Radical Moderates, Reformers and Innovators

Throughout the three past election cycles of shifting partisan fortunes, voters were trying to say to would-be leaders that our country is in serious trouble and that we must put partisanship, ideology and sacred cow budgeting second to the greater need for economic stability and global competitiveness.

In 2006 and 2008, Republicans lost the trust of the American people.  Democrats took over the U.S. Congress and the Oval Office.

Big Mistake #1: The Democrats thought …

Big Mistake #1:  Democrats thought they were being elected because of their party and their ideology.  Nothing could have been further from the truth.

Voters were concerned about deficit spending, the national debt, and wars being waged because of weapons of mass destruction … that didn’t exist.  They wanted competent leaders to solve those problems … not Democrats or liberals.

In 2008, voters were concerned about the housing crisis and the Wall Street meltdown, bank bailouts and huge job losses. They had lost faith in the ability of Republicans and conservatives to solve those problems and wanted competent leaders to solve those problems.

My Democrat friends, they elected you to solve the problems of the day … not because you are a Democrat or a liberal.

Since taking their oath of office in January of 2009, President Obama and the Democrats have governed as if the voters chose them because of their party and ideology.  That is precisely why Democrats summarily lost the Governor’s races in Virginia and New Jersey in 2009, Teddy Kennedy’s U.S. Senate seat in Massachusetts in 2010, along with the U.S. House of Representatives, Governors and state legislators all over America in the fall of 2010.

On March 23, 2010, in an Indonesian TV interview, President Obama referred to his healthcare reform bill as, “The most important domestic priority.”  Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat!!!!!!

My Democrat friends, they elected you to solve the problems of the day … not because you are a Democrat or a liberal.

Big Mistake #2: The Republicans thought …

Big Mistake #2:  Republicans thought they were being elected in 2010 because of their party and their ideology.  Nothing could have been further from the truth.

Voters were concerned about a $1 trillion budget deficit, a $13 trillion national debt, and wars being waged because of weapons of mass destruction … that didn’t exist.  They wanted competent leaders to solve those problems … not Republicans or conservatives.

In 2010, voters were concerned about the housing crisis and the Wall Street bonuses and $787 billion stimulus spending and ever-increasing unemployment and foreclosures.  They had lost faith in the ability of Democrats and liberals to solve those problems and wanted competent leaders to solve those problems.

My Republican friends, they elected you to solve the problems of the day … not because you are a Republican or a conservative.

Since taking their oath of office in January of 2011, Congressional Republicans have governed as if the voters chose them because of their party and ideology.  That is precisely why all of the polls show the job approval of Congress in general and Republicans in particular at historic lows.

You had a chance to earn the faith of the American people during the debt ceiling debate in the summer and the debt/deficit management debate this fall and you blew it.

My Republican friends, they elected you to solve the problems of the day … not because you are a Republican or a conservative.

It’s Time to Throw Them Out … Especially the Democrats and the Republicans

Sam Johnson instructed me wisely when he said, “The best way to get rid of a bad law is to enforce it.”  We can certainly see the value of Johnson’s Law when applied to this Congress.

If you want to get rid of fiscally irresponsible members of Congress, let them manage the budget.

As we the people prepare for Thanksgiving, may we give thanks for the U.S. Congressional Super Committee for confirming what we already knew: our nation’s greatest problem is a gridlocked Congress and the only solution is to throw them out … especially the Republicans and the Democrats.

– END –

Happy Thanksgiving!

John N. Davis, Editor

 

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Gingrich will Gain as Cain Wanes

by johndavis, November 3, 2011

Post: November 3, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 30 “The job of the political leader is to reach past the distractions and to continue to communicate what they think matters, and to try and do it in a way that the American people decide they offer a better future.” Newt Gingrich, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, November 2,
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Post: November 3, 2011       Vol. IV, No. 30

“The job of the political leader is to reach past the distractions and to continue to communicate what they think matters, and to try and do it in a way that the American people decide they offer a better future.”

Newt Gingrich, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, November 2, 2011

Updated Forecasts of Likely Winners: GOP U.S. Presidential Ticket

Yesterday’s John Davis Political Report suggested that the Republican Presidential ticket in 2012 was likely to be Romney-Gingrich, and that President Obama may have to replace Vice President Biden with a business person, like Erskine Bowles, in order to balance the Democratic ticket with someone who has the credentials to deal with jobs and economic growth, the debt and deficit crisis, and, the new normal of global competitiveness.

Gingrich brings two valuable/essential political assets to the GOP ticket: staying power (he’s as tough skinned, politically savvy and as intelligent as anyone), and conservative bona fides.  No Democrat will defeat Gingrich in a Vice Presidential debate, and no Republican will spark more enthusiasm among Tea Party economic conservatives and Republican social conservatives than Gingrich.

GOP Presidential UPDATE 11/3/2011: Romney-Gingrich likely GOP Ticket

  1. Romney’s seasoning will win him the nominationas the last contender standing.
  2. However, Romney cannot beat Obama without enthusiastic Tea Party support as well as the support of the most conservative Republicans … who don’t like him at all.
  3. Romney: has been at 25% all year, meaning 75% of the GOP prefer someone else.
  4. Newt Gingrich: will bring conservative enthusiasm to the ticket.
  5. Rick Perry: will continue to implode under the weight of inexperience and cowboy bravado too reminiscent of President Bush.  Fear of a third Bush term will be his doom. (Oct 2008 Bush job approval was 25%; Obama job approval today is: 45%)
  6. Herman Cain: is through due in part to an inept campaign manager (thinks blowing cigarette smoke into the camera in a TV ad is politically clever) and no campaign organization (try turning out Iowa caucus voters on a cold rainy January day without a ground game).  Cain’s apparent strategy, winning the White House with a “There’s a sucker born every minute” snow job, was doomed from the start.  His poor crisis management in the face of sexual harassment allegations is confirmation of the ineptitude of his campaign manager and his not ready for prime time candidacy.
  7. Ron Paul: too old at age 76 to begin an administration (Reagan oldest at 69; Wm. H. Harrison was 67); doubts about electability continue to plague the Paul camp.
  8. Rick Santorum: too angry/whiny/defensive (Real Clear Politics polls average 1.8%)
  9. Michelle Bachmann: too happy (Real Clear Politics polls average 3.8%); “out of money and ideas,” says Ed Rollins, Bachmann’s former campaign manager.
  10. John Huntsman: Obama’s Ambassador to China (Real Clear Politics polls average 1.2%)
  11. Newt Gingrich: the conservative’s conservative; great debater; staying power at the presidential level.

Gingrich will pick up Cain’s Votes in NC and US

North Carolina: Today’s Public Policy Polling survey shows GOP support for Gingrich at 22%, ahead of Romney’s 19%.  Although Cain leads the list at 30%, his days are numbered.  Gingrich will inherit most of Cain’s votes in North Carolina.

Perry has 10% among NC Republicans, Bachmann 4%, Paul 4%, Huntsman 2% and Santorum 2%.

National Republican Presidential: Although in the Real Clear Politics polling average for Gingrich runs behind Cain (26%), Romney (24%) and Perry (10%), he is more likely than Perry to pick up Cain’s votes … which will put him ahead of Perry within the month.

– END –

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report!

John N. Davis, Editor

 

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