- MSNBC, Aug. 31, 2009, Keith Olbermann on Robert F. McDonnell,
Republican candidate for governor of Virginia:
"In (McDonnell's master's thesis), he described women having jobs
as detrimental to the family, called legalized use of contraception
illogical, pushed to make divorce more difficult and insisted
government should favor married couples over, quote, 'cohabitators,
homosexuals or fornicators.' Wow. When did he write this? 1875? No,
1989. Wow, 1989.
"Goodbye, Mr. McDonnell."
- MSNBC, Sept. 22, 2009, Rachel Maddow also on McDonnell:
"And here's where the conservative movement and the Republican
establishment smash into each other like bumper
cars without bumpers.
Here's where Republican electoral chances stop being separate from the
wild-eyed excesses of the conservative movement.
"Part of watching Republicans try to return to power is watching
... the conservative movement eat the Republican Party, eat their
electoral chances over and over and over again."
On election night, conservatives-eating-Republicans resulted in an
18-point landslide for McDonnell, who beat his Democratic opponent 59
percent to 41 percent – winning two-thirds of all independent voters and
ending the Democrats' eight-year reign in the Virginia governor's
office.
Republicans swept all statewide offices for the first time in 12
years, winning the races for lieutenant governor and attorney general,
as well as assembly seats, garbage inspector, dog catcher and anything
else Virginians could vote for.
To paraphrase a pompous blowhard: Goodbye, Mr. Democrat.
And that's not the most exciting
news from election night!
Astoundingly, Jon Corzine, the incumbent governor of heavily Democratic
New Jersey – a state that Barack Obama won by 16 points just a year ago
– lost by 5 points.
At 49 percent for Republican Chris Christie versus 44 percent for
Corzine, the election wasn't even close enough to be stolen by ACORN.
(Although Corzine did extremely well among underaged Salvadoran
prostitutes living in government
housing.)
The biggest winner election night was pollster Scott Rasmussen, who –
once again – produced the most accurate poll results. New York Times
poll: Corzine 40, Christie 37; Quinnipiac poll: Corzine 43, Christie 38;
Rasmussen poll: Christie 46, Corzine 43.
The biggest loser was President Obama, who campaigned tirelessly for
Corzine, even giving up golf on several occasions and skipping a
quarter-million-dollar "date night" with Michelle to stump for the
Democrat.
Just two days before the election, Obama was at a rally in New Jersey
assuring voters that Corzine was "one of the best partners I have in the
White
House. We work together. ...
Jon Corzine helped get this done."
Except the problem is that voting for Obama a year ago was a fashion
statement, much like it was once a fad to buy Beanie Babies, pet rocks
and Cabbage Patch Kids. But instead of ending up with a ridiculous
dust-collector at the bottom of your closet, the Obama fad leaves you
with higher taxes, a reduced
retirement
fund, no job and a one-year
wait for an MRI.
That is why Corzine's defeat sounded the death knell for national
health
care.
The good news: Next time Corzine is in a major
car
accident after speeding on
the New Jersey Turnpike, he'll be able to see a
doctor right away.
The media will try to rescue health care by talking about nothing but
the 23rd district of New York, where the Democrat won Tuesday night.
Congratulations, Democrats – you won a congressional seat in New York!
Next up: A Catholic elected pope!
Far from an upset, the Democrats' winning the 23rd district was a
long-term
plan of the Obama White
House. That's why Obama made John McHugh, the moderate Republican
congressman representing the 23rd district, his secretary of the Army
earlier this year. The Democrats thought McHugh's seat would be easy
pickings.
Only in the last week has everyone acted as if a Democratic victory
in the 23rd district would be a shocking surprise – an upset victory
caused by puritanical Republicans staging inquisitions against
"mainstream" Republican candidates like Dede Scozzafava, the designated
"Republican" candidate in the special election.
This is preposterous – there was absolutely nothing Republican about
Scozzafava. As a supporter of partial-birth abortion, card-check union
schemes and massive government spending programs, she was less
Republican than John McCain.
Even Markos Moulitsas of Daily Kos called Scozzafava the most liberal
candidate in the race – which may explain why she was the choice of
George Soros' Working Families Party and why she promptly endorsed the
Democrat after withdrawing from the race last weekend.
Conservative opposition to Scozzafava hardly suggests that they plan
to impose litmus tests on every Republican candidate in the 2010
elections.
Speaking of litmus tests, on MSNBC recently, liberal blogger Jane
Hamsher said of the possibility that a blue dog Democrat would oppose
national health care: "I dare Blanche Lincoln – I dare Blanche
Lincoln to join a filibuster.
She'll draw primary opponents so fast it would make your head spin."
While I'm sure an out-of-touch liberal blogger from Hollywood knows
more about Arkansas than an elected senator from that state, Hamsher's
threat sounds more like an intra-party civil war than conservatives
opposing a George-Soros-supported Republican candidate in a New York
congressional race.
Not only do conservatives not pick insane fights – such as staging a
2006 primary fight against a recent vice presidential candidate because
he supported the war in Iraq – but conservatives are more popular than
Republicans.
By contrast, liberals are less popular than Democrats. When
conservatives take control of the Republican Party, Republicans win.
When liberals take control of the Democratic Party, Democrats end up out
of power for eight to 12 years.