Monday,
October 11 2004
ALAN KEYES, MR. RADIOACTIVE: Just how bad
is Alan Keyes doing in the Illinois Senate race? Let's just
say it's hard to imagine him doing any worse. In the three
latest polls taken during the past week, Keyes is drawing
between 20-24% of the vote while Obama is pushing close
to 70%.
To
be fair, this was never really about Alan Keyes beating
Barack Obama. The minute Jack Ryan dropped out of the race
the GOP strategy shifted from winning to trying to field
a credible challenger who could do two things: 1) keep Obama
occupied and 2) run strong throughout the state to protect
down-ballot Republicans from getting swamped. Keyes is failing
miserably at both.
Today's
Washington Post reports that Obama is so unconcerned
with the threat being posed by Alan Keyes that he's now
touring the country raising money and campaigning on behalf
of John Kerry and other Democrats:
In
the past week, Obama has mailed checks totaling $260,000
to Senate candidates in 13 states, including $53,000 to
the do-or-die campaign of Minority Leader Thomas A. Daschle
(S.D.). He donated $100,000 to the Democratic Senatorial
Campaign Committee and $150,000 to party organizations
in key states, including Florida, Wisconsin and Colorado.
Carrying his verbal assault on President Bush beyond state
lines, Obama will fly to Los Angeles this week for a Democratic
fundraiser and address rallies in Colorado and Nevada
for John F. Kerry. In a close presidential race where
turnout could prove decisive, Obama said in an interview
that he is talking with Kerry advisers about where he
can be most effective in the campaign's final days.
"Turnout
is huge," Obama said after a Saturday morning rally
in the hard-fought presidential battleground of Wisconsin.
"If there are selective things that we can do that
can be helpful, then we want to do them. The Kerry people
are still making determinations as to what states remain
in play. Safe to say we will probably have a couple more
travel days this month."
Back
in Illinois, Keyes is operating in complete isolation. He's
alienated almost all of the Republican party operatives
throughout the state, starting with his wild-eyed rhetoric
about Barack Obama's pro-abortion stance (the "slaveholders'"
position, similar to a terrorist, etc) and his attack on
Dick Cheney's gay daughter (Keyes called Mary Cheney a "selfish
hedonist").
Many
members of the Illinois delegation, including the Chairperson
of the Party, Judy Baar Topinka, condemned Keyes remarks
as "idiotic" and called on him to apologize. (To
make matters worse, rumors
have been swirling about the sexual preference of Keyes'
own daughter for a couple of weeks now. Keyes has refused
to comment)
This
is how bad it has become: the other night at a GOP fund
raising dinner Keyes caused a stir by showing up unannounced
- but more importantly, I was told, uninvited. At the dinner
a sitting member Congress, speaking semi-privately to the
guests at one of the tables, jokingly referred to Keyes
as a "lunatic." Everyone at the table laughed
and shook their heads in agreement.
The
damage Keyes is doing to the GOP in Illinois, however, is
no laughing matter. He will be lucky to win 25% of the vote
in November and he's become not only a drag on the ballot
for Republicans but a weapon for Democrats.
I'll
give you a quick example. Beth Coulson is the State Senator
from my district. She's a moderate Republican in a moderate
to left-leaning district and always a top target of the
Democrats. Here's a copy of the latest flier from the Illinois
Democratic Party:

Keyes
may very well cost Beth Coulson her seat, and perhaps a
few others as well. And on November 3rd Alan Keyes will
be sitting comfortably on a plane back to Maryland and the
Illinois GOP will be in a bigger hole than they were in
before Keyes arrived to help dig.
MOTHER
TERESA: Can't resist this blurb on Teresa Heinz
Kerry from Friday's
Tucson Citizen:
In
the middle of her [Heinz Kerry's] speech, Bush supporters
chimed in with a chant of "four more years."
Kerry supporters countered with "four more weeks."
Heinz
Kerry told the Bush supporters, "I respect your positions,
but you must have manners."
Adele
Conover, 54, a science writer and Kerry supporter who
had backed Howard Dean, described Heinz Kerry's talk as
"sensational."
"She
treated them like they were children," she said of
how Heinz Kerry talked to the Bush supporters.
Those
Bush supporters
are just so uncouth, aren't they Teresa? - T.
Bevan 7:45 am Link
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