As if we have not been inundated enough with politics this year, hold on to your seats. Over the next few weeks that is all you will hear, read or see. The Republican Convention is set for July 18-22 in Cleveland, and the Democratic Convention will begin on July 25 in Philadelphia.
After a full year of primaries, caucuses and delegate collecting, the field is finally set for the fall campaign for president. After the July conventions are over, the race is on between Democrat Hillary Clinton and the Republican standard bearer, Donald Trump.
Showing posts with label Democratic Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democratic Party. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 13, 2016
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Darrio Melton: Put the personal attacks aside for the primary
March 1 is right around the corner, and Alabama's primary races are heating up. We've seen contentious rhetoric in the presidential nomination races, but the same tone is trickling down to our local primaries and communities.
The primary process has produced a lot of negativity, especially with how closely Secretary Clinton and Senator Sanders are performing in early states. It's easy to sit back and throw rocks at the super-delegates and talk about "party insiders" when both candidates are campaigning for a job that is, by definition, a "party insider."
What people might forget is that the Democratic primary is the most democratic that it's ever been, and that speaks volumes about our party and the way that we choose the top of the ticket.
The primary process has produced a lot of negativity, especially with how closely Secretary Clinton and Senator Sanders are performing in early states. It's easy to sit back and throw rocks at the super-delegates and talk about "party insiders" when both candidates are campaigning for a job that is, by definition, a "party insider."
What people might forget is that the Democratic primary is the most democratic that it's ever been, and that speaks volumes about our party and the way that we choose the top of the ticket.
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Steve Flowers: Inside the Statehouse: Is the Democratic Party dead in Alabama?
On the night of the November 2010 elections I was in
my regular post as the political analyst for the Montgomery CBS affiliate WAKA
Channel 8. Around midnight as it became evident that the Democratic ticket had
been annihilated my cohort, longtime anchor Glenn Halbrooks, looked over at me
pensively and asked, “What do you think the Democratic Party does now?” I candidly responded, “They can turn out the
lights and leave the keys on the mantle. The Democratic Party is dead in
Alabama.” My off the cuff response was not intended to be flippant or humorous
but I had just witnessed the devastating denunciation of the Democratic Party
in the Heart of Dixie.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Larry M. Elkin: Republicans, lacking direction, cannot steer the country
President Obama has finally come of age politically,
and he knows where he wants to go. His political adversaries do not.
The president served notice in his second inaugural
address, and again in his State of the Union speech, that he intends to follow
the path blazed by Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson, two fellow
Democrats who insisted that expanded government could improve most American
lives. They pushed the costs of their programs onto future generations, but
most citizens nevertheless came to cherish government-subsidized pensions,
disability and unemployment insurance, and medical care for the elderly and poor.
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Ian M. MacIsaac: Romney's whitewater runs dry
Mitt Romney lost on Tuesday for a lot of reasons. He
was a flip-flopper and a serial liar; he was a wooden campaigner and repeatedly
proved himself incapable of connecting with average people; he was a caricature
of all the worst aspects of the "one percent."
But Romney did not lose last night purely through
personal failings. In retrospect, any Republican candidate would have likely
lost last night. The problem? There simply were not enough white people.
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