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October 18, 2008 at 2:17 pm #782958
Anonymous
InactiveIf the democrats can beat Joe Knollenberg in Oakland county Michigan, it probably means they’ve routed the republicans throughout the country.
Ed Rollins, old time republican campaign man said that McCain winning it would be “harder than hitting an inside straight” and that the best he can hope for is that the republicans to close the gap.
I think that by next weekend we’ll see whether McCain made any gains on the debate. The CNN poll of polls, show Obama dropping 1 point and mccain gaining 1 point yesterday. If that reverses by next weekend i’ll be willing to call it over.
October 18, 2008 at 2:18 pm #782959Anonymous
InactiveObama’s comments about “spreading the wealth around” was big blunder that may cost him the election. The stock market may have bottomed and credit lending may resume moving it off the front page. If national security becomes the main issue in the next two weeks Obama is toast.
October 18, 2008 at 2:29 pm #782960Anonymous
Inactive@slotplayer 181507 wrote:
Obama’s comments about “spreading the wealth around” was big blunder that may cost him the election. The stock market may have bottomed and credit lending may resume moving it off the front page. If national security becomes the main issue in the next two weeks Obama is toast.
People that concentrate on that stuff will be scratching thier heads on November 5th wondering WTH happened just like the GOP’s that lose their place in congress.
LOLAmericans wants a change and Obama is the change that we want and need. Time to ‘Turn the Page’ on the current administration’s lies, war and other crap. :tongue:
October 18, 2008 at 2:36 pm #782961Anonymous
InactiveIt’s time for a change.
:rockband:Democrats and blacks showed first-day voting enthusiasm in N.C., according to state Board of Elections numbers from yesterday.
The breakdown of the 113,809 first-day voters:
Democrats, 64%, Republicans, 21%, Unaffiliated, 15%
White, 61%, Black, 36%
Compare those figures to total registered voter percentages as of Oct. 17 (party) and Oct. 11 (race):
Democrats, 46%, Republicans, 32%, Unaffiliated 22%
White, 74%, Black, 21%
The first day black turnout is similar to the early turnout in Georgia, where 36 percent of early voters are black (compared to 29 percent black registered voters.)
The early-vote numbers in both states are likely to revert closer to the registered voter percentages as we near Nov. 4. How much they do that in N.C. will go a long way toward determining who wins the state.
Experts have estimated that Barack Obama needs the black turnout in N.C. needs to be 22-23 percent for him to win. In 2004, blacks made up 18.6 percent of voters.
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