zondag, mei 25, 2008

Top 10

1. Estelle feat. Kanye West: American Boy
2. Jamie Lidell: Another day
3. Jason Mraz: I'm yours
4. Sam Sparro: Black and gold
5. Kraak & Smaak feat. Ben Westbeech: Squeeze me
6. Alphabeat: Fascination
7. Usher feat. Young Jeezy: Love in this club
8. Kanye West feat. Dwele: Flashing lights
9. Gnarls Barkley: Going on
10. Duffy: Mercy

Labels:

zaterdag, mei 24, 2008

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Hoopt Clinton nu al op de moord van Obama?

Smart candidates don't invoke the possibility of their opponents being killed. This seems so obvious it shouldn't need to be said, but apparently, it needs to be said.

"We all remember Bobby Kennedy was assassinated in June in California," Hillary Clinton said yesterday, referencing the fact that past nomination contests have stretched into June to explain why she hasn't heeded calls to exit the Democratic race. She was in an editorial board meeting with a South Dakota newspaper, and she didn't even seem to notice she'd just uttered the unutterable.

The nation's political science students, our future strategists and campaign managers, would do well to pay attention to this moment. There are taboos in presidential politics, and this is one of the biggest. To raise the specter of a rival's assassination, even unintentionally, is to make a truly terrible thing real. It sounds like one might be waiting for a terrible thing to happen, even if one isn't. It sounds almost like wishful thinking.

If there were any doubt about the taboo nature of discussing such a thing, witness the reaction Barack Obama's campaign put out, which carefully avoided any repetition of what Clinton had actually said. To repeat it would be to repeat the possibility of the terrible thing.

"Senator Clinton's statement before the Argus Leader editorial board was unfortunate and has no place in this campaign," spokesman Bill Burton e-mailed. (A reporter checking his BlackBerry after an overlong smoke break would have no inkling of what was so unfortunate.)

Clinton issued a statement apologizing "if" she'd been in "any way offensive," and a spokesman tried to clarify what she meant.

"She was talking about the length of the race and using the '68 election as an example of how long the races in the past have gone," Howard Wolfson said, missing the point. What she meant was: We can wait a little longer to know who the Democratic nominee is. What she said was: assassinated.

In fact, she had used similar, more carefully phrased language back in March, in a Time magazine interview: "Primary contests used to last a lot longer. We all remember the great tragedy of Bobby Kennedy being assassinated in June in L.A. My husband didn't wrap up the nomination in 1992 until June. Having a primary contest go through June is nothing particularly unusual."

The fear of a president or a presidential candidate being shot or assassinated is horrifying precisely because recent history teaches us that it can happen. We don't need anybody to remind us, and we certainly don't need anybody to remind whatever suggestible wackos might be lurking in the shadows.

In the context of Obama, Clinton's words broke a double taboo, because since the beginning of his candidacy, some of Obama's supporters have feared that his race made him more of a target than other presidential hopefuls. Obama was placed under Secret Service protection early, a full year ago. To be unaware that one's words tap into a monumental fear that exists in a portion of the electorate -- a fear that Obama's race could get him killed -- is an unusual mistake for a serious and highly disciplined presidential candidate.

It's surprising, too, because something very similar just happened last week, when Mike Huckabee made a joke at an NRA convention about somebody aiming a gun at Obama. He later apologized and called his remarks "offensive." He also could have called them "instructive" for any politician paying attention.

If they didn't already know.

Bron: The Washington Post

Labels:

woensdag, mei 21, 2008

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Obama wint gedelegeerdenslag


Sen. Barack Obama crossed another threshold last night in his march toward the Democratic presidential nomination, splitting a pair of primaries with Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and claiming a majority of the pledged delegates at stake in the long nomination battle.

Obama scored an easy victory in Oregon after being trounced by Clinton in Kentucky. The results left him fewer than 100 delegates short of the 2,026 currently required to win the party's nomination in one of the closest contests that Democrats have staged in a generation.

The senator from Illinois stopped short of claiming the nomination, a milestone he may not be able to reach until the end of the primaries on June 3. But he staged a victory rally in Iowa, the site of his first big win of the year, to highlight his near-lock on the nomination and to continue to shift his focus to a general-election campaign against Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee.

Recalling the lengthy road he has traveled, Obama told a boisterous crowd gathered near the Iowa state Capitol: "Tonight, Iowa, in the fullness of spring, with the help of those who stood up from Portland to Louisville, we have returned to Iowa with a majority of delegates elected by the American people, and you have put us within reach of the Democratic nomination for president of the United States."

Obama's claim to the most pledged delegates last night was also a not-so-subtle message to the remaining uncommitted superdelegates that if they now endorse Clinton, they will be going against the will of Democratic voters nationwide.

Well before Obama took the stage in Iowa, Clinton spoke to cheering supporters in Louisville, and again signaled her determination to stay in the race until she or Obama has locked down a majority of the delegates. "This is one of the closest races for a party's nomination in history," she said. "We're winning the popular vote, and I'm more determined than ever to see that every vote is cast and every ballot counted."

Clinton said that she will campaign in Puerto Rico, Montana and South Dakota, where the three remaining contests will be held, and that she will keep pressing to seat the full delegations from Michigan and Florida, whose primaries were disallowed because their timing violated Democratic Party rules. "I'm going to keep making our case until we have a nominee, whoever she may be," she said.

In Kentucky, Clinton came close to replicating her blowout victory in West Virginia a week earlier, and in doing so she once again exposed Obama's weakness among working-class white voters in that region of the country. According to a survey of Oregon voters, however, Obama was winning the white vote.

A total of 103 pledged delegates were at stake in yesterday's primaries. Under current rules, there are 3,253 pledged delegates, which means Obama needs 1,627 to claim a majority. Current rules, which do not include delegates from Michigan or Florida, require the nominee to win at least 2,026 delegates -- pledged and superdelegates.

Both Obama and Clinton opened their speeches last night by paying tribute to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), who found out that he has a malignant brain tumor, praising him as a fighter and a conscience of the Democratic Party.

Obama also praised Clinton as a formidable rival who has never stopped fighting for the American people. "No matter how this primary ends," he said, "Senator Clinton has shattered myths and broken barriers and changed the America in which my daughters and yours will come of age."

But with his campaign eager to pivot to the fall election, Obama's real focus was on McCain, whom he described as a virtual clone of President Bush on the Iraq war and economic policy and as someone out of touch with the country's mood.

"I will leave it up to Senator McCain to explain to the American people whether his policies and positions represent long-held convictions or Washington calculations," Obama's remarks continued, "but the one thing they don't represent is change."

In a statement last night, McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said: "Rather than offer solutions and leadership, Senator Obama again tonight launched the tired old political attacks of a typical politician, not the 'new politics' he's promised. America needs a commander in chief who is ready from day one. John McCain has the experience, character and courage to move America forward with strength, optimism and resolve."

The odds against Clinton are now so long that it would take a near-miraculous change in the Democratic race to alter the trajectory that Obama is on to clinch the nomination next month. Her claim to be winning the popular vote depends on including the results from Michigan and Florida. Neither Clinton nor Obama campaigned in either state because of party sanctions, and Obama took his name off the ballot in Michigan.

Clinton also pressed the arguments that she has made after other recent victories: that Democrats cannot afford to lose the presidential race and that superdelegates must consider who would be the stronger nominee in the fall. "We have to get this right," she said. "We have to select a nominee who is best positioned to win in November and someone who is best prepared to address the enormous challenges facing our country in these difficult times."

As Clinton carries on her campaign, she has toned down direct attacks on Obama and has made it clear to her advisers that she does not want to do or say anything at this point that could hurt him in a general election. She also hopes to keep alive her case that she would be a stronger candidate in the fall, but she has indicated that she will have a better chance to rally her supporters to Obama's side, if he is the nominee, if she is allowed to finish out the nomination battle on her own terms.

Obama has been similarly careful, telling his staff not to do or say anything that appears to pressure Clinton to leave the race prematurely. Nonetheless, the Obama campaign's decision to stage its celebration in Iowa last night and claim a majority of pledged delegates rankled Clinton and her advisers.

Obama plans to continue shifting his focus to the general election and to the states that will help decide its outcome. Today he will travel to Florida, where he did not campaign earlier this year. Polls in Florida have shown him running behind McCain and faring worse than Clinton against the senator from Arizona.

The Kentucky result continued Clinton's winning steak across a swath of the country that includes Appalachia, as well as industrial states such as Ohio and Pennsylvania that will be battlegrounds in the general election. Clinton has repeatedly pointed to her victories in those states to argue that she would be a stronger candidate against McCain.

The Kentucky results once again highlighted Obama's problem of lacking support from lower-income white voters, a potential concern in a general-election race. But Obama looked to largely white Oregon, where he drew an estimated 72,000 people at a rally in Portland on Sunday, to demonstrate that he can appeal to white voters in other parts of the country.

Despite endorsements over the past week by former senator John Edwards (N.C.) and Sen. Robert C. Byrd (W.Va.), Obama was routed by Clinton among virtually all groups of voters in Kentucky.

According to exit polls, the senator from New York was carrying about three-quarters of white voters who earn less than $50,000 a year and who do not have college degrees. She was winning four out of five white voters older than 60 and even romped among younger white voters, normally an Obama constituency.

But the survey of Oregon voters showed that Obama ran about evenly with Clinton among white voters with incomes below $50,000 and among those without college degrees.

The polling data highlighted deep cultural differences in the two states. Far more voters in Kentucky than Oregon attend church weekly. Far more Oregon voters describe themselves as liberal than those in Kentucky.

Obama, Clinton and McCain reported their April fundraising results last night. Obama's campaign said he had amassed $31 million in April, including 200,000 new donors, as he continued to shatter records for money raised and for donors. Clinton, who has trailed Obama in the fundraising sweepstakes, nonetheless raised $22 million last month, a figure all the more impressive because it came as her path to the nomination continued to narrow.

McCain's team reported raising $18 million in April, the best month to date in his once cash-starved campaign. He reported having almost $22 million in cash on hand; Obama's campaign said it now has about $37 million in the bank.

Bron: The Washington Post

Labels:

zondag, mei 18, 2008

Top 10

1. Estelle feat. Kanye West: American Boy
2. Jason Mraz: I'm yours
3. Kanye West feat. Dwele: Flashing lights
4. Alphabeat: Fascination
5. Sam Sparro: Black and Gold
6. Jamie Lidell: Another day
7. Usher feat. Young Jeezy: Love in this club
8. Duffy: Mercy
9. Kraak & Smaak: Squeeze me
10. The Kooks: Always where I need to be

Labels:

zaterdag, mei 17, 2008

Kraak & Smaak: Squeeze me

Labels: ,

The Script - We cry

Labels: ,

Jamie Lidell - Another day

Labels: ,

donderdag, mei 15, 2008

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Ook John Edwards kiest voor Obama


GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., May 14 -- Former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards gave his long-sought endorsement to Sen. Barack Obama on Wednesday night, calling on Democrats to unite behind him and turn their attention to the fall campaign. "The reason I am here tonight," Edwards declared, "is the voters have made their choice, and so have I."

Edwards had been heavily courted by Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton since he quit the race three months ago. His decision to climb off the fence with just five contests remaining is likely to yield limited benefits, but it sends a strong signal that Edwards, at least, thinks the nomination battle is over.

Appearing with Obama at a rally here, the former senator from North Carolina and 2004 Democratic vice presidential nominee gave what sounded in places like a eulogy for Clinton's candidacy, praising her tenacity and describing her as "made of steel." But he emphasized that the party must now get behind Obama.

"When this nomination battle is over, and it will be over soon, brothers and sisters," he said, "we must come together as Democrats and in the fall stand up for what matters in America and make America what it needs to be."

Friends said Edwards told Obama of his decision on Tuesday night, as Clinton was thumping Obama by 41 points in the West Virginia primary and winning the overwhelming support of working-class white voters at the heart of Edwards's candidacy. Still on the ballot, Edwards received 7 percent of the vote there.

Obama was in Michigan in an effort to connect with such voters, who are considered essential to his chances against Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee. A majority of West Virginia voters said Obama does not share their values.

Clinton, who has vowed to continue her fight through the final June 3 primaries, in Montana and South Dakota, struck a more conciliatory tone during a round of interviews following her victory in West Virginia.

Those who voted for either her or Obama, she said, have far more in common with the other Democrat than they do with McCain. "I'm going to work my heart out for whoever our nominee is," Clinton told CNN. "Obviously, I'm still hoping to be that nominee, but I'm going to do everything I can to make sure that anyone who supported me . . . understands what a grave error it would be not to vote for Senator Obama."

When word of the Edwards endorsement leaked out, however, Clinton campaign manager Terence R. McAuliffe sounded a very different note. "We respect John Edwards," he said in a statement issued by the campaign, "but as the voters of West Virginia showed last night, this thing is far from over."

Electoral math suggested otherwise, and Obama picked up 4.5 more superdelegates on Wednesday. With an insurmountable lead among pledged delegates and a growing edge among the appointed delegates, Obama has made Clinton's path to the nomination nearly invisible.

Obama picked up the endorsement of a leading abortion rights group that is part of a key party constituency. The endorsement by the political action committee of NARAL Pro-Choice America provoked an outcry on NARAL's blog and a statement of displeasure with the organization's timing from the president of the Democratic women's political action committee Emily's List, which supports Clinton. Clinton said she was disappointed by the news.

Edwards had been deeply conflicted about choosing between his former rivals. Friends said that he had spoken regularly with Obama, but that the agreement did not come together until a call Obama placed to him on Tuesday night.

Edwards appeared more in tune with Obama and his message of change during the early primaries, and he was more often critical of Clinton, whom he considered too closely aligned with interest group politics and the established ways of Washington.

At the same time, friends said, Edwards thought Clinton was more ready to be president, and he needed time to reconcile his reservations about Obama.

Edwards is the third of Obama's former rivals to endorse him, following Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (Conn.) and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who said his loyalty to the Clintons was trumped by his belief in Obama.

To achieve maximum media impact, Obama moved up a scheduled rally in Grand Rapids to ensure the Edwards appearance made the evening news. The candidate took the stage to thunderous cheers and told the crowd of 12,500 that he would be joined by "one of the greatest leaders we have in the Democratic Party. Please give it up for my friend John Edwards."

After Edwards spoke, Obama paid homage to themes Edwards cared about, particularly the goal of stitching together what Edwards calls the two Americas.

"John Edwards," Obama said, "ran a campaign that made us all focus on what matters."

The candidate also praised Edwards's wife, Elizabeth, who was reportedly less enthusiastic about Obama, for "her courage and her resilience, her unyielding passion and commitment."

In an interview last week, Edwards strongly suggested that he was leaning toward Obama, in part because he had adopted Edwards's signature issue of poverty. Edwards praised both candidates for caring about Americans who are struggling.

"I think they're both very strong on the issue. . . . and Senator Clinton has been working on this for decades, and particularly focused on children," he said. But poverty issues, he added, have been "central to Senator Obama's life."

Obama spent Wednesday morning trying to shore up support among industrial workers and union members who have sometimes proved skeptical. He talked about the troubled American economy and vowed to lead a resurgence.

"Our job has to be to fight to make the economy fair again. I think that is going to be the central issue in this election: Who can restore a sense of fairness and economic growth for everybody -- bottom-up economic growth, instead of trickle-down nonsense," he told supporters after touring a Chrysler plant.

In Macomb County, long associated with "Reagan Democrats" who left their party in the 1980s to vote for a Republican whose values they shared, Obama recalled McCain's widely reported comment in January that many Michigan manufacturing jobs are gone forever.

"He was right," Obama said. "We can't bring back every single job. But where he was wrong was in suggesting that there's nothing we can do to replace those jobs or create new ones. Where he was wrong was not offering policies and new solutions than what George Bush has been offering over the last 7 1/2 years. That's essentially giving up. That's not what this country is all about."

Obama, who is counting on increased support from labor unions, expressed solidarity Wednesday with striking workers at nearby American Axle and criticized the Bush administration as being anti-labor. Aides made sure that members of the Teamsters, United Food Workers and garment workers unions were on stage behind him.

Obama told reporters on his Chicago-bound campaign plane that Edwards can be "extremely helpful to us campaigning in every demographic," but he noted that he has particular credibility on "issues of poverty and the plight of working people."

"Hopefully his endorsement will help some of those supporters who haven't already joined my campaign take a look at my campaign," Obama said. "We'll take any help that he can give us."

Bron: The Washington Post

Labels:

woensdag, mei 14, 2008

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Racisme in de campagne

Danielle Ross was alone in an empty room at the Obama campaign headquarters in Kokomo, Ind., a cellphone in one hand, a voter call list in the other. She was stretched out on the carpeted floor wearing laceless sky-blue Converses, stories from the trail on her mind. It was the day before Indiana's primary, and she had just been chased by dogs while canvassing in a Kokomo suburb. But that was not the worst thing to occur since she postponed her sophomore year at Middle Tennessee State University, in part to hopscotch America stumping for Barack Obama.

Here's the worst: In Muncie, a factory town in the east-central part of Indiana, Ross and her cohorts were soliciting support for Obama at malls, on street corners and in a Wal-Mart parking lot, and they ran into "a horrible response," as Ross put it, a level of anti-black sentiment that none of them had anticipated.

"The first person I encountered was like, 'I'll never vote for a black person,' " recalled Ross, who is white and just turned 20. "People just weren't receptive."

For all the hope and excitement Obama's candidacy is generating, some of his field workers, phone-bank volunteers and campaign surrogates are encountering a raw racism and hostility that have gone largely unnoticed -- and unreported -- this election season. Doors have been slammed in their faces. They've been called racially derogatory names (including the white volunteers). And they've endured malicious rants and ugly stereotyping from people who can't fathom that the senator from Illinois could become the first African American president.

The contrast between the large, adoring crowds Obama draws at public events and the gritty street-level work to win votes is stark. The candidate is largely insulated from the mean-spiritedness that some of his foot soldiers deal with away from the media spotlight.

Victoria Switzer, a retired social studies teacher, was on phone-bank duty one night during the Pennsylvania primary campaign. One night was all she could take: "It wasn't pretty." She made 60 calls to prospective voters in Susquehanna County, her home county, which is 98 percent white. The responses were dispiriting. One caller, Switzer remembers, said he couldn't possibly vote for Obama and concluded: "Hang that darky from a tree!"

Documentary filmmaker Rory Kennedy, the daughter of the late Robert F. Kennedy, said she, too, came across "a lot of racism" when campaigning for Obama in Pennsylvania. One Pittsburgh union organizer told her he would not vote for Obama because he is black, and a white voter, she said, offered this frank reason for not backing Obama: "White people look out for white people, and black people look out for black people."

Obama campaign officials say such incidents are isolated, that the experience of most volunteers and staffers has been overwhelmingly positive.

The campaign released this statement in response to questions about encounters with racism: "After campaigning for 15 months in nearly all 50 states, Barack Obama and our entire campaign have been nothing but impressed and encouraged by the core decency, kindness, and generosity of Americans from all walks of life. The last year has only reinforced Senator Obama's view that this country is not as divided as our politics suggest."

Campaign field work can be an exercise in confronting the fears, anxieties and prejudices of voters. Veterans of the civil rights movement know what this feels like, as do those who have been involved in battles over busing, immigration or abortion. But through the Obama campaign, some young people are having their first experience joining a cause and meeting cruel reaction.

On Election Day in Kokomo, a group of black high school students were holding up Obama signs along U.S. 31, a major thoroughfare. As drivers cruised by, a number of them rolled down their windows and yelled out a common racial slur for African Americans, according to Obama campaign staffers.

Frederick Murrell, a black Kokomo High School senior, was not there but heard what happened. He was more disappointed than surprised. During his own canvassing for Obama, Murrell said, he had "a lot of doors slammed" in his face. But taunting teenagers on a busy commercial strip in broad daylight? "I was very shocked at first," Murrell said. "Then again, I wasn't, because we have a lot of racism here."

The bigotry has gone beyond words. In Vincennes, the Obama campaign office was vandalized at 2 a.m. on the eve of the primary, according to police. A large plate-glass window was smashed, an American flag stolen. Other windows were spray-painted with references to Obama's controversial former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, and other political messages: "Hamas votes BHO" and "We don't cling to guns or religion. Goddamn Wright."

Ray McCormick was notified of the incident at about 2:45 a.m. A farmer and conservationist, McCormick had erected a giant billboard on a major highway on behalf of Farmers for Obama. He also was housing the Obama campaign worker manning the office. When McCormick arrived at the office, about two hours before he was due out of bed to plant corn, he grabbed his camera and wanted to alert the media. "I thought, this is a big deal." But he was told Obama campaign officials didn't want to make a big deal of the incident. McCormick took photos anyway and distributed some.

"The pictures represent what we are breaking through and overcoming," he said. As McCormick, who is white, sees it, Obama is succeeding despite these incidents. Later, there would be bomb threats to three Obama campaign offices in Indiana, including the one in Vincennes, according to campaign sources.

Obama has not spoken much about racism during this campaign. He has sought to emphasize connections among Americans rather than divisions. He shrugged off safety concerns that led to early Secret Service protection and has told black senior citizens who worry that racists will do him harm: Don't fret. Earlier in the campaign, a 68-year-old woman in Carson City, Nev., voiced concern that the country was not ready to elect an African American president.

"Will there be some folks who probably won't vote for me because I am black? Of course," Obama said, "just like there may be somebody who won't vote for Hillary because she's a woman or wouldn't vote for John Edwards because they don't like his accent. But the question is, 'Can we get a majority of the American people to give us a fair hearing?' "

Obama has won 30 of 50 Democratic contests so far, the kind of nationwide electoral triumph no black candidate has ever realized. That he is on the brink of capturing the Democratic nomination, some say, is a testament to how far the country has progressed in overcoming racism and evidence of Obama's skill at bridging divides.

Obama has won five of 12 primaries in which black voters made up less than 10 percent of the electorate, and caucuses in states such as Idaho and Wyoming that are overwhelmingly white. But exit polls show he has struggled to attract white voters who didn't attend college and earn less than $50,000 a year. Today, he and Hillary Clinton square off in West Virginia, a state where she is favored and where the votes of working-class whites will again be closely watched.

For the most part, Obama campaign workers say, the 2008 election cycle has been exhilarating. On the ground, the Obama campaign is being driven by youngsters, many of whom are imbued with an optimism undeterred by racial intolerance. "We've grown up in a different world," says Danielle Ross. Field offices are staffed by 20-somethings who hold positions -- state director, regional field director, field organizer -- that are typically off limits to newcomers to presidential politics.

Gillian Bergeron, 23, was in charge of a five-county regional operation in northeastern Pennsylvania. The oldest member of her team was 27. At Scranton's annual Saint Patrick's Day parade, some of the green Obama signs distributed by staffers were burned along the parade route. That was the first signal that this wasn't exactly Obama country. There would be others.

In a letter to the editor published in a local paper, Tunkhannock Borough Mayor Norm Ball explained his support of Hillary Clinton this way: "Barack Hussein Obama and all of his talk will do nothing for our country. There is so much that people don't know about his upbringing in the Muslim world. His stepfather was a radical Muslim and the ranting of his minister against the white America, you can't convince me that some of that didn't rub off on him.

"No, I want a president that will salute our flag, and put their hand on the Bible when they take the oath of office."

Obama's campaign workers have grown wearily accustomed to the lies about the candidate's supposed radical Muslim ties and lack of patriotism. But they are sometimes astonished when public officials such as Ball or others representing the campaign of their opponent traffic in these falsehoods.

Karen Seifert, a volunteer from New York, was outside of the largest polling location in Lackawanna County, Pa., on primary day when she was pressed by a Clinton volunteer to explain her backing of Obama. "I trust him," Seifert replied. According to Seifert, the woman pointed to Obama's face on Seifert's T-shirt and said: "He's a half-breed and he's a Muslim. How can you trust that?"

Pollsters have found it difficult to accurately measure racial attitudes, as some voters are unwilling to acknowledge the role that race plays in their thinking. But some are not. Susan Dzimian, a Clinton supporter who owns residential properties, said outside a polling location in Kokomo that race was a factor in how she viewed Obama. "I think if it was somebody other than him, I'd accept it," she said of a black candidate. "If Colin Powell had run, I would be willing to accept him."

The previous evening, Dondra Ewing was driving the neighborhoods of Kokomo, looking to turn around voters like Dzimian. Ewing, 47, is a chain-smoking middle school guidance counselor, a black single mother of two and one of the most fiercely vigilant Obama volunteers in Kokomo, which was once a Ku Klux Klan stronghold. On July 4, 1923, Kokomo hosted the largest Klan gathering in history -- an estimated 200,000 followers flocked to a local park. But these are not the 1920s, and Ewing believes she can persuade anybody to back Obama. Her mother, after all, was the first African American elected at-large to the school board in a community that is 10 percent black.

Kokomo, population 46,000, is another hard-hit Midwestern industrial town stung by layoffs. Longtimers wistfully remember the glory years of Continental Steel and speak mournfully about the jobs shipped overseas. Kokomo Sanitary Pottery, which made bathroom sinks and toilets, shut down a couple of months ago and took with it 150 jobs.

Aaron Roe, 23, was mowing lawns at a local cemetery recently, lamenting his $8-an-hour job with no benefits. He had earned a community college degree as an industrial electrician, but learned there was no electrical work to be found for someone with his experience, which is to say none. Politics wasn't on his mind; frustration was. If he were to vote, it would not be for Obama, he said. "I just got a funny feeling about him," Roe said, a feeling he couldn't specify, except to say race wasn't a part of it. "Race ain't nothing," said Roe, who is white. "It's how they're going to help the country."

The Aaron Roes are exactly who Dondra Ewing was after: people with funny feelings.

At the Bradford Run Apartments, she found Robert Cox, a retiree who spent 30 years working for an electronics manufacturer making computer chips. He was in his suspenders, grilling shish kebab, which he had never eaten. "Something new," Cox said, recommended by his son who was visiting from Colorado.

Ewing was selling him hard on Obama. "There are more than two families that can run the United States of America," she said, "and their names aren't Bush and Clinton."

"Yeah, I know, I know," Cox said, remaining noncommittal.

He opened the grill and peeked at the kebabs. "It's not his race, because I got real good friends and all that," Cox continued. "If anything would keep him from getting elected, it would be his name. It might turn off some older people."

Like him?

"No, older than me," said Cox, 66.

Ewing kept talking, until finally Cox said, "Probably Obama," when asked directly how he would vote.

As she walked away, Ewing said: "I think we got him."

But truthfully, she wasn't feeling so sure.

Bron: The Washington Post

Labels:

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Clinton wins but who cares

Hillary Clinton heeft zoals verwacht West Virginia zeer overtuigend gewonnen. Maar doet het er eigenlijk nog iets aan toe? Helemaal niet, want de interesse is maar beperkt. Obama legde zich op de vooravond al neer bij zijn nederlaag en trok naar Missouri om daar campagne te gaan voeren. The Washington Post vertelde het verhaal over de voorbije dag van Clinton en liet duidelijk zien dat West Virginia wel massaal koos voor haar, maar dat er toch weinig enthousiasme was tijdens de campagne. Markant was wel de anekdote dat ze van haar campagnebus kwam en voor de camera's hevig stond te zwaaien alsof er een grote menigte stond. Alleen, er stond enkel maar een tiental journalisten. Bovendien deed ze haar gekende move waarbij ze naar iemand wees en zwaaide alsof het een oude bekende was die haar kwam steunen, maar in feite wees en wuifde ze naar een campagnelid die ze 5 minuten eerder nog toesprak. Of hoe Clinton toch nog de schijn wilt ophouden dus. Voor iemand die pretendeerde zo machtig te zijn, heeft het iets tragischs en zieligs over zich.

Maar ze won dus overtuigend en dichtte de kloof met Obama met 14 gedelegeerden. Alleen, in de tussenstand verandert er praktisch niet, want qua supergedelegeerden is de dam nu helemaal gebroken. De voorbije dagen kozen steeds meer supergedelegeerden voor Obama, waardoor hij nu ineens een klein kloofje kan slaan met Clinton. Zelfs deze middag (ochtend in Amerika) kozen nog twee extra superdelegates voor Obama, ondanks zijn grote nederlaag in West Virginia. Hierdoor heeft hij nu 286 superdelegates, terwijl Clinton blijft hangen op 273. Bovendien zijn er al enkelen die eerst steun betuigden aan Clinton, maar de afgelopen week bekend maakten dat ze toch hun steun aan Obama gaan geven. Resultaat is nu dat Obama op alle vlakken voor staat op Clinton: meer gewone afgevaardigden, meer staten gewonnen, aan de leiding bij de popular vote (het aantal stemmen) en dus nu ook qua superafgevaardigden. Het is nu meer dan ooit duidelijk dat Obama de verdiende presidentskandidaat van de Democraten zal zijn.

Labels:

maandag, mei 12, 2008

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Obama neemt leiding bij Superdelegates

Sen. Barack Obama has surpassed Sen. Hillary Clinton in the race for superdelegates, according to CNN's latest count.

Obama on Monday picked up an endorsement from Tom Allen, a Maine representative and U.S. Senate candidate.

"Most of the primary voters across the nation have now spoken. It is time to bring a graceful end to the primary campaign.

"We now need to unify the Democratic Party and focus on electing Sen. Obama and a working majority in the United States Senate. That is how we can change the direction of the country," Allen said.

Allen said Obama and Clinton are both "supremely qualified to be president."

Obama released a statement praising Allen's record, saying, "I'm thrilled to be working alongside him in this critical election, and I look forward to working with him as president."

With Allen's endorsement, Obama now leads in the race for superdelegates, 274 to Clinton's 273.

At the beginning of the year, Clinton led the superdelegate race by more than 100.

Superdelegates are party leaders and officials who will vote for the candidate of their choice at the Democratic convention in August.

The focus of the Democratic race has largely turned to the superdelegates because they outnumber the remaining pledged delegates that are up for grabs.

Obama has a comfortable lead in overall delegates, 1,865 to Clinton's 1,697.

The Democrats next face off Tuesday in West Virginia, where Clinton is expected to win by big margins.

Her campaign is renewing the argument that if she leads in the popular vote, she should be the Democratic nominee.

"Hillary is within striking distance of winning the popular vote nationwide -- a key part of our plan to win the nomination," campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe said in a letter to supporters Sunday.

"That means we need every last vote we can get in West Virginia on Tuesday and in the races to follow."

Her campaign is trying to turn out the vote in the remaining six contests, hoping the popular vote argument will persuade superdelegates to endorse her instead of Obama.

Clinton's campaign has argued that she would be more electable in a general election because she has done well in swing states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, as well as Florida and Michigan, which were stripped of their delegates.

West Virginia is also a key swing state. Bill Clinton won in 1992 and 1996, and George Bush carried it in 2000 and 2004.

West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin, an uncommitted superdelegate, said the delegate numbers are in Obama's favor, but the popular vote is important to the people of his state.

"I think we see what happened in 2004, when Al Gore won the popular vote, and where the country has gone and the feelings toward government since then. I put a lot of stock in that," he said on CNN's "American Morning."

"If the people believe that it was over, they wouldn't be voting maybe in the way they might vote tomorrow or in the next few campaigns," he said.

Clinton is expected to trounce Obama in West Virginia, but Manchin said he thinks Obama would also be able to carry the state in the general election.

The senator from New York has a 43-percentage-point advantage over Obama, 66 percent to 23 percent, according to a survey from the American Research Group released Friday.

The poll was conducted after last Tuesday's contests and carries a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

Following Obama's double digit win in North Carolina and Clinton's narrow victory in Indiana, party leaders have suggested Clinton has reached the end of her campaign.

But Clinton has vowed to stay in the race until someone gets enough delegates to clinch the nomination.

Just 28 delegates are up for grab in West Virginia.

Still, Clinton is campaigning hard there, with stops scheduled Monday in Montgomery, Clear Fork, Logan and Fairmont.

Obama has an event scheduled in Charleston and is then expected to travel to Kentucky for a rally in Louisville.

Bron: www.cnn.com

Labels:

Alphabeat - 10.000 nights

Labels: ,

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Superdelegates for Obama

Sen. Barack Obama has tied Sen. Hillary Clinton in the race for superdelegates, according to CNN's latest count. Obama picked up an endorsement from California superdelegate Crystal Strait, a Young Democrats of America board member and a former California Young Democrats president.

"It's probably the hardest decision I've made in my life," Strait told CNN.

"I respect both candidates so much. But listening to how young people voted and caucused around the country, I know this was the right decision."

Superdelegates are party leaders and officials who vote for the candidate of their choice at the Democratic convention in August.

At the beginning of the year, Clinton had led the superdelegate race by more than 100.

The focus of the Democratic race has largely turned to the superdelegates because they outnumber the remaining pledged delegates that are up for grabs.

Strait became the 273rd superdelegate in Obama's column, by CNN's count. Clinton had 273 Sunday as well -- technically 273.5 because of some Democrats Abroad superdelegates who are given half a vote each.

"Barack Obama has shown a real commitment to young voters in his campaign, and in response, young people have overwhelmingly voted and caucused for Obama," Strait said in a written statement.

"We know that if a young person votes three times in a row for a party, they become a party voter for life. We know that because of high youth turnout in 2004 and 2006, 2008 is the third and critical election for young voters. And that's why I know I want to pledge my delegate vote to Barack Obama," she said.

Following a flurry of endorsements, Obama campaign chief David Axelrod on Sunday predicted superdelegates would continue to break for Obama.

"We're coming to the end of the process. I think people saw the results on Tuesday as very meaningful," he said on "Fox News Sunday."

The senator from Illinois last week had a double-digit win in North Carolina and a narrow loss in Indiana.

"I think there's an eagerness on the part of the party leadership and activists across the country to get on with the general election campaign. Sen. [John] McCain's been out there campaigning as the nominee for some time, and I think people are eager to engage," Axelrod said.

"So I think you're going to see people making decisions at a rapid pace from this point on," he said.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Sunday the prolonged primary season has been great for the country, pointing to increased voter registration for his party.

Speaking on ABC's "This Week," he said people should "just relax" because the primaries will be over June 3.

There are only 217 pledged delegates up for grabs in the remaining contests.

Obama holds a commanding lead in the number of pledged delegates awarded from primaries and caucuses: 1,592 to Clinton's 1,424.

The Democrats next face off Tuesday in West Virginia, where polls show Clinton with a substantial lead.

Clinton has a 43-percentage-point advantage over Obama, 66 percent to 23 percent, according to a survey from the American Research Group released Friday.

The poll was conducted after Tuesday's primary results and carries a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

"This state is really Hillary Clinton's wheelhouse. It's an older population, socially conservative, blue-collar workers," said Kennie Bass, a political reporter for WCHS in West Virginia.

Obama acknowledges that West Virginians favor Clinton.

"She is going to do very well in West Virginia and Kentucky. She will win those states, in all likelihood, by significant margins," he said this week.

Obama took a break from the campaign trail Sunday, spending Mother's Day in Chicago, Illinois.

Clinton had three stops scheduled in West Virginia ahead of the primary, and her husband, Bill Clinton, was campaigning for her in Oregon

Bron: www.cnn.com

Labels:

zondag, mei 11, 2008

John Mayer - Say

Labels: ,

Gnarls Barkley - Going on

Labels: ,

Top 10

1. Estelle feat. Kanye West: American Boy
2. Kanye West feat. Dwele: Flashing lights
3. Usher feat. Young Jeezy: Love in this club
4. Alphabeat: Fascination
5. Jason Mraz: I'm yours
6. The Kooks: Always where I need to be
7. Sam Sparro: Black and Gold
8. Duffy: Mercy
9. Moby: Disco lies
10. Chris Brown: With you

Labels:

woensdag, mei 07, 2008

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Indiana en North Carolina

Elke voorverkiezing die nu nog gehouden wordt, wordt omschreven als de laatste grote voorverkiezing in de race naar de Democratische nominatie. En telkens weer zitten we te wachten tot wanneer Hillary Clinton eindelijk beslist om haar partij een grote dienst te bewijzen en nu eindelijk eens de stap opzij zet. Want ze mocht dan wel Pennsylvania overtuigend gewonnen hebben, een groot plezier zal ze haar partij er niet mee doen in november. Want in plaats van de partij bovenaan te zetten heeft ze de voorbije weken en maanden alleen haarzelf bovenaan gezet. Alles moest wijken om haar toch maar de genomineerde te maken en alle vuile, laag bij de grondse methoden waren toegestaan. Gevolg is dat ze de verkiezingsstrijd bij de Democraten zodanig heeft gepolariseerd dat de voorverkiezingen gisteren in Indiane en North Carolina één ding hebben geleerd. Dat de Democraten verder weg staan van de presidentiële verkiezing dan ooit. 50% van de Hillary-stemmers weigert op Obama te stemmen in november. 33% van de Hillary-stemmers zegt zelfs om in november op Republikein John McCain te stemmen in plaats van de eigen partijgenomineerde Obama. Anderzijds hebben het moddergooien van Clinton op Obama, en je mag er zeker van zijn, het was met bakken modder dat ze smeet en alle smerige methodes waren toegestaan door haar (haar scheldpartij waarbij ze Obama vergeleek met Republikeinse strateeg Karl Rove was een driest hoogtepunt en vooral beschamend omdat ze zelf alle vuile trucs uit het handboek van Karl Rove bovenhaalde), ervoor gezorgd dat ondertussen ook al 40% van de Obamastemmers weigert op Clinton te stemmen. Het mag duidelijk zijn dat hoe langer Clinton nog meedoet, hoe groter de schade wordt die ze de partij gaat toebrengen in november. Als de schade nu al niet onherstelbaar is?

Het was trouwens gisteren een slechte dag voor Clinton. Ze had gehoopt om Indiana met groot verschil te kunnen winnen en het verschil in North Carolina te kunnen beperken. Het tegendeel is ondertussen bewezen. Indiana won ze met amper 2% verschil, wat feitelijk neerkomt op een status-quo en in North Carolina bedroeg het verschil met Obama maar liefst 14% en maar liefst 230.000 stemmen. Resultaat in de tussenstand: Obama heeft reeds 1.842 gedelegeerden (waaronder 254 supergedelegeerden), terwijl Clinton steeds verder achterop hinkt met 1.686 (waaronder 267 supergedelegeerden). Daarenboven heeft Clinton de voorbije dagen nog een paar uppercuts gekregen bij de supergedelegeerden, waarbij er er steeds meer supergedelegeerden de voorkeur geven aan Obama. Hij haalt haar bij de supergedelegeerden langzaamaan maar zeker in. Obama van zijn kant kan weer wat opgeluchter zijn. Zijn campagne sputtert en kende een desastreuze maand. Er waren de opmerkingen van zijn priester Wright, er was zijn eigen Bittergate en hij kon niet echt overtuigen in Pennsylvania en heeft problemen om de blanke arbeidersstem te krijgen. Maar hij klimt langzaamaan uit zijn dal. Hij distantieerde zich sterk van de uitspraken van zijn priester, hij krijgt steeds meer het vertrouwen van de supergedelegeerden en de finish ligt op minder dan 200 gedelegeerden.

Er zijn nu nog maar enkele voorverkiezingen meer. Maar het wordt nu hoog tijd dat er zware druk wordt uitgeoefend op Clinton. Haar verdere deelname in de race naar het Witte Huis is niet langer gerechtvaardigd. Hoe langer ze in de wedstrijd blijft, hoe meer ze de wedstrijd polariseert en hoe meer kiezers ze zelf in de armen van John McCain duwt. Ze moet eindelijk eens beseffen dat ze de nominatie niet kan binnenhalen en dat haar persoonlijke missie gefaald heeft. En ze mag dan wel een vechter zijn, de manier waarop ze de voorbije weken heeft gevochten waren zo beschamend dat ze nu aan de partij moet denken. Ze heeft de partij zware schade toegebracht dat ze de volgende weken dit zal moeten proberen op te lossen. Vooreerst door te stoppen met haar beschamende negatieve campagne waarbij ze op haar partijgenoot schiet. Daarnaast door uit de wedstrijd te stoppen en toe te geven dat ze gefaald heeft. En tenslotte door zich achter Obama te scharen en hem te helpen om haar kiezers te overtuigen toch op de Democraten en op Obama te stemmen in november. Als ze dit echter niet doet en de Democraten verliezen in november de presidentsverkiezingen, dan zal de grote schuldige snel gevonden worden.

Labels:

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Clinton financiële problemen

Clinton lends her struggling campaign $6.4 million

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton lent her presidential campaign $6.4 million over the past month, her campaign said Wednesday, underscoring the financial advantage held by her rival, Barack Obama.

The money more than doubled Clinton's personal investment in her bid for the Democratic nomination. She gave her campaign $5 million earlier this year.

A campaign aide said Clinton gave her campaign another $5 million on April 11, more than a week before the Pennsylvania primary. She then again dipped into her personal wealth for $1 million last week and $425,000 on Monday, one day before the North Carolina and Indiana primaries.

Clinton's campaign reported raising $10 million online after her Pennsylvania victory on April 22. Evidently, the money was not enough and her fundraising was unable to keep up with her expenses heading into Tuesday's contests.

Moreover, Obama has routinely outspent her in primary after primary and has shown little difficulty tapping his vast network of donors. He spent more than $7 million on advertising head of Tuesday's primaries in North Carolina and Indiana to her nearly $4 million.

According to the latest campaign finance reports filed with the Federal Election Commission, Obama began the month of April with $42 million in the bank for the primary to Clinton's $9.3 million.

But Clinton had debts of $10.3 million at the start of the month, much of it money owed to her main polling, phone banking and advertising consultants.

Bron: The Washington Post

Labels:

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - Obama's onoverbrugbare voorsprong

There are only six contests remaining in the Democratic primary calendar and only 217 pledged delegates left to be awarded. Only 7 percent of the pledged delegates remain on the table. There are 260 remaining undeclared superdelegates, for a total of 477 delegates left to be awarded.

With North Carolina and Indiana complete, Barack Obama only needs 172 total delegates to capture the Democratic nomination. This is only 36% of the total remaining delegates.

Conversely, Senator Clinton needs 326 delegates to reach the Democratic nomination, which represents a startling 68% of the remaining delegates.

With the Clinton path to the nomination getting even narrower, we expect new and wildly creative scenarios to emerge in the coming days. While those scenarios may be entertaining, they are not legitimate and will not be considered legitimate by this campaign or its millions of supporters, volunteers, and donors.

We believe it is exceedingly unlikely Senator Clinton will overtake our lead in the popular vote and in fact lost ground on that measure last night. However, the popular vote is a deeply flawed and illegitimate metric for deciding the nominee – since each campaign based their strategy on the acquisition of delegates. More importantly, the rules of the nomination are predicated on delegates, not popular vote.

Just as the Presidential election in November will be decided by the electoral college, not popular vote, the Democratic nomination is decided by delegates.

If we believed the popular vote was somehow the key measurement, we would have campaigned much more intensively in our home state of Illinois and in all the other populous states, in the pursuit of larger raw vote totals. But it is not the key measurement. We played by the rules, set by you, the DNC members, and campaigned as hard as we could, in as many places as we could, to acquire delegates. Essentially, the popular vote is not much better as a metric than basing the nominee on which candidate raised more money, has more volunteers, contacted more voters, or is taller.

The Clinton campaign was very clear about their own strategy until the numbers become too ominous for them. They were like a broken record , repeating ad nauseum that this nomination race is about delegates. Now, the word delegate has disappeared from their vocabulary, in an attempt to change the rules and create an alternative reality.

We want to be clear – we believe that the winner of a majority of pledged delegates will and should be the nominee of our party. And we estimate that after the Oregon and Kentucky primaries on May 20, we will have won a majority of the overall pledged delegates According to a recent news report, by even their most optimistic estimates the Clinton Campaign expects to trail by more than 100 pledged delegates and will then ask the superdelegates to overturn the will of the voters.

But of course superdelegates are free to and have been utilizing their own criteria for deciding who our nominee should be. Many are deciding on the basis of electability, a favorite Clinton refrain. And if you look at the numbers, during a period where the Clinton campaign has been making an increasingly strident pitch on electability, it is clear their argument is failing miserably with superdelegates.

Since February 5, the Obama campaign has netted 107 superdelegates, and the Clinton campaign only 21. Since the Pennsylvania primary, much of it during the challenging Rev. Wright period, we have netted 24 and the Clinton campaign 17.

At some point – we would argue that time is now – this ceases to be a theoretical exercise about how superdelegates view electability. The reality of the preferences in the last several weeks offer a clear guide of how strongly superdelegates feel Senator Obama will perform in November, both in building a winning campaign for the presidency as well as providing the best electoral climate across the country for all Democratic candidates.

It is important to note that Senator Obama leads Senator Clinton in superdelegate endorsements among Governors, United States Senators and members of the House of Representatives. These elected officials all have a keen sense for who our strongest nominee will be in November.

It is only among DNC members where Senator Clinton holds a lead, which has been rapidly dwindling.

As we head into the final days of the campaign, we just wanted to be clear with you as a party leader, who will be instrumental in making the final decision of who our nominee will be, how we view the race at this point.

Senator Obama, our campaign and our supporters believe pledged delegates is the most legitimate metric for determining how this race has unfolded. It is simply the ratification of the DNC rules – your rules – which we built this campaign and our strategy around.

Obama 08-Campaign manager David Plouffe

Labels:

maandag, mei 05, 2008

Duffy - Warwick Avenue

Labels: ,

Op zoek naar een nieuwe president - The Empire Strikes Barack

Labels:

zondag, mei 04, 2008

Top 10

1. Estelle feat. Kanye West: American Boy
2. Kanye West feat. Dwele: Flashing lights
3. Usher feat. Young Jeezy: Love in the club
4. Alphabeat: Fascination
5. Jason Mraz: I'm yours
6. Duffy: Mercy
7. The Kooks: Always where I need to be
8. Chris Brown: With you
9. Moby: Disco lies
10. The Hoosiers: Worried about Ray

Labels:

vrijdag, mei 02, 2008

CD-Tip: Wouter Hamel - Hamel

Hij wordt de Nederlandse Jamie Cullum genoemd. En ja, dat klopt enigszins. De muziek is heel jazzy, ze zijn beide klein van gestalte en zien er toch goed uit. Maar Wouter Hamel onderscheidt zich wel van Jamie Cullum door zijn eigen stemgeluid en de poppy melodietjes. Terwijl Jamie vooral grasduinde in de classics, staat Wouter Hamel er meteen met eigen en zeer goed werk. Een Nederlandse belofte die we zeker in het oog moeten houden en wiens cd ik iedereen ten stelligste kan aanraden.
Don't ask

Breezy

As long as we're in love

Reportage uit NOVA

Labels: