Watch below:
Friday, October 10, 2008
Ohio Vote Issues
Watch below:
Is ACORN Registering Voters Multiple Times?
Monday, October 6, 2008
CNN's "Overwhelming" Obama Bias
“Overwhelming,” indeed.
Hey, how about a roll call, Soledad? Now to my eye, it looks almost evenly split. I counted 13 for Biden...
and I see 11 for Palin...
The difference is two votes… and O’Brien says it is “overwhelming” and “a significant margin" Really? Just goes to show you, if you want Fair & Balanced...Watch Fox News Channel.
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Celebrity PSA says "Don't Vote"
Here in Texas, October 6th is the last day YOU can register to vote. Please register now and have your voice be heard!
www.maps.google.com/vote
Weird Obama Art Car Revealed In Austin
Austin-based bumper sticker company, Bumperactive, designed an Obama-themed bumper sticker for all fifty states. Then someone was willing to plaster them all over her ride.
More pictures of the car and the owner, Holly, are here.
Webcaster Settlement Act Goes To The President
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
New Ad Shows Obama in True Light
Obama Looks For Teen Actresses to Play Incest-Rape Victims in Anti-Palin Ads
Click to enlarge.
Monday, September 29, 2008
Sen John Cornyn Releases Bailout Statement
"The American people demand accountability from Wall Street and deserve transparency when it comes to how their tax dollars are being spent. Many are angry about the current economic situation and frustrated about being presented with an all-or-nothing proposal. I share their anger and their frustrations. The perception surrounding this bill was that it rewarded Wall Street at the expense of Main Street, and I believe that was reflected in today's vote.
"However, simply doing nothing is not an option. The reality is that there has been too much partisanship in Washington, and too much excess by some in our financial markets. A major reason we find ourselves in the current situation is precisely because Congress did nothing to reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, when so many of us were calling for reform in recent years.
"It is my hope that the debate this week signals the beginning, and not the end, of a bipartisan effort by Congress to strengthen the economy. Both parties need to continue working together and improve this bipartisan plan to protect taxpayers, small businesses' access to affordable credit, and our economy in the global marketplace. At the same time, the Department of Justice must continue its investigation of those on Wall Street who may have broken the law and contributed to our financial problems.
"I for one am committed to working with members of both parties to do what is needed to get America back on more stable economic footing. To be clear, the current crisis must not be used as an excuse to grow the size of government and increase the tax burden on working Americans who value personal responsibility. Bigger government and higher taxes will only make matters worse, and not better. It is my hope that Congress can set the rancor and partisanship aside and get back to work for the American taxpayers."
SA Congressmen Divided On Bailout Plan
Cornyn Responds To Noriega's Latest Ad
Well, if the financial industry's money is tainted like Noriega says, why did Noriega fail to say in the video that Democratic Senators also received money from the "Wall Street friends," including Hillary Clinton ($31 million), Barack Obama ($28 million), John Kerry ($19 million) and Chris Dodd ($13 million). Yet Noriega isn't asking these Senators to return this money. Hypocritical?
Cornyn's campaign spokesman Kevin McLaughlin responded, "Come on Rick, get with the game, this is a time for serious people. While John Cornyn is working in a bipartisan fashion to solve this financial crisis, Rick Noriega is in his basement producing angry, incoherent youtube videos."
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Family Doesn’t Want Obama Wearing Troop Bracelet
Shockingly, however, Staff Sgt. Brian Jopek, the father of Ryan Jopek, the young soldier who tragically lost his life to a roadside bomb in 2006, recently said on a Wisconsin Public Radio show that his family had asked Barack Obama to stop wearing the bracelet with his son's name on it. Yet Obama continues to do so despite the wishes of the family.
Radio host Glenn Moberg of the show "Route 51" asked Mr. Jopek, a man who believes in the efforts in Iraq and is not in favor of Obama's positions on the war, what he and his ex-wife think of Obama continually using their son's name on the campaign trail.
According to the father, Tracy Jopek wrote to the Senator: “She had asked him not to wear the bracelet.”
Barack Obama is using the bracelet to support a position that his father (and Ryan Jopek himself) clearly do not subscribe to, and at the time even the mother that gave him the bracelet didn’t want it used in the media (that comment was made here) and asked him to take it off.
Brian and Tracy Jopek are now divorced. I don’t know what her current thoughts are. But this interview on WPR, from March 20, was interesting. The quotes here are from about 10 to 14 minutes in.
Longoria Parker Urges For Hispanics To Vote
To urge increased Hispanic participation in the Nov. 4 election, Longoria says, “Go out and tell your families, go out and tell your friends, go out and tell your communities to try to get everyone registered to vote.”
Both campaigns are wooing the increasingly important Hispanic vote, and nonpartisan Hispanic groups have launched unprecedented registration drives.
Sen. John McCain has hired San Antonio marketing guru Lionel Sosa to develop Hispanic outreach efforts for his campaign, which recently began airing a Spanish-language TV ad in Florida that casts Obama as inexperienced and willing to sit down with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez despite his anti-American stance.
A recent poll for the Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times shows McCain leading Obama with Hispanic voters in Florida by a margin of 51 percent to 41 percent.
Nonpartisan groups such as the National Council of La Raza, Mi Familia Vota Educational Fund and the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials are working to bring a record number of Hispanics to the polls.
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Whose Words Worked At Debate?
Dr. Luntz also runs his own research company and had a group of undecided voters in Las Vegas rate the debate. So, what words worked for each candidate?
Watch below:
Perry Asked to Extend Voter Registration Deadline for Ike Victims
“People in the Houston area really aren’t thinking about registering to vote right now,” said Fred Lewis of the non-partisan group Houston Votes.
The registration deadline is October 6th.
The question is whether the governor has the power to do this. Perry’s office says the only way the governor can extend the voter registration period is if the individual counties formally request it, and so far, no county has.
Lewis says the governor has the power to extend the registration deadline on his own.
Several regions, especially in Galveston, Chambers, and Orange Counties, are still suffering from widespread power and water loss, and the time when these services will be restored is uncertain.
Friday, September 26, 2008
McCain's First Ad About Tonight's Debate
Watch below:
TMZ.com's Hottest Politician In America
Well, let me introduce you to their first Hottie Politician, Carey Torrice, a County Commissioner in Macomb County in Michigan.
Carey Torrice is 31 years old. She was born and raised in Macomb County, Michigan and was elected as a County Commissioner in November 2006 for a two year term. She is a graduate of Chippewa Valley High School and earned an Associate’s Degree from Macomb Community College. She majored in Public Relations and Communications.
She is active in a number of organizations including MADD (Mother’s Against Drunk Driving), the Muscular Dystrophy Association and is a member of the National Association of Women Business Owners and the National Rifle Association.
For more info on her and to see more photos check out her official website at CareyTorrice.com.
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Texas GOP Releases New Online Ad
The Republican Party of Texas has a new web ad titled Present that brings to light the fact that Obama voted "present" nearly 130 times as an Illinois State Senator. Perhaps that's why his Presidential campaign has been so short on specifics and issues "above his pay grade." When his constituents needed him to be their voice on vital decisions, he took a pass.
Watch the ad below:
Senate Passes Down Syndrome Bill
That's why I've been following the bill in the Senate that's co-sponsored by pro-life Kansas Republican Sen. Sam Brownback and Sen. Edward Kennedy, an abortion-rights advocate from Massachusetts. Well, I'm happy to announce the bill has been approved unanimously in the Senate this past Tuesday.
This bill is designed to help reduce the number of abortions of babies with Down syndrome and other conditions. Pro-life advocates have been worried about the high percentage of abortions as doctors leave parents with few options when confronted with a disabled unborn child.
Some studies show as many as 90 percent of parents with an unborn baby diagnosed as having Down syndrome having an abortion, because some doctors don't give parents information about caring for children with disabilities and about support services. This bill would require that.
Similar legislation is pending in the House.
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Barr Loses Supreme Court Challenge
NRCC Attacks Rodriguez Ad Weeks After It Airs
Find out why from PolickerTX and read Jason Thurlkill's article here.
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Obama Releases Official Soundtrack Album
Friday, September 19, 2008
Texas posts record voter registration
Barr loses bid to halt mailing of ballots
By W. Gardner Selby
AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN
Libertarian presidential nominee Bob Barr continued his effort Thursday to strike Sens. John McCain and Barack Obama from the Texas ballot.
In Austin on Thursday, Barr accompanied his attorney to request an emergency order from the Texas Supreme Court to stop the state from mailing absentee and military ballots, which is expected to start Saturday. (Barr's attorney, Drew Shirley, is also the Libertarian nominee for a Texas Supreme Court seat.) The court denied that request by the end of the day.
Barr still wants the court to remove the Democratic and Republican presidential nominees from the ballot because, he said, neither met a requirement in state law that nominees file paperwork to be on the ballot 70 days before the election.
Barr, a former congressman from Georgia, conceded that his legal action could result in the U.S. House choosing the next president. Such a long-shot scenario could play out if no candidate wins a majority of electoral votes Nov. 4.
Obama or McCain could fall short of a majority if the state's 34 electoral votes weren't available because the names weren't on the ballot.
Secretary of State Hope Andrade's office has said both Obama and McCain filed by the deadline and then supplemented their filings before the ballot was certified Sept. 3.
It appeared the deadline was likely to generate friction all along because it fell on Aug. 26, a day before Obama was nominated at the Democratic National Convention and eight days before McCain was nominated at the Republican National Convention.
Both conventions were scheduled late in the summer to avoid conflicts with the Summer Olympics.
The court has asked the candidates, the major parties and Andrade to respond to Barr's request by Monday afternoon.
On Wednesday, the state's solicitor general, James Ho, sent a letter to the court calling Barr's request untimely because ballots must soon be mailed to military and other overseas voters — a position revisited in a state brief filed Thursday.
Buck Wood, an Austin lawyer expert in election law, said Barr's interpretation of the law seems correct. But, Wood said, the request could be spurned by the court without explanation.
"The court can turn down a mandamus because they don't like the way you part your hair," he said. "They'll just deny it."
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Libertarian says GOP, Dems missed deadline for Texas ballots
“It should require no legal contortions whatsoever to stand for the rule of law,” Barr said. “The law we have here in Texas is not ambiguous. It is not vague.”
A lot is at stake for the two major parties in the lawsuit. McCain probably could not win the presidency without Texas, and Democrats are counting on enthusiasm for Obama to help drive turnout and create victories in down-ballot races.
The Democratic National Convention was occurring as the deadline passed, and the Republican convention occurred a week later.
Texas Solicitor General James Ho in a letter to the state Supreme Court described the lawsuits as “meritless.”
First Hispanic Woman Sworn In As Texas Secretary of State
She vowed to use her position to "protect the integrity of the election process," and to promote greater voter participation among disenfranchised Texans. She also promised to maintain a business friendly environment for entrepreneurs.
"They say America is another name for opportunity but Texas is the land of unlimited opportunity," Andrade, 58, said in her acceptance speech before hundreds of friends, family supporters and Gov. Rick Perry, who appointed her.
As secretary of state, Andrade will be the state’s chief elections officer, the governor’s liaison on border and Mexico affairs and chief protocol officer for state and international matters.
In remarks before Andrade was sworn in, Perry called his newest appointee "a great champion of San Antonio and a passionate advocate for all Texans."
"It is an honor to have you on our team," he told her.
Photo courtesy of Associated Press
Michelle Obama: Don't vote because 'she's cute'
The line won a big round of applause. Before it subsided, she interjected: "And I'm talking about me."
Barack Obama's wife, however, is not on the ticket in the presidential election. Alaska Governor Sarah Palin is.
Michelle Obama's remarks came at a women's roundtable on the economy in Charlotte, North Carolina. She told the audience of 600 that her husband is the only candidate focused on equal pay, health care, affordable college, teacher recruitment and other issues of concern to women. She said that's what the election should be about.
"We need you," Michelle Obama told the women she addressed in Charlotte. "Our families need you. Our country needs you."
Trisha Redwine, a lifelong Democrat in Charlotte, said women didn't seem to be needed by the Democratic ticket until recently. "It's almost like we didn't even matter until Sarah Palin came into the picture," she said.
Redwine backed Clinton in the primaries and now speaks favorably of McCain's efforts on family medical leave and family-friendly workplaces.
Photo courtesy of Getty Images. Text courtesy of Mike Baker, Associated Press