Top Stories

Open letter to readers: Today and tomorrow

By Lynda Waddington | 11.17.11

Wednesday was a difficult day for The American Independent News Network, which is the larger entity that operates The Iowa Independent. Our chief executive and founder announced two of our sister sites would close and their content would be moved to The American Independent.

ACS lockout continues; plan emerges to repeal sugar protections

crystal_sugar_80
By Virginia Chamlee | 11.15.11

A recently introduced bill could have far-reaching impact on the U.S. sugar industry, including American Crystal Sugar, a farmer-owned cooperative that locked out 1,300 Midwest workers on Aug. 1.

Cain campaign: Farmers know more about regulations than EPA

hermancain_80x80
By Andrew Duffelmeyer | 11.15.11

The chairman for Herman Cain’s Iowa effort says the campaign “relied more on the word of farmers than Washington regulators” in deciding to run an ad containing claims the Environmental Protection Agency says are false.

Mathis wins, Democrats maintain Senate control

Liz Mathis
By Lynda Waddington | 11.08.11

The Iowa Senate will remain under the control of a slim 26-25 Democratic majority when it reconvenes in January 2012.

Press Release

PR: Nation should work to address veterans’ challenges

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

BRUCE BRALEY RELEASE — As US involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan ends, it’s more important than ever that our nation works to address the challenges faced by the men and women who fought there.

PR: Honoring veterans, help in hiring

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

CHUCK GRASSLEY RELEASE — A difficult job market is challenging the soldiers, sailors and airmen who have protected America’s interests by serving in the Armed Forces.

PR: In honor of America’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

TOM LATHAM RELEASE — No one has done more to secure the freedom enjoyed by every single American than our veterans and those currently serving in the armed services.

PR: Honoring and supporting our nation’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

DAVE LOEBSACK RELEASE — Veterans Day is an opportunity to reflect on the service of generations of veterans and to honor the sacrifices they and their families have made so that we may live in peace and freedom here at home.

How Clinton Could Lose Iowa

By admin | 10.19.07 | 1:29 pm

[Commentary] Sen. Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign is perhaps the best organized, most highly orchestrated campaign in history.  Her events go off without a hitch, her spokespeople have incredible message discipline, and she has taken precious few unpopular positions to distinguish her from her closest rivals.

While Sen. Barack Obama and former Sen. John Edwards, among others, have challenged her more directly and explicitly in recent weeks over two key issues — her vote for a resolution classifying Iran’s Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist group and her willingness to accept campaign contributions from federal lobbyists and PACs — that alone will not provide them enough ammunition to cause her serious damage between now and January.  And Clinton is not likely to give her rivals many more policy issues to rally around before Iowans head to their precinct caucuses.

Sure, there are differences between Clinton and the rest of the field about how to withdraw from the Iraq war.  There are minor differences between candidates on health care.  The differences on campaign contributions are real.  And there are a host of other differences between the candidates, but none so far has permeated the electorate’s consciousness enough to cause large-scale factionalization.  Candidates are trying, and to succeed they must continue; but these distinctions alone will not be enough for them to overtake her.

Clinton’s rivals cannot plan to beat the New York Senator by attacking her on specific policy proposals or waiting for her to make gaffes, because Clinton is not going to give anyone enough of that material to work with.  Defeating her will take a series of attacks surrounding one question, asked of caucus goers: “How well do you really know Sen. Clinton?”

If the campaign continues on its current track, even Clinton’s strongest supporters might answer “Not very well.”The truth is, although the Clinton campaign has paid much lip service to the importance of retail politics, they aren’t walking the walk.  According to numbers compiled from several sources including Iowans for Sensible Priorities, an organization which seeks to ask candidates questions about the Pentagon budget and records their answers, Clinton seldom holds question-and-answer sessions at her public events.  One estimate indicates that she has taken questions from audiences no more than about a dozen times since she began traveling around the state last summer.  (She has answered voters’ questions one-on-one on rope lines a few more times than that, but that is not the same as holding “town hall” style events where she answers questions in front of the whole crowd.)

Iowans for Sensible Priorities did not observe Clinton taking questions from voters in public a single time between her June 9 event in Story County and her “Middle Class Express” bus tour earlier this month.  On that tour, she only took questions at a few events.

At this point in the campaign, Iowans may be willing to support a candidate who has not answered all of their questions fully and completely.  The Caucuses are still months away, after all, and not everyone has had a chance to see every candidate yet.  In another month, however, rank and file caucus goers will start to finalize their choices, and they are not likely to choose a candidate whom they have never heard answer questions from their friends and neighbors.  And even if they do, they are less likely to brave the cold January weather to caucus for them.

Other campaigns are beginning to lay the groundwork for the kinds of attacks to come.  The Obama campaign’s new TV ad (entitled “Quiet”), which first ran in New Hampshire and is now running in Iowa, showcases the Illinois Senator doing exactly what Clinton has not done in the so-called “retail politics” states thus far.  Surrounded on all sides by a small, quiet crowd, Obama lays out a position that he knows to be unpopular, and he identifies it as such.  At an event in Nevada, IA, Thursday, Gov. Bill Richardson made a point of answering questions from every audience member who had one, even when he was forced to resort to a rapid-fire series of questions and answers at the end.  His campaign staff attempted to get Richardson to wrap up to stay on schedule, but he persisted.

In fact, aside from Clinton, every Democratic candidate for president seems to have taken questions at well over half of their public appearances in the state, according to activists, campaign officials, frequent event attendees, and other sources contacted by Iowa Independent over the past few weeks.  Aside from a few policy roll-out speeches and multiple candidate appearances, sources were hard-pressed to think of any events at which Clinton’s rivals avoided taking questions publicly.  Edwards, Richardson, and Obama, along with Sen. Chris Dodd and Sen. Joe Biden, have been known to keep stump speeches short in an effort to allow the maximum number of audience questions possible at their events.

Candidates who hope to defeat the national front-runner must begin to target her more specifically on this count.  While direct attacks might not come until the final weeks of December (assuming the Caucuses will be held in early January), it is not too early to subtly remind voters of which candidates are open with them and which one is not.  Much of the work will be done for them by caucus goers themselves, but they can help move things along by emphasizing their willingness to take questions and give specific answers at every opportunity.

That the top three Democratic candidates are locked in a virtual tie for first place in Iowa comes as no surprise right now.  It is too early for Iowans to wonder why their questions have not been answered.  But over the coming months, skepticism of the front-runner will set in, as it often does here.  If Clinton hopes to maintain or expand her standing in Iowa, she will have to start giving specific answers to questions posed by members of the public.  Otherwise, she risks softening — and potentially losing — much of the support that she has built here.

Comments

  • Anonymous

    It’s time to speak out and speak TRUTH I think Americans and especially Iowans are sick of rhetoric and crave a leader that is open & honest! The current administration’s history of being so secretive has created an atmosphere of distrust and American’s are going to follow a leader who they can TRUST again.

    Personally, I have seen John Edwards on many occasions and while people are struggling to think of times Hillary HAS taken questions, I’m struggling to think of a time Edwards didn’t–even when the questions where he knew many wouldn’t like his answer.

    Any candidate who isn’t being open with voters at this point is just shooting themselves in the foot. John Edwards is consistently open and honest with the American public and that’s just one of the many reasons I’m supporting him this caucus.

  • David Goodner

    This is a damn good commentary This is a damn good commentary

  • vwcat

    We Do Not Need More Clinton Ducks and Dodges do we really need to replay the 90s with the famous triangulating and the constant duck and dodges of giving real answers to questions.
    I noticed in the debates from the start that while the pundits may gush, as they always do over Hillary, that she does not really answer the questions and runs all around them saying little of substance.
    I wonder if she long ago lost the ability to actually form any real stands on any issue and only goes according to the polling and the consultants.  She is for one thing and then at another stop against it.  How many times has she been caught flip flopping on all the issues.
    If we do not know where she really stands or if she is not going to answer questions and answer them honestly how can we be sure we will ever be told the truth or know what is really going on in Washington.
    I would think voters need to really think hard about whether to give their vote to such a candidate and maybe take long and hard looks at the other ones, who in my opinion are far superior.

  • Anonymous

    HRC: The Untouchable The last time Hillary fielded a question in Iowa at a public Q & A was in the small town of New Hampton, when Randall Rolph pressed her on her vote to call Iran’s army a terrorist organization. Clinton accused the man of being a plant who had been sent to ask the question, to which he took exception, saying the question was a result of his own research.

    read story here

    Not sure if she has answered his question to this day.

  • KN

    Insulting Clinton said that Rolph must have been a plant because she had been asked the same question in three other places. Could it simply be that Iowans follow the issues and might be upset about this one, especially since she gave essentially the same excuse for her Iran vote that she gave for her Iraq War vote? I’ve heard more than one person say that Clinton’s Iran vote was the last straw for them and that they are no longer considering her because of it. Maybe Clinton needs to start taking the voters seriously. We aren’t just an inconvenient annoyance she must put up with on her way to the White House.

  • desmoinesdem

    second choices and late deciders will swing against Clinton. I think that anyone who doesn’t walk into the precinct caucus planning to support her is not going to switch to her as a second choice.

    When I talk to undecided voters, I hear a lot of, “I don’t know, but not Hillary.”

  • yann123

    Iowans like Edwards Iowans know who is real. They know who they can trust. They know who will answer their questions ,even if they won’t like the answer. They know it will be an honest answer,not a feel good answer.

    They know who is SINCERE and TRUSTWORTHY and has INTEGRITY.

    That’s John Edwards.

  • kakie

    Edwards Is Our Best Choice John Edwards is only leading candidate to truly lay out his positions and answer questions honestly and with integrity.  I have heard him speak several times, and I am always impressed with his ability to “think on his feet,” and to answer questions honestly–even when it’s not the answer the questioner wanted to hear.

    His message is always the same–he does not pander for votes. 

    He is truly “a man of the people” and cares about us “little guys.”  His leadership and courage will make him a great president.

  • hawkeyesophomore

    Electable Hillary is the only one in the top 3 that is electable nationally. Her, Biden and Richardson would be our best shots. Edwards is a gifted speaker, but has no national campaign, he is down in his homestate, and he has lost an election already. Obama would be destroyed in a debate with a republican and he would not win us any state that Kerry did not win in 04′. At least with Clinton we get Arkansas, Virginia and Florida. With Richardson we are guaranteed New Mexico and Biden has the most experience in foreign policy of any candidate running. We NEED TO WIN! I hope people don’t allow us to choose a weak nominee again like Edwards or Obama.

  • The Demo Memo

    Hillary is too good so let’s bust on her for that… Yeah, let’s see. Hillary’s raising the most money, has the best message control, her events are perfect, the candidate herself has the right answer to every question. She’s not letting the guys get to her. She looks fabulous, impeccable. She has the Iowa Dream Team on her side.

    So, if we all just keep rubbing our hands together and saying “Mecca Lecca Hidey High” she will come undone and flub up somehow.

    Get a clue, people. Hillary is the real deal and she is riding on your tail. You can scoff and label all you want, but it just makes you look…SCARED.

  • DesertStormVet

    Clinton and her staff… …brought this on themselves. The staffers (at least in Eastern Iowa) have been so focused on telling us that Hillary is the best that they’ve not really focused on what we think, feel, want, or need. The arrogance and presumptiveness of them is both surprising and disappointing.
    In August, the Junior Senator of New York (my home state) was invited, along with all democratic presidential candidates, to speak at a forum regarding Veterans issues. No-show Hillary sent a civilian – a local lawyer/politician – to tell us how she was pro-military and pro-veteran…how she even included us in her then-new commercial (rather insultingly, imho). That puts her just slightly ahead of Mike and Dennis, who didn’t even RSVP. All the other campaigns sent Veterans to speak to Veterans, showing much better understanding of our military and veterans and their importance to our national defense and our country as a whole.
    One candidate earned my support that day – Chris Dodd – and he did so in part by showing up himself, as a veteran, to be with veterans, to tell me and the others assembled that he actually understood the issues. He looked us in the eye, told us his ideas, listened to ours. He spent time with us, engaged us in dialog, and let us all know that he not only wore the boots himself (a a member of both Army Guard & Reserves) but also continues to support his brothers-in-arms.
    We’re still waiting for Hillary to respond to the questions we asked of her civilian surrogate…more than two months later.
    I’m a Dodd suporter…gave him my supporter card personally when he showed up and demonstrated his knowledge, understanding, empathy, comradeship. He’s the guy who will look you in the eye and tell you what the deal really is, not what he thinks you want to hear. I find it interesting that 1 in 8 Americans of age are veterans….and 1 in 8 candidates understands what that really means. Hillary could learn something from that…but will she? Time will tell…and it’s told me quite a bit thus far.
     

  • julie

    Hillary = Losing Mark Penn (Hillary’s man) is a POLLSTER.

    He starts rumors of false polls- such as the most recent one that 24% of republican women would vote for Hillary.

    Later he admitted it was an internal poll, and that the real numer was 13%
    of repub LEANING women.

    Clinton will lose the general if dems are dumb enough to nominate her.

  • 2LaneIA

    Biden answers questions until people get tired Anyone who has been to a Biden event knows he is not afraid of anything or anyone, he embraces questions, and he never talks down to people. 

    I have seen people ask him about Iraq or Afghanistan, and he gives an answer that is practically a college course on the subject, but laid out in simple language that anyone can understand, and without making the questioner feel stupid. 

    What Clinton did to that questioner in New Hampton would never occur to Biden.  He seems to think that if someone asks him something, it’s because they want to know the answer, not because they’re out to get him.

  • Carol Doty

    Hillary did this in the breakout at YearlyKos Hillary arrived at the breakout with three honchos, Peter Daou, Penn and Wolfson. (I may not have the names exactly correct.  The latter two just sat at the front and did not say anything. Daou was in charge because he was known by the bloggers.)  After talking quite a while, Peter asked only bloggers that he called by name for the questions.  I think there were only four questions but I felt they were all planned.  And she spent a lot of time answering each one.

    Very different from how Obama handled his breakout.  He arrived alone, gave a brief introduction and just starting pointing to people in the audience. 

    What a contrast in the two!

  • kad7777

    JOE BIDEN is the best America has In these troubled and dire time we live in, Joe Biden, to me, encompasses all that we desperately need for our nation:

    1) Intelligence
    2) Experience in ALL phases of government
    3) Strength
    4) Respect from world leaders
    5) Diplomacy
    6) Command of issues
    7) Solutions to problems that face our nation
    8) Honesty
    9) Integrity
    10) Respect and trust from his peers
    11) Respect and trust from the people who follow him
    12) an EXPERT in foreign policy

    Joe Biden certainly meets ALL of the criteria above.

    I pray and hope every day that Mr. & Mrs. America, the people of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina know in their hearts, that if we lose Joe Biden, we’ll have lost one of the best Presidents our nation will ever have.

    Please watch a video I produced to show my support for Senator Biden. If you support him, please send the link below to family and friends, and ask them to do the same.

    http://youtube.com/w…

  • Anonymous

    It's time to speak out and speak TRUTH I think Americans and especially Iowans are sick of rhetoric and crave a leader that is open & honest! The current administration's history of being so secretive has created an atmosphere of distrust and American's are going to follow a leader who they can TRUST again.

    Personally, I have seen John Edwards on many occasions and while people are struggling to think of times Hillary HAS taken questions, I'm struggling to think of a time Edwards didn't–even when the questions where he knew many wouldn't like his answer.

    Any candidate who isn't being open with voters at this point is just shooting themselves in the foot. John Edwards is consistently open and honest with the American public and that's just one of the many reasons I'm supporting him this caucus.

  • David Goodner

    This is a damn good commentary This is a damn good commentary

  • vwcat

    We Do Not Need More Clinton Ducks and Dodges do we really need to replay the 90s with the famous triangulating and the constant duck and dodges of giving real answers to questions.

    I noticed in the debates from the start that while the pundits may gush, as they always do over Hillary, that she does not really answer the questions and runs all around them saying little of substance.

    I wonder if she long ago lost the ability to actually form any real stands on any issue and only goes according to the polling and the consultants.  She is for one thing and then at another stop against it.  How many times has she been caught flip flopping on all the issues.

    If we do not know where she really stands or if she is not going to answer questions and answer them honestly how can we be sure we will ever be told the truth or know what is really going on in Washington.

    I would think voters need to really think hard about whether to give their vote to such a candidate and maybe take long and hard looks at the other ones, who in my opinion are far superior.

  • Anonymous

    HRC: The Untouchable The last time Hillary fielded a question in Iowa at a public Q & A was in the small town of New Hampton, when Randall Rolph pressed her on her vote to call Iran's army a terrorist organization. Clinton accused the man of being a plant who had been sent to ask the question, to which he took exception, saying the question was a result of his own research.

    read story here

    Not sure if she has answered his question to this day.

  • KN

    Insulting Clinton said that Rolph must have been a plant because she had been asked the same question in three other places. Could it simply be that Iowans follow the issues and might be upset about this one, especially since she gave essentially the same excuse for her Iran vote that she gave for her Iraq War vote? I've heard more than one person say that Clinton's Iran vote was the last straw for them and that they are no longer considering her because of it. Maybe Clinton needs to start taking the voters seriously. We aren't just an inconvenient annoyance she must put up with on her way to the White House.

  • desmoinesdem

    second choices and late deciders will swing against Clinton. I think that anyone who doesn't walk into the precinct caucus planning to support her is not going to switch to her as a second choice.

    When I talk to undecided voters, I hear a lot of, “I don't know, but not Hillary.”

  • Anonymous

    Thats good to hear I hope Iowans catch on.

  • yann123

    Iowans like Edwards Iowans know who is real. They know who they can trust. They know who will answer their questions ,even if they won't like the answer. They know it will be an honest answer,not a feel good answer.

    They know who is SINCERE and TRUSTWORTHY and has INTEGRITY.

    That's John Edwards.

  • kakie

    Edwards Is Our Best Choice John Edwards is only leading candidate to truly lay out his positions and answer questions honestly and with integrity.  I have heard him speak several times, and I am always impressed with his ability to “think on his feet,” and to answer questions honestly–even when it's not the answer the questioner wanted to hear.

    His message is always the same–he does not pander for votes. 

    He is truly “a man of the people” and cares about us “little guys.”  His leadership and courage will make him a great president.

  • hawkeyesophomore

    Electable Hillary is the only one in the top 3 that is electable nationally. Her, Biden and Richardson would be our best shots. Edwards is a gifted speaker, but has no national campaign, he is down in his homestate, and he has lost an election already. Obama would be destroyed in a debate with a republican and he would not win us any state that Kerry did not win in 04'. At least with Clinton we get Arkansas, Virginia and Florida. With Richardson we are guaranteed New Mexico and Biden has the most experience in foreign policy of any candidate running. We NEED TO WIN! I hope people don't allow us to choose a weak nominee again like Edwards or Obama.

  • Sutteyo

    Don't elect a Loser Iowa With all due respect Hawkeye, we need to pick someone with cross over appeal.  That is NOT Hillary. Barack Obama is the only one that would pull in the Independents and Republicans.  He is runing third in Iowa when put in with the Repubs!!

    And check this out, definitely don't caucus for Hillary:

    Poll: Half Say They Would Never Vote for Hillary Clinton for President

    Other top tier candidates in both parties win more acceptance; Richardson & Huckabee favored most

    While she is winning wide support in nationwide samples among Democrats in the race for their party's presidential nomination, half of likely voters nationwide said they would never vote for New York Sen. Hillary Clinton, a new Zogby Interactive poll shows.

    The online survey of 9,718 likely voters nationwide showed that 50% said Clinton would never get their presidential vote. This is up from 46% who said they could never vote for Clinton in a Zogby International telephone survey conducted in early March. Older voters are most resistant to Clinton – 59% of those age 65 and older said they would never vote for the New York senator, but she is much more acceptable to younger voters: 42% of those age 18-29 said they would never vote for Clinton for President.

    http://zogby.com/new…

  • hawkeyesophomore

    She can't reach across the aisle?? With all due respect, Clinton has proven she can reach across the aisle. She won 90% of the counties in New York that George Bush won in 04' for her re-election. She helped to create SCHIP in a republican congress. She has survived attacks from the lunatic right fringe for 15+ years and she has come out better positioned. She has had everything and the kitchen sink thrown at her, and she still proves to be the stronger than before. She wins Florida for us. She resonates with Hispanics, which I am, the largest minority group in the US. She also resonates with African Americans, besting him among both women and men. And Mark Penn came out with his latest projection showing her ability to win 24% of republican and right leaning independent women in the general due to this historic campaign. She won 22% of republican women in New York, becoming the first female senator from New York. She wins no matter who the republicans nominate. Obama can't go the distance. He has never faced a tough election and he has proved to be a poor arguer at debates. Clinton can easily beat Giuliani, their frontrunner, on his strongest perceived issue (9/11 obviously) because she was there for the firefighters with breathing problems afterwards, he was not. She has the know-how and she is best prepared compared to Edwards or Obama.

  • hawkeyesophomore

    Oh, by the way Online polls will obviously slant away from her, the netroots don't like her, save a few good bloggers. Look at state polls where interviews were conducted, not where people anywhere can answer. Look at Des Moines Register polls, zogby polls and surveyusa polls, where they are validated and consistent; she wins out. This is why she has so much support in every other early state. She is ahead by 20+ points in Nevada, New Hampshire, Florida, and ahead by 15+ in South Carolina. This is because people there don't base their opinions on her from right wing talking points. New Hampshire voters know her better than anyone else. I think we here in Iowa have a problem with women in power. We and Mississippi have never had female congresspeople nor have we had a female governor. Sad to be on par with Trent Lott's state on women's equality. Yet she is still ahead here (:

  • Carrington Ward

    New York record A) Mark Penn has a lot of fun with polls, but he can't be trusted — his business (and his book) is about manipulating them.

    B) Hillary won New York because she came in with national stature and a strong ability to raise cash nationally.  As a result, the Republicans fielded a second-stringer. Many local Republican politicians endorsed her because they expected that her national stature would allow here to bring home the bacon.  But she's not so big a fish on the national level, and her ability to mobilize grassroots support is unproven, to say the least.

    C) The head-to head match-up polls are garbage measures: they tell you that almost any Democrat comes into the General election with an advantage, Hillary with a slightly larger one.  But — as Democrats — we've still got to make the judgment of how the campaign will play out.

    Your point about Obama's debate performance is fair, and certainly he's a less experienced campaigner.  But if campaign experience was the qualifier perhaps we should be drafting John Kerry again. 

  • Carrington Ward

    Polling Regarding Clinton's republican support in NY,

    http://www.washingto…

    suggests caution.

    As to the polling in New Hampshire, it's interesting to note the Concord monitor article on fundraising:  in New Hampshire, Obama raised $120k last quarter, Clinton $30k. 

    Is it New Hampshire folks, or Monsanto execs, who “know her better than anyone else?”  And if they do support her so strongly, why hasn't their money followed?

  • hawkeyesophomore

    Hillary Who do you think their nominee will be? If it is Giuliani, Edwards and Obama lose us New York! And races like Michigan, Oregon, Washington, and California become actual races, states that traditionally go in our slot. I never said campaign experience was necessary, I am saying that someone with no backbone when retorting, like Kerry, will lose us debates. Oh, by the way, she had more new donors than Obama did this last quarter (100K)and $8 million of it was raised online. And don't assert that Obama has no corporate ties, nor Edwards. Obama takes tons of cash from lobbyists (check out the Roll Call article from October 18th entitled “Obama bashes, courts K Street). Edwards, as we all know, is helping to make the lives of those in New Orleans worse (hedgefund scandal). At least she is not running on lies. The campaign will play out better for us if she is the nominee. She has the organization in ALL of the important states. She has done flawlessly in the debates. She knows policy better than either Edwards or Obama. She has never lost an election in her lifetime. She's raised the most money. She wins southern states against people like Romney, Thompson and Giuliani (AL,AR,MO,WV,VA,FL). She knows foreign policy better than most (exc. Biden and Richardson). She has the major support in the Latino(me), African AMerican, GLBT(me), and female communities. She can deliver us the Whitehouse. That is what matters. Oh, btw, she also won New York facing criticism as a “carpet bagger”, an outsider, and all the while dealing with the impeachment and Monica thing. She is tougher and smarter.

  • The Demo Memo

    Hillary is too good so let's bust on her for that… Yeah, let's see. Hillary's raising the most money, has the best message control, her events are perfect, the candidate herself has the right answer to every question. She's not letting the guys get to her. She looks fabulous, impeccable. She has the Iowa Dream Team on her side.

    So, if we all just keep rubbing our hands together and saying “Mecca Lecca Hidey High” she will come undone and flub up somehow.

    Get a clue, people. Hillary is the real deal and she is riding on your tail. You can scoff and label all you want, but it just makes you look…SCARED.

  • DesertStormVet

    Clinton and her staff… …brought this on themselves. The staffers (at least in Eastern Iowa) have been so focused on telling us that Hillary is the best that they've not really focused on what we think, feel, want, or need. The arrogance and presumptiveness of them is both surprising and disappointing.

    In August, the Junior Senator of New York (my home state) was invited, along with all democratic presidential candidates, to speak at a forum regarding Veterans issues. No-show Hillary sent a civilian – a local lawyer/politician – to tell us how she was pro-military and pro-veteran…how she even included us in her then-new commercial (rather insultingly, imho). That puts her just slightly ahead of Mike and Dennis, who didn't even RSVP. All the other campaigns sent Veterans to speak to Veterans, showing much better understanding of our military and veterans and their importance to our national defense and our country as a whole.

    One candidate earned my support that day – Chris Dodd – and he did so in part by showing up himself, as a veteran, to be with veterans, to tell me and the others assembled that he actually understood the issues. He looked us in the eye, told us his ideas, listened to ours. He spent time with us, engaged us in dialog, and let us all know that he not only wore the boots himself (a a member of both Army Guard & Reserves) but also continues to support his brothers-in-arms.

    We're still waiting for Hillary to respond to the questions we asked of her civilian surrogate…more than two months later.

    I'm a Dodd suporter…gave him my supporter card personally when he showed up and demonstrated his knowledge, understanding, empathy, comradeship. He's the guy who will look you in the eye and tell you what the deal really is, not what he thinks you want to hear. I find it interesting that 1 in 8 Americans of age are veterans….and 1 in 8 candidates understands what that really means. Hillary could learn something from that…but will she? Time will tell…and it's told me quite a bit thus far.
     

  • julie

    Hillary = Losing Mark Penn (Hillary's man) is a POLLSTER.

    He starts rumors of false polls- such as the most recent one that 24% of republican women would vote for Hillary.

    Later he admitted it was an internal poll, and that the real numer was 13%

    of repub LEANING women.

    Clinton will lose the general if dems are dumb enough to nominate her.

  • 2LaneIA

    Biden answers questions until people get tired Anyone who has been to a Biden event knows he is not afraid of anything or anyone, he embraces questions, and he never talks down to people. 

    I have seen people ask him about Iraq or Afghanistan, and he gives an answer that is practically a college course on the subject, but laid out in simple language that anyone can understand, and without making the questioner feel stupid. 

    What Clinton did to that questioner in New Hampton would never occur to Biden.  He seems to think that if someone asks him something, it's because they want to know the answer, not because they're out to get him.

  • jdk

    Clinton electable? no way Clinton is the least electable of the top 5 candidates.  You cannot win with negatives that high.  Edwards too cannot win in general election.  He could not even win his home precinct for Gore.

    Richardson, Dodd, Obama, Biden are the electable ones, in that order.

    But the most important strategic move for the candidates that are not Clinton, is the calculation about who their supporters second choice should be.

    If Clinton finishes 3rd or lower, then there can be no quick coronation. (Which is what the Republicans want.)

    The calculus is pretty straight-forward, so I'd suspect the media should be on the phone with Iowa mathematicians about how to minimize Clinton's overall caucus result via second choices.

  • Carol Doty

    Hillary did this in the breakout at YearlyKos Hillary arrived at the breakout with three honchos, Peter Daou, Penn and Wolfson. (I may not have the names exactly correct.  The latter two just sat at the front and did not say anything. Daou was in charge because he was known by the bloggers.)  After talking quite a while, Peter asked only bloggers that he called by name for the questions.  I think there were only four questions but I felt they were all planned.  And she spent a lot of time answering each one.

    Very different from how Obama handled his breakout.  He arrived alone, gave a brief introduction and just starting pointing to people in the audience. 

    What a contrast in the two!

  • kad7777

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    11) Respect and trust from the people who follow him

    12) an EXPERT in foreign policy

    Joe Biden certainly meets ALL of the criteria above.

    I pray and hope every day that Mr. & Mrs. America, the people of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina know in their hearts, that if we lose Joe Biden, we'll have lost one of the best Presidents our nation will ever have.

    Please watch a video I produced to show my support for Senator Biden. If you support him, please send the link below to family and friends, and ask them to do the same.

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