It's just not something that would have resonated with a good portion of potential voters. Right now, the main thing people are concerned about is the economy.What I found interesting is how little of a bump that Obama got after Obamacare being found constitutional, and how quick that bump went away.....
It's just not something that would have resonated with a good portion of potential voters. Right now, the main thing people are concerned about is the economy.
The common, everyday voters see them as separate, but those who stay informed know how interconnected they are. The way to turn it against Obama is to point out how Obamacare could hamper any future economic progress and possibly how much more it will cost than what was originally stated when it was signed into law.If the public doesn't think that Obamacare doesn't have anything to do with the economy then they are ignorant....
And so far, the Bain attacks from the Obama camp have not been working.
I disagree with this. I think the Bain attacks have made it perfectly clear that their is a difference between a job creator and a wealth creator, and I do think making that distinction does hurt part of the narrative that Romney is trying to paint for himself(ie that he somehow knows how to make the economy better so people create jobs)
You do realize that wealth in business is a part of job creation. He (Romney) has said no, he did not create the jobs, but he created the business ability to hire the people and create jobs....there is nothing wrong with creating wealth.....
Confirming what many political professionals from both parties have been saying for weeks, Gallup has a new poll out today purporting to show that President Obamas television ads attacking Mitt Romney for his tenure at Bain Capital have been effective. USA Today reports: At this point, Obama is the clear winner in the ad wars. Among swing-state voters who say the ads have changed their minds about a candidate, rather than just confirmed what they already thought, 76% now support the president, vs. 16% favoring Romney.
For people saying the Bain attack ads don't have any effect
http://washingtonexaminer.com/team-...ent-responded-to-bain-attacks/article/2501620
Now it should be pointed out Obama has outspent Romney by a large margin so far, so that is definitely a huge favor for Obama and over time I am guessing that number will get lower when Romney fights back, but 76-16 is a huge margin saying they are working and no amount of error in polling can change that fact
I recall reading that that poll pretty much swayed more Democrats onto the President's side but it has done little to sway independents and Republicans.
To be sure, Obama's ads have done more to win back Democrats than to win over independents or Republicans: Thirteen percent of Democrats say their minds have been changed by ads, compared with 9% of independents and 3% of Republicans.
[YT]dEByrz4lu24[/YT]
Just going to leave this here.
And this is why Republicans will never seriously go after the black vote. The black vote doesn't even try to make themselves up for grabs.
No because they boo a Presidential candidate. It's as incredibly rude whenever Obama gets booed. Granted that out of all the forums to go to, Romney shouldn't have gone to a NAACP gathering (same reason why I say that Michelle Obama should have never gone to a NASCAR gathering), but it's still an incredibly rude thing to do.Because they like the ACA?
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It works both ways frankly. Both the black vote and GOP fail to reach out to one another for various reasons. The black vote refuses to listen to the GOP, even when GOP candidates try to reach out to them, and the GOP keeps on finding reasons to alienate them. But incidents like this just reinforces the GOP mentality that they shouldn't even bother.That strikes me as a somewhat skewed way of looking at things.
It's not up for "the black vote" to make themselves up for grabs, it's up to the Republicans to convince them to vote for them. Blaming the electorate is a sure way to find yourself in the electoral wilderness.
I'm so tired of your Fox News approved rebranding of Obama as "his highness". He's not acting like a King despite what that propaganda station would have you believe. It's insulting and just stupid due to it's inaccuracy.
A King would have given us a public option.
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I think that overall, most political figures should just avoid areas where the audience is most likely going to be hostile. It makes you look bad. It's why I really don't feel sorry for Romney when he got booed. It may have been rude, but he was kinda asking for it. And more people are going to remember the booing than the high points.