Newsflash


It's time to update some information I put out in June concerning the 18th Annual Stu Bykofsky Candidates Comedy Night, set for Finnigan's Wake on Tuesday, Aug. 19. I wrote then that Mike Muhammad, the Republican challenging Democrat Bob Brady in the 1st Congressional District, didn't return my calls. As soon as that edition hit the streets, Muhammad called to say he hadn't gotten my messages. He will be in the show.

I can also announce the acceptance of Tom Manion, the Republican challenging freshman congressman Patrick Murphy in the 8th District. Without delving into detail, I had communicated with a Manion staffer, who apparently did not communicate with his boss, who was horrified to hear himself depicted as someone who turned his back on Variety, the Children's Charity, the beneficiary of the comedy night.

The botched communication was straightened out. Manion is participating in another fundraiser on Aug. 19, so he's sending a surrogate, attorney Marc Collazzo, to stand up for him. (One thing the show is never short of is attorneys.)

In breaking news, joining the show are opponents in the battleground 7th Congressional District. Incumbent Democrat Joe Sestak will take the stage along with Republican Craig Williams.

In other news, Democrat Chaka Fattah will have opposition in the 2nd Congressional District. Fattah's original opponent, Mike Livingston, dropped out, but he's been replaced by Republican Adam Lang, a computer-network engineer. (Get your Larry Mendte jokes ready.)

Fattah stunned some when he took a pass on the show. He's still supporting it by buying a table, but what Fattah - who had done the show a half-dozen times - isn't getting is that it's a candidates comedy night. It's their participation that makes the show unique. (Maybe he'll change his mind.)

In addition to candidates already named, prepped to perform are 13th District congresswoman Allyson Schwartz versus Republican lawyer Marina Kats. Republican incumbent Attorney General Tom Corbett will face John Morganelli, the Democratic district attorney of Northampton County. For treasurer, Democrat Robert McCord will meet Republican Tom Ellis. In two closely watched races, Democrat Larry Farnese and Republican Jack Morley will fight to fill Vince Fumo's 1st District state Senate seat, and in the state House, Republican John Perzel is challenged by Democrat Rich Costello in the 172nd.

As usual, Joe Conklin will provide the guaranteed laughs and my co-host is WIP's delightful Rhea Hughes.

Language mavens know that "unique" means one of a kind, which the show has been for 18 years. But no longer.

Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Max Baer, a leading children's advocate who did the show in 2003, was so impressed he asked me if he could create a clone in Pittsburgh.

I told him I would be delighted and worked with his people. So there will be a Candidates Comedy Night at the Pittsburgh Improv on Aug. 20, hosted by Pittsburgh Post-Gazette columnist Gene Collier. As in Philly, the money goes to a children's charity.



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Home arrow Blog arrow GOP Gains Could Hurt Obama Capital, If Not Agenda
GOP Gains Could Hurt Obama Capital, If Not Agenda PDF Print E-mail
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Tuesday, 03 November 2009

WASHINGTON -- Republican wins in the top three spots in Virginia's state government marked a troubling turn for President Obama, whose 2008 victory in the state marked an historic breakthrough for Democrats who hadn't won Virginia's electoral votes since 1964.

And even with a Democratic win in New Jersey, which was too close to call shortly after polls closed Tuesday evening, the fight in the Garden State was more grueling than usually accompanies Democratic campaigns in the reliably blue state.  

The setbacks demonstrate the difficulty of presidential leadership following an historic campaign built on promises of unity followed by divisive policies and a relentless campaign approach toward big legislative issues like the stimulus and health care bills.

"What this is tonight, this victory here tonight, is a warning shot, and it says to the moderate Democrats in the House that they ought to think twice about continuing to pursue the policies of this White House and (House Speaker) Nancy Pelosi," said Virginia Republican Rep. Eric Cantor.

In Virginia, Republican Gov.-elect Bob McDonnell roundly defeated Democrat R. Creigh Deeds while GOP Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling won a second term and Republican Ken Cuccinelli was elected attorney general. It was the first time the GOP took the top three spots since 1997.

"We have really had a run of wins and we got used to winning and that makes it tough," said Virginia Democratic Gov. Tim Kaine. "We have to give credit where credit is do they ran a great campaign." 

"You guys are making this tougher than this has to be," a resigned Deeds told the still chanting audience at his "victory party." 

In New Jersey, early polling showed incumbent Gov. Jon Corzine trailing Republican Chris Christie. Independent Chris Daggett was also attracting some of the vote. 

And in New York's 23rd Congressional District, an unexpected turn of events put Conservative Party candidate Doug Hoffman in direct competition with Democrat Bill Owens for the seat held by former Republican congressman and current Obama Army Secretary John McHugh.

As if hoping to avoid the outcome, the White House issued a statement after the GOP win in Virginia saying the president is not watching election returns and will not be making any remarks on the results. 

Nonetheless, the outcomes were sure to feed discussion about the state of the electorate, the status of the diverse coalition that sent Obama to the White House and the limits of the president's influence -- on the party's base of support and on moderate current lawmakers he needs to advance his legislative priorities.

"I think what this night does is it completely explodes the mythology of the meaning of the 2008 election," said syndicated columnist and Fox News contributor Charles Krauthammer.

"You will remember after the 2008 election people talked ... about a new era, about the Republicans becoming a rump party of the south, even losing parts of the south, how this was the death of conservatism. ... Here we are a year later and we can see how ephemeral and one-shot 2008 was," he added.

The president had personally campaigned for Deeds and Corzine, raising the stakes in low-energy off-year elections. Thus, even one Democratic loss was a blot on Obama's political standing to a certain degree and signaled potential problems ahead as he seeks to achieve his policy goals, protect Democratic majorities in Congress and expand his party's grip on governors' seats next fall.

Still, Tuesday's impact on Obama's standing and on the 2010 elections can be overstated easily.

Only two of the 50 U.S. states were holding gubernatorial elections. Voters often were focused on local issues and local personalities. Indeed, most people in Virginia and New Jersey said they were not casting ballots because of their feelings about Obama.

Yet national issues, such as the economic recession, clearly were a factor, with voter attitudes shaped to some degree by how people felt about the state of their nation.

It also was difficult to separate Obama from the outcomes after he devoted much time working to persuade voters to elect Deeds and re-elect Corzine. Obama campaigned in person for both and was featured in their advertisements. He characterized the two as necessary allies in the White House's effort to advance his plans. 

He also deployed his political campaign arm, Organizing for America, to try to ensure the swarms of party loyalists and new voters he attracted in 2008 would turn out.

But according to exit polls, among voters who made up their minds in the last few days, a majority of them broke for Corzine. That suggests Obama's aggressive campaigning paid off in the state. 

Exit polls showed that nearly a third of voters in Virginia Tuesday described themselves as independents, and they preferred the Republican to the Democrat by almost a 2-1 margin.

The outcome showed that "the Obama movement, the coalition isn't transferable," said Democratic strategist Kirsten Powers, a Fox News contributor. "There was a decline in minority voters, a decline in young voters. You weren't seeing these people who turned out in huge force for Obama turning out for other Democrats. And so they're now going to have to step back and say, 'Wait a minute, I'm going to have to take care of myself."

But the Democratic loss in Virginia -- and possible losses elsewhere -- could also be a blot on Obama's political standing to some degree. 

Obama needs all the lawmakers he can get to pass his legislative priorities of health care and climate change. Defeats Tuesday could make it harder for him to persuade moderate Democrats from conservative areas to get on board. They have been hearing from voters worried about his expansion of government at a time of rising deficits.

As if on cue, Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid indicated Tuesday that Congress may not complete health care legislation this year, missing Obama's deadline on his signature issue and pushing debate into a congressional election year.

The vote is "more about the policies of the president more than the personalities," said Washington Times columnist Tony Blankely. "The public is getting really scared of his policies and I think that's what we're seeing in all of these elections. ... Obama has moved the policy so far to the left that now you're seeing this big movement back and I think we're only seeing the beginning of it."

Defeats could also point to future problems for Democrats, particularly in moderate districts and in swing states like Ohio, Colorado and Nevada. In 2010, most governors, a third of the Senate and all members of the House of Representatives will be on ballots.

Still, Democrats suggest the Tuesday night wins are anything but helpful to the Republican Party.

"They're in a civil war over the definition of their party," said Paul Blank, a Democratic consultant. "And the extremists have won."



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