Two Sides of the Same Coin?

This will give plenty of ammo to the old 3rd party line — Scozzafava threw her support today behind, not the conservative, but to the Democratic candidate in NY-23:

You know me, and throughout my career, I have been always been an independent voice for the people I represent. I have stood for our honest principles, and a truthful discussion of the issues, even when it cost me personally and politically. Since beginning my campaign, I have told you that this election is not about me; it’s about the people of this District.

It is in this spirit that I am writing to let you know I am supporting Bill Owens for Congress and urge you to do the same.

It’s not in the cards for me to be your representative, but I strongly believe Bill is the only candidate who can build upon John McHugh’s lasting legacy in the U.S. Congress. John and I worked together on the expansion of Fort Drum and I know how important that base is to the economy of this region. I am confident that Bill will be able to provide the leadership and continuity of support to Drum Country just as John did during his tenure in Congress.

Surprisingly, this will more than likely help Hoffman than hurt.  Once again though, this demonstrates the disconnect between the GOP hierarchy and the grassroots, at least in New York’s 23rd District.

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The McBollingNelli Broom Is Out

Much to the dismay of the journalists at the Washington Post, the top three GOP candidates aren’t just talking win… they’re talking sweep:

It was Cuccinelli– introduced to the crowd as Ken “Don’t Tread on Me” Cuccinelli — who held up the broom, which he had been handed as he made his way to the load dock that served as a stage.

He urged the crowd of more than 200 to work hard in the next three days to deliver victory in Fairfax County and beyond.

“If we do it right here in Fairfax, guess what we’re going to be saying on election night?” he said, brushing the broom over the floor, as the crowd shouted out “sweep!!”

The credibility of the Washington Post is shot right through at this point, so the bit of schadenfreude watching the defeatism on the Virginia Politics blog is just too good to miss out on.

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INVICTUS

Without question, I am watching this movie. A lot.

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Know Campaign Needs to Know Limits

Voting is a right and a privilege of sorts.  Sure, a right we should all exercise.  A privilege to a degree as well, because there are so precious few nations on the face of the earth whose social contracts permit just about everyone — no matter your background, creed, age, property, or education — to participate.

It is also a right you may decline to exercise.  Plenty of people don’t own firearms.  Plenty of people don’t own their own newspaper.  People choose not to exercise certain rights every day.

Bob Holsworth over at Virginia Tomorrow dredges this tidbit up from the pages of the Virginia Pilot:

Bill Sizemore in The Virginian Pilot has a remakable story this morning about the “Know Campaign” that will be sending mailers to 350,000 Virginian households that will include your voting history and

That of your neigbors as well.

Debra Girvin, executive director of the Know Campaign, observed that “research shows that this tactic can drive people to the polls…we figured ‘let’s give it a try.’”

If you assume that the story isn’t an elaborate hoax (though in politics truth continually outpaces our fictional imagination), it’s pretty frightening.

Girvin won’t tell the reporter who the “we” that “figured ‘let’s give it a try’” are.

Nor will she reveal who’s in the organization or the foundation that’s purportedly paying $150,000 to fund the activity.

So much for transparency.

Now I ask you this:  Does voter intimidation work both ways?  Sure we’re familiar with the sort that drives folks away from the polls… but when that same coercion is used to put people beyond a comfort level in exercising a right (whichever one that may be), isn’t that problematic?  Illegal, I dare say?

I’d be very interested in find out who the presupposed “donors” really are.

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Hind: “The Anglican experiment is over.”

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This is tremendous news.  The Anglican Bishop of Chichester John Hind is openly considering a conversion to Catholicism:

In a further blow to the Archbishop of Canterbury’s hopes of preventing the Anglican Communion from disintegrating, other bishops have cast doubt over its survival.

The Rt Rev John Broadhurst, the Bishop of Fulham, even claimed that “the Anglican experiment is over”. He said it has been shown to be powerless to cope with the crises over gays and women bishops.

In one of the most significant developments since the Reformation, the Pope last week announced that a new structure would be set up to allow disaffected Anglicans to enter full communion with Rome, while maintaining parts of their Protestant heritage.

The move comes after secret talks between the Vatican and a group of senior Anglican bishops. Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, was not informed of the meetings and his advisers even denied that they had taken place when the Sunday Telegraph broke the story last year.

Now Bishop Hind, the most senior traditionalist in the Church of England, has confirmed that he is willing to sacrifice his salary and palace residence to defect to the Catholic Church.

Obviously the UK Telegraph is extremely non-plussed about the recent moves to unite the Anglican and Catholic traditions.  This comes on the heels of announcements from quarters of the Orthodox faith that the end of the near 1000-year schism could be seen within months. More locally to the United States, the long term project of the late Richard John Neuhaus with his “Evangelicals and Catholics Together” project hasn’t seen much progress in recent years, but the movement does continue to press forward:

I’ve written to the Catholic participants and told them on behalf of all of the evangelicals that we would like to continue the dialogue, but it was kind of up to them to decide who would lead their side of the effort.

There are some very able people around. Neuhaus was unusual because of his evangelical background; he really understood both sides of the Reformation divide. [He had] a terrific mind. That won’t be replaced. But there are others who can step up to the responsibilities, and I believe the dialogue will continue.

The divisions within Christianity have come a long way towards healing, especially given the current climate of secularism battering down the doors of virtually every institution held by religious over the last 50 years.  Still, with a lessening of fanaticism comes the freedom to pursue faith, and I hope this is what we are seeing here.

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Free Lance-Star Endorses McDonnell

This is no big surprise for anyone who has followed the FLS editorial board:

Mr. McDonnell is articulate, certainly a virtue in leadership (recall George W. Bush’s chronic incoherence and its incurred cost in popular support). Mr. Deeds is not a confident speaker, giving the impression that he is confused by complexity or fears candor.

Also, Mr. McDonnell is more positive. He has run his share of absurd attack ads, but, unlike his rival, hasn’t made vilification a campaign theme.

Executive capacity? Mr. McDonnell not only proficiently ran the A.G.’s office, but also, after serving four years on active duty, retired as a lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserve. Mr. Deeds lacks this command pedigree.

And consider how the candidates have changed. A socially moderate lawmaker, Mr. Deeds, perhaps to better contrast himself with the scholar of Regent University, has adopted the fringe-feminist view of abortion–it is all about the woman, buster!–and pandered to the gender-obsessed by pledging a Cabinet half-female. Mr. McDonnell recently flipped a position, too–but for the better. He now favors (like Mr. Deeds) a “scientific” redistricting plan to end the gerrymandering that protects the majority party and incumbents from the horrors of democracy.

Ouch.

It would seem as if the early strategy — to go for suburban women voters — was a bit too heavy-handed internally on the Deeds campaign for the tastes of suburban Fredericksburg.  McDonnell’s planning trumped Deeds’ screeds.

Goes to show that it’s not all about what the polls are telling you either.  Of course, I’m not entirely sold that Virginia will be a referendum on Obama’s presidency, either.  Deeds has run a horrible campaign — perhaps the worst seen in modern Virginia political history.

Quite a feat, and I’m not so certain it’s Creigh Deeds’ or his campaign manager Joe Abbey’s fault.  We’ll wait for that story to come out after the election.

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Deeds on the Public Option

Kinda sorta maybe might kinda sorta be against it but for it.

Don’t worry — no one else knows what his position is either.  And way to go to AP reporter Bob Lewis for pressing the question.

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Shannon Attacks Cuccinelli on Confession?!

I’ve long railed against the anti-Catholicism that runs ever so close to the surface in Virginia politics.  Sometimes it bubbles up, and in Steve Shannon’s failing campaign to be the next Attorney General of Virginia, it just came to the forefront.

Case in point, his last-ditch attack ad against Ken Cuccinelli:

See that line: “Against Requiring Clergy to Report Child Molestation”? The bill? SB 314 on third reading, 01/29/2004.  Go ahead, check it out yourself.

That bill passed 22-17 in the Senate and was killed in House Committee by a vote of 10-12. The problem with the bill isn’t just the fact that federal courts have upheld the “seal of confession” for Catholic priests, the problem is that the attack on Cuccinelli just ain’t true.

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TNR: “Is America a Good Country?”

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The question comes from the pages of The New Republic no less, and from writer Marty Peretz after President Obama refused to meet with the Dalai Lama.  This op-ed targets Obama for his failure to address Afghanistan, even as he was travelling to Copenhagen to lobby for Chicago’s bid for the Olympic Games:

So, while the president did make time for a rather brief conversation with McChrystal in Copenhagen, the real purpose of his rushed trans-Atlantic flight was to grease the International Olympic Committee into naming Chicago as epicenter of the 2016 games. If you read closely in the newspapers, it wasn’t as if Chicagoans were so ecstatic for the prize. Having the Olympics in town often turns out to be a big bust, burdening its residents, businesses and taxes for years thereafter. And, since the president is so much against national chauvinism, he might have contemplated that the games turn out to be among the most ritualized examples of hate on the planet, with the added cost of moving the poor around to make way for the rich visitors. When I was in Capetown, South Africa this summer, I saw from afar the still-being-built stadium for the 2010 World Cup soccer games. Now, South Africans are mad for soccer. But the talk in the street was against the expenditure, which comes to billions of rand and hundreds of millions of dollars even before anybody faces up to the inevitable cost over-runs. How many shanty-towns could have been replaced with this money? Or how about putting a water supply into these jungles of human refuse?

Peretz asks the inevitable questions:  If Obama can’t influence the IOC, how can we possibly negotiate with the Islamic Republic of Iran over nuclear weapons?

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CUA president to step down in 2010

Fr. O’Connell literally resurrected a school in decline, and it will be sad to see him go.

The prestige of the university has certainly risen under Fr. O’Connell’s tenure, and though the Brookland area has a ways to go before it can reclaim the status of “Little Vatican” the Catholic University of America has come and is going a long ways towards re-establishing itself as the heart of the community, not to mention a vocal part of the debate over Catholic participation in public life.

Here’s hoping for a continued trend under a new president.

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