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Conflict in the Democrat Party

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niceday21 is online - (507)
Moderate - Republican
posted 92 days, 10 hours, 45 minutes ago
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Conflict in the Democrat Party

“After a brief bout of Obamamania, some Capitol Hill Democrats have begun to complain privately that Barack Obama’s presidential campaign is insular, uncooperative and inattentive to their hopes for a broad Democratic victory in November.

“They think they know what’s right and everyone else is wrong on everything,” groused one senior Senate Democratic aide. “They are kind of insufferable at this point.”

Among the grievances described by Democratic leadership insiders:

• Until a mailing that went out in the past few days, Obama had done little fundraising for Democratic candidates since signing off on e-mailed fundraising appeals for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee immediately after securing the Democratic nomination.

• Obama has sometimes appeared in members’ districts with no advance notice to lawmakers, resulting in lost opportunities for those Democrats to score points by appearing alongside their party’s presumptive presidential nominee.

• The Obama campaign has not, until very recently, coordinated a daily message with congressional Democrats, leaving Democratic members in the lurch when they’re asked to comment on the constant back and forth between Obama and John McCain ' as they were when Obama said earlier this month that he would “continue to refine” his Iraq policies after meeting with commanders on the ground there.

• Coordination between the Obama campaign and the House and Senate leadership is so weak that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) ' who will chair the Democrats’ convention in August ' didn’t know of Obama’s decision to move his final-night acceptance speech from the Pepsi Center to Invesco Field until the campaign announced it on a conference call with reporters.

On the record, spokesmen for Democratic leaders and the campaign committees say they’re pleased with the coordination they’re getting from the Obama campaign.

“We have a great relationship with the Obama campaign and work closely with them on everything from message strategy to on-the-ground coordination in states where we have races,” said DSCC spokesman Matthew Miller.

Privately, however, there is a different message coming from some Democratic quarters on the Hill and on K Street. Some Democratic leadership staffers complain that, having defeated the vaunted Clinton political machine in the primaries, the Obama campaign now feels a “sense of entitlement” that leads to “arrogance.”

One Democratic aide, speaking on the condition of anonymity, compared the Obama campaign unfavorably to President Bush’s administration.

“At least Bush waited until he was in the White House before they started ignoring everybody,” the aide said.

“These relationships matter,” said a House Democrat close to the leadership. “I really hope these guys try to get off on the right foot. We all know what happened to [former President] Jimmy Carter and [former President] Bill Clinton. We don’t want to see a repeat of that.”

SOURCE: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0708/11750.html

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Mark Nickolas is online - (51)
Progressive - Democratic
posted 92 days, 10 hours, 32 minutes ago
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Niceday - Maybe you need a spelling lesson. It's Democratic Party. Didn't they teach you spelling in school?

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HelloDollyLlama is online - (1720)
Moderate - No Party Affiliation
posted 92 days, 10 hours, 26 minutes ago
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Obama is going to have the longest coat-tails of any Democratic presidential candidate since FDR. He is going to elect a small army of Democratic members of Congress, and strengthen the Democratic majority in both houses. He is also rebuilding the party in states that haven't even seen Democrats in decades.

So they should stop whining and get to work.

Also -- the traditional Democratic way of doing business is chaos and mixed messages. Obama is putting an end to that. These guys are getting some long-overdue discipline.

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niceday21 is online - (507)
Moderate - Republican
posted 92 days, 10 hours, 18 minutes ago
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Mark - address the post. I guess, after banging on about the divided Republican party for months, it makes you look like a jackass now that stories about divided Democrats are starting to leak out.

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AvengingTiki (312)
Progressive
posted 92 days, 10 hours, 15 minutes ago
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I think some people need to stop being so whiney. In Oregon Obama let Merkley (the guy running against Senator Gordon Smith) use his Oregon office. Merkley and Obama share all their resources here in Oregon, as well as having a highly coordinated campaign.

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ronaldvandevender (1299)
Libertarian - Libertarian Party
posted 92 days, 1 hour, 13 minutes ago
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I mentioned in another post what I felt Obama needed to watch out for. Well this kind of stuff fits the bill.

Nice day - Where the Repubs. are at odds is not things which will help reshape or rebuild support for them. All they are doing is shifting furture to the right, Which is going to isolate them that much more. The differences in the Dems. on the other hand I see as good. They are the things which may devide some of the upper level power hungry party top dogs. So what, they need to go anyway. Maybe they need to flip over to the Greens or something. Obama seems to be trying to pull together an organization which may have a chance at solidifying a vast number of people. Something this country has not seen in years.

I have never in my life backed or thought that we had a Dem. Candidate for the office of Pres. worthy of giving the time of day. For once, I see evidence that this one may be the one.

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