Kulongoski endorses Hillary Clinton

In a statement today, Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign announced the endorsement of Governor Ted Kulongoski.

"At a critical time in our history, Hillary Clinton has the strength and experience to restore hope and opportunity to working Americans and deliver the change America needs," Kulongoski said. "No one is better equipped to repair the damage of the last seven years and repair our standing in the world." ...

"Ted has devoted his life to serving the people of Oregon with integrity and distinction," Clinton said. "I'm honored to have the support of such a fantastic champion for working people, and I'm delighted that he will lead our efforts in Oregon."

Additional coverage from Harry Esteve at the Oregonian and the Associated Press.

Discuss.

  • LiberalIncarnate (unverified)
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    Why does Ted chose to damage himself like this?

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    Ted, say it ain't so! Terrible. Fortunately, by the time we vote in May, Barack Obama will already be the nominee.

  • Pat Malach (unverified)
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    The story on OregonLive you've linked to is written by Harry Esteve, not Jeff Mapes.

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    Malach... Thanks! That's fixed. Weirdly, Jeff Mapes's picture is placed there... Jedi mind trick.

  • Bill Bodden (unverified)
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    No surprise there. When Kulongoski was first running for governor I attended a gathering where he gave a stump speech that gave me the impression he was a typical politician saying what he thought the audience wanted to hear. He was obviously the lesser evil when it came time to vote for governor so I voted for him but with no enthusiasm. His record since then has confirmed my first impression. He is now clearly one of the Clinton-Democratic machine's satraps in Oregon. Four more years of Oregon soldiers and National Guards in Iraq!

  • Pat Malach (unverified)
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    With his photo and blog name prominently at top right, I thought it was Mapes' page as well until the byline at the bottom.

  • Pat Malach (unverified)
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    And when I wrote "right," I actually meant to write "left".

  • In Ted's Defense (unverified)
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    This may be completely implausible to some of you, but...

    Maybe Ted (like the majority of Democrats nationwide) actually prefers Hillary to Obama and Edwards?

    (And I say that as an Obama supporter.)

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    In early, 2006 political pundits were quick to write the governor's obituary. Despite the premature reports of his political death, the governor fought on, and won decisively against a strong challenger in the general election.

    The same dynamic is at work in this presidential primary, only Barack Obama is the candidate that pundits were writing off as recently as a month ago. But as voters focus more intensely on the contest, it is Barack Obama who voters see as the best candidate to bring change and reform to Washington. I expect Obama to be our nominee, and the governor to be a powerful advocate when Oregon really matters: our general election next November.

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    given Ted's current popularity, would any candidate really want his endorsement? as an Obama supporter, Yay Ted! give your all to HRC!!

  • Ted Fan (unverified)
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    Actually, TA, Ted's numbers with Democrats in the state are good. This is a Democratic nominating process, after all. It's the Republicans he pissed off by having a great session, passing M. 49, and supporting the tobacco tax increase.

    How much do you want to bet that Obama and Edwards sought his endorsement? Charlie Burr is taking the right approach -- whoever the nominee is, they will want and need Ted's support in the general.

  • A. Rab. (unverified)
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    The timing of this seems very strange. Right now, the big action is in Iowa, with the New Hampshire and South Carolina on deck. My instincts could be off, but I have trouble believing the Governor of Oregon carries a lot of water in those three states. I don’t really see how the timing of this helps Clinton (I assume that the endorsement was worked out a long time ago and today is just the announcement). Does anybody know if this is tied to inside baseball with the unions or some other some other group with influence in the party?

  • Sheldon (unverified)
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    Could be that Kulongoski is lobbying for a job in a Hillary Clinton adminstration. See http://www.hillary-clinton-nude.com for insights on Hillary Clinton and 2008.

  • Onlurker (unverified)
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    Hmmmmmm...What does this say about Kulongoski's endorsement of Merkley?

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    Ted inherited a state in economic recession as governor. He devoted his time, energy and strength to bringing Oregon back to economic health. Endorsemnts can be like horse trading, here's hoping Ted will get something good for the state of Oregon if Hillary goes presidential.

  • trishka (unverified)
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    yeah, it maybe not who he wants to win as much as who he thinks will win?

    oh, and...sheldon, i don't know who you are, but do you really think many of us are going to click on a link that is labelled as hillary clinton nude? she's not my favourite candidate, but: please. and that's not even just because i'm at work.

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    Posted by: Onlurker | Dec 13, 2007 1:48:08 PM Hmmmmmm...What does this say about Kulongoski's endorsement of Merkley?

    The he thinks Merkley will be a good candidate and Senator and that Merkley can win against Smith.

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    That he thinks...

    Preview is your friend Mitch.

  • Gullyborg (unverified)
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    I know my views on who should be President are radically different from most folks here.

    But I think we can ALL agree on who should NOT be President:

    http://gullyborg.typepad.com/weblog_archive/2007/12/huckabee-women.html

    Yes, I would be OK with Hillary beating Huckabee.

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    yeah Trishka,

    sheldon, is travelling through all fo the Tubes of the Internets flogging his latest Magnum Opus.

    I'm no Hillary fan, but I ain't gonna take the advice of some guy whose last book was about how the Persian Shia terris led by the "dangerous" Ahmadinejad were gonna team up with the Sunni/Wahabi Al Qaeda guys to destroy the US and Israel.

    We can get enough of this enlightened foreign policy crap from Frank Gaffney, Stephen Hadley, and Dick Cheney.

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    Posted by: Gullyborg | Dec 13, 2007 2:22:52 PM But I think we can ALL agree on who should NOT be President:

    I agree that he absolutley should not be President, but by the same token, I do hope he is the GOP nominee because he would shatter the theocratic hold on the GOP with a massive flame-out in the General election.

  • Bill Bodden (unverified)
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    Despite the premature reports of his political death, the governor fought on, and won decisively against a strong challenger in the general election.

    A strong challenger who was obviously the greater evil?

  • CGBurr (unverified)
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    There is at least some good news here for Obama supporters.

    In other early primary states, we're seeing Clinton supporters and co-chairs spreading false Fox News-generated smears against Obama's religion here and here, and as recently as yesterday, Clinton NH Co-Chair Bill Sheheen stooping as low as trying to make an issue out of Obama's use of recreational narcotics decades ago. It's the type of trash that really has no place in a Democratic primary.

    We're lucky in Oregon not to have seen this type of tactics from Hillary's camp, and the governor's involvement makes it more likely that we'll have an issues-driven debate. That's what it really should be about: who's best to bring change to Washington, not the type of campaign that dredges up essays from kindergarten.

    I've got nothing but respect for our governor -- especially after last year's session -- and if his involvement can prevent the type of slash-and-burn politics that we're seeing from the Clinton camp elsewhere, that's good news for everyone.

  • CGBurr (unverified)
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    Kari, I'm posting under "CGBurr" because for some reason Typepad is blocking my comments as spam when posting under "Charlie Burr." Nick/Kari: any help here would be greatly appreciated.

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    Oh, and that should have been "Bill Shaheen" above.

  • Garlynn -- undergroundscience.blogspot.com (unverified)
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    OK, there seem to be some well-informed Obama supporters on this thread. Maybe you can help me out here, 'cuz I'm a bit tired of having white guys for president, and I really want to like either the woman or the black guy in the race. But, I will vote in the primary for the candidate with the best policies, not the best diversity index rating.

    Paul Krugman has been pointing out for some time that Obama's stances on health care (more here) and are flawed. And, Obama supports the development of more nuclear power to solve the energy needs of the U.S.

    To me, that's three strikes, you're out. Can anybody step in and defend Obama on the merits, with regards to these points?

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    I sense a disturbance in the force Charlie.

  • Matthew Sutton (unverified)
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    This is a disappointing, but not surprising endorsement that lacks vision or foresight, let alone any connection with the people of Oregon. But if that's where is heart is, hats off to him for finally taking a stand, albeit the wrong one.

    <hr/>

    NEWSFLASH: Hillary to Advise President Barack:

    Check out the quick witted response to the cackling comment

    Now THAT'S what I'm talking about!

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    CGBurr, it should also be noted that Billy Shaheen was fired today from the Clinton campaign for those remarks.

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    Mitch, I hadn't seen that, but good for them. Shaheen was a national co-chair, so it's totally inappropriate for him to be making that type of attack. The first NH county co-chair to send the Madrasa email was let go, as was the most recent Iowa county organizer. But it's painting a picture of a pretty nasty under-the-radar effort, especially during a time when the Clinton campaign is putting out research about Obama from kindergarten and third grade. I realize that Clinton's camp says their news release was a joke, but I doubt there's a reporter in America who believes that.

    About the governor: he's a tough campaigner, but he's fair and not one to take cheap shots. That's the point I was hoping to make.

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    Garlynn, I have not picked a horse yet in the Presidential race (still vaccilating between Edwards and Obama) but your first link to the Obama/Krugman kerfuffle I am not entirely sure what you label it as a strike, is one for me per se, since back in June 4, Krugman had this to say about Obama's plan:

    Now, back in February John Edwards put his rivals for the Democratic nomination on the spot, by coming out with a full-fledged plan to cover all the uninsured. Suddenly, vague expressions of support for universal health care weren’t enough: candidates were under pressure to present their own specific plans. And the question was whether those plans would be as bold and comprehensive as the Edwards proposal. Four months have passed since then. So far, all Hillary Clinton has released are proposals to help reduce health care costs. It’s worthy stuff, but it’s hard to avoid the sense that she’s putting off dealing with the hard part. The real test is how she proposes to cover the uninsured. But last week Barack Obama, after getting considerable grief for having failed to offer policy specifics, finally delivered a comprehensive health care plan. So how is it? First, the good news. The Obama plan is smart and serious, put together by people who know what they’re doing. It also passes one basic test of courage. You can’t be serious about health care without proposing an injection of federal funds to help lower-income families pay for insurance, and that means advocating some kind of tax increase. Well, Mr. Obama is now on record calling for a partial rollback of the Bush tax cuts. Also, in the Obama plan, insurance companies won’t be allowed to deny people coverage or charge them higher premiums based on their medical history. Again, points for toughness. Best of all, the Obama plan contains the same feature that makes the Edwards plan superior to, say, the Schwarzenegger proposal in California: it lets people choose between private plans and buying into a Medicare-type plan offered by the government. Since Medicare has much lower overhead costs than private insurers, this competition would force the insurance industry to cut costs — making our health-care system more efficient. And if private insurers couldn’t or wouldn’t cut costs enough, the system would evolve into Medicare for all, which is actually the best solution. So there’s a lot to commend the Obama plan. In fact, it would have been considered daring if it had been announced last year.

    I share Kurgman's concerns about it not mandating full ceverage for all adults. But resonable people can disagree about the merit of Obama's reluctant to impose a mandate that might not be enforceable, even since some estimates point out that a combination of subsidies and outreach can get all but a tiny fraction of the population insured without such mandates.

    As Kurgman himself said near the bottom of his op-ed in June:

    On the whole, the Obama plan is better than I feared but not as comprehensive as I would have liked.

    ...which, is a fair opinion to hold position to take... if one is not a purity voter.

    As for Obama on the issue of nuclear power, Obama has not ruled out nuclear because it is far cleaner than coal-fire power generation. Witness France whose entire electrical grid is nuclear and their national CO2 emission foot print as a result. compared with other OECD countires is in 4th place for lowest CO2 emissions per unit of GDP, just after Norway, Switzerland and Sweden. Almost all of their CO2 emissions are from the transportation sector (cars, trucks, etc.). Nobody is denying that there are serious downsides to nuclear, the hazards of which are of course well known, but dogmatically ruling out any discussion of nuclear as part of a comprehensive mix of energy production technologies which reduce climate change and increase energy independence is more of a strike than what Obama has done.

    What's your "third strike"...?

    You only talk about two, the debatable one on mandates for universal coverage and nuclear power.

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    Posted by: Charlie Burr | Dec 13, 2007 4:13:28 PM The first NH county co-chair to send the Madrasa email was let go, as was the most recent Iowa county organizer. But it's painting a picture of a pretty nasty under-the-radar effort,

    Don't disagree. Was just pointing it out so we have a full picture.

    ...especially during a time when the Clinton campaign is putting out research about Obama from kindergarten and third grade. I realize that Clinton's camp says their news release was a joke, but I doubt there's a reporter in America who believes that.

    Well I personally think the "joke" line was spectacularly lame way to address it, but I suspect they simply wanted to cauterize the bleeding caused from the media knives that came out over the valid counter-punching against the Obama attack, which I pointed out the media double-standard in this here.

    Again, I have not picked a horse in the Presidential race and Clinton is near the middle of my list (she is solid in some areas though her hawkish posture in foreign policy such as her voting for the AUMFs in 2001 and 2002 are serious blemishes I have a hard time forgiving). That said, I do find it interesting to step back and take in the double-standard the media uses against Clinton which is dutifully eaten up and absorbed by far too many liberals, progressives and Democrats.

    Guess that is what the results of being in the Fright-Wing™ cross-hairs as they spend hundreds of millions of dollars unloading everything they have on someone (for decades) are, and what it does to the generally erroneous perceptions in the general voting public.

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    The "attack" was noting that Obama may be vulnerable during the general election for his past drug use. Do you think it is a non-issue? Some people (who host certain blogs) thought that in the past, at least, it was a death-knell to electability.

    The was it was phrased was inexcusable, and Clinton apologized personally to Obama about it and fired the advisor.

    The fact remains that many people worry about how it'll play across America. If a pundit had said the same thing, it would have been allowed and people would have nodded. The messenger, however, matters, and hence he was forced to resign.

    Feels like every negative note about Obama is made into a scandal.

  • Matthew Sutton (unverified)
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    Evan, Bill Clinton and GW were both elected despite their prior drug use. The difference with Obama is that he was open and honest about it, disclosing it many years ago in his book. That's why it is so weird for the guy to try to get mileage out of it.

    <hr/>

    On the nuclear power "strike", Obama has not said that he would go forward with the building of nuclear power plants. He simply says he is not willing to cross it off the list of possible fixes to the climate change crisis. He is willing to "explore" nuclear as an option to see if its inherent problems can be solved through technological advances.

    The sense I got from watching him address this issue at a "town hall" on CSPAN from an orchard in New Hampshire is that he feels that the global warming issue is so serious it would be foolish to forever bar consideration of nuclear power. However, he was very clear that we would need to address its dangers, ie. disposal and safety, before he would advocate new nuclear power plants.

  • Garlynn -- undergroundscience.blogspot.com (unverified)
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    Lestatdalc-

    The "third strike" was Social Security -- Krugman has been pointing out that Social Security really isn't in much trouble right now, and that most of the efforts to "fix" it are actually proposals from the right to try to eliminate it as a component of the government safety net. Obama has apparently piled onto the "Let's fix social security" right-wing bandwagon. Link is here (apologies, it apparently did not come through in the original post).

    Further, responding to your comments on the first two strikes:

    Krugman makes a very good argument as to why mandated care absolutely is necessary: the burden of paying for health care must be spread evenly across the population, otherwise people will be able to not contribute when they are healthy, only to sign up for a plan when they become unhealthy -- thus increasing the burden on the system and increasing the costs to all the users (Krugman's argument, not mine). This is why Edwards and Clinton both call for mandated coverage, I believe.

    As for nuclear -- it's not a question of whether nuclear is ruled out completely as an option. Governor Swarzennegger of California, when asked for his opinion of nuclear, says something along the lines of "I believe that we should not consider nuclear power until we can figure out how to deal with the radioactive waste. It doesn't make much sense to try to solve one environmental problem, such as climate change, by creating another one, such as radioactive waste." This is pretty much the opinion that we should hope for from all candidates and politicians. On this issue, however, Obama is coming from the right of Swarzennegger... perhaps because, as mentioned in the article I mentioned on the issue, his fourth-largest institutional contributor happens to be a nuclear power plant operating company based in Illinois? (Yes, he advocates for safe nuclear power, but his safety concerns seem to be with plant operations, not the larger question of should we be engaging in nuclear power at all when our nation hasn't even gone as far as France has with regards to the waste issue.)

    That's the rationale for my three strikes. I do appreciate your points, but I wanted to elaborate on my concerns so that you can better respond to them!

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    Posted by: Evan Manvel | Dec 13, 2007 4:47:52 PM The "attack" was noting that Obama may be vulnerable during the general election for his past drug use. Do you think it is a non-issue?

    Yes. Given that both Clinton and Bush have done drugs and both were elected and then reelected ...it is beyond a non-issue and bordering on the absurd.

    I would rather have someone who is forthright in talking about his dabbling in drugs as a kid in his autobiography, than someone who claims he "didn't inhale" (Clinton), or pretends he never did blow as an adult (Bush) though we know he did.

    But thanks for helping kick the can of such fraudulent FUD attack further down the road.

    * The validity of the 2000 and 2004 results not withstanding.

  • Garlynn -- undergroundscience.blogspot.com (unverified)
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    On the nuclear power "strike", Obama has not said that he would go forward with the building of nuclear power plants. He simply says he is not willing to cross it off the list of possible fixes to the climate change crisis. He is willing to "explore" nuclear as an option to see if its inherent problems can be solved through technological advances. The sense I got from watching him address this issue at a "town hall" on CSPAN from an orchard in New Hampshire is that he feels that the global warming issue is so serious it would be foolish to forever bar consideration of nuclear power. However, he was very clear that we would need to address its dangers, ie. disposal and safety, before he would advocate new nuclear power plants.

    Matthew, thanks for responding to this "strike." I missed that town hall, so I appreciate hearing that he's not just blindly pro-nuke. Especially considering the allegations about him being beholden to the nuclear industry because of their large campaign contributions to him, I feel that this is an important issue for him to continue to address in detail, and am glad to learn more about his positions on it.

  • Bill Bodden (unverified)
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    I have not picked a horse yet in the Presidential race (still vaccilating between Edwards and Obama)

    Before you pick your "horse" it might be better if you can determine which machine and corporations are behind the curtain controlling the candidate because they will determine what, if any, programs proposed by the candidates will get beyond talking points and bait.

    It is a good bet that the war industries would like to see Hillary continue her pro-war posture and that the Bill Clinton-DLC clique is also pushing for her election. Obama probably has the Daley machine from Chicago behind him. Edwards probably doesn't have anyone but ordinary people supporting him so in the unlikely event he becomes president he will probably suffer the same fate as Carter; that is, be a president without a party under constant assault from Republicans and Democrats. Richardson's father was a high executive with Citibank, so he will most likely be acceptable to Wall Street. Biden and Dodd? I suspect they have claimed a place on the stage to be attack dogs for Hillary in the event Obama or other threatens her presumptive coronation just as Gephardt and Lieberman attacked Dean on behalf of Kerry.

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    Posted by: Garlynn -- undergroundscience.blogspot.com | Dec 13, 2007 5:02:58 PM The "third strike" was Social Security -- Krugman has been pointing out that Social Security really isn't in much trouble right now, and that most of the efforts to "fix" it are actually proposals from the right to try to eliminate it as a component of the government safety net.

    This is a non-issue of rhetoric over substance. What Obama has suggested is well within the mainstream of progressive thought on the long-term balance of Social Security (i.e. things like eliminating the cap on how much of income is taxed, etc.). Krugman goes bananas because Obama used the word "crisis" which, from a Luntz or Rockridge Institute framing perspective is bad, but it has nothing to do with were Obama and the entire Democratic field actually are are on Social Security policy. Krugman's entire article is all light and no heat over using the wrong "buzzword" and not one sentence is devoted to what Obama's actual positions are (which is well within the mainstream).

    Obama has apparently piled onto the "Let's fix social security" right-wing bandwagon.

    Again, Krugman's hit-piece is not over actual policy or positions advocated by Obama but because Obama used a word tat Krugman then went ape-shit with. I agree that the rhetoric of "crisis" and the framing by Bush and crew was part of their failed attempt gin up the public so they would buy into eliminating Social Security through privatization, but that is nothing what Obama is advocating.

    Krugman makes a very good argument as to why mandated care absolutely is necessary: the burden of paying for health care must be spread evenly across the population, otherwise people will be able to not contribute when they are healthy, only to sign up for a plan when they become unhealthy -- thus increasing the burden on the system and increasing the costs to all the users (Krugman's argument, not mine).

    I don't disagree. I think it a point of policy debate worth having. But this hardly translates into Obama "attacking form the right". Even Krugman himself stated that Obama's plan is not a bad plan (certainly better than the current situation) though he clearly favors Edward's plan.

    This is why Edwards and Clinton both call for mandated coverage, I believe.

    I don't know enough about Clinton's plan to speak to it.

    As for nuclear -- it's not a question of whether nuclear is ruled out completely as an option. Governor Swarzennegger of California, when asked for his opinion of nuclear, says something along the lines of "I believe that we should not consider nuclear power until we can figure out how to deal with the radioactive waste. It doesn't make much sense to try to solve one environmental problem, such as climate change, by creating another one, such as radioactive waste." This is pretty much the opinion that we should hope for from all candidates and politicians.

    Which is basically all than Obama has actually said on the issue.

    On this issue, however, Obama is coming from the right of Swarzennegger

    Links and/or quotes please. I have seen nothing from Obama that puts him to the right of the above position on nuclear power. The Counterpunch article you link to has nothing at all which actually points out anything even remotely to the right of what you claim is "the opinion that we should hope for from all candidates and politicians."

    For the record, I liked Krugman's book "The Great Unraveling" and bought a hard-copy of it the week it came out, but Krugman, whom I respect, I beleive is more than a little off on his characterizations of where Obama is, and his op-eds are being pushed by numerous boasters of other candidates to push FUD about Obama.

  • Jack Murray (unverified)
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    Biden and Dodd? I suspect they have claimed a place on the stage to be attack dogs for Hillary

    I sincerely doubt that Chris Dodd would play supporting actor, or even be an extra, in a Hillary for President plot. The reasons for this are many, not the least of which is the separation between the two on the issue of warrantless wiretapping & retroactive telecom immunity.

    Then again, it's no surprise that Gov. K declined to endorse Sen. Dodd. The Oregon-New England connection has been gone since Gov. McCall.

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    Bill, not attacking you here if those are your criterion for who to weigh candidates works for you, but your "machine" broad brush "considerations" do not hold any interest or legitimacy in my calculus.

  • Charlie G. Burr (unverified)
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    Do you think it is a non-issue?

    Nice framing, Evan. No, what we really should be talking about is why Obama shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die, and how that will affect his electability. Personally, I see this being a HUGE problem, especially in Nevada.

  • backbeat12 (unverified)
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    This endorsement disgusts me. I've followed Mr. K. since I was a student at UO and he was just getting into politics. What kind of wimpy mealy mouthed crap is this? Ick.

    What a disappointment.

    Edwards 08

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    I'm really leaning towards Obama at this point, however reasonable people can disagree. Hillary has her strong points, and she still remains a favorite among the silent Democratic majority that many extremists like to pretend don't exist. So I can certainly see that she would appeal to the Governor, especially since he also got a lot of crap from those same noisy extremists when they blamed him for successfully managing us through the 2002 recession while simultaneously having to deal with Minnis and her cabal.

    I think he's making a mistake. This is one of those rare circumstances when the person the counterproductive-left hates is actually not the best candidate to win the general. But given what he's been through, I don't blame him for thinking that to be the case.

  • LT (unverified)
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    Charlie, when I read this, I heard Johnny Cash guitar chords in my head. Just reading it without the music is just not the same.

    Do you think it is a non-issue?

    Nice framing, Evan. No, what we really should be talking about is why Obama shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die, and how that will affect his electability. Personally, I see this being a HUGE problem, especially in Nevada.

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    Quoth Steve M., the divisive centrist extremist. Yes, it is possible to be an extremist of the center, as many of Steve's dyspeptic fulminations illustrate. Center is an ideological position just like any other. It can be held with the same kind of rigidity, broad-brush smeary generalization and internal self-destructiveness as any other. And although Steve doesn't like lefter propensities for third party talk, we should remember that the DLC grew out of roots in Democrats for Nixon.

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    Leaving aside whether anyone really has been ignoring Senator Clinton's wide support, it seems to be eroding in New Hampshire, drawing various forms of nervous response on the Clinton side.

    Regarding the governor's endorsement, we might note that Clinton and Edwards have both gotten numbers of national union endorsements, and that Clinton's include AFSCME and the AFT. Those unions' Oregon branches are important in the state AFL-CIO.

    The Oregon SEIU on the other hand, the largest union in the state, has endorsed John Edwards. Kulongoski and SEIU Local 503 (OPEU) have had tensions since the governor reneged on PERS agreements.

    (You can argue the fiscal necessity until the cows come home, and even be right. That doesn't change the fact that he had to renege on agreements that had been bargained in good faith, in which OPEU gave up other things it might have negotiated for e.g. immediate wages, or health benefits).

    Since Oregon is unlikely to be a player in the nomination, and the governor's endorsement would mainly be useful to the Clinton campaign in Oregon, apart perhaps from fundraising, perhaps we should look to who Ted is aligning himself with by making this choice now.

    Both AFSCME and Kulongoski have previously endorsed Jeff Merkley. Now they are aligned in the presidential race as well. It seems possible that shoring up ties with sections of organized labor other than SEIU, given the trickiness of that relationship could be among the governor's motives.

    (National SEIU decided not to endorse in the presidential primaries but to allow state SEIU councils to do so; most of the state SEIUs that have endorsed have gone for Edwards.)

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    Posted by: Chris Lowe | Dec 14, 2007 2:09:30 AM Quoth Steve M., the divisive centrist extremist.

    Huh?

    You are claiming Steve Maurer is a divisive extremist?

  • Gullyborg (unverified)
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    "by the same token, I do hope he is the GOP nominee because he would shatter the theocratic hold on the GOP with a massive flame-out in the General election."

    I, on the other hand, hope that both parties put their best candidate forward, so that they will each push the other to be better. In the end, America wins, no matter which party is in charge, when they both have to earn victory rather than allow the other side to self-destruct.

    The last thing I want is for the DNC to self-destruct, because that would allow the GOP to turn out idiots like Huckabee without serious opposition.

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    I'm actually more amused by the construct "centrist extremist". Methinks somebody is in need of a dictionary.

    But of course, even "centrist" is not true. By any neutral view of the US body politic, I'm liberal. I just don't choose to remain silent in the face of either Republicans spinning and lying, or people who pretend that Democrats and Republicans are indistinguishable. So if you come here to troll and insult don't expect your logical inconsistencies and hypocrisies to go unremarked upon.

    Dyspeptic? Eh... maybe I'll cop to that one. Naderites giving the U.S. George Bush as President, because he and Al Gore are Tweedledee and Tweedledum, is enough to give anyone a sour stomach.

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    Posted by: Gullyborg | December 14, 2007 at 12:49 PM I, on the other hand, hope that both parties put their best candidate forward, so that they will each push the other to be better. In the end, America wins, no matter which party is in charge, when they both have to earn victory rather than allow the other side to self-destruct.

    Though history has proven that each time the modern GOP gets into power, they harm America. So in the theoretical your calculus might make sense, but in the real world it does matter which party wins.

    Because of the makeup of the current GOP, it i impossible for the GOP to put forward candidates that are anything but criminals or whack-jobs. The GOP of sane, moderates like the Hatfield's, Rockefeller's and Packwood's (lechery aside) simply no longer exists. It hasn't for decades since the rise of the theocratic right. I honestly wish the GOP would destroy itself and reform as a competent, moderate conservative (i.e. the classical usage of that term not the term as it means now which is theocratic warmongering social darwinist radicals).

    It would push the Democratic party and America to be better, but that ain't what we got. We have a GOP where if you believe in science you are unelectable in a primary. We have a party where if you don't advocate torture, you are unelectable in a primary. We have a party where if you don't view the government as the bane of society, you are unelectable in a primary. We have a GOP where if you put actual living people before a bit of human protoplasm, you are unelectable in a primary. We have a party where if you do not support war based on fabrication, lies and greed, you are unelectable in a primary.

  • Bill Bodden (unverified)
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    centrist extremist

    At one time before it made a lurch to the right while Maggie Thatcher and her soul mate, Ronald Reagan, were screwing things up, The Economist was a highly respected paper and admired for being in the extreme center. Somehow or other, however, I doubt that our "centrist extremist" would have gained employment with that formerly estimable weekly.

  • Daniel Spiro (unverified)
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    I might agree with the endorsement if I could believe a single word that woman says about anything -- other than that she's "in it to win it." Here it is, movie buffs:

    Hillary Clinton and Tracy Flick -- separated at birth.

  • (Show?)

    Steve, I apologize for applying to you a label that doesn't fit. It is good to know that you forthrightly see yourself as liberal.

    My vocabulary skills are just fine, thanks. Centrist does not equal moderate. Consider an example where there isn't a spectrum: fans of a sports team. There are extreme, fanatical fans, and what makes them that way is the intensity of their feelings and actions.

    Some centrist or liberal politics, when pursued by extreme rhetorical and organizational means in the DP, can be divisive. Not all of the DLC do this any longer, but some e.g. Joe Lieberman still do -- they want to create a center-right orthodoxy and exclude from any real say people who don't accept the "New Democrat" policies. They regard "McGovernites" (smear-label) as the enemies.

    So I see your point about lefties (and many liberals) who look for internal enemies among Democrats as destructive & divisive in potential and sometimes in actuality. But I think that runs in both directions & sometimes your rhetoric really does go looking for enemies inside the party and is gratuitously hostile & divisive. At those moments you manifest a kind of extremism, IMO.

    Not that I would claim to be a paragon of consistency.

  • PS (unverified)
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    Why would you be so surprised that Ted would endorse Hillary? It is nothing more than one socialist endorsing another.

  • lin qiao (unverified)
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    Apropos the nuclear power biz mentioned in some posts above, the US actually does have viable underground storage for high-level radioactive waste. We just are not using it owing to at least two decades of political wrangling. Just this sort of waste storage is already used in, say, France and Scandinavia.

  • Garlynn -- undergroundscience.blogspot.com (unverified)
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    lin qiao-

    France, as I understand it, also stores their radioactive waste inside large mostly-unbreakable glass spheres. Whereas the U.S. apparently still tends to prefer 55-gallon steel drums. Storing our waste inside glass spheres, inside secure underground storage areas that aren't near any groundwater supplies, would probably be a better policy than what we have now.

    <h2>However, I'm not sure that this conjecture is at all relevant to the current campaign, except as a footnote that better methods may be currently available, even if for various reasons they are not/cannot/will not be implemented in the U.S.</h2>
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