It is pathetic that Democrats can not; and never have been able; to win on the issues. They smear, twist, malign, steal, and outright lie. The Democrat party has utilized Karl Marx and Saul Alinsky and their tactics and teachings to gain power and bring America to it's knees. Who in their right mind would vote for something like that? Not nearly enough; so gaining control of the media and speaking only propaganda when you get there is of full import. Sadly, the Democrat party and the truth are mutually exclusive.
Desperate Democrats Dig for Dirt
By Associated Press July 14, 2014 11:45 am
It
worked like a charm for Democrats in 2012 when Republican candidates in
Indiana and Missouri blew winnable Senate races after provocative
comments on rape and abortion.
But
with less than four months until the 2014 election, Democrats are still
waiting for new bombshells and growing more anxious about the lack of
incendiary material as they try to hold enough Senate seats to keep
control of the chamber. Party researchers are diligently scrubbing every
transcript and public comment for a hint of fringe language that might
spook moderate or independent voters.
"When
you get a gift like that, you dream about another gift," said Carter
Wrenn, a North Carolina Republican strategist, referring to the 2012
Missouri and Indiana Senate results.
The
best Democrats have come up with so far is Iowa Republican Senate
candidate Joni Ernst's avowed belief in a possible threat to American
property rights posed by an obscure global development concept known as
Agenda 21. Some conservatives see the concept as the harbinger of a
United Nations takeover.
"Agenda 21 is a horrible idea," Ernst told a rural county GOP audience in November:
The
non-binding resolution, signed by Republican President George H.W. Bush
in 1992, urges nations to conserve open land and steer development
toward more populous areas.
Ernst
said last year: "The implications we could have here is moving people
off their agricultural land and consolidating them into city centers,
and then telling them 'you don't have property rights anymore.' These
are all things that the UN is behind, and it's bad for the United States
and bad for families here in the state of Iowa."
Susan
Geddes, a conservative Iowa Republican strategist, said Ernst's
characterization "is a problem for our party." Conspiracy theories
aren't good campaign issues, she said.
"I don't know why she'd say that," said Geddes, a senior Iowa adviser to Mike Huckabee's 2008 presidential campaign.
The
Iowa Democratic Party has been citing the remark, and Ernst's calls for
impeaching President Barack Obama, in press releases in hopes of
building a case that Ernst's views are outside the mainstream. It's not
clear whether they are having an impact in her race against Democrat
Bruce Braley, which appears to be close.
Ernst
campaign spokeswoman Gretchen Hamel called the reference to the remarks
"a desperate attempt to change the subject away from Braley's liberal
record."
The
bombshell problem has increased as Republicans have gotten stronger in
regions such as the Midwest, which was once more evenly divided between
the parties. The more conservative GOP candidates winning primaries now
are more inclined to play to the party's rightmost fringe, saying things
that can trouble voters in a general election. Controversial remarks
often relate to women's issues, religion, race or government plots.
Former
Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott's praise of former segregationist
Republican Strom Thurmond in 2002 cost him his Senate GOP leadership
status. In 2012, Missouri GOP candidate Todd Akin's Senate campaign
crumbled after he declared the female anatomy capable of preventing
pregnancy in the case of "a legitimate rape." Likewise Indiana Senate
candidate Richard Mourdock's bid sank after he said pregnancies that
result from "that horrible situation of rape, that is something God
intended to happen."
The
more cautious rhetoric in 2014 has come as a relief to national GOP
leaders who want to close the Democrats' edge with women, younger and
minority voters. Last year, the party had a series of candidate training
sessions on speaking carefully.
The
GOP needs to gain six seats to win Senate control. In addition to Iowa,
Republicans are locked in tight races in Arkansas, Colorado, Michigan,
Louisiana, Kentucky and North Carolina.
"There
has been a concerted effort early on to introduce these positions that
Republicans hold as extreme," said Justin Barasky, national press
secretary for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Meanwhile,
Republican candidates are portraying their opponents as the allies of
Obama's health insurance program.
Democrats
are trying to highlight comments by North Carolina Republican Thom
Tillis in 2012 about demographic changes in the state as part of what
they call his "history of divisive and offensive comments." While the
ethnic population is growing, "the traditional population in North
Carolina and the United States is more or less stable," Tillis said.
North Carolina Democratic consultant Gary Pearce acknowledged the remark
is no game-changer.
For Democrats, the search continues for words that suggest fringe views.
"If it sticks they're delighted and if it doesn't they just move on to the next thing," North Carolina Republican Wrenn said.
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