Obama calls on campaign architect after lousy week
Awful week for Democrats, from Senate loss to high court ruling; how does party move ahead?
By CHARLES BABINGTON Associated Press Writer
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A one-two punch of bad news suddenly has Democrats facing an election year with campaign finance rules that favor Republicans and a Senate that can block Democratic initiatives. And President Barack Obama called on the leader of his winning 2008 campaign to help.
Democrats already were bracing for House and Senate losses in November, which typically happens to a president's party after his first two years in office. But a stunning GOP Senate victory in Massachusetts, and a dramatic Supreme Court ruling on political advertising, have made the horizon look even darker for the party that scored big wins in 2006 and 2008.
The week that marked Obama's first year in office turned out to be one of the worst in recent Democratic memory.
Now party insiders are trying to figure out why public sentiment turned against them so quickly. David Plouffe, who led Obama's winning presidential campaign, also will play a larger role in advising the president on strategies for House, Senate and governor's races as reeling Democrats try to rally in an important election year. (Emphasis added)
Republican strategist John Feehery says the changing sentiment began some time ago with the summertime attacks on Obama's health care plan and continued with the GOP's November takeover of the governorships of New Jersey and Virginia.
"It's been bad for the Democrats for a while," Feehery said. "They just haven't realized it. This is the club over their head that wakes them up."
The week's first Democratic setback can be blamed squarely on the party's poor performance coupled with a stellar campaign by a little-known GOP state senator in Massachusetts. Scott Brown tapped voter anger over high unemployment and unsavory dealmaking in Congress to win the seat long held by liberal leader Edward Kennedy.
Brown's election will restore the GOP's ability to use filibusters to block Democratic initiatives in the Senate, where Republicans will hold 41 of the 100 seats. It brought an abrupt halt to Obama's signature issue, overhauling health care, which now hangs in limbo.
The second blow, which landed Thursday, was beyond the president's control. The Supreme Court reversed a centurylong trend of limiting the political influence of corporations, which is likely to prompt a flood of campaign money going mostly to Republicans. The 5-4 ruling will let companies use their general treasuries, and not just employees' limited donations, to produce and air ads for or against federal candidates. (Emphasis added)
It also applies to labor unions, which typically back Democrats. But union membership and clout have been declining for decades. (Emphasis added) More . . .
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Now we are going to have a WhiteHouse run like a political campaign. It has begun already..
-- Edited by Sanders on Saturday 23rd of January 2010 10:05:04 PM
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010