McCain seals GOP nomination as Romney suspends campaign

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McCain seals GOP nomination as Romney suspends campaign


February 7, 2008
FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON -- John McCain effectively sealed the Republican presidential nomination on Thursday as chief rival Mitt Romney suspended his faltering presidential campaign. ''I must now stand aside, for our party and our country,'' Romney prepared to tell conservatives.
''If I fight on in my campaign, all the way to the convention, I would forestall the launch of a national campaign and make it more likely that Senator Clinton or Obama would win. And in this time of war, I simply cannot let my campaign, be a part of aiding a surrender to terror,'' Romney will say at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington.
» Click to enlarge image
Mitt Romney arrives in the parking lot of his campaign headquarters in Boston, Mass. yesterday.
(AP)



''This is not an easy decision for me. I hate to lose. My family, my friends and our supporters... many of you right here in this room... have given a great deal to get me where I have a shot at becoming President. If this were only about me, I would go on. But I entered this race because I love America, and because I love America.''
McCain prevailed in most of the Super Tuesday states, moving closer to the numbers needed to officially win the nomination.
Overall, McCain led with 707 delegates, to 294 for Romney and 195 for Huckabee. It takes 1,191 to win the nomination at this summer's convention in St. Paul, Minn.
''I disagree with Senator McCain on a number of issues, as you know. But I agree with him on doing whatever it takes to be successful in Iraq, on finding and executing Osama bin Laden, and on eliminating al-Qaida and terror,'' Romney said.
Romney's departure from the race came almost a year after his formal entrance, when the Michigan native declared his candidacy on Feb. 12, 2007, at the Henry Ford Museum of Innovation in Dearborn, Mich.
Over the ensuing 12 months, Romney sought the support of conservatives with a family values campaign, emphasizing his opposition to abortion and gay marriage, as well as his support for tax cuts and health insurance that would benefit middle-class families.
''We need to teach our children that before they have babies, they get married,'' he told voters at his campaign events.
But he was dogged by charges of flip-flopping, a criticism that undermined the candidacy of another Massachusetts hopeful -- John Kerry in 2004. In seeking to unseat Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in 1994, Romney said he would be a better advocate for gay rights than his rival and he favored abortion rights.
Throughout his campaign, Romney was questioned by voters and the media about his Mormon faith. Hoping assuage voters skeptical of electing a Mormon president, Romney gave speech on Dec. 6 in College Station, Texas, that explicitly recalled remarks John F. Kennedy made in 1960 in an effort to quell anti-Catholic bias. He vowed to serve the interests of the nation, not the church, if elected president.
In early voting Iowa, Romney sought votes by casting himself as the guardian of the Reagan-era conservative triad -- a three-legged stool, as the candidate put it -- of a strong national defense, strong economy and strong families.
Fueled by what would grow to more than $35 million of personal donations, his campaign hired top-notch staff in the early voting states, and Romney scored an early win when his organization topped the field at the Iowa Straw Poll in August.
By that time, the national front-runners, McCain and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, had virtually ceded the lead-voting state to Romney.
Instead, McCain focused on New Hampshire, second on the calendar, while Giuliani employed an untested strategy of waiting out the early primary contests and instead staking his candidacy on a strong showing in the Jan. 29 Florida primary.
Romney's goal was to score back-to-back wins in Iowa and New Hampshire, clearing the field and creating momentum to roll through Florida -- where he enjoyed the support of top aides to former Gov. Jeb Bush -- and seal the nomination in the Super Tuesday contests.
Instead, Romney was beaten Jan. 3 in Iowa by former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, a former Southern Baptist minister who received an unexpected outpouring of support in the caucuses from voters identifying themselves as evangelicals.
Five days later, Romney suffered a second consecutive defeat in New Hampshire, when McCain won the primary in part with the support of independents attracted to his self-styled maverick campaign.
Romney, who headed the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, tried to cast each defeat in competitive terms, saying his second-place finishes amount to ''silver medals.'' He also highlighted the ''gold'' he won in between and in the little-watched Wyoming caucuses.
Nonetheless, Romney took a cue from Huckabee's win, as well as Democrat Barack Obama's Iowa upset of rival Hillary Rodham Clinton, as a sign voters wanted change in Washington.
On the stump, he retooled his speech to harken back to the theme he broached in Dearborn, that America's future, and that of its government, were dependent on innovation. His campaign also hung new banners reading, ''Washington is Broken,'' as well as a to-do list Romney would complete as president.
Romney and McCain went head-to-head in the Jan. 13 Michigan primary, and Romney won, in part by highlighting his background as a business consultant and venture capitalist. When McCain acknowledged what seemed to be obvious, that not all of Detroit's lost auto industry jobs would be recovered, Romney pounced.
He accused the senator of pessimism, outlining a $20 billion industry recovery package and telling audiences in economically ailing Michigan, ''I will fight for every single job.''
Romney also tweaked his stump speech to criticize McCain for stating that he was more familiar with foreign affairs and military matters than economic issues.
Highlighting his 25-year business career, he told audiences, ''Senator McCain says the economy is not his strong suit; well, it is my strong suit.''
As the calendar progressed, however, McCain picked up a big-ticket win in the Jan. 19 South Carolina primary. Romney instead focused on his victory in the Nevada caucuses the same day.
Ten days later, the two squared off again in the Florida primary, where McCain scored a major upset after winning endorsements from the state's two top elected Republicans -- Gov. Charlie Crist, a popular figure who had previously said he planned to remain neutral in the race, and Sen. Mel Martinez.
McCain also retaliated for the negative ads that Romney aired against Huckabee in Iowa and him in New Hampshire. In a state with a large population of active-duty military and veterans, the former naval aviator accused Romney of favoring a timetable for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq.
Romney denied the charge, and the April 2007 interview McCain cited as justification for his criticism made no such clear declaration, but the senator ended up beating Romney in the primary. Most telling, he outpolled Romney among voters saying the economy was their most important issue.
The following day, Giuliani dropped out of the race and endorsed McCain. A day later, popular California Gov. Arnold Schwarzeneger announced his endorsement of McCain, reflecting a coalescing of Republican support behind the senator as he approached a Super Tuesday showdown with Romney.
Romney's final pitch was to label McCain a liberal like Clinton and Obama, a charge tantamount to heresy in the GOP. He was backed by conservative media voices like Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter, as well as former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum.
''We want the leader of our party to be somebody who stands up for Republican principles, who lives in the house that Reagan built, who makes sure our future stays bright,'' Romney said Monday.
Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This materia
 
LOL --- Dont be depressed Bryan. You still have GW for another 11 months
 
LOL look at Joey being the optimistic one. Joey, I love ya man. :D

Personally, I think we're seeing the beginning of the end of this country as far as freedom is concerned.

Be prepared.
 
David,

If you go back in the threads you'll see where I said I would rather have the Dems on control of everything so the blame sticks to them.

Do I agree with Ann? Absolutely.

We had a good 6 year run economically. Did Bush get the credit when things were going well? NO.

Does he get the blame for the bad things going on now? YES.

That is the way it is always going to be as long as a liberal media is in control. They have the ability to sway public opinion because Americans are an ignorant mass.

We'll get back the House after 2 years of Hillary or Obama but the Supreme Court will be gone.

We'll try to stop the liberals like we did to Clinton and we'll only get the blame.

We had the House and Senate and the Presidency. We just didn't have conservatives in control of those establishments.

The Republican party no longer represents the majority of Conservatives. We elect people that put an (R) by their name but they are not conservatives. They are a mulatto.

I really don't care anymore.

Time to look out for my own selfish interests.
 
Well it looks like America will finally be free of the conservative idealogues
who have been the tail wagging the Republican dog for the last 27 years.
McCain's victory means they will be put in their place on the fringes where they belong as they do not represent the views of most americans.

As Mr Cut and Paste I present:



http://mediamatters.org/progmaj/report

The Progressive Majority:
Why a Conservative America is a Myth


Ideology in America

"Republicans tend to be conservative on both [economic and social issues]. That's been a strength in a conservative country."
Mark Halperin of ABC News, October 30, 20061

Halperin is hardly alone in his view that whether one is talking about economic issues or social issues, conservatives have the public on their side. Democrats may win an election here or there, but at its most fundamental level, conventional political wisdom assumes America is a conservative country: hostile to government, in favor of unregulated markets, at peace with inequality, desirous of a foreign policy based on the projection of military power, and traditional in its social values.
This report demonstrates the inaccuracy of that picture of America. Media perceptions and past Republican electoral successes notwithstanding, Americans are progressive across a wide range of controversial issues, and they're growing more progressive all the time.
THE CONVENTIONAL WISDOM
It should come as no surprise that conservative media figures repeat the myth that most Americans share their views. Even when Democrats win, conservatives claim that their ideology is still dominant. On election night 2006, Fox News Washington managing editor Brit Hume acknowledged that Democrats were winning, but stressed that "from what we could see from all the polling and everything else, it remains a conservative country."2 He did not say what "polling and everything else" he was referring to. Glenn Beck of CNN Headline News agreed, stating the following day that despite the Democratic victory, "the majority of Americans seem in favor of classically Republican points of view."3
But it was not just conservatives; in fact, they were simply repeating what they had heard mainstream journalists say for some time. "This is basically not a liberal country," said John Harris, then of The Washington Post and now of The Politico, in May 2005. "It's a conservative country."4 Previewing the Democrats' prospects for victory three weeks before the 2006 election, CNN senior political correspondent Candy Crowley asserted that Democrats have been "on the losing side of the values debate, the defense debate and, oh yes, the guns debate."5 (Crowley presented no evidence that Democrats had been "on the losing side" of any of these debates.)
After the election, journalists found their explanation for the Democratic victory: they ran conservative candidates. "These Democrats that were elected last night are conservative Democrats," said CBS' Bob Schieffer the next day.6 "The Democrats' victory was built on the back of more centrist candidates seizing Republican-leaning districts," wrote The Washington Post.7 The New York Times anticipated the election with the headline, "In Key House Races, Democrats Run to the Right."8
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In truth, however, the Democratic class of 2006 was remarkably progressive. According to a survey conducted by Media Matters, all 30 newly elected House Democrats who took Republican seats advocated raising the minimum wage, supported changing course in Iraq, and opposed any effort to privatize Social Security. All but two supported embryonic stem cell research and only five described themselves as "pro-life" on the issue of abortion. Thirty-seven House and Senate candidates who promoted "fair trade" rather than "free trade" won; none of them lost.9 Candidates in the freshman class who were conservative on a particular issue got the lion's share of attention, but they were a distinct minority.
The journalists straining to interpret 2006 as a validation of conservatism were following a pattern they had established long before: Democratic victories are understood as the product of the Democrats moving to the right, while Republican victories are the product of a conservative electorate. For example, the day after the Republicans' landslide victory in the 1994 midterm elections, a front-page New York Times article declared that "[t]he country has unmistakably moved to the right."10 The Washington Post's front-page story that day similarly concluded that "[t]he huge Republican gains ... marked a clear shift to the right in the country."11
Similar sentiments were expressed 10 years later, following the Democrats' defeat in the 2004 election. The New York Times wrote on its front page, in an article titled "An Electoral Affirmation of Shared Values," "t is impossible to read President Bush's re-election with larger Republican majorities in both houses of Congress as anything other than the clearest confirmation yet that this is a center-right country."12 Citing the purported "God gap," a Los Angeles Times editorial similarly asserted that the 2004 election proved voters "don't believe that the Democrats share their values."13 Katie Couric, then-host of NBC's Today, asked whether "this election indicate that this country has become much more socially conservative."14 Chris Matthews, host of NBC's Chris Matthews Show, wondered: "Can the Democrats ever connect with the country's cultural majority?"15
In contrast, one would have searched in vain for examples of neutral media figures opining that the 2006 results marked a shift to the left in American opinion. The idea of an American public moving to the left -- or residing there in the first place -- seems to be outside the imagination of much of the press. But the data demonstrate that the American public is in fact progressive, far more so than conventional wisdom imagines them to be.
Further, the movement of public opinion, particularly on social issues, seems to be in one direction: to the left. Opinion on issues such as homosexuality and the role of women has grown steadily more progressive for the last few decades, while it is difficult to find an issue on which the public is more conservative now than it was 20 years ago.
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
No matter what labels people use, their view of the role of government provides a window into the ideology that underlies their political views. Conservatives believe in small government; they prefer free markets and individuals to manage things as much as possible. Progressives believe in a more active government that performs more functions and provides more services.
Polling shows that the public is much closer to the progressive view. The latest survey of the National Election Studies (NES) shows, for example, a preference for a vigorous government role in a complex world. Sixty-seven percent said we need a strong government to handle complex economic problems. Nearly 58 percent said government should be doing more, not less; and 59 percent agreed that government has grown because the country's problems have grown.
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The NES has been tracking ideology in this way for many years, and this finding is stable over time. Between 1982 and 2004, the NES asked whether the government should cut government services and spending, or increase them. With the exception of a period during the mid-1990s, for more than two decades, Americans have expressed a preference for increasing the role of government. By 2004, the gap had widened to the point that more than twice as many people (43 percent vs. 20 percent) wanted "government to provide many more services even if it means an increase in spending" as wanted government to provide fewer services "in order to reduce spending."
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The Pew Research Center found similar results. For the past twenty years, Pew has been tracking support of a government safety net for the poor. With remarkable stability -- though there was a small decline in the 1990s and a small increase in the new century -- it shows that people want a safety net. More than two-thirds (69 percent in 2007) believe the government "should care for those who can't care for themselves." They feel so strongly about it that more than half (54 percent) are willing to incur greater debt to get it done.
Furthermore, polling by the General Social Survey (GSS) reveals a strong desire for greater equity in America, and desire for the government to help achieve it. Americans certainly want to keep what they earn and expect greater work to yield greater rewards, but that's only the beginning. GSS polling since 1978 reveals a clear and steady preference for government action to achieve income equality. With the brief exception of 1994, the year of the Republican takeover of Congress, people have expressed a preference for government action to reduce income inequality. As the chart below indicates, the average difference over the study period was more than 14 percentage points.
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Americans believe in private enterprise, but they also understand that the profit motive does not always serve the public interest. Pew has been asking for the past 20 years whether businesses strike a fair balance between making profits and serving the public interest. People have consistently answered that businesses do not strike a fair balance. In 2007, 58 percent of respondents expressed doubts about business fairness and only 38 percent thought businesses strike a fair balance.
Specific Policies
The progressive nature of American public opinion becomes even more vivid when the view shifts from broad ideological questions to specific questions of policy. Of course, no person is ever all progressive or all conservative, and some issues cut across ideological boundaries, but some policies can be understood as key indicators.
THE ECONOMY
The economy regularly scores near or at the top of Americans' concerns. Over time, with the exception of short-term crises such as Iraq, people care about their livelihoods and jobs more than anything else.
Though opinions about whether the economy is doing well or poorly are in constant flux, there are a number of core economic issues that reflect more fundamental values and outlooks; it is those on which we will focus.
Trade
Trade is a hot-button issue, and Americans are worried about it in a way that invites progressive solutions. The latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll (March 2007), showed that 48 percent of Americans believe the U.S. is harmed by the global economy. Only 25 percent believe the U.S. benefits. On an individual level, more people think that they personally, their children, and the people in their community are more harmed than helped by the global economy.
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Pew has explored similar issues and reached similar conclusions, finding in addition that more Americans think free trade agreements cost jobs (48 percent) than create jobs (12 percent). In one Pew poll, 34 percent said that trade agreements slow the economy compared to 28 percent who said they lead to growth.16
These opinions need not reflect progressive attitudes, but they do indicate that the standard position of conservatives (and the consensus establishment) -- support for unfettered trade -- is not particularly popular among the public. And while no nonpartisan source has polled on the issue of labor and environmental standards -- something progressives nearly always advocate as part of trade agreements -- at least one set of polling data suggests these enjoy wide support. When Democracy Corps, a Democratic polling group, asked whether "[w]e should enforce labor and environmental protections in our trade accords and challenge China's unfair policies because American jobs are being lost," or "We should sustain our current trade policies and provide training for displaced workers because America benefits if our companies can invest and expand to markets abroad," the former statement outpaced the latter by 58 percent to 33 percent.17
Unions
American unions are in decline, but not because of public attitudes. The American people like labor unions. Pew Research registers a 56 percent favorable opinion of unions and 33 percent unfavorable.18 Gallup registers 59 percent approval and 29 percent disapproval.19 Gallup also shows that 38 percent of people want unions to have more influence in the country, compared to 30 percent who want them to have less influence. In labor disputes, 52 percent of people polled said they sympathized with the union compared to 34 percent who took the side of the company.
Furthermore, Americans believe that unions benefit not just their members, but the economy as a whole. Gallup records 53 percent who believe unions mostly help the U.S. economy, compared to 36 percent who say they mostly hurt.20
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Minimum Wage
Questions about the economy take concrete form in wages. The 2006 election campaign saw another round of an age-old debate on increasing the minimum wage, with Democrats advocating an increase and Republicans arguing that raising the minimum wage would cost jobs and harm the economy. Though the minimum wage was last increased 10 years ago, there is little doubt where the public stands on the issue. A Los Angeles Times poll taken in the aftermath of the 2006 election showed that 77 percent of Americans thought "Congress should pass legislation that will increase the minimum wage."21 Such legislation quickly passed in the newly Democratic House of Representatives by a margin that reflected the broad public support (315-116, including 80 Republicans). There were minimum wage increases on the ballot in six states in 2006; all passed by comfortable margins.
Taxes
Taxes are a perennial conservative issue and one with great political import. However, the ideological attitudes of Americans are not necessarily conservative.
A majority of Americans think their taxes are too high, a conservative theme, but they don't care about it that much. Taxes generally rank low in the list of Americans' priorities, and taxes are never number one.
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Moreover, although Americans think their own taxes are too high, they think the taxes of rich people and corporations are too low, a progressive theme. The same April 2007 Gallup poll that showed 53 percent of Americans describing their taxes as too high showed 66 percent believing that "upper-income people" pay too little in taxes. Only 21 percent said upper income people pay their fair share. Fully 71 percent said corporations pay too little and only 19 percent said corporations pay their fair share.22
Finally, although people are happy to have their taxes cut, they worry about increasing the deficit or starving infrastructure in order to do it. In 2005, a year of debate over the expiration of the Bush tax cuts, polls by both the Los Angeles Times and NBC News/Wall Street Journal asked people to prioritize tax cuts against government spending. Both polls found considerable support for what most would characterize as the progressive position.
SOCIAL ISSUES
The social, "hot-button" issues that conservatives like to group under the heading of "moral values" are said to put progressives at greatest disadvantage. The conventional wisdom poses a traditionalist "heartland," where "mainstream" Americans reside, against a modernist, secular, liberal coastal elite out of touch with the beliefs of the real America.
But this view is simply wrong. In truth, majority opinion across the country is much more likely to line up with progressive values.
First, progressives are closer to most Americans in their value priorities. Many conservatives discuss issues like same-sex marriage and abortion in positively apocalyptic terms. "ociety must be concerned about its own preservation and continuity into the next generation," warned Monsignor Robert Sokolowski in the America: The National Catholic Weekly.23
Despite such dire counsel, only 3 percent of Americans ranked gay marriage as the "most important" issue in a January 2007 poll by AP/Ipsos.24 Abortion ranked 14th among issues respondents considered "extremely important" in a May 2007 CNN poll.25 Both abortion and same-sex marriage were cited by less than 3 percent of respondents to April 2007 polls by Gallup and CBS News.26
After the 2004 election, when exit polls showed "moral values" as the response chosen most often when voters were asked what decided their votes, commentators rushed to declare that social conservatives had won the election for Bush. But it turns out that voters mean many different things when they say "moral values." When a Zogby poll taken after the election asked voters what was "the most urgent moral problem in American culture," 33 percent picked "greed and materialism," 31 percent chose "poverty and economic justice," 16 percent said abortion and 12 percent said same-sex marriage.27 As one pair of researchers put it, "[T]he moral values item on the issues list cannot properly be viewed as a discrete issue or set of closely related issues; that its importance to voters has not grown over time; and that when controlled for other variables, it ranks low on the issues list in predicting 2004 vote choices."28
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To most Americans, moral values do not mean Terri Schiavo, gay marriage, or stem cell research. To the contrary, moral values represent fundamental principles. To paraphrase Robert Fulgham, moral values are what we all learned in kindergarten.29 Share. Wait your turn. Treat others as you want to be treated yourself. But even on the issues by which conservatives would like moral values defined, the public is much closer to the progressive side.
Abortion
Most Americans oppose the idea of outlawing abortion and reject the idea of overturning Roe. v. Wade. This opinion is well settled and has been stable over time.
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Abortion remains a complex issue. Some time ago, conservatives made a strategic decision to avoid a frontal assault of reproductive rights in favor of smaller-bore, subsidiary issues that would allow a chipping away of abortion rights: parental consent, spousal consent, and limitations on a specific late-term procedure they dubbed "partial-birth abortion." On these limited questions, the conservative position is often more popular.34
To the degree that conservatives succeed at framing the debate in terms of limited exceptions, they can win certain legislative victories. But on the more fundamental question of "pro-life" versus "pro-choice," conservatives are in the minority. Pro-choice progressives represent mainstream America.
And we should not forget that much of what has become the contemporary consensus on social mores and gender roles reflects a fundamentally progressive worldview. A few decades ago, the idea that women and men deserved equal job opportunities and equal pay was controversial, dividing the right from the left. Today it is acknowledged by nearly everyone. As data from the National Election Studies show, the overwhelming majority believes women should have an "equal role" in running business and government; a tiny minority thinks women belong "in the home."
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This shift in attitudes is part of a larger evolution on issues around family roles and sexuality that has found the country becoming steadily more progressive. This is not to say, of course, that these beliefs are always translated into policy. For instance, under current law any school receiving federal funds for sex education must teach "abstinence only," an approach favored by conservatives. But this approach is rejected by the overwhelming majority of the public. When an NPR/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard University poll released in 2004 asked whether "[t]he federal government should fund sex education programs that have 'abstaining from sexual activity' as their only purpose" or "[t]he money should be used to fund more comprehensive sex education programs that include information on how to obtain and use condoms and other contraceptives," the more inclusive approach was favored by a margin of 67 percent to 30 percent. Similarly, more people were concerned that not providing teens information about contraception might lead to unsafe sex (65 percent) than that providing such information might encourage teens to have sex (28 percent).35
Homosexuality
On matters of sexual orientation, conservatives are often thought to be closer to the American majority. But this is only because the nature of the questions being debated has changed so dramatically. Just a few years ago, almost no one imagined that Americans would be arguing same-sex marriage; instead, we were debating whether discrimination in housing and employment was acceptable. On those questions, a consensus has emerged in favor of equality.
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More recently, the question has shifted to specific rights -- marriage, military service, adopting children. It's fair to say that homosexuality is not fully accepted in every regard. But the trend is unmistakably in a progressive direction. When Howard Dean began his presidential campaign in 2004, his support of civil unions for gays as governor of Vermont was seen as alien to American values. Today support for civil unions is the median position of the American voter, and even Republican presidential candidates claim to have no objection to a state passing a civil union law if its voters want one. Similarly, a majority of Americans (not to mention some prominent generals) now favors gays serving in the military.36
Other issues show the same pattern. In 1987, 51 percent of Americans told Pew that "chool boards ought to have the right to fire teachers who are known homosexuals." Two decades later, the number had fallen to 28 percent. And there is little doubt about which direction public opinion will move in the future. Starting with the pre-boomer generation born before World War II, each successive generation is more progressive on the issue of gay rights than was the generation before it.
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SECURITY
Security has long been considered a conservative strength, and many an election has been won by Republicans through deft use of security issues. But the truth is that conservative attitudes on national security often run counter to public opinion.
International
At the moment the public's views on national security are inexorably entwined with their views about the Iraq war. Although the subject of this report is long-term, fundamental beliefs, it is worth noting where the public's views on national security are at the moment, particularly since it is likely that Iraq will affect what Americans believe about these issues for years or even decades to come.
There is little doubt that the public is overwhelmingly dissatisfied with the effects the Iraq war has had on our national security. When asked by Pew in August 2006 whether the United States is more or less respected in the world than it had been in the past, 65 percent said less respected, while a scant 7 percent said more respected. By 45 percent to 32 percent, they said the best way to reduce the threat of terrorist attacks is to reduce America's military presence overseas, a complete reversal of what Pew found four years prior.38 For the first time since 1993, a plurality of respondents to the Gallup poll say we are spending too much on our military-43 percent say we are spending too much, compared to 35 percent who say we are spending the right amount, and only 20 percent who say we are spending too little.39

When asked about their beliefs on America's role in the world, its approach to terrorism, and military force as a tool of policy, the public soundly rejects the conservative approach, at least as the Bush administration has pursued it. As a recent report from the nonprofit polling group Public Agenda and Foreign Affairs magazine explained:
The Foreign Policy Index has consistently shown the public broadly prefers diplomacy over force in international affairs. For example, in June 2005, 64 percent thought the U.S. should emphasize diplomatic and economic efforts over military efforts in fighting terrorism; now that figure stands at 67 percent. Half the public considers it "very important" to only use force with the support of our allies, also consistent with 2005 findings. And majorities throughout the Index have said the criticism that the U.S. is too quick to resort to war is at least "partly justified" (seven in 10 say so in our current edition).​
When respondents were asked to rate a series of strategies for the degree to which they would strengthen the nation's security, the top-ranking moves were "Improving the effectiveness of our intelligence operations" (with 63 percent saying it would enhance our security a great deal) and "Becoming less dependent on other countries for our supply of energy" (55 percent). Only 17 percent said "Attacking countries that develop weapons of mass destruction" would enhance our security a great deal, the lowest-scoring strategy in the group. Forty-two percent said "Showing more respect for the views and needs of other countries" would enhance our security a great deal.
Again, these and other opinions have certainly been colored by the Iraq war. For instance, Pew found in 2007 49 percent agreeing with the statement, "The best way to ensure peace is through military strength," with 47 percent disagreeing -- the lowest number agreeing in 20 years, and down dramatically from the 62 percent who agreed in 2002.
Whether these opinions will shift in a more conservative direction once the Iraq war ends remains to be seen. But what we can say is that at the moment, the public doesn't just oppose the Iraq war. In broad terms, over a range of questions, it favors a more progressive approach to national security policy.
Domestic Security
In the domestic context, security has long been understood as a matter of crime control. This section explores ideology of two fundamental issues, guns and punishments.
Guns
There is a vivid disconnect between politics and public opinion on guns. Gun control is considered by some Democrats to be a "third-rail" issue they should fear to approach. Even after the terrifying tragedy at Virginia Tech, many cautioned against any legislative action on gun control.40

Typical of major news outlets, the San Francisco Chronicle reported it this way:
The Virginia Tech campus massacre may reignite a national debate over gun control, but with an election year looming and a powerful gun lobby geared for battle, Democrats probably will be reluctant to push such a divisive issue that could threaten their control of Congress and effort to win back the White House.​

"Democrats tend to be worried about their electoral prospects with the gun-owning public,'' said Bob Levy, a senior fellow and constitutional scholar with the conservative CATO Institute, a Washington think tank. "They haven't been particularly vocal, because they understand that people in this country want their guns.''41
This conventional wisdom assumes broad American opposition to the regulation of firearms. This is simply not the case. Although there are important regional variations and millions of Americans who like to hunt, most Americans support reasonable restrictions. For instance, a 2006 Gallup poll revealed that 56 percent of people wanted laws governing the sale of firearms to be made more stringent. In recent years, most polling on gun control produces similar results: Majorities of Americans favor at least some regulation of firearms, particularly handguns, as the data below demonstrate. The recently expired assault weapons ban was overwhelmingly supported by the public.
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Punishment
Few politicians have found their careers threatened by being "tough on crime." But the fact that the issue of crime lends itself easily to fear-mongering and political manipulation -- with the Willie Horton case that proved so damaging to Michael Dukakis' 1988 presidential bid being perhaps the prototypical example -- does not mean that conservative policies on crime have majority support. Indeed, evidence suggests striking public support for a more progressive approach to crime prevention.
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Even in the early 1990s when crime was at its highest and draconian solutions found their greatest support in recent history, Americans wanted more than mere punishment. Gallup has found consistent majority support for the notion that "additional money and effort should go to attacking the social and economic problems that lead to crime through better education and job training" rather than "more money and effort should go to deterring crime by improving law enforcement with more prisons, police, and judges."47
The sentiment can also be seen in more detailed polling on specific issues. Polling in 2006 and 2007 by Zogby International revealed:
  • Eighty-nine percent of people polled believe that rehabilitation and treatment for incarcerated youths can help prevent future crime, and 80 percent thought spending money on rehabilitative services and treatment for youths will save money in the long run.48
  • Seventy-eight percent supported the Second Chance Act, pending federal legislation that would allocate federal funds to prisoner re-entry.49
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Opinion on the death penalty has also shifted in recent years. Although many Americans support the death penalty for murder, when offered a choice between the death penalty and life imprisonment, the two options receive nearly equal support (47 percent to 48 percent) in the Gallup poll. This is a particularly dramatic shift: Just a decade ago, Americans preferred the death penalty over life imprisonment by a margin of more than 2-to-1 (61 percent to 29 percent). Since then support for life imprisonment has increased by 19 points, while support for the death penalty has declined by 13 points.
THE ENVIRONMENT
The environment is a latent concern of the American public. Although it does not rise in national priorities to the level of the Iraq war or health care, Americans are concerned about the environment. People feel that the health of the environment is getting worse, and that the government is doing too little to protect it. The following chart of Gallup polls shows the levels of concern on issues ranging from drinking water to the ozone layer. The nation has clearly come a long way from the time when a significant proportion of the public believed that the environment was not something to be concerned about.
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Understanding that there are problems with the environment, the public also has opinions about the solutions. And the solutions are generally of a more progressive bent. More than twice as many (64 percent) think the solution to energy problems is more conservation compared to more production (26 percent). They oppose opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for drilling. They want higher emissions standards for automobiles (79 percent) and industry (84 percent), and they want the federal government to spend more money on solar and wind power, and alternative fuel sources for automobiles.
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People are also willing to incur sacrifice and risk to protect the environment. The 2004 NES found that 45 percent of Americans thought it was more important to protect the environment even if it costs some jobs or otherwise reduces our standard of living. Only 27 percent considered protecting the environment to be less important. Polling by Gallup in March 2007 found that 55 percent thought "protection of the environment should be given priority, even at the risk of curbing economic growth." Only 37 percent disagreed. As far back as 1984, the public has felt a need for stronger environmental protection, and is willing to sacrifice for it.
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Pew has reached similar conclusions. Over time, people see a need for stricter laws and regulations to protect the environment. And they are willing to pay money to see it done. That they will even express a willingness to pay higher costs in order to achieve this end is particularly noteworthy.
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ENERGY
Not surprisingly, Americans' concern with energy rises and falls with the price of gas, but the public's latent concern about the environment becomes more urgent and concrete in the context of energy. Americans understand the relationship between energy and the environment, and they want the country to move in a progressive direction. As the figure below shows, 64 percent of the public thinks U.S. energy policy is better solved by conservation than production. A Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll found that 52 percent of Americans believe "the best way for the U.S. to reduce its reliance on foreign oil" is to "have the government invest in alternative energy sources."50 Only 20 percent said the best way was to "relax environmental standards for more drilling for oil and gas."
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A variety of other polls have found similar results, such as this April 2007 CBS/New York Times poll.
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In short, whatever else one may say about the debate over energy, it seems apparent that broad majorities of the public favor progressive approaches centering on conservation and development of alternative energy sources.
IMMIGRATION
Immigration is a complex issue that does not always divide cleanly along partisan lines. On first glance, it would appear that immigration opponents have the potential for wide support: Cable news hosts rail against illegal immigration, 61 percent of Americans in a May 2007 CBS News/New York Times poll said immigration was a "very serious" problem, and 70 percent said immigrants weaken the economy because "they don't all pay taxes but use public services." At a time of economic stress and uncertainty, immigrants are an easy target, especially undocumented ones.
But that's not the whole story. In fact, most of the public has a favorable view of immigrants. Sixty-seven percent of Americans told Gallup that "on the whole," immigration is a "good thing for this country today."51 The same May 2007 CBS News/New York Times poll revealed that twice as many Americans said that "most recent immigrants to the United States contribute to this country" (57 percent) as said they "cause problems" (28 percent). Even the impact of illegal immigration on U.S. jobs is tempered by the widespread belief that illegal immigrants "take jobs Americans don't want" (59 percent) rather than "take jobs away from American citizens" (30 percent).
The buzzword "amnesty" for illegal immigrants has political weight, but Americans are more tolerant than the media coverage often suggests. Sixty-two percent of Americans in the CBS News/New York Times poll said undocumented immigrants should be given a chance to "keep their jobs and eventually apply for legal status." Only 33 percent said they should be "deported." Polls by Gallup and CNN show even higher levels of support for integrating people who entered illegally but worked while they were here.
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Furthermore, despite media attention to building a fence on the border between the United States and Mexico, Americans show little confidence that it will do much to stem illegal immigration. Americans look more to employers as a source of the problem and a potential solution. Polling by the Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg in April 2007 showed 77 percent of people believed "employers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants should be punished for their actions." Only 18 percent disagreed. A Quinnipiac University Poll indicated 63-percent support (compared to 33-percent opposition) for communities passing local laws to fine businesses that hire illegal immigrants.52
In another poll, Pew specifically asked people to compare employer sanctions against increased enforcement such as border patrols and a fence. More people concluded that penalizing employers would be more effective. This conclusion was shared by both Democrats and Republicans, and in border zones such as Arizona and Las Vegas.
In short, while there is certainly great concern about the issue, the conservative positions on immigration -- deportation of undocumented immigrants, no path to citizenship, building more fences on the border -- enjoy less support than does a more progressive approach.
HEALTH CARE
Health care is an issue currently receiving urgent attention. In polls of national priorities, health care consistently ranks near the top. A CBS/New York Times poll in February 2007, for instance, showed 70 percent of Americans considered the lack of health insurance a "very serious" problem.
Moreover, Americans are looking to the government to solve this problem. More than twice as many people (69 percent vs. 28 percent) think it is the responsibility of the federal government to make sure all Americans have access to health coverage.
Even posed against long-standing and seemingly appealing alternative-tax cuts -- Americans express a preference for expanding access to heath care. More than three-quarters (76 percent) polled by CBS News and The New York Times in February said access to health care was more important than maintaining the Bush tax cuts -- and three in five said they would be willing to have their own taxes increased to achieve universal coverage.
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While there are a wide variety of health care plans currently being proposed -- and no doubt more to come -- the available data strongly suggest that more progressive solutions are those that begin with more support from the public.
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Conclusion
If Americans are so progressive, why don't more say so?
When asked for evidence, advocates of the idea that America is a conservative country will often cite the fact that polls show more people labeling themselves as "conservative" than "liberal." This is certainly true, as data from the NES show:
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Yet there are a number of reasons to conclude that the data on self-labeling tells us relatively little about the actual ideological positioning of the public. First, as political scientists have understood for more than 40 years, most Americans simply don't think in ideological terms. To take one example, the National Election Studies has asked respondents in the past, "Would you say that either one of the parties is more conservative than the other at the national level?" The number answering "the Republicans" seldom exceeded 60 percent when the question was asked in the past; after a 12-year hiatus, the NES asked the question again in 2004, when two-thirds of the public, an all-time high, gave the correct answer. This means that, at a time when the parties are more ideologically distinct than ever, one-third of the public can't name correctly which party is more conservative. If this bare minimum of knowledge is unavailable to such a large proportion of the population, it is fair to say that their self-placement on ideological scales will not be a particularly reliable gauge of their actual beliefs on issues.

There is an understandable assumption within Washington that if survey respondents answer the ideological self-placement question by choosing "liberal" or "conservative," then their positions on issues roughly correlate with those of the Democratic and Republican parties, respectively; and that if they choose "moderate," then their issue positions are midway between those of the two parties. But in fact, this is not the case. According to the NES, 56 percent of those who call themselves moderates associate with the Democratic Party, while only 31 percent associate with the Republican Party. As one of the authors of this study wrote previously:
"And it isn't just party identification; on issue after issue, moderates have opinions almost exactly mirroring those of liberals. In the NES survey, 64 percent of liberals say we should increase spending on Social Security, as do 68 percent of moderates-while only 47 percent of conservatives agree. Eighty-eight percent of liberals and 84 percent of moderates say federal funding on education should be increased, compared to only 58 percent of conservatives. Seventy-three percent of liberals and 66 percent of moderates want more spending for child care-but only 38 percent of conservatives agree. Sixty-two percent of liberals and 57 percent of moderates want to spend more on aid to the poor, compared to only 39 percent of conservatives."53

Another reason people don't use the liberal label is that the term "liberal" has been victim to a relentless conservative marketing campaign that has succeeded in vilifying liberals and liberalism. The consequence is that only strong liberals are willing to identify as such. But many people who hold liberal issue positions call themselves moderates, or even conservatives. As Christopher Ellis wrote in a recent study of ideological labeling, "[M]any conservatives are not very conservative":
"... nearly three-quarters of self-identified conservatives are not conservative on at least one issue dimension [size and scope of government, or abortion and homosexuality], and considerably more than half hold liberal preferences on the dominant dimension of conflict over the size and scope of government. Simply put, many conservatives are not very conservative"54
When people do use ideological labels, they often apply them inconsistently. In 1967, Hadley Cantril and Lloyd Free famously observed that Americans were "ideological conservatives" but "operational liberals."55 They didn't like the idea of government, but they liked what government does and can do.
As all the data presented in this report make clear, whatever Americans choose to call themselves, on issue after issue -- economic, social, security, and more -- majorities of the public find themselves on the progressive side. And on many of the most contentious "culture war" issues, the public has been growing more progressive year after year. Much of the news media seems not to have noticed. But the facts are too clear to ignore.
Endnotes
1 Glenn Beck, CNN, October 30, 2006.
2 Fox News Channel, November 7, 2006.
3 Glenn Beck, CNN, November 8, 2006.
4 The O'Reilly Factor, Fox News Channel, May 31, 2005.
5 CNN, October 19, 2006.
6 The Early Show, CBS, November 8, 2006.
7 Peter Baker and Jim VandeHei, "A Voter Rebuke For Bush, the War and the Right," Washington Post, November 8, 2006, Page A1.
8 Shaila Dewan and Anne E. Kornblut, "In Key House Races, Democrats Run to the Right," New York Times, October 30, 2006. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/30/us/politics/30dems.html?ex=1319864400
&en=836bf51f8a4a22a9&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

9 Public Citizen, "Election 2006: No to Staying the Course on Trade." November 8, 2006. http://www.citizen.org/documents/Election2006.pdf
10 R.W. Apple, "A Vote Against Clinton," New York Times, November 9, 1994, Page A1.
11 Dan Balz, "A Historic Republican Triumph," Washington Post, November 9, 1994, Page A1.
12 Todd Purdum, "An Electoral Affirmation of Shared Values," New York Times, November 4, 2004, Page A1.
13 "Democrats and the God Gap," Los Angeles Times, November 7, 2004, Page M4.
14 Today, NBC, November 3, 2004.
15 The Chris Matthews Show, NBC, November 7, 2004.
16 The Pew Research Center for the People & Press, "Free Trade Agreements Get a Mixed Review," December 19, 2006. http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?ReportID=299
17 Democracy Corps, November 2-3, 2004.
18 The Pew Research Center for the People & Press: Beyond Red & Blue, The 2005 Political Typology. "Would You Say Your Overall Opinion of Labor Unions Is..." 2007. http://typology.people-press.org/data/index.php?QuestionID=46
19 The Gallup Poll. "Labor Unions: Do You Approve or Disapprove of Labor Unions? August 8-11, 2006. http://www.galluppoll.com/content/default.aspx?ci=12751
20 Ibid.
21 Los Angeles Time/Bloomberg. "Do You Think Congress Should Pass Legislation that will Increase the Minimum Wage, or Not?" December 12, 2006. http://nationaljournal.com/members/polltrack/2006/issues/06employment.htm#11
22 The Gallup Poll, "Gallup's Pulse of Democracy: Taxes and Tax Cuts, 2007. http://www.galluppoll.com/content/default.aspx?ci=1714.
23 Robert Sokolowski, "The Threat of Same-Sex Marriage," America, June 7, 2004. Vol. 190. No.19. http://www.americamagazine.org/gettext.cfm?textID=3627&articleTypeID=1&issueID=487
24 Associated Press/AOL/Ipsos Public Affairs, "If you had to choose, which of the following issues would you say is most important to you personally?" Conducted 1/16-18/07; surveyed 1,005 adults; margin of error +/-3.1% (release, 1/22). And some of the respondents who rank it "most important" may be gay people seeking legal sanction. http://nationaljournal.com/members/polltrack/2007/issues/07mostimportant.htm
25 "Problems and Priorities," CNN/Opinion Research Corp, 2007, Conducted 5/4-5/6/07 by Opinion Research; surveyed 1,028 adults; margin of error +/-3%. http://www.pollingreport.com/prioriti.htm
26 "All Major Groups Agree Iraq Should Be Government's Top Focus," Gallup, April 23-26, 2007; CBS, April 9-12, 2007.
27 Carol Eisenberg. "Morally Speaking, Iraq Was Bigger Issue." Newsday. 10 November 2004. Page A27.
28 Gary Langer and Jon Cohen. "Voters and Values in the 2004 Election." Public Opinion Quarterly 69(5):744 (2005).
29 Robert Fulghum, All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten, 2004. http://www.peace.ca/kindergarten.htm.
30 CNN/USA Today/Gallup Poll. "Do You Approve or Disapprove of Congress' Involvement in the Terri Schiavo Case," April 1-2, 2005. http://www.pollingreport.com/news.htm
31 Washington Post Poll. "Do you support or oppose embryonic stem cell research?" January 2007. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/polls/postpoll_012007.htm
32 The Pew Center for the People & Press. Trends in Political Values and Core Attitudes: 1987-2007. March 22, 2007. http://people-press.org/reports/pdf/312.pdf
33 CNN/Opinion Research Corp., "Would You Like to See the Supreme Court Overturn its 1973 Roe versus Wade Decision Concerning Abortion, or Not?" January 22, 2007. http://nationaljournal.com/members/polltrack/2007/issues/07abortion.htm#4
34 For more information, The Gallup Poll. "Gallup's Pulse of Democracy: Abortion." 2007. http://www.galluppoll.com/content/default.aspx?ci=1576&VERSION=p
35 "Sex Education in America," National Public Radio/Kaiser Family Foundation/Kennedy School of Government, January 2004.
36 John M. Shalikashvili. "Second Thoughts on Gays in the Military." New York Times. January 2, 2007. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/02/opinion/02shalikashvili.html?ex=1325394000
&en=171a9a25f632cbde&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

37 The Pew Center for the People & Press. Trends in Political Values and Core Attitudes: 1987-2007, March 22, 2007. http://people-press.org/reports/pdf/312.pdf. The Pew Center for the People & Press. Less Opposition to Gay Marriage, Adoption, and Military Service. 22 March 2007. http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?
ReportID=273
.
38 The Pew Center for the People & Press. Diminished Public Appetite for Military Force and Mideast Oil. 6 September 2006. http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?ReportID=288.
39 "Military and National Defense," Gallup Poll, February 1-4, 2007, http://galluppoll.com/content/?ci=1666&pg=1
40 David Espo, "Reid Warns Against Rush to Gun Control," Associated Press, April 17, 2007. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/17/AR2007041700826.html
41 Edward Epstein and Carla Marinucci, "Virginia Tech Massacre Gun Control: Democrats, Eyes on Majority, Apt to Go Slow on Restrictions," San Francisco Chronicle. April 18, 2007. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?
f=/c/a/2007/04/18/MNGOUPAJ141.DTL
. See also: Andrea Seabrook, "Va. Tech Shootings May Revive Gun-Control Debate," National Public Radio, April 18, 2007. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?
storyId=9642202
. Associated Press. "More Gun Control? Don't Hold Your Breath." CBS News. 17 April 2007. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/04/17/virginiatechshooting/main2695994.shtml.
42 Annenberg Public Policy Center. "Do You Think the Federal Government Should Do More, the Same, or Nothing at All About Restricting the Kinds of Guns that People Can Buy?" 2 July 2004. http://nationaljournal.com/members/polltrack/2004/issues/04guncontrol.htm#1#1.
43 Ibid.
44 Annenberg Public Policy Center. "The Current Federal Law Banning Assault Weapons is About to Expire. Do You Think the U.S. Congress Should Pass this Law Again or Not?" 23 April 2004. http://nationaljournal.com/members/polltrack/2004/issues/04guncontrol.htm#1#1.
45 Brady Campaign. "The Assault Weapons Ban: Frequently Asked Questions." August 2002. http://www.bradycampaign.org/facts/faqs/?page=awb.
46 NBC News/Wall Street Journal, "Would You Favor or Oppose ... Tougher Gun Laws," March 21, 2004. http://nationaljournal.com/members/polltrack/2004/issues/04guncontrol.htm#1#1.
47 The Gallup Poll, "Gallup's Pulse of Democracy: Crime," 2007. http://www.galluppoll.com/content/default.aspx?ci=1603
48 Barry Krisberg and Susan Marchionna, Focus: Views from the National Council on Crime and Delinquency; Attitudes of US Voters toward Youth Crime and the Justice System, National Council on Crime and Delinquency, February 2007. http://www.nccd-crc.org/nccd/pubs/zogby_feb07.pdf.
49 Barry Krisberg and Susan Marchionna, Focus: Views from the National Council on Crime and Delinquency; Attitudes of US Voters toward Prisoner Rehabilitation and Reentry Policies, April 2006. http://www.njisj.org/pubdocs/2006/red_051206_zogby.pdf
50 Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg, "Americans Worried about Global Warming, Bush Not Doing Enough," August 3, 2006. http://environment.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?zi=1/XJ&sdn=environment
&cdn=newsissues&tm=21&gps=57_355_1020_615&f=00&tt=2&bt=0&bts=0&zu=
http%3A//www.latimes.com/media/acrobat/2006-08/24711743.pdf

51 June 2006. Compared to 30 percent who said immigration is a "bad thing."
52 November 2006.
53 Paul Waldman, "The Liberal Moderates," American Prospect Online, October 18, 2005. http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=the_liberal_moderates.
54 Christopher Ellis, "Conflicted Conservatives: The Politics of Ideological Identification in the United States," Public Opinion Pros, November 2005. http://www.publicopinionpros.com/features/2005/nov/ellis.asp.
55 Lloyd Free and Hadley Cantril, The Political Beliefs of Americans, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1967.



© 2008 Media Matters for America.
All rights reserved.


 
I'm curious to see what Rush, Bill O'Rielly, Ann Coulter el al, will have to say other than, well he's got to reach out to the base.
Maybe a little but suddenly they're not so important anymore.
She's supposed to be on Larry King tonight so that should be interesting.
 
Well it looks like America will finally be free of the conservative idealogues
who have been the tail wagging the Republican dog for the last 27 years.
McCain's victory means they will be put in their place on the fringes where they belong as they do not represent the views of most americans.

As Mr Cut and Paste I present:



http://mediamatters.org/progmaj/report


Come on! Mediamatters.org? There is no credibility there. Just look at the Limbaugh/Phoney solider thing.
 
That's what were gonna end up having to do.

Want to bet who will be the 1st to drop the next a-bomb.
Well, at least in that situation we won't waste billions of dollars in a useless, costly, and dangerous occupation of a foreign country.
 
MonsterMark said:
The Republican party no longer represents the majority of Conservatives. We elect people that put an (R) by their name but they are not conservatives.

They are a mulatto.


Very true. Thats because the country is more mulatto.

There are less people who vote straight party tickets today. People pick and choose candidates and they are tired of the bickering between parties. Every problem is not best solved in a conservative or liberal manner. Some things we need to be more conservative on - others more liberal on.

Times are changing. Baby Boomers are dying off. Hippies are running more things. Gen X is a morph of the two.

It isnt just politics either. Used to be that you worked for one company for 30 years. Not anymore. You cant get ahead that way, even if the company keeps you that long. Companies used to actually care about their employees, now corporate America could care less about the American worker.

And GW --- Bryan, your one of the last few who care about him. GW has been a tragedy all along. You and I both know that the economy doesnt change quickly, its something that takes a few years to show its true effects. Im sure that when the economy is good with Obama in a few years, you'll be crediting GW for it. At that point, I'll search for this thread and remind you of it. In the meantime, blame the economy on predatory lending practices, growing deficts and the unchecked price of oil.

Sure the dollar is in the toilet. While we fight a war the rest of the world is busy building their economies. We're sending our jobs overseas to build their economies. Come on man, it isnt about one party or the other - its about business. And so long as we let and encourage big business to do whatever's cheap, including sending our jobs and manufacturing to china, so they can enrich us with their rising stock prices, we'll keep getting screwed in the back door while China and India build their societies.
 
I just want to see how gracefully or rudely they will concede McCain's victory.
If they don't face the new reality and work with it they will only further marginalize themselves.
This is a spectator sport and I could see myself voting for McCain over Hillary or Obama.
It has been a very exciting race so far and it's far from over
 
Well, at least in that situation we won't waste billions of dollars in a useless, costly, and dangerous occupation of a foreign country.

Operation "Sheet 'o' glass"!!!!!

Nope. No occupation. Just a nice big ol' glass parking lot for our bombers with a lot of oil under it.
 
Baby Boomers are dying off. Hippies are running more things. Gen X is a morph of the two.

Hippies are Baby Boomers. Unless you are talking about these wanna-be hippies in my generation. Those ones aren't running anything. The can't even run a shower!


In the meantime, blame the economy on predatory lending practices, growing deficts and the unchecked price of oil.


I'm not too sold on the idea that deficits hurt the economy. Increased taxes to pay for those deficits, yes; but deficits by themselves? No.

I don't really think the oil is hurting the economy too much yet, either. Would take a much larger jump in price for that to happen.
 
I don't really think the oil is hurting the economy too much yet, either. Would take a much larger jump in price for that to happen.


I disagree. Transportation costs have added to the price of everything.
 
The Republican party no longer represents the majority of Conservatives.
Then why didn't the "majority of conservatives" vote for the candidate(s) who best represented their views? McCain's views were out there for all to see, and yet Republicans voted for him anyway.

Did it ever occur to you that it's you who doesn't represent the "majority of conservatives"?
 
Then why didn't the "majority of conservatives" vote for the candidate(s) who best represented their views? McCain's views were out there for all to see, and yet Republicans voted for him anyway.
Did you ever notice that when something bad happens to America, in this case, the last conservative dropping out of the race, that liberals like TommyB come out of the woodwork to celebrate?

Did it ever occur to you that it's you who doesn't represent the "majority of conservatives"?
Hummm. Republican primary. McCain gets less than 38% of the vote nationally. Gee, wonder who the other 62% are?:rolleyes: Brilliant analysis once again TommyB. Thanks for playing.
 
Very true. Thats because the country is more mulatto.

There are less people who vote straight party tickets today. People pick and choose candidates and they are tired of the bickering between parties. Every problem is not best solved in a conservative or liberal manner. Some things we need to be more conservative on - others more liberal on.

You're giving people too much credit here. Ever seen Jay Leno's man on the street interviews? Don't discount our pathetic education system that produces an idiocracy more easily fooled by the likes of Hillary, Obama, and McCain.


Sure the dollar is in the toilet. While we fight a war the rest of the world is busy building their economies. We're sending our jobs overseas to build their economies. Come on man, it isnt about one party or the other - its about business. And so long as we let and encourage big business to do whatever's cheap, including sending our jobs and manufacturing to china, so they can enrich us with their rising stock prices, we'll keep getting screwed in the back door while China and India build their societies.
It comes down to the government's willingness to print money to pay its bills. This is what's affecting the dollar. Somebody ask the President this question: If printing more money is not harmful to the economy, why not print 9 Trillion dollars and pay off our national debt in one weekend?:rolleyes:
 
Then why didn't the "majority of conservatives" vote for the candidate(s) who best represented their views? McCain's views were out there for all to see, and yet Republicans voted for him anyway.

Did it ever occur to you that it's you who doesn't represent the "majority of conservatives"?

Republican does not equal conservative. Your analysis is dependant on that assumption. As it stands, your analysis is wrong.
 
I hope you don't mind if I take Alan Greenspan's word over yours...

Kthx.



He ties the current deficit to projections and our legislated obligation to pay them (namely social security and the retiring baby boom generation). I am kinda splitting hairs here. The deficit by itself is meaningless, just a number. It is our paying of it that is the issue.

Either way, the end result is damage to the economy. The solution (which will probably never happen) is major cuts in spending. Actual cuts, too; not just a smaller increase in funding which is what all "cuts" coming out of washington are.
 
Deficit spending does hurt the economy. It takes money out of the private sector which would ordinarily be used to grow and benefit the economy.
 

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