Monday, November 17, 2008

Is Barack Obama Super Te Awesome?

Is Barack Obama Super Te Awesome or Does Bush Just Suck?
Robert Sterling

One of the top post-election lies of the mainstream press in its attempt to pump up the Obama cult is the claim the election was decided on how amazing and transformative Obama is. This is no trivial matter: if the election was a referendum on George W. Bush and the last eight years, then that would mean the public was demanding economics that serve the middle class, working class and poor rather than mere crony capitalism and Wall Street bailouts, an end to the Iraq quagmire and a rejection of the militarism that has led to potential conflict with Pakistan, Iran and even both Russia and China, and a rejection of the massive criminality that has led to legalized torture and big brother snooping. If, on the other hand, the meaning of the election is that Barack Obama is just totally bitching, then nothing is demanded of him, indeed, everything is merely demanded of us, that we cry at his transcendental speeches and cheer him on in his sheer perfection.

Of course, statistics are like assholes: everyone's got one, and they're often full of shit. But the evidence suggests that the mass public isn't as in love with Obama as the Kool-Aid kultist are, meaning they were voting for him with decided expectations and demands.

Item one: exit poll data indicates that if Hillary was the candidate rather than Obama, she would've beat McCain by 11 points, rather than the seven that Obama won by...

http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2008/11/12/politics/horserace/entry4596620.shtml

November 12, 2008
Who Were Those Clinton-McCain Crossover Voters?
Posted by Vaughn Ververs

CBS News’ Election and Survey Unit’s survey analyst extraordinaire Jennifer De Pinto goes inside the exit polls from last week’s election and finds some interesting nuggets about those Hillary Clinton supporters who voted for John McCain:

As voters left the polls on Election Day, many were asked how they would have voted if the election match-up were between Hillary Clinton and John McCain rather than Barack Obama and McCain. 52 percent said they would have backed the former Democratic candidate; 41 percent would have voted for McCain, wider than Obama’s 7-point margin over McCain.

Interestingly, 16 percent of McCain voters said they would have voted for Clinton, the Democrat, if she had been her party’s nominee.

So who were these potential cross-over voters?

They were older: 61% of them were age 45 and above.

53% were women; while 47% were men.

43% of these voters who supported McCain but would have backed Clinton if she were in the race described themselves as Independents. 31% were Republicans; while 26% were Democrats.
84% of them were white – higher than the electorate at large. 12% were Hispanic, compared to 9% of the total electorate.

21% of McCain voters who would have supported Clinton said race was factor in their vote. 19% of McCain voters overall said race was factor in their vote.

61% of these McCain voters who would have backed Clinton earned $50K or more annually. 39% earned less. 61% do not have a college degree.

These voters valued experience over change. 47% said experience was their top candidate quality and 32% said a candidate who shares their values. Just 10% picked change. But like voters overall, the economy was the top issue for these voters.

58% of McCain voters who would have supported Clinton if she were a candidate said their candidate’s personal and leadership qualities was more important in their vote; 36% said it was their candidate’s positions on the issues.

Among McCain backers overall, voters were divided with 48% choosing issues and 49% picking qualities. But among the electorate at large, 58% said their candidate’s position on the issues was more important.

While 85% of Obama voters said they would have voted for Clinton had she been the Democratic candidate, 13% would not have supported her including 6% who said they would have backed McCain and 7% who said they would not have voted.

60% of these voters were under age 45.

They were mostly men. 59% were men; while 41% were women.

41% of these voters who supported Obama but would not have backed Clinton if she were in the race described themselves as Democrats. 20% were Republicans; while 38% were Independents.
While most of these voters were white (74%); 17% were black – higher than the share of the total electorate. 5% were Hispanic.

53% of these Obama voters who would not have backed Clinton earned $50K or more annually. 47% earned less. 58% do not have a college degree.

These voters were clearly looking for change – 57% picked it as their top candidate quality. This was followed by values (20%) and cares (12%). Experience ranked last with 8%.

60% of these voters said issue positions were more important; 38% said it was leadership and personal qualities.
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Item number two: in a blind taste test nationally (the party vote nationally for Congress) Democrats beat Republicans by a decided nine points, again two points greater than Obama's victory.

From http://www.thegreenpapers.com/G08/HouseVoteByParty.phtml
(As of 11-17-8)

Democratic 60,518,519 53.25%
Republican 49,961,780 43.96%
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So it seems that Barky not only underperformed the widely-despised-in-the-yuppie-liberal blogosphere Hillary during the election, but did worse than the label "Democratic Congressman" did against a Republican this year. This would mean his victory wasn't a singular achievement by a transformative individual but part of a greater trend of rejecting eight years of Bush. Indeed, it appears if anything, he was a drag on the top ticket, and that in this political climate, a ham sandwich labeled "Democrat" could've kicked John McCain's ass. These facts should be important to remember as the korporate media tries in the coming months to erase all political content from the discussion of politics, as they take the George magazine philosophy of "politics as celebrity worship" to its new absurd heights in hagiographical fawning .

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