Showing posts with label Rhode Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rhode Island. Show all posts

Friday, February 12, 2010

The Times They Are A-Changin'



In the minds of most people living today, there is no memory of a time when a Kennedy did not serve in Congress.

When Edward Kennedy died last year, it was the first time in nearly half a century that a Kennedy did not sit in the U.S. Senate. But his youngest son, Patrick, continued the family tradition as a member of the House, serving Rhode Island's First District.

Now, however, Patrick Kennedy has announced that he will not seek re–election this year. And, as the last Kennedy in Congress makes preparations to leave, it is reasonable to wonder if the Kennedy family will ever send another one of its own to Washington.

Undoubtedly, there are Republicans who are wondering today if Kennedy's open House seat could be picked off in the midterm elections. My initial inclination would be to say no. Kennedy was first elected in the Republican year of 1994 with 54% of the vote, and he was routinely re–elected seven times, usually with two–thirds of the voters supporting him.

The district seems to be solidly Democratic. In the last 70 years, it has been represented by a Republican for only six. In 2008, when the district gave Kennedy 69% of the vote, it gave Barack Obama 65%. In fact, in the last 10 presidential elections, Kennedy's district has only supported the Republican nominee twice — and by very narrow margins (Ronald Reagan in 1984, Richard Nixon in 1972).

But appearances can be deceiving. Maybe Kennedy owed much of his success to the magic of the Kennedy name. Maybe Rhode Island Republicans, who seem — on the surface and from a distance — to have more in common with the "Rockefeller Republicans," the liberals and centrists who once had influence in their party, than the vast majority of Republicans today, can be competitive in 2010.

John Mulligan of the Providence Journal writes that "Kennedy's surprise decision ... instantly raises the prospects for the congressman's Republican opponent ... and may spur a fight among Democratic contenders for the seat.

"But Kennedy's decision 'absolutely, unequivocally has nothing to do with' the congressman's poor showing in recent polls, the shocking election of another little–known Republican state legislator, Scott Brown, to his father's Senate seat or the generally grim mood of voters in Rhode Island and around the country, according to ... the congressman's former chief of staff."


I have heard speculation today that Kennedy's decision was inevitable after his father died, and, indeed, there were indications in his eulogy last August of how deeply he was affected by the loss. He spoke of his childhood struggle with asthma and how it was a blessing for "a child who craved his father's love and attention." He spoke, on that occasion, of how his father remained a "magical figure" in his eyes as he grew up, of how his father found a loophole that permitted Patrick to sail on his crew.

"Just as proud as I was to be a crew on his sailboat, I am forever grateful for the opportunity to have worked with him in the United States Congress as his colleague," Patrick said in his eulogy. "I used to hang on to his T–shirt and his coat sleeve on the Capitol when I was just a little boy. So when I got a chance to serve with him on Capitol Hill, all I needed to do was set my compass to the principles of his life."

Since his father's death, I have had the sense that Patrick's compass increasingly was pointing him in different directions — away from memories of sharing something special with his father.

"I will really miss working with Dad," Patrick said the day his father was buried. "I will miss my Dad's wonderful sense of self–deprecating humor. When the far right made Dad their poster child for their attack ads, he used to say, 'We Kennedys sure bring out the best in people!' "

I don't know where Patrick Kennedy will go at this point in his life, but I hope he finds the fulfillment that will bring out the best in him.

Like his father did.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

The Campaign Will Continue

A couple of things are clear tonight, as the votes are being counted in Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas and Vermont.

* John McCain has wrapped up the Republican presidential nomination. How wildly improbable did that seem only a couple of months ago, when Mike Huckabee and Mitt Romney were at the top and McCain was trailing badly in the Iowa caucuses? But McCain came back, won the New Hampshire primary, and the Arizona senator was on his way to the nomination.

And now, tomorrow, McCain apparently is going to go to the White House to receive the blessing of President Bush, the man who trashed him in South Carolina in 2000.

American politics is nothing if it's not entertaining.

* The Hillary Clinton-Barack Obama battle is going to continue. It may continue to the convention floor in Denver.

Obama did win in Vermont earlier tonight. For an African-American man to dominate in a state that is 95% white -- even a state as small as Vermont -- is no small accomplishment. But exit polls indicated that opposition to the Iraq War was one of the key issues for Democratic voters there, and that's an issue that plays well for Obama.

In the other states, Clinton may very well finish on top. She's already been declared the winner in Ohio -- at the moment, with about two-thirds of the vote counted in Ohio, Clinton has 57% and Obama has 41%.

The count in Rhode Island is nearly complete, and Clinton has won there, receiving 58% of the vote to Obama's 41%.

Here in Texas, it's been extremely close all evening. At one point, with nearly 1.5 million votes counted, the difference between the two was only a few hundred votes. Now, with nearly half the votes counted (about 1.8 million), Clinton's lead is a little more substantial (almost 30,000). She has 50% of the vote, while Obama has 48%.

Now, it seemed to me that, to make up the difference in delegates, Clinton needed to beat Obama by about 20 percentage points in each of the primaries being held today. Well, she came close to that in Ohio and Rhode Island. And she lost Vermont, which has only a handful of delegates, anyway.

But it's so close in Texas that I have to believe that, when we all wake up in the morning, Obama will still be in front in the delegate chase. But his margin will be smaller.

If Clinton holds on and wins Texas, though, she can claim to have won in every large state in the country except the state Obama represents in the Senate -- Illinois. That will make it difficult to deny her the nomination.

But it's still the delegate numbers that will make the decision. And I think that battle won't be decided until the convention.

Looking Ahead to the Fall Campaign ...

The polls are now open here in Texas, along with Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont. If you live in those states (and if you haven't voted early), you have all day to go to your polling place and cast your ballot.

Neither the Democratic nor the Republican presidential nomination has been locked up, although John McCain is pretty close to wrapping up the GOP nod.

But Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are close mathematically -- even if his 11 consecutive victories make Obama look like he has a huge lead. And neither candidate will mathematically secure the nomination tonight.

Even so, Der Spiegel seems to be assuming that Obama will be the Democratic nominee. (While that may ultimately prove to be correct, it is not a sure thing right now.)

So Der Spiegel is getting the jump on other media outlets, speculating on how the Republicans will wage their campaign against Obama this fall.

"[O]nce the votes have been counted after the Texas and Ohio primaries," write Gregor Peter Schmitz and Gabor Steingart, "it will be highly likely that the left and the right will switch gears from simply observing the enemy to open warfare. ... This means one thing for Republicans: It's open season on Barack Obama."

And Der Spiegel implies that the recent skirmish between the Obama and McCain camps over al-Qaeda in Iraq is merely the opening salvos. More hostilities to come, Der Spiegel says.

Der Spiegel makes some interesting and insightful observations about how political campaigns have been waged in recent years and how a campaign between Obama and McCain is likely to be carried out. I encourage you to read what they have to say.

But keep in mind one thing.

Nobody's been nominated yet.

We still have some votes to count.