Wednesday, August 23, 2006

CD5: Ember Reichgott-Junge wants a Minnesota for Lieberman party

There's a lot of buzz in the MN blogosphere (see here, here, here, here, etc.) about the nature of Ember Reichgott-Junge's support. The Republican nature of it.

For those who haven't been watching the race, the DFL-endorsed candidate is Keith Ellison, a solid progressive. Several other candidates are running because, essentially, whoever wins the DFL primary will get the seat.

ERJ is a longtime Lieberman supporter who, when called out on it by the Ellison campaign, has tried to distance herself, but not gotten very far.

Since the last poll I've seen in the race had no more than a 4% gap between #1 and #3 with a whopping 6% MOE, it's critical that Republican-lites be exposed for what they are before the Sept. 12th primary.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

The Home State Myth

There's a widespread idea (seen particularly with respect to Al Gore and Tennessee in 2000) that it should be expected that presidential candidates will carry their home states. This is often extended to a premise that adding a VP to the ticket will bring their state into line.

Apparently Bush believes in the home-state myth too, as seen in his recent comment that he thinks he's the only presidential candidate to not carry his state of birth. This is actually a rather suprising comment from Bush, as he typically tries to avoid reminding people that he was born in Connecticut. David Stout of the NYT shoots that idea down.

Frankly, the idea is ridiculous. There's very little evidence to indicate more than a modest boost to a particular candidate in his home state. I suspect some who claim this are basing it off of 1968 and 1984, where Hubert Humphrey and Walter Mondale won Minnesota, not realizing that this has less to do with home-state appeal than the fact that from 1932 on, Minnesota has only gone Republican in a presidential election three times: 1952 and 1956 (Eisenhower was very popular in MN while Stevenson was seen by many as too much of an "egghead") and 1972 (Nixon 51.6% - McGovern 46.1%, the fourth most-Democratic result in that election).

Monday, August 21, 2006

A Public Service Announcement

If you need to talk to the people at Megabus, such as if their website suddenly went down and you couldn't find the location of a stop so as to catch the bus, or if a bus is running quite late and waiting passengers are getting restless (two things that happened), call 1-877-462-6342. If you get a recording about the office being closed, or all lines busy, or similar, hit 0 and you should get a real person. They're generally pretty helpful, and if you're with a large group of passengers waiting for the bus, they'll actually be glad to have a contact there.