Conservative cookies nomz. But I think you missed my main point...
beetnemesis Send a noteboard - 14/03/2012 07:09:24 PM
We will get a lot of ex-Obama voters,
Will you? That's what I was asking, what would make someone who voted for Obama in '08 decide to vote Republican? I can see former supporters being disillusioned, even disillusioned enough to just not vote at all ("Ugh, what does it matter, no matter who I vote for, the banks and corporations have all the power, etc."
. I can't really think of a specific issue that would drive former Obama supporters to the right, though. It's not like someone who voted for Obama in '08 is suddenly going to go, "You know, I never thought about it before, but Planned Parenthood IS a symbol of utter depravity in our nation!"
The only thing I could think of would be under the general heading of "Taxes/The Economy," but there's two problems with that:
1) It's hard to be passionate and informed about the economy in any specific sense. Most people do not have economics degrees (including me), so people's opinions tend to get boiled down to sound bites such as "The 1%," "Trickle-Down," and all the rest. That is, if The Economy is an important political issue to you, you're unlikely to switch sides, simply because you don't know enough about it.
2) The Republicans HAD their taxes/economy plan implemented, under Bush, and suddenly we were in a recession. I'm not saying that Bush caused the recession. I am saying, though, that it'd be hard to get someone to switch from Obama to the GOP on the basis of the economy, because we just HAD 8 years of Republican economic policies, and it didn't seem to have a noticeable benefit.
So, can you think of anything that would cause someone who voted for Obama in '08 to suddenly go, "Hm, I guess the Republicans were right about that all along?"
I amuse myself.
can *any* republican pose a challenge to obama in november?
- 14/03/2012 04:06:59 AM
1438 Views
Yes, absolutely.....
- 14/03/2012 04:12:30 AM
895 Views
"anybody but obama" is not a winning strategy
- 14/03/2012 02:28:23 PM
857 Views
It can definitely work.....don't compare 2012 to 2004.
- 14/03/2012 02:44:39 PM
729 Views
this is why it will be 2004 all over again if romney is nominated
- 16/03/2012 02:22:26 PM
784 Views
It sure as Hell is, as long as the candidate is moderate
- 14/03/2012 03:04:10 PM
986 Views
Did you vote for Obama in 2008?
- 14/03/2012 03:47:55 PM
725 Views
Yes I did. If Romney is the candidate, I will vote Romney this year. *NM*
- 14/03/2012 08:39:41 PM
446 Views
Strongly qualifying your statement really weakens the "anyone".
*NM*
- 14/03/2012 10:14:45 PM
452 Views
*NM*
- 14/03/2012 10:14:45 PM
452 Views
The statement "anyone but Obama" can be a rallying cry, but only for the right candidates.
- 16/03/2012 01:47:48 AM
886 Views
somehow i don't see romney having much credibility versus obama
- 16/03/2012 02:16:32 PM
781 Views
Spoken like a true Obama partisan
- 16/03/2012 04:18:21 PM
772 Views
actually, i did not vote for obama in 2008 and i won't this time either
- 17/03/2012 01:02:09 PM
838 Views
Sure, if Israel hits Iran and Obama looks weak.
- 14/03/2012 04:56:23 AM
898 Views
i think iran/israel is probably the biggest issue at the moment
- 14/03/2012 02:25:29 PM
891 Views
I would put serious money on an Israeli attack before the election.
- 14/03/2012 02:56:55 PM
906 Views
I know that I would consider voting for Romney
- 14/03/2012 01:05:47 PM
865 Views
If you will pardon an impertinent question: Why?
- 14/03/2012 03:26:01 PM
839 Views
Because Obama is a complete and utter failure.....
- 14/03/2012 03:44:14 PM
784 Views
Again, I get Republicans voting Anybody but Obama, but not how anyone can be comfortable w/ Romney.
- 14/03/2012 04:06:14 PM
916 Views
Pre-convention only the incumbents favorability ratings matter much
- 14/03/2012 01:19:04 PM
886 Views
obama is not popular, but at least he has the ability to organize a national campaign
- 14/03/2012 02:18:04 PM
871 Views
No, the democratic party does, so does the GOP
- 14/03/2012 03:16:31 PM
905 Views
That's true- despite how divisive the primaries seem, the GOP will unite behind the winner
- 14/03/2012 03:44:16 PM
921 Views
Re: That's true- despite how divisive the primaries seem, the GOP will unite behind the winner
- 14/03/2012 03:59:25 PM
855 Views
Actually, my experience has been a lot of libs mean it when they say they will not for anyone.
- 14/03/2012 04:19:46 PM
713 Views
I don't want to grossly over-generalize but there are distinct trends to party demographics
- 14/03/2012 06:04:09 PM
953 Views
I was thinking no, and here's my rationale:
- 14/03/2012 03:41:21 PM
817 Views
Much as it pains me to agree with trzaska, he is absolutely right in this case.
- 14/03/2012 04:21:43 PM
1027 Views
Interesting. So you guys are basically saying I'm right, but it might not matter
- 14/03/2012 04:53:48 PM
892 Views
Yeah, pretty much, and I would even say that is the trend in all Dem vs. Rep elections.
- 14/03/2012 04:59:30 PM
895 Views
Yes and no
- 14/03/2012 06:23:47 PM
1003 Views
Conservative cookies nomz. But I think you missed my main point...
- 14/03/2012 07:02:10 PM
847 Views
Conservative cookies nomz. But I think you missed my main point...
- 14/03/2012 07:09:24 PM
783 Views
And the cookies are not a lie... at last night's meeting, we had Thin Mints
- 15/03/2012 09:51:30 PM
884 Views
Yeah, I just meant perception
- 16/03/2012 02:39:30 AM
868 Views
One day Republicans and internet trolls alike will learn not to say weird shit to people like me.
- 15/03/2012 12:30:17 AM
989 Views
I like this post.
- 15/03/2012 08:40:07 PM
814 Views
I don't mean to disrespect your seal, but it looks more like a cat. *NM*
- 15/03/2012 08:52:26 PM
330 Views
You've obviously never heard of a kitten seal, Mr. I-Write-An-Animal-Blog. *NM*
- 15/03/2012 09:38:47 PM
449 Views
Maybe it's a leopard seal. That someone put a cat-ear band on. *NM*
- 15/03/2012 10:07:46 PM
354 Views
Does it matter if they do? At this point, does it matter who is president? Probably not.
- 16/03/2012 02:11:45 AM
933 Views


