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View Full Version : Tuesday's Election Results: Liberals Lose Across the Board


PittsburghAfterDark
06-07-2006, 03:42 AM
Republican leads in Calif. bellwether race

CARLSBAD, Calif. (AP) ? In the most closely watched contest in eight states Tuesday, a former Republican congressman took the early lead in a bellwether House race in California where the parties hammered campaign themes of corruption and immigration that could play out in the fall midterm elections.
With 46% of precincts reporting, Republican Brian Bilbray was ahead with 35,505 votes, or 50%, to Democrat Francine Busby's 31,955 votes, or 45%, in the special election to replace Randy "Duke" Cunningham, who was convicted of corruption charges.

Democrats will cry about "moral victory" in this case but no one ever gained a House seat by moral victory.??Only the votes count folks.??If you can't win a seat from a party when it's previous holder was so corrupt he goes to jail, your message really, really sucks.??I mean you must have said something like "You don't need papers to vote." to a gathering of illegal immigrants to lose an election that was this much of a gimme. Oh wait, that really happened?

Elsewhere, Alabama Gov. Bob Riley easily beat back a GOP primary challenge from Ten Commandments judge Roy Moore, while Democratic former Gov. Don Siegelman ? who campaigned while on trial on corruption charges ? lost his comeback fight against the state's first female lieutenant governor. Also in Alabama, voters passed a ban on gay marriage by a 4-to-1 margin.

There you go folks, for the 14th time since 2004 gay marriage goes down in crushing defeat on a state wide ballot.??Not one state in the country has had an actual vote come in at less than 55% opposing it and most states reject this issue with over 60% of the popular vote.

RESULTS: Religious turn out for gay marriage, not judge

Another Washington corruption case figured in Montana's primary, where GOP Sen. Conrad Burns sought the nomination for a fourth term. After his ties to disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff became known, Burns saw his popularity fall. He beat several primary challengers and won nearly three-quarters of the vote. His Democratic challenger in the fall will be state Senate President Jon Tester.

Wow, that's pretty dam pathetic spin here.??The guy saw popularity fall yet won 75% of the vote???BWHAHAHAHAHA nice f'in lie there.

In Iowa, the retirement of two-term Democratic Gov. Tom Vilsack set off a wide-open race. Secretary of State Chet Culver beat a crowded Democratic field to face GOP Rep. Jim Nussle, who had no primary opposition, in the fall.

California also saw a tight race between the two Democrats hoping to challenge GOP Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. With 57% of precincts reporting, state Treasurer Phil Angelides had 681,986 votes, or 47%, to Controller Steve Westly's 627,599 votes, or 44%.

Iowa, Mississippi, Montana, New Mexico and South Dakota also held primaries. Corruption and allegations of corruption ? in California, Alabama and Montana ? criss-crossed the country. Immigration was a campaign issue from the South to the Plains.

Still, the biggest race was the one to replace Cunningham, who was sentenced to eight years in prison for taking bribes on a scale unparalleled in the history of Congress. Democrats saw a rich opportunity to capture a solidly Republican district and build momentum on their hopes to capture control of the House.

National Democrats spent nearly $2 million on the race; the GOP spent $4.5 million. President Bush and first lady Laura Bush recorded telephone messages for Bilbray, while the Democrats' last two presidential candidates ? John Kerry and Al Gore ? urged supporters to back Busby.

Bilbray, made immigration the centerpiece of his campaign, proposing a fence "from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico" and restrictions to keep illegal immigrants from collecting Social Security and other benefits.

Busby, a local school board member, focused her campaign on public dissatisfaction with the Bush administration and the GOP-led Congress, and assailed Bilbray for working as a lobbyist in Washington. She consistently referred to him as "the lobbyist Bilbray."

With votes still being counted in California, officials said winners may not be determined in the House race or the governor's race until later Wednesday.

In New Jersey, Republicans chose Tom Kean Jr., the son of a popular former governor, to challenge Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez in the fall.

Kean ? who critics said needed a convincing win to be a real challenger ? easily defeated a more conservative candidate, winning three of every four votes. Menendez, appointed to his seat after former Sen. Jon Corzine became governor, beat a little-known challenger.

In the weeks leading up to Alabama's gubernatorial primary, polls showed Riley with a growing lead on Moore, the former state chief justice who became a hero to the religious right in 2003 when he was ousted over his refusal to remove the Commandments monument from the state judicial building.

As I've said all along, this portrayal of the "religous right" dominating the Republican party is a fabrication of the press.??Yes, there are a whole bunch of them but they can not, will not and do not win elections on their own.??Proof positive right here.

That same year, Riley saw his popularity plummet when he unsuccessfully sought a $1.2 billion tax increase. But his standing rose with the state economy, and this year he helped pass a tax cut for the working poor.

Lt. Gov. Lucy Baxley fashioned an "I Love Lucy" campaign, while Siegelman had to campaign at night while on trial on corruption charges during the day. She won with 60% of the vote while Siegelman got just 36%. Riley took 67% of the vote, and Moore 33%.

Schwarzenegger won the GOP nomination with only token opposition, while Angelides and Westly fought a close and nasty contest for the Democratic nomination that left many voters dismayed.

Several House incumbents who were leading against primary challenges included GOP Rep. Richard Pombo and hawkish Democratic Rep. Jane Harman, both of California.

Wait, the Cindy Sheehan crowd is out challenging Democrats???Now that's rich.

A few races brought back some familiar names:

? Jerry Brown ? the former California governor, presidential candidate and current Oakland mayor ? won the Democratic primary for attorney general.

? Chuck Espy, a state lawmaker and nephew of Mike Espy, Mississippi's first black congressman since Reconstruction, lost his primary challenge to Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson.

? George C. Wallace Jr., son of the former Alabama governor, trailed in the GOP primary for lieutenant governor to attorney Luther Strange but the race goes to a runoff because no one got 50%.

? Hollywood director Rob Reiner was the leading backer of a measure in California to create a $2.4 billion universal preschool program, which went down to defeat by a 60-to-40-percent margin.

So good old Meathead comes up with an idea that he loves, his friends love, costs tons of money and the voters reject.??Can't wait to see the spin His Baldness puts on this one trying to call the voters of Californina dumb without directly saying they're dumb.

Link (http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-06-06-primaries_x.htm)

PittsburghAfterDark
06-07-2006, 12:45 PM
Calif. voters reject $600 mln bond, tax increase
Wed Jun 7, 2006 3:18am ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - California voters appeared to have rejected ballot measures to authorize the state to sell $600 million in bonds for libraries and raise taxes to fund free preschool for 4-year-old children, according to election results early on Wednesday.

With 43.9 percent of precincts reporting, 53.4 percent of votes had been cast against Proposition 81 and 46.6 percent of votes had been cast in favor of the measure, which proposed the general obligation debt sale to finance building and renovating libraries.

The state's Legislative Analyst's Office had estimated it would have cost California $1.2 billion from its general fund over 30 years to pay off the $600 million in principal and $570 million in interest expenses from the debt.

Voters also rejected Proposition 82, which had been spearheaded by actor-director Rob Reiner and backed by the state's teachers' union, the California Teachers Association.

The ballot measure would have imposed a 1.7 percent tax on individuals with incomes above $400,000 and on couples with incomes above $800,000 to raise $2.4 billion to fund the preschool program.

The measure was rejected by 59.3 percent of voters and supported by 40.7 of voters, according to results from 43.9 percent of precincts.
Link (http://today.reuters.com/news/newsarticle.aspx?type=politicsNews&storyid=2006-06-07T092140Z_01_N06690_RTRUKOC_0_US-ECONOMY-CALIFORNIA-BALLOTMEASURES.xml&src=rss&rpc=22)

Holy shit, even California said no to outright class warfare.

Talk about liberal ideals taking a major league beating, not even the liberals wanted it.