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Treasurer's race: Betsy Markey hammers Walker Stapleton on attendance

Democrat Betsy Markeys ad.

Democrat Betsy Markey claims in her first campaign ad that Republican state Treasurer Walker Stapleton is AWOL an awful lot a charge his campaign dismisses as silly.

At best, its inexcusable. At worst, its a scandal, the spot says. According to official key card records, Stapleton only bothers showing up at his office around 10 days a month.

Stapletons campaign spokesman, Michael Fortney, said when the treasurer forgets his key card, which is often, he goes through the public entrance where attendance records are not kept.

This is silly. Betsy knows there is more than one way to get into the Capitol. The fact is she has zero understanding of the treasurers office and public finance so she has to rely on this garbage, Fortney said.

The ad concludes by saying for a serious state treasurer, who built one of Americas 500 fastest-growing companies, businesswoman Betsy Markey.

Actually, most folks identify Markey as a former congresswoman who took out ultra conservative Marilyn Musgrave in 2008, despite Congressional District 4 being incredibly favorable to Republicans. Markey was defeated by state Rep. Cory Gardner in the 2010 GOP wave; he now is running for the U.S. Senate. Stapleton that same year defeated the incumbent state treasurer, Democrat Cary Kennedy. He now is running for re-election.

Heres the script for the ad:

At best, its inexcusable. At worst, its a scandal.

State Treasurer Walker Stapleton.

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Treasurer's race: Betsy Markey hammers Walker Stapleton on attendance

Democrat strategist says Obama 'should take a flamethrower to his office'

President Obama speaking with Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell about the new Ebola virus diagnosis in Dallas. (Associated Press) ** FILE ** more >

President Obama needs to sweep through his inner ranks and weed out those who arent doing him any political good those who are simply telling him what he wants to hear, rather than what he needs to hear, a key Democratic strategist said.

Only the strategist unnamed in The Hill article used more colorful language: Mr. Obama should take a flamethrower to his office, the Democrat said.

He needs dramatic change its not even a debatable point, the strategist went on, The Hill reported. The general consensus is that the president is surrounded by people who do him more harm than good because they are more focused on pleasing him than they are challenging him or proposing a different course.

The Hill reported other Democrats are saying similarly, due in large part to the presidents failure to pass much of his agenda since his re-election. Meanwhile, most Democrats seeking political re-election have seemed to distance themselves from Mr. Obama, preferring he stay far from their campaign trails.

When he lost [David] Plouffe, when [David] Axelrod left, there arent too many people who can walk into the Oval Office and shut the door, said Democratic strategist Peter Finn, The Hill reported. And those guys could they could speak really frankly to him. How does he put people in the White House with serious political chops?

Meanwhile, Jim Manley, a former aide to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, said the White House was going to have to face a quick overhaul soon, and its probably something theyre going to have to consider for a lot of different reasons, The Hill reported.

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Democrat strategist says Obama 'should take a flamethrower to his office'

Attorney General Facing A Conservative And Radical Liberal In General Election

HARTFORD - The last time a non-Democrat held the office of attorney general in Connecticut was 1959. The current Democratic occupant, George Jepsen, was all of five years old back then.

In this election, Jepsen is being challenged by opponents who occupy opposite ends of the political spectrum and have very different approaches to the campaign.

Republican Kie Westby is a conservative lawyer from Thomaston who believes Connecticut must drop its "anti-business attitude" that he claims has driven companies out of the state and hurt job growth. He's also an NRA member opposed to new state gun controls passed after the Sandy Hook killings, and a harsh critic of "Common Core" educational standards.

Green Party candidate Stephen Fournier is proudly "to the left of the other two" in the race. He considers the federal government an "enemy of the state of Connecticut," and wants to investigate its role in the 9/11 disaster. Fournier thinks many voters out there are as angry as he is with big government and big business.

Jepsen's challengers are leaving the incumbent a lot of room in the political middle. Like his predecessors in the attorney general's office, Jepsen casts himself as a champion of consumers and a defender of personal privacy.

Tried-and-true formula

It's a tried-and-true formula, and a recent opinion survey by Public Policy Polling indicates it may well be working again: the poll gave Jepsen a 15-point edge over Westby and a 36-point advantage over Fournier.

Both Jepsen and Westby are planning on using the state's public campaign finance system, which would give each more than $812,000 in taxpayer money to spend on this election. Fournier isn't seeking any public election funding, and expects to spend less than $1,000 on his third-party candidacy.

Jepsen last week put up his first TV campaign ad of the race. Westby, who only recently made his formal application for public financing, is hoping for a quick approval so he can respond with his own TV commercials.

In 2010, Jepsen won his first attorney general contest with 53.7 percent of the vote. Republican Martha Dean another GOP conservative pulled 43.6 percent, while Fournier got 2.9 percent of the ballots cast.

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Attorney General Facing A Conservative And Radical Liberal In General Election

Immense Lie About ISIS Spreads Fear, Confusion & The Republican Message – Video


Immense Lie About ISIS Spreads Fear, Confusion The Republican Message
"Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) claimed Tuesday that "at least" 10 Islamic State fighters were apprehended while attempting to enter the U.S. at its southern border. The San Diego Republican...

By: The Young Turks

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Immense Lie About ISIS Spreads Fear, Confusion & The Republican Message - Video

Can the California GOP craft a winning campaign strategy?

As California's Republican Party contemplates its way out of the political wilderness, most of the public debate has focused on questions of ideology: Can social conservatives stomach moderation on issues such as abortion or gay marriage in exchange for election victories?

That's a serious question with lasting implications for the party's identity, but there's another discussion underway as well: Is the GOP's best strategy to pursue change from the top down securing a statewide office or two to reestablish a beachhead in Sacramento or from the ground up, doing the painstaking work of electing Republicans to local offices in the hopes that those politicians can amass the experience and credibility to someday recapture offices once held by the likes of Ronald Reagan, Earl Warren and Richard Nixon?

Both approaches are in play during this election cycle. Pressing for change from the top, businessman Neel Kashkari is challenging one of the lions of California politics, Gov. Jerry Brown, the longest-serving governor in the state's history and the only one to hold the office in two separate stretches (and in two different centuries). Kashkari had to fight his way past a far more conservative opponent, and he argues that this election marks an opportunity for the party to ditch some of the habits that have alienated so many California voters. He's pro-choice, supports same-sex marriage and has doubts about the war on drugs and the harsh sentences it has imposed, particularly on minority offenders.

Despite those unconventional positions for a Republican, a recent Field poll showed that 71% of conservatives supported Kashkari, at least against Brown. "We're a case study for this approach," the candidate told me last week as he hustled between campaign stops.

But if Kashkari's quest to move his party depends on his winning in November, it's probably doomed. The same poll that showed him performing well with conservatives had him trailing Brown by more than 20 points among those who consider themselves "middle of the road." And among liberals, the poll had him losing by a laughable 91% to 1%.

If Kashkari wins, he'll be in a position to argue that he's charted a new way. If he loses, however, that's a harder sell. Meanwhile, Ashley Swearengin, the Fresno mayor who's running for controller, could be a breakout candidate for the party, as could Pete Peterson in the campaign for secretary of state. But they too are trailing in the polls and facing the formidable head wind of the Democrats' registration advantage.

Parke Skelton, the consultant for Democrat Betty Yee in the controller's race, points out that the partisan breakdown of June primary voters in that contest was 43% Democratic to 32% Republican. In the general election, it's likely to notch up a few points in Democrats' favor, meaning that roughly 45% of the electorate will be Democratic, compared with just 32% Republican.

Aaron McLear, senior advisor to the Kashkari campaign, pointed out to me last week that, for a Republican to win statewide, he or she needs to carry 95% of Republican voters, two-thirds of independents and about one-third of Democrats. That is, as he said, "tough, really tough."

So, if a breakthrough is possible but very difficult, what about the more patient work of local campaigns? Ruben Barrales is president of a group called Grow Elect, which is trying to do just that. The organization has been working since 2011 to promote the candidacies of Latino Republicans for city councils, county boards of supervisors and special districts. In that time, the group says it has helped elect 60 candidates.

Barrales agrees that it's important for Republicans to set a more welcoming tone on social issues especially immigration and credits Kashkari with helping to lead the way. But he also recognizes the difficulties confronting any Republican candidate for a statewide office, and he says long-term success can come only through grass-roots organizing and winning races further down the ticket.

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Can the California GOP craft a winning campaign strategy?