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Obama picks up huge endorsement in key battle ground state!

  • AlphaBuckeye06 said...

    Their not a liberal paper, even if so. Their the largest paper in the state. It should help the President in that region! It also gets that 47% comment fresh in people's heads.

    Well......team Obama is about to pack up in CO and it is NOT because they have it in the bag. Data shows there is a massive swing to Republicans based on early voter and absentee data.

    GABuckgrad

  • Buckeye Warrior said...

    What are you talking about Demy? Obama has cut the deficit in half in his first term.

    http://youtu.be/SaQUU2ZL6D8

    To be fair, I think he actually has cut the deficit by 25% and it will be cut by 35% by end of 2013.
    He didnt hit 50%, but then again, your beloved Republicans who are bought and paid for by the Tea Party and Grover Norquist wouldn't let them be bipartisan, now would they?

    bengalbux

  • GABuckgrad said...

    Well......team Obama is about to pack up in CO and it is NOT because they have it in the bag. Data shows there is a massive swing to Republicans based on early voter and absentee data.

    Barry is still up by 3 in Colorado.

    http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2012/10/19/Poll-Obama-leads-by-three-points-in-Colo/UPI-30441350672707/

    bengalbux

  • MITbuck313 said...

    What about Obama's comment about businesses not building that? Just curious? Apparently when the POTUS says it, it was just a mistake when someone else says it it's how he really feels.

    There is a difference. Obamas comment was taken out of context, because he had praised businesses leaders earlier in the speech, I will admit, his inflection made it seem like he was ripping them..... But, there is a tape of Romney making those exact same comments, on two different occasions.

    The difference is, Romney was, well lets cut to the chase, he was being an elitist, try to pamper to his audience. Everyone knows, if everyone of the people who are part of the 47% voted for Obama, it would be a landslide....... He basically was implying, poor people are Democrates, rich people are Republicans... You know, being a snob....

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  • bengalbux said...

    To be fair, I think he actually has cut the deficit by 25% and it will be cut by 35% by end of 2013. He didnt hit 50%, but then again, your beloved Republicans who are bought and paid for by the Tea Party and Grover Norquist wouldn't let them be bipartisan, now would they?

    What? The deficit INCREASED by 33% under Obama? Obama has increased it by $5 Trillion.

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  • Akron Beackon Journal supports Obama!

    Ohio.com > Editorial > Editorials >
    Obama for president

    Published: October 20, 2012 - 10:08 PM
    Four years ago, Barack Obama succeeded where Democrats long have struggled. On Election Day, he carried such states as Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia. His message resonated, that one of hope and change, of remaking the culture of Washington, the candidate of a new generation ready to apply what works to the country’s problems. And now? The president faces a struggle for re-election, Mitt Romney benefiting not just from the troubled economy but also from the grandiose promises of Obama the candidate.

    Washington wasn’t going to change. If anything, Republicans grasped the stakes: Continued wrangling and gridlock would reflect poorly on the president, his pledge proving empty. So disappointment burdens the president’s pursuit of a second term. Yet he shouldn’t be measured merely against his soaring words. What matters are his real accomplishments and the direction he proposes for the years ahead.

    On both those counts, he has succeeded far more than his critics contend. We recommend the re-election of Barack Obama on Nov. 6.

    Recall how dire things were when he arrived at the White House, the economy plunging downward, at a pace much worse than almost anyone thought, contracting 8.9 percent in the final quarter of 2008, and then another 6.5 percent the following three months. The job losses were staggering, the contraction the most severe since the Great Depression. The blows to housing, construction and finance made certain the recovery would be slow and halting, many coping with diminished assets and heavy debt, all of it setting back demand.

    In response, the Obama White House and a Democratic Congress acted as aggressively as the political landscape would allow. They enacted a stimulus package that prevented something much worse and set the economy on a path of growth. They rescued the auto industry. They strengthened regulation of Wall Street.

    Ohioans should know the makeover of General Motors and Chrysler avoided what would have been calamitous, liquidation, no less, the ripple effect upending lives far removed from automakers and their suppliers.

    The accomplishments on the president’s watch haven’t stopped there. The list is impressive and bears repeating, if just in part:

    • Health-care reform, a landmark advance toward universal care, long sought, finally achieved.

    • A restructured student loan program and expanded Pell Grants.

    • A modernized food-safety system.

    • The repeal of the corrosive “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy against gays in the military.

    • A dramatic increase in fuel-efficiency standards for cars and trucks.

    • Greater clarity and accountability in the way credit-card companies operate.

    • An end to restrictions on stem-cell research.

    • A deal to cut $1.5 trillion in spending, or half the amount proposed by Bowles-Simpson.

    • Limits on mercury and other toxic emissions, rules 20 years in the making.

    For its part, the stimulus package wasn’t just about easing the blow of the recession. It looked forward via the first substantial commitment to research and development of green technology and through the Race to the Top, a competitive grant program applauded by Republicans and Democrats, to spur reform in public schools.

    In foreign affairs, the president has elevated the country’s image abroad, in part, through working more with other nations, notably in pressuring Iran. The president brought balance and principle to the fight against Islamic extremists, ending formally the use of torture, hunting down and killing al-Qaida leaders, including Osama bin Laden. He ended the war in Iraq and has launched the exit from Afghanistan. After a bumpy beginning, he has managed effectively relations with China, welcoming its emergence yet engaging in strategic pushback.

    Has all of this been achieved flawlessly? Hardly. The president lacks the political skills of a Ronald Reagan or Bill Clinton. Errors have been many, difficulties remain. They include a failure to address more directly the battered housing market. The drone program proceeds without the necessary oversight.

    What is telling about a presidency is its tilt, its direction, spirit and priorities. Thus, to those who argue the president lacks a plan for a second term: Look at the foundation that has been set. He has used the levers of government to bolster the economy, investing in education, innovation and health care, understanding the essential role of the public sector in competitiveness. Those tasks are not complete. They would continue.

    The president has governed more from the middle than many give him credit. Consider the Republican ideas in health-care reform, or the Race to the Top, or the tax cuts in the stimulus. He has stated his readiness to compromise on long-term deficit reduction. The problem has been Republican resistance to tax increases as part of a realistic and responsible approach.

    That commitment to compromise, or governing, is crucial to addressing other pressing challenges such as illegal immigration and climate change. It has been present in his nominations to the Supreme Court, tapping those who recognize the value of settled law in areas ranging from the Commerce Clause to the rights of women to make choices about their health care.

    n

    Of late, especially, Mitt Romney has argued that he is eager to bring together Republicans and Democrats. The sale becomes harder to make in view of his courting the ascendant far right of his party the past six years. He has described himself as “severely conservative.” He talks often about tax reform and the moral obligation to address the country’s debt. Yet he eschews the necessary step of raising additional revenues to complement spending reductions.

    Romney would be more credible as a candidate if on one occasion he had told the far right something it did not want to hear. Instead, the man who once was a moderate, appealingly pragmatic, has massaged positions, ducked and performed full flips, saying little about his leading achievement as the governor of Massachusetts, health-care reform, which served as a model for the president. The obvious question then surfaces: What does he really think? What would be the tilt of his presidency?

    The doubts deepen in view of his vague policy proposals. He pledges to create 12 million new jobs. He barely hints about how he would do so, except to highlight a five-point plan that is part familiar rhetoric of a challenger (bash China and promise energy independence) and part echo of what the president already has set in motion, increased exports and improved schools.

    Rommey still hasn’t explained how an additional $2 trillion in defense spending would aid the country strategically. He favors a tougher posture in foreign affairs without explaining how his stance would differ from the George W. Bush years, when pugnacity did not translate into greater influence and power.

    No question, Romney is a smart, successful financier, a man of faith and accomplishment. What troubles is his public character, the opportunistic shifts and more. It is unacceptable that in seeking the presidency, he refuses to share his income tax returns in a way comparable to what he required of his running mate, Paul Ryan.

    Finally, Romney cannot walk back easily his comments at a Florida fund-raiser about 47 percent of Americans refusing to take responsibility or care for their lives. He either was telling the crowd what he thought it wanted to hear, or he believes what he said. Either way, the words aren’t worthy of a president.

    Click here to read or leave a comment on this story.

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    Obama for president

    Four years ago, Barack Obama succeeded where Democrats long have struggled. On Election Day, he carried such states as Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia. His message resonated, that one of hope and change, of remaking the culture of Washington, the candidate of a new generation ready to apply what works to the countrys problems. And now? The president faces a struggle for re-election, Mitt Romney benefiting not just from the troubled economy but also from the grandiose promises of Obama the candidate.

    www.ohio.com

    AlphaBuckeye06

  • AlphaBuckeye06 said...

    Akron Beackon Journal supports Obama!

    Ohio.com > Editorial > Editorials >Obama for president

    Published: October 20, 2012 - 10:08 PM Four years ago, Barack Obama succeeded where Democrats long have struggled. On Election Day, he carried such states as Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia. His message resonated, that one of hope and change, of remaking the culture of Washington, the candidate of a new generation ready to apply what works to the country’s problems. And now? The president faces a struggle for re-election, Mitt Romney benefiting not just from the troubled economy but also from the grandiose promises of Obama the candidate.

    Washington wasn’t going to change. If anything, Republicans grasped the stakes: Continued wrangling and gridlock would reflect poorly on the president, his pledge proving empty. So disappointment burdens the president’s pursuit of a second term. Yet he shouldn’t be measured merely against his soaring words. What matters are his real accomplishments and the direction he proposes for the years ahead.

    On both those counts, he has succeeded far more than his critics contend. We recommend the re-election of Barack Obama on Nov. 6.

    Recall how dire things were when he arrived at the White House, the economy plunging downward, at a pace much worse than almost anyone thought, contracting 8.9 percent in the final quarter of 2008, and then another 6.5 percent the following three months. The job losses were staggering, the contraction the most severe since the Great Depression. The blows to housing, construction and finance made certain the recovery would be slow and halting, many coping with diminished assets and heavy debt, all of it setting back demand.

    In response, the Obama White House and a Democratic Congress acted as aggressively as the political landscape would allow. They enacted a stimulus package that prevented something much worse and set the economy on a path of growth. They rescued the auto industry. They strengthened regulation of Wall Street.

    Ohioans should know the makeover of General Motors and Chrysler avoided what would have been calamitous, liquidation, no less, the ripple effect upending lives far removed from automakers and their suppliers.

    The accomplishments on the president’s watch haven’t stopped there. The list is impressive and bears repeating, if just in part:

    • Health-care reform, a landmark advance toward universal care, long sought, finally achieved.

    • A restructured student loan program and expanded Pell Grants.

    • A modernized food-safety system.

    • The repeal of the corrosive “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy against gays in the military.

    • A dramatic increase in fuel-efficiency standards for cars and trucks.

    • Greater clarity and accountability in the way credit-card companies operate.

    • An end to restrictions on stem-cell research.

    • A deal to cut $1.5 trillion in spending, or half the amount proposed by Bowles-Simpson.

    • Limits on mercury and other toxic emissions, rules 20 years in the making.

    For its part, the stimulus package wasn’t just about easing the blow of the recession. It looked forward via the first substantial commitment to research and development of green technology and through the Race to the Top, a competitive grant program applauded by Republicans and Democrats, to spur reform in public schools.

    In foreign affairs, the president has elevated the country’s image abroad, in part, through working more with other nations, notably in pressuring Iran. The president brought balance and principle to the fight against Islamic extremists, ending formally the use of torture, hunting down and killing al-Qaida leaders, including Osama bin Laden. He ended the war in Iraq and has launched the exit from Afghanistan. After a bumpy beginning, he has managed effectively relations with China, welcoming its emergence yet engaging in strategic pushback.

    Has all of this been achieved flawlessly? Hardly. The president lacks the political skills of a Ronald Reagan or Bill Clinton. Errors have been many, difficulties remain. They include a failure to address more directly the battered housing market. The drone program proceeds without the necessary oversight.

    What is telling about a presidency is its tilt, its direction, spirit and priorities. Thus, to those who argue the president lacks a plan for a second term: Look at the foundation that has been set. He has used the levers of government to bolster the economy, investing in education, innovation and health care, understanding the essential role of the public sector in competitiveness. Those tasks are not complete. They would continue.

    The president has governed more from the middle than many give him credit. Consider the Republican ideas in health-care reform, or the Race to the Top, or the tax cuts in the stimulus. He has stated his readiness to compromise on long-term deficit reduction. The problem has been Republican resistance to tax increases as part of a realistic and responsible approach.

    That commitment to compromise, or governing, is crucial to addressing other pressing challenges such as illegal immigration and climate change. It has been present in his nominations to the Supreme Court, tapping those who recognize the value of settled law in areas ranging from the Commerce Clause to the rights of women to make choices about their health care.

    n

    Of late, especially, Mitt Romney has argued that he is eager to bring together Republicans and Democrats. The sale becomes harder to make in view of his courting the ascendant far right of his party the past six years. He has described himself as “severely conservative.” He talks often about tax reform and the moral obligation to address the country’s debt. Yet he eschews the necessary step of raising additional revenues to complement spending reductions.

    Romney would be more credible as a candidate if on one occasion he had told the far right something it did not want to hear. Instead, the man who once was a moderate, appealingly pragmatic, has massaged positions, ducked and performed full flips, saying little about his leading achievement as the governor of Massachusetts, health-care reform, which served as a model for the president. The obvious question then surfaces: What does he really think? What would be the tilt of his presidency?

    The doubts deepen in view of his vague policy proposals. He pledges to create 12 million new jobs. He barely hints about how he would do so, except to highlight a five-point plan that is part familiar rhetoric of a challenger (bash China and promise energy independence) and part echo of what the president already has set in motion, increased exports and improved schools.

    Rommey still hasn’t explained how an additional $2 trillion in defense spending would aid the country strategically. He favors a tougher posture in foreign affairs without explaining how his stance would differ from the George W. Bush years, when pugnacity did not translate into greater influence and power.

    No question, Romney is a smart, successful financier, a man of faith and accomplishment. What troubles is his public character, the opportunistic shifts and more. It is unacceptable that in seeking the presidency, he refuses to share his income tax returns in a way comparable to what he required of his running mate, Paul Ryan.

    Finally, Romney cannot walk back easily his comments at a Florida fund-raiser about 47 percent of Americans refusing to take responsibility or care for their lives. He either was telling the crowd what he thought it wanted to hear, or he believes what he said. Either way, the words aren’t worthy of a president.

    Click here to read or leave a comment on this story.

    Story tools

    Share on email Email Print Reprint Most Popular Subscribe

    Share this story Share on tweet 6

    Again, I am shocked! /sarcasm

    signature image

    www.miamiproject.miami.edu/

    Buckeye Warrior

  • Buckeye Warrior said...

    Again, I am shocked! /sarcasm

    I just like the 47% comment staying fresh in people's minds. In the minds of millions of people who want a president that cares for l people.

    AlphaBuckeye06

  • AlphaBuckeye06 said...

    I just like the 47% comment staying fresh in people's minds. In the minds of millions of people who want a president that cares for l people.

    It's not working bro. People are looking for answers and solutions to our economic problems, not petty gotcha videos. if it was working like you think it is, Obama would be ahead in the polls by 15 points.

    signature image

    www.miamiproject.miami.edu/

    Buckeye Warrior

  • Buckeye Warrior said...

    I promise you, no one is going to walk into a voting booth and say "I am voting for Obama because the local newspaper endorsed him". Also, you Liberals keep pounding away with the 47% comment. I love it. Romney is offering up solutions to our nations problems and Obama is playing petty games.

    I never voted for Bush when the Enquirer and Dispatch endorsed him. But low-information voters are easily swayed. This Denver Post endorsement hopefully is for those people. However, Democrats have a long way to go in gaining the vote of low-information voters - Republicans have them brain-washed.

    BTW, what solutions? Tax cuts? Name one of his five points and how he plans to accomplish it. Oh, he hasn't revealed them to you either?

    This post was edited by McCague on 10/21/2012 at 1:03 PM

    McCague

  • McCague said...

    I never voted for Bush when the Enquirer and Dispatch endorsed him. But low-information voters are easily swayed. This Denver Post endorsement hopefully is for those people. However, Democrats have a long way to go in gaining the vote of low-information voters - Republicans have them brain-washed.

    BTW, what solutions? Tax cuts? Name one of his five points and how he plans to accomplish it. Oh, he hasn't revealed them to you either?

    Typical Liberal elitists attitude. By the way, the last time you asked for an answer I gave you one. You now seem to want to move on to another one.

    This post was edited by Buckeye Warrior on 10/21/2012 at 3:25 PM

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    www.miamiproject.miami.edu/

    Buckeye Warrior

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    I aim to please...to bad I have bad aim.....

    Ez6378

  • Buckeye Warrior said...

    Again, I am shocked! /sarcasm

    He also picked up the Plain Dealer today!

    signature image
    signature image
    signature image

    I aim to please...to bad I have bad aim.....

    Ez6378