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The ritzy elitist GOP senator from Oregon is the latest to find himself behind in the polls to a populist Democratic challenger.

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Senate Race Upset-orama: Political Earthquake Hits Oregon

By David Sirota, Creators Syndicate. Posted October 20, 2008.


The ritzy elitist GOP senator from Oregon is the latest to find himself behind in the polls to a populist Democratic challenger.

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America's government-by-television means instantly memorable image is everything. Our electoral decisions pivot less on issues and positions than on caricature -- Dukakis peering out of a tank, Quayle misspelling potato, Kerry "looking French," as Republicans claimed. Rare is the iconography that represents deeper substance.

Until now.

As election day approaches, once-safe Republican senators like Elizabeth Dole (N.C.), Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and Norm Coleman (Minn.) are struggling against Democrats who are using their economic conservatism to paint them as elitists. The criticism is working both because of the imminent recession and because these incumbents look the part. To paraphrase an attack on failed presidential candidate Mitt Romney, these pols don't remind voters of co-workers, but of bosses "who laid them off."

No Republican, though, says aristocrat like Sen. Gordon Smith of Oregon. And no senate election could more intensely shift economic politics than his state's.

If Kerry looked like a professor at La Sorbonne, then Smith resembles a playboy at the Monte Carlo Casino. The son of an Eisenhower administration official and heir to a food processing company, Smith grew up in the ritzy D.C. suburbs and today lives on Bethesda's aptly named Country Club Road. In a profile entitled "From Profits to Politics," the state's largest newspaper described him as a guy who "unabashedly enjoys spending" his millions on Ferraris, mansions and "weekend trips to New York to window shop."

Since buying Oregon's senate seat in 1996, Smith has maintained high approval ratings by voting right wing on social and economic issues and feigning liberal on a handful of themes like hate crimes.

This is a well-trod Republican path in swing states -- a lockstep conservative record builds strength in GOP strongholds, and occasionally tolerant-sounding but legislatively meaningless rhetoric peels off votes in Democratic bastions.

This year, though, Smith is running for re-election against Democrat Jeff Merkley -- the son of a sawmill worker who, as Oregon House speaker, made his name cracking down on predatory lenders. More Paul Bunyan than Paul Allen, Merkley is running on his record as an economic populist, airing ads hammering a tuxedo-clad Smith for supporting corporate tax cuts and the recent Wall Street bailout. He aims to flip Smith's own calculations on their head, betting he can maintain Democratic margins in cities and middle-class suburbs and cut into Republican support in rural and working-class areas. It's a smart gamble.

Political analysts have long berated populism -- i.e., pushing financial regulation, progressive taxation and trade reforms -- as blue-collar pandering only effective in the industrial Northeast and Midwest. In the Northwest, the conventional wisdom says that while populism may appeal to Oregon's 70,000 manufacturing and timber workers who lost jobs to foreign competition, it alienates the latte-swilling office parkers who comprise the state's white-collar "new economy."

"When I see his ads in front of a mill that was closed," said Smith in attacking Merkley's criticism of free trade, "I wonder what people at Nike think, Intel, Hewlett-Packard, Columbia Sportswear, whose jobs are directly dependent on trade."

Smith hopes Merkley's pocket-book pitches to historically conservative areas like timber-producing Douglas County will alienate high-tech workers in suburbs like Washington County (often called "Silicon Forest"). But with Merkley surging in polls, the opposite may be happening.

The Great American Class War ravaging the industrial sector is now pillaging the information sector, too. As Intel boasts of outsourcing, HP lays off thousands and Wall Street eviscerates 401(k) plans, a new blue-collar/white-collar solidarity is emerging. That means today, as during the Great Depression, progressive economic arguments increasingly work across cultural, geographic and employment divides, tectonically realigning politics and -- potentially -- policy.

Should Merkley defeat Oregon's tycoon senator in the heart of the "new economy," the tremors of that realignment will become a political earthquake.

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David Sirota is a best-selling author whose newest book, "The Uprising," was just released this month. He is a fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network -- both nonpartisan organizations. His blog is at www.credoaction.com/sirota.

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View:
Merkley For Oregon
Posted by: Kitty Lady Oregon on Oct 17, 2008 9:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If rotten ads are a benchmark for success, then Smith has made sure he will never win another position in Oregon. Merkley is a decent man who has done a fine job in the Oregon legislature. The only ones voting for Smith will be the hardline repubs who vote straight party line.
Smith does not even state that he is a republican, in fact he has run ads that show Ted Kennedy, John Kerry, Barak Obama and Ron Wyden endorsing his candidacy. Wyden has requested that Smith take him off the ad, but Smith refuses. He is a rich playboy who deserves to lose so he can continue to play golf and shop.

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changing times?
Posted by: jon B on Oct 17, 2008 10:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Clearly the economic crisis has made people think. It can be so easy to ignore politics and policies when it doesn't seem to affect ones own wallet or purse, but oft repeated phrases by those on the news such as "the biggest crisis since the Great Depression" gets a lot of attention.

I've been expecting and waiting for this period. I knew the excesses of Wall Street and their buddies in Washington would eventually sell each other the rope to hang themselves. It had to crash around their feet as they had their big capitalist party and had no interest in including the poor or middle class, in fact used those people to enable their party. They had their Ponzi Scheme and now the Ponzied are finally getting mad.

Populist movements result in the mass population getting pooped on by the elite. You could already see the writing on the wall or rather the polls. Approval ratings for Bush, for Congress, for the media, for Wall Street have been falling for the last several years. The elites don't read polls I guess.

But don't mistake electing some Democrats over incumbent Republicans as winning for populism, unless the newcomers create policy that the people have needed. And don't suspect that marking a ballot is some sort of uprising, it's not banging pots in the streets.

The populace has a long way to go to prove a populist movement. For far too long there has been a complacency and disinterest in acting. For too long people have simply ignored the fleecing of themselves. The question is whether after the election, will people fall back into their TV/computer glazed brains and hope the politicians have the people's best interest in mind. And to the Democrats that win and take charge in Washington, they had better pay attention to those polls I mentioned or in two years they will probably lose their jobs back to the Republicans for no other reason than because voters aren't going to wait for change long any more.

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"Blue" State
Posted by: oregoncharles on Oct 17, 2008 10:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oregon isn't a swing state: we supported Kerry by 5%, the Legislature is controlled by Democrats, and Smith is the only Republican in state-wide office.

In fact, those "latte-swilling" office workers tend to be quite liberal. As Sirota points out, they're also just as worried about their jobs as mill-workers, who've mostly already lost theirs.

We're being barraged with ads about this race. Evidently both parties think it's close. Any polling data, Mr. Sirota? The only one I saw had Merkle y ahead by a couple of points.

It's a bad year to be a Republican, certainly in Oregon. But Oregon may not be that indicative, either.

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when it hits close to home
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Oct 17, 2008 3:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
people sober up. usually not before then.

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Vidulous
Posted by: login@bugmenot.com on Oct 17, 2008 10:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Smith blindly and consistently voted the Republican line until the 2006 elections. He then realized that he would be voted out in 2008 if he did not actually start representing the people of Oregon. He broke from the Republicans on some issues but it was too little, too late. Smith will lose this election.

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» RE: Vidulous Posted by: IntlDad
Sorry Sirota sickofsleaze
Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com on Oct 18, 2008 6:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You cited Quale's misspelling of potato.
The Brits spell it potatoe.
Quale was not the brightest bulb in the chandalier but he was not QUITE the dimbulb he was painted

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» RE: Sorry Sirota sickofsleaze Posted by: Thebigkate
» RE: Re spelling potato, Posted by: bitsfick
Washington County ain't a suburb
Posted by: fkuechmann on Oct 18, 2008 11:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"workers in suburbs like Washington County (often called "Silicon Forest")".

Uh, Washington County ain't a suburb, although it contains a bunch of Portland suburbs. And "sometimes called 'Silicon Forest'" would be better than "often called 'Silicon Forest'".

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Likely that Smith is going down
Posted by: nosmokes on Oct 18, 2008 3:43 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gordon Smith has run an unbelievably negative campaign from the outset. His ads generally take one of two courses, either distorting or totally misrepresenting his opponents record, or doing back-flips and cartwheels to distance himself as much as possible from the GOP and especially the Bush administration. He has gone so far as to poach clips of Sen Ron Wyden-D(OR) giving him accolades for their working together. It almost as if he's gone out of his way not to mention that he's a Republican and he's been nothing but a corporate shill for two terms in the Senate.

Although the polls show the race is quite close I'm very hopeful that Jeff Merkley will be able to defeat him, especially considering the traditionally underpolled newly registered voters.

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A Silver Lining!!
Posted by: lively56 on Oct 18, 2008 5:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There just may be a silver lining in this financial crisis, in that it's finally waking up a lot of people that have been dormant for so many years. Now they are coming out in droves to vote these monsters out of office. We can only hope so.

I never could figure out why a neocon like Sen. Smith could get elected in Oregon. I have always had the perception that Oregonians were Progressives for the most part.

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Gordon Smith -- Part of the Problem, Not the Solution
Posted by: jimswanson on Oct 18, 2008 5:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
James A. Swanson
www.bushleagueofnations.com [for FREE downloads of entire book]

David Sirota does a nice job in describing the changing political landscape in Oregon and the progressive populist tidal wave sweeping across America.

We can only hope that American voters this time around base their votes more on substance and critical issues, and less on caricature and propaganda.

Although Gordon Smith is not among the most conservative Senators, he is part of the problem, not the solution. An “elitist” born with a silver spoon in his mouth, he religiously supported GOP economic policies that have shoved America to the brink of the GOP Great Depression II.

Beginning with Ronald Reagan, GOP values went South, and the American Dollar became the Confederate Dollar.

The GOP established huge rigged casinos, with the winnings going to the “lucky” few—the GOP’s constituency of the Super Rich and huge corporations—and with the losses, countless trillions of dollars, being shouldered by U.S. taxpayers.

A level playing field did not exist with respect to any of the humongous financial disasters of the last three decades. From the S&L scandals and bailouts of the 1980s, to government contracting fraud in Iraq, to the recent financial meltdown, rigged structures are plainly visible.

This and much more is discussed in, "The Bush League of Nations: The Coalition of the Unwilling, the Bullied and the Bribed – the GOP’s War on Iraq and America," by James A. Swanson (2008, CreateSpace Publishing, 448 pages).

As a gift to patriots everywhere, the entire book can be downloaded for FREE at www.bushleagueofnations.com. Please pass along the good news.

I ask for nothing in return, except that you consider using my book to help kick out America’s worst political party ever.

Jim Swanson
www.bushleagueofnations.com

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Oregon is a minor tremor compared to Colin Powell's magnitude 10.0 endorsement of Obama
Posted by: USAFVeteran1966 on Oct 19, 2008 10:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
General Powell nailed Songbird McCain's coffin shut on today's "Meet The Press" TV show by endorsing Senator Obama.

Powell left open the only reason Barack could lose next month: bigotry. If that happens, America's fate will be sealed as a racist society with no hope for redemption.

Vietnam vet/Obama supporter
Say NO to Songbird McCain

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Nothing is more important than the right to vote.
Posted by: cori on Oct 19, 2008 10:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mark Crispin Miller, He's a leading media studies scholar at New York University, where he's teaching a course this semester on "How to steal an election." Interviewed on Bill Moyers, the Journal PBS on the net. See the whole interview
MARK CRISPIN MILLER: Well, I'm afraid that what we've seen in this decade, in this century is unprecedented. This upcoming election specifically is two sets of activities. One is vote suppression. It means various dirty tricks and tactics and legal devices used to shrink the size of the electorate before Election Day. For example, interfering with registration drives or making them vulnerable to partisan challenges or passing laws requiring certain kinds of documentation at polling places. Like the Jim Crow laws. Caging voters, which is sending them registered letters with forms that if they don't fill them out, their names will be stricken from the voter rolls. Voter purges. There's a whole huge menu of extremely ingenious devices now being used I think with unprecedented brazenness to try to make the electorate as small as possible in advance of Election Day. It makes a certain sense to try to see to it that those voters can't vote. That's one set of activities that I worry about. Also fraud by using the computerized voting systems which we now have in place in at least 80% of the country those systems through black box technology, precisely because it is so technical and it's so opaque and it's all run by private companies, private companies that have close ties to the Republican Party, the use of this kind of voting apparatus is extremely worrisome and something that we should be watching very carefully.
What is happening with ACORN is a first-class propaganda drive. The entities you've mentioned are all participating in it - Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, John McCain, the McCain campaign, despite the inconvenient fact that John McCain gave the keynote speech at ACORN's annual conference in 2006. We won't talk about that. The fact is that what we're hearing about ACORN is, without exception, false. It is false. ACORN itself flagged the suspicious voter registration forms that caused this whole thing to begin in Las Vegas about ten days ago. It brought those forms to the attention of the secretary of state who then turned around and said, "Ah-ha, evidence that you're conspiring to commit voter fraud." CAGING” It's really very simple. The Republican Party, in a particular state, will get a list of the names and addresses of Democrats and send them letters that look sort of like junk mail, you know? Often they'll have windows in the envelope, the kind of thing that people are going to be inclined to throw away. And if people don't open those envelopes and take out forms that are in them and fill them out and send them in, their names will be stricken from the voter rolls on that basis. They've also been known to send these kinds of forms to people who are overseas serving in the military. Well, they're not home to check their mail, so if they don't fill out the forms, their names are stricken from the voter roll.
This is the right on which all our other rights depend, as Tom Paine said. Nothing is more important than this right. This is the right for which millions of our forebears have shed their blood, have died. This is what keeps us free. Only this. If we lose the right to pick our representatives and to get rid of the government when we don't like it anymore, if we don't have that right, if we don't have that power, we're as good as slaves.
Go to "Video the Vote" and they will give you a camera to take to the polls and interview voters.
RULES” VOTE AS EARLY AS POSSIBLE.. DON’T MAIL IN YOUR BALLOT.REGISTER AND BRING YOUR ID. Even if you have already voted go back to the poll staion just to show big numbers.

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Merkley on Trade and the Economy
Posted by: orftc on Oct 23, 2008 3:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jeff Merkley spoke last week about trade and the economy at a forum on "The Future of Trade" organized by the Oregon Fair Trade Campaign. The forum featured testimonials from both blue- and white-collar workers whose jobs have been lost as a result of failed trade policies.

Video of Merkley's comments is online at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ojjupalvpwo

Particularly poignant were the comments of Frank Rouse, a Machinist at Portland's Freightliner Truck Plant who learned just that morning that the plant was closing its doors and moving most of its production to Mexico under NAFTA -- eliminating Frank's 22-year job and thousands of other local jobs in the process.

Frank said, "I wish I had better news, but this is the reality of what current trade deals have to offer our workers. The one thing that I ask is that we stop feeling helpless. We need to take control and unite as one to take back our country. We need to call the shots, and we need to tell the corporations that they need to take a back seat. It’s our turn."

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RP
Posted by: rav933 on Oct 24, 2008 9:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the failed economy of today is the direct result of the economic policies of the democratic Clinton regime and Alan Greenspan, what happened in the late 90’s as far as the US economic policies is the main reason for the downrurn seen a decade later. Ecomnomies are not driven by changes made a year or two ago but a result of changes with repurecussions a decade later. Which is why, we are in this dire strait, due to the democratic socialist policies of Clinton which were put into play by one Alan greenspan

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Re:Senate Race Upset-orama: Political Earthquake Hits Oregon
Posted by: ragavendra on Nov 15, 2008 8:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The deserved winner after people deciding that a winner should support the economy was a democrat candidate,adding to his advantage is his good manners and a decent look of the candidate .
----
ragavendra

oregon drug rehab

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