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Merry Xmas UNO Dems & Frm. Prez. Renner… a Bright Idea Shines

I’ve been meaning to blog this for a few days…

An issue which former UNO Dems President Ryan Renner spent a lot of time working on, and which the UNO Dems adopted as a pet project a few years ago seems to have hit the big time in the recent Democratic Congress’ energy bill.

2012 floresent

The New York Times covered this story recently:

The new energy bill signed this week makes it official. When 2012 hits, stores can no longer sell the cheap but inefficient incandescent light bulbs that are fixtures in most homes.

And this interesting statistic:

[S]ales of compact fluorescents doubled in 2006 over 2005, and doubled again this year. But … they still account for 15 percent of bulbs in use in homes.

Way to go UNO Dems! Ahead of the curve by several years, we’ve been pushing green-energy, especially in our lightbulbs, for many years now. Pressure from groups like ours are a large part of why the Dems in Congress included this requirement in the new energy legislation. (previous coverage here)

Happy Festivus!!

Air your grievances here.

The State of the Race

Been a while since I posted something about the national race, and things have changed a lot in the past few months. Here’s a rundown for those of you just tuning in.

The Democrats:

15 days out from Iowa, and the top three look neck-and-neck in the Hawkeye state.

Hillary Clinton: If she can’t win Iowa, she needs John Edwards to win, and needs to finish ahead of Obama. If she wins Iowa, it’s difficult to see her losing the nomination.

Barack Obama: The race is so close right now, that a win in Iowa could put Obama over the top, propel him into a win in New Hampshire and South Carolina, in to Super Tuesday.

John Edwards: The problem with expectations: Edwards has to win in Iowa. Even if he wins in Iowa, it’s difficult to see how much momentum that gives him in New Hampshire. An Edwards win in Iowa actually helps Clinton, because an Obama win would seriously injure her chances at winning the nomination.

Now, it’s very hard to see where things will go on February 5. One candidate could run the table or we could have a knockdown dragout fight on Super Tuesday. But if Hillary or Obama win both Iowa and New Hampshire, you’d have a hard time convincing me that they won’t win the nomination. The Democratic race right now is relatively easy to predict.

The Republicans: 

I’ll be the first to admit: there is no telling where the Republicans are going to go with this one. The momentum is difficult to predict, and there’s not a frontrunner at this point. Maybe Huckabee, but that depends where you look.

Rudy Giuliani: He’s done. Finished. Cooked. Even if it weren’t for an entire month of horrendous news cycles, (including being asked by Tim Russert: “Would you give your mistress Secret Service protection?”) he’s taking a nomination strategy that is as perplexing as it is maddening. He’s ignoring Iowa, tanking in New Hampshire, and expecting that by ignoring those states he can still win Florida and have enough momentum going into Super Tuesday to win the nomination. The right’s brief flirtation with Giuliani didn’t end because of his issue positions - they were willing to look past that - but because the former New York City mayor is a fatally flawed candidate.

Fred Thompson: I think we’ve all heard by now some variation on the joke: Fred Thompson’s campaign is on hold until the writer’s strike ends. He ran out of fresh material.

John McCain: Will they give him a second third fourth fifth sixth chance? I’m guessing not.

Mike Huckabee: He’s still got a few question marks. First: can he survive the attacks from Romney? So far, he’s doing a good job of staying above the fray. With just two weeks left and the holiday season keeping the air war at a low volume, you have to wonder if he’s peaked at just the right time. The biggest problem Huckabee has is that the corporate wing of the party will not accept him as a nominee. And in the end, they, not the evangelicals, control the Republican Party.

Mitt Romney: Win or lose in Iowa, Mitt Romney will be the choice of establishment Republicans simply because he’s their only alternative. There’s a decent argument that a loss in Iowa actually helps Romney if the GOP is as afraid of Huckabee as I think they are. Either way, Romney’s got the backing of the Bush family, it seems, so either he wins in Iowa and carries that momentum through to New Hampshire and Michigan, or he finishes second in Iowa but spins it as a positive. The rise of Huckabee has successfully lowered expectations to the point where if Romney finishes second in Iowa, he’ll still have a path to the nomination.

Scott Kleeb: Moments

Tony Raimondo, Lifelong Republican

Just let his own words speak for him.

Behlen Manufacturing chair Tony Raimondo (R) said he realized when ex-Ag. Sec./ex-Gov. Mike Johanns (R) entered the race, he wouldn’t be able to raise the money needed to get the GOP nod. Raimondo: “Especially when the governor endorsed him, I think the Republican primary closed up. … I would love
personally to see more of an open primary, (but) Mike certainly
has a very positive record.”

  “Raimondo said this isn’t the end of his political aspirations, and his name may pop up in the future. He said no one’s suggested to him that he run for the Senate seat as a Democrat, and while he has no plans to switch parties, he would listen if asked” (Bratton, AP, 10/26/07).

Columbus industrialist Tony Raimondo said Thursday he will seek the 2008 Republican Senate nomination if Sen. Chuck Hagel does not pursue a third term.”I’ve decided if Hagel doesn’t run, I will be running,” the chairman of Behlen Manufacturing Co. said in a telephone interview.

Raimondo, a nationally recognized businessman once in line for White House appointment as federal manufacturing czar, said he would bring business development experience in a global marketplace to the Senate.

“Competitiveness and job creation are basically what I’ve worked my whole life on,” he said. “I think we need more business leaders in Congress.” (Walton, LJS, 5/11/07).

Maybe We Need Another Golden Flip-Flop For Tony?

I cannot imagine, a month after giving a tongue-in-cheek award to Jon Bruning for changing parties due to political convenience and ambition, defending that same ambition just because the candidate happens to be switching to my party.

Joe Jordan tells us - after getting a weak-ass response from state chair Steve Achelpohl - that Raimondo has until Dec. 7 to switch parties. December 8 is the Democratic State Central Committee Meeting in Lincoln. He’s not going to find a lot of friendly faces if he tries to pull the same stunt Kate Witek did last year. As one delegate to the state convention remarked, of Witek: “You have to be a Democrat for at least a week.”

This whole episode makes me sick.

Bruning Out; More On Raimondo…

Well, I was wrong. Jon Bruning is dropping out of the race for U.S. Senate. While publically his supporters will claim that Bruning was forced out by the D.C. establishment, I will maintain that it was clearly the Nebraska Young Democrats “Fallen Star” Award that destroyed his candidacy. Yeah, we may have received only a brief mention in the North Platte Telegraph, but that won’t stop me from taking credit (okay, joint credit, Kyle).

All kidding aside, this does change things a little bit: The primary is boring on the Republican side, and Johanns is assured of the nomination now that his only competition is admitted former marijuana user Pat Flynn. Now the intrigue moves back to our side, as we wait on a candidate to decide to enter the race.

But is that candidate being decided for us? Sam Stein at the Huffington Post picks up on the rumors we reported yesterday, and everything he’s hearing is pretty much what we’re hearing: this is Ben Nelson’s horse in the race. And Raimondo has pretty much admitted he’d be running as a Republican if he thought he could beat Johanns in a primary.

What happens when a political party is just a label to be exchanged at someone’s own convenience? We could ask Jon Bruning. Politics becomes a game, parties become teams, and guys like Raimondo are the high-priced free agents who end up hurting your team in the long run because they’re really just mediocre ball players. The Nebraska Democratic Party becomes the Kansas City Royals.

It’s time for real leadership. Scott Kleeb brings that to the table. We would be fools to reject him in favor of a Republican.