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Week of August 24, 2008 - August 30, 2008

Feingold Defends Obama, Praises Biden Pick


From the Wall Street Journal's Nick Timiraos:


John McCain is quick to tout his credentials as a party “maverick” as an advantage over Barack Obama, who Republicans have criticized for refusing to break with his party on any major achievements.

One of McCain’s biggest across-the-aisle partners, Wisconsin Sen. Russ Feingold, defended Obama against those criticisms Sunday, even as he refrained from any criticism of McCain, who co-authored their landmark campaign finance reform bill.

“Both candidates have a record of working with the other side … but I think Sen. Obama is more likely to lead us in the right direction,” Feingold said after introducing the Democratic nominee at a Wisconsin picnic on Sunday. “It’s interesting, I’m maybe the member of Congress who has worked most closely with both of them.”

Feingold cited Obama’s work on nuclear non-proliferation with Russia with Indiana Republican Richard Lugar and their work together on a lobbying and ethics reform bill. “That was a very tough deal where many members of the Democratic Party were pushing very hard on him personally to weaken our bill,” he said.

The Wisconsin senator wouldn’t criticize McCain. “We need to be positive,” he said, and he dismissed Democratic attacks against McCain’s inability during an interview last week to say how many houses he owned. “I don’t believe it will” matter, he said. “People in the end will vote on the issues of working families.”

Feingold, who Obama praised as a man with “the courage of his convictions,” also sounded a call for genuine bipartisanship, particularly if Democrats control the White House and both chambers of Congress next year. “The worst mistake we could make is to not include Republicans whenever we can,” he said. “That’s the formula for disaster.”


From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's Patrick Marley:


Pawlenty called Biden a creature of Washington, noting he’s been in the Senate since Obama was about 12.

“Where’s the change?” Pawlenty said. “Barack Obama is all for change unless or until it’s politically expedient to pick the consummate insider.”

Pawlenty noted that Biden had criticized Obama as not being ready for the job when Biden also was seeking the Democratic presidential nomination in the Iowa caucuses. He said picking Biden wouldn’t be enough to boost the ticket’s credentials.

“When you’re going to be president of the United States, it’s not a situation where you should have to have a mentor or a trainer or a supervisor,” Pawlenty said

Feingold dismissed that, saying Obama made a wise decision by choosing someone who could work with him as an adviser and partner. He dismissed the claim that Biden is a Beltway insider, noting that he takes the train home every night so he can be with his family.

“He’s a real guy,” Feingold said. “He’s not some guy who lives and breathes Washington.”


From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's Craig Gilbert:


Wisconsin Democrat Russ Feingold, who serves on two Senate committees with Delaware's Joe Biden, praised Biden's selection as Barack Obama's running mate today.

"I think it's a good balance," Feingold said in an interview today, referring to Biden's  longevity and foreign policy experience and Obama's "fresh approach to politics."

Feingold sits on both the judiciary and foreign relations committees, as does Biden. Biden chairs foreign relations, and chaired judiciary before Feingold entered the Senate in 1993.

Feingold said choosing someone of Biden's experience was an important signal for Obama to send.

"I think Sen. Obama wants to make the American people confident that he will have around him people that will make sure he knows and has access to all the information (he needs). He's trying to say, 'This is symbolic of the kind of people who are going to govern with me.' It's probably the most important message for him, and I've felt that way for a long time," said Feingold.

 More on Obama's Eau Claire, WI stop here and here.



 

Former OMB Director and Rep. Rob Portman (OH)- McCain's VP?


    Apparently, Senator McCain will be unleashing his VP in Dayton, OH this coming Friday after the Democratic Convention.  Of course, he will also be celebrating his birthday that day as well.
    Given the location of the event and McCain's need to shore up his economic gravitas, I believe, McCain will chose former Rep. Rob Portman of OH to be his running mate.  Portman has the following economic expertise working in his favor (from Wiki):
Portman was a member of the Ways and Means Committee and vice chair of the Budget Committee.... Most recently, he was Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Prior to this appointment, Portman was the United States Trade Representative, a post carrying the rank of Ambassador
I believe this experience coupled with an ability to explain trade and tax policy to an Ohio voter (and voters at large) will seal the deal for him to take the spot as Republican VP.

Second, Portman is suggested by some (Novak) to be Bush's hand-picked choice for McCain's running mate.  True, McCain could want to get as far from Bush as possible.  However, I would add, why start now?  According to the Wiki article:

Very close to President George W. Bush, he acted as the liaison between Congressional Republicans and the White House during the first four years of the Bush administration. In nominating him for the trade post, President Bush called Portman "a good friend, a decent man, and a skilled negotiator."....Later, a public, ceremonial swearing-in was performed by then-White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card on May 17, 2005, with his friend President Bush in attendance. On April 18, 2006 President Bush nominated him to fill the role of Budget Director; its former director, Joshua B. Bolten was promoted to White House Chief of Staff.
Furthermore, Portman was popular when he was a Representative in Ohio, easily winning re-election several times and by large margins. 

Portman was also known as a congressman who reached across the aisle, another key in McCain's branding this election season.  He was best known for legislation on the IRS, eliminating capital gains taxes, environmental protection for trees, and easing ex-cons adaption back to society, and curbing unfunded mandates.  I think many of those issues will align very well with McCain's supposed maverick status while also catering to the GOP base.

In conclusion, perhaps Portman's hometown paper described him best as having "two personas: the well-connected Congressman who would surface on cable news channels as a 'talking head' for the Bush led agenda and another as the politician who drove himself from one small town pancake breakfast or Kiwanis luncheon to another in a district stretching 100 miles plus."


I would also look at this Newsweek blog on Portman, some great info here.  Newsweek agrees he is a strong contender:

 ...he'd probably do more to help the senator be effective once he reaches the White House than any other VP contender.......a perfect economic mouthpiece for McCain, who's notoriously weak on what's become the top voter concern of 2008. But it's Portman's nuts-and-bolts understanding of how the executive branch works--especially with Congress on money issues--that should appeal to McCain. Portman was the first President Bush's liaison to Capitol Hill, whereworked to restructure the IRS and ran the Administration's efforts to pass a controversial unfunded mandates measure; since then, he's helped the second President Bush expand free-trade agreements and structure the federal budget. "Rob understands government to a degree and at a level that most people don't achieve without serving as vice president or president," Robert Paduchik, Bush's campaign manager in Ohio in 2004, told Salon. That's exactly the kind of sidekick McCain--a lifetime legislator mostly interested in foreign policy--will need if and when he moves into the White House. None of Portman's fellow VP possibilities have comparable credentials.

 


Director Rob Portman (OH)- McCain's VP?


    Apparently, Senator McCain will be unleashing his VP in Dayton, OH this coming Friday after the Democratic Convention.  Of course, he will also be celebrating his birthday that day as well.
    Given the location of the event and McCain's need to shore up his economic gravitas, I believe, McCain will chose former Rep. Rob Portman of OH to be his running mate.  Portman has the following economic expertise working in his favor (from Wiki):
Portman was a member of the Ways and Means Committee and vice chair of the Budget Committee.... Most recently, he was Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Prior to this appointment, Portman was the United States Trade Representative, a post carrying the rank of Ambassador
I believe this experience coupled with an ability to explain trade and tax policy to an Ohio voter (and voters at large) will seal the deal for him to take the spot as Republican VP.

Second, Portman is suggested by some (Novak) to be Bush's hand-picked choice for McCain's running mate.  True, McCain could want to get as far from Bush as possible.  However, I would add, why start now?  According to the Wiki article:

Very close to President George W. Bush, he acted as the liaison between Congressional Republicans and the White House during the first four years of the Bush administration. In nominating him for the trade post, President Bush called Portman "a good friend, a decent man, and a skilled negotiator."....Later, a public, ceremonial swearing-in was performed by then-White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card on May 17, 2005, with his friend President Bush in attendance. On April 18, 2006 President Bush nominated him to fill the role of Budget Director; its former director, Joshua B. Bolten was promoted to White House Chief of Staff.
Furthermore, Portman was popular when he was a Representative in Ohio, easily winning re-election several times and by large margins. 

Portman was also known as a congressman who reached across the aisle, another key in McCain's branding this election season.  He was best known for legislation on the IRS, eliminating capital gains taxes, environmental protection for trees, and easing ex-cons adaption back to society, and curbing unfunded mandates.  I think many of those issues will align very well with McCain's supposed maverick status while also catering to the GOP base.

In conclusion, perhaps Portman's hometown paper described him best as having "two personas: the well-connected Congressman who would surface on cable news channels as a 'talking head' for the Bush led agenda and another as the politician who drove himself from one small town pancake breakfast or Kiwanis luncheon to another in a district stretching 100 miles plus."


I would also look at this Newsweek blog on Portman, some great info here.  Newsweek agrees he is a strong contender:

 ...he'd probably do more to help the senator be effective once he reaches the White House than any other VP contender.......a perfect economic mouthpiece for McCain, who's notoriously weak on what's become the top voter concern of 2008. But it's Portman's nuts-and-bolts understanding of how the executive branch works--especially with Congress on money issues--that should appeal to McCain. Portman was the first President Bush's liaison to Capitol Hill, whereworked to restructure the IRS and ran the Administration's efforts to pass a controversial unfunded mandates measure; since then, he's helped the second President Bush expand free-trade agreements and structure the federal budget. "Rob understands government to a degree and at a level that most people don't achieve without serving as vice president or president," Robert Paduchik, Bush's campaign manager in Ohio in 2004, told Salon. That's exactly the kind of sidekick McCain--a lifetime legislator mostly interested in foreign policy--will need if and when he moves into the White House. None of Portman's fellow VP possibilities have comparable credentials.

 


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