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November 2013
Nov 7, 2012
center right nation my ass.. pro dream act, pro same sex marriage, pro choice...Obama eats the dude with magic underpant's lunch
A Thrashing.....
This
 was a thrashing. I don’t yet know the full electoral college total, but
 it’s looking like at least a 100-vote margin. That’s a thrashing. Over 
at 11:13? And the truth is, it wasn’t even that dramatic. It was over 
around 9:00. The next two hours were just waiting around for it to be 
official.
You
 can believe, if you want, that Ohio is still up for grabs. That Karl 
Rove business on Fox was priceless. It’s an astonishing thing, that the 
numbers specialists at Fox called Ohio for Obama, and the on-air talent 
questioned it. And not just an anchor—an on-air commentator who has also
 raised and spent many millions of dollars on behalf of Romney. It’s as 
banana republic as anything that happens in a real banana republican.
But
 as I write, Florida is leaning Obama, and maybe even Virginia. This 
thing is over. Without Ohio, it’s likely still 300-plus electoral votes.
 And after they count the votes in California, Obama is projected to win
 the popular vote too.
Mitt Romney's 2012 concession speech. 
 
 
Was
 it the ground game? Was it the 47 percent? Was it Sandy? Was it Chris 
Christie? It was a little bit of all those things. But mostly it was two
 big things, and this election was about big things.
The
 first big thing is that a very clear majority of Americans saw the 
truth about the past four years. Exit polls showed that voters still 
blamed the economic problems on George Bush’s administration. They 
thought Obama tried hard and did a pretty good job (no, he hasn’t done a
 great job yet), and they notice the change and improvement recently. I 
didn’t write all these things down, but in state after state exit poll 
as they went through them on CNN, more people thought—finally!—that the 
economy was headed in the right direction.
The people know who created the problem, and they know who’s fixing it. That’s number one.
And
 number two? The second big thing here is that the Republican Party is 
just too far to the right. Not just to win a national election. It’s too
 far to the right even to compete really seriously in one. The thing 
some Republicans are saying now is absolutely true: They should have 
been able to win this year. No incumbent president has ever been 
reelected with this kind of unemployment rate, and there’s no good 
reason it should have happened now. They could have won.
But
 it’s a fringe party that has become too extreme to win the White House.
 I’d imagine they’re going to blame Romney. I don’t like Mitt Romney. 
I’m indescribably relieved that after tonight, I never have to hear that
 man’s wretched voice again. He ran the lyingest campaign in modern 
history—just outright and blatant lies. But in some ways he did run a 
pretty effective campaign. He and his team did some smart things in the 
past month. They ran a pretty good race in the end in some ways.
But
 it was too late and too clever by half. His attempts to distance 
himself from the right wing came too late. I saw another exit poll 
number that 80 percent of people made up their minds in September. 
Before the first debate even happened. That large majority saw a 
spineless Romney sucking up to an extremist party on issue after issue. 
And even while Romney was pirouetting, they saw a parade of Neanderthal 
congressional candidates telling women to expel their fetuses.
I’ll
 have much more to say about this over the course of the week. But 
tonight, America told the guy who’s been trying that they appreciate it.
 And they told the crazy party: you’re crazy
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