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Democrats' Election Hopes May Hinge On Frustrated, Independent Voters

LIZ SIDOTI   07/19/10 03:12 AM ET   AP

Democrats Independent Woes
For swing-state candidates such as Rep. Joe Sestak (D-Penn.), who is running for Senate, electoral hopes may rest on frustrated Independent voters.

MEDIA, Pa. — Democrat Joe Sestak – a son of the Philadelphia suburbs – needs the independent voters in his backyard as he campaigns for a Senate seat in a swing state that may tilt Republican this year.

Independents have been turning away from President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party, frustrated with the economic downturn and administration initiatives, even in Pennsylvania where Obama won by double-digits two years ago. Sestak, a two-term congressman, has his work cut out for him.

"To vote for any of them right now, I'm not really sure I could. It's too early to say," says Tori Fisher, 45, an artist selling handmade jewelry at a picnic table down the street from Sestak's bustling campaign headquarters.

Fisher backed Obama two years ago and Democrats in 2006 but says "all of my friends feel frustrated" with the president's policies. "All of them could be doing a better job," she said of the Democrats controlling the White House and Congress.

On a nearby park bench, Albert Davis, 63, calls his previous support for Obama unfortunate. He faults the president and his party for their handling of the troubled economy, the soaring budget deficit and the new health care law.

"I thought he could straighten this country out," he says. "I may have been wrong."

Davis doesn't know how he'll vote this fall – "if I vote."

Although Democrats outnumber Republicans by about 1.2 million in Pennsylvania, independent voters, especially those in the so-called collar counties around Philadelphia, have proved decisive in elections in this swing state. They are seen as key to victory in the competitive Senate race between Republican Pat Toomey, a former congressman who once headed the anti-tax Club for Growth, and Sestak, who defeated Sen. Arlen Specter, a former Republican who switched parties to run in the May 18 Democratic primary.

A recent poll showed Toomey with a clear advantage among independent voters, and the same Quinnipiac University survey showed Obama's approval under 50 percent in the state. The president has lost considerable ground among Pennsylvania independents.

In 2006 and 2008, independents frustrated with then-President George W. Bush and the war in Iraq pushed Democrats to House and Senate wins across the country. Among the winners was a retired admiral and political novice named Sestak who captured a district that encompasses the one-time factory town of Conshohocken and the wealthy enclaves of the Main Line. This year, voters unaligned with a political party are disgruntled with the direction of the country, the Democratic-controlled Congress and Obama – and appear poised to punish the party in power.

Nationwide, a recent Pew Research Center survey showed Republicans with an edge over Democrats – 44 percent to 36 percent – among independents. At this point in 2006, independents backed Democrats 47 percent to 32 percent.

With independents so critical to victory, each Senate candidate is casting the other as an extreme ideologue out-of-step with voters on economic issues.

"Pat Toomey, someone I like, will always side with Wall Street and big oil ... but I'll stand up and fight for the working family and what they need," says Sestak, painting Toomey as far too conservative for the state. Sestak regularly hammers the former Republican congressman on his support for drilling in Lake Erie and his House votes on measures that included tax breaks for corporations.

Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey, chairman of the Senate committee charged with electing Democrats, tags Toomey as "a former Wall Street executive who made his money trading derivatives" after a House stint in which he "not only racked up an extreme right-wing voting record, but he also championed freewheeling Wall Street practices."

Toomey, in turn, assails Sestak for voting for the Wall Street bailout, the economic stimulus, the health care law and cap-and-trade legislation that critics deride as an energy tax.

"That's liberal," says Toomey. "He is in lockstep with Nancy Pelosi and her agenda."

Republicans frequently link Sestak with the House speaker from San Francisco and argue that Sestak does nothing more than toe the Democratic line. Says Texas Sen. John Cornyn, chairman of the National Senatorial Campaign Committee: "If voters give Sestak a promotion this November, they can expect more of the same from the Washington Democrats' tax-and-spend agenda – lost jobs, higher taxes and bigger government."

Freed from a GOP primary this year, Toomey has amassed far more money. He raised $3.1 million in the most recent fundraising quarter and ended with $4.65 million available. He has four offices open, is running TV ads and is getting help from deep-pocketed groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Sestak emerged from his Democratic primary with Specter all but broke; he raised $1.95 million last quarter and had about $2 million on hand. He has yet to run TV ads but has 10 campaign offices.

Three months out, polls show the Senate race a dead heat.

Stephen Bouikidis, a founder of the grass-roots organization Independent Pennsylvanians, says it's unfulfilled promises of bipartisanship that influence the state's 1 million independents. "We are very interested in candidates who want to reform. But what we won't respond to is partisanship," he says.

If independents side with Republicans this fall in Pennsylvania, Democrats could lose both a Senate seat and a governorship in an important presidential state two years before Obama is expected to seek re-election.

There's little disagreement over what's on the minds of the state's electorate, independents included.

"They want to see government get their fiscal house in order," says Dan Onorato, the chief executive of Allegheny County and the Democrat running for governor. And his GOP opponent, Attorney General Tom Corbett, says: "They're concerned about taxes, they're concerned about spending."

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MEDIA, Pa. — Democrat Joe Sestak – a son of the Philadelphia suburbs – needs the independent voters in his backyard as he campaigns for a Senate seat in a swing state that may tilt R...
MEDIA, Pa. — Democrat Joe Sestak – a son of the Philadelphia suburbs – needs the independent voters in his backyard as he campaigns for a Senate seat in a swing state that may tilt R...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:28 PM on 07/20/2010
As an independent from Maine that has watched our two turncoat, torry senators bow down to the new democratic agenda, I can easily say that I will NEVER vote for another democrat as long as they continue down the path of spend, spend, spend! All the dems do is cast their votes to pay off their buddies in the new aristocracy of this nation. It's sickening to see them competing to gain approval of the powerful elite, only to become part of the top 1% club. What ever happened to supporting working Americans?
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Sundalecat
We love Obama!, by an angry White Man
11:11 PM on 07/20/2010
Join the Reuglican party. You belong there.
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11:46 AM on 07/21/2010
And you feel the Republican party will suit average American's needs better? I am genuinely curious and not sarcastic, please tell me what you think the right would do if they gain control again without the standard " Fix things" answer.
03:12 AM on 07/20/2010
So what's the Democrat response to voters' concerns of too much spending, too many taxes?

More spending, more taxes. And less boost for the engine of growth that helps everybody, private business.

What an unbelievable transformation I've seen in the Democratic Party over my lifetime; from the champion of the little guy, to the New Elite, the party of Government interests.

Nobody illustrates this better than Jesse Jackson, who rose up from being part of Martin Luther King's stand for the dignity of the individual, having each person judged by the content of his character rather than the color of his skin; to a shameless hustler and race-baiter, selling government programs to individuals and corporations under the threat of boycotts, negative publicity and charges of discrimination filed with the Justice Department, regardless of any substance behind the charges. Such court cases, with the monopoly and police power of the Federal Government behind them, and no penalty assessed Jesse Jackson or any plaintiff in event of a lost case, can easily bankrupt a corporation; or severely affect the cost of doing business and shareholder value for larger ones.

Face it, Democrats have gone from the party of the little guy, the worker, to the party of the new aristocracy, government interests. Look at their support; unions, groups with self-proclaimed aggrievances looking for government bail-outs, government workers, all of whom live off the government and the taxpayers' back.

The "new "Democrats have dropped their pants for Big Government.
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10:21 PM on 07/20/2010
Great Post and right on the money!
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Sundalecat
We love Obama!, by an angry White Man
11:19 PM on 07/20/2010
The Reuglicans kiss up to banks, big business and want tax cuts for the wealthy. I could never vote for them. They care nothing about americans at all. That is unless it is big business CEO's. They showed them most recently with there bull on spending for unemployment. I guess if you like what they are giving than vote for them. I hope you can rest at night. Because they could careless about the little guy.
03:08 PM on 07/23/2010
Demo-rats kiss up to "progressives" and the Big Government royalists, to hell with making it on your own or making your own decisions, put your hands out for your entitlements and drop your pants for the government monopoly. They care nothing for individual freedom, free choice, and giving everyone the best chance to fulfill their potential; they care only about power for themselves.

I don't rest at night because people like you give little thought to your vote, and will give away your rights and freedom, and those of others, at the drop of a hat for someone else who tells you what you want to hear.

Is freedom of choice, capitalism, whatever you want to call it perfect? Not by a long shot; it allows people freedom, and people are people, human nature has lots of flaws.

But as Dirty Harry said, "The system sucks, but until somebody comes along with something better, I'll stick with it."

The "progressive" alternative of power to the big government monopoly and royalty is an historic failure that's killed a hundred million people, still around with the failed states of North Korea, Cuba, Zimbabwe and the rotting Western Europe, Scandanavia. Communist China, Vietnam are trying like the dickens to make it with an oppressive one-party system; they're no more than the equivalent of Western Europe, strangled by regulations and bureaucracy.
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12:12 PM on 07/19/2010
Another thing.
I think i would really like the obama family if I were to meet them in person but I do believe that he has surrounded himself with people who frankly don't care about anyone but themselves.
And he has to know that by now.
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12:07 PM on 07/19/2010
I'm a frustrated Independent.
Frustrated with the status quo that's being perpetuated by the obama administration.

I didn't vote for obama because I don't beleve campaign promises. They're just that, promises and aren't promises made to be broken? (who said that?)
Having said that I wanted him to be the one to change things for the betterment of all of us "little people".
But so far it seems the rich are the only ones who are getting richer and we're getting the shaft.

I'm thinking that when SS is cut and the bush tax cuts are extended permanently, that will be the end of both dems and repubs parties I for one will cheer.
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JLTorres
Agitate. Agitate. Agitate.
03:35 PM on 07/19/2010
Well, there's only one party advocating for cutting SS and extending the Bush tax, and that's the Repubs. No one is happy with the status quo, especially since voters do not really have strong choices other than the two parties--a basic problem with our system. But if you look at what we have, it doesn't seem to me like a hard choice. And deep down you know it too. A progressive movement is a long term proposition and some people, especially so-called independents, think one person like Obama can do it all in less than two years. That's crazy.
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11:57 AM on 07/21/2010
My one problem with the president is that he hasn't come out fighting for us. Every 4 or 5 months there's this big hoopla that the gloves have come off, or it's about time he started pushing, then a few days later it's business as usual. Instead of giving the money to wall street why didn't they just do small government loans for new business owners, kind of like the GI bill. And as long as we are hooked on China, there will never be any real trade reform. Any addict can tell you you never tweak off your supplier.
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justalurker
edited my micro-bio
05:45 PM on 07/19/2010
One way to end the frustration is to get more info. Try watching Msnbc and fox on alternate nights and realize they represent the two extremes of American politics. The truth and reality lies somewhere in between their opposing viewpoints.

Fo example fox thought that healthcare and financial reform bills do too much, and msnbc thought they did too little. This tells me that Obama kept his promise to work for ALL of america and not just the red states or blue states exclusively.

If you think nothing's changed, please go to politifact and see a list of the promises kept by Obama. He's kept MORE promises in his first year than any other president inthe last 50 years and that's something to admire.
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justalurker
edited my micro-bio
11:47 AM on 07/19/2010
Can you get a badge for supplying the first three posts to a new thread?
:-)
maybe a cookie? A pony?
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12:08 PM on 07/19/2010
How about a new fan for your first comment?
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justalurker
edited my micro-bio
11:44 AM on 07/19/2010
Another point: the article says that independents are important factor for dems to win.

Only true if we get the normal low turnout for midterm elections. If all the dems get fired up and ready to vote this fall, the independents become far less relevant.
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justalurker
edited my micro-bio
11:35 AM on 07/19/2010
Keep in mind that many conservative republicans left their party during the last 4 years due to embarrasment and anger over bush policies.

I saw an article last week (don't have the link) that said that roughly half of "self-declared" indepents are more conservative than the average republican. So it is wrong to asume that independents are a measure of the political center. Many new independents are former republicans and current tea partiers. Frankly. I can't see any difference between the tea party and republican platforms.

For November, I suspect to see 1-2 dozen seats to go republicans since the party out if power usually does better in midterms -- and dems would still control both.houses. However, it would be way cool if the democrats had a massive voter turn out to make Washington and the corporate media realize that this country is left of center. That's why Obama won by a landslide and bush could just barely win one time and needed the right leaning scotus to help out the first time.