Born and raised in MA, I've typically voted Democrat in every election except for city council because Cambridge has proportional representation and the municipal elections are not based on party. The Massachusetts Special Election was the first time I voted Republican for a state-wide campaign. I did it for two reasons: protest and to send a message to President Obama and his White House Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel.
We want a change, but we want the change that we voted for in 2008. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal on December 18, 2009, Emanuel told Jonathan Weisman that he was not worried about appeasing the base. My message to Mr. Emanuel is: don't ignore your base or they will not turn out to vote -- or, quite frankly, they will vote the other way out of protest.
Obama abandoned his efforts to go after Wall Street and, once elected, he moved from the left to the middle. Come to think of it, once he officially got the Democratic nomination, he moved from the left to the middle, and then once he was elected, he skewed more to the right. I realize that many progressives keep saying "Give him more time," and many are writing articles that he's doing too much at once -- but that's not the problem. It's not about giving him more time; it's that almost all of his decisions are in the opposite direction of his campaign promises. Obama has...
When we vote our elected officials into office, we need to challenge them on the good and bad. When they move away, we pressure them to hold to their campaign promises and when they do the right thing, we say thank you.
My vote for Brown was not in support of Scott Brown, and although Coakley ran a weak campaign, I didn't vote against her, but it was a vote against Emanuel and Obama for abandoning the progressive agenda that he campaigned on during the 2008 election. Do I think that Coakley would have served my state better if elected to the Senate? One has to wonder, however, she didn't come across as if she wanted the job, and acted as if she had it in the bag. In addition, she flip flopped in the debates, lacked a lot of detail in her speeches, and she had 15 lobbyists from the healthcare industry heavily influencing her campaign. Currently, the Democrat's are already conceding left and right on key issues, therefore another Democrat in the Senate would not suffice. Senator-elect Brown seemed to want the job more; he was out there campaigning every day, and within his platform I agreed with about 4 or 5 of his agenda (I'm center left, politically).
What frustrates me the post regarding elected officials is when they get into office, they ignore their base. One thing I will give credit to Republican's, they don't ignore their supporters, and Obama needs to stop appeasing Republican's who want to block his key initiatives and pass healthcare through reconciliation, where all he needs is 51 votes and not 60. That's how Bush got all of his stuff through - you didn't hear Bush talking about needing 60 Republicans to pass his agenda while stalling everything. Obama got elected on anti-Bush, but once he got into office, he's embraced many of Bush's policies - if we wanted another Bush in office, we would have elected McCain.
The last straw for me was when Obama came down to my campus on Sunday, touting his support for Coakley, but forgetting that he still hasn't shown tough leadership against the party that wants to see him fail. Leadership is not unilateral disarmament where you put down your weapons and walk toward the enemy stating that you just want to negotiate while they spout vile lies about you, i.e. fake birth certificate and other fake lies that have been saying since he got elected. Also, mentioning that Coakley is someone that goes against the status quo and would be tough against special interests. Really? As Arianna Huffington stated in Countdown, the night of the election, Mr. President, you are the status quo. Also, your administration is bursting with special interests. How can we take your word that Coakley isn't going to get into office and fall within the same gamesmanship that you have?
Thank you, Celinda Lake, for your interview with Brave New Films, and your research that you released regarding what would happen if Brown won. Everything in your research reflects exactly what I've felt as a former Obama supporter, and that is the feeling that his administration has ignored and abandoned the middle class. I've unregistered as a Democrat, and although I'm center left politically, I re-registered as an Independent, and don't align myself with any party except the mad-as-hell party. Obama talks about all the things that he's going to do, and his entourage of aides can echo it, but if it's not followed up with action, they are just words. And if you continue to shelter bankers and Insurance Corporations, your base will know and you won't get reelected in 2012.