Thursday, November 26, 2009

Politics

Obama to Stump for Deeds, Corzine

Obama will make the case that his policies are turning the economy around

Posted October 19, 2009

As part of his final push leading up to the November 3 elections, President Obama plans to make an aggressive case that his policies are finally turning the economy around and call on voters to expand his "Obama coalition" from 2008 and apply it to economic policy.

"You're going to see the president talking about the economy and how he put in policies that have us back on the road to recovery," says Josh Earnest, a White House spokesman. Obama will argue that his aggressive actions have stabilized the financial markets, kept the mortgage crisis from getting worse, and prevented a recession from becoming a depression. He will acknowledge that the unemployment rate remains high, at 9.8 percent, but will say his policies will eventually create more jobs.

Over the next two weeks, the president will campaign vigorously for candidates who share his priorities, Earnest says. In terms of individual races, Democratic strategists say his top priorities are helping New Jersey's Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine to win re-election and putting Virginia gubernatorial candidate Creigh Deeds over the top to keep that statehouse in Democratic hands. Obama is scheduled to stump for Corzine Wednesday at Fairleigh Dickinson University and for Deeds next week.

Fund-raising also is high on Obama's list. He will headline events Tuesday in Manhattan for the Democratic National Committee and Bill Owens, a Democratic candidate for Congress in New York's 23rd District, where a special election will be held November 3. Owens is seeking the seat of Republican Rep. John McHugh, who resigned to become Obama's secretary of the Army. On Friday, Obama will campaign and raise money for the 2010 re-election campaigns of Sen. Chris Dodd in Connecticut and Gov. Deval Patrick in Massachusetts.

Reader Comments

Obama - the do nothing president

Like hell we are on the road to recovery! Big Spender keeps on increasing the fiscal devt load on the backs of the American taxpayer. Incumbents need to be voted out and Corzine is a crook of epic proportions. Deeds hasn't done any good ones.

Go ahead, Mr. President -- make the GOP's day!

So Obama actually believes his presence will enhance the political chances of Corzine and Deeds? I'd say many of their problems can be directly attributed to the failures of the Obama administration.

This is the first chance average American voters will have to register their displeasure with the party that's now running this nation (into the ground) ... and Obama's appearances will only remind people which politician fueled their grassroots opposition in the first place.

Unless Obama brings along his minions from ACORN, the political careers of two Democrat governors may soon be toast.

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