Sabresfansince1980 wrote:
Mr. Natural wrote:
I don't think Gingrich has the political organization, nor the money, to hang with Romney over the long hall, but maybe he can elevate the GOP dialogue to a level deserving of a presidential election.
Elevate the dialogue? Obama's eloquent dialogue during his campaign was nothing more than a rah-rah speech. He had nothing more to say than, "I'm not Bush" and "hope and change". Since his election he's taken every bit of the partisan stance that Repubs are accused of, starting off early with his "they can take the back of the bus" comment.
Gingrich would do more than elevate dialogue, he would tear Obama apart in a debate, and it would be ugly. Obama will not focus on issues (not that he does now) if Gingrich is the primary winner, he'll resort to dredging up past. Obama's only hope against Gingrich is a smear campaign that actually could work in the minds of independants that might only see (in their minds) a Repub dinosaur.
If you've been a Sabres fan since 1980, then surely you've been around long enough to realize that
EVERY presidential candidate's campaign is mostly "rah-rah" speeches. However, in the last presidential election Obama offered far more in the way of substance than did his opponent.
Also, Obama just made the "back of the bus" comment less than two months ago, so if that is when he started getting partisan he waited far too long, in my opinion. The comment referred to the GOP driving the economy into the ground and now they are calling shotgun on economic reforms. Pretty mild stuff.
I would throw the Republican congress off the bus altogether.
As to the president running a smear campaign against Gingrich, keep in mind that Newt is the same man who started the practice of giving speeches in the well of an empty House of Representatives for the benefit of C-Span cameras that never showed it was empty, calling Democrats cowards and traitors and daring them to stand up and object if they disagreed, which of course no one did since he was speaking to empty seats.
Cheap, underhanded tactics and smear campaigns involving a candidate's personal life are fair game in a presidential campaign. You know how I know this?
The Republicans have demonstrated it many, many times.