

Wesley Clark for Obama VP in 2012
The last time a Republican was elected to the seat, which covers parts
of Brooklyn and Queens, was nearly a century ago, says Allysia Finley of
The Wall Street Journal. That would be Anthony Weiner’s New York
9th. Brooklyn was long considered the dead center of Democratic
politics in America. Indeed, the century of populist liberal thinking
was born in Brooklyn. That a Republican would take it today would send
the Democrats through a sea change. It already has.
It makes no difference who wins today in Brooklyn. Change is here, but
not the kind that Obama called for. If Obama wants to survive in 2012 he
needs to make an immediate radical shift. Obama’s lost promise was
identified immediately after his nomination. The choice of Joe Biden for
VP established the paradigm. This would not be new as Reagan, Kennedy
and Roosevelt brought in the new; new demands new people. This would be a
party of old hacks and returned political favors. Hillary made it
worse. And the foul-mouthed Thugee Society from Chicago gave the
appearance of a vengeance agenda.
First off, get Joe Biden off the ticket. On July 8, 2011, Paul Bedard of Washington Whispers, a blog at U.S. News, said it was lamented that President Obama did not pick Wesley Clark, the former NATO supreme commander, as a running mate in 2008 or find the retired four-star general a choice Cabinet spot: “That has allies suggesting he's angling to be among those Obama might consider if he dumps Vice President Joe Biden or to fill Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's post — or even Defense secretary or United Nations ambassador — in a second Obama term. ‘It's a waste of brilliant talent,’ a Clark associate tells our Suzi Parker.”
It is indeed, in a Cabinet badly in need of talent. With the romanticized “Arab Spring” now in the grip of soccer thugs, Obama foreign policy is surpassing their storied failures on economy here at home. Clark was right about Libya. He was right about Iraq, and he opposed invasion of both.
If NY’s 9th district race turns out to be a continuation of conservative trends that rose in the NY-23 race two years ago, the Dems face a landslide in 2012; a loss not only of the presidency but of the Senate as well. And as one commentator said, Texas Gov. Rick Perry's stock has gone up in the past month like an Internet stock in the 1990s. If Perry takes South Carolina, and there is every indication that he will, he will take everything.
It might not hurt the Democrats to have a Southern general on the ticket. One who knows what he is doing.











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