Porterville Recorder

His panics, obama and the 2018 election

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F ormer President Barack Obama has shattered modern precedence by entering the 2018 mid-term campaign; his eight-year presidency, however, hovers over his intrusion into the campaign.

His debut 2018 political speech at the University of Illinois was well delivered and at times funny. But, he could not explain why his eight-year economic growth pattern doesn’t come close to looking good over current growth.

His record: Slightly over 1% growth average for his eight years.

He didn’t slap President Trump around with job growth that started under his governance, nor did he hit hard on corruption that has permeated the Trump government.

He didn’t mention that under President George W. Bush, GDP growth exceeded Obama’s GDP growth.

He fails to sway uncommitte­d voters. Example: his weekend appearance at the Anaheim Convention Center to promote California Democrats running in districts won by Hillary Clinton flopped. Only 900 people appeared in a venue rented to accommodat­e a large crowd greeting President Obama. There are over 20 million people within a two hour drive of Anaheim.

Meanwhile, his friends in the U.S. Senate made fools of themselves, trying to make Trump’s nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court look like a promoter of wire-coat-hanger use for “back alley” abortions. Especially bad were potential Democrat Presidenti­al candidates, to wit: California’s Kamal Harris and New Jersey’s Booker.

She, because she dangled an alleged conversati­on Judge Brett Kavanaugh supposedly had about the Mueller Special counsel investigat­ion with a (or several) lawyer(s) from a Washington, D.C. firm founded by President Trump’s former attorney. She presented no details nor offered any facts to support her questions. His answer to her was “No.” She did not posit any details beyond asking the question. In political parlance, the word for her question was — “SMEAR.”

Senator Booker, on the other hand, is what we used to call a “wimp.”

Booker said he was challengin­g Senate “rules” by releasing documents marked confidenti­al, but the reality was he didn’t do that; the documents had been cleared for release before the committee session started. Booker lied.

So, entering the final 60 days before Election Day, we see President Obama’s entry into the campaign flopping in California. We see Democrat Senators in the Judiciary Committee flopping around like fish out of water and failing to make a dent in Judge Kavanaugh’ s nomination. He’ll be approved with several Democrat Senate votes; at least two plus all Republican­s.

We see everlastin­g (and boring) optimism that a Texas Democrat with an arrest record can knock off a Republican Hispanic Senator who might not be very likable but who is, neverthele­ss, a Republican Hispanic in a solid Republican state that hasn’t elected a Democrat statewide for a generation.

In Florida, that Hispanic-disliking historian Victor Davis Hansen in his book “Mexifornia” calls a “successful multi-racial state”- we see a campaign for governor that will be the most racially- influenced election in the country this year, despite one Holocaust-denier running for Congress in Illinois.

Republican nominee and former Congressma­n Ron Desantis apparently spoke several times at conference­s sponsored by former Communist David Horowitz, in which wellknown White Supremacis­ts spoke. Most people do not consider Horowitz to be a racist, and his conference­s, like many, have a rainbow of speakers over time.

Suggesting that Desantis may have racist feelings because he spoke at Horowitz conference­s is pretty juvenile. We hope it doesn’t reflect what the campaign of Black Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum will look like in the coming weeks. An FBI investigat­ion swirls around Gillum. Prediction: Desantis will win.

As for the Florida Senate race, Republican Governor Rick Scott will receive heavy Puerto Rican and Cuban support and will probably win the race — with Hispanic votes. Bill Nelson, who?

Hispanics will carry much weight in the Texas Senate race and will give Senator Ted Cruz enough votes for his reelection. In Illinois, Hispanics can have an influence in the race between millionair­es for governor. Prediction: Republican incumbent Governor Bruce Rauner will win reelection with numerous Hispanic votes.

In California, Hispanics will elect Gavin Newsom governor, but their votes will fall off in Democrat-targeted congressio­nal districts in Orange and San Diego counties, denying Democrats the sweep of half-adozen districts they have targeted, and that Obama tried to help in his failed appearance in Anaheim.

Mexican American – Hispanic governors are termed out of office in New Mexico and Nevada. In the race to replace New Mexico’s Republican governor Susana Martinez, Republican Congressma­n Steve Pearce is statistica­lly tied with Democrat nominee Congresswo­man Michele Lujan Grisham 60 days out. Pearce has been endorsed by former Democrat Governor Jerry Apodaca.

In Nevada, Attorney General Adam Laxalt (a Hispanic if one stretches the definition to Basques) is running against Clark County (Las Vegas) Commission­er Steve Sisolak. The race is too close to call, but betting money is on Laxalt. The winner replaces Governor Brian Sandoval.

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