kingblaze84
New member
shootemwon;1160973 said:One of the main factors you could point to in Bush's re-election was that John Kerry was an exceptionally bad candidate. If Obama faces an exceptionally bad challenger like Bush did in 04, it certainly would help him.
Also, someone previously commented that all likely Republicans have polls showing that if the election were today, they could beat Obama. While that's mainly true, those numbers are misleading. There's an old saying that goes something like "A high profile candidate's best day on the campaign trail is the first day". What it means is that anyone with name recognition will have better numbers before the campaign actually gets underway. Let's take Palin as an example of this. The day she was announced as McCain's runningmate, polls showed that independents and Hillary supporters had surprisingly high opinions of her. After a couple weeks on the campaign trail, as the tough questions started getting asked, her approval shot way down. Now she's supposedly more popular, but let her get on the trail for 2012 and you better believe she's gonna face those same old problems. If you go back and look at what seasoned, rational analysts (as opposed to narrative driven pundits who just wanna hype up juicy stories) the consensus always was that Palin's high poll numbers would fall when people got to know about her. The same will happen for anyone else once they start running.
Solid points. I guess it's just too early to tell now, but your post is the reason why I think eventually, a newcomer will be the one to challenge Obama and beat him. I could be wrong, but I doubt it.
The terrible economy is NOT helping Obama, and sadly, it doesn't look like it's gona pick up anytime soon. If things get any worse, I don't know how the hell Obama will win. At least the economy was in average to good shape when Bush was in office.....Obama does not have the same luxury.
It's not looking pretty for Obama..........
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