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Marriage was the motivator in 2004

In 2004, a number of states had referenda on their ballots for Defense of Marriage resolutions, laws, or amendments. I’ve seen data that suggests that many conservative voters in swing states like Ohio were motivated to go to the polls to vote to protect marriage and, by the way, cast a vote for President Bush. In other words, without those referenda, it’s likely Bush would have lost and Kerry would have been elected.

To my knowledge, there’s no similar broad-based motivator this time around. Will an anti-Hillary or anti-Obama sentiment be enough to motivate conservative voters who are lukewarm about McCain to get them to the polls?

One might take the view that while McCain is not 100 percent reliably pro-life or conservative, no matter what, he’s more pro-life and more conservative than his two possible opponents. That’s not exactly a ringing endorsement. Hmm.


Posted by Domenico Bettinelli on 04/2/08 at 07:13 PM  •   • 



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COMMENTS

if AlQuaeda is very smart, they will NOT pull any stunts in the US until after the election.

United States Posted by ninenot  on  04/3/08  at  12:31 PM



That’s assuming AQ thinks like we do. They don’t. They *prefer* having someone like Bush in office, because it makes for a better enemy for recruitment (and, remember, AQ is a mafioso syndicate, and recruitment is a key support).

United States Posted by  on  04/4/08  at  07:29 AM



1) Al Qaeda would like nothing more than the U.S. to pull out of Iraq so they could establish a Muslim state.

2) Republicans at some level must hope the primary conflict doesn’t resolve itself any time soon. Blacks don’t like Hillary and white collar Dems don’t seem to be flocking to Obama.

United States Posted by matt  on  04/4/08  at  10:58 AM



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