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LEFT WING LOONS Title: “My daddy would turn over in his grave ... if he knew --- I voted for a Republican,” In Louisiana Runoff Election, Senator Landrieu Tries to Revive Her Base By RICHARD FAUSSET DEC. 4, 2014 Louisiana Runoff: A Blue State Turns Red Senator Mary L. Landrieu, a Democrat, faces Representative Bill Cassidy, a Republican, in a runoff election Saturday. HAMMOND, La. She has been rebuffed by her liberal colleagues in Washington and pilloried at home for voting with the president, and has watched helplessly while her Democratic base has eroded like a cheap levee. These are hard times for Mary L. Landrieu, the last Deep South Democrat in the United States Senate. But on the cusp of a Saturday runoff election that feels as much like a race against history as against a Republican opponent, Ms. Landrieu has been barnstorming around her home state on what she called her Louisiana First Victory Tour, hugging, kissing and cajoling voters with an argument that has served her well for the 18 years she has been in the Senate. On the stump, Ms. Landrieu, 59, has long made it clear that her party affiliation took a back seat to her professed role as Louisianas essential envoy to Washington, attuned to the states peculiar cultural quirks and federal needs, from oil-patch policy to flood protection. Continue reading the main story Related Coverage President Obama greeting audience members after speaking at Xavier University of Louisiana in New Orleans in 2010, on the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. In some Southern states, the Republican advantage among white voters is nearly nine to one in presidential elections, a level of loyalty rivaling that of African-Americans for Democrats. Political Calculus: Demise of the Southern Democrat Is Now Nearly Complete DEC. 4, 2014 On Tuesday afternoon in Hammond, a city of 20,000 north of Lake Pontchartrain, she told a small crowd that the November elections had been about choosing which party should be in charge of Congress. Angie Shirley, a supporter of Bill Cassidy, waited for a campaign event to begin at University Worship Center in Shreveport, La. Credit William Widmer for The New York Times That has been decided now, she said. But what is still left to be decided is who is best qualified to represent this state for six more years in the United States Senate. At risk is not only her Senate seat, which is being contested by Representative Bill Cassidy, a Republican from Baton Rouge, but a family dynasty dating back to her father, Moon Landrieu, a former mayor of New Orleans. There is also a sense that the black-white coalition that moderate Democrats like Ms. Landrieu once forged to win statewide office here may be fading into history. The rise of the first black president helped accelerate the white migration to the Republicans, which was reflected in the Republican tide that swept away many surviving Democratic officeholders across the South in November. And Louisiana lost a hefty chunk of its black population after Hurricane Katrina. Ms. Landrieu was the top vote-getter in Louisianas nonpartisan primary in November. But Mr. Cassidy, a 57-year-old doctor, has hewed closely to his partys recent strategy of nationalizing congressional elections. He and outside spending groups have reminded voters that Ms. Landrieu voted with President Obama 97 percent of the time. They have also criticized her for voting in favor of the Affordable Care Act, characterizing it as the deciding vote for Obamacare. But other numbers are just as ominous for Ms. Landrieu. Elliott Stonecipher, a political analyst in Shreveport, La., said that the growing degree to which whites have become Republicans and the loss of an estimated 125,000 Democratic voters after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 meant that Democrats now represented about 47 percent of Louisianas overall voter registration, compared to more than 60 percent in 2000. Ms. Landrieu was able to overcome that problem in 2008 in part because of Mr. Obamas presence on the ticket and the lift it gave to Democratic turnout, Mr. Stonecipher said. But this time, Ms. Landrieu is alone. Continue reading the main story She has literally been watching the power of her political brand disappear, he said. While Ms. Landrieu beat Mr. Cassidy by 16,000 votes in the primary, a second conservative candidate, Rob Maness, garnered more than 200,000 votes in the contest. Mr. Maness has since endorsed Mr. Cassidy. Ms. Landrieus appearance in Hammond underscored the fealty she still commands in some quarters: The crowd was thick with local officials who testified that the federal money she delivered helped build the local airports control tower and improve the local wastewater system. But for many voters, those achievements are not as important as the damage that they believe the Democratic Party is doing in Washington. Before she headed to Hammond on Tuesday, Ms. Landrieu stopped in the working-class New Orleans suburb of Gretna. There, a group of white, retired gas company workers were sitting in a coffee shop on Huey P. Long Avenue, ignoring the rally that Ms. Landrieus team was preparing. I think Mary Landrieu is just following the lead of the Democrats, said John Murphy, 78, one of the men drinking coffee. It was her vote that decided Obamacare. And that just ticked me off. Conrad Lawrence, 78, another in the group, said that he, too, was voting for Mr. Cassidy, even though Mr. Lawrence said that he was still a registered Democrat and had voted for many Democrats in the past including Ms. Landrieu. But the party had become too liberal for him. My daddy would turn over in his grave if he knew I voted for a Republican, he said. Ms. Landrieus father directed the desegregation of New Orleans city government in the 1970s. Ms. Landrieu and her brother Mitch, the current mayor, are seen by many blacks as inheritors of his legacy. That has come at a certain political cost. Joe Ortolano, another one of the men in the coffee shop, said the Landrieu clan had created an environment where everything catered to the black.
Poster Comment: Catering ... to the muslims too --- jews are next !
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Evolution - Marxism - anarchy - libertarianism - black racism - class warfare ... isn't ever going to work --- in a designed - science - immutable law universe ! All of these neocom ... reverend wright - obombobots - notso Sharpton --- ain't going to make it there
If you ... don't use exclamation points --- you should't be typeing ! Commas - semicolons - question marks are for girlie boys !
I hope and pray that today will be a total rout of this "entitled" woman! Knock her off her throne, Louisiana! Take nothing for granted...get out and vote!
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