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McCain ad seeks Clinton supporters

August
25

Supporters of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton are being targeted in a new television ad released earlier today by John McCain’s presidential campaign.

The 30 second ad features a Clinton supporter,Debra Bartoshevich, who is supporting McCain because Clinton won’t be the Democrats’ nominee.

The presumptive GOP nominee released an ad yesterday called “Passed Over’’ that alleges that Obama did not offer Clinton the position of running mate because she spoke the truth about him with her criticism during the primaries.

Clinton, seeking to unify Democrats behind Obama, plans to release her delegates to vote for Obama and will urge them to vote for the Illinois senator at a meeting Wednesday with those delegates.

Clinton speaks this morning at the New York delegation breakfast here in Denver.

Here’s the script for the ad:

Debra Bartoshevich: “I’m a proud Hillary Clinton Democrat. She had the experience and judgment to be President. Now, in a first for me, I’m supporting a Republican, John McCain. I respect his maverick and independent streak, and now he’s the one with the experience and judgment.A lot of Democrats will vote McCain. It’s okay, really.”
John McCain: “I’m John McCain and I approved this message.”

This entry was posted on Monday, August 25th, 2008 at 9:53 am by Brian Tumulty.
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20 Responses to “McCain ad seeks Clinton supporters”

  1. R Hooper

    What a media stooge (D.B.). Thankfully, those with such poor logic are small in number.

  2. the consultant

    The ad is brilliant…low key..over 50% of Hillary supporters are not yet supporting Obama….that will
    of course change after the convention but Obama is
    not getting a large enough share of the democratic
    vote to win….kerry got 89 and lost…Obama is in
    the high 70”s…Obama at this point appears to be
    a loser

  3. Bob H

    ‘A committee of the Wisconsin Democratic Party in July voted to strip Bartoshevich, a lifelong Democrat and former Clinton delegate, of her delegate status. Bartoshevich made headlines in June when news reports indicated she would support McCain if Sen. Barack Obama was the Democratic nominee.’

    from the Racine Journal Times,

    http://www.journaltimes.com/articles/2008/08/25/local_news/doc48b2d3e563ff1152774873.txt S major case of sour grapes.

    Funny how many newspapers are leaving that out of this ‘story’. Note that this woman has a personal grudge so strong that she will go against the wishes of the candidate she supposedly supported (Clinton, who has endorsed Obama and encouraged her backers to do the same) to do this for McCain and the RNC. A fleeting moment in the spotlight. Hardly showing any allegiance to the principles of Clinton nor Democrats.

  4. the consultant

    you will find that there will be legions of regular democrats who do not support Obama..they may not
    necessarily vote for McCain but they do not have to
    for him to win the battleground states…and just
    keep your eye on Ohio, Va, Mo, Nev, and NH and Mich
    that will tell you the story..go to realpolitics.com
    and follow the state by state polling ..right now
    I have McCain ahead 274 to 264..with only a few toss
    ups left..

  5. DBR NC

    The consultant:

    surely you mean realclearpolitics.com ? Check out where realpolitics.com takes you. Realclearpolitics.com shows Obama ahead, as does pollster.com

  6. tim hays

    The Biden choice proves that Senator Obama has a political “death wish.” Biden is the best naive choice of a presidential candidate since Dukakis chose Lloyd Bentsen.

    God Bless America! Biden makes even Agnew look like Truman as a choice.

    Sen. McCain,the wiser candidate, may now feel free to choose as his running mate a man of great wisdom and character, former Gov. Mitt Romney. Even dogs will root for Mitt. (Our inside laugh.)

  7. Jim Kelly - NY Conservative Campaigns

    What vote percentage did Biden get in the primary races, something like 1% (One per cent?)
    And he is from the State of Delaware?

    Another win for the Republicans on the horizon.

    Jim Kelly – NY Conservative Campaigns

  8. the consultant

    I happen to think Joe Biden is a smart, decent, and
    good man…his knowledge of national security and foreign
    affairs is wide and deep..the fact that Obama had to
    pick him underlines Obama’s lack of gravitas in that
    area…If the ticket were reversed even I would
    have to consider it

  9. GOP Girl

    Senator Biden is a wise choice for Obama-Biden does get respect from the Republicans. While I may not agree with him politically, he is intelligent and knows how to communicate. Hopefully McCain chooses fmr. Gov. Mitt Romney for VP and then we’ll have a real race. We’d hopefully get the disgruntled Clinton supporters and keep our conservative base. Oh, as an asides, Senator Biden was good friends with Senator Strom Thurmond-so much so, they had requested that their senate offices be next to one another.

  10. GOP Girl

    Again, ignore the lines

  11. GOP Girl

    Senator Biden is a wise choice for Obama-Biden does get respect from the Republicans. While I may not agree with him politically, he is intelligent and knows how to communicate. Hopefully McCain chooses fmr. Gov. Mitt Romney for VP and then we’ll have a real race. We’d hopefully get the disgruntled Clinton supporters and keep our conservative base. Oh, as an asides, Senator Biden was good friends with Senator Strom Thurmond-so much so, they had requested that their senate offices be next to one another.

  12. Jiminy Cricket

    On August 24, yesterday, the Washington Post ran a story reporting that Biden’s son Hunter, and Biden’s brother James, are named as defendants in a big lawsuit accusing them of defrauding a former business partner and an investor of millions of dollars in a hedge fund deal.

    The case apparently is in the NY State Supreme Court.

    They say they are not guilty, and Joe Biden is tenatively linked to it in an indirect way. But the Obama camp is of course sticking by “Say It Ain’t So Joe!” Biden.

  13. ed1

    Right – One of his sons (don’t know if it’s this one) graduated from Yale Law and then became a lobbyist/”consultant” for MBNA, later Bank of America. Coincidentally, Biden backed almost everything the banks wanted with his votes in the Senate, and tried to convince his fellows to do the same, which they were disinclined to do, since the great majority of them found the banks predatory in trying to make bankruptcies more difficult, and credit card interest usurious. Same old same old. Guess the kid was more interested in easy money than he was in constitutional law – and old Joe did his best to see that he was successful. Got a ton of campaign donations from the banking industry to boot. Getting a little tired of all these holier-than-thou charlatans? Me, too.

  14. Jiminy Cricket

    Simple answer—YES. Very tired of them. On all levels.

    Biden is like a ship with a lot of slow leaks. If the Republicans do it right, they can turn those small leaks into big ones. Then, end of ship.

  15. Ian

    I don’t think anyone can say that Biden is a great guy without personally knowing him. He may or may not be. I don’t see how having an office next to Strom Thurmond is any evidence one way or the other. Obviously, he appears to be a devoted family man and appears to be well-liked by his colleagues in the Senate and those in the media.

    However, he is an attack dog, who has done some pretty crappy things. Clarence Thomas didn’t believe that Biden was honest with him when Biden sat atop the judiciary. He didn’t give Robert Bork a fair hearing and in fact, came up with a plan over two months ahead of time to derail his nomination. He wasn’t particularly fair or nice to Alito or Roberts. There are principled liberals in the Senate such as Senator Feingold and there are attack dogs such as Tom Harkin. Biden, is more similar to the latter than the former.

  16. Ian

    As for Biden’s foreign policy experience, there a couple of snippets from an article in Slate titled, “What Would Biden’s Middle East Policy Look Like?” by Shmuel Rosner that I thought would be pertinent. Although the author of the piece is very sympathetic to Biden, he provides a mountain evidence of against him.

    “it’s hard to identify a coherent agenda, much less an ideology, driving Biden’s many positions.”

    “He voted against the first Gulf War, though he later regretted it, and in favor of the second Gulf War. (He didn’t regret that; in 2005 he said that “the decision to go to war was the right one,” but the candidate he’s supposed to help made his name by opposing that same war.) He has suggested a partition of the country (he has been quiet about this position in recent months), and he opposed the surge, declaring, “The surge isn’t going to work either tactically or strategically.””

    “His position on Darfur—the most daring of all the candidates’, Democrat or Republican—demonstrates that his patience with rogue regimes is limited. He is ready to take action. Morally, calling Darfur the exception is an easy case to make. Strategically, not so much. Can Biden support unilateral American intervention in places in which the United States has no direct strategic interest while rejecting such actions in places where the interest is clear? Apparently, he can.”

  17. ed1

    Obama’s wife says she admires Biden because he goes home to his wife every night, The implication, of course, is that many, if not most of the ethically challenged down there, don’t.

  18. the consultant

    Biden lives how many minutes from dc..

  19. ed1

    Good guess would be similar to Stamford from Grand Central.

  20. the consultant

    biden was picked because barry has NO foreign policy resume
    and because biden is an attack dog by nature which they
    feel they need to go after MCcain

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