Wednesday, August 27, 2008




ProConPundit Ready To Pass Torch


We are coming to the point where we must focus on the selection of John McCain’s running mate which will be announced Friday at 10 a.m. Chicago time. The cat should be out of the bag Thursday.
The final names being thrown around are Mitt Romney, former Governor of Massachusetts, Governor Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota and, Senator Joseph Lieberman, independent of Connecticut.
I believe Romney and Pawlenty are out of the running. Pawlenty would be a Quayle-like choice. McCain is not desperate enough to pick Romney.

My final three predictions are:
1. Tom Ridge, Former Governor, Pennsylvania and First Secretary of Homeland Security
2. Lindsay Graham, U.S. Senator (SC)
3. Joe Lieberman, U.S. Senator (CT)


I lean mostly to Ridge and think Graham has been ignored by the media.

Biden Finally Makes Prime Time


I love Joe Biden. I don’t actually remember the last time we had a regular guy on a national ticket. He adores his family, still thinks his wife is hot and she seems proud of him. On top of all of that, he is well qualified to be President of the US. His speech tonight wasn’t the best speech I’ve ever heard him give and I’ve paid more attention to him than most people. (That’s not bragging.) His personal stuff was interesting. It was mostly a speech that seemed disjointed to me.



His speech was shorter than I imagined. His son Beau, Attorney general of Delaware, gave the intro for his dad which was really touching.

Biden is an emotional, heart guy. I love him. He, too, was short on what Obama and he would actually do to make life in America better.

Anecdotally, Biden never endorsed Obama until he was selected as his running mate. The families seem to have bonded well. Michelle Obama was weepy during the speech which was, well, not exactly touching, but nice.

Obama had a surprise visit at the end of the speech. Forgive me, I thought it was lame. Biden didn’t need him. Obama so often comes off as an "eat your spinach type" explaining things to us that don’t need to be explained to us...like why his speech will be in a stadium tomorrow night.

GOP strategist, Mike Murphy, was ridiculed as a guest tonight by Chris Matthews, booed by the studio audience while Keith Olbermann told Matthews to pull the plug on Murphy. Murphy had the gall to say that he thought Bill & Hillary would actually vote for McCain. Opposition to Obama is simply not tolerated. Murphy quipped, You (people at MSNBC) are so in the tank (for Obama) that I am looking for the submarine.


Good Performances by The Clintons’

While I have endorsed Obama as President of any high school student council in America, I think the Clinton’s should be in the Thespian Hall of Fame. All right, I always blast them. This time, let me say good things about them.
Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton despise Barack Obama. They think he lacks experience–and he does. They think he is unelectable and if they aren’t among the shrewdest pontifical strategists, who is? Ironically, they look at him they Bush I looked at Clinton in 1992. I think the difference is that Bush underestimated Clinton. McCain is not making that mistake.


Hillary last night and Bill tonight gave great speeches and rousing endorsements. They aren’t hypocrites for going to bat so hard for someone they can’t stand. They are loyal Democrats. They are self serving and working their angles, but loyal Democrats.
I must admit it was fun to listen to Bubba once again. I have generally despised him and usually with good reason. No one can shoot that bull like he can. Rivaled or exceeded only by Ronald Reagan, Bill is the best political speaker of our time. He never lets the truth stand in the way of making a good point. He took us down one more "Don’t Stop Thinkin’ About Tomorrow" memory lane of his presidency: Peace and prosperity, denial and appeasement, impeachment and disgrace.
Back to being nice. Let no one distort this. The Clinton’s did their part. There is a lot of buzz that Bill is not attending Obama’s speech tomorrow night. Who cares? He did his part. Obama has done very little to foster a good relationship with Bill. I don’t blame Obama. I wouldn’t either. At the same time, you can’t criticize Clinton for not going out of his way.

It was humorous to watch Michelle Obama tearing up when Hillary and Bill spoke glowingly of her husband. They want him to fall flat on his face.

I also think the nonsense about a catharsis and Hillary’s supporters needing to be treated so deferentially has been nauseating. This is part of why Obama doesn’t go out of his way to cajole them.

The high points of the convention, so far, has been the tribute to Ted Kennedy and Bill Clinton’s speech. So far, they’re not making a case for what they will do. They are bad mouthing Bush, though not excessively so and trying to link McCain to Bush but NOTHING about what change would actually be.


The Brilliant Woman Who Is The Star of the Democrats
Caroline Kennedy: Her Mother’s Daughter


Chicago 9 p.m. CST


Caroline Kennedy gave a great introduction to her Uncle Teddy the other night and obviously did a good job vetting a running mate for Obama. Her greatest performance was later Monday night when she was interviewed by the worthless Wolf Blitzer on CNN. I was out of town and staying in a hotel near Louisville that only had CNN. Blitzer asked Kennedy about the vetting process and said, "All right, Caroline, walk us through if you will, the entire process..." of picking from the final three finalists.

With her mother’s grace she paused, sort of rolled her eyes out loud, laughed, and replied, "I’m not walking you through anything, this was a confidential process."

She was great. Wolf Blitzer is a jerk.

Cable TV is really pathetic. I was forced to watch CNN for a couple of days and, except for David Gergen, is pretty lame. I have generally favored MSNBC even though it leaned left. I liked it because of the NBC influence of Tim Russert and, because even lefties like Chris Matthews interviews good people. With Russert dead, Tucker Carlson run off the reservation and any other voices that are not far left ridiculed or extinguished, its really lame.

The latest MSNBC influence is a cable show to the far left witchyfuss, Rachel Maddox.

Monday, August 25, 2008


South Side Chicago Girl Makes Her Mark


I grew up 5 miles and a million miles from Michelle Obama and her church.


People who know more than I do have described Michelle Obama as an anti-white militant black. I don’t really care for her and it pains me, I must admit, to oppose a so-called South side Chicagoan named Barack Obama for President. I doubt that another south sider will ever come this close again. Whatever I think of them, though, Michelle is really and truly a girl of the south side...she’s not exotic, not from Hawaii, not raised in Kenya. She grew up about five miles from me. She gave a great speech for her husband and the country she says she has always loved, even if only recently proud of.

Clintonesque in her embellishments, she lied when she said her husband wants to end the war reponsibly. He has been too slow to actually pay attention to what is going on or what is needed in Iraq. His entire platform has been based on voting against a war he had no vote in, while he voted present 100 times in the Illinois Senate when what he actually believed might have mattered.

So far, this convention has said nothing to white, working class, blue collar Democrats.

Lion and Lamb of Democratic Party

Honored at Convention:
Kennedy and Carter make final appearances to DNC


While Democrats have gathered in the Mile High City of Denver at the Pepsi Convention Center, the ProConPundit is diligently and flawlessly corresponding to you from the Horseshoe Casino & Hotel in Elizabeth, Indiana, near Louisville. I am here on business but still tending to the important matter of giving you the finest, dim-witted, partially informed coverage and commentary that you have come to expect from me.

The opening night of the Democratic convention has been lackluster. Its been too liberal and short on substance, generally. Nancy Pelosi, Jimmy Carter and Ted Kennedy all on one night with nothing substantiative impresses me as poor planning.

On the plus side, the introduction of the video tribute to Ted Kennedy was given by Caroline Kennedy. Her very presence is touching. The video tribute, also, was touching. Whatever you think of Ted Kennedy, behind Bob Byrd and Strom Thurmond, he is the longest serving U.S. Senator and has had a tremendous impact on American life. It was not known until the last minute whether Teddy would be able to attend the convention, let alone speak. His doctor and wife had advised against it. His wife, Victoria Reggae, incidentally, is a class act and loves him dearly. She was a pal of his for many years before she married him, so she was well aware of his drinking and carousing, and married him still. They seem really caring of each other. Ted forged ahead. The next suggestion was that he simply come out on stage but not speak. Notta. Then there was a plan for him to sit on a stool. He axed the stool. He gave a characteristic Teddy Kennedy barn burner speech. It had Shrummy written all over it (Bob Shrum his speech writer.) Make no mistake, this was Ted Kennedy’s last speech at a convention. I don’t mean that callously. He is 76 and has brain cancer. I was touched by the fact that he chose to speak of the future and not the past. He has been part of a past that was glorious and tragic, brave and shameful. Yet, he made it not about him or his brothers but about the dream which continues and he past the torch to Obama. Whatever you think of Ted (I like him), whatever you think of Obama (I don’t), it was touching. It was most touching to the cold heart of the ProConPundit as Teddy spoke, the camera occasionally panned to Caroline Kennedy and Maria Shriver who were crying as they listened to their Uncle Teddy belt out his last barn burner at a Democratic convention. My heart goes out to them even as they experience something unique in their family: someone dying. They have so often been robbed of the opportunity to say goodbye and so often forced to grapple with premature death. Teddy has run his race and fought the good fight. Its nice that the Kennedy’s have been blessed with a family member living a long and vibrant (and controversial) life.

Just 30 minutes before the Kennedy event was a video tribute to Jimmy Carter’s humanitarian efforts. Following that, Jimmy & Roslyn walked the stage to a standing O, but no speaking event. This was a mistake. Jimmy Carter will be 84 in October. This is his last convention and the ProConPundit is the only one who knows it. I know a lot of my friends despise him. His presidency was a dark time and, in fact, the worst of my lifetime. He is a decent man and a Nobel Peace Prize winner. Given the sick and twisted and pathological influence of the Clinton’s on this convention, it bears mentioning that Jimmy Carter, for whatever the failings of his presidency, always intended to do well, never placed a cigar in the vagina of a fat intern and was never impeached. (Sorry for the crudeness but it’s true.). At a Democratic convention, if nowhere else, he deserves a little more respect.

The real missed opportunity as everyone waits to see how unified the Clinton’s and Obama’s are was that the Kennedy’s and Carter’s were on the stage within 30 minutes of each other. Hello? Remember the 1980 convention when Teddy refused to shake hands with Jimmy Carter? Imagine the power of Carter and Kennedy shaking hands together, hugging each other on stage tonight. Neither will likely be on the stage of a convention again. That was poor.

I agree with James Carville and David Gergen who both believe this first night, except for the Kennedy sentiment, has been a wasted night in terms of substance. Michelle Obama is next. If I stay awake...I will report.

Saturday, August 23, 2008



My Second Favorite State With 2 Great Senators

I am a resident of Illinois and Wisconsin. No offense to my cheddar neighbors but my favorite state after Illinois is Indiana. I love Hoosiers. I also love the two fine U.S. Senators from Indiana, Dick Lugar, Republican and Evan Bayh, Democrat. Not only do they do proud to Indiana, and trust me with senators like Durbin and Obama in Illinois, Hoosiers should be proud, these two guys are national leaders. They quietly and effectively serve on committees like Armed Services, Foreign Relations, etc. I have always thought Bayh would made a good president and wished Lugar had gone further in his run for the White House in 1996. They have both been mayors of Indianapolis and Bayh was Governor of Indiana.

My reason for bringing them up today is that Bayh’s future ambitions for the presidency have likely ended with being passed over by Obama. And on that day, Evan Bayh’s colleague, Dick Lugar had this to say of him, "I have enjoyed for many years the opportunity to work with Joe Biden to bring strong bipartisan support to United States foreign policy. ... I share the disappointment of many Hoosiers that my partner in the Senate, Evan Bayh, was not selected on this occasion, but I believe he will continue to have widespread support for higher office during many years ahead."

Two class acts from a great state!

The Last Winning Democratic Ticket

Without a Southerner: 1944



Welcome To The Ice Age of Biden and McCain

"Someone's gonna cry

when they know they've lost you.

Someone's gonna thank the stars above."


The stakes couldn’t be higher. Its their last chance at the dream of their lifetime. Joe Biden will likely never be President but one shot at becoming Vice-President. John McCain, burdened by age and linking his wagon to the legacy of an unpopular Bush Administration, is within striking distance of winning or losing it all. Now McCain’s colleague and friend from the Senate becomes a most formidable opponent. Biden is a hard charging, tough fighting, skilled debater and lover of campaigning. His street smarts, foreign policy experience, domestic policy achievements, grey hair, Irish Catholic identity and ability to relate to real people all help tell the American people that Obama is "okay." There really isn’t credible precedent to suggest a running mate actually winning the election for the nominee but Obama, and McCain, need all the help they can get. Biden will help Obama.

McCain needs help. He has had the edge and may continue to. With Joe Biden a credible guy to talk about kitchen table issues at a time when John McCain doesn’t know how many kitchen tables he has is a problem for McCain. McCain not knowing how many houses he owns was his answer to President Bush I not knowing what a grocery scanner was in 1992.

The heat is on for McCain to make a good pick. Few people match Biden’s debate acumen. Two people I have watched debate him skillfully over the years on Meet The Press are Lindsay Graham and Joe Lieberman. Graham and Lieberman are the two people closest to McCain. I would pick Graham. I think Mitt Romney is a mistake now more than ever. If pro-lifers (of which I am one) are opposed to Tom Ridge (of which I am not) for being pro-choice, shouldn’t they oppose Romney for being pro-choice until he ran for President? That is my argument for Ridge, not against Romney. My argument against Romney is that he and McCain don’t like each other and running mates don’t actually deliver states. Two guys with 12 houses between them is a campaign nightmare. I would go with Ridge, Graham or Lieberman. Graham is youngest, southern, safest. In the end, McCain should have who he likes and can work well with. Anointing Romney as his heir apparent, win or lose, is a bad move. The Biden pick should also rule out McCain's choice of Bush league-ers (no pun intended) like Pawlenty (MN), Portman (OH), Sanford (SC), Crist (FL).

No one in the Senate knows McCain better than Biden. Until know they have been good friends and fans of each other. The gloves are off and one will win all, one will lose all. I can’t get the old Glenn Frey song, "The One You Love" from 1982 out of my head. "Someone's gonna cry when they know they've lost you. Someone's gonna thank the stars above."


From the Vault of the ProConPundit:

Eulogy for Strom Thurmond
by Senator Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
Columbia, South Carolina – July 1, 2003
(As Transcribed)

Nancy, Strom, Julie and Paul: James Strom Thurmond. Fritz, he was one complex guy. For what else would explain that he asked, I’m told by Nancy, a guy named Biden from the State of Delaware to be one of his eulogists. I’ll never figure him out.
And Strom, I won’t forgive you. Lindsay, I always thought I was in control, but I knew down deep that I wasn’t and I think this is his last laugh. For what else could explain a North East liberal presence as the only outsider speaking here today, with the possible exception of Vice President Cheney.
Strom Thurmond was the only man whom I knew who, in a literal sense, lived in three distinct and separate periods of American history and lived what would have been considered a full life in each of those periods, particularly in his beloved South. Born into an era of essentially unchallenged and unexamined mores of the South, reaching his full maturity in an era of fully challenged and critically examined bankrupt mores of his beloved South, and living out his final three decades in a South that had formally rejected its past on race. In each of these stages in my observation, and I was only with him the last three decades, Strom represented exactly where he came from.
There’s an old hymn that includes these lyrics: "Once to every man and nation comes the moment to decide. In the strife of truth with falsehood, for the good or evil side... Then it is the brave man who chooses while the coward stands aside."
No one ever doubted Strom Thurmond’s physical courage. You’ve heard much written about it. About fifteen years ago I was reminded of this: I was coming up in an escalator with Strom going to a vote and a fella, who apparently had held a long-time grudge against Senator Thurmond, a tourist, literally interposed himself between me and Strom. And he said, "If you weren’t so old I would knock you..." and Reverend, I won’t say what he said. "I would knock you down."
And I immediately stood between them, and Strom literally took of his coat, and said, "Hold my coat, Joe."
And I looked at him and said, "No, no, no, no, no, no!"
And with that he went down and did twenty-five push ups. He had to be 88 or 87. He stood up and looked at the man and said, "If you weren’t so young, I’d knock you down."
Strom Thurmond was also a brave man who, in the end, made his choice and moved to the good side.
I disagreed deeply with Strom on the issue of civil rights and on many other issues, but I watched him change. We became good friends. I’m not sure exactly why or how it happened, Nancy. But you know we did. And Fritz could never figure it out; neither could I. Fritz is my very closest friend in the Senate.
But I do know that friendship and death are great equalizers... where our differences become irrelevant and the only thing left is what’s in our heart.
I went to the Senate emboldened, angered, and outraged at age 29 about the treatment of African-Americans in this country, by everything that, for a period in his life, Strom had represented. But then I met the man.
Our differences were profound, but I came to understand that, as Archibald MacLeish wrote, "It is not in the world of ideas that life is lived. Life is lived, for better or worse, in life."
Strom and I shared a life in the Senate for over thirty years... we shared a good life there and it made a difference. I grew to know him... I looked into his heart and saw the man, the whole man... I tried to understand him. I learned from him... and I watched him change oh so subtly.
Like all of us, Strom was a product of his time, but he understood people. He cared for them. He truly wanted to help. He knew how to read people... how to move them... how to get things done.
I’ll never forget we went down to see President Reagan. Strom and I had the Thurmond-Biden crime bill. We sat in a room with President Reagan and with Ed Meese, Jim Baker, William Smith, the Attorney General. And Strom started to try to convince the president to sign onto our bill, and he turned to me and he said, "Joe, explain it to him."
And I did my little bit, and it looked like the President was coming on and I swear in the Lord’s house that this is a true story, and with that, as Ed Meese, Mr. Vice President, thought the President might be convinced, he stood up and he said, "Mr. President, it’s time to go."
And with that the President very respectfully looked over and said, "Well, Strom, I have to go." And he had his hands on the table, and the president went to get up like this, and Strom grabbed his arm and pulled him back into his seat. I never saw anyone do that to a president.
And the president looked very sternly at Strom, and Strom said with his hands still on his arm, he said, "Mr. President when y’all get to be my age you’ll understand, you’ve gotta compromise." And the president then was about 85 years old.
Strom knew America was changing, and that there was a lot that he didn’t understand about that change. Much of that change challenged many of his long held views. But he also saw his beloved South Carolina changing as well, and he knew the time had come to change himself... But I believe the change came to him easily, and I believed he welcomed it because I saw others of his era fight that change, and never ultimately change.
It would be humbling to think I was among those who had some influence on his decision, but I know better. The place in which I work is a majestic place. If you are there long enough, it has an impact on you.
You cannot, if you respect those with whom you serve, fail to understand how deeply they feel about things differently than you, and over time I believe it has an effect on you. This is a man who in 1947, the New York Times ran a lead editorial saying, "Strom Thurmond: Hope of the South." And it talked about how he had set up reading programs and gotten better books for ‘separate but equal schools.’ This is a man who was opposed to the poll tax. This is a man who I watched vote for the extension of the voting rights act. This is a man who I watched vote for the Martin Luther King Holiday. And it’s very easy today to say that was pure political expediency, but I choose to believe otherwise. I choose to believe that Strom Thurmond was doing what few do once they pass the age of 50. He was continuing to grow, continuing to change.
His offices were next door to mine in the Russell Building, more appropriately mine were next to his. And, over the years, I remember seeing a lot change including the number of African-Americans on his staff and African-Americans who sought his help.
For the man who will see, time heals. Time changes. And time leads him to truth, but only a special man like Strom would have the courage to accept it, the grace to acknowledge it, and the humility – in the face of lasting enmity and mistrust – to pursue it until the end.
There’s a personal lesson that comes from a page in American political history that is yet unwritten, but nevertheless it resonates in my heart. I mentioned it on the floor of the Senate the other day.
It’s a lesson of redemption that I think applies today and I think Strom, as he listens, will appreciate it.
When I first arrived in the Senate, I met with John Stennis, another old Southern Senator who became my friend. We sat at the other side of this gigantic grand mahogany table he used as his desk which had been Richard Russell’s. It was the table upon which the Southern Manifesto had been signed, I am told. The year was 1972.
Senator Stennis patted the leather chair next to him when I walked in to pay my respects as a new young senator which was the order of the day, and he said, "Sit down, sit down, sit down, son." And those who served with him know he always talked like this. And he looked at me, and he said, "Son, what made you run for the Senate?" And like a darned fool, I told him the exact truth before I could think better. I said, "Civil Rights, sir."
As soon as I said it, I could feel the beads of perspiration pop out of my head and I got that funny feeling, and he looked at me and said, "Good. Good. Good." And that was the end of the conversation.
Well, eighteen years later, after us having shared a hospital suite for three months at Walter Reed and after him trying to help me in another pursuit I had, we had become friends. I saw him sitting behind that same table eighteen years later, only this time he was in a wheelchair. His leg had been amputated because of cancer, and I was going to look at his offices because in my seniority his office was available as he was leaving.
I went in and sat down and he looked at me as if it were yesterday, and he said, "Sit down, Joe. Sit down, Joe." And tapped the chair.
And he said something that startled me: He said, "You remember the first time you came to see me, Joe?" I shook my head. I didn’t remember. And he leaned forward and recited the story.
I said, "I was a pretty smart fellow, wasn’t I, Mr. Chairman?"
He said, "Joe, I wanted to tell you something then, and I’m going to tell you now." He said, "You’re going to take my offices, aren’t you?"
I said, "Yes sir, Mr. Chairman."
And he ran his hand back and forth across that mahogany table in a loving way, and he said, "You see this table, Joe?" This is the God’s truth. He said, "You see this table?"
I said, "Yes sir, Mr. Chairman."
He said, this table was the flagship of the Confederacy from 1954 to 1968. He said, "We sat here most of us from the Deep South, the old Confederacy, and we planned the demise of the Civil Rights movement."
And then he looked at me and said, "And it’s time. It’s time now that this table go from the possession of a man who is against civil rights to the table of a man who is for civil rights."
I was stunned.
And he said, "One more thing, Joe." He said, "the civil rights movement did more to free the white man than it did the black man." I looked at him, and I didn’t know what he meant, and he said in only John Stennis’ fashion, he said "It freed my soul. It freed my soul."
Strom Thurmond’s soul is free today. His soul is free.
The Bible says, "Learn to do well; seek judgement, relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, plead for the widow. Come now, and let us reason together... Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow."
Strom, today there are no longer any issues to debate. There is only peace, a patch of common ground, and the many memories that you’ve left behind.
For me, those memories are deeply personal, and they will stay with me as long as I live. Strom Thurmond stood by me when others didn’t, and when it was against his political interest to do so. I had been accused of something terrible, in my view, on the eve of the Bork nomination. I gathered the entire Judiciary committee, I was then Chairman, and I said to Democrats and Republicans alike, "I will stand aside as Chairman so that it will not effect this proceeding. And the first man to jump to his feet was your father, and he said: "No!" And I said, "Well, let me explain." And he said, "You don’t have to explain anything to me. You’re my chairman." And with that everyone stood up, but Strom Thurmond was the first man on his feet. He did not seek a single explanation for what I had been accused of.
And clearly, when partisanship was a winning option, he chose friendship, and I’ll never forget him for it.
I was honored to work with him, privileged to serve with him, and proud to call him my friend.
His long life may well have been the gift of his beloved God, but the powerful and lasting impact he had on his beloved South Carolina and on this nation is Strom’s legacy, his gift to all of us. And he will be missed.
The British essayist, William Hazlitt once wrote, "Death cancels everything but truth; and strips a man of everything but genius and virtue. It’s a sort of natural canonization."
The truth and genius and virtue of Strom Thurmond is what I choose to remember today.
To Nancy, to Strom; to Julie, and to Paul... to all his friends... to the people of South Carolina who knew him so well and loved him so much... America mourns with you. I mourn with you, for I knew Strom well. I felt his warmth as you did... I saw his strength as you did... I was the beneficiary of his virtues as you were. And I will miss him as you will... as we all will...
But he lived a long and good life and I know that, today, a benevolent God has lifted his arms to Strom. I just don’t know what Strom is saying to that benevolent God because you know he’s saying something.
So I say, farewell, Mr. Chairman. We stand in adjournment until we meet again.

Mr. Biden Goes To Springfield


As was the case in 1988 when Michael Dukakis picked Lloyd Bentsen, in 1996 when Bob Dole picked Jack Kemp, 2000 when Al Gore picked Joe Lieberman, and, to be honest, in 1980 when Ronald Reagan picked George H.W. Bush, I found myself once again wishing the running mate was the nominee for President.

Barack Obama nominated MY FAVORITE DEMOCRAT as his running mate today in Joe Biden, Democrat from Delaware. In 1981 when I was attending Worsham College of Mortuary Science, I remarked to my friend and classmate, Paul Kroeger that Joe Biden was the kind of Democrat we needed as President. This was on the heels of the dismal days of the Carter Administration as the Democratic Party began its long exile from the White House, as regular Democrats, working class Democrats became Reagan Democrats. I have waited 27 years to see Joe Biden on a national ticket. That the Democratic Party could never take a guy like him seriously, instead preferring Michael Dukakis in 1988 and Barack Obama in 2008 is why, as Reagan said, "I didn’t leave the Democratic Party, they left me."

Obama made a superb choice in picking Biden. As a Chicagoan, it was fun to see the announcement taking place on the steps of the Old Capital in Springfield. Obama doesn’t do much for me, but I really love Biden. I won’t go on and on about him. I think he’s been a great champion for working class Americans, a man who has triumphed terrible tragedies, survived stupid mistakes, has been a loyal but not far left Democrat and a reasonably bipartisan guy. Here is Biden's speech, http://www.clipsandcomment.com/2008/08/23/transcript-joe-bidens-speech-springfield-il/

Let me tell you three things about Biden you may not know:
1. He was THE eulogist at the funeral of the late Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-SC) in 2003. He wasn’t one of a dozen people who spoke at the funeral. Strom Thurmond wanted one U.S. Senator to speak at his funeral and he picked Biden. I watched it at the time. It was really impressive and spoke well of both of them.
2. For all of his years in the U.S. Senate, has a net worth of $ 150,000, and except for once plagiarizing, has never so much as been accused of an ethical or moral lapse.
3. When Biden was a child, he had a stuttering problem and was once ridiculed in class by a Catholic nun. His fighting Irish mother stormed to the school the next day and told the nun, "If you ever make fun of my son again, I will rip that bonnet off your face." It reminds me of something similar that Grandma Moynihan did after a nun read a list to the class of students whose tuition, during the Great Depression, was not paid.

Biden was not Obama’s first choice. His first choice was Gov. Tim Kaine of Virginia. And although Evan Bayh received serious consideration, he was vetoed by far left groups for being too conservative. Bayh opposed partial birth abortion. The so-called National Organization for Women (NOW) prevailed upon Gore to not pick Bayh as a running mate in 2000 and other left wing kooks who have a kindred spirit in Obama succeeded again. Tensions with Russia have underscored the need for an adult and an experienced one on the ticket. It was Illinois' other Senator, Dick Durbin, who pushed hard fro Biden once again proving that even a broken clock is accurate twice a day. Although Biden was chosen for his foreign policy background, his roll out speech in Springfield stressed his domestic priorities. He is a good friend of John McCain but wasted NO TIME slugging him. Biden declared, "These times require more than a good soldier. They require a wise leader." He also blasted McCain for employing the same "swift-boat" tactics that he once deplored and was, himself, a victim of by Bush-Rove in 2000.

Biden is a superb choice, the best possible choice Obama could have made. He’s a regular guy who connects with ordinary people. As much as the liberal crazed media ridicules him for talking too much and for his gaffes, his so-called gaffes often resonate right-on with the mind set of the American people. While he is well known for his endless remarks during senate hearings, his lesser known quips are priceless.


Here are a couple that come to mind:
1. "Rudy Giuliani is the least qualified person to seek the presidency since George Bush and all of his sentences contain one noun, one verb and 911."
2. When asked during a debate to say something nice about the person standing next to him, he quipped that he thought it was a stupid exercise and proceeded to tell Dennis Kucinich that what he liked most about him was his wife.

Today he said of his own wife, "Ladies and gentlemen, my wife Jill, who you’ll meet soon, is drop dead gorgeous...she also has her doctorate degree, which is a problem." It s great that the guy has a hot wife, is 66 years old and wants you to know that about her. Who does that? Regular guys–like Joe Biden.

ProConPundit Ready for 3 a.m. Call



Much has been said about Barack Obama’s readiness as President for a 3 a.m. emergency call. Obama has yet to prove that he is capable of receiving such a call. As of today, we know he is capable of sending a text message in the middle of the night. And the ProConPundit, believe it or not, was on the text message distribution list.
The text message came in around 2 o’clock Chicago time this morning. I felt a combination of emotions: excitement, mild irritation to be awakened, and stupidity to have asked for this.

I promised two friends, Marc Jaeger and John Olenick that I would forward the text to them. Jaeger, who only owns two homes was at the cape of Wisconsin Dells. He doesn’t have a computer there and apparently not a television, either, so he was relying on hearing from me. It should be noted that some parts of Wisconsin do actually have television sets and computer access. I did forward the text message to them but after I went back to sleep for four hours.

The text message was a good application of technology to a political campaign and a good way to include people, even skeptical ones, to the announcement.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008


Congressman Kirk Predicts Bayh for Obama



The ProConPundit attended a small fund raiser for U.S. Congressman Mark Kirk (R-IL 10th District) last night at the University Club of Chicago. Actually, I was on the host committee. Congressman Kirk is a great representative, having served since 2000. When he is not in congress, he spends free time and weekends in the U.S. Naval Reserves. He is a fine public servant, my kind of Republican and a good representative of the people of Illinois in Washington.

When asked who he thought Obama would name as a running mate, he spoke rather matter of factly that he thought Evan Bayh of Indiana would get the nod. We are all circling around Bayh-Biden-Kaine. The Obama camp has also predicted that the running mate would be predictable. Is that a little too predictable?

Meanwhile Rush Limbaugh is breathing fire threatening wrath to McCain if he doesn’t pick a running mate to Rushbo’s liking. What difference would a pro-choice running mate actually make? Well, it could help bring in swing voters and pro-choice Republicans in the fall. At the same time, the Vice-President’s divergent view on abortion would mean absolutely nothing in the administration. For whatever real and perceived grievances conservatives have against McCain, his pro-life/anti-abortion credentials are absolutely unquestionable and above reproach. He has earned the right to name whatever running mate he wants.

Monday, August 18, 2008


Obama To Announce Running Mate Wednesday


The Obama Campaign has announced that it will announce its running mate as early as Wednesday and that it won’t be a surprise. Assuming that is true, then it will be Kaine, Bayh or Biden. Obama desperately needs experience and a fighter in his running mate, which leaves Kaine and Bayh out. Using that criterion, it will be Biden.






ProConPundit Endorsements/Predictions


for McCain Running Mate





John McCain should pick whoever he wants as his running mate. That the likelihood of his being elected our 44th president has increased significantly in the last month means that he probably won’t give in to making a selection he’d feel forced into like Mitt Romney. Likewise, I think selections like Pawlenty of Minnesota and Portman of Ohio are cosmetic selections–picking someone younger, etc.



John McCain’s instincts would be to pick the person he most feels comfortable with to take over should he die in office and to have his back while he is in office. An added factor, given his age, is to choose a Vice-President with an eye toward that person assuming the presidency or running in four years presuming McCain retires after one term.


I believe the following are McCain's favorites. The first three are my picks.


1. Sen. Lindsay Graham of South Carolina. He has been joined at the hip with McCain every step of the way of the campaign. Many conservatives would be well pleased with him while others are off put by his support of the gang of 14 and immigration reform. His name does not come up in the media as a running mate and I tend to support surprise picks. Given McCain’s reliance on Graham, I think he may be tapping him for White House Chief of Staff or Attorney General.


2. Tom Ridge, former Pennsylvania Governor and first Secretary of Homeland Security. Ridge would be a superb choice, stellar debater and would probably win Pennsylvania for McCain, which could be the ball game. Kerry narrowly carried Pennsylvania four years ago. Ridge would be a huge boost to McCain in the election, a loyal and excellent Vice-President and McCain’s heir apparent. He is pro-choice which is a deal breaker to a lot of conservatives but I think his strengths out weigh this.


3. Sen. Joe Lieberman, exiled Democrat and all around American patriot. He would be a fine, fine, Vice-President. He would bring a lot of Jewish votes to the GOP and he is the BEST, bar none, debater against Obama’s running mate! (Two Democrats debating!) That said, for all the right wing hoopla that McCain is not really a Republican, I can’t see him naming a Democrat as his running mate. McCain has reached across the aisle a lot, but this would be a real stretch.

4. Alaska Governor, Sarah Palin. This would be a good pick for McCain to shore up conservatives, on the one hand. On the other hand, McCain would make history by the GOP delivering the first woman VP. I don’t favor symbolism over substance. She is not prepared to assume the presidency.
ProConPundit Predictions for Obama Running Mate

Its hard to know what is believable but with the media bias in favor of Obama we risk not realizing how in jeopardy his candidacy is. Wise people in all quarters are predicting a Clinton scheme to still rob Obama of the nomination. I would not bet the lunch money that they will wrestle the nomination from him but I will bet this: they will weaken him to the point of a decisive enough defeat for him in the fall that Hillary can return in 2012.

I think Obama needs to do something surprising in his VP pick and that would be to not choose one of the three people everyone is predicting: Bayh, Biden, Kaine. Personally, to that end, the ProConPundit favors Sam Nunn or Chris Dodd. That their names have evaporated tends to make me think they are the top contenders.
When is the last time a nominee picked someone predicable?

Kerry picked Edwards and Dole picked Kemp. Those were was predictable.

But consider this:
Bush unpredictably picked Cheney.
Gore unpredictably picked Lieberman.
Bush I unpredictably and pitifully picked Quayle.
Clinton unpredictably picked Gore.
Dukakis unpredictably picked Bentsen.
Mondale unpredictably picked Ferraro.
Reagan unpredictably picked Bush I.
Carter unpredictably picked Mondale.

My money is not on a predictable choice. That said, I think Kaine would be a SUPERB choice for electing McCain. Picking a 5 minute governor of Virginia with no foreign policy experience is a ticket for disaster. I am personally VERY fond of Bayh and Biden and would appreciate either of them being picked. Bayh would bring Indiana into play for the Democrats which could mean the ball game. Either of them would be excellent Vice-Presidents and Joe Biden would be THE BEST debater against whoever McCain picks as his running mate.


No one could bring more foreign policy credibility than Biden. He is known by leaders of foreign countries and is also known by most Americans. Bayh has foreign policy experience, is not known to other foreign leaders, and is virtually unknown to most Americans.


John McCain Will Become our 44th President

Because I stuck with McCain when his political obituary had been written, many of you have been asking me in the past couple of months whether I thought he could pull it off and actually win the presidency this fall. Others have asked if I thought anything could rival the Obama mania.


I have had my doubts and there have been low moments. For the first time since John McCain clinched the nomination, I truly believe that he will, in fact, win the presidency this fall.

Consider this...
1. McCain has done an effective job of showing Obama as a celebrity phenomena but not a serious person for the presidency of the United States. This premise will continue as the celebrity event/football stadium extravaganza of the Democratic convention unfolds. McCain has gotten ahead of the curve.

2. In 1988, Dukakis was 18 points ahead of Bush I coming out of the Democratic convention and went on to get creamed. Keep that in mind as we move forward.

3. The Obama Campaign has orchestrated a celebrity extravaganza for the Democratic convention. Between the Clinton speeches looming large over the convention and Hillary Clinton’s name being placed into nomination in the raucous setting of a football stadium, I think things are not moving in a good direction for Obama.

4. John McCain scored decisively over Obama in the Rick Warren interview. In the warmup interview before the interviews, Andrea Mitchell said that Obama insiders felt good about their prospects because he was really comfortable with Rick Warren and this interview while McCain, she said, was begrudgingly participating. After McCain creamed Obama, the next day Mitchell said just the opposite: that Obama’s people knew it would be a bad forum for them and a good one for McCain. The liberal intelligentsia is absolutely apoplectic over the fact that Obama is on the ropes.

5. MSNBC has finally found a way to raise its ratings–suspending all programming. For two weeks, all MSNBC programming has been cancelled in order to cover the Olympics. The ProConPundit has tended to like MSNBC because of the great interviews that take place. Little by little, MSNBC has gotten rid of any semblance of balance. There is now such a reactionary, volatile reaction to anything that criticizes Obama that cancelling their programming seems like a great cause and a sure ratings climber.

6. Thank God for Russia! Thank God that the Russian invasion of Georgia is happening now and not later. Obama’s reply was to say that the United Nations needs to take a strong stand. United Nations? Hello? The only thing united about the UN is that they stand with tin horn dictators, terrorists and thugs and that the U.S. picks up the tab. John McCain, incidentally, has reiterated what he said a year ago: that Russia should be kicked out of the G-8.

ProConPundit Breaks Silence

and Embarrassment to Endorse Obama

The ProConPundit has taken a long break from the blog this summer. This has been, in part, because I have been really busy. Mostly, though, I have remained silent because there hasn’t been much to say. I have been generally non-plussed by the activity of the campaigns and pundits the last couple of months.

The other reason for my silence has been apprehension about the McCain campaign. I’ve not wanted to answer the question many of you have asked me: CAN HE DO IT? IS IT OVER? I am ready to tackle these issues now. So let me begin with my endorsement of Obama.

I have vacillated many times on endorsing Obama. I endorsed him early on in a Democratic debate when he was asked how he would respond to an attack on the U.S. He responded by saying he would call Civil Defense people, talk to local responders, etc. It was then that I issued an endorsement of Obama as mayor of a mid-sized city like Indianapolis or Peoria.

When he spoke in Berlin of our imperfections as Americans, then I came close to endorsing him as President of the European Union. But after his lackluster, if not dismal, performance in the interview by Rick Warren, I am now clear and unequivocal in my endorsement of Barack Obama.


Therefore, once and for all, the ProConPundit issues an unconditional endorsement of Barack Obama to be PRESIDENT of ANY high school student council anywhere in the U.S. or any other country he holds allegiance to.

When Rick Warren asked Obama to name three close advisors he would rely on as President, the first two were his wife and his grandmother. GRANDMA? Yes, GRANDMA. The next time planes fly into buildings, its reassuring to know that the President can rely on Grandma to see him through. McCain’s first response was David Petraeus.

Rick Warren is pastor of Saddleback Church and author of mega best selling book, PURPOSE DRIVEN LIFE. The first line of the book is "IT'S NOT ABOUT YOU." The book is generally a great rebuking of the baby boomer credo that the world revolves around us. In answering one of Warren’s questions, Obama rambled on and on and finally said he came to realize that "its not all about me." Warren quipped, "I am always glad to hear that." The entire congregation (audience) erupted into laughter while the self-absorbed Obama didn’t get why they were laughing. He considers himself a friend of Warren and even the most cursory background or prep work on being interviewed there should have informed him about the premise of this book. Obama looked silly and uncomfortable through the entire interview.

My endorsement stands: any time, any high school: Barack is our student council prez.