Tag Archive | "bob mcdonnell"

A Lack of Support


Looking at the main page of Virginia Virtucon, I noticed the stark contrast between the number of endorsements McDonnell has and the endorsements that Deeds has.  If you read the edorsements for Deeds, they show a definite lack of support for the candidate they chose:

Bob McDonnell

Washington Times
Sun Gazette Arlington
Sun Gazette (McLean, Vienna, Oakton and Great Falls)
News & Messenger (Prince William County)
Daily Press (Newport News)
The Winchester Star (no longer a working link)
Loudoun Times-Mirror
Harrisonburg Daily News-Record
Richmond Times-Dispatch
Fredericksburg Free-Lance Star

Creigh Deeds

Washington Post
The Roanoke Times
Virginian Pilot

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The Life and Times of Bob McDonnell


The following was in a Oct. 18th Richmond Times-Dispatch article:

As a young Army lieutenant stationed in Germany, Bob McDonnell made the Guinness Book of World Records.

He organized his hospital unit to carry a 120-pound woman on a stretcher on a record-breaking trek — 93.4 miles in 32 hours.

Thirty-two years later, McDonnell is doing a different kind of heavy lifting, as he seeks to break Democrats’ eight-year hold on Virginia’s governorship.

Since word surfaced seven weeks ago of his controversial graduate-school thesis, McDonnell has sought to focus the campaign on jobs creation in an economy battered by a deep recession.

That strategy appears to be working. Recent polls show McDonnell with enough of a lead over Democrat R. Creigh Deeds, a state senator from Bath County, that he is cautioning supporters against overconfidence.

“I’ve told my staff to forget the polls,” McDonnell said in a recent interview in Verona, at a picnic sponsored by U.S. Rep. Robert W. Goodlatte, R-6th.

“We’ve got a hard-working opponent. We are opposed by President Obama and Tim Kaine,” the governor and chairman of the Democratic National Committee, “who have considerable resources. The only way we are going to win is to stay focused on our message and do an absolutely A-plus get-out-the-vote effort.”

. . .

On the campaign trail, the former attorney general is cool and unflappable, traveling the state in a Ford Expedition with a McD4VA license plate.

In his trademark button-down shirt and khakis, he moves slowly through a crowd, pausing to shake hands and make conversation with each prospective voter. He also exhibits a keen sense of humor.

In February, during a dinner with reporters who cover state politics, McDonnell poked fun at one of his formative political alliances. He said he was so worried about the Democrats’ media coverage and fundraising that he “called Pat Robertson and asked if he could direct a hurricane” to their Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner.

McDonnell, 55, caught a break in his quest for governor when Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling decided not to challenge him for the Republican nomination, but instead run for re-election.

It wasn’t the first time good fortune blessed McDonnell’s family. In 1912, according to family lore, one of McDonnell’s grandfathers got sick and missed a voyage — on the Titanic.

McDonnell was born in Philadelphia but grew up in the Mount Vernon area of Fairfax County. A Roman Catholic, he attended Bishop Ireton High School, where he played wide receiver and defensive back for the football team.

In November 1971, McDonnell’s Bishop Ireton squad faced off against the undefeated T.C. Williams High School powerhouse team memorialized in the film “Remember the Titans.”

Ireton lost 26-8, but McDonnell scored his team’s only points, on a 63-yard touchdown reception and a two-point conversion.

Scott O’Brien, quarterback on the Bishop Ireton team, says McDonnell was a “tough and feisty” football player. When he scored the two-point conversion against T.C. Williams, McDonnell “was hit so hard that he vomited on the sidelines, but he was back in the game on the next play,” O’Brien said. “He probably didn’t weigh 150 pounds dripping wet.”

Now a high school administrator in Myrtle Beach, S.C., O’Brien also remembers McDonnell’s sense of humor.

“He had a nickname for everyone,” O’Brien said. McDonnell called O’Brien “Sonny” after Washington Redskins quarterback Sonny Jurgensen.

“He had great people skills,” O’Brien said of McDonnell. “Everybody congregated around him.”

. . .

McDonnell received an ROTC scholarship to the University of Notre Dame, where he earned a degree in management.

He spent 21 years in the Army, 4½ years on active duty and the rest in the Army Reserve. He retired as a lieutenant colonel.

While in the Army, he attended night school at Boston University and received a master’s degree in business administration.

Out of the Army, he went to work for American Hospital Supply. He managed operations in Atlanta, Chicago and Kansas City. By 1985, the hospital-supply industry was hit by turmoil and McDonnell’s GI Bill benefits were about to expire.

McDonnell and his wife, Maureen, a former Washington Redskins cheerleader, decided to return to Virginia and make their home in Virginia Beach.

They had come to like the area while he was stationed at Fort Eustis in Newport News. McDonnell also was attracted by Regent University, then called CBN University after founder Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network.

“I had gone to a Catholic school as a kid and to Notre Dame as an undergraduate,” McDonnell said. “I liked the fact that Regent was focused on values and ethics, also that the public-policy area was focused on looking at the traditions and history that our Founders brought to the nation. I was particularly interested in the Judeo-Christian traditions of America.”

McDonnell studied public policy and communications and then added a major in law the next year when the university opened a law school.

In 1988, McDonnell got a summer internship on Capitol Hill working with the Republican Policy Committee led by Rep. Jerry Lewis of California.

Although the GI Bill paid for McDonnell’s graduate-school tuition, he held several jobs to help support his family, which had grown to include three daughters. Among the jobs, he worked in sales for The Virginian-Pilot newspaper in Norfolk.

In 1989, McDonnell submitted his 93-page master’s thesis, titled “The Republican Party’s Vision for the Family: The Compelling Issue of the Decade.”

Deeds has seized upon the document, terming it demeaning to working women. In campaign stops and television ads, the Democrat has hammered McDonnell, saying the thesis crystallized a brand of social conservatism that is out of touch with Virginia values.

In much of the thesis, McDonnell explored the tension between what he saw as a governmental interest in preserving the traditional family and the Republican tenet of limited government.

Forty pages in, McDonnell criticized the notion of additional tax credits for child care.

“Further expenditures would be used to subsidize a dynamic new trend of working women and feminists that is ultimately detrimental to the family by entrenching a status-quo of non-parental primary nurture of children.”

McDonnell says he has discarded the view, arguing now that the contributions of women are important to the workplace and politics. He cites, among other things, his eldest daughter’s career in the Army. She is a combat veteran of Iraq who now works for a high-tech defense contractor.

He says that as governor he would hire on merit and that he did so as attorney general, pointing out that half of the deputy attorneys general he appointed were women.

. . .

Out of law school in 1989, McDonnell was hired as an assistant prosecutor in Virginia Beach. There, he became interested in politics.

“I thought victims weren’t treated very well and criminals were let off too easily,” he said.

In 1991, Kenneth W. Stolle, then the Republican Party chairman in Virginia Beach, was seeking Republicans to run for General Assembly seats.

He recruited McDonnell, who knocked off Democrat Glenn B. McClanan, who had held the House of Delegates seat since 1972. Stolle also ran for office and won a state Senate seat.

“We won the seats going door-to-door,” McDonnell said. “We had very little money. We outworked them. I only raised about $23,000.”

Because of his prosecutorial experience, McDonnell spent his first few years in the House of Delegates introducing law-and-order bills.

He also sponsored social legislation, including several anti-abortion bills. Rising swiftly through the ranks, he became chairman of the House Courts of Justice Committee and became a co-sponsor of then-Gov. George Allen’s welfare-reform bill and a bill to abolish parole.

Running the courts panel “takes a lot of patience and a lot of attention to detail,” said Del. David B. Albo, R-Fairfax, who succeeded McDonnell as committee chairman.

“I’ve never seen him lose his temper,” he said. “I think it’s his military background.”

. . .

By 2005, McDonnell was running for attorney general. He defeated Deeds by 360 votes in the closest statewide election in Virginia’s history.

It was not until a recount was finished on Christmas Eve 2005 that he was declared the winner.

“It was a tough time,” McDonnell said. “My daughter [Jeanine] had just left for Iraq five weeks before Election Day. On Election Night I was ahead by 3,200 votes, but by the next day it was down to 1,500 votes.”

Marla Graff Decker, who served as deputy attorney general for public safety under McDonnell and holds the same job under his successor, Bill Mims, said she was impressed by the way McDonnell “went native” when he became attorney general.

“They took the time to learn about the office and the agencies that we serve,” she said. “They spent a lot of time walking the floors getting to know people, the ins and outs of this office.”

As attorney general, McDonnell cracked down on drunken drivers, drug dealers, identity theft and child sexual predators. McDonnell said the General Assembly passed 83 of the 94 legislative proposals made by his office.

He resigned in February to run for governor.

Whoever is elected governor will take office at a time when state revenue is likely to continue to fall. Kaine, as governor, has had to cut $7 billion in state spending since April 2007 because of declining tax revenue.

“I am hopeful that within a year this economy turns around and we will be back at a reasonable budget,” McDonnell said. “I don’t want to have to face four years when I only have to think about what I am going to cut.”

The governor, who under Virginia law cannot serve consecutive terms, should function as the chief executive officer of a major corporation, with a $75 billion biennial budget and 105,000 employees, he continued.

“You’ve got to have vision, you’ve got to be a leader, you’ve got to be decisive, and you have to make sure that the people that drive state government are taken care of.

“I realize that you’ve got a very short time to make a difference.”

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The Downfall of Deeds


Three things will be the downfall of Creigh Deeds in these last 10 days of the campaign. Some have already started to happen, some will happen, and some only take place behind that election curtain. They are as follows:

Alienating his base. He’s already begun to do it with his comments about Virginia maybe opting out of the ‘public option’ in the health care bill attempting to move through Congress.  He will continue to do so with idiotic comments like that which will fail to turnout his base on Election Day.

Being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Deeds has failed to do any rural stumping anywhere other than his district (Bath/Alleghany/Rockbridge).  Instead, he’s gravitating towards the swing suburbs of northern Virginia and attempting to grab those votes from McDonnell.  He’s banking that, in addition to the votes he can garner in the NoVA suburbs and just the Ds in general across the Commonwealth, rural Virginia will support him in droves.  Well, rural Virginia doesn’t support someone they never see.  I doubt he’ll see the turnout for him in rural areas either on ED.

Being lame. Watching Deeds during a debate is like watching a train wreck in slow motion…a stuttering, stammering train wreck that reference FactCheck.org every 7 seconds.  Generally, Deeds just isn’t a candidate that everyone (socialites, laymen, intellectuals, youth) can get behind. McDonnell is.  Southern comfort only gets you so far.  Deeds has no substantive policy stances except for exponential increases in spending and taxes and is finding that most of his party is hesitant to support him and most that did are now dropping like flies.

    So, in conclusion, Deeds’ campaign is doomed and there’s really nothing he can do about it.  I only see it getting worse over the next week and a half.

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    With Desperate Times Come Desperate Deeds


    From poll results to policy initiatives, Bob McDonnell has consistently been in the lead.  The most recent poll shows that he’s up by double digits and staying there.

    PPP’s Oct. 16-19 survey gives him a 12 point advantage over Dirty Deeds. PPP’s survey three weeks ago had McDonnell up by just five points.  SurveyUSA also has McDonnell up by an overwhelming number of 19 points…the highest so far if I’m not mistaken.

    Deeds continues to be hampered by a high unfavorable rating at 48 percent in the SurveyUSA poll and his only leg to stand on at this point is the Washington Post.  He’s losing supporters daily with his comments that alienate the only votes he probably had. I guess the best ally is a dumb opponent.

    The fact that endorsements are flipping and poll numbers are surging for McDonnell lends well to the fact that Deeds’ campaign is the textbook definition of what one would call a “lame duck” candidate. Heck, Barry O won’t even touch come off his ivory tower in Washington to lend a hand.  What an epic fail.

    But keep your eyes peeled over the next 11 days because “with desperate times come desperate Deeds.”

    A Public Policy Polling survey taken Oct. 16-19 gives Republican nominee McDonnell a 52 percent to 40 percent advantage over Democrat Deeds. PPP’s survey three weeks ago had McDonnell had by just five points.

    The PPP poll came on the heels of a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 17-19 that pegged McDonnell’s lead at 19 points. Most surveys in the past two months have given McDonnell a lead in the high single digits.

    Deeds continues to be hampered by a high unfavorable rating (48 percent)

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