RACE TO THE WHITE HOUSE 2008

RACE TO THE WHITE HOUSE 2008

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Don't Just Stand There, Bust a Move: Why Edwards, Giuliani, and Ron Paul Need A Vote


By Loren Shimanek
Op-Ed Columnist

The event went completely unnoticed by the media. The primaries in 24 states, of course, were a focus, but the coinciding debate will allow a last minute chance for constituents of Soc 118 to cast their vote for a non-delegate oriented nomination. The election on Thursday will be the culmination of weeks of hard campaigning by the candidates under the guiding hand of Secretary of the State of California, Drew Halfmann. The results should exemplify who has run the best and most effective campaign. Through the weeks of campaigning and Tuesday’s debate the front runners are Democratic candidate Senator John Edwards and Republican candidate Mayor Rudolph Giuliani; however, if Ron Paul is to run as an Independent or Libertarian Party candidate then he and his campaign staff deserve voting recognition.


The debate coincided with Super Duper Tuesday, as opposed to the more negatively connotative title of “Tsunami Tuesday,” since natural disasters are not only emblematic of disastrous results, but undermines voter integrity: a collective integrity that has under gone environmental identity transformations that have brought incredible social trauma to various foreign and domestic populations. Political correctness aside, the debate was a summation that transferred power from top vote getters in the National Primaries to the more undefended and bygone candidates.


The Democrats battled on many levels that had Senator John Edwards proving, undoubtedly, that he was and still may be the best Democratic candidate with not only a well organized and orchestrated campaign, but charismatic oratory skills that validated textured viewpoints and strategic restructuring of the country. The campaign of Hillary Clinton has been well publicized, and early on the New York Senator seemed to be well suited for the nomination. However, the remaining forums of policy and issue disclosure found Senator Clinton fumbling words and misdirecting policy stances. It was unfortunate circumstances that surrounded a leak from an inter-office memo that disclosed Senator Clinton’s opinions of a Fox News journalist. The culmination of miscues results in a lop-sided perspective of the Senator. The campaign staff was able to produce quite a buzz with the highly effective initial campaign ad, probably the best executed and influential ad of the entire nomination race.


Finally, for the Democrats, Senator Barack Obama showed no signs of progression from his initial policy and issue stances, but the Illinois Senator did not mince words; he stuck to what has worked in the National race for the Democratic nomination. The ad campaign for Senator Obama was also highly effective and well produced which shows all around the Senator’s campaign team was well focused and organized. In fact, all the Democratic teams performed well, but it was Edwards, possibly the personal bombardment of press releases to the Soc 118 constituents that allowed the Senator to keep a heady lead on the other candidates. Regardless, there was a bit of tit-for-tat on some clarification of individual stances, but nothing confrontational for the Democrats at the over produced Fox News sponsored debate.


The debate was well organized and the expert news analysts asking questions impressed the candidates with their execution of facts and inquiries. The glitzy digital smokescreen, not unheard of in the Rupert Murdoch media umbrella, over shadowed the issues. The program was an equal opportunity for all candidates to give closing statements that should’ve facilitated grandstanding and massive cheers, but only one candidate, the most unlikely hopeful garnered applause in what will go down as the most memorable attempt at a Republican nomination: Ron Paul.


Ron Paul capitulated that “truth equals freedom and freedom equals power” while issuing a closing statement by acknowledging his fervent supporters. As the Texas Congressman looked proudly at his supporters saying, let the people speak for themselves and walked into a sweaty pile of screaming supporters. He emerged half naked and marked with blood. His supporters adorned in Paul’s wrinkled flesh frothed at the mouth. His supporters were his campaign staff, and they not only ate and drank their leader’s charisma, but established the most hallucinatory and giddily obnoxious campaign ever to waltz into a political arena. An arena that was subdued by candidates that said very little about change.


Throughout the Republican portion of the debate neither Senator John McCain nor former Governor Erica Huckabee delivered conclusive evidence that they will be worthy of the nomination. Senator McCain discussed at length how he would be the best strategist for the war in Iraq and how immigration can be a mutual exchange of workers and economics. The Arizona Senator’s message was redundant and tired, but not without ample support from a crack staff of campaigners that had the Senator moving at a much younger pace than seemed possible. McCain’s candidacy was a featured story in this publication. The transformation of Erica Huckabee was a big story as this publication has reported, but her campaign was fragile with poorly produced advertisements and a blatant attempt at corporate sponsorship by distributing Mars Inc. candies. Also, Huckabee could not make a statement without regarding her religion or talking about improved health, which now seems contradictory to the Mars Inc. campaign funds. As the “other” woman in the overall primaries, Erica Huckabee has been relying more and more on her religious predisposition and losing sight of the issues. Ultimately, issues of immigration, health care, the economy, and the War in Iraq seemed like a re-hash of tired viewpoints with nothing new being said by all the candidates. Mitt Romney did not take part in the debate, which is a shame considering that he has performed well through the primaries despite dropping out weeks ago due to an old football injury. It was former Mayor of New York Rudolph Giuliani that seemed incredibly excited about having the opportunity to speak on his views. Giuliani rampaged through his position on every issue and question that Fox News provided. His “take-no-prisoners” attitude and confidence was a refreshing interaction that made up for weeks of near non-existent campaigning. His campaign staff had provided some of the most lucid and forthright advertisements in the primaries, but failed to elucidate the burgeoning aggressiveness the debate allowed the former Mayor to communicate. Giuliani may be the scariest candidate on foreign policy and the economy, but he is not soft spoken about change. Without a doubt, Ron Paul may be the scariest candidate, but he is an enigmatic symbol of a new generation of Americans that will have a more definitive say in the upcoming elections. Until the libertarian generation evolves from curiosity to thorough policy formulation the novelty of a candidacy such as Ron Paul’s will be just that: a novel aspiration.


The fact remains, however, that both formidable candidates are no longer primary movers in the national scope. The question as to why Edwards and Giuliani will possibly win the non-delegate election in Secretary Halfmann’s sponsored election for media and political pundits shows how valid these candidates and their campaign staff have been for this small electorate, and possibly for the rest of the country.


Although Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Senator John Edwards have stopped campaigning in the national race they have continued campaigning in this secret amalgamation of journalists and political pundits remain perhaps the most formidable candidates in this alternative primary race. This could be the most intriguing aspect of the national nomination race because both candidates continue to generate absentee votes as seen in the California primary were John Edwards received over 100,000 votes. Mayor Giuliani is still campaigning as a vice presidential hopeful in John McCain’s corner. In fact, Governor Mitt Romney, though dropping out the race long ago, has raised high above the expectations of the voting populace as he continues to garner votes without campaigning or debating. So, with the vote on Thursday Senator John Edwards will possibly resituate himself in the primary elections due to the hard campaigning done in Soc 118. The same could be said with Mayor Giuliani. It would be nice to have the former Mayor of New York admit that he no longer desires the Presidency, but now prefers a hard won position as McCain’s running mate. However, the vote on Thursday could possibly catapult Giuliani’s 50 million dollar single delegate into some serious contention power. These projections for the national scheme seemed far fetched, but nothing more so than the candidacy of Texas Congressman and outspoken libertarian populist Ron Paul.


Paul’s bid has been strategic comic reliefs recalling the little know fact that Steve Martin ran for the Independent vote in 1984. In a single debate that took place in Scottsdale, Arizona, Martin was able to induce an embarrassing moment for Walter Mondale by insinuating that he [Mondale] is a “wild and crazy guy,” and Martin, wearing a lamp shade, fabricated a story about how he and Mondale got drunk on Jell-O shots backstage at a David Letterman taping. The unorthodox methods of Steve Martin, in 1984, demonstrate the unorthodox tactics Ron Paul’s campaign orchestrated to generate the libertarian message into something an 18-25 year old voting population can understand. Is Ron Paul convincing as a candidate? Hardly, but he is convincing as a person who could bring about radical change which is something this entire primary campaign has focused on. Maybe the change he exudes is not practical, as is the idealist practicality of Edwards or the authoritative practicality of Giuliani, but as long as change remains the focus throughout the election process, in both the primaries and general, there will be someone worth voting for.

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