Topic: The Night They Drove the Tea Partiers Down
Bestinshow's photo
Sun 11/08/09 05:17 AM
Edited by Bestinshow on Sun 11/08/09 05:17 AM
FOR all cable news’s efforts to inflate Election 2009 into a cliffhanger as riveting as Balloon Boy, ratings at MSNBC and CNN were flat Tuesday night. But not at Fox News, where the audience nearly doubled its usual prime-time average. That’s what happens when you have a thrilling story to tell, and what could be more thrilling than a revolution playing out in real time?

As Fox kept insisting, all eyes were glued on Doug Hoffman, the insurgent tea party candidate in New York’s 23rd Congressional District. A “tidal wave” was on its way, said Sean Hannity, and the right would soon “take back the Republican Party.” The race was not “even close,” Bill O’Reilly suggested to the pollster Scott Rasmussen, who didn’t disagree. When returns showed Hoffman trailing, the network’s resident genius, Karl Rove, knowingly reassured viewers that victory was in the bag, even if we’d have to stay up all night waiting for some slacker towns to tally their votes.

Alas, the Dewey-beats-Truman reveries died shortly after midnight, when even Fox had to concede that the Democrat, Bill Owens, had triumphed in what had been Republican country since before Edison introduced the light bulb. For the far right, the thriller in Watertown was over except for the ludicrous morning-after spin that Hoffman’s loss was really a victory. For the Democrats, the excitement was just beginning. New York’s 23rd could be celebrated as a rare bright spot on a night when the party’s gubernatorial candidates lost in Virginia and New Jersey.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/08/opinion/08rich.html

peppydog50's photo
Sun 11/08/09 05:36 AM
Way to tell them best in show. I was suprised that the Democrats lost New Jersey although it was close.

TJN's photo
Sun 11/08/09 06:55 AM

Way to tell them best in show. I was suprised that the Democrats lost New Jersey although it was close.

Who did he tell?
The candidate the Republicans was a joke anyway. Scozzafava new she had no chance to win so she droped out of the election. The Conservative candidate got in to late.

As liberal as New York is it was still a close election.

Scozzafava's name should have been pulled from the ballots.
She got what like 6% of the vote. Could have been a diferent outcome had she not been on it.

InvictusV's photo
Sun 11/08/09 07:27 AM
Owens is a typical politician. Be proud..

Owens breaks 4 campaign promises in first hour in Congress

"The mixed-up mess that was the 23rd Congressional District Special Election was a close race between Democrat Bill Owens and Conservative Doug Hoffman. Many feel that it was unlikely Mr. Owens would have won those crucial few thousand votes if the voting public was aware of his intent with regard to the Health Care bill. The majority of residents in this district do not support the Health Reform bill as it is now written and many feel like they've become victims of a fraud perpetrated by their chosen candidate."

http://www.gouverneurtimes.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7623:owens-to-break-campaign-promises&catid=60:st-lawrence-news&Itemid=175