Watch as the AmericaLast media does everything possible to ignore the obvious - people are pissed off.
From AP via Yahoo! News:
Lugar loss has lessons for Republicans, Democrats
Veteran Sen. Richard Lugar's loss in the Indiana GOP primary provides warnings for President Barack Obama and his Democrats as well as Mitt Romney and fellow Republicans six months before the November election.
In
one state at least, anti-incumbent sentiment is coursing through the
electorate, a potentially ominous sign for the incumbent Democratic
president seeking a second term and lawmakers of all political stripes.
The GOP also remains deeply split between the establishment wing and
insurgent tea party, a fissure that underscores the challenge the
presumptive Republican presidential nominee and other GOP candidates
face in the months ahead to unite the party.
"We
are experiencing deep political divisions in our society right now,"
Lugar, 80, one of the nation's longest-serving senators, said in a
statement after the results were known. "These divisions have stalemated
progress in critical areas. But these divisions are not
insurmountable."
Ultimately,
it was Lugar's efforts to cross party lines and his longevity in
Washington — two issues that tea party-backed challenger Richard Mourdock used against him — that proved too much for Indiana Republicans.
A few hours after conceding, Lugar slammed Mourdock for embracing "groups whose prime mission is to cleanse the Republican Party of those who stray from orthodoxy as they see it."
"This is not conducive to problem solving and governance," Lugar said. "And he will find that unless he modifies his approach, he will achieve little as a legislator. Worse, he will help delay solutions that are totally beyond the capacity of partisan majorities to achieve."
Broadly, Lugar's defeat may create an opportunity for Democrats working to hang onto a narrow four-seat majority in the Senate. National party leaders vowed to help centrist Democrat Joe Donnelly, a three-term House member from South Bend, compete against Mourdock, the conservative state treasurer, in a Senate race the party otherwise would have bypassed.
But
whether Democrats follow through with that pledge — and go all in for
Donnelly by spending large sums of money in the race — is an open
question. Indiana
has been a hard place for Democrats to win. Four years ago, Obama
became the first Democrat to carry the state in a presidential election
since 1964, and he did so by a single percentage point, turning out vast
numbers from the Chicago-influenced urban and industrial region in Indiana's northwest.
Democratic strategist Tad Devine said Mourdock's conservative profile has Democrats optimistic about their chances despite Indiana's
Republican trend. Said Devine, "If the Senate race turns out to be a
moderate Democrat and an out-of-step Republican, moderate voters who
regret that they can't vote for Lugar will help Donnelly."
"Nationally,
Democrats will throw a lot of money into it quickly. I'm not one who
believes it will be a competitive Senate race," said Musser, a former
Romney aide.
The race illustrated vulnerabilities for Democrats and Republicans alike.
Incumbents,
Obama included, are at risk no matter their party at a time when the
economically struggling public is sour over anyone linked to Washington.
So, it seems, are lawmakers with a history of working with members of
the opposite party.
Just ask Lugar.
Mourdock hounded the veteran senator over questions about his Virginia home — and Indiana
residency — and his long Washington ties. The challenger also took
Lugar to task over his collaboration with Obama. The two worked together
on nonproliferation issues, and Lugar was one of only a handful of
Republicans to vote to confirm Obama's two appointments to the Supreme
Court.
"He's a good and decent man," Valparaiso Republican Bruce Garrison said of Lugar after casting his vote for Mourdock. "But how can the country keep going on the path it's on? And how can we send the same people back to fix it?"
It's that reject-the-status-quo strain among voters that incumbents up and down the ballot will find themselves having to fight against over the next six months.
That Lugar — an establishment candidate if there ever was one — fell to a tea party-backed Republican made clear that the divisions within the GOP that were on display in 2010 primaries across the country had not yet healed.
"There is an element of the Republican base, and it's stronger than ever now, that was never going to vote for Richard Lugar," said Dan Dumezich, a Lugar supporter from northwest Indiana and Romney's state co-chairman.
The split presents a huge challenge for Romney as he seeks to unify the Republican Party in the coming months.
He
has campaigned as the establishment choice, but he was beaten badly at
times by insurgent favorites, first former House Speaker Newt Gingrich
in South Carolina and later in a series of contests by conservative
former Sen. Rick Santorum.
Now
Romney is working to mend the rifts. Whether he can — and whether the
tea party and other conservatives rally behind him — won't be clear
until November.
For more laughs, check out the left-fascist comedy stylings of Mr. Heinz- Kerry, who seems to have finally stopped lying about his war record. [Hee-hee. I'm kidding. It's just that nobody pays any attention to him any longer.]
John Kerry Laments Dick Lugar's Primary Loss - ABC OTUS News via Yahoo! News
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