The Beltway Forum
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

Dems try To Make NC Blue

Go down

Dems try To Make NC Blue Empty Dems try To Make NC Blue

Post by red states rule Sun Aug 17, 2008 10:08 am

This is good news - Dems spending money in a state that they are sure to lose

When they do lose it, Dems will call the voters in NC racists


Obama Backers Mobilize in Bid to Wrest State From Republican Grip

By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE
Published: August 16, 2008
RALEIGH, N.C. — Under a scorching sun, hundreds of people lined up recently in a parking lot here to pick up free back-to-school supplies being distributed by a local radio station. Bobbing among the shade umbrellas were a handful of workers for Senator Barack Obama, carrying clipboards and voter registration forms.

On Monday night, others fanned out at a movie screening for surfers in Wrightsville Beach. They descended on a street festival in Asheville. When oil companies posted record profits, Obama supporters showed up at gas stations here with registration forms.

Despite the relentless heat, and midsummer lull, the Obama campaign is mobilizing in North Carolina. The state is one of half a dozen once-solid Republican bastions, including Georgia, Indiana and Virginia, where Democrats now sniff opportunity to expand the electoral map.

They hope that North Carolina’s growth, especially among high-tech workers in Research Triangle Park, will help change voting patterns that are decades old. But the Obama strategy relies on a surge among black voters and young people, two groups that have not turned out in great numbers in recent elections.

To that end, the organization of Mr. Obama, the presumptive Democratic nominee, has been conducting an intense registration drive, appearing wherever people gather, as well as singling out potential voters in neighborhoods and online, and reaching out to undecided voters. It has also reactivated the extensive volunteer network it built before crushing Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton here in the May primary, and it is already running television commercials.

The campaign of the presumed Republican nominee, Senator John McCain, by contrast, has been barely visible. But his camp says it is getting in gear, and it has history on its side.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/17/us/politics/17carolina.html?ref=politics
red states rule
red states rule
Moderator
Moderator

Number of posts : 772
Location : conservative part of PA
Location : Dems try To Make NC Blue Us10
Registration date : 2008-07-26

Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum