"Robin Hood Zero" <rbnhdzro@N0SPAM.Z0R0.0RG> wrote in message
news:c251p1pushhpnqfml1fo34ddqvkv7pkud8@4ax.com...
<absolutely nothing>
It writes what it knows about.
Bad news for you, needledik. Jon Corzine trounces kkkrookkked lying
repugnigoon Forrester Gump and Tim Kaine trounces Jerry (Falwell) Kilgore in
RED state.
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?id=1294540
Democrats Win Elections in NJ, VA, CA
Nov 9, 2005 - Democrats cleaned up big in off-year elections from New Jersey
to California, sinking the candidate who embraced President Bush in the
final days of the Virginia governor's campaign. They also turned back GOP
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's efforts to limit the power of California's
Democratic leaders.
Democratic Sen. Jon Corzine easily won the New Jersey governor's seat after
an expensive, mudslinging campaign, trouncing Republican Doug Forrester by
10 percentage points. Polls in the last week had forecast a much closer
race.
Democratic Lt. Gov. Tim Kaine won a solid victory in GOP-leaning Virginia,
beating Republican Jerry Kilgore by more than 5 percentage points. Democrats
crowed that Bush's election-eve rally for the former state attorney general
only spurred more Kaine supporters to the polls.
In California, Schwarzenegger failed in his push to rein in the
Democrat-controlled Assembly with ballot measures that would cap spending
and remove legislators' redistricting powers. Another measure he supported
was trailing and a fourth was too close to call.
Elsewhere, Texas voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional ban on gay
marriage, Maine voted to preserve the state's new gay-rights law, and GOP
Mayor Michael Bloomberg easily clinched a second term in heavily Democratic
New York.
Democrats said the results were the first steps toward bigger victories next
year when control of Congress and 36 governors seats are at stake and for
the 2008 presidential race.
"I believe national Republican politics . really had an effect in Virginia
and California," said Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean. Voters "don't
like the abuse of power, they don't like the culture of corruption. They
want the nation to go in a different way."
Republicans warned against reading too much into two governorships that
started the day in Democratic hands and ended that way. Virginia Gov. Mark
Warner was barred by law from seeking a second term, and New Jersey acting
Gov. Richard J. Codey opted not to run.
.
|