Posted on 03/15/2010 1:14:54 PM PDT by ncalburt
http://corner.nationalreview.com/
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Post is Now Farther Down the Page !
No pics, no story.
Wow! 200 people. Obama would not have won Ohio without the fraud perpetrated by the SOS and ACORN.
Here's a picture of those who showed up:
what a pathetic turnout. LOL
OLDER POSTS >
Monday, March 15, 2010
Kathy Dahlkemper: ‘It’s So Important to Have Women Representing the Pro-Life Movement’ [Kathryn Jean Lopez]
I’m not sure how someone who provides firsthand witness like this the Pennsylvania Democrat chose life as an unmarried college student and vote for the health-care bill the White House is pushing. If Rep. Dahlkemper votes true to her conscience, I suspect Nancy Pelosi can’t count on her vote.
Especially if you’re from her district in Pennsylvania, you might thank her for what she had to say on the House floor last week and encourage her on a key vote this week.
03/15 04:07 PM Share
re: Worst Legislation Since . . . [Kathryn Jean Lopez]
Rich, I’d be curious how many votes you’re getting for “worse than all that.” That’s where I am.
03/15 03:36 PM Share
NRO Web Briefing New on NROMost-Read Content @DanFosterNRO: Paul Ryan: ‘You’re passing this bill the Washington way.’ Tweet
Vote and Comment: Palin, ‘America must stand against Obamacare.’ The Feed
Marc Thiessen: Sweetheart deals gone sour. Washington Post
Rep. Paul Ryan: What real health reform should look like. Washington Post
D. Burlingame and T. Joscelyn: Gitmo’s indefensible lawyers. Wall Street Journal
Bill Gertz: Justice, CIA clash over probe of interrogator IDs. Washington Times
Fareed Zakaria: Pakistan is one place where Obama’s foreign policy is working. Washington Post
Byron York: Democrats aren’t suicidal. They’re self-executing. Washington Examiner
Michael Barone: Tea party brings energy, change and tumult to GOP National Review Online
Robert Samuelson: Obama’s plan is the ‘illusion’ of reform. Real Clear Politics
H. Higgins and K. Conway: Swing districts oppose health-care reform. Wall Street Journal
Fred Hiatt: Obama should show Americans that he’s happy they made him the president. Washington Post
Ross Douthat: Hollywood’s political fictions. New York Times
A. Thernstrom and T. Fay: Are some races more equal than others? American Enterprise Institute
Arthur Herman: Region must rally against Iran. New York Post
: Taking His MeasureJim Copland: The Majority Leader of the Lawsuit LobbyWalter Olson: Exorcising Toyotas DemonsDan Lips: Popping the Higher-Education BubbleRich Lowry: American Exceptionalism, ContinuedKathryn Jean Lopez: Girl Scouts Gone WildMichael Barone: Tea Party TumultLarry Kudlow: Yellen Is Spellin Future InflationFred Schwarz: Our Subversive FoundersPaul Howard: Explaining Obamacare . . . by Bashing InsurersVictor Davis Hanson: The Death of the Iran Won MythThe Editors: Cap and TaxJohn J. Pitney Jr.: 1994 and 2010Duncan Currie: The Boren SupremacyJonah Goldberg: Health-Care HellRich Lowry: Why Obama Needs a Republican CongressMona Charen: The Democrats Wont Talk About This ProvisionCharles Krauthammer: In Praise of the Rotation of PowerKevin Williamson: High MarksDuncan Currie: The Reconciliation Pickle
COSTA: They Just Want This OverOLSON: Exorcising Toyotas DemonsTURNER: The Slaughter StrategySTEYN: But Enough About Me...KUDLOW: Yellen Is Spellin Future InflationBARONE: Tea Party TumultGOLDBERG: Health-Care HellGOLDBERG: “The Case for Unpopular Clients”CHAREN: The Democrats Wont Talk About This ProvisionKRAUTHAMMER: In Praise of the Rotation of Power
Obama Comes to Ohio (Again), Nobody Shows Up [Matt A. Mayer]
President Barack Obama, joined by Ohio governor Ted Strickland, came to Ohio today to continue his permanent campaign on health-care legislation. His campaign events during the 2008 presidential race attracted crowds of thousands of Ohioans; this time, President Obama managed a crowd of about 200 people. With his negative approval numbers in Ohio (44 percent approve, 52 percent disapprove), it isnt much of surprise that few showed up to hear him once again talk about health care. On health care, Ohioans disapprove of the job President Obama is doing (34 percent approve, 58 percent disapprove). On the health-care proposal, 56 percent of Ohioans mostly disapprove of it, with 43 percent believing that the proposed changes go too far.
The fact of the matter is that Ohioans are almost solely focused on jobs, jobs, and more jobs. On the economy, President Obama is heavily into negative territory (37 percent approve, 57 percent disapprove) as Ohioans in large numbers disprove of his handling of the economy. Given the fact that Ohio had a net increase in jobs from 19902010 of just 79,100 private sector jobs in a state of 11.4 million people, these findings shouldn’t be a surprise. For Ohioans, it really is time that President Obama stopped trying to ram health-care legislation through and started doing what he said he would do in the State of the Union speech focus like a laser on jobs.
Matt A. Mayer is president of the Buckeye Institute for Public Policy Solutions.
LOL, that article says about 200 showed up.
*snort* only 200 hundred showed up.
37% approval in Ohio and he is going to jam this bill through anyway.
Messed that up:
Obama Comes to Ohio (Again), Nobody Shows Up [Matt A. Mayer]
President Barack Obama, joined by Ohio governor Ted Strickland, came to Ohio today to continue his permanent campaign on health-care legislation. His campaign events during the 2008 presidential race attracted crowds of thousands of Ohioans; this time, President Obama managed a crowd of about 200 people. With his negative approval numbers in Ohio (44 percent approve, 52 percent disapprove), it isnt much of surprise that few showed up to hear him once again talk about health care. On health care, Ohioans disapprove of the job President Obama is doing (34 percent approve, 58 percent disapprove). On the health-care proposal, 56 percent of Ohioans mostly disapprove of it, with 43 percent believing that the proposed changes go too far.
The fact of the matter is that Ohioans are almost solely focused on jobs, jobs, and more jobs. On the economy, President Obama is heavily into negative territory (37 percent approve, 57 percent disapprove) as Ohioans in large numbers disprove of his handling of the economy. Given the fact that Ohio had a net increase in jobs from 19902010 of just 79,100 private sector jobs in a state of 11.4 million people, these findings shouldnt be a surprise. For Ohioans, it really is time that President Obama stopped trying to ram health-care legislation through and started doing what he said he would do in the State of the Union speech focus like a laser on jobs.
Matt A. Mayer is president of the Buckeye Institute for Public Policy Solutions
It’s been reported there were a large number of anti-Obama protesters but I can’t find any pictures.
And those 200 attendees thought they were there to get those new government paid for cell phones.
Right, everyone else had an anti-”O” sign
I heard there were about 1,000 protesters. Anyone know if it’s true? Can’t find any pictures of Zero speaking before a large crowd or anything.
I don't think Kucinich is flipping.
Obama Comes to Ohio (Again), Nobody Shows Up [Matt A. Mayer]
President Barack Obama, joined by Ohio governor Ted Strickland, came to Ohio today to continue his permanent campaign on health-care legislation. His campaign events during the 2008 presidential race attracted crowds of thousands of Ohioans; this time, President Obama managed a crowd of about 200 people. With his negative approval numbers in Ohio (44 percent approve, 52 percent disapprove), it isnt much of surprise that few showed up to hear him once again talk about health care. On health care, Ohioans disapprove of the job President Obama is doing (34 percent approve, 58 percent disapprove). On the health-care proposal, 56 percent of Ohioans mostly disapprove of it, with 43 percent believing that the proposed changes go too far.
The fact of the matter is that Ohioans are almost solely focused on jobs, jobs, and more jobs. On the economy, President Obama is heavily into negative territory (37 percent approve, 57 percent disapprove) as Ohioans in large numbers disprove of his handling of the economy. Given the fact that Ohio had a net increase in jobs from 19902010 of just 79,100 private sector jobs in a state of 11.4 million people, these findings shouldnt be a surprise. For Ohioans, it really is time that President Obama stopped trying to ram health-care legislation through and started doing what he said he would do in the State of the Union speech focus like a laser on jobs.
Matt A. Mayer is president of the Buckeye Institute for Public Polic
Or were bused in, paid on duty by SEIU or some ACORN tangent?
one has to ask, did the 200 include the media? LOL
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