- Richard Greene
- 20 Oct 06, 08:11 PM
Many Republicans have begun to admit - more or less in public - that they expect to lose a lot of House seats on Election Day, but congressman is not one of them. He is the man leading the party鈥檚 fight to win as many House races as possible, and he was in a bullish mood when he appeared at the this week.
Mr Reynolds didn鈥檛 just whistle in the dark - he struck up an entire brass band there. He cited races where Republicans were raising more money than Democrats and insisted that the number of races 鈥渋n play鈥 was far lower than the Democrats suggest.
He also got off the best zinger of the event, lavishing mock praise on his Democratic opposite number for a four-minute run-through of what the party would do if they won power. 鈥淐ongratulations for the longest presentation I have yet heard on the Democratic plan!鈥 he crowed.
But Mr Reynolds - who is linked via a staff member to the Mark Foley scandal and may lose his own seat next month - did show a few cracks in the cheery facade.
Perhaps most tellingly, after tossing around dollar figures and the numbers of critical districts, he got the date of the election wrong. It鈥檚 7 November - but he said 8 November. Despite his upbeat rhetoric, he may actually be thinking a great deal about what happens the day after the vote.
Richard Greene is the 91热爆 News website's Washington reporter
- Justin Webb
- 20 Oct 06, 04:56 PM
You join me in the King of Prussia Mall in the suburbs of Philadelphia, where I have just spent an hour outside looking for Republicans.
My producer is rather impressed, I think, that I am able to find shops that appeal to particular political sub-sections of the nation, but my wife has advised me well: these girls are right-leaning. The only problem is they are right-running as well - dashing past me, looking for all the world as if a child molester has just invaded their gently perfumed space.
Nobody wants to talk about politics here. I try my best Hugh Grant English accent, but to no avail. Eventually we give up on Lilly and go for prosperous-looking chaps instead and the Lord smiles on us: We come up with a firm supporter of ("It'd be a sin if he lost," he tells me) and a couple who think the senator is too extreme.
Thus we will illustrate the demise (temporary perhaps) of social conservatism as a political force in Pennsylvania politics. Talking politics with ordinary folk in this country is tough work - a reminder that those of us who are interested (and particularly those who are involved) are a small and atypical group.
Justin Webb is the 91热爆's chief North America radio correspondent.
- The Reporters
- 20 Oct 06, 03:47 PM
New York Times: Various factions within the Republican coalition are already blaming each other for next month's expected defeat - a feud one conservative has dubbed "pre-criminations".
Washington Post: The Virginia Senate candidates are getting endorsements from the highest possible backers - George Bush and Bill Clinton.
Los Angeles Times: Republican leaders in California's Orange County are distancing themselves from their own House candidate after he is linked to a racially charged campaign letter.