Just last week, I noted Colorado Democrat Sen. Michael Bennet’s botched attempt to spoon-feed the local media. The Bennet campaign screwed up again big time again — sending him to phone in to KHOW’s indefatigable independent watchdog Peter Boyles after months and months of avoiding the show. Bennet assumed he’d be able to use KHOW airwaves to regurgitate his Democrat GOTV talking points. No go. Listen here to Bennet’s disastrous cut-and-run radio interview, which lasted a grand total of 40 seconds. *Update: Here’s the clip* Boyles hammers Bennet for ducking him; interrogates him over his support for failed, corruption-plagued USAO nominee Stephanie Villafuerte , and drills him over the scandalous Cory Voorhis immigration enforcement railroading before Bennet hung up. Partial transcript: BOYLES: This is Senator Michael Bennett. Good morning, sir. BENNETT: Good morning, how you doing? BOYLES: I gotta ask you, man, we have been trying to get you on this radio show since you took office. Why now? BENNETT: Uh, uh, I don’t know, uh, (laugh), uh, I actually didn’t know that, why now, just to urge everybody to go to the polls and vote in this really important election. BOYLES: I mean, what’s in it for you to come on this show? You would not come on the show. We’ve tried you so many times to come on this radio show. And this morning, the day before, you come on the radio show. I don’t get it. BENNETT: Well, uh, I just thought it was important to say to your listeners that it was critical for them to get out and vote. And, uh, I apologize I haven’t been on. I’ve traveled this state 30,000 miles. BOYLES: No, no, no. We’ve tried you in DC. We tried you in Denver. We put phone calls in to you. And your people ignored us. They won’t even call us back. And now 7:00 this morning? BENNETT: I’m sorry about that… BOYLES: Don’t be sorry…but why wouldn’t you come on the show? BENNETT: ‘Kay, we’ll do it another time…Ok? More: Bennet also appeared on conservative talk radio station KHOW after being chastised for avoiding interviews but he cut his appearance short to only 40 seconds. Asked why Democratic Gov. Bill Ritter decided not to run for re-election, he said it was because of his family. Bennet also mistakenly said at first that he didn’t support Ritter’s chief of staff, Stephanie Villafuerte, for U.S. Attorney. “I didn’t vote for her, she didn’t come up for a vote,” Bennet said when asked about Villafuerte. When host Peter Boyles said that he and Sen. Mark Udall had supported a “blue card” vote to advance her nomination, Bennet said “I don’t think I gave it… I did, I did because I thought she was qualified for the job.” Tomorrow, Colorado voters get to hang up on Bennet and Buck Washington. Can’t come a moment too soon. *** Latest poll has Buck up by 4. Flashback: Demcare dunce of the day: Sen. Bennet says he’ll sacrifice job…that he’s already losing Previous: Democrat Chicken Dance awards

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Colorado Democrat Sen. Michael Bennet’s disastrous cut-and-run radio interview

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Fewer Young Voters See Themselves as Democrats

On September 4, 2010, in barack obama, Uncategorized, by If Bush Did It

I mean, seriously, if this is some kind of sign of the times we might be in the midst of the most important de-realignment in the post-1964 party era. I’ll have more on this later, but check NYT : FORT COLLINS, Colo. — The college vote is up for grabs this year — to an extent that would have seemed unlikely two years ago, when a generation of young people seemed to swoon over Barack Obama. Though many students are liberals on social issues, the economic reality of a weak job market has taken a toll on their loyalties: far fewer 18- to 29-year-olds now identify themselves as Democrats compared with 2008. “Is the recession, which is hitting young people very hard, doing lasting or permanent damage to what looked like a good Democratic advantage with this age group?” asked Scott Keeter, the director of survey research at the Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan group. “The jury is still out.” How and whether millions of college students vote will help determine if Republicans win enough seats to retake the House or Senate, overturning the balance of power on Capitol Hill, and with it, Mr. Obama’s agenda. If students tune out and stay home it will also carry a profound message for American society about a generation that seemed so ready, so recently, to grab national politics by the lapels and shake. All those questions are in play here in Larimer County, about an hour north of Denver, for the more than 25,000 students at Colorado State University. Larimer, like much of Colorado, was once solidly Republican but went Democratic in the last few elections and is now contested by both sides. It is seen as a signal beacon for an increasingly unpredictable state. Kristin Johnson, 23, like many other students interviewed here in recent days, said that a vote for Democrats in 2008, however passionate it was, did not a Democrat make. But she bristles just as much at the idea of being called a Republican. “It’s like picking a team when you really don’t want to root for either team,” said Ms. Johnson, a communication studies major, who said she was undecided about parties and politics going into the general election campaign. She is not the only one. Because the university draws about 80 percent of its enrollment from within Colorado — mostly from Denver and its suburbs — it is also a sort of mirror within a mirror for Colorado’s political culture. Moderate and conservative views are common; a campus monoculture of liberalism is not. Leah Rosen, a history major from Denver, still vividly remembers witnessing a fistfight outside her dormitory room on election night in 2008 between Obama supporters and McCain supporters. National exit polls back then gave Mr. Obama a 66 percent edge among young people, to 32 percent for Senator John McCain, the Republican presidential nominee. Larimer is the focal point for a nationally watched House race in Colorado’s Fourth District, where Betsy Markey, a Democrat, is fighting for a second term in a traditionally Republican seat, against a Republican challenger, Cory Gardner. Senator Michael Bennet, a Democrat appointed last year to fill a vacant seat, is also in a toss-up contest against a Republican candidate, Ken Buck, who has local connections as the Weld County district attorney in Greeley, 20 miles southeast of Fort Collins. Many students here, especially seniors nearing graduation, said that worries about the economy, and about getting a job after graduation, had filtered through the campus, dampening enthusiasm for Democrats in Congress and Mr. Obama. But they have ObamaCare, right? Well, maybe not .

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Fewer Young Voters See Themselves as Democrats