Top 10 questions for the Conventions

10. Does Vice-President Joe Biden realize he’s been shafted?

The Wednesday night of conventions is usually reserved for the Nomination Acceptance Speech of the Vice-Presidential nominee. This year at the Democratic National Convention, Joe Biden’s speech will be rambling on and on while most of America will be watching the Dallas Cowboys vs. New York Giants in the kickoff to the NFL season.

Will Biden insist on another night, or be simply talking to the wienies who watch PBS and not NFL?

9. Will Democrats figure out that women care about more than abortion?

Women should be insulted that Democrats think the only thing they care about is having abortions. Women I know care a whole lot more about their careers, their jobs, national security, their families and the direction of the United States of America.

Do Democrats realize how stupid they look sending 50-year old women to CNN and MSNBC to whine about how crucial abortion is to them?

8. Will Republicans capture the “vision thing”?

Mitt Romney can talk business and jobs. Paul Ryan can talk budgets and numbers. But can they capture that “American spirit” that wraps all their policies and philosophies in a rehetorical message that gives lift and direction for a nation?

Reagan did it. George W. Bush did it. Bill Clinton did it. Obama didn’t do it the same way in 2008, but it was there.

It’s up to Romney to inspire.

7. Will anyone in the media point out Obama’s job plans are for government jobs?

All weekend on the political talk shows, when Democrats were asked about the economy, Dem mouthpieces touted the jobs of teachers, policemen and firefighters.

The press just left it at that, not asking “Who will pay the taxes to pay for these jobs if the only new jobs are paid by taxpayers?”

Private sector jobs create tax revenue. Government jobs take tax revenue. I’d love one reporter to ask Democrats on this point.

6. Is Obama’s message really “My economic plan didn’t work, but his won’t either?”

Every time Democrats are asked about their economic message, the only thing they have to say is “Romney will be worse.” Really?

Is that Obama’s message to America? Obama’s policies are a failure, but everyone else’s policies would be even more failure?

That’s about the most losing-embracing message since Walter Mondale saying he’d raise taxes because it was better than saying he wouldn’t and doing it anyway. He lost 49 states.

5. Will young people turn on Obama?

Obama carried young people by a huge, amazing blast-out-the-doors margin in 2008. These young people are still unemployed, living at home with their parents instead of working in their career of Hope.

I think that was a major reason why Romney chose Paul Ryan, one of the youngest Vice-Presidential nominees ever.

Will Ryan stop talking about Medicare and start talking to people more his own age and younger and show them a better way than what Obama fooled them into supporting?

4. Will anyone note the Labor Day connection?

The Democratic National Convention kicks off on Labor Day, after 42 consecutive months of unemployment over 8% and still counting. While the Democrats are partying and celebrating, more and more Americans are either looking for work or out of work and have been for a very long time.

Labor Day? Obama’s should be called False Labor Day.

3. Can advertising get nastier?

Obama’s supporting ads are accusing Mitt Romney of murder by cancer. This from the Party that complains about negative rhetoric in politics, but has no problem when it comes from their own mouths.

It’s been an ugly negative summer. Will the Conventions change that, or make it worse?

2. Will polls 3 weeks from now be the same?

Traditional wisdom gives each party a bounce after the conventions, and traditional wisdom says that bounce is really temporary. I think metrics look like there is less bounce potential than usual, since the conventions are comparably late this time and summer has been an advertising blitz on both sides, which is a relatively new phenomenon.

If October looks like August pollwise, this race may be a photo finish. However, if Romney bounces and Obama bumbles, this race could be over in two weeks.

1. What does the middle class want more? Government benefits or a job?

The middle class is a huge chunk of votes,and a huge chunk of non-ideological votes. The question of this election is, or at least should be if the middle class is heard, what do they want more? Do they expect failure and seek government benefits to help them out? Or do they simply want a job and want to take care of themselves and their families instead of being government’s child waiting for a too-low allowance.

It’s Romney’s task to lift Americans in despair to believe that they can succeed. If a majority of middle class Americans think they need to rely on government to survive, Obama has his re-election in the bag. But if Americans want to work and provide for themselves, and believe that opportunity will exist with President Romney, this campaign is his.

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