Republicans have good reason to like Obama- Jan Ting- Opinion- Philadelphia Inquirer- 10/23/08Jan C. Ting is a Temple University law professor and for

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Republicans for Obama

Republicans have good reason to like Obama- Jan Ting- Opinion- Philadelphia Inquirer- 10/23/08

Jan C. Ting is a Temple University law professor and former Republican U.S. Senate candidate


Former Secretary of State Colin Powell and conservative talk-show host Michael Smerconish are hardly alone among Republicans supporting Barack Obama.

A surprising number of recognizable Republicans are reportedly supporting the Democratic nominee: Susan Eisenhower, Julie Nixon Eisenhower, Rep. Wayne Gilchrest of Maryland, former Rep. Jim Leach of Iowa, former Sen. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, Bush fund-raiser Rita Hauser, former National Review publisher Wick Allison, former National Review columnist Christopher Buckley (son of William F.), and former Reagan-Bush lawyer and pro-life legal scholar Doug Kmiec. (Even Jenna Bush, President Bush's daughter, told Larry King she's undecided.)

According to a recent Pew Research Center poll, Obama has less support among Democrats and independents than John Kerry had four years ago. But Kerry trailed Bush by two points at this point in the 2004 campaign. Obama leads John McCain by eight points today partly because of his significantly higher support among Republicans.

There are many reasons so many Republicans support Obama. For one thing, he proves that Republicans have been right all along: America is getting better and better, not worse and worse. And racism is becoming less of a problem, not more of a problem. Obama is the proof.

Republicans also like Obama's personal history. Raised by a single mother and his grandparents, he nonetheless became successful through hard work and a good education. Republicans respect that story. It's a Republican story.

Republicans who believe in traditional marriage appreciate that, of the two presidential candidates, Obama is the one still married to his first wife.

And Republicans are reassured by Obama's willingness to compromise on renewing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, continuing efforts to protect America from terrorism.

Republicans also appreciate his commonsense embrace of faith-based organizations as allies in the effort to transform America.

Republicans approve of Obama's analysis of recent Supreme Court opinions, supporting both the Second Amendment and the states' right to impose the death penalty for child rape.

While the ideologues of the left lament that Obama does not take knee-jerk leftist positions, Republicans appreciate that Obama is not an ideologue. He uses his intelligence and education to think through the issues one at a time and seek workable compromises across partisan divides.

Republicans are further reassured by the story of Obama's election as the first African American president of the Harvard Law Review. On an ideologically factionalized editorial board, Obama emerged as the victor. The conservative minority decided that, though he was not one of them, he would give them a fair shake. By all accounts, Obama went on to lead the politically divided board through an unusually challenging year.

Like the majority of the American people, increasing numbers of Republicans regard the invasion of Iraq as a disaster. They also doubt that even more deregulation and privatization will solve our economic problems.

Democratic control of Congress has proven inadequate to reverse the policies of a Republican president determined to "stay the course" on both Iraq and the economy. Only a president committed to change can do so.

"Reagan Democrats" were once the swing voters who decided presidential elections. In 2008, it may be "Obama Republicans."
 
Re: Republicans for Obama

One more:

Former Minnesota Gov. Arne Carlson (R) stepped across party lines and endorsed Sen. Barack Obama for president, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Carlson said that Obama's stances on the Iraq war, the economy and green energy goals won him over. He also cited recent comments by Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) questioning whether politicians have "pro-America or anti-America views."
 
Re: Republicans for Obama -- Another on the List

Another one, and this one is a Viet Nam vet:

"Former Sen. Larry Pressler (R-SD), "who was the first Vietnam veteran to serve in the United States Senate, is the latest Republican to back Sen. Barack Obama's presidential campaign," according to Politico.

"I just got the feeling that Obama will be able to handle this financial crisis better, and I like his financial team of [former Treasury Secretary Robert] Rubin and [former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul] Volcker better," he said. By contrast, John McCain's "handling of the financial crisis made me feel nervous.""
 
Re: Republicans for Obama

One more note --
A new poll shows McCain up only two in Arizona.
People who know him well . . .
 
Re: Reagan COS for Obama

Reagan's Chief of Staff has joined the list.

"Former Reagan chief of staff Ken Duberstein told CNN's Fareed Zakaria this week he intends to vote for Democrat Barack Obama on Tuesday.

Duberstein said he was influenced by another prominent Reagan official - Colin Powell - in his decision.

"Well let's put it this way - I think Colin Powell's decision is in fact the good housekeeping seal of approval on Barack Obama."

Powell served as national security advisor to Reagan during Duberstein's tenure as chief of staff."
 
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