Who said that? November 16
Posted by: Julie Germany in GSPM on
Nov 16, 2009
President Obama "needs to deliver more for Main Street than Wall Street," says Celinda Lake in an MSNBC article titled "Why Women Are Losing Faith in Obama." Lake is the President of Democratic polling firm Lake Research Partners and a member of the GSPM's Council on American Politics.
"California Democrats need to ponder very seriously the prospect of putting up a candidate for governor who comes with reams of radio-show rantings like Brown," he states, sagely adding that "Republicans will put tens of millions of dollars behind making him look like a conspiracy-spouting fringe lunatic to the average voter." said Garry South in the Smirking Chimp article "Jerry Brown: a man for all rages." South is a Democratic political consultant and a member of the GSPM's Council on American Politics.
"If the Democratic Party is a liberal party, in order for them to be a majority party, they need the support of some conservatives," said Edward Grefe, a professor at the GSPM in a Globe and Mail piece titled Tactics govern Obama teams swing to conservative side."We are starting to see a separation in the messaging. Groups that are opposed to President Obama's health care plan are starting to turn up the volume in key states to put pressure on lawmakers to vote against these bills, said Evan Tracey, president of CMAG in a CNN article titled "Reform critics saturate airwaves." Tracey is an adjunct faculty member at the GSPM.

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