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(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: President Barack Obama says Rahm Emanuel would be 'terrific' Chicago mayor after Richard Daley Now that's a good endorsement. President Barack Obama said his chief of staff would make a "terrific" Chicago mayor on ABC's "Good Morning America" on Thursday. But the president said Rahm Emmanuel is currently busy at the White House and anticipates that Emmanuel will wait until after Nov. 2 to make his decision. "My expectation is he'd make a decision after these midterm elections," Obama said. "He knows that we've got a lot of work to do. But I think he'd be a terrific mayor." Longtime Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley announced unexpectedly this week that he wouldn't run for a seventh term, leading to speculation that Emmanuel, 50, might enter the race. Emmanuelknown for his hot temper was born in the Windy City and has long expressed interest in running for mayor. But even though Obama wants him to hold off until after Nov. 2, several political analysts told Politico that it may not be possible. "He'd have to start putting together an organization immediately, Larry Bennett, a political science professor at DePaul told the website. While the Chicago primary is on Feb. 22, candidates are required to file a petition with 12,500 signatures by Nov. 22. And if Emmanuel does file in time, a win is far from guaranteed even with the president's blessing. As many as 10 candidates could throw their hats into the ring, possibly including William Daley, the mayor's brother and former U.S. commerce secretary, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. "He's an opportunist," John McCarron, an urban affairs writer and adjunct professor at DePaul University in Chicago said of Emmanuel. "But he's got his work cut out for him." Jonathan Alter of Newsweek called Emmanuel a "formidable" contender, pointing out that he was elected to the House in 2002 without previous experience in an elective office. But he said an official endorsement from Obama, a former Illinois senator, is not guaranteed either. The president, he said, would be caught in a "tight spot." "Obama will feel loyal to Emanuel, whom he begged to leave the Congress in 2008 and come work for him amid the economic crisis," Alter said. "
The president owes him. But that doesn't mean he would necessarily wade into a Democratic primary and endorse him over other politicians he has also known for years."
Poster Comment: The only way he would win is if competing political groups put up candidates that cancel each other out and he wins the Democratic nomination with 25% of the vote. In '83 Daley and Jane Byrne canceled each other out and Harold Washington won the Democratic nomination. The joke went "what happens when two Irish politicians screw each other? You end up with a nigger mayor."
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#1. To: X-15 (#0)
That would be the kiss of death if the voters were sentient at all.
Liberty is not a means to a higher political end. It is itself the highest political end. He (Gordon Duff) also implies that forcibly removing Obama, a Constitution-hating, on-the-down-low, crackhead Communist, is an attack on America, Mom, and apple pie. I swear these military people are worse than useless. Just look around at the condition of the country and tell me if they have fulfilled their oaths to protect the nation from all enemies foreign and domestic. LOL So true
WWGPD? - (What Would General Pinochet Do?)
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