Joe Felice

This Was All Forseen . . .

Joe's got some smart things about the overall nomination process - specifically how the media misreports the horse race. Plus he uses a kick-ass Super Mario Brothers analogy to describe Obama vs. McCain and why the media coverage will continue to be wrong for the next 6 months.


Joe Weighs-in on the Veepstakes

Joe on why neither Hillary, Edwards, or Richardson will be the Veep, and a little advice on better choices. Oh yeah, and lemon bars.


West Virginia, Kentucky and Nebraska Elections

So there were some elections yesterday (the madness never stops), and I figure we should at least mention them here.

In West Virginia, Sen. Clinton won in a landslide (as predicted). She defeated Obama 67 - 26%, and she even captured young voters who chose her 59 - 35%. I haven't checked, but I believe this is only the third state in which Clinton won the 18 - 29 demographic. Young voters were 14% of the Democratic electorate. Unfortunately, there is no data from previous cycles against which to compare that, however, based on averages, it is likely that young voters increased their share over previous cycle.

In a race that saw major coverage in the netroots, Scott Kleeb won his primary agains uber-DINO (Democrat in Name Only) against Tony Raimondo. Scott will now compete for the seat vacated by Chuck Hagel in November. This was a good win for Democrats and for young voters. Scott is a huge friend of the youth organizing community and many of you are probably familiar with his wife, Jane Fleming Kleeb, who is an all around youth-organizing rock star and blogs here at Future Majority occasionally under the name of her organization, the Young Voter PAC. Jane blogged the race all day yesterday and you can read her dispatches here.

Finally, we also won a long-shot race in Mississipi. In a deep-red distrinct, Travis Childers defeated his Republican opponent Greg Davis. This was the third special election in a row in which a Democrat defeated a Republican in a red district, and it's an indication of just how big a wave we might see in November. It's also another reason why we need to maximize the youth vote in every state. If victories like this are possible in the deepest or red districts, 50 million Millennials can help make this one of the biggest landslides we're likely to see in our lifetime.

For more, don't miss Joe's take on yesterday's elections and what it all means:


Republic vs. Democracy

Joe knocks another one out of the park. My favorite line is his analogy of the electoral college as three-legged dog. You need to watch this.


Video Politics

Three items, all having to do with online video and politics.

First, MoveOn has announced the 15 finalists in its Obama in 30 Seconds contest. You can vote here. The winner will be aired on national television. This one is my favorite:


Second, I've just found out through the blog grapevine that Joe Felice, one of my old MFA colleagues, has an awesome YouTube Show in which he covers politics, among other things. It's amazing.

Joe is currently involved in an online video contest the prize of which is a free ride to the Democratic Convention. He's been selected as a finalist in the Project Breakout Political Pundit competition and here is his final submission:

Joe is smart as a whip and just as witty. His coverage of the convention will be top notch. He deserves to be there. Go vote for him.

In the meantime, I'll be adding Joe's show to the Breaking Video sidebar. Watch for that crazy afro he's got going.

Finally, Google and YouTube have announced a partnership to produce a political forum in New Orleans during the general election. Here's hoping they adopt something like the MTV/MySpace Dialogue format.

Here's the announcement:


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