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Lee vs Markell

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

This isn’t that kind of post where I compare political standings on both men, but having been at both meeting places last night after the primaries for both men I wanted to talk about my experience and the feeling I got from each place.

I arrived at GOP headquarters in Wilmington braced and ready for lots of people, lots of chatter and excitement and just a frenzied feeling overall.  I was surprised when there were few people there and it was pretty quiet.  It was very easy to find a chair and there were plenty of snacks to go around.  Now this could be because it was pretty well understood that Lee was going to win the primaries and so people were not too nervous about the outcome.  But the whole feeling overall was just really subdued.  There were a few young people there around my age (I’m 23), but still, there was no music playing, FOX news was playing quietly on a tv nearby and a radio was playing talk radio but not loud enough for people to hear what about (although I am sure it was about the primaries).  Once it was understood that Lee was going to win, I decided to skip the speech and head to Markell where by that time he would squeak by with a win.  However before I talk about that, I chased down Bill Lee as he was walking into headquarters and he was very gracious to talk to me for a quick minute before he went in to give his speech, and I thank him for giving a greenhorn a moment to talk.

After some time finding Markell’s headquarters (why oh why do cities re-name streets?  It gave my GPS a very hard time for a bit and much frustration) I could tell before getting out of the car that this was going to be a very different experience.  His was down by the riverfront (which reminded me of Baltimore with its poshness) in a large room filled with signs that said “I back Jack” and a throng of people.  I got there just in time to hear the majority of his speech, and to look around the room and survey the people.  Loads of people wearing Markell t-shirts, balloons and a buffet table which was sadly picked clean.  You could just smell the anticipation in the air granted there wasn’t much air circulating so it smelled of something most definitely.  Lots more younger people, little children, and just a very pumped scene.  People were just so proud and so happy and it was very contagious.  With the different backgrounds for both of these men with their supporters, it should make for a very interesting 2 months.

As this was my very first primary elections I was very nervous and there was much praying that I didn’t let the station down.  However being the person that I am I love seeing politics and democracy at work.  Even if the moods were different, people came out and people were interested and it was so wonderful to see people care.  I hope you all enjoyed not just my coverage but all of WGMD’s coverage as we all worked tirelessly and wanted to get as much out to our listeners as possible.  Is there anything else that you would enjoy hearing for the elections in November?  Let us know!!

Reaction From Bill Lee

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

WGMD had a chance to speak with republican candidate for governor Bill Lee about his big win over Mike Protack in the primary. You can listen to the full audio here.

Open Note To Mike Protack

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

To:  Mike Protack

Drop out of the Governors race, and get off the ballot as an “Independent Party” candidate.   Staying in the race will only serve to further hurt your already shaky credibility.  Be a man and throw your support behind the gentleman who beat you fair and square; Bill Lee.  He’s a fellow Marine man!  Stand up and fight next to him, not against him.  In the long run the Republican party may, I say may, give you a tiny bit more respect.

Dropping out and supporting  Lee would show class.   Staying in the race will only show you to be a sore loser cry baby.

The “Independant Party” is a joke anyway.

Please Mike, take my advice on this one.

 

-Dan

Sam Wilson Possibly Endorsed

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

A great many people have spent portions of their summers asking me what I’ve got against Sam Wilson. My only reply is I’ve nothing against the savior of Western Sussex County. The better question you could ask is what does Sam Wilson have against me? It could well be argued our politics are very much alike. We’ll vote for most, if not all, the same candidates in November.

Some of you know my talk radio history. I was enjoying ratings growth and pressuring state and local governments at my last job. Then a U.S. Senator pressured my employer and I was out on the street. Senator Clinton wished to control my speech and in turn the public dialogue, which is why Sam Wilson also has something in common with the woman who would be Queen.

Some of you may remember the foot in mouth disease suffered in early summer by William Swain Lee. Sam and I both like Mr. Lee but Sam sought to silence my coworkers and me by threatening an advertiser boycott. He threatened our ability to ply our trade. Strange behavior from an avowed defender of the Constitution but then it appears Mr. Sam and his acolytes believe it’s something you bend for the purpose of the current day. It’s my hope Wilson doesn’t intend to run Sussex County in the same manner. If you ever disagree will he then “make” you follow his diktat?

Sam’s cronies insist he’s just joking. Yeah, so was Hillary.

Government by force isn’t the American way. I keep hearing the geographically challenged telling me to return to my New York penthouse ways. Surely they were taking a pass when map reading was being taught at school. My corner of New York State is more remote than Sussex County and always has been. Ever see a movie called Allegheny Uprising? It’s loosely based on my people. Some of my ancestors were buried just north of where I grew up. They fell in an Indian massacre. Some of my more recent ancestors are buried in the Pacific where they fell fighting Japanese.

Sam Wilson would certainly have my support if he acknowledged what this country is all about but instead he sulks, feels wronged and threatens lawsuits. He would get my support because if he could ever shut his mouth during a conversation and listen to what’s being said I believe he would understand. It’s why he’s a far better man than some in local politics. His logic gets blindsided by his emotions but he isn’t self serving and devious and he doesn’t beat his wife. I appreciate Sam Wilson for his faith, his dedication to his friends and because he’s good to his family. I just don’t want him governing me by fiat.

A Couple of Voting Resources

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Kudos to the News Journal today.. they have a great group of resources for voting, including candidate descriptions for all races, voting locations and more.. For the caller this morning looking for a list of candidates and Web sites.. try these two places..

from the state:

http://elections.delaware.gov/filed.shtml

 

and our own site:

http://www.wgmd.com/vote1.php

 

The Journal has several articles about the specific candidates on their front page of their site today as well.

JMX

Live Delaware Election Coverage

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Live coverage of todays primary election begins at 8pm tonight on the radio at 92.7 FM WGMD, and on your computer at WGMD.com

Always live streaming online.  Click here to visit our live audio stream!

 

 

 

What I Believe

Friday, September 5th, 2008

Our second consecutive summer drought is ending abruptly this weekend. When it rains in the north there is a cooling period after the front moves through. It began raining Friday afternoon and when I left the office at 8:00 P.M. Friday night it was a lot like stepping into a sauna. There was a Nor’easter that barreled through here Mother’s Day and it was the worst storm in 46 years. Just a couple thousand feet away that day the bay surrounded some of my neighbor’s homes and the wind whipped and I reprised my life as a reporter and took my Marantz down the street interviewing people waiting it out. A day later it was sunny and it hasn’t rained much since.

Pardon me for being long winded. I’m taking stock. I’ve been at this place a year now and I set this as a milepost in order to prove I could move far away and break some old attachments. Bernie Aiello wrote me today and asked if I missed Central New York. Bernie is a retired TV executive, having worked in Buffalo, Portland, Maine and Syracuse. We used to get together for breakfast at an out of the way place called the Valley Inn outside Marcellus, New York.

Yes. I miss friends and family but I don’t miss Upstate New York. It isn’t the same. The trees and lakes are very pretty but my parents are gone and most of my old friends moved and some died. Like a Chekhov novel it was a wonderful way of life and then vanished so quickly there wasn’t time to take stock. Monday afternoon I took Alaine-Marie to Syracuse and a visit to a bookstore. I hadn’t felt melancholic all weekend but that trip moved me. On the drive home we stopped at the McDonald’s in Fairmount, New York and grabbed some chicken wraps. I’m not a big McDonald’s guy but when my daughter was little it was a common stop for the toys. When her Grandma Colley died I picked my little girl up from school and drove to a McDonald’s in nearby Auburn, New York and over fries told her the news. I broke down and she sat silently and didn’t speak until much later in the day.

Labor Day we also drove through Marcellus on the way back to camp. And I detoured through the park. It was next door for us for 4 years and many an afternoon I pushed a little girl on a swing or we walked the dog. Marcellus Park is in many ways my vision of what Heaven must be. Tall trees, a trout stream and trails and I’d made plans to someday be buried not far away in St. Francis Xavier Cemetery. It’s on a hill overlooking the village and a statue of Jesus, arms outstretched, looks over the folks below. Monday night we went to the field days a few miles away in Skaneateles, New York and as I watched the fireworks I was already thinking about another day on-air in Delaware.

Friends and family tell me I need to be “there” for my little girl. She’ll turn 15 in December. She’s still vacillating about a move here. I watched her with her friends at the field days and saw nothing but joy. She stays with her surviving grandparents as her mother is many years now out of the picture. Is this ideal? Of course it isn’t but I’m also responsible for her support and after I was dismissed at WFBL (Thanks, Hillary) I couldn’t find much gainful employment in a place globalization passed by. So I’m here listening as the heavy rain falls in Long Neck. It will storm through much of the weekend. I’m told it rained most of the summer in Upstate New York but during my four nights away Labor Day Weekend the sun did nothing but rise, shine and then set.

The last twelve months have also been rewarding. The people at work and the people listening are overwhelmingly fine and decent human beings. They love God and their families and their country. Aside from my little girl not much is available 365 miles to my north. She at least is surrounded by two half siblings, loving grandparents and so many, many friends.

When she was little she would fall and sometimes cry but after the age of six she never displayed much emotion. Doctors were later concerned she bottled up her thoughts. Tuesday morning was a gut-wrenching affair. She didn’t appear to be listening when I told her I was leaving. Finally she came outside and watched me load the car and then when I said goodbye she stood some 50 feet away and was silent. It’s when I walked over to her and hugged her and she broke into tears. Then she followed me to the car and leaned her head against my chest and sobbed. All I could do was explain all things will pass. And that I missed her and that she was the most important person in my world.

You’ll have to excuse me if I show no compassion for Mrs. Clinton or my former radio employers. Or if I’ve a short fuse with sociopaths in politics and those who spread lies before God and community. Or if I’m blunt and have so little time for the Pabulum spewed by the politically correct.

What I’m now going to tell you isn’t a talk radio topic and it’s a rare insight into my personal life and a major cause for my beliefs about living. When my daughter was 8 she was the victim of child-abduction by a crazed human being. It didn’t dawn on me until tonight that when we ate at McDonald’s Monday we were at the same plaza where police found her wandering a week later. My close friend, Onondaga County Sheriff’s Department Sergeant Bob Burns, drove me to pick her up. Her hair was changed and she wore strange clothes but she rushed smiling into my arms.

God commands me to forgive. He doesn’t tell me to be weak or to apologize for what I believe.

BREAKING Baker Vs. Bennett Blowout

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

It’s getting hot in Sussex!  County Council candidate Judson Bennett appeared today on WGMD’s  Jared Morris program making comments about a consulting company his opponent Mark Baker is using.  I’ll now post three letters forwarded to me from the company and Mr. Bennett.

E-mail one:

Mr. Bennett -

As you may know, I am the President of Pathfinder Communications, LLC, the firm preparing campaign communications for your opponent, Mark Baker. It has come to my attention through friends in Sussex County that in your appearance on WGMD today you chose to make accusations about my firm, specifically about our hiring of private investigators to follow candidates around.

I write you for three reasons:

First, to notify you that this accusation is not only untrue, but possibly slanderous.  If you have a shred of proof, please provide it.

Second, to demand an apology from you both in writing to me and on-the-air at WGMD in which you:

a.  State that you made this accusation with no proof

b.  Retract the statement

c.  Apologize to my company and to Mr. Baker for the implications your claim made about him

Third, to make you aware that neither my company nor I are public figures or political candidates, and your baseless accusations have much different ramifications should I (or anyone like me you may make baseless claims against) ever choose to pursue legal remedy.

My professional reputation and that of my firm are very important to me and I am both angered and dismayed that you would choose to impugn them for your own political gain with neither proof nor caution. 

As I have requested your apology be both in writing and on WGMD, I have included WGMD on this email.  I expect to hear from you soon.

Thank You,

Jason Ercole

Pathfinder Communications, LLC

 

Malvern, PA 

 

 

Next letter two:

 

Mr. Ercole,

Nobody has been slandered more than me by your malicious company. I have copies of all your hit mail pieces and your radio ads on behalf of Mark Baker. You are despicable and anybody who does business with you should be ashamed of themselves, especially Mark Baker— I heard you did use investigators and if you don’t, it doesn’t matter-you are still a ruthless organization that is about dirty tricks. Regardless, your attack ads are absolutely crap and I hope they back fire on Baker. I’m a well known Republican who has served his party well for many years, and you sir are a prostitute in my opinion who through your oppositio research firm tries to hurt people for money in political contests. You and your company represent everything that is distasteful and intrisically evil about politics. You will get no  apology from me, I’ll die first. If you want to make a legal issue out of this-I’ll see you and Mr. Baker in court. Slander-what a joke!      JUDSON BENNETT

And letter three:

I will make no further comment other than to say, that Mr. Bennett admits what he said isn’t true, but doesn’t care that he did.  I think that is your story…

Thank You,

Jason Ercole

Pathfinder Communications, LLC

Malvern, PA 

Her Prompter Was Broken

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

The latest gab from the Obama media is the Palin speech was written months ago and that she can’t replicate the performance.  Sure, nobody else ever delivers a prepared speech!  An NBC reporter kept running on about this supposed flaw.  He failed to mention this…

 Sarah Palin Winged her Speech

And when are we going to hear the national media pick up the story the News Journal reported today?  Lyin’ Joe Biden telling people a drunk driver killed two members of his family.  Even I was drinking this Kool-Aid.  The other driver wasn’t drunk.  In fact he rushed to Mrs. Biden’s car after the wreck to help.  He died in 1999 and Biden has been smearing the poor dead man for political gain.  Has Joe Biden no shame?  50 million dead babies, Joe, on your watch.  That’ll send you to Hell for sure but the latest…

Joe Bidens Acceptance Speech

Monday, September 1st, 2008

I checked the blog and while I know that we posted the video of Biden’s acceptance speech for the Obama ticket, I wanted to put the transcript of the speech so that anyone can read it and tell me what they think about the speech or Biden as a possible VP. I would LOVE to hear some intelligent thoughts on this!!

Beau, I love you. I am so proud of you. Proud of the son you are. Proud of the father you’ve become. And I’m so proud of my son Hunter, my daughter, Ashley, and my wife, Jill, the only one who leaves me breathless and speechless at the same time.

It is an honor to share this stage tonight with President Clinton. And last night, it was moving to watch Hillary, one of the great leaders of our party, a woman who has made history and will continue to make history: my colleague and my friend, Sen. Hillary Clinton.

And I am honored to represent our first state — my state— Delaware.

Since I’ve never been called a man of few words, let me say this as simply as I can: Yes. Yes, I accept your nomination to run and serve alongside our next president of the United States of America, Barack Obama.

Let me make this pledge to you right here and now. For every American who is trying to do the right thing, for all those people in government who are honoring their pledge to uphold the law and respect our Constitution, no longer will the eight most dreaded words in the English language be: “The vice president’s office is on the phone.”

Barack Obama and I took very different journeys to this destination, but we share a common story. Mine began in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and then Wilmington, Delaware. With a dad who fell on hard economic times, but who always told me: “Champ, when you get knocked down, get up. Get up.”

I wish that my dad was here tonight, but I am so grateful that my mom, Catherine Eugenia Finnegan Biden, is here. You know, she taught her children — all the children who flocked to our house — that you are defined by your sense of honor, and you are redeemed by your loyalty. She believes bravery lives in every heart, and her expectation is that it will be summoned.

Failure at some point in everyone’s life is inevitable, but giving up is unforgivable. As a child I stuttered, and she lovingly told me it was because I was so bright I couldn’t get the thoughts out quickly enough. When I was not as well-dressed as others, she told me how handsome she thought I was. When I got knocked down by guys bigger than me, she sent me back out and demanded that I bloody their nose so I could walk down that street the next day.

After the accident, she told me, “Joey, God sends no cross you cannot bear.” And when I triumphed, she was quick to remind me it was because of others.

My mother’s creed is the American creed: No one is better than you. You are everyone’s equal, and everyone is equal to you.

My parents taught us to live our faith, and treasure our family. We learned the dignity of work, and we were told that anyone can make it if they try.

That was America’s promise. For those of us who grew up in middle-class neighborhoods like Scranton and Wilmington, that was the American dream and we knew it.

But today that American dream feels as if it’s slowly slipping away. I don’t need to tell you that. You feel it every single day in your own lives.

I’ve never seen a time when Washington has watched so many people get knocked down without doing anything to help them get back up. Almost every night, I take the train home to Wilmington, sometimes very late. As I look out the window at the homes we pass, I can almost hear what they’re talking about at the kitchen table after they put the kids to bed.

Like millions of Americans, they’re asking questions as profound as they are ordinary. Questions they never thought they would have to ask:

Should Mom move in with us now that Dad is gone?

Fifty, 60, 70 dollars to fill up the car?

Winter’s coming. How we gonna pay the heating bills?

Another year and no raise?

Did you hear the company may be cutting our health care?

Now, we owe more on the house than it’s worth. How are we going to send the kids to college?

How are we gonna be able to retire?

That’s the America that George Bush has left us, and that’s the future John McCain will give us. These are not isolated discussions among families down on their luck. These are common stories among middle-class people who worked hard and played by the rules on the promise that their tomorrows would be better than their yesterdays.

That promise is the bedrock of America. It defines who we are as a people. And now it’s in jeopardy. I know it. You know it. But John McCain doesn’t get it.

Barack Obama gets it. Like many of us, Barack worked his way up. His is a great American story.

You know, I believe the measure of a man isn’t just the road he’s traveled; it’s the choices he’s made along the way. Barack Obama could have done anything after he graduated from college. With all his talent and promise, he could have written his ticket to Wall Street. But that’s not what he chose to do. He chose to go to Chicago. The South Side. There he met men and women who had lost their jobs. Their neighborhood was devastated when the local steel plant closed. Their dreams deferred. Their dignity shattered. Their self-esteem gone.

And he made their lives the work of his life. That’s what you do when you’ve been raised by a single mom, who worked, went to school and raised two kids on her own. That’s how you come to believe, to the very core of your being, that work is more than a paycheck. It’s dignity. It’s respect. It’s about whether you can look your children in the eye and say: We’re going to be OK.

Because Barack made that choice, 150,000 more children and parents have health care in Illinois. He fought to make that happen. And because Barack made that choice, working families in Illinois pay less taxes, and more people have moved from welfare to the dignity of work. He got it done.

And when he came to Washington, I watched him hit the ground running, leading the fight to pass the most sweeping ethics reform in a generation. He reached across party lines to pass a law that helps keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists. And he moved Congress and the president to give our wounded veterans the care and dignity they deserve.

You can learn an awful lot about a man campaigning with him, debating him and seeing how he reacts under pressure. You learn about the strength of his mind, but even more importantly, you learn about the quality of his heart.

I watched how he touched people, how he inspired them, and I realized he has tapped into the oldest American belief of all: We don’t have to accept a situation we cannot bear.

We have the power to change it. That’s Barack Obama, and that’s what he will do for this country. He’ll change it.

John McCain is my friend. We’ve known each other for three decades. We’ve traveled the world together. It’s a friendship that goes beyond politics. And the personal courage and heroism John demonstrated still amaze me.

But I profoundly disagree with the direction that John wants to take the country. For example,

John thinks that during the Bush years “we’ve made great progress economically.” I think it’s been abysmal.

And in the Senate, John sided with President Bush 95 percent of the time. Give me a break. When John McCain proposes $200 billion in new tax breaks for corporate America, $1 billion alone for just eight of the largest companies, but no relief for 100 million American families, that’s not change; that’s more of the same.

Even today, as oil companies post the biggest profits in history — a half-trillion dollars in the last five years — he wants to give them another $4 billion in tax breaks. But he voted time and again against incentives for renewable energy: solar, wind, biofuels. That’s not change; that’s more of the same.

Millions of jobs have left our shores, yet John continues to support tax breaks for corporations that send them there. That’s not change; that’s more of the same.

He voted 19 times against raising the minimum wage. For people who are struggling just to get to the next day, that’s not change; that’s more of the same.

And when he says he will continue to spend $10 billion a month in Iraq when Iraq is sitting on a surplus of nearly $80 billion, that’s not change; that’s more of the same.

The choice in this election is clear. These times require more than a good soldier; they require a wise leader, a leader who can deliver change — the change everybody knows we need.

Barack Obama will deliver that change. Barack Obama will reform our tax code. He’ll cut taxes for 95 percent of the American people who draw a paycheck. That’s the change we need.

Barack Obama will transform our economy by making alternative energy a genuine national priority, creating 5 million new jobs and finally freeing us from the grip of foreign oil. That’s the change we need.

Barack Obama knows that any country that out-teaches us today will out-compete us tomorrow. He’ll invest in the next generation of teachers. He’ll make college more affordable. That’s the change we need.

Barack Obama will bring down health care costs by $2,500 for the typical family, and, at long last, deliver affordable, accessible health care for all Americans. That’s the change we need.

Barack Obama will put more cops on the streets, put the “security” back in Social Security and never give up until we achieve equal pay for women. That’s the change we need.

As we gather here tonight, our country is less secure and more isolated than at any time in recent history. The Bush-McCain foreign policy has dug us into a very deep hole with very few friends to help us climb out. For the last seven years, this administration has failed to face the biggest forces shaping this century: the emergence of Russia, China and India as great powers; the spread of lethal weapons; the shortage of secure supplies of energy, food and water; the challenge of climate change; and the resurgence of fundamentalism in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the real central front against terrorism.

In recent days, we’ve once again seen the consequences of this neglect with Russia’s challenge to the free and democratic country of Georgia. Barack Obama and I will end this neglect. We will hold Russia accountable for its actions, and we’ll help the people of Georgia rebuild.

I’ve been on the ground in Georgia, Iraq, Pakistan and Afghanistan, and I can tell you in no uncertain terms: this administration’s policy has been an abject failure. America cannot afford four more years of this.

Now, despite being complicit in this catastrophic foreign policy, John McCain says Barack Obama isn’t ready to protect our national security. Now, let me ask you: Whose judgment should we trust? Should we trust John McCain’s judgment when he said only three years ago, “Afghanistan — we don’t read about it anymore because it’s succeeded”? Or should we trust Barack Obama, who more than a year ago called for sending two additional combat brigades to Afghanistan?

The fact is, al-Qaida and the Taliban — the people who actually attacked us on 9/11 — have regrouped in those mountains between Afghanistan and Pakistan and are plotting new attacks. And the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff echoed Barack’s call for more troops.

John McCain was wrong. Barack Obama was right.

Should we trust John McCain’s judgment when he rejected talking with Iran and then asked: What is there to talk about? Or Barack Obama, who said we must talk and make it clear to Iran that its conduct must change.

Now, after seven years of denial, even the Bush administration recognizes that we should talk to Iran, because that’s the best way to advance our security.

Again, John McCain was wrong. Barack Obama was right.

Should we trust John McCain’s judgment when he says there can be no timelines to draw down our troops from Iraq — that we must stay indefinitely? Or should we listen to Barack Obama, who says shift responsibility to the Iraqis and set a time to bring our combat troops home?

Now, after six long years, the Bush administration and the Iraqi government are on the verge of setting a date to bring our troops home.

John McCain was wrong. Barack Obama was right.

Again and again, on the most important national security issues of our time, John McCain was wrong, and Barack Obama was proven right.

Folks, remember when the world used to trust us? When they looked to us for leadership? With Barack Obama as our president, they’ll look to us again, they’ll trust us again, and we’ll be able to lead again.

Jill and I are truly honored to join Barack and Michelle on this journey. When I look at their young children — and when I look at my grandchildren — I realize why I’m here. I’m here for their future.

And I am here for everyone I grew up with in Scranton and Wilmington. I am here for the cops and firefighters, the teachers and assembly-line workers — the folks whose lives are the very measure of whether the American dream endures.

Our greatest presidents — from Abraham Lincoln to Franklin Roosevelt to John Kennedy — they all challenged us to embrace change. Now, it’s our responsibility to meet that challenge.

Millions of Americans have been knocked down. And this is the time as Americans, together, we get back up. Our people are too good, our debt to our parents and grandparents too great, our obligation to our children is too sacred.

These are extraordinary times. This is an extraordinary election. The American people are ready. I’m ready. Barack Obama is ready. This is his time. This is our time. This is America’s time.

May God bless America and protect our troops.

also here is a link that was put on WGMD’s website full speech

remember…intelligent thoughts!! No Biden sucks or anything like that!