Saturday, April 17, 2010

The 2010 Elections are about incumbents. Changes in Mid-term does not guarantee business in DC will change.

If the electorate of 2010 simply wants to vote against incumbents does that speak to the intelligence of the decisions being made or simply a surrender to other forces that make 'life decisions simple?'

...The survey of 500 Arizona voters on March 16 found:
53 percent favor Proposition 100 (a three-year, 1-point increase to the state’s 5.6 percent sales tax). Thirty-six percent oppose the tax hike aimed at helping close multi-billion dollar state budget deficit. Eleven percent are undecided.
71 percent said the country would be better if most congressional incumbents were defeated. That could bode well for Republican hopes to regain Arizona congressional seats held by U.S. Rep. Harry Mitchell of Tempe, Gabrielle Giffords of Tucson and Ann Kirkpatrick of Flagstaff.
As for the economy, 44 percent said the U.S. economy will be weaker while 35 percent said it would be stronger. Another 13 percent in the Arizona Rasmussen poll said it would be the same....