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FSogol

(46,525 posts)
Wed Jul 22, 2015, 03:57 PM Jul 2015

Martin O'Malley: Obscure but not implausible

Clinton may have had the most supporters in the room, and Sanders' populist fury stirred the most anticipation. But if there had been impartial judges giving scores, O'Malley would have been the clear winner — and a sound meter probably would have confirmed it. His lines about redeeming the American Dream and promoting a stronger middle class are standard fare. His selling point was: "I am the only candidate for president with 15 years of executive experience." He stands out, he said, for turning "progressive values into action."

This was where his earnest speech became impassioned, his voice rising over building cheers: "In Baltimore, we took action to save lives by reducing record-high violence to record lows. We increased drug treatment to free thousands of our courageous neighbors from the scourge of drug addiction. ... Driver's licenses for new American immigrants, marriage equality and a ban on assault weapons: and we didn't just talk about it, we actually got it done!" On his mayoral record, O'Malley can point to documented changes that, in the post-Ferguson, Mo., era, seem incompatible. Overall crime fell more in Baltimore than in any other big city. At the same time, shootings by police dropped sharply.


and

And he seems to enjoy the part of the campaign that involves chatting and posing for selfies with voters. At the nearby White Star Ale House, before the dinner, I arrived 10 minutes early for his "meet-and-greet," only to find O'Malley already working a crowd whose numbers would have alarmed the fire marshal. He was still at it when I left an hour later.

Does any of this matter in a race against two far more famous candidates? Maybe not. He lacks Clinton's money and incomparable name recognition, and he lacks Sanders' visceral appeal to the Occupy Wall Street crowd. His narrow path to victory lies in convincing Democrats he's a fresh alternative to the recycled Clinton, but unlike Sanders can be elected.



Whole article by Steve Chapman of the Chicago Tribune behind a pay wall here:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chapman/ct-omalley-president-iowa-democratic-perspec-0723-20150722-column.html

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Martin O'Malley: Obscure but not implausible (Original Post) FSogol Jul 2015 OP
But if there had been impartial judges giving scores, O'Malley would have been the clear winner elleng Jul 2015 #1
DU paints a different picture, doesn't it? n/t FSogol Jul 2015 #2
Sure does. elleng Jul 2015 #3

elleng

(136,064 posts)
1. But if there had been impartial judges giving scores, O'Malley would have been the clear winner
Wed Jul 22, 2015, 06:03 PM
Jul 2015

— and a sound meter probably would have confirmed it. His lines about redeeming the American Dream and promoting a stronger middle class are standard fare. His selling point was: "I am the only candidate for president with 15 years of executive experience." He stands out, he said, for turning "progressive values into action."

At the nearby White Star Ale House, before the dinner, I arrived 10 minutes early for his "meet-and-greet," only to find O'Malley already working a crowd whose numbers would have alarmed the fire marshal. He was still at it when I left an hour later.

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