Martin O'Malley
Related: About this forumWhy Dan Hynes Thinks Martin O’Malley Can Beat Hillary
'He told me in a telephone conversation this week that Hillary is inevitable only until shes not anymore. And Hynes has a pretty good platform from which to make that argument. In 2006, he was the first elected official to publicly callvia a letter published in the Sun-Times and a press conferenceon his former opponent, then-U.S. Senator Barack Obama, to run for president at a time when Hillary the Inevitable was poised to stroll into the Oval Office. . .
'The former Illinois comptroller was one of the first politicians to back Barack Obama when Hillary looked like a shoe-in for the White House. Now he thinks the former Maryland governor can pull off a similar upset. . .
Dan Hynes, 47former Illinois comptroller, losing candidate in the 2004 U.S. Senate primary (against Barack Obama) and in the 2010 gubernatorial primary (against Pat Quinn), scion of a famous Chicago political familywill have none of that. He told me in a telephone conversation this week that Hillary is inevitable only until shes not anymore. And Hynes has a pretty good platform from which to make that argument. In 2006, he was the first elected official to publicly callvia a letter published in the Sun-Times and a press conferenceon his former opponent, then-U.S. Senator Barack Obama, to run for president at a time when Hillary the Inevitable was poised to stroll into the Oval Office. . .
People will see, he says, the clear contrast with Hillary, this young, innovative governor. He also mentions that OMalley has been in Iowa more than Hillary or Bernie, that he has 80 county chairmen and is building an incredible grassroots operation. (OMalley said publicly after Saturdays debate that he is planning to park in Iowa.)
Hynes organized for Obama in 2007-2008 in Iowa, and he plans to do the same for OMalley and to get the same result. [There] will be a cavalry of Illinoisans to hit the doors and streets in Iowa.
As a member of the Democratic National Committee, Hynes is irritated with the headwinds his candidate is fighting because of the paucity of debates, which, he charges were designed by the DNCs chairwoman, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, to give Hillary an advantage. The debate schedule, he adds, is structured in a disadvantageous way. Its outrageous. The last one was on a Saturday night during the middle of an Iowa football game; the next one is the Saturday night before Christmas. Im disappointed in the chairwoman. . .
He also argues that OMalley was the hands-down winner when MSNBCs Rachel Maddow interviewed the three candidates earlier this month. And he claims that OMalley knocked it out of the park at the Jefferson-Jackson dinner late last month. (Politicos Glenn Thrush agrees, writing that OMalley best[ed] both Hillary and Bernie.)'
http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/Felsenthal-Files/November-2015/Dan-Hynes-Martin-OMalley/
FSogol
(46,420 posts)Koinos
(2,798 posts)I think that Sanders may have temporarily paused or peaked and Clinton is vulnerable due to her new shift to the right. Whether this means that O'Malley has enough running room and time, I am not sure. I do know that O'Malley thinks he can do it. And I believe that it is good for both Sanders and O'Malley for O'Malley to stay the course, since he is helping to "raise the volume" on progressive values. He has definitely stood his moral ground on the issues of Syrian refugees and immigrants. Anyone who is paying attention has got to appreciate O'Malley's "What the hell is that?" response to Trump's fascist proposals.
See "Rights groups slam 'Islamophobia' of US candidates" at
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/11/rights-group-slam-islamophobia-candidates-151120140330904.html