The President and Family

The President and Family
The Obama Family Going to Church on Sunday!

Monday, November 5, 2012

Requiem for Romney- Alexander Burns and Maggie Haberman - POLITICO.com



For Republicans, the only thing harder than losing to Barack Obama might be explaining it.

By any reasonable standard, Obama is a seriously vulnerable incumbent: a president overseeing a limping economy, whose party got thumped in the 2010 midterm elections, and whose signature accomplishment of health care reform is highly controversial. Whatever his strengths on national security and personal likability, Obama probably began the 2012 campaign as the most beatable sitting president in 20 years.

So if Obama manages to defeat Mitt Romney’s on Tuesday, the Republican Party will have to go through a painful process of self-examination and internal debate in order to explain what went so badly wrong.
The debate won’t just be fodder for political obsessives: it will also determine how Republicans approach governing next year and how the party campaigns in 2014, 2016 and beyond.

Even before tomorrow’s vote, the post-election arguments about why Romney lost — if he does — are beginning.

Here’s a POLITICO preview of the top arguments Republicans would use to explain and excuse it:
  
Mitt Romney was a historically bad candidate
If Romney wins on Tuesday, he’ll be president of the United States. If he loses, he’ll be the fall guy for the entire Republican Party.

Republicans weren’t overjoyed about nominating Romney in the first place, partly because he was a shade too moderate for their taste, but also because he was such an inept competitor in the 2008 primaries.
Win or lose, Romney has validated many of those fears, careening from misstep to misstep throughout the 2012 race. If Romney wasn’t fumbling his response to the Supreme Court’s Affordable Care Act ruling, he was offending the British on the eve of the London Olympics, or getting caught on tape bashing Americans who don’t pay income taxes.

On a deeper level, Romney was a problematic candidate for 2012. In a campaign still shadowed by the meltdown of the financial services industry, the GOP picked a candidate as close to Wall Street as any in history. Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour said in August that Democrats had branded Romney as a “wealthy plutocrat married to a known equestrian.” He was right, and Romney may have been more vulnerable to such attacks than any other major Republican in America.

Relentlessly attacked by Democrats for his Bain Capital record, Romney never responded in an effective way. He stuck to his script that Obama hadn’t successfully steered the economy back to solid ground, failing to flesh out his own agenda until late in the game and even then only vaguely.

If Republicans come up short in Senate or House races, too, they’ll gripe about the lack of Romney coattails. It probably won’t be fair for the party to blame Romney for all its failings down-ballot, but it’ll happen anyway.

Oh, Sandy
Over the weekend — days before the election ends — Republicans were already pointing to Hurricane Sandy to explain a Romney loss. The argument goes like this: wall-to-wall news coverage of the superstorm, combined with the loss of life and uncertainty about how to campaign in the shadow of a tragedy, stalled Romney’s momentum.

Obama took charge of storm-relief efforts, visiting hard-hit sites, and Americans tend to rally around the president in a crisis. The glowing praise for Obama from New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a top Romney surrogate, also didn’t help the Romney cause.


Karl Rove told the Washington Post that the storm allowed Obama to be a “bipartisan figure this week. His has been the comforter-in-chief and that helps.” Barbour told CNN’s Candy Crowley that the storm “broke” Romney’s momentum.

And News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch attacked Christie on Twitter, declaring that he “must re-declare for Romney, or take blame for [the] next four dire years.”

There’s no question that the storm has aided Obama in terms of media coverage, and praise from the opposing party is always useful. But Christie’s power to swing an election — one largely being fought in Midwestern states unaffected by the storm — is seriously questionable. So, too, is the idea that Romney was assured victory in a tight, two-point race before the storm hit.

We can’t know what would have happened if the storm hadn’t hit. But there were strong indications before it landed the week before the election that Romney’s momentum was stalling, and that the Republican had failed to capitalize on his strong first debate performance with enough gusto.

What’s more, had Romney run a more effective campaign over the last year, he wouldn’t have had so much riding on the last month of campaigning — and a single blown debate by Obama — to vault him over the top.

Stuart Stevens blew it
Every time Romney has flagged in the 2012 race, a chorus of conservative critics have directed their ire at Stuart Stevens, the flamboyant Mississippi native and auteur who serves as Romney’s chief strategist. The last man standing after a messy internal fight among Romney’s 2008 advisers, Stevens was a target from the beginning.

Stevens’s basic methodology for winning races goes like this: run a center-right candidate through a Republican primary by focusing on the general election, then focus relentlessly on the incumbent while taking as few specific policy positions as possible.

This approach appears to work better in statewide races than it does in a presidential campaign, when voters seek more specificity and a genuine personal connection with their candidates. Yet Stevens never strayed from this strategy, leaving Romney largely undefined to the national electorate as Democrats tore up his record at Bain Capital and as governor of Massachusetts.

Stevens was the chief speech writer, traveling strategist, ad-maker and overseer of the campaign’s in-house ad buying strategy. Romney’s convention speech, prepped on the fly, made a rookie mistake by omitting a reference to the Afghanistan war. Romney’s ads were criticized as banal, cookie-cutter pieces that never broke through. The ad-buying strategy, reviewed at length by POLITICO, left Romney outflanked by the Obama campaign in key markets across the country.

To be sure, Stevens is not the only person in Romney high command who would (and should) take blame for a loss. But as a favorite punching bag for conservatives throughout the cycle, there’s no doubt he would be a whipping boy on Nov. 7.

Immigration was a fatal blunder
It’s been one of the most consistent — and for Republicans, alarming — features of 2012 polling: Romney is getting blown out with Latino voters. And he pretty much made his own bed with this powerful and growing demographic.

As early as September 2011, when Romney was running to Rick Perry’s right on immigration — Romney’s most memorable line on the subject was that illegal immigrants should choose to “self-deport” to their native countries — Republicans privately fretted that Romney was digging himself a demographic hole.
They were right: Romney’s likely to lose Latinos by a wider gap than McCain’s 36-point margin of defeat. That could push states like Nevada, Virginia, Florida and Colorado into Obama’s column, and if Obama wins just a few of those battlegrounds, it will be exceptionally difficult for Romney to win nationally.

Should that scenario come to pass, Republican elites — who have long feared confinement to an aging and white voter base — will be ringing the alarm bells Wednesday morning. Some party leaders haven’t waited until after Election Day to raise the hue and cry.

In an interview with New York magazine, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush compared the party’s predicament with Latinos to Monty Python’s hapless Black Knight: “We’re competing with ninjas, you know, guys with big, sharp knives, and we have no weapon, and we’re playing like we’re fighting them, and we get an arm cut off — ‘Oh, it’s just a flesh wound’ — and we’re down to the trunk.

It was a mistake to nominate a moderate — again

For much of the Republican base, the last four years carry a straightforward lesson: When you nominate an ideological squish like John McCain, you lose. When you run on big, bold, conservative ideas — as the party did in 2010 — you win.

Romney has embraced many of the ideas of the 2010-vintage GOP, selecting Paul Ryan as his running-mate and embracing staunchly conservative goals like defunding Planned Parenthood. But for most on the right, Romney remains the “Massachusetts moderate,” as Newt Gingrich christened him during the GOP primaries.
Back in the Republican nomination fight, Rick Santorum called Romney the “worst Republican” to put up against Obama, since he couldn’t draw a bright-line contrast on health care and other issues. Should Romney lose on Tuesday, this argument will be back in force.

There are a bunch of holes in this argument. Romney has taken serious damage with women and Latinos as a result of hewing to the conservative line on abortion and immigration. It’s a dubious proposition that Romney would be better off campaigning harder on issues like privatizing Medicare.

 But in the race’s final month, old Mitt — the one who passed universal health care in Massachusetts as governor — seemed to reemerge on the campaign trail, promising no tax cuts for the wealthy and that government can indeed do good things. It was his strongest month of the campaign.
Where Romney has clearly fallen short is offering up a compelling positive vision for the country, not necessarily a compelling, orthodox conservative vision. His longtime conservative critics will still whack him on this count with verve.


It was all the media’s fault
Claims of media bias from both sides are nothing new in presidential politics. But the Romney campaign has long lamented that the press is out to get them, with the candidate, his wife and top surrogates openly complaining that they can’t get a fair shake.

Romney and his campaign have viewed their press coverage as routinely savage, feeding into the Obama campaign’s caricature of Romney as a non-mustachioed Snidely Whiplash. Reporters, the Romney team has complained, are more interested in gaffes than in policy, even if that means taking Romney out-of-context.
Yet the reality is Romney also did little to make an affirmative case for his candidacy and his character until late in the game. When the Obama team attacked, Romney and his spokespeople resisted responding to the press, declining to comment on stories and then attacking them as biased and factually flawed only after they appeared in print.

For most of the 2012 cycle, Romney’s campaign invested little energy into making its case to and building relationships with the national media. Romney conducted relatively few interviews, favoring softball appearances on Fox News and interviews with radio hosts like Hugh Hewitt. His spokespeople didn’t reliably answer press requests, even benign ones. The assumption was that the press is either irrelevant, or simply trying to cause trouble.

But treating the media as a hostile force can be a self-fulfilling prophecy: denying reporters basic access and refusing to answer straightforward questions about policy and strategy is a pretty surefire way to deprive yourself of positive coverage.

Democrats have complained about the media, too, attacking the press covering the 2012 campaign for not fact-checking Romney aggressively enough and for buying in too credulously to the “narrative” of Romney’s October momentum. But few on the left have made these complaints a primary explanation for the state of the race.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Democratic Election Rally 287 Iyannough Road Hyannis 4PM!

Light the fires!


Cape Cod Democrats Rally at the Double Tree Hotel Iyannough  Road across from the airport

Maureen Dowd Op-Ed Columnist The Loin King




NOT since Lydia Bennet eloped with Mr. Wickham, not since Anna Karenina ran off with Count Vronsky, has such a hue and cry been heard about purloined affections. 

The triangle that flared at the climax, with Chris Christie scampering away from Mitt Romney in the wuthering storm to cling to Barack Obama, the New Jersey governor’s brown eyes looking up trustingly into the president’s brown eyes, added a frisson to a jaundiced, spendthrift race. 

In novels and movies, it’s a powerful narrative: the problems of three little people, playing out against a charged backdrop. “Casablanca.” “Gone With the Wind.” “The Year of Living Dangerously.” “Broadcast News.” “L.A. Confidential.” 

Christie was unrepentantly swept away by his new pal, the commander in chief, who also likes to wear a jacket with his name and title sewn onto the lapel. 

“So, I do pinch myself every day,” Christie said at a news conference in Trenton on Wednesday. “You know, like when I got on Marine One, I’m pinching myself, believe me. Sandy and Bill Christie’s son on Marine One was not exactly what I thought was going to be happening with my life.” 

A president who has taken a lot of abuse from Republicans — one refusing to take his urgent calls on the debt deal, one yelling “You lie!” during a State of the Union address, many libeling his religion, race and nationality, all plotting to upend his plans — was finally getting a little G.O.P. love. 

It was a jarring sign to Republicans that, despite Romney’s humanlike performance in recent weeks, there is no deep tie, nor real respect, among many of those helping with his campaign, even men considered as running mates. Romney is idolized by his wife and sons, and in his close Mormon circle of friends, but beyond that, there is an intensity vacuum. 

In the final days, with Christie cheating on him, Mitt was left with Jeb Bush, who offered the faint praise to CBS News that Romney had been slow to respond to the president’s attack but had finally “found his rhythm.” 

Pity poor Jeb Bush, trying to drag another entitled, second-rate scion over the finish line in Florida while stifling his own dreams. He told a crowd that Obama’s “entire strategy is to blame others, starting with my brother, of course.” But his brother is to blame for creating the chaos that swallowed much of Obama’s first term. And for derailing Jeb’s career and blighting the family name. While Jeb was hawking Romney, W. was giving a speech at a confidential Cayman Islands investment conference. He should go check on Mitt’s cash still sunning itself in the Caribbean. 

Even some of Romney’s own campaign advisers confess they don’t really know who he is. Is he the pragmatist who would curb Grover Norquist, John Bolton and Dan Senor, or the severe conservative who would let them run wild? It’s sad when you are hoping someone is an opportunist and a liar.
Some of Romney’s staffers seemed taken aback by his commanding performance in the first debate, musing about whether, had there been 47 percent fewer gaffes, the rich stiff actually could have had a chance of easily sending Obama packing. 

(Maybe Mitch McConnell and other Republicans would prefer that a Democrat keep the White House, given that the out-of-power party might pick up more Congressional seats in the midterms — not to mention how actually enacting the Romney-Ryan agenda could make the G.O.P. a minority party.)

Having Christie go rogue — and Colin Powell and Michael Bloomberg cross over from wherever they were — was a compelling plot twist in a race that has looked more to the gutter than the stars. Two uninspiring candidates, one Americans had fallen out of love with, one they could not fall in love with, one who had lost his narrative, one who offered a narrative with Janus faces and contradictory and occluded positions. 
 
The only thing about Romney that doesn’t oscillate, besides the exact quota of salt to pepper in his hair, is his weight. He told ABC’s Diane Sawyer that he regularly gets on the scale on the campaign trail to make sure he doesn’t deviate too much. If only his consistency extended to his positions on the auto bailout, abortion, climate change, gun control, health care, etc.

Romney’s closing argument was that he could spark a stagnant economy, but his false claim that Jeep jobs were moving from the United States to China was a huge mistake, allowing the big car companies to call him out as a liar. Obama found his fire in castigating Romney, saying, “You don’t scare hard-working Americans just to scare up some votes.” 

Voting for either man seems a shot in the dark. You have to make that vote still confused about who they are, how they’ve evolved, and where they’re leading us. You have to make that vote without knowing if either would have the mettle, as president for the next four years, to face down destructive forces and restore America’s luster. 

“After four years as president,” Obama told voters in Hilliard, Ohio, on Friday, “you know me.”
But do we? If we know him, why does he seem so much slighter than the Barack Obama who thrilled the country a mere four years ago? 

If we know him, why were we so stunned at his crimped, self-destructive performance in the first debate, when the man usually so in control of his emotions could not contain his contempt that he was expected to justify himself while this superrich, superphony, supercilious Republican dauphin stared at him with a smarmy smile? Barry used a vulgarity about Mitt to Rolling Stone, expressing the way he truly feels, but out campaigning the past few days, he toned it down, noting that his rival tried to “massage the facts” while “I tell the truth.” 

After his despondent debate and his disheartened remark that “You can’t change Washington from the inside,” the graying president has to spend his last campaign hours exhorting until he’s hoarse, working to reassure us that he’s still interested in his job. “I am a long ways away from giving up on this fight,” he said in Springfield, Ohio, on Friday. “I got a lot of fight left in me.” 

When a skeptical supporter pressed, “You’re not too tired?” the president responded: “I don’t get tired. I don’t grow weary. I hope you aren’t tired either, Ohio.” 

David Axelrod, the president’s mustachioed medium, strained to paint the president as filled with vigor, telling reporters in Lima, Ohio, that Obama’s exhilaration “is coming from his loins.” Twitter users quickly dubbed the president the Loin King. 

The campaign played Stevie Wonder’s “Signed, Sealed, Delivered” at rallies in 2008 too, but in Ohio in 2012, the words have a more wistful ring to them: “Like a fool I went and stayed too long. Now I’m wondering if your love’s still strong.” 

CAMPAIGNING in Lake Worth, Fla., on Friday, Bill Clinton, as usual, lavished Obama with support that contained a sting: “I may be the only person in America, but I am far more enthusiastic about President Obama this time than I was four years ago.” 

It is clear now that we elected an introvert, which is strange, and a leader who is depleted, rather than recharged, by politics and crowds. As Neera Tanden, president of the Center for American Progress and a former Obama adviser, told New York magazine: “It’s stunning that he’s in politics, because he really doesn’t like people. My analogy is that it’s like becoming Bill Gates without liking computers.” 

Obama denounces Romney as “a very talented salesman,” which he considers an insult. At the same time, he admits that his ineptness at selling his policies left him in need of someone like Bill Clinton, who could be a “secretary of ’splaining stuff.” 

As the former community organizer deftly handled the devastation of Sandy — showing all the fleet response and caring reactions that he had lacked during the BP oil spill — and pressed the case that “we’re all in this together,” it seemed as though the president had learned some things about communicating and confidently using the levers of government. And that he understood that Americans will expect more from him if he is re-elected. 

But I couldn’t help thinking of a “Star Trek” episode, “The Naked Time,” in which the starship Enterprise sends crew members to a dying planet. The spaceship is contaminated by a strange red liquid that causes everyone to emote like crazy. Even Spock starts crying inconsolably because he can’t tell his mother how much he cares about her.  

Spock and Captain Kirk fiddle with the matter and antimatter and get away but fall into a time warp and hurtle back 71 hours, so the emotional outpouring never happened.
Has President Spock, who bounded into action on Sandy and rocked a New Jersey woman in his arms, really grown? Or is he giving us what we want for the moment so we’ll give him what he wants for the next four years?

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Democratic Stand Outs/ with Elizabeth Warren, President-Barack Obama and other Candidates Supporters Rally

 

---November 3rd, Saturday 11-1pm Rt. 137 & Rt. 39 Harwich Freedom Corner. 

Park over at the 400 East Parking lot. Dress Warmly!
 

---November 4th, Sunday Patriots Plaza Shopping Center 11-1pm Rt. 134! 



Park at US Post office! Dress Warmly!
 

 

Democratic Election Return
Headquarters 

 Party at Harwich LandHo Rt. 28 at 7:30pm!


Monday, October 29, 2012



Response to Mr. Ruplenas’ “My View” (The difference between Ted and Scott) of October 29, 2012

Mr. Ruplenas’ commentary on my “My View” piece is a vituperative ad hominum rant that dredges up the absolute hate that some still harbor about the Kennedy family. I am not an apologist for the Kennedys, but growing up in a three decker around Boston in the forties and fifties, like Scott Brown, with no father at home or child support, we always heard of the Kennedy boys, their successes and their fortunes, from the nuns, the Jesuits, the pulpits and from the neighbors. I admit I may be biased. However, my original point stands. Scott Brown is no Ted Kennedy and the Massachusetts voters know it. The difference is one of social conscience in his voting record of 36 years and Brown’s lock step voting on major Republican efforts to thwart any progress that can be attributed to President Obama.


Some reflections and corrections to Mr. Ruplenas’ alleged facts:


1.       Ted Kennedy did not have to take money from lobbyists like Brown does, to get elected. Therefore he was a man of the people in his voting. Brown favors financial institutions and votes to support their interests. He’s not an “independent” as he suggests in his ads.


2.       Senator Brown took the “Norquist” Republican oath not to raise taxes. This while setting himself up for four fully taxpayer supported pensions and free medical care for life for him and his wife when he retires. Can anyone explain to me how a person can run for office citing no more taxes while positioning himself for four tax supported pensions and no cost medical care for life with a straight face? Mr. Ruplenas should reflect on this reality that a newly elected Senator Brown might give up some of his taxpayer supported pensions to avoid a national bankruptcy.


3.       Colonel Brown is not and will not be a veteran until, as a National Guardsman he serves 180 consecutive days on “active Duty”- not “Active Duty for training” his status in Kazakhstan, Afghanistan and Paraguay. These are short term two week assignments as part of his annual commitment. Those National Guardsmen and Women in uniform who staff those sites on “Active Duty” and who face combat over two, three or four long term tours of duty endure a heavy sacrifice for their service to their country. For Colonel Brown, it’s more of a lark. For the others it’s a heavy burden on them, on their families, and on their finances. For Colonel Brown it’s just a change of scenery. If he plans on volunteering for a combat assignment in Afghanistan to get “veteran” status, the voters should know that.  He’d been gone for half a year from the senate to complete that requirement and might face injury or death in a combat zone on “Active Duty”. That’s a sacrifice. Spending two weeks as National Guard Colonel visiting a unit in a combat zone does not rise to the level of sacrifice borne by those on permanent party in the same combat zone. Ask anyone who has been there. He is not a veteran until he meets the 180 day requirement!


4.       In an AP story earlier this year, Senator Brown’s bio indicated he received both the “Meritorious Service Medal” and the “Army Commendation Medal’, but you cite only one in your piece. Is his official bio in error or is your information error? It would be important to know because the Senator is heading a “Faux Military Award” effort in the Senate. If his record were faulty it would not look good for him to be boasting in his official bio about military awards he never received. If he only was awarded the Army Commendation Medal and not the Meritorious Medal, than the official Bio sent to the AP from his headquarters overstates his awards and has never been retracted by the Senator.


5.       My interest in Colonel Brown’s National Guard record arises out of my own long national guard/USAR experience in three states and the Pentagon for a third of my life. He treats his service like a hobby. The guys I served with treated it more like a calling. There are thousands of current and ex-guardsmen in the state who will draw their own conclusions on voting day about Brown’s  self promoted “soldiering” as a National Guard Lawyer as an occasional short term visitor in combat zones. His integrity is at risk because of his continual efforts at self promotion, which parallel many of his other questionable comments about his role as a senator.


Thanks for the opportunity to write a response to Mr. Ruplenas’ “My View”.

Thomas P. Johnson

Harwich Port, MA




Saturday, October 27, 2012

America Undecided: Catholic, Independent and Social Justice Perspectives on Election 2012

Dear John,   I wonder if you might be willing to circulate to your list the news about our new book relating to the healthcare reform/HHS debate and the presidential election.   

Doug Kmiec, the former dean of the Catholic University Law School, and I joined forces with another former Notre Dame law professor, Ed Gaffney (a religious freedom expert), to write America Undecided: Catholic, Independent and Social Justice Perspectives on Election 2012 about the Religious Liberty issue that has roiled the Church. 

 It's available on Amazon for Kindle e-book readers, and also in paperback. It combines the medical perspective on the whole contraception issue with the constitutional and religious freedom issues raised by Cardinal Dolan and Archbishop Lori. 

I felt it was important to mount some kind of forceful response to the idea that the administration was somehow anti-Catholic or anti-religion.
At the heart of the book is the story of the several Catholic priests who hired President Obama in 1985.  Most people don't realize that he worked for three years out of an office in a Catholic Church rectory in Chicago, and really got his first exposure to organized religion from Fr. Bill Stenzel and Fr. Tom Kaminski.



With my thanks, as always~



Patrick Whelan



http://www.amazon.com/America-Undecided-ebook/dp/B009UFHM2A/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1351174313&sr=8-1&keywords=kmiec+whelan

America Undecided: Catholic, Independent and Social Justice Perspectives on Election 2012

Authored by Amb. Douglas W. Kmiec, Authored by Edward M. Gaffney Jr., Authored by J. Patrick Whelan, M.D. Ph.D.

List Price: $12.95

5.5" x 8.5" (13.97 x 21.59 cm)
Black & White on White paper
184 pages

ISBN-13: 978-1480131453
ISBN-10: 1480131458
BISAC: Biography & Autobiography / Presidents & Heads of State



In a carefully documented analysis for the 8-10% of America's voters who are undecided, the authors demonstrate why Barack Obama deserves a second term. The authors -- trained in law, theology, diplomacy and medicine -- reveal the achievements of President Obama from a Catholic, Independent and social justice perspective. 


What's more, the authors knock down the specious arguments being made that Obama has denied religious liberty or pursued a foreign policy putting the nation at risk. Barack Obama ended the war in Iraq, placed accountable limits on the military in Afghanistan, demonstrated both prudence and respect for our international partners without over-committing or ignoring global obligations. 


The President's mature handling of these issues has indeed left GM alive and Bin Laden dead. As a matter of social justice, President Obama is committed to restructuring the tax code in favor of a broadly conceived middle class. addressing the needs of the very poor, and taking steps to continue to build an economy where "made in America" again signifies quality and innovation. 


President Obama is committed to support those nations which abide by a rule of law, resolve in favor of free, open elections, gender equality, sound environmental practice, and religious freedom. 


The President favors greater inter-faith understanding as a means of reducing world conflict in the Middle East as elsewhere. Committed to Human rights, the President will continue to act against human trafficking and the allied, illicit drug and weapons trades. and in freeing markets in north Africa and elsewhere of the scourge of illegal activity while containing the hatreds of terror, open vast markets for U.S. goods and services and the peace that is strengthened by responsibly exercised freedom of expression and commercial intercourse. 


Never before published material reveal the distinctly and profoundly Catholic influence on President Obama's early life and work as a community organizer in Chicago.

Friday, October 26, 2012



Who wants to go to New Hampshire and  meet Barack Obama?  We have free tickets and slots available. 

All binders are welcomed as long as you don't have to be home to cook for your families! LOL! 


Get a ticket to see President Obama in Nashua, New Hampshire


with special guest James Taylor


 Saturday, October 27th


Doors open at 12:00 p.m.


Elm Street Middle School
117 Elm Street
Nashua, NH 03060


 

President Barack Obama and special guest James Taylor are coming to Nashua. Fill out the form below, and your free ticket will be emailed to you immediately. 

https://my.barackobama.com/page/s/get-your-ticket-to-see-president-obama-in-nashua

Parking: There is limited parking available around the Elm Street Middle School. Free parking with shuttles will be available beginning at 9 AM from:

Parking Lot
Corner of Canal Street and Chandler Street
Nashua, NH 03064
Millyard Technology Park
10 Technology Way
Nashua, NH 03060

This event is free and open to the public. A RSVP is required for entry into the event. Sign up below to get your ticket:


Contact Julian Cyr, Regional Field Organizer with Obama for America Massachusetts here in Southeastern MA, including the Cape! jcyr@barackobama.com

Call Julian Cyr at 508-360-6694  
Or
 Pat Johnson at 774-353-0349

Younger Folks most encouraged to attend. Make history call your friends and crash with the NH Obama folks! Get your ticket!  

We leave at 9am sharp from Rte. 132 Burger King/ Bus Lot on Saturday, Oct 27th! We should be back about 6:30 PM in Hyannis, 7:00PM Harwich.

 

https://my.barackobama.com/page/s/get-your-ticket-to-see-president-obama-in-nashua