Cliffhanger: Can They Get to 'Yes'?












There are all sorts of theories floating around Washington about what kind of deficit reduction deal Democrats and Republicans eventually cut and when and how they get there.


And, nearing the end of a week when little progress appears to have been made, one thing is certain: Americans are worried about the consequences of going over the fiscal cliff.


According to a new Quinnipiac University poll out this morning, voters by a 47 to 23 percent margin said that the consequences of falling off the cliff, which include deep spending cuts and painful tax hikes, would be bad for the economy. And even more -- 53 percent -- said lawmakers' failure to avoid the cliff would be "bad for their personal financial situation" compared to just 13 percent who said it wouldn't.


What's more, President Obama and Democrats head into the final weeks before Christmas operating from a position of relative strength, at least when it comes to public opinion.


Read: What national "fiscal cliff" polls tells us (and what they don't)


Obama's post-election job approval rating stands at 53 percent, according to the latest Quinnipiac numbers (40 percent disapprove), and 53 percent of voters also said they trust the president and Democrats more than Republicans to work out a deal in the deficit negotiations.
But the question of how that happens is another matter altogether. Some Republicans say that the best option is to simply get President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner in a room together and wait for them to hammer out a deal mano-a-mano.




In an interview this week with Bloomberg News, President Obama disagreed.


"I don't think that the issue right now has to do with sitting in a room," he told Bloomberg's Julianna Goldman. "The issue right now that's relevant is the acknowledgment that if we're going to raise revenues that are sufficient to balance with the very tough cuts that we've already made and the further reforms in entitlements that I'm prepared to make, that we're going to have to see the rates on the top two percent go up. And we're not going to be able to get a deal without it."


Related: Can the mortgage deduction survive the fiscal cliff?


Nevertheless, House Republican Whip Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., called on the president to lead and predicted that we are entering a crucial phase of the talks -- despite the fact that some lawmakers are leaving town for a long weekend.


"If you want the answer to solving the fiscal cliff, the House has put an offer on the table and the president now has to engage," McCarthy said at a news conference yesterday. "I think the next 72 hours are critical. If he sits back and continues to play politics that will give you your answer to where we are going. This is an opportunity for this country to lead. This is an opportunity for the president to lead."


And Speaker Boehner assured that he would "be available at any moment to sit down" with the president "to get serious about solving this problem." (President Obama and Boehner spoke by telephone yesterday).


In the end, more Americans are rooting for compromise rather than collapse: By a 48 to 43 percent margin, voters surveyed in today's Quinnipiac poll predicted that President Obama and Congress would reach agreement to avoid the cliff by the end of the year.



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The butterfly effect – in giant balloons



Kat Austen, CultureLab editor



HB-Saraceno-27.jpg

On Space Time Foam (Image: courtesy of Fondazione HangarBicocca; photography by Alessandro Coco)



See more in our gallery: "The universal art of networking"



"I HAVE always been fascinated by the butterfly effect," says Tomás Saraceno. "A butterfly's movement here will make a storm somewhere else."



An artist and architect trained in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saraceno sees the world as a vast interconnected network, a notion that pervades his work. His 2010 installation, 14 Billion, for example, is a collection of beautifully interlinked hand-knotted strands, designed so that disruption to any one thread affects the whole piece. It was the fruit of a collaboration with scientists he met during a residency at NASA's Ames Research Center in California.








In an earlier work, Saraceno took inspiration from the three- dimensional structure of webs spun by spiders such as the black widow. He teamed up with researchers to develop models of such webs, then used these models to create 14 Billion, which represents galaxy formation at the start of the universe.



Saraceno's latest work, On Space Time Foam (pictured), now on display at HangarBicocca in Milan, Italy, uses malleable surfaces to explore interconnections between individuals. Constructed of huge transparent balloons that overlap on different levels in the cavernous former factory, the piece allows the audience to experience the invisible links that bind us together by collectively walking, lying or scrambling on the sculpture. "It is a big ecosystem... it makes people aware of their coexistence," he says.



Saraceno not only takes inspiration from science, but also inspires his collaborators to ask new questions. After his NASA residency, he and colleagues submitted a joint proposal to do experiments with spiders on the International Space Station. The proposal was ultimately unsuccessful, but there are likely to be new science-inspired projects on the horizon: Saraceno has just finished a residency at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.


On Space Time Foam by Tomás Saraceno, HangarBicocca, Milan, Italy, until 3 February 2013



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AA to introduce new advanced defensive driving course






SINGAPORE: The Automobile Association of Singapore (AA) plans to introduce a new advanced defensive driving course, as part of its continuing efforts to promote safe driving and safer roads.

Speaking at the AA's 105th charity gala dinner held at the Ritz-Carlton Millenia Singapore, AA president Bernard Tay said that the association will be working with the authorities on the curriculum.

No timeline was announced for the course. AA holds defensive driving courses for the public once a year with the next one expected in June or July next year.

Some driving schools in Singapore such as the Bukit Batok driving centre currently conduct a day course on defensive driving, which includes skid planning and emergency planning. At Woodlands Driving school, defensive driving is included in their basic driving courses.

Mr Tay also announced that S$700,000 had been collected for three beneficiaries - the Singapore Road Safety Council, the Teck Ghee Citizens' Consultative Committee Community Development & Welfare Fund and the National Arthritis Foundation.

The event was graced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Members of Parliament Cedric Foo, Hri Kumar Nair and Lam Pin Min.

Mr Lee noted the growth of the AA from 56 members in 1907 to over 83,000 members today.

"We are a completely different world but it's a world where there's still a role for AA to serve their members, to educate them on road safety, provide them with services," said Mr Lee. - TODAY



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#askpontifex meme takes off before pope's first tweet



The Pope has already racked up nearly half a million followers in eight languages ... and a long queue of queries.



(Credit:
Screenshot by CNET)


Pope Benedict XVI has signed up for Twitter and though the pontiff has yet to bestow his first tweet upon us, he's racked up nearly half a million followers.


He is also already facing a backlog of questions -- ranging from sincere to raunchy -- from the faithful and the not-so-faithful alike.


Twitter made the announcement Monday that the Pope's personal Twitter handle was live and that Vatican City's most famous resident would be taking questions via the #askpontifex hashtag, some of which will be answered by the pontiff himself during a live tweeting session on December 12.


Twitter and the Vatican's communications staff have made it pretty clear that Benedict is only interested in receiving questions on matters of faith. But as the resulting avalanche of one-liners and downright rudeness reveal, more people on Twitter seem to practice irreverence than Catholicism. My favorite of the bunch so far:




In fact, it's pretty difficult to find many sincere questions on matters of faith (in English, anyway -- some of the Spanish queries seem to be less ironic and cynical) in the #askpontifex stream. Even the horrified tweets of the more respectful bystanders seem to outnumber actual, earnest questions:




I think you're right, Mr. Suess. And by the way, I hope that once you've wrapped up your master's you continue on to get your doctorate so we can call you, well ... you know.


Oh my goodness, the irreverence is contagious. My apologies. Better just sign off here and let some of the more clever questions for the Pope speak for themselves:












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Scientific Results From Challenger Deep

Jane J. Lee


The spotlight is shining once again on the deepest ecosystems in the ocean—Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench (map) and the New Britain Trench near Papua New Guinea. At a presentation today at the American Geophysical Union's conference in San Francisco, attendees got a glimpse into these mysterious ecosystems nearly 7 miles (11 kilometers) down, the former visited by filmmaker James Cameron during a historic dive earlier this year.

Microbiologist Douglas Bartlett with the University of California, San Diego described crustaceans called amphipods—oceanic cousins to pill bugs—that were collected from the New Britain Trench and grow to enormous sizes five miles (eight kilometers) down. Normally less than an inch (one to two centimeters) long in other deep-sea areas, the amphipods collected on the expedition measured 7 inches (17 centimeters). (Related: "Deep-Sea, Shrimp-like Creatures Survive by Eating Wood.")

Bartlett also noted that sea cucumbers, some of which may be new species, dominated many of the areas the team sampled in the New Britain Trench. The expedition visited this area before the dive to Challenger Deep.

Marine geologist Patricia Fryer with the University of Hawaii described some of the deepest seeps yet discovered. These seeps, where water heated by chemical reactions in the rocks percolates up through the seafloor and into the ocean, could offer hints of how life originated on Earth.

And astrobiologist Kevin Hand with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, spoke about how life in these stygian ecosystems, powered by chemical reactions, could parallel the evolution of life on other planets.


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Majority Back Clinton for Presidential Bid in 2016


ap hillary clinton jp 121204 wblog Hillary Clinton Wins High Popularity, Majority Support for a 2016 Bid

Kevin Lamarque/AP Photo


Carried by a new high in personal popularity and broad approval of her work as secretary of state, Hillary Clinton closes out her diplomatic career with majority support as a candidate for president in 2016.


Fifty-seven percent in the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll say they’d back a run by Clinton to succeed Barack Obama, vs. 37 percent opposed. That includes a broad gender gap – 66 percent support for Clinton among women, dropping to 49 percent among men.


See PDF with full results, charts and tables here.


Clinton is expected to step down soon from her leadership of the State Department, a position she accepted after narrowly losing the Democratic presidential nomination to Obama in 2008. She’s demurred on the prospect of another bid for the presidency.


Clinton’s fared well during her tenure at State; 68 percent approve of her work, second only to Colin Powell among the last five secretaries of state. (He managed a remarkable 85 percent approval in 2002 and 2003.) Similarly, two-thirds in this poll, produced for ABC by Langer Research Associates, see Clinton favorably overall, numerically a new high in her long public career as first lady, U.S. Senator, presidential candidate and top U.S. diplomat.


Clinton’s recovered from personal favorability as low as 44 percent in April 2008, during her presidential run; she also dropped that low in June 2003, when she was discussed as a possible candidate in the 2004 presidential race, and in June 1996, during the Whitewater controversy. Those dips underscore the potential risks should she climb back into the political fray.


In another sign of the challenges of a political candidacy, intensity of sentiment is better for Clinton personally, and as secretary of state, than it is for her as a candidate. Her “strongly” favorable rating and strong approval of her job performance outnumber her strong negatives, in both cases, by more than 2-1 margins. Strong support for her as a candidate also outweighs strong opposition, but much more narrowly, by 9 percentage points, 36 to 27 percent.


2016 and GROUPS – Politics are comparative, so actual support for Clinton as a candidate would depend more than anything on her opponents, in the Democratic primaries and general election alike. That said, having 57 percent willing to give you a look (55 percent among registered voters) is not a bad starting point – and the differences among groups are telling.


In addition to the gender gap there are sharp differences between age and racial groups, generally similar to Obama’s support patterns. Young adults, age 18 to 29, support Clinton for president by nearly 2-1; that falls to an even split among seniors. And while she gets 52 percent support among whites, that jumps to 70 percent among nonwhites, a strongly Democratic group.


Clinton does less well among nonwhites than did Obama, who won re-election with 80 percent of their support last month. That said, while majorities of white men and married men say they’d oppose a Clinton candidacy, she’s backed by more than six in 10 white women and married women – two groups that Obama lost.


Among other groups, support for Clinton in 2016 tops out at eight in 10 Democrats and liberals, vs. 23 and 24 percent of Republicans and strong conservatives, respectively. About two-thirds of moderates and six in 10 independents say they’d support a Clinton candidacy.


It’s hard to see Clinton winning 23 percent of Republicans in an actual campaign; no Democrat has come close to that mark in exit polls dating back 36 years. That’s another sign that, while currently her numbers are positive, actually running for president can be messier than it looks from a popular perch at Foggy Bottom.


METHODOLOGY – This ABC News/Washington Post poll was conducted by landline and cell phone Nov. 28-Dec. 2, 2012, among a random national sample of 1,020 adults. Results have a margin of sampling error of 4 points. The survey was produced for ABC News by Langer Research Associates of New York, N.Y., with sampling, data collection and tabulation by SSRS/Social Science Research Solutions of Media, Pa.

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Battling nature in your backyard



Phil McKenna, contributor



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(Image: Shattil & Rozinski/Naturepl.com)


Your yard is the new frontier as wildlife returns to the suburbs. In Nature Wars, Jim Sterba calls for a shift from conservation to culling to win back territory



BEARS are at the bird feeder and gangs of turkeys terrorise the suburbs. In Nature Wars, author Jim Sterba takes readers on a fascinating journey to the front lines of the human versus wildlife conflicts erupting in backyards across the US.



What makes Nature Wars a must read, however, is that it brings to light one of the greatest environmental success stories ever told. We are bombarded with dire environmental reports - the disappearing Amazon or dwindling tiger populations - creating what Sterba calls a "mental narrative of loss". Yet from the vantage of a cottage on the edge of New York City, he finds the opposite problem. On a wooded lot that was once a family farm, he encounters a menagerie of turkeys, Canada geese and herds of deer so thick he can hardly step outside. If anything, Sterba argues, we are suffering from too much of a good thing.







Nature_Wars.jpg

A reporter for The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, Sterba digs into dramatic yet largely overlooked changes in the landscape of the US over the last several hundred years.



Prior to the arrival of European settlers, Sterba tells us, the largest tree-covered landscape in what is now the US was the Great Eastern Forest, an area stretching from Maine to Alabama that made up an estimated 75 per cent of the nation's tree cover.



Settlers cleared the woods for farming and fuel until the prospect of running out of trees threatened national stability. Marginal land once cleared for farming was abandoned, oil and coal were discovered as replacements for firewood, and a slow, almost imperceptible regeneration of woodlands began. Today, trees cover two-thirds of the original Great Eastern Forest.



Mirroring the decline and regrowth of the nation's forests was a mass extermination and subsequent rebound of wildlife. By 1890 white-tailed deer were reduced to an estimated 350,000 individuals, just 1 per cent of the population thought to exist before the arrival of Europeans. Today, thanks to forest regeneration and intensive conservation efforts, deer in the US number around 30 million. Turkey and black bear populations have followed a similar arc.



Burgeoning wildlife populations are an extraordinary environmental success but the spread of suburbanites across the landscape means animals now have to contend with new denizens. By 2000 the majority of people in the US lived not in cities or on farms but in the vast area in between.



So how does the convergence of so many wild creatures and humans play out? Sterba offers as an example the community of Princeton Township in New Jersey, home to Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced Study. The woods surrounding both institutions were so overrun with deer that vehicle collisions and Lyme disease posed serious risks to human health.



When the township employed a team of sharpshooters to cull the deer population, candlelight vigils ensued. The local animal control officer started wearing a bulletproof vest after his cat was crushed to death and his dog was poisoned. Deer guts were splattered on the mayor's car, but the cull continued.



The idea of wildlife overabundance may be difficult to accept. But accept it we must, says Sterba. Environmentalists must shift from a mindset of preservation to one of wise use. This includes selective logging, culling and even embracing a long-standing taboo - fur clothing. After a century of conservation, wise use will be a tough sell, but Nature Wars makes me want to pick up a gun and learn how to hunt.



Book information
Nature Wars: The incredible story of how wildlife comebacks turned backyards into battlegrounds by Jim Sterba
Crown
£17.99/$26


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Asian hedge fund industry faces challenges ahead






SINGAPORE: Hedge fund managers said industry consolidation and increased regulatory oversight with accompanying costs are the top two challenges facing the industry in the next one to two years.

This is according to a pool of 100 hedge fund managers interviewed by accounting firm, Ernst and Young.

Many also pointed to a downward pressure on fees, resulting in a drop in revenues.

Hedge funds are investment funds that generally only open to institutions and sophisticated investors specified by regulators and use advanced investment strategies such as leveraged, long, short and derivative positions.

According to Eurekahedge, an investment funds research house, specialising in hedge fund databases, Asian hedge funds may be delivering an annualised returns of 9 percent since 2008, but things are not looking all that rosy for the industry.

More than 70 hedge funds in Asia have shut down this year, with more expected to close shop next year.

Eurekahedge's head of Analysis and Research, Farhan Mumtaz, said: "Returns are performance-based, so if they are performing well, it does not necessarily mean they would be making a lot of cash for themselves especially if they have a smaller asset base.

"Since 2008, a number of hedge funds remain below their high water mark."

The slowdown in the US and the sovereign debt situation in Europe have made matters worse for hedge funds in Asia as asset flows dried up because of risk aversion.

This year, Asia's hedge funds are estimated to have managed some US$126 billion -- a drop of almost 30 percent from 2007.

But the number of hedge funds operating in Asia remain almost unchanged, standing at 1,319 for the three quarters of 2012, compared to 1,317 for the whole of 2011.

Mr Mumtaz said: "It is a fluid situation, there will obviously new start-ups. We expect that trend to continue for one reason, banks themselves are not doing too well -- their trading operations are at risk of closing. So, when that's closed, to pre-empt that, traders might start their own hedge funds."

However, industry tracker, Eurekahedge expects the asset size of Asian hedge funds to grow 7 percent next year to US$135 billion as risk appetite recovers.

Ernst and Young's partner for Assurance and Financial services, Brian Thung, said: "Investment performance is a very key criteria for the investors.

"However, the investors also need to understand or they want to understand how would the managers be having an operational model that would allow them to create this kind of returns that investors crave for."

According to Ernst and Young, hedge funds continue to face a squeeze on margins, particularly on fees and often in return for large mandates and lock-up periods.

- CNA/lp



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Apple nabs former TI engineers for chip push, report says



Apple's A6 chip, which is designed by Apple and manufactured by Samsung.

Apple's A6 chip, which is designed by Apple but manufactured by Samsung.



(Credit:
Apple)


Reports suggest that Apple is in the hunt for former Texas Instruments engineers in Israel, in a bid to expand its operations in the country.


According to sources speaking to The Next Web, Apple has been hiring "dozens" of engineers after the chipmaker cut 250 jobs from one of its Israeli operations center.


Apple is ramping up its efforts to build research and development centers in Herzliya and Haifa, the report said.


TI this month announced a round of redundancies, in the region of 1,700 employees worldwide, as it aims to pull out of the consumer market while focusing on embedded systems. The company aims to focus on selling its chip technology into embedded markets and the automotive sector.


According to the report, the engineers were working on radio chips, such as those supporting Bluetooth and Wi-Fi technology, used in a number smartphones and
tablets. But TI began to wind down its OMAP operations -- or Open Multimedia Applications Platform, a system-on-a-chip (SoC) used in such products as the
Kindle Fire -- while shifting its research and developments efforts back to the U.S.




Earlier this year, Apple was reportedly on the lookout for talent for its Israel research and development center in Haifa, including recruiting new employees.


Last month, amid the departure of iOS chief Scott Forstall, Apple's top executive team was shaken up, and hardware engineering chief Bob Mansfield was pulled out of retirement to head up the Cupertino, Calif.-based technology giant's Technologies unit.


The new division is understood to oversee the company's wireless networking efforts, along with its chipmaking business, giving Apple an opportunity to turn its chip design and building efforts in-house, cutting out smartphone rival Samsung, which currently manufacturers chips for the company, and gaining a firmer grip on its increasingly leaky supply chain.


We've put in questions to Apple, and we will update the post if we hear back.


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Insiders Reveal 2012 Election Secrets


ht obama romney meeting wy 121129 wblog New Revelations From Obama/Romney Campaign on Immigration, Facebook and That Eastwood Speech

Pete Souza/White House


The 2012 election cycle came full circle last week when representatives from the Obama and Romney campaigns, as well as top advisers to many of the GOP primary candidates and several influential outside groups, gathered at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government for a 2012 debrief — finally answering some of the lingering questions about the race.


On neutral ground in Cambridge, Mass., fierce rivals (think Romney campaign manager Matt Rhoades and strategist Stuart Stevens and Obama campaign manager Jim Messina and strategist David Axelrod) met for the first time since the election — and many for the first time ever.


The conference, organized by Harvard’s Institute of Politics, featured a who’s who of political bold-faced names from campaign 2012, including senior campaign aides like Romney political director Rich Beeson and pollster Neil Newhouse, Obama deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter and digital director Teddy Goff, Rick Santorum adviser John Brabender, former Rick Perry campaign operatives Rob Johnson and Dave Carney and even Mark Block, who ran Herman Cain’s short-lived but much-talked-about presidential bid.


Representatives from the outside groups that had so much influence — and spent so much money — on the election were also on hand, including Bill Burton, senior strategist for the pro-Obama super PAC, Priorities USA Action; Steven Law, head of the pro-Republican group American Crossroads; and Tim Phillips, president of the conservative Americans for Prosperity.


Dozens of campaign 2012 veterans and journalists were on hand for the sessions, which covered the GOP primary, the general election, campaign strategy, the debates, conventions and the emerging power of the super PACS.


Here are some of the highlights from the conference:


Romney’s Campaign Concedes Immigration Position in Primary Was a Mistake


Mitt Romney’s decision to take a hard-line stance on immigration during the GOP primary was considered a big reason for his paltry 27 percent showing among Latino voters. But, the conventional wisdom has suggested that Romney couldn’t have won the primary without drawing a strong contrast with Texas Gov. Rick Perry on this hot-button issue.


Romney campaign manager Matt Rhodes, however, says that his candidate could have won the primary without attacking Perry’s support for in-state tuition for illegal immigrants.  When asked by panel moderator Jonathan Martin of Politico whether he “regret[s] trying to outflank Perry on the right on immigration,” Rhoades took a long pause, and then shifted the conversation to Perry’s controversial statements about Social Security. Romney had attacked the Texas governor for calling the popular entitlement program a “Ponzi scheme” and a “failure.”


“In retrospect,” Rhoades said. “I believe we probably could have just beaten Perry with the Social Security hit.”


So while Rhoades never said he wished that Romney had never uttered the words, “self-deportation” he essentially conceded that he regrets the immigration position the governor took in the primary.


The Obama Campaign Only Fully Committed to Florida in Mid-September


If there was one state that the Romney campaign felt confident they were going to win it was Florida. And, until mid-September, the Obama campaign wasn’t convinced that they were going to contest the state. That changed in the aftermath of the strong convention in Charlotte, however, and the Obama campaign decided that they were going to go “full out” to win there.


Obama campaign strategist David Axelrod:


“One of the things that we had discussed internally was the state of Florida and how we were going to treat Florida. We had made a decision that we were going to wait until mid September and after the conventions to see where we were in Florida before we fully committed. We were in, we had invested a lot, but we hadn’t been in the Miami media market. When we emerged from conventions not only had we gotten a little bump, but we saw Florida remained very competitive and made the decision to go full out in Florida.”


Team Romney Never Read Clint Eastwood Speech


Romney strategist and convention director Russ Schrieffer was asked by panel moderator Ron Brownstein of National Journal if anyone actually read a copy of Eastwood’s speech. The answer: not so much.


Russ Schrieffer: “I said [to Eastwood] are you going to do what we talked about, are you going to talk about what you talked about at these fundraisers. And he looked at me and said.. ‘Yep.’ ”


Laughter followed Schrieffer’s comments to which he replied:


“It’s Clint Eastwood, you argue with him.”


Republicans Are Worried (And Rightly So) About the Technology Gap With Democrats: 


Jon Huntsman’s campaign manager Matt David noted that “one area we should freak out about is technology. The GOP is far behind there.”


The Obama campaign used social media as a means to an end — using technology as a way to recruit, persuade, target and turn out voters.  Obama’s digital campaign guru Teddy Goff pointed to the power of Facebook in helping to find a previously unreachable group of potential voters: the friends of those who were already voting for the President.


In 2008, said Goff, they found that “99 percent of our email list voted.” As such, Goff said, “We entered into this election, with an understanding that anyone we were talking to directly, the vast majority were voting for us. So the question was … how can we serve them with stuff that will make them go out and get their friends.” And, Obama’s Facebook fans were a great place to start. Obama’s 33 million Facebook fans globally are friends with 98 percent of the U.S. Facebook population, Goff said.


Facebook also helped the campaign track down their coveted 18-to-29-year-old cohort. Goff explained that they were unable to reach half of their 18-to-29 GOTV targets by phone because they didn’t have a phone number for them. But, he said, they could reach 85 percent of that group via a Friend of Barack Obama on Facebook. “We had an ability to reach those people who simply otherwise couldn’t be reached,” Goff said.


Was the Romney High Command Really and Truly Shocked on Election Night? 


Neil Newhouse, Romney pollster:


“Here’s what we saw in the data: you have to give credit to the Obama campaign for undercutting it. We saw in the last two weeks, an intensity advantage, a campaign interest advantage, an enthusiasm advantage for Republicans and Mitt Romney. … Just the same as we saw four years ago on behalf of Barack Obama. We thought it would tilt the partisan make-up of the electorate a couple points in our direction.


“We weren’t surprised by racial composition; we were surprised by the partisan composition. … The real hidden story here on our side, the number of white men who didn’t vote in this election compared to four years ago was extraordinary. And these white men were replaced by white women. We were taking a group we won by 27 points and replacing them with a group we won by 12-14 points.”


Perry Should Have Waited Until Late Fall, Not Summer, to Jump In:


Perry strategist Dave Carney said the biggest tactical mistake made by Perry was that “we should have started years ago.” Perry, as governor in a state with a part-time legislature, “had a lot of time on his hands” — he should have used that time, and his role as RGA chair, to meet donors and travel the country before 2011. Once Perry decided to get in, however, Carney argues the Perry should have waited until mid-October or November to get into the race. That extra few months, said Carney, “would have given us more time to be prepared and do the groundwork that was necessary on the issues.”


What Role Did Karl Rove Play With Republican Outside Groups Like American Crossroads, Which He Co-founded?


Steven Law, president and CEO of American Crossroads and president CrossroadsGPS:


“Karl … recognized it was really important to not simply have an organization exist in a particular cycle for a tactical use but to … start to build enduring institutional strength on the right the way that we saw the unions providing that for the Democrats. … And then there were certain other parts that I think Karl really gets credit for. The first is encouraging us to reach out to other center-right groups and to try to start to collaborate where we were legally permitted to do so to share information and encourage people to pull the oars in the same direction. On the fundraising side both he and Ed [Gillespie] and then later on Haley Barbour were all tremendously instrumental in harvesting their Rolodexes and relationships. Karl is a guy that’s got tremendously good ideas, and again, not so much on the tactical side but more kind of broad strategic moments and was a tremendously useful and valuable source of ideas along the way.”


Bill Burton, senior adviser, Priorities USA Action:


“He also helped us raise money. I probably e-mailed out every one of his columns to our donors — our high-dollar list — to point out what they were saying on the Republican side and how confident Rove was. … When he would go on TV bursting with confidence about Romney winning, that little click went around every single time. Karl Rove is an enduring figure for both sides.”


After Rove’s Appearance on Fox News on Election Night, Is He Discredited Within the Republican Party?


Steven Law:


“Absolutely not. We all get our turn in the barrel.”

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