HUMOR

Voice Votes: Chris Christie, Voter Shame, and Shaggy

Updated: May 30, 2013 | 12:09 a.m.
November 1, 2012 | 8:06 p.m.

Welcome to this week’s Voice Votes, a feature in which we grade the week’s headlines—and poke fun at them. You can join in by suggesting your own #win, #fail, and #meh candidates via Twitter. (Send tweets to @nationaljournal). Need more space? E-mail suggestions to Readers@nationaljournal.com or leave us a comment on Facebook. We’ll publish the best suggestions in this space every week and credit the authors.

Here's how we vote this week:

#Win on the little Colorado girl who burst into tears after hearing one too many mentions of Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. The Romney and Obama campaigns initially viewed the girl’s anguish as a chance to show off their empathy skills, before learning she was too young to vote. 

#Win on New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s turn in the spotlight this week after his take-charge handling of superstorm Sandy’s devastation of his state. If 2016 Republican primary voters don't like his new BFF relationship with Obama, well, as Tony Soprano once said, "All due respect, you got no f------ idea what it's like to be No. 1."

#Win on the revelation that the resignations earlier this year of former Rep. Dennis Cardoza, D-Calif., and two other congressmen came while all three were subjects of separate ethics investigations. “It wasn’t me,” Cardoza told National Journal, invoking what legal scholars call “the Shaggy Defense.”

#Meh on Romney’s ridicule of Obama’s proposal for a Cabinet-level secretary of Business at a rally in Virginia on Thursday. Romney’s alternate proposal: If you need a secretary for your business, borrow money from your parents.

#Meh on the 100 surrogates who will join Romney and Paul Ryan on the campaign trail between Friday and Election Day. It sounds impressive, but probability tells us that 47 of them will just be dead weight.

#Fail on the new Facebook app that aims to shame people into civic participation by letting their friends know whether they’ve voted. If the most embarrassing thing about you on Facebook is your voting history, you need to get out more.

#Win on the warning from the brother of Michigan 11th District House candidate Kerry Bentvolio that the tea partier is “mentally unbalanced” and that “if he gets elected, he’ll eventually serve time in prison.” Yes, but is there anything that sets him apart from your average House candidate? 

#Fail on Katrina-era FEMA Director Michael “Heckuva Job, Brownie” Brown’s criticism of Obama for responding too quickly to the devastation of Hurricane Sandy. Career tip from Brownie: It's all about being behind the curve.

Get the latest news and analysis delivered to your inbox. Sign up for National Journal's morning alert, Wake-Up Call, and afternoon newsletter, The Edge. Subscribe here.


Leave A Comment
The National Journal Group has the right (but not the obligation) to monitor the comments and to remove any materials it deems inappropriate.
Comments powered by Disqus
Follow National Journal
Related Content
Columns
Ronald Brownstein: Political Connections

Why We Lack Good Privacy Guidelines

June 13, 2013
Technology innovations have served to strip away privacy. They could also be the key to restoring it.
Charlie Cook: The Cook Report

Why Obama’s Approval Rating Isn’t Higher

June 13, 2013
Constant controversies could prevent the president from getting much credit for the improving economy.
Josh Kraushaar: Against the Grain

Three Signs Republicans Haven't Learned Any Lessons From 2012

June 13, 2013
After last year's drubbing, Republicans vowed to change their ways. But as 2013 wears on, they’re sticking to the script that got them in trouble.
More Columns »