PRIMARY
RESULTS INDICATE NOVEMBER ELECTIONS MAY BE GOING TO THE DOGS
The state primary
elections are history — with the exception of a few runoffs — and that
means we get a brief respite from all the mud-slinging political ads on
television. Now it’s back to screaming car dealers and commercials about
medical problems that shouldn’t be mentioned in a family newspaper.
Better enjoy it while you can. You know that the political strategists
are loading up their slop buckets and getting ready for the November
general election.
For whatever reason,
only about 20 percent of us voted in the primaries. That is a shameful
statistic. I was in Iraq when people got their first chance to vote in a
democratic election. Some walked 20 miles for the privilege. We won’t
even get our lazy rumps off the couch.
In the Republican
primary for governor, incumbent Gov. Sonny Perdue easily dispatched Ray
McBerry, the choice of the flaggers. Flaggers are high-fiving each other
over the 50,000 votes their guy received. I hate to burst their bubble,
but Sheila the Family Wonderdog could get 50,000 votes without missing
her daily 22-hour nap. Perdue got 370,000 votes, or 88 percent, which
qualifies in my book as a rout. Flaggers have been telling me for
several years that 79 percent of Georgians have said they want a chance
to vote on a state flag referendum that includes the Confederate battle
flag. Maybe so, but the flag issue wasn’t a blip in the primary and
won’t be in the November general election either.
Meanwhile, back in
the 21st century, Gov. Perdue will face Lt. Gov. Mark (The Big Guy)
Taylor in the general election. Perdue says he will run on his record,
which includes spaying a couple of dogs and giving an elephant a
physical. Taylor has chosen not to run on his record because he didn’t
do anything worth talking about while lieutenant governor. Perhaps a
good campaign strategy for Taylor would be to charge Perdue with animal
cruelty because of the poor dogs that lost their manhood, their
self-respect and some other stuff I’m not going to mention at the hands
of the governor. (Note to Taylor’s campaign team: I’m giving you this
idea free of charge.)
Replacing Taylor as
lieutenant governor will be either Gainesville Republican State Sen.
Casey Cagle or the Democrats’ Jim Martin of Atlanta, a former state
commissioner of Human Resources, or former State Sen. Greg Hecht of
Jonesboro. Martin and Hecht are in a runoff, if anybody besides their
closest relatives care. Cagle beat slick-as-oil Ralph Reed, who happened
to be passing through Georgia on his way to the White House. Reed was
the choice of the Christian Coalition, former New York Mayor Rudy
Giuliani, former U.S. Sen. Zell Miller, and a bunch of Republican fat
cats. He just wasn’t the choice of the voters. Reed claimed to be an
anti-gambling advocate at the same time he was helping disgraced
Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff protect the gambling interests of some
Indian tribes. I guess he thought we were too dumb to notice the irony
of that.
In Georgia’s 4th
Congressional District, Ambassador to Outer Space Cynthia McKinney is in
a runoff with an earthling named Hank Johnson, a former DeKalb County
commissioner. Currently stumping the district for the ambassador is
media publicity hound Cindy Sheehan, as well as Darth Vader and E.T.,
the Extra Terrestrial — none of whom are qualified to vote in the
district. Needless to say, I have a great interest in the outcome of
this race. The ambassador is worth a minimum of four columns a year —
six, if she slaps a police officer.
The primary results
have been a bit unsettling for me. If I lose Ray McBerry, Ralph Reed and
our Ambassador to Outer Space as regular column fodder, this would leave
me with only President Peanut and his unsolicited and self-important
pronouncements, bleeding heart liberals who think George Bush is
responsible for all the world’s ills, including psoriasis, and people
who talk too loud on their cell phones in the checkout line at the
grocery store. If that happens, I just may be forced to spay dogs for a
living.
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