Pete Ricketts and Pope Benedict XVI

and
Earl Ben Nelson and a Loaf of Bread



Preliminary campaign finance reports indicate many of Landrieu’s contributions came from out of state white Democrat leaders and financiers, including a $1,000 contribution from Sen. Ben Nelson's (D-NE) PAC. (Sources: Democratic National Committee Worked To Defeat Nagin; DNC Says 'No Way' -- The Drudge Report – 5/22/06).So Leavenworth Street wonders this: What on Earth was Earl B. Nelson doing sticking his nose in a battle between two Louisiana Democrats? Is Earl a Big Easy fan? A frequent visitor? Doing a thousand dollar favor for Mary Landrieu's boy? A Cajun cookin’ fan? What’s the back story here?

Don Walton: Heineman win impacts Hagel, Ricketts
by Don Walton, Lincoln Journal Star
Big victory for Dave Heineman. And he wasn’t the only one who won.
Heineman’s Republican gubernatorial triumph was good for Pete Ricketts and Chuck Hagel.
And for the Nebraska Republican establishment, or so it is deeply believed.
Hagel had placed his leadership prestige on the line by supporting the governor over Tom Osborne.
Although Heineman won this one on his own — with the help of a superb campaign managed by Carlos Castillo — his victory kept Hagel’s coattails intact in Nebraska.
It also means Hagel didn’t lose a race on his home court to his buddy, colleague and potential 2008 rival, John McCain, who endorsed Osborne.
Now, Hagel no longer faces the uncomfortable possibility that his home state governor might endorse McCain for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination even if Hagel entered the race.
On Wednesday, Hagel acknowledged his endorsement created a level of “tension” in his relationship with Osborne. No doubt about that, it shows.
This is highly speculative, and we’ll never know, but it seems likely that a Governor Osborne might have worked more closely in Washington with Ben Nelson, a Democrat, than with Hagel, assuming Nelson is re-elected this November.
And how about Ricketts in his bid to unseat Nelson?
He’s likely to receive more time and attention and assistance from Heineman than he might have from Osborne on the campaign trail this autumn. Heineman’s more of a partisan, more of a party guy.
Which brings us to the GOP establishment.
Clearly on Heineman’s side in the gubernatorial primary race, most party insiders and interest groups aligned with the GOP will breathe more easily now.
Osborne is not an insider, not a party devotee, not as partisan, too independent for GOP insiders and activists who put a premium on party. Many of the interest groups, denied an opportunity to even contribute money to the Osborne campaign, also worried about that independent nature.
When Osborne promised his governorship would “not be politics as usual,” those were not comforting words to everyone.
Heineman was, is and will be a party enthusiast, who could be expected to use the governorship to help build the GOP in the same way that Jim Exon strengthened the Democratic Party during his eight-year tenure in the State Capitol.
Location of Heineman’s Lincoln campaign operation next door to Republican state headquarters spoke volumes symbolically, even though the GOP and the governor’s campaign functioned behind separate doors.
So, whose fortunes dip with Osborne’s loss?
Kate Witek, his running mate.
Jon Bruning, who found himself on the losing side. But Bruning, at age 37 and with his eyes on higher office in the future, is in position to build his own record as attorney general and has plenty of time to recover any lost ground.
Now, a word about Tom Osborne.
“I thought I had a pretty good level of trust in the state,” he said in a telephone interview shortly before midnight, an hour after he knew he had lost.
“But I wasn’t the guy they wanted to lead the state.”
What hurt, Osborne said, was to lose in rural areas “where I thought I had strength.”
And to lose there, he said, after working six years in Congress to bring farm programs, drought relief, rural health care assistance, rural education assistance, water resource funding, veterans assistance, broadband Internet development, resources to battle methamphetamine and more to western and central Nebraska.
He went to Washington where he could have coasted, but worked hard for his district.
It’s a cruel business.
Tom Osborne will recover and find another way to serve.
Certainly through his youth mentoring program.
Perhaps with a program to battle meth, or tackle youth drugs and underage drinking, or protect children who are suffering and dying.
Perhaps the high-rollers in Omaha who supported him would like to fund a foundation to support his good works.
This is a guy who was the greatest college football coach of his time — and if you consider what he accomplished, and where he did it, I think you can make a case for greatest coach of all time. An average of 10 victories a season for 25 years straight, with never fewer than nine, are you kidding?
Add six years of performance as a member of Congress.
Something tells me there’s more to come.






Tom Osborne ran as an Independent. He sought endorsements from well-known Democrats (and prochoice advocates) such as Warren Buffett. His campaign actively sought registered Democrats to switch parties.
He didn’t take a Republican position on the illegal immigrant / in-state tuition issue. He didn’t seek the endorsement of the NRA. He initially didn’t take any position on the
During his years as the 3rd District Congressman, voters thought they knew who he was. He was coach Tom, Republican, Man of Integrity. But during the campaign, they found out that he was Tom the Independent, who was now willing to go negative ham-handedly on his opponent. He broke Ronald Reagan’s law of Say-No-Evil-of-Republicans.
Republicans still like Tom the Coach. They want to remember Tom the Coach. But Republicans didn’t want Tom the Independent.
Tom Osborne forgot that he was running in the Republican Primary, and not the General Election. General Election voters may have gone his way on that platform.
Republican voters wanted to vote for a Republican.
(And

Earl has been going around to business groups spouting the line that “Pete Ricketts was born on third base and thinks he hit a triple.” (Forget for a moment that Ricketts had a middle-class upbringing and has had a successful business career.) Instead note that the last person who used that line, against a political neophyte with a successful father, was Ann Richards, former Governor of Texas, who went on to lose her office to a guy called “W”.
Earl has been stealing lines from Republicans too. On election night he stole David Kramer’s line about Ricketts spending in
Earl also claims that this is a battle of “
And Earl has been bringing in the big guns for his election – bringing in a Senator crony for a pre-election outing in
So let’s sum up:
Earl rips Ricketts with old Dem attack line.
Earl rips Ricketts with old GOP attack line.
Earl rips Ricketts with see-through populist pap.
Earl brings in
Seems like someone is just a littttttttle worried. Worried – scared. Take your pick. And if Earl is this scared, just a few hours into the General Election campaign, that can only mean one thing:
Pete Ricketts can beat Earl Ben Nelson.

Adrian Smith was the anti-Tom Osborne. At least the Tom Osborne that ran for Governor.
Smith courted Republican voters. He sought endorsements from all the right GOP groups. He touted his conservative credentials in his ads. He left no doubt as to whom GOP voters should support.
He ran a meat and potatoes GOP campaign against two others who has similar credentials. And now he will take Osborne’s seat.
(And while we originally thought Scott Kleeb (D) had a shot, we found this photo on Kleeb’s website. Nice knowin’ ya, Scott.)

For your Election Day perusal:
Tuesday’s weather forecasts across
Scottsbluff: 60° – 30% chance of isolated t-storms (broken glass)
And on that weather note, the National Journal’s Hotline On Call has an interesting theory – the reverse rain effect in
Of course, the must-read for any Nebraska politico is Don Walton of the LJS, and this Election Day is no exception (Don Walton: Who's David and who's Goliath? - LJS - 5/9/06). One thing we might add to Don's insight on Establishment Endorsements is that Chuck Hagel's early endorsement of Heineman came when Osborne was vacillating about whether or not to even run. DH decided not to wait for TO's decision, and Hagel followed when he was tired of waiting for TO as well.
An ESPN article about the former
A big ol’ story about the Senate race in Congressional Quarterly (NE Senate: ‘Outsider’ Ricketts Holds Edge in GOP Primary – CQPolitics.com –
And finally, for those of you sick of the elections, but still craving “political” news, I give you…Nixon’s sandwich.

Because we have earnestly investigated the candidates, their platforms, and…and..
Ok, we looked at their websites, and that’s pretty much all we’re basing it on. Well there was also an OWH article on it (ohhhh yeah, it pays $83K per year. Noooooow we see the reason for the competition).
So there’s Barb Carpenter who has spent twenty-five (!) years in the office, and the past six as the chief deputy. Now why someone doesn’t just give her the job, I don’t know. (Frankly, why this is an elected position, I don’t know. Shouldn’t the judges just appoint someone? But I digress…) But I’ll say this about Barb’s experience: she told me NOTHING about it on her website. Nada. Zilch. So how can I depend on her to file my Demurrer correctly, if she can’t even give me a HINT of what she’s been doing for the past twenty-five years?
Then there’s Tom Barrett. Tom is a lawyer for the State Fire Marshall’s office. He’s been cracking down on fire-crackers for the past number of years now. He’s also a life-long denizen of
And finally there’s Trish Lanphier. Trish, apparently from her tag-line, is RUNNING on the fact that she got fired by nutty Julie Haney. (And we use the term “nutty” only in the most endearing fashion, as we really don’t want one of those nasty-grams Julie so efficiently doles out to Public Pulse writers…) Another reason to vote for Trish is that she’s “been in the news”. Honest to gosh. Trish, maybe if you rob the Barleycorn you’ll get enough press to run for
But we think and the world is generally just and fair, and we’re giving the nod to Carpenter. But Barrett could just as well pull it out. We frankly have no idea. Do you? If so, please add your comments already. We're waiting.


















Ben Nelson will likely be a very tough candidate for Republicans to beat this fall - for obvious reasons. Nelson has extensive experience and a formidable record. He demonstrates leadership. And he isn't shallow.I’m sorry, who was this endorsement for again? Oh yeah, Kramer.
