BOOMERANG: As stunts go, the Republican Party's "Conservative Voter Survey" ranks right up there with some of Evel Knievel's work. A wheelbarrow full of surveys was meant to show how many people don't like Gov. Beverly Perdue, a Democrat. Over at Perdue's office, staff members sifted through the surveys and found plenty of irate voters upset with Republicans as well as a campaign contribution that was intended for the Republican Party.
I LOVE YOU, MAN: Republican Sen. Richard Burr's economic development summit in Durham will be remembered as a great moment in political reconciliation. Burr and the man he beat almost six years ago, UNC system President and Democrat Erskine Bowles, traded fawning, appreciative comments about each other. Whoever wins the Democratic nomination next year to challenge Burr will surely be seeing lots of Bowles' comments in TV ads.
PRO, CON: In Washington, Burr decried the stimulus package. In North Carolina, at a fire station that was getting a grant from stimulus funds, Burr celebrated it.
IN OTHER NEWS: Sen. Kay Hagan and U.S. Rep. Brad Miller are pushing for a coin to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Greensboro civil rights sit-ins. Perdue says a 20-year old affair by the head of the highway patrol is irrelevant to his job qualifications. The Gallup Poll has found that John Edwards’ standing in the minds of Americans has dropped further than Sammy Sosa's image after the slugger was discovered corking his bat.
John Edwards' approval rating among Americans has fallen 27 points, the steepest drop Gallup has measured since 1992.
In January 2008, the Gallup poll held Edwards at a 48 percent approval. Twenty-two months and one big sex scandal later and Edwards approval was 21 percent.
Edwards decline puts him atop the list of celebrities who have, mostly because of personal or professional troubles seen big drops in public approval, according to Gallup. Edwards peers include Jesse Jackson (24-point drop after a spike in approval from a diplomatic mission), Sammy Sosa (24-point drop after a bat-doctoring scandal), Tom Cruise, (23-point drop after lots of bad PR) and Martha Stewart (16-point drop after an insider trading scandal).
The Gallup survey of 1,013 Americans was conducted Oct. 1-4 and had a margin of error of 4 percentage points.