"The good news is, we won. The bad news is, we won."
Election Day is over, and President-Elect Barack Obama has won decisively, as shown on the
polls page. But the elections are not all over, and we have to look at where we go from here.
Elections
We know that Obama won in a moderate landslide, but not all of the Electoral College votes had been decided at the end of Election Day.
- Missouri, 11 votes, McCain
- Nebraska, 1st district, 1 vote, Obama
- North Carolina, 15 votes, Obama
The result of the first set of counts is Obama 365, McCain 173.
Even though results have been announced, they have not been certified, nor have they been accepted by the Congress as required under the Constitution. There are cases of
vote suppression and other electoral crimes to be investigated. It remains possible that Obama's victory is even bigger than we have heard.
Voting reform will be a significant issue for the new 111th
Congress.
In the Senate, we still have some undecided seats.
- AK, Mark Begich (D), Ted Stevens (R), too close to call,call on Election Day, with 40,000 ballots still to count. If Stevens wins,Update: heBegich willhas almostwon certainlyin havethe tocomplete resign,count, and there willStevens behas aresigned specialfrom election.the Senate.
- GA, Jim Martin (D), Saxby Chambliss (R), mandatory runoff on Dec. 2. Volunteers needed nationwide. The sleaze from the Chambliss campaign is only getting worse. Bill Clinton and John McCain are campaigning for Martin.
- MN, Al Franken, (D), Norm Coleman (R), Dean Barkley (I), too close to call, mandatory recount. ColemanThe isfirst tryingcount toput getColeman up by 215. Franken tohas refusegained a recount.few Whyvotes wouldin the recount so far. Nate Silver's statistical analysis at FiveThirtyEight.com gives a most probable outcome of Franken agree?winning by 27. This would probably mean continuing lawsuits, and possibly a decision by the Senate itself.
Many House races, state and local races, and ballot propositions remain undecided, even if one side is claiming victory from an incomplete vote count. Some results are subject to legal challenge, such as the California Prop. 8 amendment to the state Constitution forbidding
gay marriage. Check your local news sources for most of these. A few will make national news.
Google News is your friend.
Transition
The
transition team has to identify several thousand people to appoint to various positions in the Executive Branch.
Threats against Barack Obama's life and against his family started up during the campaign and have spiked since. There have been at least two cases resulting in arrests.
Transition
Obama Transition Web siteCabinet
State Dept: Sen. Hillary ClintonDefense: Up in the airPrettyTreasury: goodTim interactiveGeithner, piececurrently onhead Newsweek.of ThisNew York Federal ReserveCommerce: NM Gov. Bill RichardsonHHS: Former Sen. Tom DaschleAttorney-General: Former Deputy ratesAG Eric HolderitsMoreOn Saturday 22 November 2008, Robert Reich ownblogged pageat Truthout.com, How Obama Is Already Taking Charge. AtHis hisbest firstinformation presswas conference,that Obama saidwould appoint- Tim Geithner whenat asked,Treasury
- Peter "WhenOrszag weat havethe somethingOffice toof announce,Management weand willBudget
- Jack announceLew it."and Jason Furman at the National Economic Council
- Austan Goolsbee at the Council of Economic Advisors
All are relatively young but experienced in government, and non-ideological. What next?We can expect some policy speeches soon, and plenty of public discussion of the Congressional agenda. Obama gave his first news conference as President-Elect on Friday, Nov. 7.W is a lame duck President who cannot get new legislation through a hostile Congress, but he still has authority to do a number of things for good or ill. He is negotiating a Status of Forces Agreement for Iraq with a timetable for withdrawal, exactly as Obama proposed. Republicans ridiculed the idea right up to the moment they did it. Watch for last-minute environmental deregulations and Presidential pardons, among other things.What are the other big issues?- The economy, stupid. ^_^ Stimulus package, rescue homebuyers, re-regulate Wall Street, restore competition and transparency to markets, undo Bush tax cuts, let workers and middle class have a share of economic growth,...
- Trade. Free for corporations but not for people doesn't count.
- Environment. Renewable energy (to combat Global Warming, and for security), reregulate pollution,...
- Immigration. A path to citizenship. Help countries so that their citizens will not have to flee from war, oppression, or dire poverty.
- Afghanistan, Pakistan, Al Qaeda, Taleban
- "Rogue states", failed states, civil wars: Iran, North Korea, Burma, Cuba, Sudan, Congo, Somalia,...
- Foreign aid. Obama proposed doubling US foreign aid, including a $2 billion annual Global Education Fund.
- Supreme Court. Obama could have the opportunity to appoint three Justices.
- Lower courts. Obama will have to appoint about 50 Federal judges immediately.
- The First Dog, promised to the Obama children as a reward for their good behavior during the campaign. It must be hypo-allergenic. They would have preferred to get a shelter dog, but Obama says, "most of them are mutts, like me."
Washington Post transition coverage