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joan rivers fashion police

Joan Rivers is seen in this “Fashion Police” promotional photo. (Photo by: Brian Bowen Smith/E!)

Comedy legend Joan Rivers died at the age of 81 Thursday. She went into cardiac arrest on Aug. 28, and had been on life support at New York’s Mount Sinai Hospital. Six days after she was rushed to the hospital after she stopped breathing during a minor procedure, her daughter Melissa Rivers said she had “been moved out of intensive care and into a private room where she is being kept comfortable,” but gave no further details of her condition.

“It is with great sadness that I announce the death of my mother, Joan Rivers. She passed peacefully at 1:17 p.m. surrounded by family and close friends,” her daughter Melissa Rivers said. “My son and I would like to thank the doctors, nurses, and staff of Mount Sinai Hospital for the amazing care they provided for my mother.”

The NYC Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed that they will be investigating the cause and manner of Rivers’ death. “The death has been reported to us and the Medical Examiner’s Office is investigating,” a spokesperson said.

The Dept. of Health is also looking at the edoscopy clinic where she went into cardiac arrest during a minor throat procedure. “It’s a full investigation of the matter,” another spokesperson said.

A native New Yorker, Rivers entered show business with the dream of a theatrical career, but comedy became her way of paying the bills along the way.

“Somebody said, ‘You can make six dollars standing up in a club,'” she told The Associated Press in 2013. “And I said, ‘Here I go!’ It was better than typing all day.”

 

Comedy legend Joan Rivers has died at

mark-begich

Alaska Democrat Sen. Mark Begich is under fire for running an ad that was not only insensitive, but also false and put in jeopardy an ongoing criminal prosecution. (Photo: Getty – See Image)

Alaska Democrat Sen. Mark Begich finally pulled heavily criticized ads Tuesday following demands from a crime victim’s family, but the damage to an otherwise flawless campaign has been done. Anchorage attorney Bryon Collins, the victim’s family attorney, said that the ads were not only insensitive, but also jeopardized the prosecution of a criminal suspect.

“The family [of the murder victims] directly and without question has told your campaign they want no part of this,” Collins wrote in a letter to Begich’s campaign that was obtained by The Daily Caller. “You[r] campaign is playing pure politics at the expense of my clients, and frankly has done only what is in the best interests of ‘Mark Begich’ rather than protecting the victims of the most serious crime in Alaska history.”

The ad highlighted the case involving 25-year-old Jerry Active, who is charged with murdering the victim’s two grandparents and the sexual assault of their two-year-old granddaughter. Active, who had a prior 2007 felony conviction, should never have been free to commit these crimes in the first place. However, a database error set him free via a parole he wasn’t eligible for and, last May, he allegedly committed the murders and assault. The state has since admitted by the mistake, but the Begich campaign dishonestly claimed his Republican opponent and former attorney general, Dan Sullivan, was responsible for the crimes.

In addition to the televised ad, Begich’s campaign Web site posted an image — viewable below — with Sullivan’s name on the plea deal signed in March of 2010. However, the campaign cropped the picture just above Assistant District Attorney Gustaf Olson, though the document was actually signed by him.

Begich attack on Sullivan

As far as we could tell from the obvious comparison of these two images, the Begich campaign intentionally tried to pull the wool over both the heads of fact-checkers and Alaskan voters. The page from Begich’s site has since been removed. However, it can still be viewed in Google cache. The image below clearly shows Sullivan’s name as a simple AG document template.

Active plea deal

Worth mentioning, an Anchorage Daily News piece criticizing the state for the error, which insinuated blame but did not mentioning Sullivan specifically, has also been removed from the paper’s Web site, though we found it and it can be read here.

Meanwhile, Sullivan’s campaign agreed to pull its response ad almost immediately, an ad that flat-out accused Begich of “lying” about his role. In a written statement the campaign said that it was “pleased we could play a role along with the victims’ attorney to end it.”

Begich, on the other hand, refused to take the ad down over the weekend, opting instead to air a revised version without consideration for the victims’ family. Because of his refusal to pull the ad when requested and its wide condemnation for falsehoods, the denounced tactics of Begich’s campaign and the suffering it cause the victim received more air-time than the original ad. Begich, undoubtedly, hurt himself far more than he ever could have hurt Sullivan with the ad.

“Begich, surprisingly, really bombed this one,” says PPD’s senior political analyst Richard D. Baris. “If you are going to play the Bush-Horton card, then you’d better have two things on your side — the victim’s consent and the truth.”

Begich has managed to keep a moderate image and steer clear of answering questions regarding his support for the Obama agenda. The president is deeply unpopular in the state and Republican nominee Mitt Romney carried The Last Frontier by double-digits.

“Until now, Begich was running a strong campaign for a Democrat in such a conservative state,” says Baris. “Begich wanted nothing more but to run a localized campaign based on his deep ties to Alaska.”

According to data gathered from Gallup for the PPD 2014 Senate Map Predictions model, Alaska is now the sixth most conservative state in the union. Regardless of whether Republicans were successful in nationalizing the Alaska Senate race, Baris says it was always going to be a hard lift for Begich to get reelected.

“The polls in Alaska are notoriously useless. So, we have no choice but to rely upon the fundamentals,” Baris said. “Look, he beat a convicted felon in a Democratic wave election by under just 4,000 votes, and now its pretty much time to pay the piper for the seats they should never really have won in the first place.”

Begich was defying political gravity with his localized strategy, which basically asked voters to trust his character even though they may not necessarily agree with him on the issues. Of course, as Baris notes, this is exactly why this story was so damaging.

“Obviously, voters might say his integrity is very much in question now.”

The Alaska Senate race is currently rated “Leans Republican” on PPD’s 2014 Senate Map Predictions.

Alaska Democrat Sen. Mark Begich finally pulled

Felice Friedson of Media Line, a friend and colleague of Steven Sotloff, appeared on Hannity Wednesday night to pay tribute to the life of the American journalist. Sotloff was kidnapped in Syria while covering the civil war between what was then the Free Syrian Army and the Assad regime.

Sotloff is the second American journalist to be beheaded by the terror army ISIS, also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, the Islamic State and ISIL.

Friedson made a plea to President Obama not to let his death be in vain, reading a powerful piece sent to her from Sotloff just a week before his abduction. Steven Sotloff questioned why the American mainstream media was ignoring the rise of Islamic extremism, which Friedson was visibly frustrated by during the interview. She discussed a lost opportunity by the Obama administration to act on behalf of pro-Western forces even prior to his self-imposed “red line” ultimatum, which he never followed through on.

Yet, the media continues to ignore the whole story. A new analysis released by the Media Research Center claims the major news networks are ignoring reports that President Obama was fully aware of the ISIS threat for at least one year.

A senior Pentagon official said that President Obama was given “detailed and specific intelligence” regarding the rise of the Islamic State during his daily briefing at least a year before the group began seizing vast amounts of territory in Iraq and Syria over the summer. Regarding the execution of American journalist James Foley, the first journalist to be beheaded by an ISIS terrorist in a video online, the official confirmed reports claiming the administration was indecisive and delayed a rescue mission for a month, by which time, Foley and potential Sotloff had already been moved.

Felice Friedson of Media Line, a friend

Kansas Sam-Brownback-Pat-Roberts

Republican Governor Sam Brownback (left) and Republican Senator Pat Roberts (right) are both battling for their political lives in races the GOP should have easily won. (Photos: AP)

Chad Taylor, the Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate in Kansas, asked Wednesday that his name be removed from the ballot, leaving independent Greg Orman to face incumbent Republican Sen. Pat Roberts one-on-one in November. The national party was already forced to rush to the rescue of incumbent Governor Sam Brownback, but having to sink money into two races that both candidates should easily win, is a dramatic turn of events.

With control of the U.S. Senate on the line, Washington Republicans knew full-well they could not afford to defend a seat in a deeply conservative state. Kansas has not elected a Democratic senator since President Franklin Delano Roosevelt first won the presidency, yet here we are changing the status of this race from “Safe Republican” to “Leans Republican” just two months before Election Day. Rarely, if ever, do we make such a dramatic adjustment and, for over a month, PPD’s model had resisted a rating change based on the state’s solid Republican leanings.

So, how did we get here? Let’s take a look at it because, as the title of the article suggests, both the Establishment and Tea Party wings of the party have only themselves to blame. Arguing who is a RINO or who is too extreme, as it turns out, hasn’t proven very productive, electorally speaking.

Sen. Roberts won by a less-than impressive seven-point margin against physician Milton Wolfe. He had the second-worst showing out of any incumbent GOP senator this primary cycle and, roughly half of his own party voted against him. As I previously examined, the Tea Party failed to unseat Roberts not only because the vote split between Wolfe and two other challengers, but because they have been unable to coalesce behind a single candidate. It is inherently fatal to the art of political messaging to present so many alternatives to the target you are attempting to draw a contrast with.

It muddles the movement’s message, which in politics, must be honed and delivered to voters with precision and coherence. The Tea Party and insurgent challengers have not a single candidate to show for the millions upon millions of dollars spent this cycle attempting to defeat incumbent Republicans, an enormous sum of money desperately needed now to defend a once-safe Republican seat.

The bottom line is that the Republican Party now finds itself in a self-created disaster, a product of each wing of the party always threatening to take their ball and go home if their guy doesn’t win the nomination. The Establishment, and their voters, flat-out threaten to side with so-called moderate Democrats in the event a Tea Party victor is chosen. But sometimes they just side with them, regardless.

On Wednesday, Orman was endorsed by Traditional Republicans for Common Sense, a group of former lawmakers that includes many of the moderates that endorsed Democrat Paul Davis over Gov. Sam Brownback in July.

“Our members know leadership, because they’ve been leadership,” said chairman and former state representative Jim Yonally. “Our members have been there. They’ve been on the front line. They’ve had to make the tough decisions.”

Absolutely laughable. In fact, I can hear Democratic readers laughing right now. And you should be.

A spokesman for the NRSC declined to comment for this article, but sources conveyed a deep sense of frustration with Sen. Roberts following the primary. Now, he is taking flack from both his Establishment and Tea Party flanks. That’s just not a safe position to be in for an incumbent Republican senator these days.

The GOP will try to attach a “D” next to Orman’s name as often as possible and, in reality, he is truly a Democrat. He was contemplating a run back in 2008 against Roberts — as a Democrat — but ultimately decided against it. Still, it will be difficult to do. The question now remains whether the Tea Party cringes at the prospect of another upper chamber controlled by Harry Reid more than one controlled by Republicans they deem insufficiently conservative.

Let’s move on to incumbent Gov. Sam Brownback, who was once positioned to cruise to reelection. Brownback signed legislation preventing federal agents from regulating firearms and ammunition manufactured and stored within Kansas state lines, which prompted U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to threatened to sue the state over the law. It was a win-win for Brownback politically.

Yet, since then, the press has turned sour on Brownback, and he had begun trailing in some polls against Democrat Paul Davis as early as last year. It wasn’t until the beginning of the summer that the national party came to grips with the fact they were going to have to sink a significant amount of money into his race and, despite PPD’s warning and downgrade to “Leans Republican” earlier this year. They underestimated Davis and the Democrats, period. Sure, Kansas has moved farther to the right, and would certainly never elect Kathleen Sebelius if she was on the ballot today. But in gubernatorial campaigns, “All politics is local.”

Nevertheless, the state remains overwhelmingly Republican and, thus, both Roberts and Brownback remain slight favorites. The Partisan Voting Index ticked up from R+11 in 2010 to R+12 in 2014. On Gallup’s scorecard, which the PPD model pulls several key metrics from, Republicans have a 13-point party ID advantage. Obama’s approval sits at 32 percent, trust in state government is high, minority animosity is low, religiosity is high and conservatism is just as prevalent. The variable currently hammering the GOP as of now also happens to be one of the most influential analyzed by the model — candidate strength.

A significant percentage of voters in Kansas are self-described moderates, who along with a Libertarian Party candidate drawing a disproportionate number of voters away from either or both Republicans, could very well give Democrats a slim victory on Election Day.

Republican Governor Sam Brownback (left) and Republican

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X8FPu4qB4Wc

Vice President Joe Biden said we will follow ISIS to the gates of hell, but Colonel Ralph Peters mockingly says we can’t even follow them into Syria, let alone to the gates of hell. The vice president is definitely running for president, a long-held dream that has always been out of his reach.

In past attempts at securing the Democratic nomination, Biden was forced to back out when it was discovered that he had plagiarized a large part of his speech. Not that plagiarizing any part of a speech should be acceptable, but this is what happens when Biden says what is on his mind, rather than someone else’s.

Meanwhile, it will be difficult for Biden to make a distinction between himself and President Obama on foreign policy, and was actually the single voice in opposition to making the call to get Osama bin Laden. In fact, President Obama agreed, but when his poll numbers fell to 39 percent in Gallup, he changed his mind and made the call.

Vice President Joe Biden said we will

obama dempsey

President Barack Obama talks with Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, outside the Oval Office following a meeting in the Situation Room of the White House, June 19, 2014. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

A new analysis released by the Media Research Center claims the major news networks are ignoring reports that President Obama was fully aware of the ISIS threat for at least one year.

“On Tuesday night, the three major broadcast networks omitted from their coverage on the Islamic group ISIS a report that President Barack Obama has received briefings on the terrorist organization for at least a year,” the report said.

A senior Pentagon official said that President Obama was given “detailed and specific intelligence” regarding the rise of the Islamic State during his daily briefing at least a year before the group began seizing vast amounts of territory in Iraq and Syria over the summer.

“ABC, CBS, and NBC all led their evening newscasts with multiple segments on the gruesome murder of American journalist Stephen Sotloff at the hands of ISIS in a propaganda video,” the report adds. Yet, not a single second was dedicated to the report from Catherine Herridge. A follow up analysis by PPD also concluded Wednesday’s coverage completely ignored the report.

PPD recently reported on another report from the West Point counterterrorism center, which said the Obama administration consistently ignored actionable intelligence suggesting ISIS was rising over a four-year period that directly paralleled the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq.

The claims made by Herridge’s source puts the West Point report into perspective. The report’s author, Michael Knights of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, painted a picture of a president more concerned with political calculus than national security. However, according to the Media Research Center, the major broadcast networks didn’t view the reports as newsworthy content.

The dueling reports underscore what has become an adversarial relationship between the president, the Pentagon and various other intel agencies. White House Press Secretaries Josh Earnest, and to a greater extent his predecessor Jay Carney, have repeatedly indicated that foreign crises under the administration’s tenure were a result of intelligence failures, rather than greater failures of Obama’s foreign policy.

A MRC report found the major broadcast

Wasserman-Schultz-Scott-Walker-AP-split

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz addresses delegates during the final session of the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina September 6, 2012 and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker speaks at the Republican National Committee summer meetings in Chicago on Friday, Aug. 8, 2014. (Photos: Reuters/AP)

Wisconsin Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mark Burke is putting some distance between herself and Debbie Wasserman Schultz after she made comments that diminished the suffering of women victims of domestic violence.

In Schultz’s attempt to criticize Wisconsin Republican Governor Scott Walker, she minimized the suffering of women victims of domestic abuse, drawing a contrast that even Burke cannot condone.

“Scott Walker has given women the back of his hand. I know that is stark. I know that is direct. I know that is reality,” Wasserman Schultz said, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “What Republican tea party extremists like Scott Walker are doing is they are grabbing us by the hair and pulling us back. It is not going to happen on our watch.”

The Republican National Committee quickly pounced on the comments and called on Burke to denounce the DNC chair’s comments.

“This is a sad attempt to gain political points that’s offensive to victims of abuse and well beneath the chair of a major political party,” RNC spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said in a statement. “It’s a new low for an already flailing Democrat Party. Mary Burke should denounce the leader of her party or explain why she’s standing by as Democrats mislead Wisconsin voters.”

Republicans have ramped up their efforts to combat the typical Democrat attack lines geared at targeting women voters, as Schultz’s comments hardly represent a one-time occurrence. In July, RNC Co-Chair Sharon Day kicked off what the party dubbed the “14 in ’14” women’s initiative event in Oakland County, Michigan. It was the beginning of a massive effort to recruit and train women under 40 to be a part of the political process.

“Between women losing their doctors due to ObamaCare and feeling the anemic Obama economy every day, it’s important the Republican Party has female messengers across the country heading into November,” said RNC Co-Chair Day. “14 in ’14 will encourage women to stand up for Republican candidates and principled values.”

Schultz claims her comments attacking Walker were meant to underscore their supposedly negative impact on women, rather than minimize the truly harmful impact domestic violence has on women victims.

“Domestic violence is an incredibly serious issue and the Congresswoman was by no means belittling the very real pain survivors experience,” said Lily Adams, a spokeswoman for the DNC. “That’s why Democrats have consistently supported the Violence Against Women Act and won’t take a lesson from the party that blocked and opposed its reauthorization. The fact of the matter is that Scott Walker’s policies have been bad for Wisconsin’s women.”

Walker and Burke are in a contested contest for Wisconsin governor, which is rated “Likely Walker” on the PPD’s 2014 Governors Map Predictions. Recent polls show the contest is close with Walker holding on to a slight lead on the average of polls. But Walker has been here before, and Democrats are hoping they can defeat the man they launched a failed recall effort against after his initial election victory in the 2010 midterm elections.

“That’s not the type of language that Mary Burke would use, or has used, to point out the clear differences in this contest,” Burke spokeswoman Stephanie Wilson told FoxNews.com. “For the last 11 months of this campaign, and in the final 9 weeks left to go, Mary is committed to pointing out those clear differences — there is plenty that she and Governor Walker disagree on — but those disagreements can and should be pointed out respectfully.”

Despite the tightness of the race, the Wisconsin State Republican Party has a slightly better midterm ground game than the Wisconsin State Democratic Party, which is expected to give Walker the edge.

[caption id="attachment_17082" align="aligncenter" width="630"] Rep. Debbie Wasserman

mcconnell-reid-boehner-pelosi

From left, clockwise: Mitch McConnell, Harry Reid, John Boehner and Nancy Pelosi. (Photos: AP)

A new GWU/Battleground poll finds Republicans leading Democrats on the generic congressional ballot 46 – 42 percent, with voters trusting the GOP more on the economy, immigration and foreign policy. The poll, conducted jointly by The Tarrance Group and Lake Research Partners, found that the economy is the most important issue on the minds of American voters, and will drive their vote more than any other issue.

“Though the American public is as divided as it has been all year, as we head into the 2014 general elections the advantage among likely voters is flowing toward Republicans,” said Christopher Arterton, poll director and GW professor of political management.

In the survey of 1000 likely voters, Republicans have an intimidating advantage over Democrats in states considered most likely to flip on PPD’s 2014 Senate Map Predictions model.

“Republicans hold a 4-point advantage on the generic congressional ballot. In states with a competitive Senate race, Republicans hold a 16-point advantage (52 to 36 percent) on this generic ballot,” said Ed Goeas, president and CEO of The Tarrance Group.

 

A large amount of political speculation regarding the 2014 midterm elections has consisted of whether the Republicans’ chances of retaking control of the U.S. Senate will hinge upon a wave election, or if there will even be a wave. PPD’s model suggest the GOP is strongly favored to control the Senate, wave or no wave, but Goeas says they are in a better electoral position than they were in 2010, an election that delivered the Democrats a “historic shellacking.”

“All of these measures exceed where the GOP was at this point in the 2010 cycle,” Goeas said. “By any measure, Republicans are fired up and ready to deliver victories to their candidates in November, with of the strong backing of independent (by 15 points) and middle-class voters (by 11 points).”

Voters trust the GOP 49 – 42 on the economy, 51 – 38 on the federal budget and spending, 47 – 46 on jobs, 48 – 42 on taxes, 50 – 40 on foreign policy and 48 – 41 on immigration.

As daunting as the numbers seem for Democratic candidates in the fall, not all strategists see an electoral abyss on the horizon.

“While Republicans regained a narrow lead in the generic congressional trial heat, Democrats enjoy advantages among a number of electoral constituencies that are on the rise (e.g., women, younger voters and voters of color),” said Celinda Lake, president of Lake Research Partners.

Still, the president is clearly weighing down Democrats going into tough elections this fall. A growing 58 percent majority of voters now disapprove of the president’s handling of immigration issues, as recent reports surfaced he was contemplating an executive order that would legalize up to 8 million illegal immigrants at a time when tens of thousands are flooding across the southern border looking for permisos, or freebies.

On foreign policy, voters disapprove of the president 38 – 58 percent, and give him negative marks on taxes (45 – 50 percent), jobs (47 – 50 percent), the economy (43 – 55 percent), solving problems (42 – 55 percent) and working with Congress (40 – 57 percent). In one of the worst showings, just 35 percent approve of his handling of the federal budget and spending, while 61 percent disapprove.

On the issues, 24 percent of likely voters say the economy is most likely to drive their vote, topping feelings about President Obama (10 percent), ObamaCare (13 percent), behavior of your member of Congress (15 percent), Social Security and Medicare (10 percent) and women’s issues (5 percent).

On economic issues, the Republican Party holds a 7-point advantage with 49 percent of voters expressing more confidence in its ability to manage the issue that is most important to them.

With the release of ever-important post-Labor Day polling, Republicans have now taken a small lead on the PPD average generic ballot. Rasmussen Reports, another pollster tracking the generic ballot weekly, found Republicans holding a small 1-point lead leading up to Labor Day.

We examined a pair of polls released last week from Gallup and Pew Research and found widening enthusiasm and expectation gaps favoring GOP candidates in the fall. We predicted the polls suggested likely voter models, which dominate samples after Labor Day, would have a dramatic impact on the average.

Given the national sentiment and political environment during the 2014 midterm elections, historical generic ballot data suggest the Republican lead would result in relatively significant gains that would constitute a wave election. Determining what constitutes a wave election is another article altogether, but the mood in the country is significantly more sour than in previous wave cycles. A whopping 70 percent of likely voters nationwide feel that the nation is on the wrong track, while just 21 percent say that the nation is headed in the right direction.

Similarly, Rasmussen this week found 66 percent of likely voters nationwide feel the nation is headed in the wrong direction, while just 25 percent say it is headed in the right direction. The PPD average of Direction of Country polling sits at a negative 25.6 – 66.1 percent.

According to the PPD 2014 Senate Map Predictions model, Republicans are favored to pick up a net 6 – 9 seats in the U.S. Senate, while our House projections suggest they will slightly expand their majority.

A new GWU/Battleground poll finds Republicans leading

joan rivers fashion police

Joan Rivers is seen in this “Fashion Police” promotional photo. (Photo by: Brian Bowen Smith/E!)

Six days after comedian Joan Rivers was rushed to the hospital after she stopped breathing during a minor procedure, her daughter Melissa Rivers gave fans some awaited news. However, the latest statement didn’t offer a lot of new information regarding her mother’s condition.

“My mother has been moved out of intensive care and into a private room where she is being kept comfortable,” the statement read. “Thank you for your continued support.”

Melissa Rivers didn’t answer whether or not her mother was still on life support or even if her condition had improved. As of Tuesday, Melissa Rivers said the 81 year old remained on life support, and said that she knows her mother would be overwhelmed by the continuing outpouring of kindness from fans across the country.

E! said on Tuesday that filming on the series Joan Rivers co-hosts, “Fashion Police,” had been suspended.

“We will not be producing a ‘Fashion Police’ this week or next as we await Joan and Melissa’s return in front and behind the camera,” a rep said. “E! will be airing two ‘E! From Fashion Week’ specials that will deliver the latest news and information from the highly-anticipated event.”

The firebrand TV comedian went into cardiac arrest back on August 28 during a procedure at a clinic. She was rushed to New York City’s capable Mount Sinai Hospital, and her daughter, Melissa Rivers, has previously said her mother “is receiving the best treatment and care possible.”

Six days after comedian Joan Rivers was

ISIS fighter in Iraq

An ISIS fighter stands guard at a checkpoint captured from the Iraqi army near the oil refinery at Baiji, where government troops are trying to oust the insurgents. (Photo: Associated Press)

Last week, President Obama shocked the press corps when he said “we don’t have a strategy yet” in regards to the ISIS Islamic threat in Iraq and Syria. In a new survey, a whopping 73 percent of likely voters are worried the president really is clueless when it comes to a strategy for combating the terror army, including 47 percent who said they are “very concerned.”

The survey was conducted prior to the release of a second video depicting the beheading of American journalist Steven Sotloff by what appears to be the same ISIS executioner. Last week, the administration confirmed American journalist James Foley was in fact the man beheaded in a video entitled, “A Message to America.”

While just 30 percent support sending troops back to Iraq to defeat ISIS, that’s up from 12 percent measured last December, and opposition to sending troops back to Iraq has fallen dramatically. In December, 71 percent were opposed, but a significantly lower 58 percent said the same a month ago. Now, just 41 percent say they are opposed, while a sizable 29 percent are undecided.

The trend is interesting when you consider the criticisms leveled on Obama from both the right and left. President Obama has refused or shown to be incapable of playing the role a commander-in-chief has historically played in periods of U.S. foreign crisis. Even though Americans have always been skeptical of war, they equally hate instability and failure to confront shared enemies. The role of a president, in large part, is to rally the public and increase support for what are labeled necessary military actions.

If we compare support for ground troops in Iraq in 2014 with past conflict, including the first Gulf War, support is relatively high. The general exception to the rule was in the aftermath of the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, when support for action in Afghanistan was nearly as high as President George W. Bush’s 90 percent approval rating. Support for the Iraq War in 2003 began roughly around the same levels, but support increased as Bush filled the traditional role of a wartime U.S. president.

Voter interest and engagement is now very high, with 79 percent of voters saying they have been following recent news reports about the fighting in Iraq and Syria, including 45 percent who have been following the events “very closely.”

Meanwhile, as usual, party affiliation is directly related to sentiment, as just 52 percent of Democrats consider ISIS a serious threat to the United States. That compares to 82 percent of Republicans and 70 percent of voters not affiliated with either major party who agree.

Further, Democrats are much less concerned about the president’s lack of a strategy for dealing with the radical Islamic group. So much for politics ending at the water’s edge.

The survey of 1,000 Likely Voters was conducted on August 30-31, 2014 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95 percent level of confidence.

In a new survey, a whopping 73

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