Charlie Cook – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Mon, 28 Jan 2008 14:51:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Charlie Cook – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 2008 Elections Truly Baffling, Veteran Political Watcher Says https://now.fordham.edu/inside-fordham/2008-elections-truly-baffling-veteran-political-watcher-says/ Mon, 28 Jan 2008 14:51:38 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=14301
Charlie Cook speaks to Fordham students at the Lowenstein 12th-floor lounge.
Photo by Michael Dames

Long before Mike Huckabee stunned Mitt Romney in the Iowa caucuses and Hillary Clinton made a dramatic comeback to beat Barack Obama in the New Hampshire primaries, Charlie Cook predicted that the 2008 national elections would be the wackiest in recent memory.

“This is the weirdest political environment that I’ve ever seen,” he said at a Dec. 14 lecture at the Lincoln Center’s Lowenstein Center 12th-floor lounge. “What we all do is we study the past, looking for patterns and trends and things, and it’s usually very helpful. This year I think it’s better to go with that slogan from Alcoholics Anonymous, ‘Take it one day at a time.’”

Cook, a non-partisan political analyst who has been forecasting congressional and presidential elections in his “Cook Political Report” for 23 years, was introduced by Costas Panagopoulos, Ph.D., director of Fordham’s Center for Electoral Politics and Democracy. Panagopoulos noted in his introduction that when he worked with Cook for NBC News during the 2006 national election, it was the first network to call the switch of power in the House of Representatives from Republican to Democrat.

“He’s widely regarded as one of the nation’s best non-partisan trackers of election outcomes,” Panagopoulos said. “It’s remarkable to me just how much knowledge and information he has about 435 congressional districts in 50 states, and on the national level.”

But even that level of knowledge has left Cook scratching his head, as the race for the president has been particularly fluid. Cook hedged from making firm predictions on who would win either major party’s nomination, noting that he’d once said he would win the Tour de France before Rudy Guiliani won a Republican presidential nomination. Guiliani’s performance on 9/11 formed a sort of cocoon around him, but ultimately Cook said he suspects Mitt Romney will win that party’s nomination.

The Democratic nomination is still too close to pick though. Democratic voters, he said, have been so buoyed by their retaking of Congress in 2006, they’re looking to make history, even if it means considering a candidate only four years removed from a state legislature.

“Obama’s rise reminds me of a second wife,” Cook said. “It’s the triumph of hope over experience.”

What makes the current contest so entertaining for political watchers is that it provides scenarios where the exceptionally close finish between Clinton and Obama in the Iowa presidential caucuses on Jan. 3 lured independent voters in New Hampshire—who can vote in any primary—to the Democratic primary. Conventional wisdom said that would benefit Mitt Romney in the Republican primary, but instead John McCain triumphed. In both cases, there’s a very good chance that the neither party’s presidential candidate will be decided until the “Super Tuesday” primary on Feb. 5.

When it comes to Congressional elections, Cook said it’s safe to assume that Democrats will pick up four seats in the Senate and perhaps and equal number in the House. He said Jim McCrery, a veteran Republican congressman from Louisiana, is a perfect example of how Republicans in Congress are in trouble.

“He’s the Republican next in line to become the chairman of the House ways and means committee, and he’s announced he’s not running for re-election. Here you are, next in line; all you need is 16 seats to switch over and you’ll be chairman of the ways and means committee,” Cook said. “You’re in your mid-50s, and you retire from Congress in good health? Because he saw that there was just minimal chance, or no chance, of the House turning over soon. What a weird, weird, weird business we’ve all decided to study.”

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Charlie Cook Muses on 2008 Elections https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/charlie-cook-muses-on-2008-elections/ Mon, 17 Dec 2007 18:09:13 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=34563 This is the best of times for political junkies. That was the message that Charlie Cook delivered to attendees at a lecture Friday afternoon at Fordham University’s Lincoln Center campus. Cook, publisher of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report, also answered questions from audience members about subjects ranging from the 2008 congressional elections to the surprisingly wide open race for the White House.

“This is the weirdest political environment that I’ve ever seen,” Cook said. “What we all do is we study the past, looking for patterns and trends and things, and it’s usually very helpful. This year I think it’s better to go with that slogan from Alcoholics Anonymous, ‘Take it one day at a time.’”

Cook hedged away from making firm predictions on who would win either the Republican or Democratic nomination, noting that he’d once said he would win the Tour de France before Rudy Guiliani won a Republican presidential nomination. Ultimately he said he suspects Mitt Romney will win that party’s nomination but the Democratic nomination is still too close to pick. Democratic voters, he said, have been so buoyed by their retaking of Congress in 2006, they’re looking to make history, even if it means considering a candidate only four years removed from a state legislature.

“Obama’s rise reminds me of a second wife,” Cook said. “It’s the triumph of hope over experience.”

The talk, which was held at the 12th-floor lounge of the Lowenstein Center, was sponsored by Fordham University’s Center for Electoral Politics and Democracy. Costas Panagopoulos, the center’s director, noted in his introduction that when he worked with Cook for NBC News during the 2006 national elections, they were the first network to call the switch of power in House of Representatives from Republican to Democrat.

“He’s widely regarded as one of the nations’ best non partisan trackers of election outcomes, “he said. “It’s remarkable to me just how much knowledge and information he has about 435 congressional districts in 50 states and on the national level.”

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Charlie Cook to Speak on 2008 Congressional Elections https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/charlie-cook-to-speak-on-2008-congressional-elections/ Tue, 11 Dec 2007 18:24:00 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=34570 While political watchers are familiar with the upcoming slate of presidential candidates, of equal importance are the 2008 congressional elections that will determine which party controls the United States House of Representatives and the Senate.

Charlie Cook, whose nonpartisan online newsletter, the Cook Political Report, has been analyzing national elections since 1984, will provide a sneak peek at those congressional elections at a lecture on Fordham’s Lincoln Center campus on Friday, Dec. 14 at 4 p.m.

The event, sponsored by Fordham’s Center for Electoral Politics and Democracy, will be held in the 12th-Floor Lounge of Lowenstein Center.

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