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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: tejek who wrote (137015)5/23/2001 5:54:14 PM
From: stribe30  Read Replies (1) of 1582284
 
Ted, here is the most telling quote I've found on this issue:

A senior leadership aide said
Lott was considering the idea
of creating a new Republican
leadership position for
Jeffords. "Our leadership is
willing to do whatever it takes
to remain a majority in the
U.S. Senate," said the GOP
aide.


Maybe they can pull a Florida and change the Constitution to add a few seats to the Senate and have them made by "presidential appointment"
:)

These guys are desperate to keep the neo-conservative Bush agenda on-course. Fact is.. even if they lose control of the Senate..they still will more then likely win the majority share of votes in the Senate due to the fact a few Democrats generally vote with them anyhow... the panic this is creating in the Republican party amuses me...

By the way.. the response to the above statement and to the fact some moderate Republicans were trying to persuade him to change his mind?

...But a source close to Jeffords
said he will not change his
mind about leaving the
Republican Party, and that he
delayed his announcement as a
courtesy to his moderate
Republican colleagues.


Glad to see there is at least 1 principled Republican -or ex-Republican as it were... I thought that party was full of like-minded sheep that did whatever Bush told them to... nice to see at least 1 prove me wrong... and look what happens when you try to vote objectively:

Many Republicans believe Jeffords single-handedly sank
Bush's proposed $1.6 trillion tax cut -- forcing the White
House to negotiate with moderate Democrats on the smaller
$1.35 trillion figure.

Republicans have been whispering since then about making
Jeffords pay a price for disloyalty. One possibility would be to
kill the Northeast dairy compact that allows Vermont dairy
farmers to charge more for milk.


This perhaps exposes a rift in the moderate wing of the Republican party.. perhaps there will be some more defections later on down the line.

If this happens, it is to me the beginning of moderate
Republicans figuring out that there is no place for them in the
modern Republican Party," Gephardt said.
"This sends a clear message that while the Republicans talk of
bipartisanship, they fail to do anything in a bipartisan way,"
Gephardt said.


Rep. Charles Rangel, D-New York, predicted some
Republicans in the House would take note of Jeffords' action,
and as a result progress on the tax bill and some of the
president's other priorities would likely be slowed.

"The more light that shines on this, the longer it is going to
take," Rangel said. "There are some responsible Republicans in
the House who are going to take a long, hard look at the way
they have been treated by the Republican leadership."


cnn.com
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