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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TigerPaw who wrote (18624)5/9/2000 2:48:00 PM
From: Zoltan!  Respond to of 769667
 
>>The problem is not only does Jr. not know the details, his RNC puppetmasters don't either. Like the tax cut, this was just a slogan with no thought put into implementation or ramifications.

You are wrong, of course.

>>At least Gore is pushing for ideas that have had a few years of gestation.

AlGore's moldy ideas have been tested and have failed. He hasn't had a new idea the whole eight years of his scandal ridden tenure and suddenly now he has ideas - forget about it, AlGore is not credible as a solution. Beyond AlGore's corruption, he is too repellent to be elected - looks like Bush will even win the "women's vote" - especially now that people want to end the Clinton-AlGore regime.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (18624)5/10/2000 6:56:00 AM
From: Zoltan!  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
People find AlGore repellent and Bush is a more than acceptible alternative after 8 years of unprecedented lies and corruption from the Clinton-AlGore regime. People doubt that AlGore has leadership ability.

LA TIMES POLL: BUSH TAKES 'IMPOSING NATIONWIDE LEAD' OVER GORE

According to publishing sources, the LOS ANGELES TIMES will publish a front page story Wednesday that shows George W. Bush has taken an overall 51% to 43% lead over Al Gore in the paper's latest nationwide poll.

TIMES political scribe Ronald Brownstein points out that with less than 6 months to go before the election, "the Texas governor has virtually unified the Republican base, even as he is reaching successfully into centrist swing voter groups who proved crucial to President Clinton's two victories."

Brownstein reports that Bush is playing particularly well with an important demo Bill Clinton neutralized in '92 and '96 -- married voters, who opted for Bush over Gore in the poll by a 21-point margin.

Writes Brownstein:

"The results pinpoint the challenge facing Gore: while making progress at portraying himself as a centrist, Bush appears to be reassembling elements of the electoral coalition that allowed the GOP to win five of the six presidential elections before Clinton."
drudgereport.com