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Politics : Those Damned Democrat's -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tadsamillionaire who wrote (1245)6/22/2003 12:01:10 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 1604
 
Wesley Pruden
The 57 varieties of John Kerry
URL:http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/pruden.html

newsandopinion.com | You have to feel a spot of sympathy for someone who looks as French as John Kerry. But he's sometimes got a mouth like Jacques Chirac, and he leaves a lurid paper trail.

The French-looking senator, who with the other Democratic presidential candidates has been the object of a nationwide search by Interpol detectives assigned to the Missing Persons Bureau, was finally discovered in New Hampshire earlier this week, interrupting the domino games in a park in downtown Lebanon.

He was in a complaining mood, as important senators often are, and complaining specifically about George W. Bush, as Democrats do. Mr. Kerry, surprising some of the folks with his fluent English, repeated the Democratic theme, first set out by his rival Howard Dean, that George W. promised to build an international coalition against Saddam Hussein but instead waged Anglo-Saxon war on Iraq without staunch allies such as France, Chad and Brazil, basing it on intelligence that wasn't very smart.

"He misled every one of us," he said. "That's one reason why I'm running to be president of the United States. I will not let him off the hook throughout this campaign with respect to America's credibility, and credibility to me, because if he lied, he lied to me personally."

He repeated the Democratic boilerplate that he's glad Saddam Hussein is gone; it's just that he thinks George W. was wrong to make him gone. He promises a congressional investigation and, adjusting the cut of his jib for any snapshooters in the vicinity, vowed, "We will get to the bottom of this."

Mr. Kerry reminded the folks that he had served in Vietnam —in fact, he reminded them two or three times, no Bill Clinton he — and said that his war service and his membership on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the Senate Intelligence Committee made him the "best suited" to question George W.'s credentials as the commander in chief. "I believe I can hold President Bush accountable if they have misled us."

Since Mr. Kerry was one of the 77 senators who voted to go to war, he calls into question his own smarts. "For the sake of argument," jibes James Taranto of the Wall Street Journal Online, "let's say Kerry is right and Bush perpetrated a sham. In a hypothetical general-election matchup, who would you rather choose to deal with hostile foreign leaders: a guy who's capable of pulling off such an elaborate deception, or the sucker who fell for it?"

Not only that, but Mr. Kerry himself reminds us that he is a former member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, so considering what he was saying about Saddam Hussein, his weapons of mass destruction and the necessity of going to war only a few election cycles ago, who is misleading whom?

Here's the senator, speaking to the Senate (again in plain English) late in 1997: "It is not possible to overstate the ominous implications for the Middle East if Saddam were to develop and successfully militarize and deploy potent biological weapons. We can all imagine the consequences. Extremely small quantities of several known biological weapons have the capability to exterminate the entire population of cities the size of Tel Aviv or Jerusalem. These could be delivered by ballistic missile, but they also could be delivered by much-more-pedestrian means; aerosol applicators on commercial trucks easily could suffice."

The senator was ready to sock it to him, and didn't want argument from anybody: "[Saddam Hussein] cannot be permitted to go unobserved and unimpeded toward his horrific objective of amassing a stockpile of weapons of mass destruction. This is not a matter about which there should be any debate whatsoever in the Security Council, or certainly in this nation."

And none of that jaw, jaw stuff, either. Talking and resoluting is for wussies. The senator wanted war, war: "In my judgment, the Security Council should authorize a strong U.N. military response that will materially damage, if not totally destroy, as much as possible of the suspected infrastructure for developing and manufacturing weapons of mass destruction, as well as key military command and control nodes. ... This should not be a strike consisting only of a handful of cruise missiles hitting isolated targets."

And if those wussies at the United Nations insisted on being their usual pantywaist selves, a good American president, not someone like Bill Clinton, would know what to do: "While we should always seek to take significant international actions on a multilateral rather than a unilateral basis whenever that is possible, in the final analysis ... we must have the courage to do what we believe is right and wise."

George W. Bush never said it any better himself. He had the courage, as we all saw, and he took the senator's advice.



To: Tadsamillionaire who wrote (1245)6/22/2003 12:03:08 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (6) | Respond to of 1604
 
Voters Looking for Leadership in 2004 Election
Friday, June 20, 2003
By Dana Blanton

Voters say they will put leadership above a candidate’s political party and issue positions when it comes to deciding their vote for president, and today half say they would be more likely to vote to re-elect President Bush than for the Democratic candidate in the next election.

OAS_AD('Middle');

By 51 percent to 30 percent, Americans say they would vote for George W. Bush if the 2004 presidential election were held today, according to the latest FOX News national poll of registered voters. Fully 90 percent of Republicans plan to stick with their party leader, and 73 percent of those approving of the job Bush is doing as president say they would vote to re-elect him. Men are only slightly more likely than women to support President Bush (54 percent to 49 percent respectively).

"President Bush's support seems to be holding up," comments Opinion Dynamics President John Gorman. "However, the poll also points to some potential problems for his campaign: declining feelings that the Iraq war was worth it; high levels of concern about the economy; and skepticism from almost half the voters about whether the tax cuts will benefit them. The question, of course, is whether any of the Democratic candidates is capable of emerging and challenging him on these issues."

The poll, which was conducted June 17-18 by Opinion Dynamics Corporation, also finds that Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman (search) and Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry (search) currently lead the contenders for the Democratic nomination. Among Democratic voters, Lieberman and Kerry tie with 15 percent each, followed by Missouri Rep. Dick Gephardt (search) at seven percent, North Carolina Sen. John Edwards (search) and Florida Sen. Bob Graham (search) both at five percent and former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean (search) at four percent.

Rounding out the list of nine Democratic hopefuls, three percent would vote for former Illinois Sen. Carol Moseley Braun (search), while two percent would vote for Ohio Rep. Dennis (search) Kucinich and New York Minister Al Sharpton (search). One third of Democrats are not sure which candidate they would vote for in a 2004 primary.

What would Democrats like to see in their presidential nominee? Majorities prefer the Democratic candidate to have opposed the war with Iraq (56 percent), opposed the Bush tax cuts (55 percent), and to support a national health care plan (81 percent).

Overall, when voters are asked which factor will be most important in deciding their vote for president, a 47 percent plurality says "leadership abilities,” with 30 percent placing the candidate’s position on the issues on top and only six percent saying political party will be the deciding factor.

Republicans are strongest in their prioritization of leadership, as 53 percent say it will matter most in their vote for president compared to 43 percent of Democrats and 45 percent of independents.

Clinton for Mayor?

Given the recent speculation about former President Bill Clinton running for mayor in New York City, the poll asked voters if they would support for him in their city. About one-third of Americans (34 percent) say they would vote for Clinton if he were to run for local office in their area, but 60 percent say they would not.

There is a wide partisan gap (but no gender gap) on this hypothetical vote, with 67 percent of Democrats saying they would vote for Clinton compared to only seven percent of Republicans.

Some people (22 percent) think it is likely that Clinton will run for mayor of the Big Apple, a few (13 percent) think Clinton will become the first "first spouse” in the White House when his wife Hillary is elected president, but the plurality (37 percent) thinks it is more likely that he will find himself involved in another scandal.

And with the sales success of New York Sen. Hillary Clinton’s new book, under half (45 percent) of Americans say they think most people are buying the book because they want to read it, while a third think people are buying it because it seems like "a popular thing to do,” and seven percent think sales are prompted by people wanting to show her support.

Polling was conducted by telephone June 17-18, 2003 in the evenings. The sample is 900 registered voters nationwide with a margin of error of ±3 percentage points. Results are of registered voters, unless otherwise noted. LV = likely voters

URL:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,90003,00.html