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


To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (437593)8/3/2003 11:12:19 AM
From: Land Shark  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
See, we do agree occasionally.



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (437593)8/3/2003 11:59:23 AM
From: gerard mangiardi  Respond to of 769667
 
Sounds like most of the party.



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (437593)8/3/2003 12:05:38 PM
From: laura_bush  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Wise words from Senator Hillary Clinton:

Sen. Clinton Says Supreme Court Still Merits Mistrust

Recent Decisions on Gays, Affirmative Action Does Not Outweigh
'Dubious Rulings,' She Says
The Associated Press

Friday 01 August 2003

Sen. Hillary Clinton said Friday that Supreme Court victories this
year for gay couples, minorities and women do not erase the distrust
created by other "legally dubious" rulings, including the Bush v. Gore
presidential election case.

The court ruled this summer that colleges may continue to use race
as a factor in picking students, that gay men and women cannot be
prosecuted for having sex and that state government workers are
protected under a federal law intended to ease work and family
conflicts.

The rulings angered conservatives and were opposed by some of
the court's most conservative members.

"These favorable decisions in recent months should not obscure the
torrent of aggressively activist and legally dubious decisions of times
past," Clinton, D-N.Y., told the American Constitution Society.

She said this is "the same court that gave us Bush v. Gore, which
made a mockery of one of our most cherished constitutional rights,
the right to vote," a reference to the 2000 ruling that ended Democrat
Al Gore's chances of winning the White House.

Clinton also mentioned past court rulings on guns, worker rights
and age discrimination.

Clinton made the comments at the first convention of the American
Constitution Society, a liberal lawyers' group which intends to
challenge the older and more influential Federalist Society, a
conservative law association. Clinton had also complained about the
Supreme Court in a speech last year to society members.

"In addition to installing an American president, the current
Supreme Court has invalidated federal laws at the most astounding
rate in our nation's history," she said then.

On Friday, Clinton defended Senate Democrats' filibuster of three of
President Bush's most conservative federal appeals court nominees:
Texas judge Priscilla Owen, District of Columbia lawyer Miguel
Estrada and Alabama Attorney General William Pryor.

Clinton said the White House was playing politics with the choices.

President Bush on Friday denounced the Democratic filibusters.
"These obstructionist tactics are unprecedented, unfair and unfaithful
to the Senate's constitutional responsibility to vote on judicial
nominees," Bush said in a statement.

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said the GOP would
keep fighting for Bush's blocked nominees when the Senate returns
from its break in September.

truthout.org