SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hope Praytochange who wrote (686585)6/22/2005 1:41:22 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Clinton, McCain 'Gorillas' of 2008 Race

By RON FOURNIER, AP Political Writer2 hours, 41 minutes ago
news.yahoo.com

If you want to be the next president, it's time to start running — unless your name is Hillary Rodham Clinton or John McCain. They can wait. And wait, as front-runners tend to do.

"They're 800-pound gorillas," says Democratic consultant Jeff Link of Iowa. "They're well-known, well-liked and will be heavy favorites in their respective parties."

What does that mean for the other 15 or so Democrats and Republicans considering a 2008 bid? It's time to get hustling. They have a limited window of opportunity to establish themselves as credible candidates before the early front-runners decide whether to seize center stage.

Joe Biden gets it. The Delaware senator announced Sunday that he intends to seek the Democratic nomination and will determine this year whether he can win. Two days later, he delivered what amounted to the first speech of the 2008 campaign, accusing President Bush of "misleading statements and premature declarations of victory" in Iraq.

While they have been less open about their ambitions, several other candidates have been in the hunt for weeks:

• Both halves of the 2004 Democratic ticket, presidential nominee John Kerry and his running mate, John Edwards, are keeping tabs with supporters and touting new causes: children's health care for Kerry, poverty for Edwards. The former vice presidential candidate plans to travel to four presidential battleground states next week to promote ballot initiatives that would raise the minimum wage.

• Democratic Gov. Mark Warner of Virginia has courted Democrats in Iowa, and is meeting privately with party and union leaders elsewhere. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, both Republicans, have also visited the state that traditionally opens the election season.

• Democratic Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico has made a political trip to New Hampshire, the state that normally follows Iowa in presidential voting. Voters there have had a chance to meet several Republican hopefuls, including Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee and Sens. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska and Sam Brownback of Kansas.

Several other Republicans are making noise about a 2008 bid, including former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, New York Gov. George Pataki, Sen. Rick Santorum (news, bio, voting record) of Pennsylvania and Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour.

On the Democratic side, Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack and Sen. Evan Bayh (news, bio, voting record) of Indiana are testing the waters, and party leaders don't rule out another campaign for former Vice President Al Gore.

Bush's brother, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, has said he won't run for president in 2008. Still, some Republicans, including a few close to the White House, say McCain-Bush is their dream ticket.

Vice President Dick Cheney has pledged not to run, meaning 2008 could be the first campaign in five decades without a president or vice president vying for the White House. Strategists in both parties say that Clinton and McCain are the most formidable prospects, though both face major obstacles en route to the White House.

Their strong early standing puts pressure on the other prospects to begin campaigning.

"It's a huge issue," said GOP consultant Tom Rath of New Hampshire. "You've got to assume what these other candidates are doing is positioning themselves in case there is a collapse. They'll want to fill the void."

McCain has said he wants to be president, but will wait a couple of years to decide whether to run. The maverick who gave Bush a run for his money in the 2000 primaries will turn 72 in 2008. Clinton won't even talk about the presidential race, saying she's focused on her 2006 re-election campaign in New York.

If they have their way, McCain and Clinton will stay out of the fray for months — better to avoid the glare and grind as long as possible. Anybody else who wants to be president should be camped out in Iowa and New Hampshire, looking for supporters and pressuring the front-runners to get out of their comfort zone, strategists say.

"Hillary clearly has the edge now," said Democratic consultant Greg Haas of Ohio. "But by sticking his toe in the waters, Biden is letting her and others know that he's not conceding anything."

Polls suggest that Clinton is the overwhelming favorite of Democrats, while a slim majority of all voters say they are likely to back her in the general election. A Clinton candidacy would galvanize conservatives who railed against her husband, former President Clinton.

McCain has the opposite problem. He is favored by a majority of Democrats and independents who would vote in a general election, but his support among Republicans is less than ideal.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE — Ron Fournier has covered national politics for The Associated Press since 1993.

___

On the Net:

An interactive guide to potential 2008 candidates is available at:

wid.ap.org



To: Hope Praytochange who wrote (686585)6/22/2005 4:37:02 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Romney vs. McCain:

Different strokes

By Scot Lehigh, Globe Columnist | June 22, 2005
webmail.pas.earthlink.net

IT'S OBVIOUS that both Mitt Romney and John McCain want to be the Republican Party's next presidential nominee. So let's compare the two top-tier (likely) candidates as they test the national waters.

If you're a Republican activist in one of the states where his Commonwealth PAC has been sprinkling money about, you may have read rave reviews about Romney, courtesy of the ''memorandum" political aides Darrell Crate and Trent Wisecup sent out in early June.

Romney, it reports, has battled Harvard, Ted Kennedy, and legislative Democrats to ban ''human cloning," a term that makes somatic cell nuclear transfer sound far more sinister than it is.

He's fighting for an income tax cut, against tuition breaks for illegal immigrants, for tougher workfare, for abstinence education, and for the death penalty.

And then, of course, there's his crusade against gay marriage.

Last week, the governor dropped his previous (tactical) support for a proposed state constitutional amendment that would forbid gay marriage but institute civil unions in favor of one that would simply impose a gay-marriage ban. In so doing, Romney abandoned an amendment that at least makes an effort to be fair to same-sex couples to endorse a measure that includes no provision for them.

Now, Republican recipients of the Commonwealth PAC memo may see all that as the determined leadership of a principled conservative. (Of course, out-of-state observers who value results rather than mere scrappiness might also view Romney's won-loss record on the issues and conclude that when it comes to Beacon Hill fisticuffs, he is more glass-jawed palooka than potent political pugilist.)

From a Massachusetts perspective, however, what Romney is doing looks like presidential primary panderama. When he ran for governor in 2002, one of Romney's strongest selling points was that he was beholden to no one. But the man who won the governorship by portraying himself as independent enough to stand up to powerful Democratic interests here now seems awfully eager to placate Republican activists and ideologues everywhere else.

One can see that most vividly on abortion. In his 1994 Senate run, Romney maintained that his support for abortion rights dated back to his mother's 1970 campaign for the US Senate. In 2002, with Romney vowing he wouldn't change the state's prochoice status quo, a campaign spokesman insisted his stand was ''exactly the same position as any other prochoice politician."

No longer. If the Commonwealth PAC had addressed that issue, it would have had to include a sentence like this: ''As he fights to distance himself from his past support of abortion rights, Governor Romney has now evolved to such a degree that his staff declines to tell home-state reporters what his post-2006 stand might be."

Romney aides object to the notion that his positions have been crafted with an eye to presidential politics, insisting they emanate from heartfelt belief. If so, it's certainly convenient that the governor's heart usually tells him pretty much what GOP activists want to hear on key issues.

Contrast that to the way McCain has conducted himself.

On ''Meet the Press" on Sunday, the Arizona senator disagreed with Vice President Dick Cheney's claim that the Iraq insurgency is in its last throes, saying that the president needs to acknowledge that a long, hard slog lies ahead. With the Republican administration trying to simply edit global warming away, McCain has co-sponsored legislation with Senator Joseph Lieberman, Democrat of Connecticut, to reduce greenhouse gases.

Despite the Republican right's demand that the Senate put an end to the filibustering of judicial nominees, McCain, in late May, helped engineer a bipartisan pact to preserve that Senate right.

In December, McCain declared he has no confidence in Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. Last July, he voted against a proposed constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, saying it contravened state's rights. He opposed both of the Bush tax-cut packages, calling the first tilted too much toward the wealthy, the second inappropriate in wartime. Chastising the Republican Congress for spending like a drunken sailor, he has also called on Bush to veto some of that largesse.

Although he proved himself a loyal Republican during the presidential campaign, McCain is no favorite of the far right. But among others, he's considered a straight shooter, one widely admired for his independence and his willingness to speak his mind.

As McCain and Romney explore national candidacies, here's a question the governor might want to ponder: In a race that emphasizes character, who seems more his own man?

Scot Lehigh's e-mail address is lehigh@globe.com