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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TopCat who wrote (75313)4/10/2006 3:10:22 PM
From: SkywatcherRespond to of 81568
 
CHENEY AUTHORIZED BUSH TO AUTHORIZE CHENEY TO AUTHORIZE LEAK

Leak Plot Thickens as New Documents Emerge

Days after it was revealed that President George W. Bush authorized
Vice President Dick Cheney to authorize a leak of prewar intelligence, new
documents surfaced today indicating that the President only authorized
Mr. Cheney after Mr. Cheney authorized him to do so.

While confusing at first blush, the documents serve to clear up a
question that has nagged many Beltway observers for the past few days: did
President Bush actually tell Vice President Cheney to do something, in a
complete reversal of the White House's customary chain of command?

"If President Bush told Dick Cheney to do something, rather than the
other way around, that would be a first for this White House," said Davis
Logsdon, professor of political science at the University of Minnesota.
"If, as these documents suggest, President Bush authorized Dick Cheney
to authorize the leak only after Dick Cheney first authorized the
President to do so, then the whole situation starts to make a little more
sense."

As news that Mr. Cheney had authorized Mr. Bush to authorize him to
authorize the leak swept through Washington, lawmakers on both sides of
the aisle seemed relieved that a sense of the natural order of things had
been restored.

"I was pleased to hear that President Bush only authorized Dick Cheney
after Dick Cheney authorized him to do so," said Sen. Bill Frist
(D-Tenn). "I never bought that the President told the Vice President to do
something - that was crazy talk."



To: TopCat who wrote (75313)4/10/2006 4:21:57 PM
From: SkywatcherRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Want More Bush? Elect McCain
By Helen Thomas
Hearst Newspapers

Sunday 09 April 2006

Washington - In his bid for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, Sen. John McCain is moving to the right.

The Arizona Republican, who failed to win the Republican presidential nomination in 2000, is the most visible Republican on television, outside the White House, and seems to never pass up an opportunity to appear on Sunday talk shows.

All this appears to be part of his effort to transform his image as a maverick independent so that he can make his pitch to the conservative Republican base that will vote in the party's primaries and caucuses two years hence.

McCain's focus is on Southern states where he will have to show his dedication to the conservatives who dominate the GOP. He was scheduled to be the main speaker at the Lincoln Day dinner in Lakeland, Fla., on Saturday. Later this spring, he will deliver the commencement address at Liberty University at Lynchburg, Va., the school founded by evangelical leader Jerry Falwell.

Falwell has indicated there are still some bridges to mend with McCain, who had called Falwell "an agent of intolerance" in his first bid for the presidency in 2000.

Although Falwell has not endorsed McCain, he has said that the senator "could be the GOP's best hope" if Sen. Hillary Clinton is nominated to head the Democratic ticket in 2008.

Falwell also says McCain is in the process of "healing the breach with evangelical groups."

Asked to explain his change of attitude toward the evangelist on "Meet the Press" Sunday, McCain said: "I believe that the Christian right has a major role to play in the Republican Party. One reason (that) is so is because they're so active and their followers are. And I believe they have a right to be part of our party."

McCain also has gone out of his way to cozy up to President Bush after their bitter rift in the 2000 presidential campaign. McCain has said he does not look back in anger at old political battles. That's wise - he's going to need Bush's backing in a presidential bid.

McCain also has taken other stands that should put him in good with Southern conservatives. Hailing from a military family - his father and grandfather were admirals in the Navy - he is a strong supporter of the invasion and occupation of Iraq and believes the number of US troops there should be beefed up.

He is against abortion rights and gun-control laws and believes students should be taught the religion-oriented "intelligent design" theory of creation as well as the theory of scientific evolution.

His painful experience as a POW during the Vietnam War led him to buck the White House on the question of using torture to interrogate detainees and prisoners of war. Despite White House opposition, he triumphed with a 90-9 Senate vote on his anti-torture amendment to the defense appropriations bill.

Well, almost.

In signing the bill, the president issued a statement that under his constitutional authority as commander in chief, he did not have to abide by the anti-torture amendment. This is a dubious claim of presidential power that should be challenged.

McCain's political record is not entirely pristine. He was a member of the so-called Keating Five - five senators linked to Charles Keating in the savings and loan scandals in 1991. But a special investigator found that McCain had not been substantially involved in influence peddling but criticized him and three others for "questionable conduct."

That searing experience may explain why McCain has been an avid advocate of campaign finance reform.

With his "hail fellow well met" persona and tendency to jaw with the media and pundits in the back of the campaign bus, he has created the impression in some quarters that he is a "moderate."

Forget it. His voting record speaks for itself.

McCain is working hard to prove his staunch conservative credentials as he woos the far right in his party.

If he wins the presidency, the country can expect a continuation of Bush's aggressive foreign policy and ultra-right domestic programs.

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