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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (13464)8/19/2007 12:07:38 PM
From: Ann Corrigan  Respond to of 224738
 
Rove: Democrats, Clinton negatives high

By WILL LESTER, Associated Press Writer

Aug 19 2007

WASHINGTON - White House political adviser Karl Rove said Sunday he sees encouraging signs for the GOP in the public's strong negative opinions of Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton and the Democratic-run Congress.

"I do think the Republican Party is more in keeping with the attitudes and values of the American people," said President Bush's departing chief political strategist. Congress' approval in an Associated Press-Ipsos poll this month stood at 25 percent, compared with 35 percent for Bush.

Rove announced last week he would leave the Bush administration by the end of August, return to Texas and spend more time with his family.

Rove said the field of Republicans seeking to succeed Bush offers the GOP "an excellent chance to keep the White House."

As Democratic hopefuls held a debate in Iowa, Rove appeared on three Sunday morning talk shows and stepped up his criticism of Clinton, the New York senator and former first lady.

"She enters the general election campaign with the highest negatives of any candidate in the history of the Gallup poll," he said.

"It just says people have made an opinion about her. It's hard to change opinions once you've been a high-profile person in the public eye, as she has for 16 or 17 years."

Clinton, at the debate, responded to Rove's remarks by saying, "I don't think Karl Rove is going to endorse me, but I find it interesting that he's obsessed with me."

Rove evaded a question during the broadcast interviews about whether the GOP wanted Clinton to win the Democratic nomination.

"It's going to be what it's going to be," Rove said.

Top GOP strategists have said in the past that they aimed their harshest comments in 2004 at Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, the eventual nominee, because they wanted Bush to take on Kerry rather than John Edwards, then a senator from North Carolina. Edwards ended up as Kerry's running mate.

Rove disputed that strategy was behind his criticism of Clinton.

Looking back to the 2006 elections, when Democrats took control of Congress, Rove said their success was not unexpected.

"The 2006 election was a normal off-year election, if you look at the sweep of American history," he said.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (13464)8/19/2007 12:11:42 PM
From: Ann Corrigan  Respond to of 224738
 
Coulter & FOX are the Democrats axis of evil because they expose liberal hypocrisy with a few brief but pointed words.