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 : THE WHITE HOUSE -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: pompsander who wrote (16287)1/25/2008 2:11:21 PM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 25737
 
Hard to argue that point if you make his assumptions and are an adherent of the "hard knuckle" politics school of thought.



To: pompsander who wrote (16287)1/25/2008 3:32:59 PM
From: Bill  Respond to of 25737
 
Rush is a conservative first, a republican second. So no, I don't believe Bush would be the ideal candidate for him.



To: pompsander who wrote (16287)1/25/2008 3:44:10 PM
From: Bill  Respond to of 25737
 
Finally. I've been waiting for this one...

'STRAIGHT TALK' EXPRESS TAKES SCENIC ROUTE TO TRUTH
by Ann Coulter
January 23, 2008

John McCain is Bob Dole minus the charm, conservatism and youth. Like McCain, pollsters assured us that Dole was the most "electable" Republican. Unlike McCain, Dole didn't lie all the time while claiming to engage in Straight Talk.

Of course, I might lie constantly too, if I were seeking the Republican presidential nomination after enthusiastically promoting amnesty for illegal aliens, Social Security credit for illegal aliens, criminal trials for terrorists, stem-cell research on human embryos, crackpot global warming legislation and free speech-crushing campaign-finance laws.

I might lie too, if I had opposed the Bush tax cuts, a marriage amendment to the Constitution, waterboarding terrorists and drilling in Alaska.

And I might lie if I had called the ads of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth "dishonest and dishonorable."

McCain angrily denounces the suggestion that his "comprehensive immigration reform" constituted "amnesty" -- on the ludicrous grounds that it included a small fine. Even the guy who graduated fifth from the bottom of his class at the U.S. Naval Academy didn't fall for this a few years ago.

In 2003, McCain told The Tucson Citizen that "amnesty has to be an important part" of any immigration reform. He also rolled out the old chestnut about America's need for illegals, who do "jobs that American workers simply won't do."

McCain's amnesty bill would have immediately granted millions of newly legalized immigrants Social Security benefits. He even supported allowing work performed as an illegal to count toward Social Security benefits as recently as a vote in 2006 -- now adamantly denied by Mr. Straight Talk.

McCain keeps boasting that he was "the only one" of the Republican presidential candidates who supported the surge in Iraq.

What is he talking about? All Republicans supported the surge -- including Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani. The only ones who didn't support it were McCain pals like Sen. Chuck Hagel. Indeed, the surge is the first part of the war on terrorism that caused McCain to break from Hagel in order to support the president.

True, McCain voted for the war. So did Hillary Clinton. Like her, he then immediately started attacking every other aspect of the war on terrorism. (The only difference was, he threw in frequent references to his experience as a POW, which currently outnumber John Kerry's references to being a Vietnam vet.)

Thus, McCain joined with the Democrats in demanding O.J. trials for terrorists at Guantanamo, including his demand that the terrorists have full access to the intelligence files being used to prosecute them.

These days, McCain gives swashbuckling speeches about the terrorists who "will follow us home." But he still opposes dripping water down their noses. He was a POW, you know. Also a member of the Keating 5 scandal, which you probably don't know, and won't -- until he becomes the Republican nominee.

Though McCain was far from the only Republican to support the surge, he does have the distinction of being the only Republican who voted against the Bush tax cuts. (Also the little lamented Sen. Lincoln Chafee, who later left the Republican Party.) Now McCain claims he opposed the tax cuts because they didn't include enough spending cuts. But that wasn't what he said at the time.

To the contrary, in 2001, McCain said he was voting against Bush's tax cuts based on the idiotic talking point of the Democrats. "I cannot in good conscience," McCain said, "support a tax cut in which so many of the benefits go to the most fortunate among us at the expense of middle-class Americans who need tax relief."

McCain started and fanned the vicious anti-Bush myth that, before the 2000 South Carolina primary, the Bush campaign made phone calls to voters calling McCain a "liar, cheat and a fraud" and accusing him of having an illegitimate black child.

On the thin reed of a hearsay account, McCain immediately blamed the calls on Bush. "I'm calling on my good friend George Bush," McCain said, "to stop this now. He comes from a better family. He knows better than this."

Bush denied that his campaign had anything to do with the alleged calls and, in a stunningly magnanimous act, ordered his campaign to release the script of the calls being made in South Carolina.

Bush asked McCain to do the same for his calls implying that Bush was an anti-Catholic bigot, but McCain refused. Instead, McCain responded with a campaign commercial calling Bush a liar on the order of Bill Clinton:

MCCAIN: His ad twists the truth like Clinton. We're all pretty tired of that.

ANNOUNCER: Do we really want another politician in the White House America can't trust?

After massive investigations by the Los Angeles Times and investigative reporter Byron York, among others, it turned out that neither of the alleged calls had been made by the Bush campaign -- nor, it appeared, by anyone else. There was no evidence that any such calls had ever been made, which is unheard of when hundreds of thousands of "robo-calls" are being left on answering machines across the state.

And yet, to this day, the media weep with McCain over Bush's underhanded tactics in the 2000 South Carolina primary.

In fact, the most vicious attack in the 2000 South Carolina primary came from McCain -- and not against his opponent.

Seeking even more favorable press from The New York Times, McCain launched an unprovoked attack against the Rev. Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, calling them "agents of intolerance." Unlike the phantom "black love child" calls, there's documentary evidence of this smear campaign.

To ensure he would get full media coverage for that little gem, McCain alerted the networks in advance that he planned to attack their favorite whipping boys. Newspaper editors across the country stood in awe of McCain's raw bravery. The New York Times praised him in an editorial that said the Republican Party "has for too long been tied to the cramped ideology of the Falwells and the Robertsons."

Though McCain generally votes pro-life -- as his Arizona constituency requires -- he embraces the loony lingo of the pro-abortion set, repeatedly assuring his pals in the media that he opposes the repeal of Roe v. Wade because it would force women to undergo "illegal and dangerous operations."

Come to think of it, Dole is a million times better than McCain. Why not run him again?



To: pompsander who wrote (16287)1/25/2008 6:07:02 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 25737
 
Rep. Weldon Joins Long List of Retiring House Republicans

By Jonathan Allen, CQ Staff
cqpolitics.com

Rep. Dave Weldon , R-Fla., will retire at the end of the 110th Congress, opening up yet another slot on the Republican side of the Appropriations Committee, where conservatives and moderates have been engaged in a heated battle for primacy.

Weldon, now in his seventh term representing Florida’s east-central 15th District, is the 21st House Republican to voluntarily depart at the end of this Congress; only five House Democrats are leaving, and three of those are running for the Senate.

Though the 15th District has a distinct Republican lean, Weldon took just 56 percent of the vote in 2006.

Weldon, a physician whose specialty is internal medicine, indicated in a brief statement that he intends to return to his medical practice.

Since he was first elected as part of the huge GOP class of 1994, he has combined his knowledge of medicine with hard-right political views to advance socially conservative causes, including efforts to curtail abortion, prevent federal funding for embryonic stem cell research and stop authorities from removing a feeding tube from brain-dead Floridian Terry Schiavo.

He has used his spot on the Appropriations Committee to send money back home to the Space Coast, though Kennedy Space Center was removed from his district in the 2002 round of redistricting.
Appropriations Fallout

Weldon’s decision, which comes a day after fellow appropriator James T. Walsh , R-N.Y., announced he would retire, brings to six the number of GOP appropriators leaving after this Congress. Four of those six serve on the Labor-HHS-Education Subcommittee, which handles the biggest of the domestic spending bills.

One Republican vacancy already exists on the full committee, as a result of the appointment of Roger Wicker , R-Miss., to the Senate.

The sheer number of openings raises the stakes in a fierce intraparty battle over spending that is playing out this weekend at a House Republican retreat in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va.

Several members of the conservative Republican Study Committee are arguing for a one-year moratorium on earmarks, funding that members direct to projects in their own districts through the annual appropriations process.

The conservatives’ campaign against earmarks includes a push to stack the GOP side of the Appropriations Committee with hardline foes of domestic spending .

Rep. Jeff Flake , R-Ariz., the House’s most ardent critic of earmarks, is trying to win appointment to the Wicker seat on the committee, a cause that has been aided by grassroots conservative support and Web ads.

Several other RSC members, including Reps. Henry E. Brown Jr. of South Carolina, Tom Cole of Oklahoma, Marilyn Musgrave of Colorado and Michael R. Turner of Ohio, also are vying for Appropriations seats, as are more moderate lawmakers like Jo Bonner of Alabama and Dave Reichert of Washington.



To: pompsander who wrote (16287)1/26/2008 9:55:10 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25737
 
Obama Weathers Attacks to Triumph

January 27, 2008
News Analysis
By PATRICK HEALY
nytimes.com

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Senator Barack Obama proved in South Carolina on Saturday that he could not only endure everything the Clinton campaign threw at him in the most confrontational week of the presidential contest so far but also that even in a Southern state he could draw support across racial lines.

Still, his victory came in large part because Mr. Obama was able to turn out significant numbers of black voters, a dynamic that will not necessarily prove as decisive in the 22 states that hold nominating contests on Feb. 5.

If the results buoyed the Obama team, it left the campaign of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton facing a new set of questions. Her advisers’ steady attacks on Mr. Obama appeared to prove fruitless, if not counterproductive, and the attack-dog role of former President Bill Clinton seemed to have backfired.

Indeed, surveys of voters leaving the polls showed that many Democrats who believed Mr. Clinton’s role was important ended up voting for Mr. Obama.

Last week, Clinton advisers believed Mr. Clinton was rattling Mr. Obama and drawing his focus away from his message. The results on Saturday indicated, instead, that voters were impressed with Mr. Obama’s mettle and agreed with him that the Clintons ran an excessively negative campaign here.

“The criticism of Obama ended up really helping him going forward, I think,” said Representative James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, an influential black Democrat who remained neutral in the primary. “If he ends up winning the nomination, he will definitely face an onslaught of attacks this fall, and he may look back on South Carolina as the place that toughened him up.”

Mrs. Clinton may have won the last two nominating contests, in New Hampshire and Nevada, but she is now left to decide whether she needs to reassess her strategy as the race shifts from a state by state battle to a national scale.

South Carolina voters showed little taste for the Clintons’ political approach. They said in exit polls that their main concern was the economy; during an all-out campaign blitz on behalf of his wife here, Mr. Clinton spent the last week highlighting Mr. Obama’s record on Iraq and his recent statements about the transformational nature of Ronald Reagan’s presidency.

Mrs. Clinton’s advisers were minimizing the importance of South Carolina even before polls closed, saying the primaries in Florida on Tuesday and in a swath of states on Feb. 5 were of more importance. But she will have to reckon with the rejection of her candidacy by black voters and the mixed support she received from white Democrats and younger voters here — two groups she must have by her side in order to build a cross-section of support in the coming contests.

“The Clintons will now have to deal with a perception of hollowness about her strategy, that she is leaving it to her husband to take care of things and allowing him to overshadow her political message,” said Blease Graham, a professor of political science at the University of South Carolina.

Mrs. Clinton also had trouble competing here with Senator John Edwards, the third Democratic candidate, who decisively won among white men.

Still, Mr. Edwards is now 0 for 4 in Democratic nominating contests. His electoral future is in even more doubt after South Carolina, his native state, where he emerged victorious in the 2004 primary as a presidential candidate.

The campaign now moves in several different directions for all three candidates.

Tellingly, Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton were leaving South Carolina on Saturday night for two states that, like this one, have moderate political constituencies that do not often embrace Democrats in presidential general elections. Mrs. Clinton flew to Tennessee to hold a rally with black voters in Nashville — and even deliver her concession speech there — while Mr. Obama was headed to Georgia, which also votes on Feb. 5.

If South Carolina is any guide, the sizable numbers of black voters in Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee will prove a boost to Mr. Obama in the Feb. 5 primaries. His victory may stir fresh excitement among voters there and in his home state, Illinois, as well as in other places where he is building support, like California and even Mrs. Clinton’s political base, New York.

He also has bragging rights about a new coalition of support: About as many South Carolina white men voted for Mr. Obama as voted for Mrs. Clinton, and 70 percent of white voters said they would be satisfied if Mr. Obama won the Democratic nomination, according to exit polls was conducted by Edison/Mitofsky for the National Election Pool of television networks and the Associated Press.

More than half of black voters in the state said the country was definitely ready for a black president, while only about a quarter of white voters reached the same conclusion. By contrast, about one-third of both South Carolina whites and blacks said the country was definitely ready for a women president, the exit polls showed.

“Obama’s victory will leave him with some strong talking points — especially that he can continue to expand his voting base into a conservative southern state,” Professor Graham said. “His team comes out of this able to say that he’s acceptable to white southern men. And the Clintons come out of this facing questions about how their attack strategy seemed to fail.”

Marjorie Connelly contributed reporting.

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company



To: pompsander who wrote (16287)1/26/2008 10:26:40 PM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 25737
 
Notice the new name of this thread...<g>

GZ