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To: American Spirit who wrote (77742)5/24/2008 10:52:32 AM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 89467
 
breitbart.tv

Rep. Kanjorski: "That if we won the Congressional elections, we could stop the war. Now anybody was a good student of Government would know that wasn't true. But you know, the temptation to want to win back the Congress, we sort of stretched the facts...and people ate it up."



To: American Spirit who wrote (77742)5/28/2008 6:08:04 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Ex-aide Scott McClellan rips Bush's Iraq 'propaganda'

nydailynews.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (77742)5/28/2008 1:46:20 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Obama's Path to Victory in November

huffingtonpost.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (77742)5/30/2008 10:59:15 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
What Jim Webb Is Worth to Obama

observer.com

by Steve Kornacki | New York Observer May 28, 2008

Now is the season for idle vice presidential speculation, and this year the field of potential nominees in both parties is unusually large.

Among Democrats, much of the chatter is understandably focused on Hillary Clinton, who, to judge from some revealing public comments from key supporters, wouldn’t mind being offered a spot on Barack Obama’s ticket.

Clinton’s value to Obama is clear: an instant truce with the 18 million or so Democratic primary voters—about 15 percent of the November electorate—who didn’t vote for him. Plus, Clinton may be his best hope of carrying the 27 electoral votes of Florida, where polls show a stubborn and staggering gap between her performance against John McCain and his. And yet there is at least one major consideration that reduces the plausibility of the Hillary scenario: Why, if he has even an inch of wiggle room, would Obama ever consent to a four- or eight-year power-sharing arrangement with her and her husband?

Those two variables, value and plausibility, are the keys to handicapping the vice presidential derby.

Kathleen Sebelius, for instance, is a more plausible pick than Clinton and, in fact, features prominently on most pundits’ tip sheets. The theory is that snubbing Clinton for a different female candidate would mollify the women who have been so loyal to Clinton. And, unlike with Clinton, Obama would have confidence that Sebelius, one of his early supporters, would be a team player in the fall campaign and in his administration. Because of his strong relationship with Sebelius, it is plausible that Obama would be interested in making her his running mate.

But Sebelius, the daughter of a former Ohio governor who previously served in the Kansas legislature and as the state’s insurance commissioner, falls short in the value category, because she would only exacerbate Obama’s vulnerability to one of the Republicans’ main lines of attack: that he is dangerously inexperienced on international affairs and national security—or that he hasn’t, as Clinton herself memorably put it, passed “the commander in chief test.”

All of this explains why Virginia’s Jim Webb has been getting so much press lately. Of all of Obama’s possible choices, Webb may represent the strongest mix of value and plausibility.

Start with his value, which, at least on paper, eclipses virtually any other contender. No pick could do more than Webb to reassure the country when the G.O.P. starts bludgeoning Obama with its national security attacks. To grasp the authority that Webb would bring to the ticket, just consider McCain’s attack on Obama over the weekend for his lack of military service. Webb, a no-nonsense Vietnam combat veteran and former secretary of the navy (under a Republican president, no less), would help immunize Obama against such an attack and would be able to throw the charge back in McCain’s face.

Webb, with his patriotic life story and maverick’s swagger, would be a near-perfect antidote to McCain, providing immeasurable reassurance to swing voters who are inclined to throw the Republicans out of the White House but tempted by McCain’s reputation for integrity. With Webb on the ticket, it would be much tougher for McCain to convince Americans that Obama’s foreign policy prescriptions are the product of inexperience and naïveté.

Webb also offers the geographic balance that is traditionally sought in a VP candidate. Virginia is in play this year, and if the Democrats succeed in flipping its 13 electoral votes to their column for the first time since 1964, the impact could be decisive. If Obama were to win three states between Virginia, Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania, he could very possibly claim the White House without any other Southern states and with no Western states (besides those on the Pacific coast).

And while some will say that pairing two senators on the same ticket is unwise, keep in mind that his Senate tenure—which now stands at 18 months—is virtually an afterthought on the 62-year-old Webb’s résumé. His experiences are diverse and include executive leadership, as Navy secretary. He is not saddled with an extensive catalog of Senate votes and would hardly seem, to most voters, like just another senator.

It is also plausible that Obama would want to put him on the ticket. Webb stayed out of the Democratic primary (while Obama carried Virginia by 30 points), so while Obama is hardly indebted to him, he also doesn’t hold any grudges against him. Webb’s neutrality might also make him a palatable choice to Clinton supporters, in a way that a running mate who had stridently backed Obama in the primaries wouldn’t be. So Webb passes the plausibility test: Obama probably wouldn’t mind picking him, and he’d probably be able to get away with picking him.

There is a caveat with Webb, though. The enthusiasm for his placement on the ticket this year calls to mind the enthusiasm for his entrance into Virginia’s Senate race two years ago. Back then, Democrats saw in his biography the perfect candidate to capitalize on the public’s growing impatience with the Iraq war and to win over a critical chunk of Virginia’s many Republican and Republican-leaning independent voters.

He did win the Senate race, beating George Allen by 9,000 votes, but the victory didn’t exactly come about as planned. Webb’s triumph in 2006 was not the result of inroads into the state’s more conservative areas, but rather a consequence of the state’s shifting demographics: Webb rolled up big margins in the increasingly liberal and densely populated sprawl of northern Virginia, compensating for Allen’s strength in the state’s rural areas.

This can be partly chalked up to the nature of Senate races, in which the personalities of candidates are often less important than their party label—a contrast to presidential (and even gubernatorial) politics. On the national stage in a White House race, Webb might have better luck appealing to and winning over conservative-leaning voters than he did in his Senate campaign.

But 2006 also revealed some deficiencies in Webb as a candidate. His speeches were flat and often uninspiring, and he seemed almost sedated in television interviews. After being coaxed into the race by national Democrats, he very nearly lost the 2006 primary, defeating an unknown lobbyist named Harris Miller by just six points. And his victory over Allen may have been more a result of Allen’s mistakes—surely you remember “macaca”—and the national tide, which strongly favored Democrats.

That said, 2006 was Webb’s first venture into elected politics. He’s a stronger speaker now and better on television. And in a national campaign, what seemed dull in ’06 might instead register as sober, responsible and reassuring. And, really, when the Republicans start calling him a weakling and a lightweight, is there anyone Obama would rather have by his side than Jim Webb?



To: American Spirit who wrote (77742)5/30/2008 11:49:37 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Barack Obama’s Unlikely Supporter: Rupert 'Fox News' Murdoch

finance.yahoo.com

Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg had a long day of grilling executives at their All Things Digital Conference. But they saved Rupert Murdoch -- their Wall Street Journal overlord -- for last. The highlight? Murdoch’s not-quite-but-almost endorsement of Barack Obama for president.

The founder -- and defender -- of Fox News said he expected Obama to win in a landslide, citing widespread unhappiness with the current administration and his disenchantment with Republican contender John McCain. Murdoch added that after a long career in the Senate, McCain had been forced to compromise too much and doesn’t stand for much. Murdoch even nonchalantly owned up to influencing the New York Post to back Obama in the New York primary.

During the Q&A, I pressed Murdoch -- a new U.S. citizen -- on whether he would actually vote for Obama in November. He said he was leaning toward it, but would know in the next six months. When I asked if I could call him, he said yes, then joked I could probably just figure it out from reading the Post...



To: American Spirit who wrote (77742)5/31/2008 1:08:10 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
Former Bush donors now giving to Obama

mcclatchydc.com

By Greg Gordon | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Beverly Fanning is among the campaign donors who'll be joining President Bush at a gala at Washington's Ford's Theater Sunday night, but she says that won't dissuade her from her current passion: volunteering for Barack Obama's presidential campaign.

She isn't the only convert. A McClatchy computer analysis, incomplete due to the difficulty matching data from various campaign finance reports, found that hundreds of people who gave at least $200 to Bush's 2004 campaign have donated to Obama.

Among them are Julie Nixon Eisenhower, the granddaughter of the late GOP president Dwight Eisenhower; Connie Ballmer, the wife of Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer; Ritchie Scaife, the estranged wife of conservative tycoon Richard Mellon Scaife and boxing promoter Don King.

Many of the donors are likely "moderate Republicans or independents who are dissatisfied with the direction of the country now and are looking for change," said Anthony Corrado, a government professor at Colby College in Maine who specializes in campaign finance.

"There is a large block of Republicans, particularly economic conservatives, who just feel that the Republican Party in Washington completely let them down" by failing to control spending and address other problems, Corrado said. "The Republicans have really given these donors no reason to give."

Lawyer Allen Larson of Yarmouthport, Mass., a political independent, contributed $2,000 to Bush's 2004 reelection campaign, but said he gave Obama the maximum $2,300 in hopes he can use his "unique skills" to rebuild fractured foreign alliances.

Larson said he's "not anti-Iraq war," but he said that Bush promised to bring people together when he ran for president and has failed to do so, while Obama has demonstrated in his campaign "that he has the ability to connect in ways that no other candidate can."

While they represent a tiny slice of Bush's 2004 donors, he said, a shift of longtime Republicans committed enough to write checks reflects "a real strain" in the GOP.

Detroit attorney Michael Lavoie, a moderate Republican who backed Bush in 2000 and 2004 with $3,000, said he donated to a Democratic presidential candidate for the first time this year because Obama offers "the greatest hope for healing divisions" at home and abroad.

Calls to more than a dozen of the Bush-turned-Obama backers suggest there are multiple motives for their shifts.

Lavoie, 55, of Birmingham, Mich., said he's been "very disappointed in George Bush's policy with the Iraq war and very disappointed with his economic policies that added $3 trillion to the national debt."

Remembering the horrors of Vietnam, he expressed dismay that "the Republican party engages in the spin, the propaganda, the selling of the war."

Katherine Merck, 84, of Lexington, Mass., preferred not to recall her donations of $2,000 to Bush in 1999 and $2,000 in 2004.

"I just can't get over it that my name is in there for sending money to that miserable president," she said. "I think Obama is something we all need badly, really badly. I think that people need to grow up more and learn how to get on in the world without resorting to killing people. I'm talking about the war in Iraq."

Beverly Fanning said she thinks Bush has been "great," but like several others, she said she was taken with Obama's speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention and continued to follow him after he won a U.S. Senate seat and declared his presidential candidacy.

"Am I all the way liberal?" Beverly Fanning asked. "I think I'm actually a conservative liberal. . . . It's not that I'm against McCain. It's just that Barack is my choice."

Worried about the loss of manufacturing jobs to Third World countries, she said, she began volunteering early this year for Obama, who says he'd consider amending trade pacts to protect those jobs.

The 48-year-old mother of two has given Obama more than a dozen donations, hitting the maximum $2,300 for the primaries. She's even knocked on the doors of 300 homes in Orangeburg, S.C. and in the affluent Cleveland suburb of Shaker Heights.

Fanning said that her husband Tom, the chief operating officer of the Southern Co., a major electric utility, is a solid Republican who backs McCain for president but gave $1,000 to Obama in February.

She said that Obama has "a lot of white support," but she blanched during a recent visit to her hometown of Bristol, Tenn., when someone told her a racist joke.

"I told him, 'I have been volunteering for Barack Obama for five months,' " she said. "I thought the guy was gonna faint."

Some converts declined to give any hint of their reasons.

"I consider that to be a private matter," said Jeffrey Leiden, a Glencoe, Ill., cardiologist who's a former president of Abbott Laboratories' pharmaceutical products group.

Corrado said he thinks some of the ex-Bush donors have given to Obama to hurt Hillary Clinton — a suspicion confirmed by Henry Corey, 86, of Bronxville, N.Y., a longtime GOP donor.

He said he gave Obama $250 because, "frankly, I wanted to be sure that someone nudged Hillary Clinton aside. I think she'd be a disaster."



To: American Spirit who wrote (77742)5/31/2008 11:04:02 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
McCain’s McClellan Nightmare

nytimes.com

By FRANK RICH
OP-Ed Columnist
The New York Times
06/01/08

They thought they were being so slick. When the McCain campaign abruptly moved last Tuesday’s fund-raiser with President Bush from the Phoenix Convention Center to a private home, it was the next best thing to sending the loathed lame duck into the witness protection program. John McCain and Mr. Bush were caught on camera together for a mere 26 seconds, and at 9 p.m. Eastern time, safely after the networks’ evening newscasts. The two men’s furtive encounter on the Phoenix airport tarmac, as captured by a shaky, inaudible long shot on FoxNews.com, could have been culled from a surveillance video.

But for the McCain campaign, any “Mission Accomplished” high-fives had to be put on hold. That same evening Politico.com broke the news of Scott McClellan’s memoir, and it was soon All Bush All the Time in the mediasphere. Or more to the point: All Iraq All the Time, for the deceitful origins of the war in Iraq are the major focus of the former press secretary’s tell-all.

There is no news in his book, hardly the first to charge that the White House used propaganda to sell its war and that the so-called liberal media were “complicit enablers” of the con job. The blowback by the last Bush defenders is also déjà vu. The claims that Mr. McClellan was “disgruntled,” “out of the loop,” two-faced, and a “sad” head case are identical to those leveled by Bush operatives (including Mr. McClellan) at past administration deserters like Paul O’Neill, Richard Clarke, John DiIulio and Matthew Dowd.

So why the fuss? Mr. McClellan isn’t a sizzling TV personality, or, before now, a household name beyond the Beltway. His book secured no major prepublication media send-off on “60 Minutes” or a newsmagazine cover. But if the tale of how the White House ginned up the war is an old story, the big new news is how ferocious a hold this familiar tale still exerts on the public all these years later. We have not moved on.

Americans don’t like being lied to by their leaders, especially if there are casualties involved and especially if there’s no accountability. We view it as a crime story, and we won’t be satisfied until there’s a resolution.

That’s why the original sin of the war’s conception remains a political flash point, however much we tune out Iraq as it grinds on today. Even a figure as puny as Mr. McClellan can ignite it. The Democrats portray Mr. McCain as offering a third Bush term, but it’s a third term of the war that’s his bigger problem. Even if he locks the president away in a private home, the war will keep seeping under the door, like the blood in “Sweeney Todd.”

Mr. McCain and his party are in denial about this. “Elections are about the future” is their mantra. On “Hardball” in April, Mr. McCain pooh-poohed debate about “whether we should have invaded or not” as merely “a good academic argument.” We should focus on the “victory” he magically foresees instead.

But the large American majority that judges the war a mistake remains constant (more than 60 percent). For all the talk of the surge’s “success,” the number of Americans who think the country is making progress in Iraq is down nine percentage points since February (to 37 percent) in the latest Pew survey. The number favoring a “quick withdrawal” is up by seven percentage points (to 56 percent).

It’s extremely telling that when Gen. David Petraeus gave his latest progress report before the Senate 10 days ago, his testimony aroused so little coverage and public interest that few even noticed his admission that those much-hyped October provincial elections in Iraq would probably not happen before November (after our Election Day, wanna bet?). Contrast the minimal attention General Petraeus received for his current news from Iraq with the rapt attention Mr. McClellan is receiving for his rehash of the war’s genesis circa 2002-3, and you can see what has traction this election year.

There are other signs of Iraq’s durable political lethality as well. Looking for a bright spot in their loss of three once-safe House seats in special elections this spring, Republicans have duly noted that the Democrats who won in Louisiana and Mississippi were social “conservatives,” anti-abortion and pro-gun. They failed to notice that all three Democratic winners, including the two in the South, oppose the war. Even more remarkably, new polling in Texas finds that an incumbent Republican senator and Bush rubber stamp, John Cornyn, is only four percentage points ahead of his Democratic challenger, Rick Noriega, a fierce war critic who served in Afghanistan.

In the woe-is-us analyses by leading Republicans about their party’s travails — whether by the House G.O.P. leader John Boehner (in The Wall Street Journal) or the media strategist Alex Castellanos (in National Review) — Iraq is conspicuous by its utter absence. The Republican brand’s crisis is instead blamed exclusively on excessive spending, scandal and earmarks — it’s all the fault of Tom DeLay’s K Street Project, Jack Abramoff and that Alaskan “bridge to nowhere.”

This transcends denial; it’s group psychosis. Nowhere is this syndrome more apparent than in the profuse punditry of Karl Rove, who never cites Iraq as a problem for Mr. McCain (if he refers to it at all) and flatly assured George Stephanopoulos last Sunday that Mr. McCain has no need to make a “clean break” from Mr. Bush.

Mr. Rove is to the McCain campaign what Bill Clinton was to the Hillary Clinton campaign: a ubiquitous albatross dispensing dubious, out-of-date political advice and constantly upstaging the candidate he ostensibly supports. Like Mr. Clinton, Mr. Rove is a camera hog who puts his need to vehemently defend his own administration’s record ahead of all else. So what if he’s under subpoena by the House Judiciary Committee? He doesn’t care if he reminds voters of administration scandals or of Mr. McCain’s association with Iraq any more than Mr. Clinton cared if he reminded voters of his continued ties to suspect financial donors and the prospect of an out-of-control co-presidency.

Damaging as Mr. Clinton’s behavior was to his wife’s campaign, Iraq was worse. Mrs. Clinton could never credibly explain away her vote authorizing the war. Her repeated disingenuous attempts to fudge it ended up contaminating her credibility on other issues.

Mr. McCain’s record on Iraq is far worse than Mrs. Clinton’s. He didn’t just cast a vote but was a drumbeater for the propaganda Mr. McClellan cites, including the neocon fantasies of a newly democratic Middle East. On “Hardball” and “Meet the Press” in March 2003, Mr. McCain invoked that argument, along with the promise that Americans would be “welcomed as liberators,” to assert the war would be “one of the best things that’s happened to America.”

To cover up these poor judgments now — and questionable actions, including his public boosting of Ahmad Chalabi, then a lobbying client of the current McCain campaign guru, Charles Black — Mr. McCain is hoping that the “liberal media” will once again be complicit enablers. We’ll see. He’s also counting on the press to let him blur his record by accentuating his subsequent criticism of the war’s execution — as if the war’s execution (also criticized by countless Democrats), not its conception, was the fatal error.

His other tactic is to try to create a smoke screen by smearing Barack Obama as unpatriotic. Mr. McCain has suggested that the Democratic front-runner is the Hamas candidate and has piled on to Mr. Bush’s effort to slur Mr. Obama as an apostle of “appeasement.” A campaign ad presented Mr. McCain as “the American president Americans have been waiting for” (not to be confused, presumably, with the un-American president Al Qaeda has been waiting for).

Now Mr. McCain is chastising Mr. Obama for not having visited Iraq since 2006 — a questionable strategy, you’d think, given that Mr. McCain’s own propagandistic visit to a “safe” Baghdad market is one of his biggest embarrassments. Then again, in his frantic efforts to explain why he sided with Mr. Bush to oppose an expanded G.I. bill that the Senate passed by 75 to 22, Mr. McCain has attacked Mr. Obama for not enlisting in the military.

Besides making Mr. McCain look ever angrier next to his serene opponent, this eruption raises the question of why he chose double-standard partisanship over principle by not applying this criterion to the blunderers who took us into Iraq. Unlike Mr. Obama, who was 7 years old in 1968, Mr. Bush and company could have served in Vietnam as Mr. McCain did.

The McCain campaign may have no choice but to double down on Iraq — what other issue does the candidate have? — but it can’t count on smear tactics or journalistic and public amnesia to indefinitely enforce the McCain narrative. As the McClellan circus shows, unexpected bombshells will keep intervening — detonating not only on the ground in Iraq but also in Washington, where more Bush alumni with reputations to salvage may yet run for cover about what went down in 2002-3.

As F. Scott Fitzgerald would have it, we will be borne back ceaselessly into the past. Or so we will be as long as Americans continue to die in Iraq and as long as politicians like Mr. Bush, Mr. McCain and Mrs. Clinton refuse to accept responsibility for their roles, major and minor, in abetting this national tragedy.

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company



To: American Spirit who wrote (77742)6/1/2008 6:52:48 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Crist should drop out of Veep race
_______________________________________________________________

By CARL HIAASEN
The Miami Herald
Sun, Jun. 01, 2008

Despite his coy avoidance of the topic, Gov. Charlie Crist is acting like he'd love to be vice president of the United States.

Last weekend he attended a select but highly publicized gathering in Arizona hosted by Sen. John McCain, who will be heading the Republican ticket.

Appearing at the barbecue with Crist were former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, both of whom are also salivating at the prospect of reupholstering Dick Cheney's Barcalounger.

It's no sin to be ambitious, and it's flattering to be courted by your party's presidential nominee. But if Crist cares as much about Florida as he says, he should graciously excuse himself from the vice-presidential sweepstakes.

He's been governor for only 17 months, and it's fair to say that the lives of most Floridians -- workers, retirees, students -- have not improved even slightly.

If Crist were to become vice president, he'd leave Tallahassee with virtually no footprints. He would be remembered more for his tan than for his leadership.

People are fond of Charlie now, but likability can carry a politician only so far. At some point, voters expect results -- and results take time.

Some national pundits say that Crist should be at the top of McCain's list because Crist can deliver Florida in November, and that the GOP can't win the White House without winning Florida.

The first part of that theory might be true today, but Charlie might not be the same golden boy five months from now. His approval ratings in state polls, while still high, have slipped markedly.

One reason is that millions of Floridians have opened their tax bills and insurance premiums only to discover that they're still getting hammered.

Remember that Crist sailed into the governor's mansion on a pledge of reducing the property taxes and reining in runaway insurance costs. These are huge and complicated problems that apparently require more than 17 months to fix.

The recent constitutional amendment on homestead exemptions, which passed largely because of Crist's barnstorming, will bring minimal relief to homeowners while causing strapped municipalities to cut services and jack up other fees and taxes.

With so much left undone, and dark economic clouds on the horizon, it's awfully early for Crist to be dreaming about higher office.

As vice president, he'd be basically useless to the residents of Florida. For one thing, he'd lose all clout over the knuckleheads in our sorry excuse for a Legislature.

Say what you will about Jeb Bush (and I've said plenty that he didn't like), the man put in eight full years as governor, and he worked his butt off.

That's what voters expected of Crist when they elected him -- not Jeb's right-of-center politics, but the same dedication to the office.

Rumors about Crist's vice-presidential aspirations surfaced in the spring of 2007, only a few months after he became governor. With a flourish, Crist had signed a bill requiring paper receipts on electronic voting machines.

Oddly, the measure also featured an out-of-nowhere provision that allowed state office holders to run for federal office without resigning.

Without that new law, Crist would have been forced to step down in order to join the McCain ticket. Now Charlie can hang onto the job until Inauguration Day -- and beyond, if McCain should lose.

Even after the trip to Arizona, Crist stuck to his script and downplayed the speculation about a vice-presidential bid. He says his main ambition is continuing to serve the people of Florida.

If that's true, then he should politely tell McCain he's not interested in going to Washington.

You're either a full-time governor or you're not. This is a bad time for Florida's chief executive to be distracted, and running in a national campaign is a major distraction.

The vigor and youthfulness that have made Crist so appealing to McCain's camp are the same qualities that won over Floridians during the governor's race.

With that election came high expectations that certainly did not include Charlie bailing out after half a term -- and during hurricane season, no less.

He still has the potential to be one of the state's most influential and unifying leaders ever, appealing as he does to many Democrats and independents.

However, in chasing the vice presidency, Crist would trade the opportunity to make a real difference in Florida for a chance to succeed McCain as president in 2012 or 2016.

Maybe that would come to pass, and maybe it wouldn't.

In any event, the history books in his own home state would treat Crist's once-promising governorship as a forgettable footnote.