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Politics : Clinton's Scandals: Is this corruption the worst ever? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Zoltan! who wrote (10808)1/29/1999 11:52:00 PM
From: uu  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13994
 
Dear Ziltan,

I just talked to your family and they asked me and all your other friends to ask you to please come back home and leave cyberspace alone. Stop your obsession with idiotic political comments in cyberspace and come back to the real world. Your wife and family need your attention.

Take care,

Your very good friend, - Addi



To: Zoltan! who wrote (10808)1/30/1999 1:24:00 AM
From: Catfish  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13994
 
Democrats Should Be Afraid, Very Afraid...

Observations
January 29, 1999 Dave Monti

With rare exception, polls showing the president's 'job approval' at 65% to 75% have gone unchallenged. The American people have these polls foisted upon them as reliable within small margins of error. But most of the polls are brought to us by major media sources. The same media that surreptitiously made certain their investigative reporters achieved the desired 'story' by blowing trucks up on cue and planting mislabeled products in grocery stores to be 'found'. Now we hear that their polls are controlled as they avoid polling in conservative strongholds and that two out of three Americans polled are not likely voters.

The liberal media, parroting the White House, says Republicans should be afraid, very afraid, to challenge the right of a popular president to remain in office. The Constitution and Rule of Law be damned, the American people have spoken. Well, President Bush had poll numbers in the 90's immediately following operation Desert Storm. A few months later he lost his bid for re-election proving the only 'poll' that counts is at the ballot box.

The Democrat mantra has been that the House and Senate should follow the polls, listen to the American people, and leave the now popular President Clinton in office. Democrats must be reminded that the American people expressed the limits of their concern for this president when, after he lied to them and was facing possible impeachment articles, they continued Republican control of the House and Senate in November of 1998. This, after a huge White House led Democrat onslaught of vicious attacks on Ken Starr and the Republicans. An attack that continued daily by the likes of White House surrogates James Carville, Paul Begala, and an organized "war room", all fully supported by a cast of thousands of liberal 'reporters' backed by the same media asking us to believe their polls.

The American people, in the only poll that counts, kept the Republicans in control. And, Republicans must heed that message, an election to office requiring them to defend the Constitution and the Rule of Law. They must stand on principle and vote to approve the Articles of Impeachment. If Democrats do not join Republicans to remove Clinton from office, then Democrats alone must bear the responsibility for keeping their deceitful, immoral, law breaking president in office. They will inherit the disgrace of their leader before November 2000. Democrats should be afraid, very afraid.

freerepublic.com



To: Zoltan! who wrote (10808)1/30/1999 1:31:00 AM
From: Catfish  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13994
 
New Poll Reveals No Gain or Loss for Republicans or Democrats In Wake of Impeachment Trial

ZOGBY AMERICA POLL

January 29, 1999

A new Zogby America Poll released today shows both parties in virtually the same position as on Election Day 1998. In the new poll of 923 likely voters, conducted Tuesday through Thursday, 39.8% said they would vote for the Republican in their Congressional District, while 39.1% would vote for the Democrat.

When Undecideds are factored out, the generic vote is 50.4% Republican and 49.6% Democrat. On November 3, 1998, exit polls showed that 51% voted Republican and 49% voted Democrat.

Pollster John Zogby: "Republicans are still favored by voters over 65 (43.4% to 38.4%), voters over 30, Protestants (47.6% to 29.5%), and Independents (32.2% to 30.0%). Catholics now slightly favor the Republicans (41.4% to 37%). (Democrats lead among 18-29 year olds (45% to 30.1%), all voters earning less than $35,000, and women (40% to 35.7%). There is a gender gap with men supporting Republicans 44% to 38.1%)."

"Neither party seems to have lost ground".

freerepublic.com