Blogger died again. What a surprise. Mark my word. Blogger will not be able to handle the election traffic and all of us will be screwed.
Anyway, what's the latest GOP scandal?
Read More......
Swedish Meatballs
1 day ago
I stand by what I said. I take back none of what I said. I wouldn’t rephrase it any differently. It is what I believe; it is what I think. It is what I have found to be true.Rush stands by his attack on Michael J. Fox. Do Jim Talent, Michael Steele and Mark Green stand by Limbaugh's attack?
Steele called the talk show host's remarks "a little bit over the line," but said he really didn't hear Limbaugh's comments. DePuyt then played the remarks for viewers.Read More......
"That's a little more than over the line," Steele said.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist says if Republican candidates want to succeed on Election Day, they should turn their focus away from the Iraq war.Sure, cause if you don't talk about it, maybe no one will notice the carnage. Read More......
"The challenge is to get Americans to focus on pocketbook issues, and not on the Iraq and terror issue," Frist said in an interview with the Concord Monitor on Tuesday.
Despite the findings of several recent public polls, there’s a reason that national Republicans — who notably face an ever growing and quite costly national playing field—have yet to pull their funding from the expensive Denver airwaves in Colorado’s 4th Congressional District. The reason is this — Angie Paccione and Marilyn Musgrave remain locked in a statistical dead heat, 45 to 42 percent, Paccione’s edge, with Eidsness capturing 6 percent of the vote* — stunning really when you consider that Musgrave and national Republicans have easily outspent Paccione and her allies by as much as eight-to-one at this point in the contest.Read More......
Among registered Democrats, Paccione leads 81 to 11 percent with 4 percent defecting to Eidsness. Among registered Republicans, 14 percent defect to Paccione, 6 percent to Eidsness, and Musgrave is at 71 percent. Among critical independents however, Paccione bests Musgrave by a whopping 32-points, 58 to 25 percent, while 8 percent support Eidsness.
In more good news for Paccione and her campaign, Musgrave remains critically wounded both personally and professionally, and it appears that her constant barrage of attacks on Paccione is backfiring to some extent. Indeed, Musgrave’s favorable-to unfavorable ratio has slipped from nearly dead even in late September to net negative today, with a plurality, 47 percent, giving her cool, unfavorable ratings, while just 38 percent giver her warm, positive ratings. Ninety-four percent of the electorate can identify her. Moreover, just under six-in-ten voters (59 percent) say that Musgrave is doing a fair-to-poor job in Congress, while just a little more than a third, 36 percent, say excellent-to-good.
* These findings are based on a survey of 600 likely November 2006 voters in Colorado’s 4th Congressional District. Calling took place from October 22- 24, 2006, and interviews were conducted by professional interviewers supervised by Strategic Services staff. The data were stratified to reflect the projected geographical contribution to the total expected vote. Registered Democrats comprise 29 percent of the sample, registered Republicans 45 percent, and 26 percent are unaffiliated with either party. The margin of error associated with these data at a 95 in 100 percent confidence level is +/- 4.0. The margin of error for subgroups is greater.
Although we cannot find that a fundamental right to same-sex marriage exists in this State, the unequal dispensation of rights and benefits to committed same-sex partners can no longer be tolerated under our State Constitution....Here is George Bush endorsing gay civil unions in 2004:
To bring the State into compliance with Article I, Paragraph 1 so that plaintiffs can exercise their full constitutional rights, the Legislature must either amend the marriage statutes or enact an appropriate statutory structure within 180 days of the date of this decision....
We will not presume that a separate statutory scheme, which uses a title other than marriage, contravenes equal protection principles, so long as the rights and benefits of civil marriage are made equally available to same-sex couples. The name to be given to the statutory scheme that provides full rights and benefits to same-sex couples, whether marriage or some other term, is a matter left to the democratic process.
Elisabeth BumillerCNN already screwed up their coverage of this. The NJ court did NOT just approve of gay marriage - they specifically said NO to marriage. They said that gay couples should be given benefits in a separate arrangement, which is exactly what George Bush said in 2004. Read More......
The New York Times
Published: October 26, 2004
"President Bush said in an interview this past weekend that he disagreed with the Republican Party platform opposing civil unions of same-sex couples and that the matter should be left up to the states."
"Mr. Bush has previously said that states should be permitted to allow same-sex unions, even though White House officials have said he would not have endorsed such unions as governor of Texas. But Mr. Bush has never before made a point of so publicly disagreeing with his party's official position on the issue."
"In an interview on Sunday with Charles Gibson, an anchor of "Good Morning America" on ABC, Mr. Bush said, "I don't think we should deny people rights to a civil union, a legal arrangement, if that's what a state chooses to do so." ABC, which broadcast part of the interview on Monday, is to broadcast the part about civil unions on Tuesday."....
"I view the definition of marriage different from legal arrangements that enable people to have rights. And I strongly believe that marriage ought to be defined as between a union between a man and a woman. Now, having said that, states ought to be able to have the right to pass laws that enable people to be able to have rights like others."
LIMBAUGH: "All right then, I stand corrected... so I will bigly, hugely admit that I was wrong, and I will apologize to Michael J. Fox, if I am wrong in characterizing his behavior on this commercial as an act."I will apologize if I am wrong? How is that an apology? All Limbaugh said is that if anyone can prove him wrong, some day, then that day he will apologize. That's not an apology. It's not even one of those lame "I apologize if you were offended" apologies.
One Republican strategist close to the White House, granted anonymity to speak candidly about campaign strategy, said some Republicans — among them Senate candidates in tight races in Missouri, Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Tennessee — simply do not want their final campaign images to include Mr. Bush, and have spurned White House offers for help.Who does want Bush?
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