Roasted Squash and Einkorn Wheat Salad
17 hours ago
Long considered an opponent of significant new gun control and a faithful friend of the National Rifle Association, Gov. George W. Bush seems to be taking small steps away from the powerful organization and signaling a greater receptiveness to additional restrictions on firearms.Jake Tapper, who is now with ABC News, wrote a similar piece for Salon on May 17, 2000:
Several times over the last few days, Mr. Bush expressed support for two measures -- the mandatory sale of trigger locks with new handguns and the implementation of ''smart gun'' technology -- that the rifle organization has frequently criticized.
Even more striking, Mr. Bush openly criticized the N.R.A.'s executive vice president, Wayne LaPierre, for his recent assertions that President Clinton, rather than vigorously prosecuting the laws, tolerated a certain level of gun violence to keep his public crusade for gun control on the front burner.
''I don't think the N.R.A. was right to characterize the president the way they did,'' Mr. Bush said in an interview at the governor's mansion here on Wednesday.
On Friday, right before the Million Mom March in favor of more gun laws, Bush came out in favor of giving away thousands of trigger locks for anyone who wants one, an apparatus he has pooh-pooohed in the past. He also did and said absolutely nothing last year when two pieces of state legislation -- both requiring that guns be sold with trigger locks -- were introduced.So what happened that the pundits, and the media, now think guns was ever a losing issue?
"That's a huge change for him," says Sudbay. "It seems to be a very crass political move timed in conjunction with the Million Mom March and also to diminish his very pro-gun record."
"I think he saw himself being pushed out on one of the wings when he got embroiled with [Sen. John] McCain and he saw that his best way to regain support was to shift back to the center," says TSRA's Talbot.
Why would Bush try to gloss over his previous strong support for the NRA's agenda? Obviously for votes. One of the few polls taken in the last few months that had Gore leading was conducted by ABC News immediately after Robinson's comments, showing Gore with an edge, 46 percent to 38 percent. Clearly, Bush is worried, otherwise he wouldn't have had his handlers rush to book him on NBC's "Today" show to announce his new free-trigger-lock entitlement program for gun owners.
But one executive of a Washington organization concerned with this issue says that Gore is misreading these swing voters. If so, Gore's attempt to portray himself as having little opinion about the issue is not only disingenuous but politically stupid.After the elections, the Democratic brain trust immediately blamed the gun issue for their election losses. In today's Salon piece, Alex Koppelmann explained how former Minority Leader Dick Gephardt (D-MO) was one of the first to lay the blame for the 2000 election losses on guns. I always found that interesting, because in the 1998 election, the Gephardt campaign called Handgun Control the Friday before the election begging for Sarah Brady to cut a radio ad for them to run over the weekend. Of course, she did.
Though the executive, who did not wish to be named, agrees that Gore shouldn't be making his positions on guns a major talking point, he thinks that Gore's failure to portray Bush as an extremist on this issue has been a "missed opportunity."
The executive points to the fact that many swing states have rejected the NRA's position on concealed-carry laws, which allow individuals to carry loaded, concealed weapons in public. One of the first bills Bush signed into law as governor of Texas was a concealed-carry law. Bush went so far as to amend the law, the first of its kind in Texas in 125 years, to let licensees carry their loaded guns into churches, amusement parks and nursing homes.
This mindset, the executive argues, is foreign to the swing voters Bush and Gore are fighting for.
Gun law battles in key swing states attest to that idea. Despite NRA lobbying, there are no concealed-carry laws in Wisconsin, Ohio or Illinois. Recent attempts to weaken the requirements for concealed-carry licensees in Minnesota and Michigan have gone nowhere. A 1998 referendum on closing the "gun show loophole" in Florida passed with 72 percent support.
Last year in the bellwether state of Missouri, gun law advocates such as Handgun Control Inc. were outspent by the NRA more than 4-to-1 in a concealed-carry battle. Nevertheless, the NRA position, opposed by the late Gov. Mel Carnahan, lost.
Some news accounts have suggested that Cho had a history of antidepressant use, but senior federal officials tell ABC News that they can find no record of such medication in the government's files. This does not completely rule out prescription drug use, including samples from a physician, drugs obtained through illegal Internet sources, or a gap in the federal database, but the sources say theirs is a reasonably complete search.We don't even have a list of gun owners, and we have a list of everyone who has been prescribed anti-depressants? And in fact, the article suggests that this isn't just a database of patients who use anti-depressants, it's a federal database of every prescription drug you've ever bought.
A closely divided U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the first nationwide ban on a specific abortion procedure, restricting abortion rights in a ruling on one of the nation's most divisive and politically charged issues.Obviously need more details, but this looks like a victory for the theocrats. They've got the Supreme Court they want now -- and they won't stop here. Yes, this means a woman's right to choose is in peril. That's the dream of Bush, his Republican party and the theocrats who support them. Read More......
By a 5-4 vote, the high court rejected arguments challenging on various grounds the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act that President George W. Bush signed into law in 2003 after its approval by the Republican-led U.S. Congress.
A new CNN/Opinion Research Corporation poll released this morning finds support for the war in Iraq remains low amid widespread feelings that the war is going badly and that sending additional troops to Iraq won't make any difference.John Murtha always said the American people were way ahead of the politicians when it came to Iraq. When Murtha gave that first major speech on changing the policy in Iraq on November 17, 2005, one of his first lines was, "The American public is way ahead of us." He's been right all along.
Most Americans (72%) say they are closely following the ongoing dispute between President Bush and the Democrats in Congress over proposed timetables for withdrawal -- and a likely Bush veto of the Iraq appropriations bill if it includes such a proposal. Six in ten think that they would wind up siding with the Democrats in this dispute; 37% say they are more likely to take the President's side.
Overall, 32% support the war, while 66% oppose it.
Four large bombs exploded across Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least 127 people and wounding scores as violence climbed toward levels seen before the U.S.-Iraqi campaign to pacify the capital began two months ago.-- UPDATED -- it's even worse:
In the deadliest of the attacks, a parked car bomb detonated in a crowd of workers at the Sadriyah market in a mostly Shiite area of central Baghdad, killing at least 82 people and wounding 94, said Raad Muhsin, an official at Al-Kindi Hospital where the victims were taken.
Four big bombs exploded across Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least 66 people and wounding nearly 150 as violence climbed toward levels seen before the U.S.-Iraqi campaign to pacify the capital began two months ago.Read More......
To the west of the city, U.S. troops killed five suspected insurgents and captured 30 others in a raid in Anbar province, a day after police uncovered 17 decomposing corpses beneath two school yards in the provincial capital.
The White House threatened on Tuesday to veto a Senate bill proposing to allow the U.S. government to negotiate prices for prescription drugs under the Medicare program.For something that would have a "negligible effect on federal spending" these sure are strong reactions. I question just how negligible those savings would be, but going along with that line of thought, what would happen if the administration could find similar negligible savings in other areas. It all adds up and even a little is a lot with the US government spending.
The Senate was expected to cast a test vote on Wednesday, when Democrats try to end debate and go forward with consideration of the bill. Republican Charles Grassley of Iowa, who opposes the bill, has vowed to filibuster or talk the bill to death.
In a statement, the White House said the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the Senate bill "would have a negligible effect on federal spending and provide no substantial savings to the government or Medicare beneficiaries."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
© 2011 - John Aravosis | Design maintenance by Jason Rosenbaum
Send me your tips: americablog AT starpower DOT net