Conservative Republicans Against Bush

mainstream

Come Back to the Mainstream

William G. Milliken (Governor of Michigan): “The party has abandoned the middle to take on socially divisive issues. This president has pursued policies pandering to the extreme right wing across a wide variety of issues and has exacerbated the polarization and the strident, uncivil tone of much of what passes for political discourse in this country today.”

Elmer R. Andersen (Governor of Minnesota): “Republicans of my era used to have a humane and reasonable agenda. Today, as taxes for the wealthy are being cut, jobs are being outsourced if not lost and children are left medically uninsured, the Bush Administration is running up the biggest deficit in U.S. history– bound to be a terrible burden for future generations.”

David Cargo (Governor of New Mexico): “The party has been ‘kidnapped’ by conservatives. Its right-wing image is hurting the party electorally, particularly among suburbanites, women and minorities.”

Dan Evans (Governor of Washington): “There are a whole host of areas where the Bush Administration has gotten too harsh, too partisan, too unwilling to reach across the aisle to get good answers to tough problems.”

A. Linwood Holton (Governor of Virginia): “The problem lies with the extremist element that controls the Republican Party, which has polarized the country.”

Walter R. Peterson (Governor of New Hampshire): “We have let the Republican Party go too far to the right, so we risk losing much of the position we have with the American people. You go too far and the voters revolt.”

Journal Endorsement

Re-Elect George Bush ABQjournal Opinion

While the record is mixed, the recommendation, ultimately, is to re-elect George W. Bush, aside from the mistakes — one of which is great reluctance to admit to mistakes. One hopes the administration has learned from these mistakes. [A]ll of these ultimately are trumped by the wild card of terrorism, the issue on which the president is the clear choice. The Journal endorses the re-election of President Bush.

It is possible to be shocked but not surprised. The next time someone writes to complain about the Albuquerque Journal’s liberalism, you won’t have to point to Ramirez, Trevor, Dimdahl, the aptly-named Prickly City or a host of conservative voices that appear daily. Instead, direct such a mistaken reader to your endorsement of George Duhbya Bush. This decision, presumably a consensus of many staffers and the owner-publisher, is based on one argument: it’s all about terror. It’s not. Still, this should silence whining conservatives (if only…) and, perhaps, even console them in their misery on Nov 3rd. mjh

John Kerry for President – Newspaper and Media Endorsements

Daily Endorsement Tally: Bush Has a Big Day, But Kerry is Still Eking Out a Win

[T]he count of daily papers [is] 208-190 in favor of Kerry. ,,,

Kerry continues to easily hold the edge in the circulation of papers supporting him by a roughly 4-3 margin.

More than 60 papers that backed Bush in 2000 have now switched to Kerry or endorsed neither candidate. Fewer than 10 switched the other way after backing Al Gore in 2000.

Conservative FOR Kerry / Conservatives AGAINST Bush

Kerry’s the One

Kerry’s the One
By Scott McConnell, The American Conservative Magazine

[This is] an election about the presidency of George W. Bush. To the surprise of virtually everyone, Bush has turned into an important president, and in many ways the most radical America has had since the 19th century. Because he is the leader of America’s conservative party, he has become the Left’s perfect foil — its dream candidate. …

Bush has behaved like a caricature of what a right-wing president is supposed to be, and his continuation in office will discredit any sort of conservatism for generations. …

Bush is more than ever the “neoconian candidate.” The only way Americans will have a presidency in which neoconservatives and the Christian Armageddon set are not holding the reins of power is if Kerry is elected. …

George W. Bush has come to embody a politics that is antithetical to almost any kind of thoughtful conservatism.

t r u t h o u t – RADIO FREE TO: Republicans for Kerry

Texas Republican Says “Country Must Come Before Party”, By Mitch Dworkin, Republicans for Kerry

The Republican Party as well as America needs a return to mainstream leadership.

Country must come before party. We need a president who can admit to making mistakes and bad decisions, a president who can unite this country and restore credibility back to the White House and to our allies who are now alienated from this Administration, and a president who is fiscally responsible and is in touch with the economic burdens of middle class Americans. …

A president who while in debate with agreed upon rules who will not directly answer the question that is put to him “President Bush, please give three instances when you think you made a bad decision, and what you did to correct it” and who in one incident interrupts the moderator of the presidential debate three times, changes the moderator’s question, and then says on his own without permission from the moderator “You tell Tony Blair we’re going alone…” does not have the temperament to lead the Republican Party or this great nation. That is especially true when our countrymen and women are shouldering 88.5% of the costs and casualties in Iraq due to this president’s inability to work with the United Nations.

The truth is non-partisan and the truth according to a federal report released last week is that economically we are worse-off than we were before President Bush took office with this president being the first president in 72 years to lose net jobs. The truth according to the CIA is that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq which was the basis of President Bush starting a unilateral and preemptive war without a sufficient coalition, an exit strategy, and a plan to win the peace. The truth is that President Bush ran in 2000 as a candidate who would be a uniter as opposed to a divider and this country has never been more partisan in the last 22 years according to John McCain and even VP Dick Cheney admitted to this division in his debate with John Edwards.

There is a growing movement of Republicans called “Republicans for Kerry” who are moving away from President Bush and his extreme policies. It is a difficult and painful move for many Republicans who have never before considered voting for a Democrat, but they know that it will be even more painful if they have to endure another four years of the Bush Administration’s out of the mainstream policies.

The Republican Party and the country needs new leadership! Senator John Kerry is running a mainstream campaign of fiscal responsibility, he has demonstrated that he can work well with people and can unite people of differing opinions, and he can admit to making mistakes.

Country must come before party. Republicans of conscience should vote for John Kerry on November 2 so that this country will once again be stronger at home and respected in the world.

Ignore the Polls

from NewMexiKen

From CNN October 27, 2000

Gallup: Bush 52% Gore 39%
CNN/Time: Bush 49% Gore 43%
ABC/Washington Post: Bush 48% Gore 45%
Zogby: Gore 45% Bush 43%

Actual vote: Gore 48.4% Bush 47.9%

I expect a Kerry landslide. Bush will be unable to ignore, explain away, deny or defeat the drubbing he’s got coming. mjh

Respecting Voters’ Rights?

WALB-TV, Albany. South Georgia’s #1 News Source: Challenge dropped against most Atkinson voters

Many of the people who gathered outside the Atkinson County Courthouse had at least one thing in common, a Hispanic name.

They all received letters saying their right to vote had been challenged.

“I didn’t know why I was being challenged,” said Antonio Hernandez, who’s lived in the county for 12 years and served on a grand jury there. “I didn’t know what was the cause or anything.”

So they filled the courtroom, many prepared to show birth certificates and citizenship papers, all because three men, Frank Sutton, Phillip Liles and James Mullis, questioned their right to vote.

“It was a closely contested commissioners race,” Liles said. “And after looking into it, it had been discovered that there were some non-citizens who had been asked to vote.”

But after county attorney Russ Gillis began the hearing, it didn’t take him long to get to his point. The challenges were dismissed because they were “legally insufficient because they’re based soley on race,” he said to the courtroom.

Representing the Board of Registrars, he explained that the 96 people who received letters represent nearly 80 percent of the county’s Hispanic voter, making it obvious they were challenged only because of their race, which is a violation of the Voters Rights Act.

But before it was over, one citizen wanted to make a point of her own.

“If you went to school and studied history, you should know that even your last name is foreign,” said Olga Martinez, who was raised in a migrant farming family and became a U.S. citizen four years ago.

In fact, many of the people challenged were born U.S. citizens and pointed out that they are never challenged when they come to pay taxes.

“They kind of just take your check and I was kind of surprised to be challenged to vote,” said Sid Rodriguez, who was born and raised in Texas and has lived in Atkinson County for more than 20 years.

Opinion > Editorial: G.O.P. to the Poor: Don’t Vote” href=”http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/30/opinion/30sat3.html?ex=1256875200&en=c915e34f60977315&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland”>The New York Times > Opinion > Editorial: G.O.P. to the Poor: Don’t Vote

ith little notice or discussion, Senator Christopher Bond of Missouri allowed a provision into a Senate appropriations bill that could ban even nonpartisan voter registration efforts in public housing developments all over the country. This is an example of the unfortunate impulse now afflicting some parts of the Republican Party: a desire to suppress voting in poor and minority neighborhoods. Mr. Bond’s proposal runs contrary to both the spirit of democracy and federal law, which in recent years has moved increasingly toward broadening ballot access. The National Voter Registration Act – commonly known as the Motor Voter Act – actually requires state agencies, including those that issue welfare benefits and drivers’ licenses, to offer voter registration materials to the people they serve.

The proposed Senate legislation comes on top of recent G.O.P. maneuvers in Ohio, where Republicans challenged the registrations of more than 30,000 voters, many of them impoverished. Federal courts have stepped in to halt such challenges for now, but more are expected at the polls.

The same impulse to discourage voters was on display over the last several months in New Mexico, where the Indian Health Service of the Health and Human Services Department suspended voter registration efforts for several months at some medical centers and clinics serving Native Americans. Earlier this month, the Indian Health Service issued a memorandum effectively ending the ban, but only after untold numbers of Native Americans had missed the opportunity to register to vote in the coming election.

Mr. Bond’s argument – that housing built with public money should be used only for housing, not voter registration – makes no sense on its face. It is even more ridiculous given the universal support for voter registration on military bases around the world. Military voters tend to favor Republicans, and public housing residents tend to favor Democrats. It would be nice if everyone could agree that both groups should be encouraged to vote.

We Lost Those Weapons

From Bush on down, buck-passers are saying the 400 tons of very powerful explosives that disappeared were gone before we got there. Yeah, right. Thanks to the embedded media, we have film of soldiers inspecting the bunkers. AFTER which, the weapons disappeared. We all have moments of incompetence, most of us have moments where we lie, but lying incompentents deserve some rebuke. mjh

Top News Article | Reuters.com

Report: Video Shows Explosives Went Missing After War

ABC News on Thursday showed video appearing to confirm that explosives that went missing in Iraq did not disappear until after the United States had taken control of the facility where they were stored.

The disappearance of the hundreds of tons of explosives from the Al Qaqaa storage facility near Baghdad has become a hotly contested issue in the U.S. presidential campaign.

Democratic challenger Sen. John Kerry has charged that President Bush’s administration blundered by failing to safeguard the powerful conventional explosives.

Bush countered that Kerry was making wild accusations without knowing the facts. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on Thursday advanced the administration’s argument that the explosives may have been gone by the time U.S. forces got there.

Without mentioning Kerry by name, Rumsfeld told a radio interviewer, “People who use hair-trigger judgment to come to conclusions about things that are fast-moving frequently make mistakes that are awkward and embarrassing.”

Rumsfeld also said it was “very likely that, just as the United States would do, that Saddam Hussein moved munitions when he knew the war was coming” in order to protect the material from attack.

ABC said the video it broadcast was shot by an affiliate TV station embedded with the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division when the troops passed through the storage facility on April 18, 2003, nine days after the fall of Baghdad.

ABC said experts who have studied the images say the barrels seen in the video contain the high explosive HMX, and U.N. markings on the sealed containers were clear. …

ABC said the barrels seen in the video were found inside locked bunkers that had been sealed by inspectors from the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency just before the war began.

“The seal’s critical. The fact that there’s a photo of what looks like an IAEA seal means that what’s behind those doors is HMX,” Albright said.

The soldiers were not ordered to secure the facility, ABC reported.

IAEA Says It Warned U.S. About Explosives

U.S. officials were warned about the vulnerability of explosives stored at Iraq’s Al-Qaqaa military installation after another facility — the country’s main nuclear complex — was looted in April 2003, the U.N. nuclear agency said Thursday.

The International Atomic Energy Agency cautioned American officials directly about what was kept at Al-Qaqaa, the main storage facility in Iraq for so-called high explosives, spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said.

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The disclosure shed new light on what the United States knew about Al-Qaqaa, which held 377 tons of high explosives that have vanished — an issue that has become a flashpoint in the final days of the U.S. presidential campaign.

The explosives can be used to make car bombs that insurgents have used to target U.S.-led forces in Iraq. On Thursday, an armed group in Iraq claimed in a video to have obtained a large amount of the missing material — HMX, RDX and PETN — and threatened to use it against foreign troops.

"It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people's minds." — Sam Adams