Posted on 11/20/2006 2:41:05 PM PST by Risha
No joke: Kerry says goof wont hurt 08 prez bid
By Associated Press
Monday, November 20, 2006 - Updated: 01:42 PM EST
WASHINGTON - Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry insisted on Sunday his "botched joke" about President George W. Bushs Iraq policy would not undermine a possible White House campaign in 2008.
"Not in the least," Kerry, the Democratic presidential nominee in 2004, said when asked if the furor over his comment had caused him to reconsider a 2008 race. "The parlor game of whos up, whos down, today or tomorrow, if I listened to that stuff, I would never have won the nomination."
One of the Republican politicians mentioned in a crowded field for the White House, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, said he would not make a decision until September - a relatively late date in the campaign cycle - to focus in the private sector on trade policies.
"We have lots of time for personal ambition," the Georgia Republican said. "And I think an awful lot of this early energy is wasted, and we ought to be focusing on, you know, how are you going to compete with China and India, how are you going to solve the problem in Iraq?"
Gingrich said Arizona Sen. John McCain and former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, both of whom have set up presidential exploratory committees, were the likely front-runners of the Republican Party. But Gingrich said voters are yearning for a clearer conservative voice.
"I think Mitt Romney has an opportunity to fill that," Gingrich said, referring to the outgoing Massachusetts governor.
McCain said Giuliani was an "American hero" for his leadership in New York following the Sept. 11 attacks. But McCain called himself the best presidential candidate based on a "record of being a conservative Republican, of knowledge on national security and defense issues."
McCain, who supports a ban on abortion except in cases of rape, incest and to save a mothers life, said he doubted a constitutional amendment could pass but that one would not be needed because "its very likely or possible that the Supreme Court should - could - overturn Roe v. Wade." He was referring to the Supreme Courts 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that established a womans right to abortion.
The high court is deciding this term whether to uphold a 2003 federal law banning the procedure opponents call "partial-birth" abortion in a case conservatives hope could be used to reverse the landmark 1973 abortion-rights decision.
At least two conservatives, Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, have called on Roe to be overturned. Legal analysts have said if the court issues an anti-abortion ruling, justices would be more likely to impose restrictions rather than abolish the right.
"Im a federalist," McCain said. "Just as I believe that the issue of gay marriage should be decided by the states, so do I believe that we would be better off by having Roe v. Wade return to the states. And I dont believe the Supreme Court should be legislating in the way that they did on Roe v. Wade."
McCain called the militarys "dont ask, dont tell" policy toward gays "very effective." He said he opposed gay marriage, but as to civil unions, "people ought to be able to enter into contracts, exchange powers of attorney, other ways that people who have relationship can enter into."
Meanwhile, former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, the 2004 Democratic nominee for vice president, said Illinois Sen. Barack Obama should get into the race.
"I hope he runs. I think he should run," Edwards told The Associated Press. "This is such an important job that I would urge anybody who can make a serious contribution to the campaign and the dialogue - either in our party or the other party - to run."
Edwards is not yet willing to commit to another run for president. He said whether Obama - or any other candidate - enters the race will have no bearing on his decision to make a second run for president. Edwards sought his partys nomination for the White House in 2004.
Kerry said he would decide early next year whether to run for president.
Shortly before the Nov. 7 elections that brought Democrats back into power in the House and Senate, Kerry retreated from public view following his remark to a college audience that young people might get "stuck in Iraq" if they do not study hard and do their homework.
"This is over. This was a misstatement. All of us make them in life. You wish you could have it back, but you cant," the senator said Sunday.
Kerry said Sunday he had made the decision to keep a low profile after the White House attacked the joke as insulting to U.S. troops and several Democrats called the comment a needless distraction before the pivotal congressional elections.
"Since we had very close races, I made the decision to make certain that I didnt distract. The results speak for themselves," he said.
On running in 2008, Kerry said he had not yet made a decision whether to set up an exploratory committee.
"Right now, my focus will be what happened on election day," he said, citing a need to work toward solutions on Iraq, energy independence and health care. "The American people are waiting for us to lift up an enormous challenge."
Both Kerry and Gingrich appeared on "Fox News Sunday." McCain was on "This Week" on ABC.
© Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
The joke is he thinks he HAS a Presidential Bid option in 2008.
So Kerry should be another Adelai Stevenson?
He doesn't have the record of accomplishment associated with Thomas Dewey.
The good news: The Democrats were to patriotic to vote for Dean in the Primaries, and voted for him as party chair based on Dean's promise to not run for President.
Kerry looked like, at first glance, as a more conservative choice than Dean or the Breck Girl.
LOL!!!
Anybody ever notice how yellow this guy always looks? Does he have liver disease or is that just a bad spray on tan?
Kerry may have been the single most pathetic candidate a major party has put forth in my lifetime. He makes Al Gore look presidential.
Mocking John on YouTube --- http://youtube.com/watch?v=yeYRWk-RMwk
His chances are actually a million times better than before his "botched joke," but a million times zero is still zero.
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No Joke.
JOHN KERRY =
Pictures of a vietnamese Re-Education Camp
http://www.Freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1308949/posts
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Kerry should just resign as Senator of Massachusetts and give up politics altogether. I thought that there was a good chance that Virginia's former Democratic Governor Warner would run for president, in an attempt to put a moderate face on the left wing party. As long as people like Hillary, Kerry, Dean and Pelossi are heading the Dems, no red states are going to turn blue. Go Romney!
Kerry doesn't understand why he lost in '04. He doesn't understand that we know what he was saying in his botched "joke." He was saying if you go to school and are indoctrinated by a socialist and globalist education, you will come to think like he does and you will be willing to sell out America. And that is why Kerry lost in '04. He would sell out America.
If Alfred E. Neuman somehow gained the democratic nomination, millions of sheeple (near 50% of voters, probably)would vote for him.
Awesome! I love Jean-Francois!
This guy truly lives in an alternate reality.
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