To: sinkspur
Republican lawmakers who generally back President Bush are not backing him on immigration. In fact, they want their leaders to know they have "serious concerns" about President Bush's proposed immigration policy.
Well, it looks like there's going to be some fine tuning as to arrive at a consensus.
Like the way government is supposed to accomplish the will of the people.
Strategery works.
But, some are more interested in winning the "Lonliest Conservative" award, rather than winning elections and deconstructing liberalism.
68 posted on
01/26/2004 5:00:54 PM PST by
motzman
(Dubya, Rudy, and Rnold...I trust 'em!)
To: motzman
Don't think more than a very few of the Republican conservative critics of the president on his "guest worker program" will abandon the ship of state to the Demorats on that account.
72 posted on
01/26/2004 5:04:29 PM PST by
luvbach1
(In the know on the border)
To: motzman
I said from the beginning that this was politics. Bush can say he tried and those who said NO WAY can tell their constituants that they listened to their letters
76 posted on
01/26/2004 5:06:54 PM PST by
MJY1288
(WITHOUT DOUBLE STANDARDS, LIBERALS WOULDN'T HAVE ANY !)
To: motzman
Yup, all us lonely conservatives who expect laws to be enforced and criminals charged with crimes.
All us stupid people who have not yet succumbed to corruption.
100 posted on
01/26/2004 5:20:55 PM PST by
sarasmom
(If I get a fake blue card, does that mean I wont have to pay for health and auto insurance?)
To: motzman
But, some are more interested in winning the "Lonliest Conservative" award... And some are interested in whether there's a nickel's worth of difference between "compassionate conservatism" and out-and-out socialism.
There sure is no compassion for the taxpayer, but apparently plenty for tax consumers and big business.
Bush is conservative in very few ways.
223 posted on
01/27/2004 8:10:10 AM PST by
jimt
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