Posted on 10/19/2004 8:00:29 AM PDT by Timeout
Bush-Cheney '04 is announcing a NASCAR tour that will cover 14 events in four states (Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania) on October 19 and 20. The tour features seven of NASCAR's best drivers and most well-known figures: Darrell Waltrip, Mark Martin, Bill Elliott, Jack Roush, Benny Parsons, Jeff Hammond and Eddie Wood. NASCAR fans represent a pivotal voting block in this election, and these NASCAR celebrities' enthusiastic support for President Bush will have a real impact in driving voters to the polls. See below for a schedule of these historic events.
President Bush's Support Within The NASCAR Community Runs Deep
Nine Of The Nextel Cup Series Top 10 Drivers Have Endorsed The President. Drivers include: Kurt Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Elliott Sadler, Mark Martin, Tony Stewart, Matt Kenseth, Ryan Newman, Jimmie Johnson and Jeremy Mayfield.
NASCAR President Mike Helton Has Endorsed The President.
The Most Successful Owners Have Endorsed The President. They include Jack Roush, Teresa Earnhardt, Richard Childress, Robert Yates, and J.D. and Joe Gibbs.
Countless NASCAR Heroes Have Endorsed The President. They include: Geoffrey Bodine, Brendan Gaughan, Jeff Green, Kevin Harvick, Kasey Kahne, Bobby Labonte, Terry Labonte, Jamie McMurray, Joe Nemechek, Kyle Petty, Ken Schrader, Brian Vickers, Rusty Wallace and Michael Waltrip.
Schedule Of Events For Tuesday, October 19...
[I'll list them in the first post below]
Tony and Junior are good friends. I respect that.
What "I" question is why didn't Robby Gordon have points taken from him when he flicked off the camera crew? Why didn't Dale Jarrett have points taken when HE swore in front of the camera? I mean........turnabout is fair play. Why single out one and not the rest.
Perhaps NASCAR will now.......but I question the timing since it is Junior.
Robby should have been parked for the duration of the race and the one following. As for DJ, I have no idea what he did, so I'll defer commenting. Johnny Sauter and one other driver got 25 pt fines for swearing on tv. Jr. swore on TV. NASCAR had to be consistent and dock the points from Jr.
Stewart is the only one with guts enough to say it. ;-)
Amen
And, why wasn't he (R. Gordon) penalized points for taking cars out of the race intentionally?
None near me...we aren't a battleground state AT ALL...sounds cool though, glad to see NASCAR get involved
NASCAR neeeds people like Tony Stewart and, to a lesser degree, Jimmy Spencer that are not afraid of pointing to the emperor's exposed little willy and calling him on it.
NASCAR was right to dock the points from Jr as they did with Sauter and Hornaday - but I think they should have pro-rated them to reflect the 10 race stretch.
Yes, and that's another infraction. Personally, I think there are those higher up that do not like DEI and some palms were greased under the table to do this to Dale.
Just MHO, but this is very suspicious to me!
Racing icon stumps for Bush
NASCAR legend Jack Roush visits Beckley to promote president
By Mannix Porterfield/REGISTER-HERALD REPORTER
NASCAR legend Jack Roush made a pit stop Tuesday in Beckley, the first leg of his tour to help President Bush win the checkered flag in his second race for the White House.
Race fans and Republican supporters converged on Nextel Cup car owner Roush after he arrived in the late afternoon at Nell Jean Square to talk cars and politics.
On both subjects, Roush talked non-stop to anybody within earshot. Anyone who wanted it got an audience with him.
"I'm stumping up votes for Bush," the straw hat-wearing Roush announced to a knot of NASCAR fans clustered around him.
"I think George Bush has done a good job for a first-time president. I'm anxious to give him a chance to go back and finish his work."
Asked why, the race mogul quoted his 89-year-old mother as she filled out her absentee ballot, "I trust him."
"When he said he would do something, he would do it," Roush said.
"I like the fact that he's a friend of sportsmen. He's a protector of the Second Amendment."
In fact, when the Clintons captured the White House, Roush said, he bought up a hardy supply of semi-automatic shotguns and ammunition for sporting purposes.
"I thought they were after them," he said of Bill and Hillary Clinton.
Another selling point for Roush is Bush's commitment to stalk terrorists around the globe, he said.
"Anybody that wants to cause us trouble, if we know where they're coming from, we'll see them on their back door," he said.
"We're not going to fight them on ours."
- - -
Roush said his biggest beef with John Kerry is that "right now, he's standing in the way of George Bush's second term."
"I think it's real important to the economy and it's important to the social programs he's got going," he said of the Republican incumbent.
Moreover, Roush said he favors Bush over his pro-life stance and his conservative values on other issues.
"I don't think Kerry would have the same values that most people in this part of the country and that I have got," he added.
Roush plans to join veteran driver Bill Elliott as the tour moves into Charleston, the second stop of their tour. Elliott was unable to make the Beckley appearance due to flight difficulty.
- - -
No stranger to his area, Roush grew up in Manchester, Ohio, about 40 miles from Portsmouth.
"I used to get television back in the '50s from Huntington and Charleston," he said.
"I look to the east and West Virginia here for a lot of things."
Roush has five teams involved in Nextel Cup races and says the racing phenomenon is growing.
"That's fairly easy to understand," he said of racing's popularity.
"It's nice, clean competition, a good family sport. They keep the rules consistent enough that if you watch it this year and you get involved where you can't watch a race for a while, then you come back and watch it again, you find the same people with the same good fight and struggling over space at the race track."
Among his stable of drivers, three are in the chase for the Nextel Championship, points leader Kurt Busch, Mark Martin and Matt Kenseth.
"There's a lot of drama being acted out by the personalities, as well as by the manufacturers and sponsors," Roush said.
"There are so many different levels of competition. It's just fascinating."
- E-mail: mporterfield@register-herald.com
There have been many on track incidents this year and last year where in some cases there were penalties and some not. So it does appear to me they don't really follow their own rules all the time.
In this case, I think it was blown out of proportion because it was Jr and they probably thought if they didn't penalize him people would say they were playing favorites.
Bush daughters, NASCAR champ rally for president
http://www.cincypost.com/2004/10/21/twins102104.html
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