Posted on 12/15/2010 5:15:28 AM PST by Daisyjane69
"Greetings, it's me again, giving more advice ."
It was April 17, 2008, and Jack Kemp, the one-time Buffalo Bills quarterback turned congressman, presidential candidate, Bush 41 HUD Secretary and 1996 GOP vice presidential nominee, was at it again. This time, sadly, one of his last "in print" outings before his tragic early death from cancer just over a year later, he was writing an open letter in the Wall Street Journal to then-Illinois Senator and Democratic presidential aspirant Barack Obama.
On tax cuts.
And while he was at it, in typical Kemp style, reminding his fellow Republicans about the GOP's heritage of economic growth -- their legacy from party founder Abraham Lincoln.
Kemp has been recently identified in the six-part Fox News history of the conservative movement hosted by Brit Hume, The Right, All Along: The Rise Fall & Future of Conservatism, as the most important Republican of the late 20th century who never became president. He won that label not because of his titled political positions or a personality frequently understated as "ebullient." The source of Kemp's reputation came about because of an entirely unofficial title as the godfather of what is known as "supply-side economics."
(Excerpt) Read more at spectator.org ...
It's so obvious that even obama could understand it...if he wanted to.
Jack Kemp’s time would’ve been better spent warning “useful idiots” about Obama.
Exactly: Graham, McCain, Cornyn, Collins, Snowe, Corker, Lugar, Voinovich, Hatch, Corker, and Grassley.
Telling a COMMUNIST to not raise taxes was pretty stupid. With all due respect.
Exactly.
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