Posted on 11/02/2006 5:23:50 AM PST by 8mmMauser
Republican gubernatorial front-runner Charlie Crist says he was perfectly clear in opposing governmental intervention in the Terri Schiavo case.
He spoke out loudly.
And he was silent.
Loudly silent.
The day after limping through a tough nationally televised debate, the Republican attorney general wanted to talk about his plans to slash taxes. Instead reporters questioned him about his debate assertion that, Yes, I did speak out against Congress trying to force the reinsertion of the severely brain-damaged womans feeding tube in 2005.
Crist did not publicly express his opposition to the Schiavo intervention until April 2006, more than a year after the Pinellas womans death. But he maintained on Tuesday that he forcefully expressed his opposition from the start.
I spoke loudly, Crist said in Tallahassee. I think its important that when issues like that come up and you believe that government is the appropriate place for it that you act that out, and you walk the walk, and dont just talk the talk.
The attorney general noted that his office by not going to court and pushing the agenda on that issue, that was speaking out louder than anybody else did in Florida.
This is one of many issues from insurance reform to abortion and civil unions where Crist has been accused of ambiguity or trying please all sides.
Contrary to his comments Tuesday, during the Republican gubernatorial primary in August he stressed to the weekly newspaper of the Florida Baptist Convention that his office helped the governors office with legal work to keep Schiavo alive, even though he personally had qualms.
I dont remember that, but Ill check on it and see, Crist said when asked about that interview with the Florida Baptist Witness.
Gov. Jeb Bush came to his would-be successors defense. He spoke out to me, Bush told reporters. Crist, however, said he never directly talked to Bush.
There are few issues in the political realm so black and white as the Terri Schiavo case. People either supported the state and federal government intervening to keep her alive or they didnt.
But Crist is the second statewide candidate recently to face questions about how he acted during the Schiavo end-of-life controversies that erupted in 2003 in the Legislature and in 2005 in both the Legislature and Congress.
Democratic Attorney General candidate Walter Skip Campbell, a state senator from Broward County, has been on the defensive this week for having voted to keep Schiavo alive and later criticizing the governmental intervention. Crists involvement in the Schiavo case may be the only common ground between the Schindler family, Terri
Schiavos parents and siblings who fought to keep her alive, and her husband, Michael Schiavo, who insisted his wife did not want to be kept alive in a persistent vegetative state. Both sides have criticized Crist.
When he said in that debate that hes going to be a leader, my heart dropped. Hes not a leader, hes a follower, Michael Schiavo said Tuesday. If he really wanted to stand up he would have said, 'No, this is wrong. The government should stay out of this. ... Charlie Crist did not say a word, he was nowhere to be found. Hes a coward.
Terri Schiavos father, Bob Schindler, wrote an essay in August accusing Crist of snubbing the familys pleas for him to help their efforts. Florida Atty. Gen. Charlie Crist let my daughter die. He had it within his authority to save her life, but he turned a blind eye to her suffering, Schindler wrote.
The Florida Democratic Party issued a release saying Crist lied about his role in the Schiavo case, but at a brief campaign stop at Arco-Iris restaurant in Tampa on Tuesday, Davis would only say that Crist misrepresented his position.
I was up fighting George Bush and the entire United States Congress, both political parties, and Charlie Crist was unwilling to take a position, Davis said.
Davis, trailing in polls and campaign money, is hoping his debate performance Monday night will cut Crists advantages. No statewide viewership numbers were available Tuesday, but in the Tampa Bay area about 152,000 households tuned in a ratings jump for that time slot on WFLA and that doesnt include those who watched on MSNBC.
- Tallahassee bureau chief Steve Bousquet and staff writer Alex Leary contributed to this report. Adam C. Smith can be reached at asmith@sptimes.com or (727) 893-8241.\
"There's an awareness of doing this kind of thing, but like drawing up any legal document, people tend to procrastinate," said Kate O'Malley, senior program officer at the Oakland-based California Healthcare Foundation, which released the survey. Recent high-profile cases, including that of Terri Schiavo, have brought the issue of advanced health care directives into the spotlight. Schiavo, a Florida woman in a persistent vegetative state, died last year when her feeding tube was removed after nearly a decade of court battles between her husband and parents over her care.
Most in state lack living wills
8mm
Fixed it.
God knows, we had flocks of them drop in on us. I suppose some of them fit Ms. Mercer's description as casuists, rationalizing their moral confusions. Some, though, were relentless in their pursuit of evil. They were not reasoning "poorly." They were twisting words and facts on every point. They lusted for Terri to be killed.
"Infamous"?! What in the hell is the matter with these people? Pearl Harbor was infamous, September 11, 2001 was infamous, the Holocaust was infamous, Terri's murder was infamous. There are plenty of examples of infamy in recent history, but Congress trying to save an innocent woman from being murdered ISN'T ONE OF THEM!
This is America -- WE SPEAK ENGLISH HERE!!!
Thanks a lot for poisoning your party, your state and your religion, John Danforth!
In satan's lair.
Mais oui.
;-)
No entiendo.
The best solution would be for YOU to spend the twenty bucks and then post it all here so that the rest of us can save money!
N-O E-N-T-I-E-N-D-O!
You could pay in sterling. It is only £14 GBP.
Yes, it would have helped the GOP to save the life of an innocent woman but they got more fundraising dollars for killing her.
Next: Judge Greer and George Felos' new book: "We Did It!"
No comprendo, old chap. Cheerio, tut tut and all that.
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