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The Most Influential US conservatives: 1-20
Telegraph (UK) ^ | 11-01-07 | (none)

Posted on 11/01/2007 6:11:11 PM PDT by ConservativeStLouisGuy

The most influential US conservatives: 1-20

 
1. RUDY GIULIANI
Republican presidential candidate
 
RUDY GIULIANI

The clear Republican front runner and perhaps the only party nominee who could beat Hillary Clinton in 2008, Giuliani makes the top of our list despite his unorthodox brand of conservatism that is anathema to many on the Christian Right. Before 9/11, a thrice-married New Yorker in favour of abortion, gun and gay rights would have struggled to survive the early stages of a Republican nomination battle despite his tax cutting and crime fighting credentials. But even many Christian conservatives who disagree with the former New York mayor on social issues now view national security as their number one priority.

Giuliani's performance after 9/11 made him an international figure and helped make a nation feel good about itself just after its darkest hour. But 9/11 is the centrepiece of the Giuliani campaign in more than just that respect - he is determined to confront America's enemies, including Iran, and has taken on an array of hawkish advisers. Meetings with Tony Blair and Gordon Brown while in London to receive an award from Margaret Thatcher underlined his global stature. All the stars are in alignment for a Democratic victory in 2008 but Giuliani has the potential to buck the historical trends and signal a dramatic shift in American conservatism by securing an unlikely win.

2.GENERAL DAVID PETRAEUS
Commander of coalition forces in Iraq

 
GENERAL DAVID PETRAEUS

We see this highly respected scholar-warrior, educated at West Point and Princeton, as a potential future president – he would be the first general to reach the White House since Dwight Eisenhower in 1952. In the meantime, however, the prospect of American victory or defeat in Iraq rests in his hands. Perhaps no figure in American public life was cited so frequently in Washington in the run-up to his September report on the progress of the "surge" when his integrity was attacked by the liberal advocacy group MoveOn.org.

Although Petraeus, as a professional soldier, has properly stayed away from the political arena, he is a close friend of Bill Frist, the former Republican senator and surgeon who once saved the general's life when he was shot in the chest during a training accident. But we judge that Petraeus's pronouncements on the war on terror, and the clear thrust of his impressive testimony on Capitol Hill last month, place him firmly in the Republican camp on the number one issue for conservatives – the future of the war against Islamic extremism.

3. MATT DRUDGE
Internet journalist and talk radio host

 
MATT DRUDGE

When Matthew Nathan Drudge, 41, makes a move, the American news agenda and body politic shift with him. His Drudge Report website is the most influential news aggregator in the world. Such is the volume of traffic he generates, newspaper websites he links to regularly crash under the tsunami of extra hits. Drudge shot to prominence in 1998 when he broke the story of the Monica Lewinsky scandal as the mainstream media prevaricated.

Such is his current power that his biggest detractors – Hillary Clinton and The New York Times – are among those who seek to get out their information ahead of the news cycle by courting him. An intensely private man, Drudge, based in Los Angeles, is a former convenience store clerk and telemarketer whose father bought him a computer in 1994 because he was worried about his son's indolence. A populist, anti-abortion, anti-tax, libertarian-leaning conservative, Drudge has his finger on the pulse of Middle America.

4.NEWT GINGRICH
Former Speaker of the House of Representatives

 
NEWT GINGRICH

He lead the Republican Revolution of 1994, when the Grand Old Party swept into power on a platform of smaller government, welfare reform and lower taxes - ending 40 years of Democratic rule in the House of Representatives. A towering intellect, Gingrich is a one-man powerhouse of conservative ideas. A polarising figure who still bears the scars from his battles with Bill Clinton over impeachment, he recently ruled out a presidential bid in 2008.

Phenomenally well read, Gingrich is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a visiting fellow at the Hoover Institute and runs his own ideas greenhouse American Solutions. He has taken on Al Gore over climate change, John Murtha over the Iraq war, Hillary Clinton over health care and George W. Bush over immigration reform. A supremely confident media performer, few politicians excite the conservative base as much or are as hated by liberals as Gingrich.

5. RUSH LIMBAUGH
Talk radio host

 
RUSH LIMBAUGH

A national phenomenon, Limbaugh's influence is massive and has endured the test of time. His recent contretemps with Senator Harry Reid was indicative of Limbaugh's continued power – he raised $2.1 million for military and police families by selling on eBay a letter from the Democrats attacking him. As far back as 1996 he won the ultimate conservative accolade by having Al Franken, a left-wing comedian, pen a volume about him entitled: Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat Idiot.

For three hours each day, Limbaugh ranges from waxing philosophical to sounding off about political issues of the day. His theatrical style belies an erudition and painstaking research that his detractors often underestimate. His show began in 1988 and still tops the listenership lists. Often accused of going OTT, he courts controversy and relishes a battle. Any conservative Republican would chew off his own arm to appear on the Limbaugh show.

6. DICK CHENEY
Vice President of the United States

 
DICK CHENEY

The former Wyoming congressman and Defence Secretary during the Gulf War is the most powerful vice president in American history. Freed from the burden of having to plot a future run for office, since 9/11 Cheney has dedicated himself to protecting America by offering unvarnished and sometimes unpalatable advice to George W. Bush about the steps he believes need to be taken. Deeply conservative and fiercely loyal to Mr Bush, he is supported by his wife Lynne who is herself a leading conservative who just missed inclusion on our list. Cheney is an enigmatic figure who keeps his own counsel when outside the Oval Office.

Unerringly hawkish, after 9/11 Cheney abandoned his 1991 qualms about US forces toppling Saddam Hussein, instead believing that Iraq, Iran, North Korea and Syria needed to be confronted and al-Qa'eda hunted down across the world. He recently laughed off his nickname of Darth Vader and has been content to insulate Mr Bush by soaking up Left-wing opprobrium. Cheney turned his office into a foreign policy powerhouse within the Bush administration, nurturing such figures as David Wurmsur, who recently stepped down as his Middle East adviser. If Bush does decide to take military action against Iran, then much of the credit – and the blame – will be laid at Mr Cheney's door.

7.ROBERT GATES
Defence Secretary

 
ROBERT GATES

A former CIA director who served for 26 years at the spy agency, George W. Bush's decision to replace the ebulliently hawkish, supremely self-assured Donald Rumsfeld with the cautious, understated Gates appeared to mark a decisive shift. Viewed as part of the realist school of foreign policy associated with George Bush Snr, Brent Scowcroft and James Baker, Gates had already advocated engagement with Iran and expressed private criticism of the conduct of the Iraq war.

Gates immediately introduced changes, firing senior officers involved in overseeing military facilities keeping wounded soldiers in squalid conditions, briefing reporters in sit-down sessions rather than confronting them and giving generals more leeway to argue their case. Quietly, Gates is arguing against military action in Iran, holding the balance of power with Condoleezza Rice against Dick Cheney. He is also advocating a steady drawdown of troops from Iraq.

8. JOHN ROBERTS
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court

 
JOHN ROBERTS

George W. Bush will bequeath his successor a head of the Supreme Court who could be on the bench for the next 30 years, shaping the parameters of American life for the next generation and beyond. Roberts joined the court as chief justice in July 2005. He was originally nominated by the president as an associate justice to replace the retiring Sandra Day O'Connor, but was given the top job when William Rehnquist died. At 50, he was the third youngest man to lead the court.

Bush chose him as a reliable conservative and he has not disappointed so far. But the Christian Right's holy grail of overturning Roe versus Wade and making abortion illegal is not among his plans, although he backs limiting practices such as partial-birth abortion. On issues such as the future of Guantanamo, the death penalty, the limits of what constitutes torture, the reach of executive power and conducting the war on terror, the Roberts court will have far-reaching influence. Already the Supreme Court under Roberts has become more conservative.

9. JOHN MCCAIN
Senator for Arizona and presidential candidate

 
JOHN MCCAIN

The former US Navy pilot who spent more than five years as a PoW in Vietnam faces an uphill battle to win the Republican nomination after an outsider bid in 2000 that at one point looked likely to stop George W. Bush. A consistent advocate of more troops in Iraq, he is closely associated with the "surge" policy and has stuck doggedly to his guns even when his stance has appeared certain to cost him votes. Now 71, he would be the oldest ever US president when first elected.

An unpredictable maverick throughout his life, McCain has frequently bucked party orthodoxy on campaign finance reform, climate change and, in 2000, on the influence of the religious Right, whose leaders he branded "agents of intolerance". Was recently damaged by his backing for immigration reform, which his opponents labelled "amnesty" for illegals and has taken a strong stance against torture. The Arizona senator probably won't be president – though as a Giuliani ally he could be Pentagon chief. His contribution to his party and conservatism will be lasting.

10. MITT ROMNEY
Presidential candidate

 
MITT ROMNEY

The former Massachusetts governor is positioning himself as the conservative candidate in the race for the Republican nomination. An accomplished businessman and self-made multi-millionaire, he ran the consulting firm Bain & Company before rescuing the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City from a corruption scandal and cash crisis that threatened to sink it.

A Mormon, he has been reluctant to discuss details of his faith on the campaign trail and it remains to be scene whether evangelical Christians will back him. Perhaps more problematic is his recent shift from being a liberal Republican in the New England mould to being a purported rock-red conservative. He became an opponent of abortion rights at age 57 and only recently joined the National Rifle Association. Has sunk truckloads of his own cash into his well-organised and astute campaign that has him leading the polls in the crucial early-voting states. Despite lagging badly in the national polls, he is well placed to win the Republican nomination.

11. MIKE HUCKABEE
Presidential candidate

 
MIKE HUCKABEE

A seemingly ideal fit to be the 2008 vice-presidential candidate on the Republican ticket, the former Arkansas governor is a Baptist minister who fronts his own rock band and is almost universally liked. Poor fundraising and a very limited foreign policy background probably means the Republican nomination is beyond his reach.

A deeply religious social conservative, he achieved notoriety by losing 110lbs (nearly eight stone) and becoming a vocal proponent of healthy living. Holds classic conservative positions on abortion, gay marriage and gun ownership that would help boost the conservative credentials of a nominee like Rudy Giuliani. Arkansas background would also be ideal for hand-to-hand political combat with Hillary Clinton.

12. CONDOLEEZZA RICE
Secretary of State

 
CONDOLEEZZA RICE

Plucked from relative obscurity as Provost of Stanford, Rice's previous government experience was limited to being a Soviet analyst during the George Bush Snr administration. She was pitched into the government fray as National Security Adviser and failed to mediate effectively between the warring factions centred around Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney on the one hand and Colin Powell on the other. At one time viewed as a potential president of vice president, there are few calls for this now and she has shown no enthusiasm for running for office.

Her biggest asset was having the ear of George W. Bush as she slid away from her realist roots and the legacy of her mentor Brent Scowcroft and gradually aligned herself with the neo-conservatives as Bush himself accepted their analysis. At the State Department, she has moved back towards the diplomatic bureaucracy, favouring talks with Iran and arguing against military strikes. Her critics charge that she could end of being wrong on both Iraq and Iran – initially too hawkish, then too timid. Her push for Israeli-Palestinian peace seems belated and her legacy is likely to be a tarnished one.

13. JOHN BOLTON
Former US ambassador to the United Nations

 
JOHN BOLTON

A controversial and relentlessly energetic and hawkish diplomat who was a key ally of Vice President Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld at the State Department, where he battled against what he saw as Colin Powell's attempts to stifle George W. Bush's directives. Led opposition to joining International Criminal Court and becoming entangled in international agreements that night limit US room for manoeuvre as well as securing important deals to limit WMD proliferation.

Already a notorious critic of the United Nations, he was appointed as US ambassador to the world body and set about challenging every aspect of its work but was never confirmed by the Democratic-controlled Senate and his recess appointment eventually lapsed. A tireless negotiator who believes in confronting Iran and North Korea and argued forcefully for the invasion of Iraq, even his critics concede he worked effectively even for those Bush administration policies he disagreed with. Has close links to Britain's Conservative party. Now back at the AEI think tank and with a new book out, Bolton is in touch with more than one presidential campaign. A senior Bolton appointment in a Giuliani administration would seem likely.

14. PAUL GIGOT
Editorial Page Editor, The Wall Street Journal

 
PAUL GIGOT

Since 2001, Gigot has overseen the editorial page of the "Wall Street Journal" - the gold standard of American conservatism - after taking over from the legendary Robert Bartley, who had been in post since 1972. Gigot also hosts the weekly Journal Editorial Report on Fox News. Under Gigot, the page (it is actually two pages plus increasing online content) has lost none of its influence or bite.

A Pulitzer-winning columnist, Gigot's background as a reporter in Chicago, the Far East and Washington is reflected in the Journal's opinion content which, although superbly written, closely argued and provocative, also includes original reporting from such Gigot-nurtured talents as Bret Stephens and Kimberley Strassel. Indeed, Gigot scooped the Journal's own news pages recently by breaking the news of Karl Rove's resignation by carrying a long interview with him. Gigot's influence looks set to grow with Rupert Murdoch, the Journal's new owner and an avowed admirer of the editorial page, planning to challenge the sway of the "New York Times".

15. LAURA INGRAHAM
Talk radio host

 
LAURA INGRAHAM

Cut her political teeth as a speechwriter during the Reagan administration before completing a law degree and becoming a clerk to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. Less polemical and self-consciously outrageous than Ann Coulter, to whom she is sometimes compared, Ingraham is an increasingly respected and prominent figure within the conservative movement. Although unapologetically Republican, she has given the party's presidential candidates some of their toughest grillings.

A campaigner against the "pornification" of America through what she sees as the erosion of family values and patriotism, she is also a persistent critic of Hollywood and the United Nations. Ingraham, 43, has been a detractor of media coverage of the Iraq war and was attacked by liberals for encouraging her listeners to clog the phone lines of a Democrat hotline dedicated to resolving voter problems during the 2004 election.

16. HALEY BARBOUR
Governor of Mississippi

 
HALEY BARBOUR

About to be comfortably re-elected as Mississippi governor, Barbour is one of the most accomplished Republican executives in the United States. As a successful Southern governor with immense experience, he is a future president who would be a clever pick for vice-presidential running mate in 2008. Received national plaudits for his handling of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated Mississippi's Gulf coast, while neighbouring Louisiana's Democratic governor floundered.

Barbour, 60, has cut his state's budget deficit in half without raising taxes and used the skills he honed as a Washington lobbyist to good effect in winning over a Democratic-led state legislature. A highly successful chair of the Republican National Committee, Barbour helped lay the foundations for the Republican Revolution and the takeover of Congress in 1994.

17. FRANK LUNTZ
Pollster and strategist

 
FRANK LUNTZ

A baseball fanatic and political junkie, Luntz, 46, is an irrepressible force in Republican politics, shooting off vivid quotes that are lapped up by journalists and delivering a straight message to his clients even when his polls do not tell him what they will want to hear. Close to Rudy Giuliani and John McCain, it would be hard to name a prominent GOP political operative or member of Congress of the last 20 years who has not been advised by Luntz.

As well as running his own research consulting company, Luntz is a frequent pundit on an array of political news programmes. He has the ear of politicians and operatives alike. Master of the political message, Luntz's fascination with the use of language has often held redefine a political debate to the benefit of Republicans. A frequent guest on BBC's Newsnight, a 2005 Luntz poll helped propel David Cameron to the Tory party leadership. Luntz, who did post-graduate study at Oxford, has also advised Tony Blair.

18. GLENN BECK
Talk radio host

 
GLENN BECK

A reformed alcoholic and former drug addict who converted to Mormonism, Glenn Beck boasts the fourth most popular talk radio show in America with about five million listeners each week. His hour-long nightly television show on CNN is referred to by the network as "an unconventional look at the news of the day" and gives Beck's conservative viewpoint an influential outlet in the American mainstream.

Beck recently stated he is "through with" George W. Bush, citing the issues of immigration reform and soaring government spending – a reflection of the views of many grassroots conservatives. A climate change sceptic and vocal advocate for more troops in Iraq. A persistent critic of political correctness, he has compared Al Gore to Goebbels and referred to Hillary Clinton as "Stalin in a pantsuit". With a growing audience in the key 25-54 demographic, he is a potential heir to Rush Limbaugh.

19. MIKE PENCE
Congressman

 
MIKE PENCE

A lawyer and former talk radio host who was elected to Congress in 2000, he has described himself as "a Christian, a conservative and a Republican, in that order" and called for a "return to the values" of the 1994 Republican Revolution. Just 47, and youthful despite his white hair, a future presidential bid is a near certainty for this articulate, forceful Indiana congressman regarded on both sides of the aisle as a rising star.

Chair of the Republican Study Committee, a conservative congressional caucus, Pence is a campaigner for small government, low taxes and the outlawing of abortion. But he departed from the Republican Right orthodoxy over immigration, introducing a compromise bill that was an imaginative attempt to split the difference between George W. Bush and congressional Republicans.

20. ED GILLESPIE
Counsellor to President George W. Bush

 
ED GILLESPIE

Gillespie recently stepped into one of the most difficult jobs in politics – directing the communications policy for an embattled, unpopular president approaching the final year of his second term. Already, he appears to have steadied the ship somewhat, most notably issuing aggressive rebuttals of press criticisms of the Iraq "surge" policy. Mainly through success on the ground, but abetted by Gillespie's efforts, opinion has begun to shift decisively.

A Republican operative who has worked at the coal face since making night-time telephone calls for the Republican National Committee from a basement in 1985, Gillespie worked for Dick Armey, then House Majority Leader, and helped draft the 1994 "Contract with America". Rose to become RNC chairman and became a successful lobbyist working alongside Jack Quinn, former chief of staff to Al Gore. Gillespie is a strategist who will play pivotal roles in future presidential campaigns.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: conservatism; conservatives; giuliani; mccain; romney; talkradio; topten; us
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

UK? I get it. U Klueless.


101 posted on 11/01/2007 7:43:25 PM PDT by Rockitz (This isn't rocket science- Follow the money and you'll find the truth.)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

TOP 100 conservatives list. PING.

The list is flawed, about 30-40 of the people arent real conservatives, but worth a gander.


102 posted on 11/01/2007 7:44:26 PM PDT by WOSG (Pro-life, pro-family, pro-freedom, pro-national sovereignty, pro-strong national defense, PRO-troops)
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To: calcowgirl

Nice to know that great coonservative leader Andrew Sullivan outranks Santorum, Buckley and Thompson!

Inconsistent is too kind.


103 posted on 11/01/2007 7:44:37 PM PDT by Soul Seeker
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy
The problem with this selection is easily understood.


104 posted on 11/01/2007 7:45:32 PM PDT by Iron Munro (Suppose you were an idiot, and suppose you were a member of Congress; but I repeat myself.)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

Giuliani number 1?

Dear Telegraph:

ESAD, or if you prefer, FOAD.


105 posted on 11/01/2007 7:45:32 PM PDT by Petronski (Here we go, Steelers. Here we go!)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

By the way, what the hell is Slick Willard doing on the list?

The idiots at the Telegraph have sure hit a new low with this one.


106 posted on 11/01/2007 7:47:08 PM PDT by Petronski (Here we go, Steelers. Here we go!)
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To: WOSG

After seeing who they placed on this list, I fully expected to see Montgomery Burns somewhere in the middle!

Absurb - simply absurd!


107 posted on 11/01/2007 7:48:34 PM PDT by headsonpikes (Genocide is the highest sacrament of socialism.)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

Anyone know why Haley Barbour didn’t run for the 2008 presidency?


108 posted on 11/01/2007 7:55:00 PM PDT by Canticle_of_Deborah (Romney Republican)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy; calcowgirl

Why not name Rudy the most influential concert pianist or the most influential astronomer or the most influential hockey player?


109 posted on 11/01/2007 8:13:39 PM PDT by ElkGroveDan (Take the wheel, Fred.)
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To: ElkGroveDan

You got it. It’s interesting how many names out of the Rudy camp made that list.
Methinks his propaganda machine has been working east of the Atlantic.
It reminds me of the international press that fueled Schwarzie’s campaigns.


110 posted on 11/01/2007 8:15:58 PM PDT by calcowgirl ("Liberalism is just Communism sold by the drink." P. J. O'Rourke)
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To: calcowgirl

I think that’s my new tagline.


111 posted on 11/01/2007 8:17:43 PM PDT by ElkGroveDan (If Rudy's a conservative, then I'm a concert pianist.)
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To: calcowgirl

fine tuning it


112 posted on 11/01/2007 8:18:59 PM PDT by ElkGroveDan (If Rudy's an influential conservative, then I'm an award winning concert pianist.)
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To: All
Come on...the Brits see "conservative" much different than we do...

Here's more info from June 07...

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani is the overwhelming favourite of grassroots British Conservatives to be the next American President. More than three times as many UK Conservative Party members opted for him than chose Senator John McCain.

These are the full results:

* Joe Biden: 0.3%
* Sam Brownback: 0.7%
* Hillary Clinton: 10.1%
* John Edwards: 2.2%
* Newt Gingrich: 4.6%
* Rudy Giuliani: 43.9%
* Al Gore: 5.9%
* John McCain: 14.4%
* Barack Obama: 10.1%
* Bill Richardson: 0.6%
* Mitt Romney: 2.3%
* Fred Thompson: 4.9%


All of the issues that make Giuliani a difficult choice for many Republicans - abortion, gay rights and gun control - are not big issues in British politics. His tough approach to crime, fiscal conservatism and national security credentials give him obvious appeal with British Tories. Many Brits will also see the 'Mayor of 9/11' as the kind of competent communicator that can begin to restore America's standing in Europe. If 'brand Bush' is toxic for many Europeans many see Giuliani as the candidate as well equipped as any Democrat to tackle anti-Americanism.

http://britainandamerica.typepad.com/britain_and_america/2007/06/british_conserv.html
113 posted on 11/01/2007 8:19:21 PM PDT by jonathanmo (So many phobes, so little time...)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

ping


114 posted on 11/01/2007 8:31:53 PM PDT by kinsman redeemer (The real enemy seeks to devour what is good.)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy
Drudge higher than Rush? I don't think so.
115 posted on 11/01/2007 8:41:42 PM PDT by LiteKeeper (Beware the secularization of America; the Islamization of Eurabia)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy
LOL. This list is an even bigger joke than the liberal list.

Rudy is less conservative than most Democrats. And that's saying something!
116 posted on 11/01/2007 8:57:50 PM PDT by Antoninus (Republicans who support Rudy owe Bill Clinton an apology.)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

117 posted on 11/01/2007 9:09:42 PM PDT by Bean Counter (Stout Hearts...)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

The most influential US conservatives: 1-20

1. RUDY GIULIANI
Republican presidential candidate


You have GOT TO BE F’ING KIDDING ME!


118 posted on 11/01/2007 10:03:39 PM PDT by Grunthor (Just askin’: Is the problem in the Middle East too much George Bush, and not enough George Patton?)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy
Giuliani is the wrong list. He ought to be on the liberal list. And, Romney hardly qualifies as a legitimate conservative either.

But, if these two are going to make, why isn't Arnold Schwarzenegger on the list?

119 posted on 11/01/2007 10:07:49 PM PDT by Ol' Sparky (Liberal Republicans are the greater of two evils)
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To: ConservativeStLouisGuy

Where’s Clarence Thomas?


120 posted on 11/01/2007 10:22:15 PM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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