Posted on 02/05/2008 6:12:45 AM PST by OPS4
For Immediate Release February 5, 2008 Contact: Press Office 703-650-5550
U.S. Senator Sam Brownback, Former Governor Frank Keating, Congressman Spencer Bachus, Former Secretary William Ball to Campaign in North Dakota and Montana
VA -- U.S. Senator John McCain's presidential campaign today announced that U.S. Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS), former Governor Frank Keating (R-OK), Congressman Spencer Bachus (R-AL), and former Secretary of the Navy William Ball will campaign on behalf of John McCain in North Dakota and Montana on Tuesday, February 5th.
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
FARGO, NORTH DAKOTA
WHO: Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) Former Governor Frank Keating (R-OK) Congressman Spencer Bachus (R-AL) Former Secretary of the Navy William Ball
WHAT: Meet and Greet with Supporters and Press Conference
WHEN: Tuesday, February 5, 2008 at 10:15 a.m. CST Press Set Up Time: 9:30 a.m. CST
WHERE: Fargo/Hector International (FAR) Airport Fargo Jet Center 2801 32nd Ave N Fargo, ND 58102
BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA
WHO: Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) Former Governor Frank Keating (R-OK) Congressman Spencer Bachus (R-AL) Former Secretary of the Navy William Ball
WHAT: Meet and Greet with Supporters and Press Conference
WHEN: Tuesday, February 5, 2008 at 12:00 p.m. CST Press Set Up Time: 11:15 a.m. CST
WHERE: Bismarck Airport 2301 University Drive Bldg 17 Bismarck, North Dakota 58504
HELENA, MONTANA
WHO: Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) Former Governor Frank Keating (R-OK) Congressman Spencer Bachus (R-AL) Former Secretary of the Navy William Ball
WHAT: Press Conference
WHEN: Tuesday, February 5, 2008 at 3:00 p.m. MST Press Set Up Time: 2:45 p.m. MST
WHERE: Montana Club 24 W 6th Avenue Helena, Montana 59601
Republican front-runner John McCain continues today to collect key endorsements in states that hold nominating contests on Tuesday. Among them:
Former senator Don Nickles of Oklahoma, 2000 presidential candidate Steve Forbes of New York, and former Massachusetts governor Paul Cellucci. Cellucci chose McCain over Mitt Romney, also a former Massachusetts governor. He called McCain “a man of great principles and proven leadership.”
And all are Welcome to do the same to defeat The Marxist Clinton’s.
How do you know that for a fact? Were you there. I think some of his fellow POW’s might tell a different story.
As a Kansan, I can’t tell you how disgusted/dissapointed I am in Sam Wetback. And the @$$clown is going to run for governor at some point. Probably in order to get executive experience to make another run for El Presidente.
“How do you know that for a fact? Were you there. I think some of his fellow POWs might tell a different story.”
Your hatred of him is clouding your judgement. This story is well documented by numerous witnesses.
There are many reasons to dislike McCain starting with his assault on the first amendment. You can do this without disparaging his military record which is a good one.
The only vets out there criticizing him for anything are these people who think that the U.S. government left POWS in Viet Nam to rott when they knew there were existing POWs out there. Of course they don’t have any actual proof of this. I think it’s despicable to assume that a former POW would do that to POWs in Viet Nam. I have no doubt that there were men left behind in Viet Nam, but I would have to see some conclusive evidence that our government ignored them. Something more than Rambo II or Chuck Norris’s character Col Braddock.
Why would any conservative consider voting for someone who seriously considered running as Kerrys VP?
“Brownback is a RINO?”
He supported McCains amnesty plan.
I think the rumors that he sold out other prisoners in exchange for extra perks and comfort kinda rattles some people still.
I also noticed in the list someone posted of those supporting McCain, that Sam Johnson was not on that list. Who is Sam Johnson? Well, he just happens to another Vietnam vet who was also a POW. Why is his opinion of John McCain left off the table?
John McCain already moves to mollify the GOP right
Former Sen. Bob Dole, who knows a thing or three about losing elections to the Clintons, has some advice for conservative radio talk show impresario Rush Limbaugh, who’s been loudly complaining about John McCain for weeks.
Dole, the GOP candidate who got erased in the 1996 election by Bill Clinton, is trying to calm down the prominent conservative who’s threatening party unity with his outspoken on-air opposition to the not-so-conservative McCain, as he appears to zero in on the Republican nomination, which could be decided as early as today.
In a personal letter to Limbaugh released by the McCain campaign, Dole wisely first stroked the conservative broadcaster’s broad ego, then proceeded ...
to support McCain as a true conservative. “I have not seen you in a long time,” Dole wrote, “but I do hear you frequently and I know that you have serious reservations about Senator McCain.”
“I worked closely with Senator McCain when he came to the Senate in 1987,” Dole wrote, “until I departed (in 1996). I cannot recall a single instance when he did not support the Party on critical votes. (At my age, I cannot be entirely certain but here are a few key conservative examples:)”
Dole then lists nine major issues McCain supported. He provides some statistics showing McCain sometimes actually supported Republican presidents more and opposed Bill Clinton more than even Sen. Jesse Helms.
“I disagree with his votes against the Bush tax cuts,” Dole adds, “but I believe his pledge to make them permanent and I do not agree that Governor Romney ever suggested a timetable for troop withdrawals in Iraq.”
Dole notes that he wore a bracelet with McCain’s name during the Arizonan’s POW years. And he closes with, “Whoever wins the Republican nomination will need your enthusiastic support. Two terms for the Clintons are enough.”
The problem for the GOP’s conservative wing represented vocally by Limbaugh is that it dithered throughout 2007 awaiting the Second Coming of a Ronald Reagan, who would embody a perfect conservative fiscal, social and economic candidate. Fred Thompson flamed out with his four-hour workdays. Sam Brownback, Tommy Thompson and Jim Gilmore had the collective charisma of a corpse and got no political traction.
Rudy Giuliani, the hero of 9/11, waited too long to show his stuff and then didn’t have any. And Mitt Romney sounds like a genuine conservative convert now but the images of those liberal-looking YouTube videos from the 1990s linger.
Certainly, part of the blame for the party’s situation falls on President Bush, who didn’t help prepare a successor. He was comfortable sticking with Dick Cheney as his vice president for the second term, when he could have picked a new one in 2004 and given that VP four years to become the obvious inheritor.
Last summer there seemed no hurry for the conservatives to line up behind a favorite. McCain was clearly dead and nearly buried. But the oldest major candidate, the one who had the grit to endure some 2,000 days of solitary POW confinement and then did exactly what he said he could, he out-campaigned everyone else. Suddenly, McCain won New Hampshire, South Carolina and Florida.
I had no idea our nation was being run by so many RINOs and leftists. No wonder our country is such a mess.
“Does what you did 35 years ago give you a pass for the rest of your life? If so, then lets free that one Rep who went to prison, the guy who was a Vietnam Ace. Isn’t he a hero? “
Have you even read my posts???? My original statement was in response to another poster who said McCain was not a hero. My response to that person was that he indeed was a hero while a POW in Viet Nam and I outlined why. I then went on to say that there are plenty of things to attack McCain on starting with his assualt on the first amendment. The bravery he displayed as a fighter pilot and POW has been documented and should not be taken away from him. I never said I was giving him a pass. I was a Fred Thompson supporter and will not vote for McCain unless he has a very conservative VP candidate. I’m not happy with either Romney or McCain as a choice but I’ll take Romney over McCain.
Before responding, you should make sure you understand everything that has been said.
Oh, and the Vietnam Ace you were referring to was Duke Cunningham and I agree. He got what he deserved.
Maybe you have the weong set of glasses on.
If they're standing with McCain, they definitely are not conservatives.
We stand with the party candidate who can defeat the deomrats anything less is BULL>
Those who are standing with McCain are standing with the wrong candidate.
It was even worse than that. When it was obvious it was going to be defeated he went running down to the seargeant at arms yelling “The Senator From Kansas Wants To Change His Vote.”
I stand with him. If he loses and its Huckabee or Romney I will stand with the party candidate.
I believe the best candidate who can defeat Hillary Marxist Clinton is McCain.
Your choice. Not me.
If he loses and its Huckabee or Romney I will stand with the party candidate.
I, too, will vote for whoever the party's candidate is in November. (Wouldn't have been able to say that if it were Rudy.)
I believe the best candidate who can defeat Hillary Marxist Clinton is McCain.
Obviously, I disagree.
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