Posted on 03/30/2002 11:39:41 AM PST by GailA
Wrong you are. I did not vote for Governor Sundquist last election I went Independent. I wish the Dems had won that election. Yes that's what I said and I posted why. It's the truth. The re-elected RINO split the party. If Lamar gets it I will seek out an Independent close to my beliefs. I will vote for that person. You cheapen the blood bought sacred right and duty to vote by subverting and then perverting it's very meaning. You make voting to be everything that is isn't meant to be and ignore the very principle it was founded on.
No I'm not. But I can tell you know nothing of Tennessee politics especially Governor Don Sundquist. Here is what I posted earlier if you can understand it. Sundquist was the Dems man in a GOP suit. His agenda was theirs and theirs is his. Now follow me closely as to what happened next. About half the GOP followed the governor because of party loyality and as well helped usher in the Dems agenda. That left the other half the conservatives to fight the battle.
Now if he had lost the GOP would have at least been clear on an agenda and had a full fight against the pathetic leglislation being pushed. In other words a Dem governor would have been elected with a united GOP working against him. Instead we got a Dem Governor a RINO who did the Dems dirty work and split the party in the process. Do you comprehend? Sometimes there are far worse things than losing an office to another party.
I'm just not as outraged as you are about CFR. I still believe that parts of it are so unconstitutional that they will not stand. But even if they do, I do not think Bush is a jerk. We simply did not do a good enough job educating the public about this bill. The tide was against us and we need to move on to more important battles. If you want to be a constitutional purist like Ron Paul fine, but we need to win elections and control Congress first. It's going to take some time to move this country totally in the direction we want and Bush is a patient man. There's nothing done that can't be undone.
March 29, 2002
State income tax issue far removed from U.S. Senate
The Oak Ridger
Lamar Alexander may face a tough primary contest, made all the more difficult by the double standard the media typically employ when covering election campaigns.
The former Tennessee governor who is seeking the Senate seat Fred Thompson will leave is making his primary pitch to his party's more conservative base, in precisely the manner that Democratic hopefuls seek to woo the more liberal activist base of the Democratic Party, a base vitally critical to primary success.
Of course, never mind that Republican and Democratic primary winners invariably must scamper back to a more sensible political middle if they wish to achieve success in general elections where Independent and crossover voters typically spell the margin of victory.
The liberal New Republic magazine in its issue of March 25 draws contrast to Mr. Alexander's words of Jan. 7, 1999, when he chided then-fellow candidate George Bush on his use of the term "compassionate conservative."
Calling them "weasel words," Mr. Alexander likened Bush's reference to compassionate conservatism with Al Gore's use of the term "practical idealism."
"They're designed to mean nothing," he scolded Mr. Bush.
How things change. Earlier this month, Senate candidate Lamar Alexander addressed President Bush this way: "I think President Bush has given a good, clear definition of that and has done a real good job."
Well, the former governor can expect to be chided on that one.
But where he has more serious trouble, we think, is in trying to endear himself to the party's conservative wing by distancing himself from ongoing discussions of a state income tax, clearly a hot-button issue for the state.
But it is just that ... a state issue. Mr. Alexander could, and should, wisely opt out of this serious and needed debate by insisting appropriately that the income tax issue is a matter that must be decided in Nashville, not in Washington, where he hopes to wind up.
Our Tennessee Republican Party must unite after the Republican primary and support the candidate that wins that primary, no matter who the winner is. If your guy does not win the primary and you decide to "take your ball home with you so nobody else can play", you will do nothing more than help elect Bob Clement and support Tom Daschle's liberal agenda. Then you can mona and groan about the Democrats winning the 2004 Presidential election and worse yet, you can moan and groan about having to have another Clionton in office for 8 years. Think about it.
Well if another Clinton gets in as POTUS who do we have to thank? Think about that Party Man!!! "Let's move on" Bush and the Not Guilty Senate RINO's. Oh yes we must have more of them./sarcasm
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