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Meet Bill Frist: Senator championed confirmation of pro-abortion Satcher
WorldNetDaily ^ | 12-19-02 | Joseph Farrah

Posted on 12/19/2002 9:01:50 PM PST by Salvation

Meet Bill Frist –
heir to Lott throne

Senator championed confirmation
of pro-abortion Satcher, fights fat


Posted: December 19, 2002
9:30 p.m. Eastern

By Joseph Farah
© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com

WASHINGTON – Everyone knows Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., is the upper house's only physician. But who is this man who appears likely to become the next Senate majority leader?

Opponents of abortion on demand are likely to be deeply disappointed. While Trent Lott, R-Miss., had promised to bring to the floor for a quick, early vote a bill restricting partial-birth abortion, Frist championed the nomination by President Clinton of former Surgeon General David Satcher, a fervent supporter of unrestricted abortion and someone who actually performed abortions.

Satcher continued to serve in the Bush administration until earlier this year.

While Satcher's nomination was widely presumed to have originated with Vice President Al Gore, like Satcher, a Tennessean, his confirmation was actually championed by Frist.

Frist once told National Public Radio that there are no absolute right, absolute wrong answers in medicine. During last year's stem-cell debate, Frist proposed using leftover embryos from in vitro fertilization clinics for scientific research. The Weekly Standard also noted that Frist believes there is a moral imperative to use one unsalvageable life to save another.

Frist's other pet causes while serving in the Senate have been fighting AIDS in Africa and fighting obesity among Americans. He believes the federal government needs to increase funding of physical education programs in school. He thinks spending $125 million on a Centers for Disease Control program encouraging children to engage in athletics is another top priority.

He sponsored a bill earlier this year that would have authorized a nationwide ad campaign to promote better nutrition and exercise and would have authorized money for bicycle paths, parks and recreation centers.

According to sources close to the White House, Frist has been favored by Bush political adviser Karl Rove to take the helm of the Senate Republicans ever since Lott got himself embroiled in controversy with his remarks at Sen. Strom Thurmond's 100th birthday party.

Now Frist reportedly is considering a bid to oust Lott.

According to the Associated Press, GOP aides say Frist, now in his second term, is gauging support from his colleagues, having spent time sounding them out by telephone.


Sen. Bill Frist

One aide, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Frist would consider running for the job if colleagues asked him to do so "for the sake of the Senate as an institution or the long-term agenda of the Republican Party.''

In a sign that Frist might be building momentum, a Republican aide close to No. 2 Senate Republican Don Nickles of Oklahoma said Nickles would likely support a race by Frist.

Nickles, a longtime rival of Lott, believes he would have less support from colleagues than Frist for majority leader, the aide said.

Meanwhile, Lott sustained a double-barreled setback this week as Sen. Lincoln Chafee, R-R.I., broke ranks to call for a change in party leadership and Secretary of State Colin Powell forcefully criticized his controversial remarks on race.

"I believe it's time to make a change," Chafee told reporters in his home state. "I think the process is happening," he said, encouraging the White House to step in to help ease Lott from power.

Powell, the highest-ranking African American in the Bush administration, made his first comments on a controversy that flared this month when Lott spoke favorably of Sen. Strom Thurmond's segregationist presidential campaign of a half-century ago.

"If the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't have had all these problems over all these years either," Lott said at Thurmond's 100th birthday.

"I was disappointed in the senator's statement," Powell said. "I deplored the sentiments behind the statement."

"There was nothing about the 1948 election or the Dixiecrat agenda that should have been acceptable in any way to any American at that time or any American now."

Lott has maintained a defiant pose, insisting he would fight for his job at a Jan. 6 meeting of GOP rank and file senators and swiping at suggestions from anonymous officials with ties to the White House that he step down.

"There seems to be some things that are seeping out that have not been helpful," he said in Biloxi, Miss. "I understand how that happens because you've got a lot of people who work there that have different points of view," he told reporters.

"But I believe they do support what I am trying to do here and the president will continue to do so."

As WorldNetDaily reported earlier, nearly two-thirds of Americans believe Lott should be replaced as Republican leader, according to the results of a new survey.

Sixty-two percent say GOP senators should replace Lott when they meet Jan. 6, compared to just 18 percent who think he should remain the party's senate chief.

First winning entry to the Senate in 1994, Frist was re-elected in 2000 by the largest margin ever received by a candidate for statewide election in Tennessee history. He's the first practicing physician elected to the chamber since 1928.

A native of Nashville, Frist founded and subsequently directed the Vanderbilt Transplant Center, which became an internationally renowned center of multi-organ transplantation. He's performed some 200 heart and lung transplants and has written more than 100 articles, chapters and abstracts on medical research, as well as three books.

Related stories:

Poll: Most want Lott replaced

Lott's daughter hits back at segregationist


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: abortion; abortionlist; catholiclist; frist; lameoneissuejerks; lott; monomania; nhs; notpureenough; nuttylitmustests; physician; prolife; senate
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To: Howlin
The janitors.
161 posted on 12/19/2002 10:33:36 PM PST by Sir Gawain
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To: ApesForEvolution
I'm sorry to see your recent views attracting this flotsam. Even though I don't agree with you much on the "flap", I appreciate your views on infanticide. We should all jettison those who think it's a light matter burdening our party.
162 posted on 12/19/2002 10:33:57 PM PST by wardaddy
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To: wardaddy
You are so right.
163 posted on 12/19/2002 10:34:22 PM PST by EternalVigilance
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To: Howlin

If we're talking about the mess that we call a senate, they're probably not seated yet.

164 posted on 12/19/2002 10:34:42 PM PST by Jhoffa_
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To: ApesForEvolution
Another Psalmist!
165 posted on 12/19/2002 10:34:57 PM PST by John Valentine
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To: wardaddy
**Man.....what kind of Republican are you? Let me guess.....instead of the party being founded in your hometown...you actually founded the party....lol**

There you go, telling those AlGore stories again! LOL!

166 posted on 12/19/2002 10:35:07 PM PST by Salvation
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To: Jhoffa_
Probably not even born yet.
167 posted on 12/19/2002 10:35:16 PM PST by Howlin
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To: EternalVigilance
Well I still believe the bell curve would fit nicely over the Republican party and you'd have 15 - 20 % on the left and right and the middle making up some 50-60 %. With a large enough universe the curve works... That's why I don't think the far right nor the far left are anywhere the majority of the party. It's the moderates...... and they are conservative but just not in the same way or to the same degree you may be. Sorry but that is how I see it. Otherwise all these right sided candidates would be winning and they don't other than once in a while...

Night to you ......
168 posted on 12/19/2002 10:35:18 PM PST by deport
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To: sinkspur
Doctors don't perform abortions, only sicko murderers.
169 posted on 12/19/2002 10:35:37 PM PST by ApesForEvolution
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To: wardaddy
They're socially conservative dems. No question about it. Their financial desires for big government programs give them away. But hey, if we're not gonna buy votes we might not win, right? /sarcasm
170 posted on 12/19/2002 10:35:55 PM PST by Black Agnes
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To: america-rules
Sinkspur said: "But if, as part of that 1%, he did five or ten, well, hell, that's only five or ten, right?"

america-rules responded" So no doctor can perform an abortion no matter what? Read what your saying man because you're sounding a little freeky ?

If the fact that a person considers it "freeky" to kill one, two,ten, or a thousand human lives via abortion, then that person shows his/her true colors. If your pro-abortion, stand by your position overtly, and don't try to hide behind the "numbers" of abortion a doctor performs. It is murder or it is not; stake your ground and defend that ground on the merits.

And if it is "freeky" to be for the life of the unborn, count more than half of this country "freeky".

171 posted on 12/19/2002 10:36:57 PM PST by power2
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To: Howlin
Cool! Then it's not too late to abort those weirdos!

Freaks! LOL!

172 posted on 12/19/2002 10:38:50 PM PST by Jhoffa_
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To: John Lenin
"Outlawing abortion is dumb, regulating it is the way to go"

Regulate it? What, you get one murder followed by a hasty sterilization so you can't do it again?

Murder by any other name is till murder and little boys and girls, the most defenseless in our society that have no voice yet, must have the same rights as you or I. Given by God and protected by law.
173 posted on 12/19/2002 10:39:08 PM PST by ApesForEvolution
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To: EternalVigilance
I wish I (we) weren't?

Where did all the libertarians go anyhow?

Seems like everyone who posts now sans tpaine is a card carrying Pubbie.
174 posted on 12/19/2002 10:39:31 PM PST by wardaddy
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To: Salvation
Satcher continued to serve in the Bush administration until earlier this year.

Didn't Bush have the power to remove him? I believe he did.

All this up roar over Lott's misunderstood words and Bush gets a pass about something like this?

Is this the Twilight Zone or what?

175 posted on 12/19/2002 10:39:44 PM PST by SwordofTruth
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To: sinkspur
"But I'm just kind of curious at how those who were willing to destroy Trent Lott over remarks made in tribute to an old man on his 100th birthday are perfectly willing to look the other way when Frist's record and his ACU record are examined."

I don't think much of the dislike is about the original foot-in-the-mouth remark, do you? It was the run & hide behavior afterwards, then the endless phony apologies, and the BET interview was what topped it off for me.

But don't you think many still have a bitter taste because of Lott's bungling of the impeachment trial? ( I certainly do.) Because of that, and the afore mentioned things, Lott hasn't endeared himself to anyone, including me.

176 posted on 12/19/2002 10:40:15 PM PST by FBD
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To: Salvation
No...Al invented politcs itself back in the cave....in his spare time when he and Tipper came up for air.
177 posted on 12/19/2002 10:40:44 PM PST by wardaddy
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To: Torie
I am not sure what a surgeon general's view on abortion has to do with his job

Duh, could it be because abortion is an issue that involves doctors and medicine, and he's the chief government doctor ?

Sounds to me like you're just a pro-abort. Do you think Dr. Kevorkian would be fine for surgoen general, because "you're not sure what a surgeon general's view on 'mercy killing' has to do with his job"?

178 posted on 12/19/2002 10:40:53 PM PST by churchillbuff
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To: SwordofTruth
**Is this the Twilight Zone or what?**

Not quite.
179 posted on 12/19/2002 10:41:01 PM PST by Salvation
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To: wardaddy
"Social Conservatives are the base of this party ...."

Yea, and 50% of them are pro choice !

Another 25% are pro choice if it were their un-married daughter...

I personally would vote to make any abortion a capital crime even in rape or incest (Killin is killin) but making it the sole issue is just freekin stupid !

180 posted on 12/19/2002 10:41:03 PM PST by america-rules
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