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1 posted on 12/15/2002 7:59:46 AM PST by ewing
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To: ewing
The dems want a more leaning left moderate republican ML as they are scared crapless at the judicial nominees and partial birth abortion. Santorum is best choice but no matter what the dems gotta get over their minority and face the fact their commie issues ain't gonna see light.
99 posted on 12/15/2002 11:25:01 AM PST by TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
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To: ewing
What we have-

What we need-


103 posted on 12/15/2002 11:27:24 AM PST by socal_parrot
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To: ewing

Karl Rove

"Keywords" of Association with Karl Rove

content="Karl Rove, political consultant, lee atwater, phil gramm, kay bailey hutchison, republican party, george walker bush, george w. bush, politics, politician, president, 2000 campaign, Yale University, Skull and Bones Society, texas politics, texas biography, famous texans, texas history, state of texas, texas governor, united states president, u.s. president, united states vice president, u.s. vice president, texas house of representatives, texas senate, white house, george bush presidential library and museum, bush library and museum

"I have no interest whatsoever in being in Washington DC. I'm happy right here." --Karl Rove, when asked if he will head for the White House if Phil Gramm, the candidate he handled in 1996, wins the presidency.

Best known for: George W. Bush's chief strategist. Consultant to U.S. Senators Phil Gramm, Kay Bailey Hutchison and many other right-wing politicians.

Born: December 25, 1950 in Denver, and grew up in Colorado, Utah and Nevada.

Family: His father was a geologist. At age nine, Rove became a faithful Republican when he backed Richard Nixon against John Kennedy.

Education: Attended nearly half a dozen colleges without getting a degree.

Profession: Teaches graduate students at the University of Texas.

Career: In the years of the Watergage scandal, Rove's career as a big-time political handler began with a motley crew of friends and associates. He was chairman of the College Republicans when George Herbert Walker Bush was chairman of the state Republican Party in 1973. He won the presidency of the College Republicans in a race against Terry Dolan. The late Lee Atwater, who later became famous as the political attack dog for the Reagan-Bush team, managed Rove's campaign. Dolan went on to become a Soft Money pioneer by helping form the National Conservative Political Action Committee, then died of AIDS in 1986 at age 36. Dolan's advisers in his loss to Rove were Charlie Black, Paul Manafort and Roger Stone. Those three were later instrumental in the success of Ronald Reagan's 1984 campaign.

Atwater joined the consulting firm of Black, Manafort and Stone after the '84 election. The firm later worked for the 1988 Bush-Quayle campaign. Two of Nixon's dirty tricksters also worked for Bush-Quayle: Frederick Malek, Bush's Republican National Committee rep, who had compiled lists of Jews in the Bureau of Labor Statistics as part of Nixon's investigation of a "Jewish Cabal;" and Dwight Chapin, who was jailed for lying to a grand jury about hiring Donald Sigretti to disrupt the 1972 Democratic primary campaign of Senator Edward Muskie. Chapin worked under Manafort in 1988. The firm's other clients included drug-connected Bahamian Prime Minister Oscar Pindling, Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos, and UNITA, the South African-supported Angolan rebel group led by CIA asset Jonas Savimbi. Lee Atwater lobbied for UNITA. All of which began when Atwater was introduced to George Bush in 1973, by his good friend Karl Rove.

In 1980, Bush hired Rove to help him run for president. He was the first person Bush hired for the campaign. Atwater became chairman of the Republican National Committee and one of Bush's closest political advisors. In 1981, when Bush became Reagan's vice president, Rove started his consulting business, Karl Rove & Co. His first direct mail client was Bill Clements, the first Republican in a century to become Texas governor.

Rove began working for Bill Clements in 1978. Four years later, he was working for Phil Gramm, who was in the U.S. House of Representatives as an old-style conservative Texas Democrat. In 1984, Rove helped Gramm, now a Republican, defeat Democrat Lloyd Doggett in the race for U.S. Senate. It was that same year, 1984, that Rove handled direct-mail for the Reagan-Bush campaign. In 1986, he helped Clements become governor a second time. In 1988, Rove helped Tom Phillips to victory, the first Republican elected to the Texas Supreme Court. Ten years later Republicans held all nine seats. Mark McKinnon, a former Democratic consultant who defected to the Bush campaign, called Rove the "Bobby Fischer of politics. He not only sees the board, he sees about 20 moves ahead."

Rove has been closely advising George W. Bush since he announced he was a candidate for Governor in November 1993. By January 1994, Bush had spent $613,930 on the race against incumbent Ann Richards. Over half of that, $340,579, went to Rove. In a state long dominated by Democrats, albeit right-wing ones, every statewide elected office was, by 1999, held by a Republican. Many of those politicians succeeded with the help of Rove. During the November election, the half-dozen candidates he advised were all winners.

Bush has called Rove a close friend and confidant, and a man with good judgment. Almost a quarter of all the money Bush's presidential exploratory committee spent from January to the end of March, 1999,  went to Rove's consulting firm ($220,228). Rove soon sold his consulting firm to devote himself to the Bush campaign. Long known locally as a political kingmaker, the possibility of a second Bush in the White House has made Rove more famous.

Sources: Robert Bryce, "The Man Behind the Candidate," The Austin Chronicle, March 18, 1994, pp. 23, 28-30, 32-33; Robert Bryce, "The fab four:Meet the people maneuvering behind the scenes to put George W. Bush in the White House," Salon magazine, June 16, 1999, (http://www.salon.com/news/feature/1999/06/16/advisors/index1.html); Paul Brancato, “Bush League” illustrated cards (Forestville, California: Eclipse Enterprises, 1989), pp. 5, 13, 18.

 


116 posted on 12/15/2002 11:37:57 AM PST by TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
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To: ewing
Bill Frist Voting Record

No matter who the ML is the dems will gripe as they are using a stall tactic of spin. The conservative Vs. Liberal Leftist issues and judicial nominees are what concerns them,as they are so far left they are self made demons that have no issues but know what they don't want and that is conservative judges at all costs of stalling and railroading and taking the heat off themselves.

132 posted on 12/15/2002 11:47:45 AM PST by TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
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To: ewing
IF LOTT WANTS TO END THIS ONCE AND FOR ALL...

I think Lott should just blatently fess up and say he 'is' predjudiced against the black progressive leftist communistic caucus in which the Clinton's have made of the VERY HARD LEFT, democratic party.

This way they have to shut up and then the leftist communists in the media and politics and Hollywood can scream how right winger he is. THEN he is only guilty of being an extremist right winger not a racist. And then with class he can then say that he will 'consult with his fellow republicans, and see if any voting considerations are at hand for the ML role. And make clear he will remain in the senate.

Then the dems will be back in the spotlight (where they belong) as they have NO ISSUES but to bash and call names) and deal with the judicial nominees and other pertinent issues they can no longer try to stop.

136 posted on 12/15/2002 11:58:40 AM PST by TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
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To: ewing
What's the difference, anyway? With the term limits we have in this country won't he be, like, out, like, next year (or is it the year after that)?


150 posted on 12/15/2002 12:26:51 PM PST by Revolting cat!
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To: ewing
So...what is Frist's position on partial birth abortion?
159 posted on 12/15/2002 12:44:52 PM PST by hove
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To: ewing
Rumor has it Lott will resign as a senator if he is outted. That puts the power of the Senate back in the hands of the Dems. Tenn. has a Dem Governor.
If Dems take over again, we'd better start stocking upon Turbins and Burkas.
Dems hate America. They want their "new and improved USSA."
183 posted on 12/15/2002 4:36:24 PM PST by concerned about politics
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To: ewing
This is rather blunt. But it is the truth! Bush, with all of his grovelling gets what? About 8% of the black vote. If we kowtow to the neoracists and deep six Lott, what are we going to get? 8-1/2% Didn't La. election prove that blacks vote as a monolithic block according to how their handlers tell them. It's going to take generations or some great change before most blacks think for themselves and spread their votes over the political spectrum and vote according to their interests rather than how the liberal RAT plantation owners tell them.
I didn't like the impeachment-fixer Lott before this stupid incident but we can't secretly dump him now at the behest of Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson.
198 posted on 12/15/2002 6:18:34 PM PST by 2nd Amendment
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To: ewing
He should NOT LEAVE LEADERSHIP NOW!

He should perhaps step down in the summer, unless unbelievable gains are made in the Senate agenda that prove him effective.

Let the Dems gear up to use him like Gingrich then he should pull himself between summer and Dec. 2003.
212 posted on 12/15/2002 7:57:31 PM PST by A CA Guy
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To: ewing
"white courtesy phone for Trent Lott....."
241 posted on 12/16/2002 7:36:53 AM PST by finnman69
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To: ewing
Of course Karl Rove wants Bill Frist as Senate Majority Leader. Frist has a weak moral compass and will make whatever ideological concessions necessary to support the Administration. He isn't an ego like Lott is, and will be more than happy to function as Karl Rove's "b!tch." Depending on what you think about Karl Rove and his strategies, this could be a good thing or a bad thing.
245 posted on 12/16/2002 8:26:14 AM PST by LibertyGirl77
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To: ewing
I am really starting to wonder about some things.

Is Rove really at the center of all this? Does he think Pres. Bush can win reelection easier with the Senate in Democrat hands?

A not unlikely scenario: if Lott is pushed out of his position as Majority Leader, he resigns, he is replaced with a Democrat, and Chafee bolts. Daschle is back in charge.

And Bush easily wins in 2004.

Is this the best strategy for the G.O.P. as a whole, or just for Rove?

266 posted on 12/16/2002 10:37:15 AM PST by B Knotts
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To: ewing
This whole farce is typical Republicanism....

Forget about the enemy and kill each otherThese Senatorial A.Hs will give away control again!!!

267 posted on 12/16/2002 10:59:02 AM PST by rmvh
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To: ewing

268 posted on 12/16/2002 11:04:17 AM PST by SerpentDove
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