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Nobody Does It to the Dems Like Newt
Tweet Share on Facebook February 1, 2007 CommentHe's back. A conservative back-bencher who fired up a lackluster gop and grabbed victory in 1994, Newt Gingrich is being tapped by the newly out-of-power group to help map a return trip. "Unlike anyone else in the party," says a prominent gop insider, "Newt knows how to fight back." A potential 2008 presidential candidate, Gingrich has been meeting with Republicans at closed-door House gop retreats and suggesting ways to squash the Dems.
Initially, the former speaker urged a less in-your-face approach, advising Republicans to put it in idle and wait for the Democrats to "implode on their own," one gop lawmaker tells us. "Newt advised not to get out in front of them too fast, let them make some mistakes," says the lawmaker. Well, it hasn't happened fast enough, and now Gingrich is sounding the attack charge. At a second retreat of conservatives this month, he challenged them to bark loudly and often at Democrats and use parliamentary moves to thwart the opponents. His first order to conservative rabble-rousers: Take over the gop message. Next, he suggested tactics and rules to delay legislation and tricks to trap Democrats. Finally, drop a bomb the media will love. The gop did, slapping Speaker Nancy Pelosi's demand for an "Air Force Three" to fly her home to San Francisco. Says a leadership aide, "He brings up things that we didn't even know about."
With Dan Gilgoff, Linda Robinson, Angie C. Marek, and Suzi Parker
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McCain Pitches National Security in Donor Memo
Tweet Share on Facebook January 30, 2007 Comment (1)GOP Sen. John McCain, whose Vietnam War record and support of the president's war in Iraq have made him the target of antiwar activists, plans to make national security a key element of his campaign, a new fundraising memo indicates.
"We live in a dangerous world and in the years ahead our nation will need strong and decisive leadership to set it on the right course," says the memo to donors. "Senator McCain's service to our country has prepared him to deliver the leadership we need, both here at home and in the world."
The letter, sent in an online form, asks donors to take a survey that "will help us refine a national agenda that will give top priority to the most important issues that affect your everyday life, and the lives of all Americans." Typically, fundraising letters touch on the key themes of upcoming campaigns, and McCain's was no different.
In addition to national security, the letter from campaign manager Terry Nelson puts other McCain issues at the front of the Arizona senator's agenda: "limited government, fiscal discipline, and common-sense conservative values."
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Tuesday's Cartoon
Tweet Share on Facebook January 30, 2007 Comment (1) -
$1 Million to Ride With Wolf
Tweet Share on Facebook January 29, 2007 Comment (1)What does it cost to hang with CNN star Wolf Blitzer and act like a cable newsman? How about a cool $1 million? At least that's what Dave Liniger, chair and cofounder of RE/MAX, paid this month for CNN's "Warrior One," the cable's Iraq war Hummer that Blitzer helped auction off at the famous Barrett-Jackson Collector Car Event in Scottsdale, Ariz. Auctioning the Hummer, refurbished by the TV show Overhaulin', was the idea of those who operated it in Iraq. Their goal: helping raise money for the Fisher House Foundation, which builds "comfort homes" for families of hospitalized military personnel. CNN sent the full $1 million to the charity.
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Monday's Cartoon
Tweet Share on Facebook January 29, 2007 Comment
—Stuart Carlson, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel -
Get Ready for Huckabee
Tweet Share on Facebook January 26, 2007 Comment (1)Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee will appear on Meet the Press Sunday to "talk about 2008," he tells Whispers in what is very likely his first foray into the 2008 presidential race.
While the GOP conservativea dark horse on the list of most political junkieswon't reveal his plans, sources tell our Suzi Parker that he will start the process and signal that during the interview. A clue? He travels to Iowa, the first presidential caucus state, Tuesday and Wednesday. While there, Huckabee is expected to make some waves by naming a high-profile GOP activist his Iowa chairman.
Last year, Huckabee hired Eric Woolson, George W. Bush's chief Iowa spokesman in 19992000, to coordinate his legislative, grass-roots, and public-relations efforts in Iowa and a handful of other states for his "Hope for America" PAC. Huckabee also speaks Sunday morning at a forum hosted by National Review. Over the past couple of weeks, Huckabee has been on a book-signing tour to tout his new effort, From Hope to Higher Ground: 12 Stops to Restoring America's Greatness, and the ex-guv seems pleased with the reviews.
"Response has been surprisingly positive with a typical response being that it's a thorough treatment of the major issues but from a common-sense, practical perspective rather than from a rigid, ideological one," Huckabee says. "Those who read the book are somewhat surprised to find a conservative Republican talking about the environment, music and the arts, alternative domestic energy sources, health, and the urgency of addressing the nation's infrastructure."
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Friday's Cartoon
Tweet Share on Facebook January 26, 2007 Comment
—Gary Markstein, Copley News Service
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Ford Still Likes Women and Football
Tweet Share on Facebook January 25, 2007 CommentYou've got to give former Rep. Harold Ford Jr. one thing: He's not going to let a nasty GOP attack ad change his public views of women and football.
Ford, introduced today as the new chairman of the moderate Democratic Leadership Council, said this when asked if he was planning to attend the upcoming Super Bowl: "I love Jesus, I love girls, and I absolutely love football." You might recall that near the end of his campaign for the Tennessee Senate seat won by Bob Corker, the GOP aired a widely criticized ad that featured a bare-shouldered blond beckoning in the camera: "Harold. Call me." It was an apparent bid to poke fun at the single Ford, who had attended a Playboy Super Bowl party in Jacksonville, Fla., in 2005. Like a pro, he shrugged it off today with his trademark humor.
"It's over with. We didn't win. We ran a hard campaign. A lot of things happened right there at the end of the race," he said, that cut short his bid. He lost by 50,000 votes of 1.8 million cast. Today he predicted a comeback. "Does it hurt losing? Oh, yeah," he said, but it won't stop him from running for a statewide seat again.
"I know I want to do it again one day. In my state it takes a few times to run, sometimes one or two times to run, before you win," he said.
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Thursday's Cartoon
Tweet Share on Facebook January 25, 2007 Comment (1)
—Chris Britt, Copley News Service -
And You Thought Katherine Harris Lost
Tweet Share on Facebook January 24, 2007 Comment (2)She may have given up her House seat to run a losing campaign for the Senate, but that doesn't mean former Florida Rep. Katherine Harris actually has to leave the House.
See, as a former representative, she keeps floor rights and she used them to the hilt Tuesday night before President Bush's State of the Union address. Our chief photodog, Charlie Archambault, caught her mingling on the Republican side and even handing out business cards.
GOP insiders say she still has a place in Washington and is penning a book. Recall that she lost her bid to unseat Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson in what was widely perceived as a bumbling campaign. But don't count her out: We've met her a couple of times, and she always seems on her game and mulling her future ventures.
