Florida Senate Race Lays the Ground for the GOP’s Ideological Battle
Florida’s squishy, big-spending Republican Governor, Charlie Crist jumped into the race for Senate today. He’s already been criticized for being “too moderate,” but many in the party are looking for just that. Crist was endorsed almost immediately by the National Republican Senatorial Commitee, and the media has been all over him. But it’s not going to be that easy. Conservative rising-star Marco Rubio is pledging a tough primary, pitting Republicans that want to spread the conservative ideals of limited government and free markets against the squishy stimulus loving establishment. Rubio shot out this ad right after Crist’s announcement:
May 13, 2009 2 Comments
McKinnon: Aboard the Bush Plane
From The Daily Beast:
…
“Grateful.”
That’s the word expressed not just by former President Bush, but his staff, as well, on the last flight home aboard on what any other day of the last eight years would have been Air Force One, but today was Special Air Mission 28000.
I can only imagine the blogosphere lighting up with what will be some version of “good riddance.” But while I expected the president’s mood to be defiant, bitter, defensive, or vengeful toward his critics, he was anything but. As he toured the cabin of the airplane throughout the flight, visiting with old friends, family, and staffers, he was filled with equanimity, grace, and a generosity of spirit.
January 21, 2009 No Comments
President Bush Declares Jan. 18th “National Sanctity of Human Life Day”
From Politico:
In one of his final actions in the White House, President Bush on Thursday declared Jan. 18 to be “National Sanctity of Human Life Day.”
“All human life is a gift from our creator that is sacred, unique and worthy of protection. On National Sanctity of Human Life Day, our country recognizes that each person, including every person waiting to be born, has a special place and purpose in this world,” reads the presidential proclamation.
“The most basic duty of government is to protect the life of the innocent. My administration has been committed to building a culture of life by vigorously promoting adoption and parental notification laws, opposing federal funding for abortions overseas, encouraging teen abstinence and funding crisis pregnancy programs,” the proclamation continues.
“The sanctity of life is written in the hearts of all men and women. On this day and throughout the year, we aspire to build a society in which every child is welcome in life and protected in law. We also encourage more of our fellow Americans to join our just and noble cause. History tells us that with a cause rooted in our deepest principles and appealing to the best instincts of our citizens, we will prevail.”
(h/t Kathryn Jean Lopez)
January 16, 2009 No Comments
Bush Prepares His Post-Presidential Office
From Politico:
President Bush is naming a high-powered staff to launch him on a productive post-presidency that, at least at first, will be busy behind the scenes and quiet on the surface.
The Office of George W. Bush will be in Dallas, near his presidential library at Southern Methodist University.
The president plans to write a book, give speeches, help build his presidential library and start a “freedom institute” to prolong his legacy, with a special emphasis on his “freedom agenda” of promoting democracy for the Middle East. [Read More]
January 15, 2009 No Comments
President Bush Will be Missed, A Look Back at His Second Inaugural Address
h/t TruthCaucus
In his second inaugural address, the president presented his vision for freedom and democracy around the globe. For those that now only remember his presidency as full of blunders, and his speeches full of malapropisms, you have misunderestimated him.
Check back on inauguration day for thank you messages to President Bush from our editors and contributors.
Giving Credit Where Credit is Due: Bush’s Better World, from The New York Post
January 14, 2009 No Comments
WaPo: Gitmo Prosecutions “in Chaos”?
That’s what an article by Peter Finn in tomorrow’s Washington Post claims. The statement that “the system of handling evidence against detainees at Guantanamo Bay is so chaotic that it is impossible to prepare a fair and successful prosecution,” comes from Lt. Col. Darrell Vandeveld, a former Military prosecutor who resigned last year citing “a crisis of conscience.” Vandeveld filed a declaration in federal court yesterday supporting a petition to have the charges against Gitmo detainee Mohammed Jawad withdrawn because he had been “tortured” while in Afghan and subsequently US custody. Jawad was captured in Afghanistan in 2002 after severely wounding two US soldiers and their interpreter in a grenade attack. Military officials have rejected Vandeveld’s claims. Finn cites e-mail correspondence with chief military prosecutor Col. Lawrence Morris who has this to say:
“I am happy to respond under oath to any of the allegations,” Col. Lawrence Morris, chief military prosecutor, said in an e-mailed statement. Vandeveld, he said, “was disappointed when I did not choose him to become a team leader, and he asked to resign shortly thereafter, never having raised an ethical concern during the 9 months I supervised him. I relied on his representations to me about Jawad and other cases I entrusted to him (which included his advocacy of a 40-year sentence for Mr. Jawad the week before he departed).”
According to Finn, military judges in this case as well as in the case of Omar Khadr, have requested to be briefed on the supposed disorganization of evidence in Gitmo prosecutions, and a verdict in Jawad’s case is expected within 30 days.
Seems like Bush Derangement Syndrome stuff to me. It seems liberals and anti-Americans like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are obsessed with this, but no one else is writing about it. As I see it anyone who throws a grenade at US soldiers only deserves the worst. Andrew McCarthy of National Review makes what I think is a pertinent comment while discussing Obama’s plans to close Gitmo at the NYT blog:
[...]the purpose of holding enemy combatants in wartime (which the Supreme Court has repeatedly validated, as recently as the 2004 Hamdi case) is not to prosecute them but to remove them from the battlefield and derive intelligence. Prosecution is incidental to that purpose, and often not practical. If your first imperative in detaining people is the right one (i.e., to defeat the enemy and protect Americans), you are going to detain many people who cannot be prosecuted at all, let alone “swiftly.”
Check back in the morning for updates.
January 13, 2009 No Comments
Lowry: Ten Bush Mistakes
From the Editor of National Review:
President Bush infamously couldn’t or (more likely) wouldn’t identify mistakes he’d made during his presidency at a 2004 press conference. In a newly self-reflective mood in his twilight hours in the White House, Bush has opened up about what went wrong.
In a jaunty performance at his final press conference, he said pursuing Social Security reform instead of immigration reform immediately after the 2004 election was a “mistake,” as was hanging the “Mission Accomplished” banner on the tower of the USS Abraham Lincoln. As he heads to Texas, Bush should reflect on these 10 more important mistakes that shaped his presidency:
…
Oddly enough for a president denounced as an executive monster by his perfervid critics, many of Bush’s mistakes involve not being active enough or taking a stronger hand. How that came to be so with a president who believed so deeply in strong leadership should long occupy Bush, and fair-minded historians. [Read the List]
January 13, 2009 No Comments
Barnes: Ten Things Bush Got Right
From the Weekly Standard:
The postmortems on the presidency of George W. Bush are all wrong. The liberal line is that Bush dangerously weakened America’s position in the world and rushed to the aid of the rich and powerful as income inequality worsened. That is twaddle. Conservatives–okay, not all of them–have only been a little bit kinder. They give Bush credit for the surge that saved Iraq, but not for much else.
He deserves better. His presidency was far more successful than not. And there’s an aspect of his decision-making that merits special recognition: his courage. Time and time again, Bush did what other presidents, even Ronald Reagan, would not have done and for which he was vilified and abused. That–defiantly doing the right thing–is what distinguished his presidency. [Read More]
January 12, 2009 No Comments
President Bush’s Radio Address on Gaza
From the President’s Radio Address:
I have been monitoring the situation in the Middle East closely with the members of my national security team. Secretary Rice is actively engaged in diplomacy. And I’ve been in contact with leaders throughout the region — including the King of Saudi Arabia, the King of Jordan, the President of Egypt, the President and Prime Minister of the Palestinian Territories, and the Prime Minister of Israel.
This recent outburst of violence was instigated by Hamas — a Palestinian terrorist group supported by Iran and Syria that calls for Israel’s destruction. Eighteen months ago, Hamas took over the Gaza Strip in a coup, and since then has imported thousands of guns and rockets and mortars. Egypt brokered a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, but Hamas routinely violated that ceasefire by launching rockets into Israel. On December 19th, Hamas announced an end to the ceasefire and soon unleashed a barrage of rockets and mortars that deliberately targeted innocent Israelis — an act of terror that is opposed by the legitimate leader of the Palestinian people, President Abbas.
In response to these attacks on their people, the leaders of Israel have launched military operations on Hamas positions in Gaza. As a part of their strategy, Hamas terrorists often hide within the civilian population, which puts innocent Palestinians at risk.
Read and Listen to the Entire Address Here.
h/t StandWithUS
January 8, 2009 No Comments
Obama Conversation With Bush May Clear Up Transition Confusion on Hamas
From The Wall Street Journal’s Washington Wire:
President George W. Bush and President-elect Barack Obama discussed the situation in Gaza briefly during a telephone call on New Year’s Day, the White House confirmed. That appeared to suggest that U.S. policy on the Gaza conflict might not be as confused as some analysts fear.
January 6, 2009 No Comments







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