Results 1 to 7 of 7

Thread: Dubya a conservative?

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Pennsylvania
    Posts
    564
    <TABLE =wide cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0>
    <T>
    <TR>
    <TD>
    <DIV =msgarea><TT>Richard Viguerie tells it like it is. </TT></DIV>
    <DIV =msgarea><TT></TT></DIV>
    <DIV =msgarea><TT>I noted that Rick Santorum steered clear of a meeting with Dubya in Philadelphia, although I'm getting a feeling that it may be too late to shift gears.</TT></DIV>
    <DIV =msgarea><TT></TT></DIV>
    <DIV =msgarea><TT>If we're stuck with a Democrat-elect congress a year from now, you can thank GWB and GWB alone for alienating the Republican voter base.</TT></DIV>
    <DIV =msgarea><TT>************************************* *************</TT></DIV>
    <DIV =msgarea><TT></TT></DIV>
    <DIV =msgarea><TT>Viguerie: Elections Show GOP Paying Price for Bush

    Results from Tuesday's elections confirm the results of a recent poll that showed President Bush's move to the left has hurt Republican electoral chances, said conservative icon Richard Viguerie.

    The day after Democrats won the race for governor in New Jersey and red state Virginia, Viguerie said:

    "Republican candidates yesterday paid the price for President Bush's move to the left exhibited by his expansion of government programs, power and spending at the expense of personal, religious and economic freedom.

    "He has not been in sync with conservatives, who are the mainstream of American voters, on immigration and too many other policies.

    "Voters rejected the politics of compromise by President Bush and the Republican leadership, and want a more principled, populist direction within the GOP."

    In the poll by Viguerie's ConservativeHQ.com:

    69 percent of those surveyed said Bush is not governing as a conservative.

    62 percent said they were "disappointed" or "angry" over President Bush and the Republican-led Congress.</TT></DIV><TT>
    <DIV =msgarea>
    70 percent said they would support "a principled conservative candidate running against an establishment Republican incumbent in a 2006 Republican primary."

    25 percent said they would reduce their financial support for the GOP in 2006, and 27.4 percent said they would end it completely. Regarding the 2006 election, 13.36 percent agreed with the statement: "I'm so disappointed that I may sit this election out."</DIV>
    <DIV =msgarea>
    Respondents gave Bush a grade of D for "controlling government spending" - and a D- for "reducing illegal immigration."

    "To save his presidency and prevent devastating Republican losses in '06, President Bush needs to take drastic action by replacing most of his White House policy personnel with effective, principled
    conservatives," said Viguerie, who pioneered ideological and political direct mail and helped elect Ronald Reagan in 1980.

    "President Bush's ratings are not low for acting like a
    conservative. They're low for not."




    </TT>

    </DIV></TD></TR></T></TABLE>
    <DIV =-rowb12></DIV>
    The greatest threat to freedom is not foreign governments. It is our own.

  2. #2
    Administrator Don Wassall's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Nevada
    Posts
    884


    Can the dittoheads actually be waking up? Let's hope so.


    As far as Viguerie goes, I like the results of his poll but trust him about as far as I can throw him. He's never left the cozy confines of the Beltway Right when it comes to race, immigration and Zionism. He's made a whole lot of money by sending letters to conservatives, asking them to send donations to the politicians who have sold them out for so long.
    Editor, The Nationalist Times, Voice of the Real America since 1985

  3. #3
    Guest


    "Is Dubya a Conservative?"


    Is Dubya an American?


    IMO, the answer is "No!" to both. And Dubya is definitely not a Constitutionalist.

  4. #4

    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Pennsylvania
    Posts
    564
    Quote Originally Posted by UncleDudley


    "Is Dubya a Conservative?"


    Is Dubya an American?


    IMO, the answer is "No!" to both. And Dubya is definitely not a Constitutionalist!


    That's why I usually refer to him as el Presidente Jorge Dubya Arbusto, our mestizo maestro.
    The greatest threat to freedom is not foreign governments. It is our own.

  5. #5
    Guest


    "el Presidente Jorge Dubya Arbusto, our mestizo maestro"


    Good one.

  6. #6

    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Nevada
    Posts
    92


    Even the "hispanics" don't want him. Hugo Chavez is the man of the people south of the border, not President Jorge W. Siesta. Jorge was humiliated at the recent summit in South America, where he ducked out of having any kind of formal or informal meeting with Chavez, who addressed cheering throngs while Bush was cursed by tens of thousands of demonstrators and snuck back to Washington asap. Of course the embedded media kept Americans in the dark about what happened.
    Liberty and Self-Determination for Everyone

  7. #7


    HAH! "Jorge W. Siesta" -- that's ripe. Tell me, folks, do you feel (as I do ) that every president is worse than the one before him? Reagan was better than Carter, I guess he was the last almost passably good prez. He was a poor excuse for a statesmen but now a lot of us would give our eyeteeth to have him back.


    It is terrific and exciting that a phony like Viguerie even mentions immigration in a negative light. He's not entirely useless if we can hang him on the wall and used him for a political barometer. Gee, wouldn't it be interesting if he'd polled them on Israel and the War? Maybe he did but found the results uncomfy?Edited by: rellaw

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •