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December 31, 2005

President's Radio Address to the Nation - February 5, 2005


President's Radio Address to the Nation - February 5, 2005
In his weekly radio address, President Bush said, "This week, in my address to Congress and the American people, I was pleased to report that the state of our union is confident and strong. Many challenges still lie before us, and I will work with Congress to do what Americans have always done -- leave a better world for our children and grandchildren."
Source: www.whitehouse.gov

Press Conference of the President


Press Conference of the President
President Bush on Monday said, "This new threat required us to think and act differently. And as the 9/11 Commission pointed out, to prevent this from happening again, we need to connect the dots before the enemy attacks, not after. And we need to recognize that dealing with al Qaeda is not simply a matter of law enforcement; it requires defending the country against an enemy that declared war against the United States of America."
Source: www.whitehouse.gov

President's Radio Address to the Nation - July 16, 2005


President's Radio Address to the Nation - July 16, 2005
In his weekly radio address, President Bush said, "This past week I met with Democratic and Republican leaders in the United States Senate and sought their views on the process, and their thoughts on the qualities to look for in a potential nominee. Also, my staff has talked with more than 60 members of the United States Senate. Members of the Senate are receiving a full opportunity to provide their opinions and recommendations, and I appreciate their advice."
Source: www.whitehouse.gov

Statement on H.R. 4440, the "Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005"


Statement on H.R. 4440, the "Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005"
On Wednesday, December 21, 2005, the President signed into law: H.R. 4440, the "Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005,"
Source: www.whitehouse.gov

December 28, 2005

Stand Ready to Continue Supporting Social Security Reform this Fall


Stand Ready to Continue Supporting Social Security Reform this Fall
Look for Social Security reform to continue as the hot topic this fall. Lawmakers and interest groups on both sides of the Social Security debate are using the program's 70th birthday to build momentum, reports USA Today. Both sides "are using the program s 70th anniversary Sunday as an occasion to kickstart a debate begun last winter when Bush made Social Security the centerpiece of his State of the Union address."  

December 20, 2005

Iraqi Elections Only A Week Away Next Thursday Iraqis will


Iraqi Elections Only A Week Away

Next Thursday Iraqis will head to the polls for the third time this year in a brave signal of their commitment to democracy.

Show your support for American troops and freedom loving Iraqis by encouraging family and friends to ink their index fingers purple from December 12th to the 15th. Get all the details at Purple Finger For Freedom.


Katie MacGuidwin

December 18, 2005

More Options for Seniors with New Medicare BenefitsPresident Bush yesterday


More Options for Seniors with New Medicare Benefits

President Bush yesterday touted touted the new Medicare drug benefit for seniors in visits to El Mirage, AZ, and Rancho Cucamonga, CA. Bush said the new Medicare benefit "contains many options for consumers. 'The more options available, the more likely it is you're going to get what you want,' he said," as reported by the AP. The Wall Street Journal reports that according to White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan "beneficiaries in every region of the country will be able to choose a prescription-drug plan whose deductible -- the amount a person must pay each year before coverage kicks in -- is low or zero."

And the Arizona Republic adds the President "spoke for more than 30 minutes to the group, most of whom were senior citizens." He "stressed that seniors, as well as their children, need to become better informed about the new coverage plan that takes effect Jan. 1.On Oct.1, people eligible for the new drug coverage will start hearing about the plan's details."


Mindy Finn

Let s Not Get Ahead of OurselvesWith all the talk and


Let s Not Get Ahead of Ourselves
With all the talk and speculation in the media about the 2008 presidential election, let s not forget that crucial elections are coming sooner - they re less than two years away -- November 2006. And right here at the RNC, we re working hard to ensure the GOP maintains its strong majority in the 06 midterms. Radio Iowa reported that RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman, in Iowa on Wednesday, warned "the party's prospective presidential candidates who're coming to Iowa shouldn't get too focused on the 2008 campaign. I'm focused right now on the 2006 election, not the 2008 election. " Mehlman added, "I always say the first primary of 2008 is what folks do in 2006 it's crucial that Republicans fight to protect the majorities they hold in the U.S. House and Senate, where the GOP controls the debate agenda," pointing out that President Bush "has been able to accomplish things because he's had a Republican-led Congress to work with."
Mindy Finn

Republicans Providing Marylanders With Options In `06President Bush has scheduled


Republicans Providing Marylanders With Options In `06

President Bush has scheduled a visit to Maryland this week to help state Republicans bolster confidence in the party and for 2006 candidates. With Senator Sarbanes retirement coming at the end of this term, a senate seat is open in Maryland for the first time in 20 years. Lt. Gov. Michael Steele is hoping to capture this seat next November, while Gov. Robert Ehrlich is running for re-election.

Bush s visit, which will include a stop at the Naval Academy, will help Republican candidates expand the party s strength by chipping away at Democrats' long-standing advantage with key voting blocs, including black voters, as stated in a Baltimore Sun article today. With these strong Republican candidates, Marylanders will have, for the first time in generations, a true choice," said a Steele campaign spokesperson, Leonardo Alcivar.


Kirstin Hopkins

Congress Struggles With Spending Cuts, Oil (AP) AP - Republicans


Congress Struggles With Spending Cuts, Oil (AP)
AP - Republicans will work into the weekend in hopes that Congress will be able to wrap up a $40 billion-plus spending cut plan, though a fight over oil drilling in Alaska remains an obstacle.

N.H. Republican Guilty in Phone Jamming (AP) AP - A


N.H. Republican Guilty in Phone Jamming (AP)

James Tobin leaves U.S. District Court in Concord, N.H. with his wife Ellen Thursday, Dec. 15, 2005 after a jury acquitted him of violating voters rights during an election day phone-jamming plot against New Hampshire Democrats in 2002. The jury convicted him on two counts of telephone harassment. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)AP - A jury convicted a former national Republican official of two telephone harassment charges for his role in a phone-jamming plot against New Hampshire Democrats on Election Day 2002.



December 15, 2005

Signs Point To Economic Progress In Iraq Iraqi consumers appear


Signs Point To Economic Progress In Iraq

Iraqi consumers appear to be spending more money and gaining confidence in their economy.  LA Times reports the morning Iraqis interviewed around the country generally appeared to be spending more money this year than last year, a possible indication of increased consumer confidence.

LA Times interviewed Iraqi shopkeepers who said recent political milestones had spread optimism about the country's future.

"Business is better than previous years," said Saleh Abed, 34, a Baghdad clothing wholesaler. "Although there is terrorism and the country is going through a very rough time, there is some kind of stability. We have an army. We have police. We have a constitution."


Katie MacGuidwin

December 13, 2005

Let s Not Get Ahead of OurselvesWith all the talk and


Let s Not Get Ahead of Ourselves
With all the talk and speculation in the media about the 2008 presidential election, let s not forget that crucial elections are coming sooner - they re less than two years away -- November 2006. And right here at the RNC, we re working hard to ensure the GOP maintains its strong majority in the 06 midterms. Radio Iowa reported that RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman, in Iowa on Wednesday, warned "the party's prospective presidential candidates who're coming to Iowa shouldn't get too focused on the 2008 campaign. I'm focused right now on the 2006 election, not the 2008 election. " Mehlman added, "I always say the first primary of 2008 is what folks do in 2006 it's crucial that Republicans fight to protect the majorities they hold in the U.S. House and Senate, where the GOP controls the debate agenda," pointing out that President Bush "has been able to accomplish things because he's had a Republican-led Congress to work with."
Mindy Finn

Chairman Mehlman On "Meet The Press"Did you catch RNC Chairman


Chairman Mehlman On "Meet The Press"
MehlmanDid you catch RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman on "Meet The Press" this morning discussing Karl Rove? Notice how the Democrats (as embodied by former Clinton Chief of Staff John Podesta) had nothing but attacks and smears while the Chairman said we need to wait for the investigation to finish? Read the full transcript here.
Katie Harbath

President Bush Touts Flourishing EconomyPresident Bush yesterday met with his


President Bush Touts Flourishing Economy
President Bush yesterday met with his economic team at his Crawford ranch to promote positive economic news. "Bush touted the strength of the economy and promoted his domestic agenda, including tax and Social Security reform," in remarks to reporters, says USA Today. The President, "citing 200,000 jobs created in July and economic growth in the second quarter of a 3.4% annual rate," told reporters, "Americans have more money in their pocket, and that's good news." Bush also said "he'll renew efforts this fall for passage of an overhaul of Social Security and limits in cash awards in medical liability lawsuits," and that he "looks forward to recommendations due next month from a presidential panel studying ways to simplify the tax code."
Mindy Finn

Grassroots Organizing, High Technology Key to Growing Our PartyRNC members


Grassroots Organizing, High Technology Key to Growing Our Party

RNC members across the nation are energized about taking what they learned at last week's national meeting in Pittsburgh and are running with it to continue expanding the Republican Party. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports Mehlman "dispatched Republican National Committee members with marching orders to focus on grass-roots, voter registration and targeting with the goal of bucking the six-year itch, a historic trend of congressional losses by the party of the White House incumbent.  'History is not on our side,' Kelley McCullough, the RNC chief of staff, told the group.  'Traditionally the party of the president loses seats in the second mid-term election.'"  The Post-Gazette goes on to report that "Speaker after speaker during the RNC's summer meeting stressed the importance of nurturing that volunteer network as well as maintaining a technological edge over the Democrats."

Moreover, Chairman Mehlman says that expanding the base does not mean we have to sacrifice our principles, rather it's quite the opposite. They work together; our strong values are what motivates new Americans to join the GOP. "The theme of the Republican Party's summer meeting this weekend was expanding its base," the San Francisco Chronicle reports.  "'We don't have to choose between motivating our base and bringing new faces and new voices into the party,' said GOP Chairman Ken Mehlman. ...  'We talk about a compassionate conservative philosophy that not only unites Republicans, but attracts support among discerning Democrats and among independents.'"  Santorum, the keynote speaker on Friday at the meeting, "told fellow Republicans that his traditional values message 'is a good solid message for every community in America.'"  The GOP "sees its strong traditional values message, coupled with the failures of the welfare state and the Democratic Party's rigidity, as the keys to attracting minorities and other new members.  'We're not asking Republicans to become more liberal to lure new voters into the party,' Mehlman told the delegates."


Mindy Finn

Signs Point To Economic Progress In Iraq Iraqi consumers appear


Signs Point To Economic Progress In Iraq

Iraqi consumers appear to be spending more money and gaining confidence in their economy.  LA Times reports the morning Iraqis interviewed around the country generally appeared to be spending more money this year than last year, a possible indication of increased consumer confidence.

LA Times interviewed Iraqi shopkeepers who said recent political milestones had spread optimism about the country's future.

"Business is better than previous years," said Saleh Abed, 34, a Baghdad clothing wholesaler. "Although there is terrorism and the country is going through a very rough time, there is some kind of stability. We have an army. We have police. We have a constitution."


Katie MacGuidwin

December 11, 2005

Battle Of Tal AfarIn case you missed it, The Wall


Battle Of Tal Afar

In case you missed it, The Wall Street Journal writes today about the battle of Tal Afar and how it could be a turning point in the war against terrorists in Iraq. Among the key points of the story:

  • In recent days Iraqi forces -- yes, Iraqi forces -- have led the largest urban assault [in Tal Afar] since the liberation of Fallujah last November.
  • Iraqis are leading the fight and, most important, many will stay so the people of Tal Afar can begin to believe they can live free of terrorist intimidation.
  • [A] force of about 5,000 Iraqis and 3,800 Americans had killed at least 157 terrorists, detained 440 suspects, and discovered 34 weapons caches.
  • The Tal Afar operation calls into question the contention of war critics like Senator Joe Biden that there are only a handful of Iraqi troops capable of meaningful operations. In fact, U.S. commanders classify about 40 battalions -- roughly 750 soldiers in each -- as "fully independent" or able to fight "in the lead."
  • A U.S. officer with detailed knowledge offered us this assessment: "The Tal Afar operation has been a sweeping success for the Iraqi Security Forces in many ways. There is an Iraqi Army Brigade headquarters with four infantry battalions, a Special Police Commando Brigade headquarters with two battalions, and an Army Transportation battalion in the fight up there. The Police Commandos and one of the Army battalions were flown there by the Iraqi Air Force's own C-130 fleet executing their first combat support missions." Eight Iraqi soldiers and one American have died in the offensive.

Click here to read the entire article (subscription required).


Katie Harbath

Vice President Cheney Speaks Of Progress In Iraq Vice President


Vice President Cheney Speaks Of Progress In Iraq

Vice President Cheney addressed troops at Fort Drum in New York yesterday, giving encouraging news of the progress in Iraq.  ABC News reports Citing the stepped-up training of Iraqi security forces, their ability to control more territory and carry out missions on their own, Cheney said: "We have been making steady progress.

Vice President also praised Democratic Senator Joe Lieberman s statements last week on the danger of pulling out Iraq prematurely.  The Washington Times reports After visiting troops in Iraq last month, Mr. Lieberman said: Almost all of the progress in Iraq and throughout the Middle East will be lost if those forces are withdrawn faster than the Iraqi military is capable of securing the country. Mr. Cheney said Mr. Lieberman was entirely correct .We disagreed on some issues, but we stand together on this war


Katie MacGuidwin

Bush Tax Cuts Necessary For America s Fiscal RecoveryMatt Towery makes


Bush Tax Cuts Necessary For America s Fiscal Recovery

Matt Towery makes a strong case for keeping President Bush s tax cuts in place in today s Christian Science Monitor.  He believes it is necessary that the cuts remain for America to recover from the current fiscal situation, saying the cuts originally helped rescue us from the recession that Bush inherited when he took office .  He says taxpayers should not be the ones to suffer the financial effects of recent disasters such as the hurricanes.

Small business owners, entrepreneurs, and corporations are supplying most of the nation's jobs, and the burden on them will only increase as they will be relied upon to absorb the many workers displaced by Katrina. Punishing these job creators is the absolute last thing our leaders should resort to.
Katie MacGuidwin

Workers' Focus On Retirement Security On The Rise; But Boomers' Retirement Confidence Level Has Dropped


Workers' Focus On Retirement Security On The Rise; But Boomers' Retirement Confidence Level Has Dropped
Insurance News Net - credit respecting the divisive debate over Social Security reform, then it lies in Americans' renewed of all the dialogue about Social Security and its future,' says Catherine

Republicans Providing Marylanders With Options In `06President Bush has scheduled


Republicans Providing Marylanders With Options In `06

President Bush has scheduled a visit to Maryland this week to help state Republicans bolster confidence in the party and for 2006 candidates. With Senator Sarbanes retirement coming at the end of this term, a senate seat is open in Maryland for the first time in 20 years. Lt. Gov. Michael Steele is hoping to capture this seat next November, while Gov. Robert Ehrlich is running for re-election.

Bush s visit, which will include a stop at the Naval Academy, will help Republican candidates expand the party s strength by chipping away at Democrats' long-standing advantage with key voting blocs, including black voters, as stated in a Baltimore Sun article today. With these strong Republican candidates, Marylanders will have, for the first time in generations, a true choice," said a Steele campaign spokesperson, Leonardo Alcivar.


Kirstin Hopkins

West Virginia Republicans Welcome Mehlman with Open ArmsChairman Ken Mehlman


West Virginia Republicans Welcome Mehlman with Open Arms

Chairman Ken Mehlman heads to West Virginia this week, and that state s Republicans are ready to give him a warm welcome. The Wheeling (WV) Intelligencer editorializes, "West Virginians -- Northern Panhandle residents in particular -- should feel honored that" Mehlman "is coming to Wheeling this week. His visit is more evidence that politicians on the national stage no longer take the Mountain State for granted or dismiss it as not important enough to merit much attention. George Bush paid attention to West Virginians in 2000 -- and was elected president of the United States because he cared about the Mountain State. During his time in office, Bush has provided abundant proof that his expressions of affection for our state and its people -- and of concern for us -- were not empty platitudes." West Virginians "should not be taken for granted." Mehlman s "planned visit to Wheeling is a demonstration that he and other party leaders understand that."


Mindy Finn

Rove Story Summer s "Tall Tale"Donald Lambro of the Washington Times


Rove Story Summer s "Tall Tale"
Donald Lambro of the Washington Times says the supposed Karl Rove controversy was merely a summer "tall tale" to fill the media gap, noting Ambassador Joe Wilson s fleeting credibility.
Mindy Finn

December 05, 2005

Superb Opening - Stay Tuned for More Roberts Hearings TodaySupreme


Superb Opening - Stay Tuned for More Roberts Hearings Today

Supreme Court nominee John Roberts appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday for day one of confirmation hearings to join the Court. So far, so good as Roberts testimony yesterday is receiving wide praises. With the incredible intellect and professionalism we have become familiar with from Roberts, the nominee delivered his opening remarks sans notes or hesitation.

USA Today sums up the media s view when it calls Roberts "unflappable and succinct," with the Los Angeles Times saying the nominee s statement "showed the qualities that made him a superb advocate before the Supreme Court." And the Washington Times says "Roberts Jr. yesterday left little doubt why President Bush nominated him to be the next chief justice of the Supreme Court. One conservative observer later remarked that Judge Roberts stole the show. "


Mindy Finn

Stand Ready to Continue Supporting Social Security Reform this Fall


Stand Ready to Continue Supporting Social Security Reform this Fall

Look for Social Security reform to continue as the hot topic this fall. Lawmakers and interest groups on both sides of the Social Security debate are using the program's 70th birthday to build momentum, reports USA Today. Both sides "are using the program s 70th anniversary Sunday as an occasion to kickstart a debate begun last winter when Bush made Social Security the centerpiece of his State of the Union address."

 


Mindy Finn

Who would be out knocking on doors in 90 degree


Who would be out knocking on doors in 90 degree heat on a Saturday afternoon in July?
I participated in this activity on Saturday in the outskirts of Richmond, Virginia with the Kilgore for Governor Campaign volunteers. After gathering in the Kilgore Campaign Headquarters to give me an opportunity to share with the volunteers how important the grassroots activities were to re-electing President Bush in my home state of Ohio, everyone picked up their clipboards, maps, literature and contact lists and hit the streets.

Knocking on a few doors with the volunteers, I was really impressed with their enthusiasm and the responses we were getting from those with whom we visited. This level of activity at this time in the campaign bodes well for the grassroots efforts to elect a Republican, Jerry Kilgore, governor of Virginia this year.

To learn more about Jerry Kilgore visit, http://www.jerrykilgore.com/


Jo Ann Davidson

Republicans Providing Marylanders With Options In `06President Bush has scheduled


Republicans Providing Marylanders With Options In `06

President Bush has scheduled a visit to Maryland this week to help state Republicans bolster confidence in the party and for 2006 candidates. With Senator Sarbanes retirement coming at the end of this term, a senate seat is open in Maryland for the first time in 20 years. Lt. Gov. Michael Steele is hoping to capture this seat next November, while Gov. Robert Ehrlich is running for re-election.

Bush s visit, which will include a stop at the Naval Academy, will help Republican candidates expand the party s strength by chipping away at Democrats' long-standing advantage with key voting blocs, including black voters, as stated in a Baltimore Sun article today. With these strong Republican candidates, Marylanders will have, for the first time in generations, a true choice," said a Steele campaign spokesperson, Leonardo Alcivar.


Kirstin Hopkins

House Passes Key Energy ReformThe House yesterday passed the conference


House Passes Key Energy Reform
The House yesterday passed the conference report for the energy bill, and the Senate is expected to take up the measure tomorrow. The measure includes provisions that will extend Daylight Savings Time, $14.5 billion in tax breaks and incentives for energy producers and alternative fuels, and an ethanol mandate. The Wall Street Journal reports that the final tally in the House was 275-156. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman "said the measure would 'reduce energy demand, increase energy supplies and update our aging energy infrastructure.'" USA Today report that "architects of the bill said it represents a triumph of bipartisanship in a Congress that has struggled for four years to overcome regional and partisan differences on energy."
Mindy Finn

Biden Hypocritical In Opposition To Alito On Fox News Sunday


Biden Hypocritical In Opposition To Alito

On Fox News Sunday Senator Joseph Biden (D-DE) said of Judge Samuel Alito "clearly, clearly, you'll find a lot of people, including me, willing to do whatever they can to keep him off the court."  Biden was upset over Alito s dissagreement with the 1962 Supreme Court case Baker vs. Carr, which Alito expressed in a 1985 job application.

Biden should be careful with his words, as a Washington Times Op-Ed points out this morning.  John R. Lott Jr. writes If Mr. Biden carries through on his threat, it might result in the opposite of what he intends: Instead of embarrassing Judge Alito, such questioning may actually show Americans how much the Supreme Court has made up its own laws.

Lott is referring to the activist role the liberal Warren Court took in deciding Baker vs. Carr, saying that this decision (which established the principle of one man, one vote ) would have shocked the authors of the 14th Amendment.

Lott writes After all, did Mr. Biden ever put forward legislation to stop the unfair practice of giving Delaware and other small population states overrepresentation in the Senate? It will be interesting to see how he attacks Judge Alito without facing such obvious hypocrisy.
Katie MacGuidwin

Laura Bush: Criticisms of


Laura Bush: Criticisms of the President "Disgusting"
Yesterday, Mrs. Laura Bush visited schools in hurricane stricken regions and those assisting in the relief efforts. During her visits, Mrs. Bush praised the efforts of those helping hurricane victims rebuild their lives and defended the administration's response to the recovery effort. CBS News covered Mrs. Bush at a school in Mississippi, where she said, "I think we've seen a lot of the same footage over and over that isn't necessarily representative of what really happened in both, in a lot of ways. Overall, it was a very good response." CNN's The Situation Room added Mrs. Bush "addressed the plight of children displaced by the hurricane. She urged parents to make sure their children are safe in school. And, earlier, she visited a school in Iowa that is taking care of children of evacuees."

And Mrs. Bush had words for those making outrageous criticisms against the President. The AP reports, "Laura Bush described as 'disgusting' comments by rapper Kanye West and Democratic chairman Howard Dean blaming her husband for the disproportionate number of black hurricane victims. 'I think all of those remarks are disgusting, to be perfectly frank, because of course President Bush cares about everyone in our country,' the first lady said Thursday in an interview. 'And I know that. I mean, I'm the person who lives with him,' she said. 'I know what he's like and I know what he thinks and I know how he cares about people. "

The AP notes, "On a nationally televised telethon Friday, broadcast live on NBC, West departed from the script to declare 'George Bush doesn't care about black people.'" Dean, earlier this week, "told the National Baptist Convention of America, a black religious group, that race played a role in the hurricane casualty numbers. Mrs. Bush said it was clear that poor people were more vulnerable when the hurricane hit. 'They lived in poorer neighborhoods. Their neighborhoods were the ones that were more likely to flood, as we saw in New Orleans. Their housing was more vulnerable,' she said. 'And that's what we saw, and that's what we want to address in our country.'"


Mindy Finn

December 03, 2005

Rove Story Summer s "Tall Tale"Donald Lambro of the Washington Times


Rove Story Summer s "Tall Tale"
Donald Lambro of the Washington Times says the supposed Karl Rove controversy was merely a summer "tall tale" to fill the media gap, noting Ambassador Joe Wilson s fleeting credibility.
Mindy Finn

PFAW s Predictable Smear Campaign The fact that far left groups


PFAW s Predictable Smear Campaign

The fact that far left groups like NARAL and People for the American Way (PFAW) would smear Judge Roberts with outlandish inaccuracies to advance their political agenda, is hardly newsworthy. Ralph Neas and Company have been railing against the President's nominee before one was even nominated. The only group that should be truly concerned with PFAW s report is the Sierra Club, given how much paper was wasted to print this dishonest and disingenuous report.

 Tracey Schmitt, Press Secretary


Katie Harbath

GOP`s Successful End to Summer in WashingtonPresident Bush arrives at


GOP`s Successful End to Summer in Washington
President Bush arrives at the end of the summer congressional session with key legislative wins on a variety of top issues. Most significant is the House approval of CAFTA, but it is not his only victory over the last few days. The Christian Science Monitor writes the President and GOP have achieved "big wins on issues ranging from a highly controversial trade pact to long-stalled energy and highway bills. Perhaps more important, his nominee for a vacant Supreme Court seat appears to be headed for a less-toxic confirmation process than analysts had expected." In Iraq, "top commanders have raised the prospect of significant numbers of US troops returning home next year. 'It's a pretty good week for the president,' says James Thurber, a political scientist at American University in Washington."
Mindy Finn

President Bush Touts Flourishing EconomyPresident Bush yesterday met with his


President Bush Touts Flourishing Economy
President Bush yesterday met with his economic team at his Crawford ranch to promote positive economic news. "Bush touted the strength of the economy and promoted his domestic agenda, including tax and Social Security reform," in remarks to reporters, says USA Today. The President, "citing 200,000 jobs created in July and economic growth in the second quarter of a 3.4% annual rate," told reporters, "Americans have more money in their pocket, and that's good news." Bush also said "he'll renew efforts this fall for passage of an overhaul of Social Security and limits in cash awards in medical liability lawsuits," and that he "looks forward to recommendations due next month from a presidential panel studying ways to simplify the tax code."
Mindy Finn

Grassroots Organizing, High Technology Key to Growing Our PartyRNC members


Grassroots Organizing, High Technology Key to Growing Our Party

RNC members across the nation are energized about taking what they learned at last week's national meeting in Pittsburgh and are running with it to continue expanding the Republican Party. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports Mehlman "dispatched Republican National Committee members with marching orders to focus on grass-roots, voter registration and targeting with the goal of bucking the six-year itch, a historic trend of congressional losses by the party of the White House incumbent.  'History is not on our side,' Kelley McCullough, the RNC chief of staff, told the group.  'Traditionally the party of the president loses seats in the second mid-term election.'"  The Post-Gazette goes on to report that "Speaker after speaker during the RNC's summer meeting stressed the importance of nurturing that volunteer network as well as maintaining a technological edge over the Democrats."

Moreover, Chairman Mehlman says that expanding the base does not mean we have to sacrifice our principles, rather it's quite the opposite. They work together; our strong values are what motivates new Americans to join the GOP. "The theme of the Republican Party's summer meeting this weekend was expanding its base," the San Francisco Chronicle reports.  "'We don't have to choose between motivating our base and bringing new faces and new voices into the party,' said GOP Chairman Ken Mehlman. ...  'We talk about a compassionate conservative philosophy that not only unites Republicans, but attracts support among discerning Democrats and among independents.'"  Santorum, the keynote speaker on Friday at the meeting, "told fellow Republicans that his traditional values message 'is a good solid message for every community in America.'"  The GOP "sees its strong traditional values message, coupled with the failures of the welfare state and the Democratic Party's rigidity, as the keys to attracting minorities and other new members.  'We're not asking Republicans to become more liberal to lure new voters into the party,' Mehlman told the delegates."


Mindy Finn

Lieberman Says Our Troops Must Stay Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) has


Lieberman Says Our Troops Must Stay

Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) has just returned from his fourth recent trip to Iraq. He discusses the heartening progress he witnessed there in today s Wall Street Journal, saying none of these remarkable changes would have happened without the coalition forces led by the U.S. And, I am convinced, almost all of the progress in Iraq and throughout the Middle East will be lost if those forces are withdrawn faster than the Iraqi military is capable of securing the country.

Senator Lieberman points specifically to impressive economic gains in Iraq, saying There are also positive economic indicators that receive little or no coverage in the Western media .

To view an abbreviated version of this article, visit http://www.gop.com/News/Read.aspx?ID=5950.


Katie MacGuidwin

December 02, 2005

Overwhelming Number Of Iraqis Support Constitution The Washington Times (Quinn, 10/05/05)


Overwhelming Number Of Iraqis Support Constitution
The Washington Times (Quinn, 10/05/05) reports that, despite what the main stream media would have you believe, Recent polling shows widespread support for a new Iraqi constitution to be voted on Oct. 15, even in strongholds of Sunni Arab groups that are fighting to derail the charter [T]he polling by the Iraqi Center for Development and International Dialogue -- a nonprofit organization funded partially by the United Nations -- indicated that the referendum was headed for passage...[and that,] of 3,625 Iraqis, conducted Sept. 14 to 19, showed 79 percent in favor of the draft constitution and 8 percent opposed. The remainder did not respond. Equally encouraging was the respondents belief in the effect the constitution will have. A high percentage of respondents said they intended to vote and that the level of violence likely would be reduced after the referendum. Most encouraging, arguably, is that [S]upport for the constitution...topped 50 percent even in central provinces known as the heartland of Sunni unrest -- a sign, [ says Mehdi Hafedh, director of the Iraqi Center for Development and International Dialogue], that the Sunni-Shi'ite split is not as wide as many fear. Let me know where you read about this in the New York Times.
Katie MacGuidwin