GOP Gets Catty
I told you it was going to get fun.
Here's John McCain, slamming George W. Bush and the Republican Congress in the Washington Times today:
"We just let things get completely out of hand," he said of his own party's rule in the past eight years...
"Spending, the conduct of the war in Iraq for years, growth in the size of government, larger than any time since the Great Society, laying a $10 trillion debt on future generations of America, owing $500 billion to China, obviously, failure to both enforce and modernize the [financial] regulatory agencies that were designed for the 1930s and certainly not for the 21st century, failure to address the issue of climate change seriously..."
"I think, frankly, the problem was, with a Republican Congress, that the president was told by the speaker and majority leaders and others, 'Don't veto these bills, we need this pork, we need this excess spending, we need to grow these bureaucracies.'"
And, naturally enough, Republicans are slapping back. Anonymously, of course. "One of the most senior Republican strategists in the land" tells Politico:
"Lashing out at past Republican congresses instead of Pelosi and Reid, and echoing your opponent's attacks on you instead of attacking your opponent, and spending 150,000 hard dollars on designer clothes when congressional Republicans are struggling for money, and when your senior campaign staff are blaming each other... 10 days before the election, you're not doing much to energize your supporters."
Let the finger-pointing, name-calling, and back-stabbing begin.
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Comments
Judah, you don't find it a little convenient that he waited until the end of his failing run for the Presidency and the coming end of his Congressional reign to make these remarks publicly? If he had such a big problem with things, why did he wait until yesterday to say it? I don't know. I just think liking McCain for his honesty makes about as much sense as liking Obama for his experience in the Executive Branch.
The $150.000 that the Republicans spent on the MANUFACTURED MAVERICK could have been better spent on presenting a coherent message instead of the chaotic "throw everything at him and see what sticks approach" I am not interested in negative ads or attacks. Thus far Barack Obama has presented the best ideas on ROLLING back the taxes for the wealthy. This tax was initially put in Place by Reagan who called it TRICKLE DOWN ECONOMICS. Well nothing has trickled into my pockets but
wealth has surely flowed unchecked into the pockets of John McCain and the many llobbyists he surrounds himself with. It has surely flowed in Dick Chaney's pockets via Halliburton, the Oil and Bank Executives. In 2000 Ex Maverick John McCain voted against the Bush tax cuts. His words were the same words Obama is saying now. Obama has shown inspiring, intelligent, steady leadership OBAMA 08 NO to McBush McSame X-Maverick McCain NO COUNTRY FOR ANGRY OLD MAN
"I just think liking McCain for his honesty makes about as much sense as liking Obama for his experience in the Executive Branch."
Or as liking W in 2000 because he said he was "a uniter, not a divider", or because he said that *he* wouldn't do any "nation building". or would bring government spending under control (I believe McCain on this about as much as I believe W).
I can't believe someone thinks McCain is honest. Oh, wait a minute. Looking back on the last two presidential elections, I guess I can believe it. In the words of the melting wicked witch from Oz, "Oh, what a world, what a world....."
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