Rats jumping off the Bush boat? O'Reilly, others now skeptical about Bush

aria

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Sorry for the pun, I couldn't resist panning Bill "Shut up, shut up, shut up" O'Reilly.

Of course, as the article mentions, they'll be back aboard for the November election... but will any seeds of doubt planted now only end up flowering by November? Or are Americans as short-memoried as ever?


Bush's Political Base Seems Restive, Anxious
By Alan Elsner

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Some of George W. Bush's conservative political supporters are increasingly restive and anxious about the president's economic policies as well as his attempts to justify the war against Iraq.

Popular conservative television news anchor Bill O'Reilly, usually an outspoken Bush loyalist, said on Tuesday he was now skeptical about the Bush administration and apologized to viewers for supporting prewar claims that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.

"I was wrong. I am not pleased about it at all and I think all Americans should be concerned about this," O'Reilly said in an interview with ABC's "Good Morning America."
Pollster John Zogby said Bush was on the defensive with some polls showing him slightly behind Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry (news - web sites), his probable Democratic opponent in the Nov. 2 presidential election.


"The president is on the ropes right now. The question is, how will he adjust? Right now, the issues are not in his favor. Many Americans still think the economy is poor and his rationale for the Iraq war seems a little thin," he said.

"Bush's greatest asset was his unimpeachable integrity in the eyes of most Americans. But with no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, that integrity has been chipped away and right now some large lumps are falling off it," Zogby said.

Bush's White House interview on NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday was designed to calm some of these doubts. But while some pundits gave Bush good marks for his performance, some prominent conservatives were not impressed.

'TIRED AND UNSURE'

Peggy Noonan, a speechwriter for former President Ronald Reagan and for Bush's father and an outspoken conservative commentator, said: "The president seemed tired, unsure and often bumbling. His answers were repetitive, and when he tried to clarify them he tended to make them worse. He seemed in some way disconnected from the event."

Conservative columnists George Will and Robert Novak and former Republican congressman Joe Scarborough, now a cable TV commentator, have also recently criticized Bush's fiscal programs and his attempts to explain them.

Such doubts, if they persist, could spell trouble for Bush's re-election campaign. But conservative political consultant Keith Appell said Bush would soon be able to unify and energize his base.

"The White House has had a string of misfires but I believe they will soon regain their stride. This last month has been a wake-up call, but maybe that's what they needed," he said.

In the past month, Bush's State of the Union Address and his initiative to send manned spacecraft to Mars failed to generate much enthusiasm. Conservatives and liberals both criticized his budget for failing to seriously confront the country's growing deficit problem.

On Monday, Bush delivered an economic report to Congress promising to create 2.6 million jobs this year. Last year's economic report predicted that 1.7 million jobs would be created. Instead, there was a net loss of 53,000.

"Congress has the power to censure the president -- to formally reprimand him for betraying the nation's trust. If ever there was a time for this, it's now," the group said in a statement posted on its Web site.

Democrats hope they can plant seeds of doubt now. "If you can create a drumbeat of criticism in February, it's easier to make the case when it really counts in September and October," said Democratic consultant Jennifer Laszlo.

But Brown University political scientist Darrell West said he expected Bush to recover. "It's damaging when your friends criticize you in public, but by November they will all be supporting Bush," he said.
 

Mike Shagohod

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Well I never voted for the Bastard, but I ended up thinking him right about the whole foreign deal. But alas, now a days having fully examined the amount of horseshit going on during this particular regime... while he's a bit more forward than that fuckard Clinton, GWB just needs to get out of office and stay out. Though in reality to be fair, who exactly would be the best choice to run a nation that's going to Hell faster than a game of Strip Poker, that the world looks to as the "mighty empire." ??? When it's all said and done, corruption will be found on some level in any presidental regime, the only difference is it's nothing to the point of doors being kicked in and people being killed in cold blood for thinking differently from someone else. *But if there are any number of future terrorist fiascos that happen on our soil, the Homeland Security department will make damn sure that some of that might still come to pass. Bush can suck a dick as far as I'm concerned.

MERCENARY X99
 

JHendrix

Jello Pudding Pop, Y'know? Like that whole Bill C
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GunstarHero said:
Thats a good article.

Yeah it is. I mean I'm voting for Bush in November, but good lord I really am angry with the man right about now.

He went from a savior of the country to being the lesser of two evils (and not by that much). Hell if Liberman managed to get the Democratic nomination (I know it'll never happen), I'd be voting for him over Bush. And that's despite the insane videogames thing he had back in the day. :loco:

Bush is screwing over the conservatives much like Clinton did to gay people in 96. The worst thing that can happen for him as far as we're concerned is that we'll stay home, but most of the conservatives are like me: We're too scared of what'll happen in Iraq and with terrorism if one of the Democrats gets elected this year.

Only real hope I have is that Bush is as corruptly smart as these wacko conspiracy theorists paint him as and he pulls Bin Laden out of whatever cave he's hiding in around October.

I'm really starting to hate politics.
 

galfordo

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JHendrix said:
I'm really starting to hate politics.

They always have been and always will be this bad or worse. It's just the nature of the beast.
 

neobuyer

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What precious few of you geniuses realise is that what this country needs RIGHT NOW is a flaming homosexual president. A real 'Paul Lynde' type. Like Rip Taylor smashed together with Charles Nelson Riley at a million miles an hour and then given female hormone injections and a cravatte.

So when a reporter or interviewer asks the inevitable question: "Mr. President- Are you a homosexual?"

The leader of the free world can look said interviewer in the eye and say: "Maybe I am..... and maybe I AM!" And then give a little hmm hmm hmm hmm giggle.

Also, Mike Tyson should be Vice President- can you imagine how fun politics could be if only the world was molded according to my flighty whims? Everything would be so comical and absurd- we wouldn't need war.
 

BoriquaSNK

His Excellency BoriquaSNK,, The Ambassador of Appl
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Kerry will not pull out troops.

Edwards will not pull out troops either.

If elected, Bush will pull the soldiers out the second he gets some UN peacekeeping support. Then the country will go down the shitter completely.

Come'on guys, are Kerry and Edwards really THAT bad? They're pretty moderate, I don't see anything they'd do to anger Conservatives.

Great article by the way.
 

DangerousK

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BoriquaSNK said:
Kerry will not pull out troops.

Edwards will not pull out troops either.

If elected, Bush will pull the soldiers out the second he gets some UN peacekeeping support. Then the country will go down the shitter completely.

Come'on guys, are Kerry and Edwards really THAT bad? They're pretty moderate, I don't see anything they'd do to anger Conservatives.

Great article by the way.

I wouldn't mind seeing Kerry in there.

He fought in Vietnam so I think he probably could handle the Iraq situation rather well.
 

aria

Former Moderator
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neobuyer said:
What precious few of you geniuses realise is that what this country needs RIGHT NOW is a flaming homosexual president. A real 'Paul Lynde' type. Like Rip Taylor smashed together with Charles Nelson Riley at a million miles an hour and then given female hormone injections and a cravatte.

So when a reporter or interviewer asks the inevitable question: "Mr. President- Are you a homosexual?"

The leader of the free world can look said interviewer in the eye and say: "Maybe I am..... and maybe I AM!" And then give a little hmm hmm hmm hmm giggle.

Also, Mike Tyson should be Vice President- can you imagine how fun politics could be if only the world was molded according to my flighty whims? Everything would be so comical and absurd- we wouldn't need war.

Comedy GOLD!

Bonus points if you saw the movie "Black and White" and the unbelievable funny interchange between Mike Tyson (as himself) and Robert Downey Jr. (as a gay producer) where Downey keeps flirting with Mike until you really honest-to-god think Mike is going to knock him out. (According to the commentary, they apparently just let the actors play it out so Downey just kept provoking Tyson to get a natural reaction.)
 
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