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  • 18:18 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    Romney to Woo Conservatives Republicans gathering for the year's marquee conservative conference say they are worried about the tone of the party's presidential race and the strength of front-runner Mitt Romney

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  • 10:48 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    A Wealthy Backer Likes the Odds on Santorum Few people played a more pivotal role in Rick Santorum’s victories in Minnesota, Missouri and Colorado than Foster Friess, a wealthy donor to conservative causes.His role as outside funder — one that Mr. Friess indicated he would continue to play in the contests ahead — escalates the battle among a few dozen wealthy Republicans to influence their party’s choice of a presidential nominee. 

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  • 10:17 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    Mr. 'Inevitable' Gets Pummeled AgainWhy Santorum's sweep in three states is devastating for Mitt.

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  • 10:11 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    Contraception Culture WarHow did the Obama Administration get into a fight with the Catholic Church?

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  • 09:47 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    What the FBI Had on Steve JobsThe FBI released its file on the Apple co-founder, assembled in 1991 when he was being considered for a presidential appointment.

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  • 06:44 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    Obama, ExplainedAs Barack Obama contends for a second term in office, two conflicting narratives of his presidency have emerged. Is he a skillful political player and policy visionary—a chess master who always sees several moves ahead of his opponents (and of the punditocracy)? Or is he politically clumsy and out of his depth—a pawn overwhelmed by events, at the mercy of a second-rate staff and of the Republicans? Here, a longtime analyst of the presidency takes the measure of our 44th president, with a view to history.

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  • 01:24 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    GOP race turning into regional delegate battleAaron Blake / WashPostThe battle may be breaking down along regional lines, with Rick Santorum gaining momentum in the Midwest, Newt Gingrich resonating in the South and Mitt Romney faring best in the Northeast and elsewhere.

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  • 01:14 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    Turmoil deepens bleak Tehran winterAs the winter mercury slumps and pollution hovers over Tehran, it's not the smog but deteriorating standards of living and the feeling that the world is conspiring against them that has Iranians most vexed. A currency crisis continues to grip the city and hope is absent - not so the supply of kidneys from financially stricken donors.

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  • 00:40 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    Mitt Romney’s character flawJonathan Capehart / WashPostVoters sense a lack of character in someone for a job that demands bedrock principles and core beliefs."Mitt Romney can’t translate his carefully manufactured aura of inevitability into reality because no one believes he is who he says he is. We all know this."

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  • 00:31 - 09.02.2012 News >> Latest

    Modified Insider Bill Poised to Pass House The House is expected to approve legislation Thursday to tighten insider-trading rules in Congress, despite changes made by a top GOP lawmaker to remove a key disclosure provision. "Most notably, Mr. Cantor cut a provision that would require people who mine Washington for market-moving information to disclose their activities in the same fashion as lobbyists. The provision covering what is known as the political-intelligence industry was opposed by Wall Street and its Washington lobbyists, including the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, which mounted an effort to kill it."

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Nobody Loves The Idiot Print E-mail

 

Republican 'Young Guns' critical of Bush legacy and party hierarchy

Former president George W Bush and the Republican party hierarchy have been denounced for betraying conservative principles by a new generation of congressmen bidding to convince voters that the Right can offer real change.

Former President George Bush has been criticsed for betraying conservative principles Photo: REUTERS

 

Calling themselves the Young Guns, three members of America's House of Representatives are about to publish a template for new era of Republican domination in Congress.

With the economy failing to live up to President Barack Obama's hopes for a strong recovery - unemployment remains just below ten percent - Republicans are poised for major gains on Nov 2, when all of the House and a third of Senate seats is contested in midterm elections.

The president has scrambled to stave off defeat over the economy and will this week launch measures designed to boost small businesses.

He will ask Congress to increase and extend a tax credit for research and development, as a way of boosting job creation, an administration official said yesterday. He is also likely to propose to use tax cuts for the rich passed by Mr Bush which are about to expire for further tax breaks for business.

Many polls and pundits say the Republicans will gain the 39 seats needed to win back control of the House of Representatives but just fall short of winning back the Senate.

But doubts linger that the party can take advantage of the favourable winds as it struggles to persuade voters that it has changed significantly since it lost power in 2006.

A recent NBC poll found only 24 per cent of voters saw the party in a positive light.

The Young Guns book recognises "high profile ethics lapses" and "an inability to rein in spending or even slow the growth of government" led to a breakdown in trust in the party.

During the previous Republican rule, Tom DeLay, the former majority leader in the House, was prosecuted for money laundering and violating campaign finance laws, though he was never convicted. Several other members of Congress were embroiled in scandals involving favours for lobbyists.

"The fact is, we had our chance, and we blew it," wrote co-author Eric Cantor, the party's chief whip.

Critics have pointed out that Mr Cantor, 47, from Virginia, was a member of the party's leadership during the era he is now criticising.

The Young Guns programme run by Mr Cantor and his colleagues and co-authors Kevin McCarthy and Paul Ryan is designed to find new, reliable conservative candidates.

Leaked excerpts indicate that it poses a challenge to the party's most senior leaders.

John Boehner, the Republican leader in the House of Representatives, has distanced himself from a policy document produced by Mr Ryan called a "Road Map for America's Future" that recommended cuts in Social Security, the US equivalent of the state pension, and Medicare, a heavily subsidised health care scheme for the elderly.

With Democrats quick to warn what voters could lose from Mr Ryan's ideas, the Republican leadership has been keen to avoid anything that might surrender their advantage on the economy.

 

 

 

 
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