Loius Farrakhan can because he mixes race with hate and makes the Klan look good…

February 28, 2008 at 2:44 am (Uncategorized)

to the tune of Willy Wonka “Candy Man”

Farrakhan supports Barack Hussein Obama

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Saul Anuzis on passing of William F. Buckley Jr

February 28, 2008 at 12:57 am (Uncategorized)

Anuzis’ Statement on the passing of William F. Buckley, Jr.

“God saw all that he had made, and it was very good,” mankind istold at the end of the first chapter of the Book of Genesis. There is nodoubt in my mind that on a beautiful day in 1925 God went back to work andwith His best effort made William F. Buckley, Jr. Now, God welcomes Hisvery good creation back after an incredible life in which Buckley helped tocreate the modern conservative movement.

“At the Michigan Republican Party, I know I express the feelings ofthousands of grassroots members who are saddened at the passing of a manwhose intellect and ability to communicate basic conservative ideas andvalues changed our state, nation and world. Buckley practiced hisconservatism with élan and style. When I was a young conservative incollege, watching Firing Line and reading National Review, I thought Buckleymade conservatism cool. Later, conservative lions like Bill Buckley andRussell Kirk inspired Governor Engler to lead a conservative renaissance inMichigan in the 1990s.

“I am told that Bill Buckley died at his desk, still at work in hisstudy. We can only imagine his last thoughts and wishes, but I think we canall honor his memory and build his legacy by working even harder to rebuild
the conservative movement. More than anything, Buckley understood the powerof ideas, and now it is our job to keep up the fight to make elections aboutideas and substance, not about rhetoric and personality.

“Friends and admirers throughout Michigan extend their condolencesto his brother Christopher and the entire Buckley family. Be assured thatyou are in our prayers.”

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Bill Donahue, Catholic League President goes after Barack HUSSEIN Obama

February 28, 2008 at 12:56 am (Uncategorized)

February 27, 2008

OBAMA CHAMPIONS “CULTURE OF DEATH”

In last night’s debate between Senator Barack Obama and Senator Hillary Clinton, MSNBC moderator Tim Russert asked both presidential candidates whether there was “any word or vote that you’d like to take back” in your “careers in public service.” Senator Obama cited his role in a unanimous decision by the U.S. Senate regarding the Terry Schiavo case. He said it was “a mistake” for the Congress “to interject itself into that decision-making process of the families” to settle her fate.

Catholic League president Bill Donohue addressed this issue today:

“So now we know that Obama thinks it was a mistake—the biggest mistake he’s ever made in public life—to allow Schiavo’s parents the right to petition a federal court over the withdrawal of food and medical services necessary to save her life. Never mind that the vote was merely procedural: it simply allowed the patient’s parents the right to ask for federal review, never guaranteeing a particular outcome. Moreover, the bill was case specific—it had no bearing on any case other than Schiavo’s, and it explicitly said that ‘nothing in this Act shall constitute a precedent with respect to future legislation.’ Yet Obama now says his vote ‘was not something I was comfortable with, but it was not something that I stood on the floor and stopped.’ How revealing.

“Just as important as what Obama said is what he didn’t say: He could have taken the opportunity to say that the biggest blunder of his career in public life was his vote to kill a bill in the Illinois legislature that would have provided medical care for infants who survive abortions. In 2003, while chairman of the Health and Human Services Committee of the Illinois Senate, he led the fight to oppose a bill that would have mandated health care for a baby who survived an abortion, and he did so
even though the bill explicitly said it would not imperil Roe v. Wade.

“In conclusion, Senator Obama thinks it is none of the federal government’s business to allow doctors to intentionally starve a person to death, nor is it the law’s business to require doctors to attend to the health care of a fully born baby who has survived an abortion. All this from the Minister of Hope.”

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Dennis Lennox on TV

February 28, 2008 at 12:17 am (Uncategorized)

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James O’Keefe’s Sting Operation Proves that Planned Parenthood is Racist

February 26, 2008 at 11:26 pm (Uncategorized)

The above video proves that Planned Parenthood is racist and is seeking to eliminate people of certain races. I heard about this video this summer, but didn’t believe that it would be as bad as he said that it would be. Basically, the employees of Planned Parenthood are willing, if not eager, to take money from donors who want to fund the abortion of black babies.

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Farrah wins $2 million lottery

February 26, 2008 at 8:38 pm (Uncategorized)

Michigan House member wins $2 million lottery prize
2/25/2008, 7:06 p.m. EST
By TIM MARTIN
The Associated Press

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — State Rep. Barb Farrah, a Democrat from Southgate, loses her job in the House of Representatives at the end of this year because of term limits.

After winning $2 million in the Michigan Lottery, she faces a lot less pressure to find a new gig.

Farrah won the prize during Friday’s basketball game between the Detroit Pistons and the Milwaukee Bucks at The Palace of Auburn Hills. She randomly was selected from a pool of five finalists.

“This comes at a handy time,” said Farrah, who is in her sixth and final year in the House. “I haven’t made a lot of decisions about what comes next.”

Farrah’s path to a winning ticket began with a birthday gift from her brother. She kept buying tickets with the winnings until one $20 ticket led to her entry as one of 875 contestants for the $2 million.

A number corresponding to Farrah’s ticket was picked as one of five finalists in a drawing supervised by an independent auditor, according to lottery officials. That portion of the contest is not done in a public setting but lottery officials said people can ask to watch it if they want. Farrah won the big prize in a live, public drawing.

There’s no prohibition against state lawmakers winning the lottery. But Leon Drolet, a Republican Macomb County commissioner and former state lawmaker, wants the state attorney general’s office to review the process by which Farrah moved from one of 875 contestants to the final five to make sure it was legitimate.

Farrah is chairwoman of the House Regulatory Reform Committee, which sometimes deals with lottery and gaming issues.

Drolet said he has no reason to believe Farrah engaged in any improper actions, but he asked for the review in the interest of “assuring the public.” He said state law should be changed so lawmakers on committees with lottery oversight can’t win its prizes.

Greg Bird, a spokesman for House Democrats, said Drolet is “simply attempting to make political hay out of nothing.”

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Dennis Lennox – Gary Peters…you know the drill…

February 25, 2008 at 12:48 am (Uncategorized)

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Wife beating Kilpatrick spokesman still on Detroit payroll

February 23, 2008 at 10:48 pm (Uncategorized)


Allen’s on payroll, so councilman is after a budget cut

Matt Allen, a former spokesman for Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, is still on city payroll without council approval.

A Detroit city councilman said Thursday that he wants to dock the budget of Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick’s office because the mayor’s embattled former spokesman remains on the city payroll without council approval.

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What is wrong with Detroit voters?

February 23, 2008 at 10:44 pm (Uncategorized)


Cox wades into Kilpatrick appeal

Mike Cox

Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox filed a legal brief Friday in support of a Free Press lawsuit seeking the release of secret documents related to an $8.4-million payout to three former Detroit cops who agreed to seal up incriminating text messages. But Cox stopped short of asking the Michigan Supreme Court to release all of the records the newspaper is seeking.

Kwame Kilpatrick is the physical manifestation of corruption. Why don’t the Detroit voters get rid of him?

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John Gleason’s trashy politics

February 23, 2008 at 9:06 pm (Uncategorized)


On Tuesday the Saginaw News reported that Senator John Gleason (D-Flushing) was in Saginaw doing some rabble rousing on behalf of his subsidiary, the Michigan Trial Lawyers PAC (also known as the Ambulance Chasers PAC).

The Saginaw News writes:

For more than a year, Senate Republicans in Lansing have blocked a bill to repeal the state’s one-of-a kind drug immunity law to protect the pharmaceutical industry, a Democratic legislator and the leader of a special interest group say.

Democratic state Sen. John Gleason on Monday chided state Sen. Roger N. Kahn, a Saginaw Township physician, and other members of the GOP for their opposition to repeal the law.

Traveling with Gleason during his press conferences in Saginaw was Boyne City resident Leslie R. Wiltjer who says a family member suffered a stroke from taking an FDA approved drug.

It gets better though…

Wiltjer, 56, said her husband, Richard J. Wiltjer, suffered a stroke in 2004 after taking the drug Celebrex occasionally for four years to relieve pain. However, on Monday she could not provide a medical diagnosis that linked the stroke with taking the drug.

”We’ve never attempted to prove it,” she said. ”You just know.”

Maybe the next time Gleason finds someone to stump with, his staff can at least verse her better. “She just knows,” haha riiight.

Senator Kahn responded with:

”More bad lawsuits mean more increased prices,” he said. ”Dow Corning got bankrupted on bad lawsuits (over silicone implants) and is still trying to recover, and we lost 10 years of opportunity for jobs in Michigan.”

”The reason in Michigan why we have the FDA defense (law) is because the Food and Drug Administration holds drug companies to pretty high standards, and they are experts in whether a drug is safe or unsafe,” Kahn said. ”Secondly, the notion that you can’t sue if you’ve been injured by a drug in Michigan is absolutely wrong.”

Word of advice to Sen. Gleason and his trial lawyer cronies… If you are going to take someone on the stump with you, at least make sure that they were indeed harmed by an FDA approved drug. Having a hunch doesn’t cut it!

Note: The Michigan Trial Lawyers PAC has contributed thousands of dollars to Sen. Gleason along with Sen. Kahn’s general election opponent Carl Williams. ($10,000)

Link to the article

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McCain supporters dismiss report of lobbyist link

February 21, 2008 at 9:22 pm (Uncategorized)

Posted by Ted Roelofs | The Grand Rapids Press February 21, 2008 12:36PM

Categories: Breaking News

It’s no surprise West Michigan Republicans are suspicious of a New York Times report linking Arizona Sen. John McCain with a 40-year-old female lobbyist.

But some foresee a surprising outcome: McCain will actually benefit from the story as voters see him as the unfair target of a one-sided account of events nine years ago.

“The American people are tired of negative campaigning in general and in particular of baseless allegations,” said Scott Greenlee, deputy director for McCain’s Michigan campaign operation.

http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f378/ekim11/ScottGreenlee1.jpg

“I don’t think there’s anything there. To try and find something that is nine years old that was never substantiated seems to me to be pretty silly.”

In a story that broke Wednesday night, the paper reported that campaign aides feared in 1999 that McCain was having a romantic relationship with Vicki Iseman, a lobbyist with clients who did business before the Senate committee he led.

McCain and Iseman have denied a relationship.

“I’m very disappointed in the article. It’s not true,” McCain said in a Thursday news conference in Toledo. His wife, Cindy, appeared at his side.

“I intend to move on.”

While the story could undercut McCain’s image as an upright opponent of Capitol Hill influence peddling, some think it could shore up his support in the GOP base because of the Times reputation as a publication of the liberal elite.

“Unless somebody can produce a smoking gun or connect arrows, if anything this is going to help McCain,” said Lansing political analyst Bill Ballenger.

“If it looks like somebody is taking a cheap shot and misfired, it makes him look better. There could be a backlash.”

Ballenger said the biggest risk to McCain in this story would be proof he acted improperly as chairman of the Commerce Committee.

“Maybe a bigger question might be, did McCain do anything as a member of a committee or cast any votes that appeared improper?”

Michigan GOP committeeman Chuck Yob dismissed the matter.

“As far as I’m concerned, it’s a smear campaign. It will go away. There’s nothing to it,” he said.

With McCain scheduled today to tour a Ford Motor Co. plant in Dearborn, meet with auto executives and attend an evening fundraiser in Troy, Yob said the campaign is moving on.

Yob believes most Americans are far more concerned about issues like jobs and national security than with reports like the New York Times article.

“It’s not only with this (article), but the American people don’t care about yesterday. That’s water over the dam. It’s what you are going to do tomorrow. How is he going to keep us safe? What is he going to do about jobs?

“Those are the issues we are talking about.”

State Rep. Kevin Green, R-Wyoming, said he hopes the story does not foretell a mud-spattered campaign that could see personal charges levied against not only McCain but also Illinois Sen. Barack Obama.

“The unfortunate part is that this whole tactic for Sen. Obama and Sen. McCain has started already. They are both honorable men.

“These kinds of things take the folks away from what really matters. It’s going to be the downfall of all of us if we continue down that path.”

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A law for sharing power in Lansing

February 21, 2008 at 9:07 pm (Uncategorized)

There ought to be one, GOP legislator says

BY DAWSON BELL • FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER • February 21, 2008

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Is it possible to rid the state Legislature of noxious political bickering, creating an atmosphere of nonpartisan goodwill and harmony?

OAS_AD(‘ArticleFlex_1′);Rep. Bill Caul, R-Mt. Pleasant, says Michigan ought to give it a try by getting rid of majority rule in the House and setting up a system of shared power in which neither party could run roughshod over the other.

Cynics might suggest the resolution — introduced Tuesday as a proposed constitutional amendment, meaning voters would have to approve it — reflects partisan self-interest given that Caul’s Republicans are the minority party in the House.

But Caul said Wednesday that if he can’t get support this year, he would introduce the measure in 2009 even if the GOP regains control.

“People think that Lansing is broken, that everything is about politics … that no one ever crosses party lines to get things done,” he said.

Caul’s resolution has 10 cosponsors, all Republicans. It calls for power-sharing modeled on the House experience of 1993-94. That followed the ‘92 election when Democrats and Republicans were evenly split, forcing them to devise a plan to alternate control of the agenda every other month.

Political analyst Bill Ballenger said Caul is a “hardworking, earnest sort” and means well. And he agrees that disdain for politics is at toxic levels.

“It really might be a good thing,” Ballenger said. “Too bad that they won’t even consider it.”

Contact DAWSON BELL at 313-222-6604 or dbell@freepress.com.

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Hoogendyk-Baron to debate

February 21, 2008 at 2:09 am (Uncategorized)

Event: Michigan Republican Primary Senate Debate


When: February 28th at 7:00pm.

Who: Representative Jack Hoogendyk and Bart Baron

Representative Jack Hoogendyk

http://jackformichigan.org/

Bart Baron

http://www.bartbaron.com/

These two candidates will square off in the Republican primary this year to determine who takes on Carl Levin.

Both men have good ideas for unseating Levin, but will need your support to succeed.

The most important issues of the day will be debated so you can decide for yourself who you will support. Baron and Hoogendyk will lay out their individual strategies to defeat Levin and attempt to persuade you to pitch in and help one or the other get elected.

Don’t miss another exciting NORC debate!

For more information contact the NORC President, Jim Runestad, at 248.623.8522. www.norc-us.org.

This event will be at the Pontiac Country Club 248-682-6333 and begin with a short membership meeting at 7:00 pm. The club serves complimentary coffee. Other drinks are available for purchase in the restaurant/bar

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Dick Cheney doing a fundraiser for Tim Walberg!

February 20, 2008 at 7:13 pm (Uncategorized)

http://pictopia.com/perl/get_image?provider_id=320&size=550x550_mb&ptp_photo_id=821872
Cheney to stump for Walberg in Marshall

Press officials for Vice President Dick Cheney confirmed Tuesday he is scheduled to make a stop at the Marshall home of Fred and Arlene Homann on March 7 during a private, invitation-only fundraiser for U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Tipton.

Details about Cheney’s visit were scant among local Republicans.

Fred Homann said he was asked by a friend to host the party.

“I’m just supplying the facility, if you will,” he said. “I’m not sending out any of the invitations or anything like that.”

Homann said he is a Republican supporter and, while he has held fundraisers for GOP candidates at his home before, he’s never hosted a big-name guest before.

“I am very excited to have the vice president come to Calhoun County,” Walberg said about Cheney’s visit.

Scott Durham, chairman of the Calhoun County Republican Party, said Cheney’s visit will help highlight local issues and frame them in a national discussion.

“It’s fantastic any time any of these national figures swings through Calhoun County,” he said. more

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MSNBC mistakes Osama for Obama

February 20, 2008 at 2:26 pm (Uncategorized)

Obama seems to resemble Osama bin Laden more and more every day.

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Mich. GOP chairman relishes game of politics

February 19, 2008 at 8:55 pm (Uncategorized)

photo

BY DAWSON BELL • FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER • February 19, 2008

Saul Anuzis, the effervescent chairman of the Michigan Republican Party, knows how to do modern politics.

He blogs, he texts, he podcasts and micro-targets. But he also knows there is a timeless and nontechnical side to politics — fun.

It was an early lesson, learned on the campus of the University of Michigan-Dearborn in the 1970s, where he discovered that a surefire way to interest college students in politics was the same tactic used to interest college students in anything else — offer free beer.

Thirty years later, his methods may be more sophisticated (at least a little), but Anuzis still appears to be having a good time.

Clearly, he loves the attention. Anuzis, now in his fourth year as chairman, never ducks an interview or a question. He can wisecrack nonstop. And he is almost unflappable, even when assailed from both sides.

For someone who presided over a Republican bloodbath in 2006 and faces the prospect of another in 2008, a good sense of humor is indispensable.

Anuzis — the son of Lithuanian immigrants who learned English as a second language — never graduated from college and was a successful entrepreneur before returning to professional politics. Good humor seems to be part of his makeup.

He is a completely partisan Republican, who grew up in a working-class family in Detroit, was a member of the Teamsters in college and assumed his political identity when he realized Ted Kennedy might win the Democratic nomination for president in 1980.

He considers himself a classic Reagan Republican, an ideological movement conservative who happens to be working in a job most often filled by a technocrat. Anuzis said last week that his most difficult moments as chairman have come not in confrontations with Democrats but with fellow Republicans.

“A lot of people didn’t like it too much when I started linking stories on my blog about Congress spending like drunken sailors,” he said, “because it was our congressmen.”

Anuzis also made some Republicans uncomfortable in 2007 when he was a relentless critic of proposals from Gov. Jennifer Granholm and other Democrats to fix the state government budget by raising taxes — especially Republican lawmakers who were thinking about voting with the Democrats.

He says he understands. The role of the party chairman is different when the governor’s office is occupied by a member of the opposing party, Anuzis says. Everybody in the governor’s party agrees with her, he said. But when the governor is of the other party, the out-of-power chairman’s job is to disagree with the governor.

It also makes the job pretty simple.

“Every day you get to get out of bed trying to figure out ways to beat Democrats,” he said. “I really like that.”

But back to the politics of beer. It didn’t involve beating Democrats, just the people then in power in student government at U-M Dearborn. Anuzis and his colleagues in a tri-partisan (Republican, Democrat & Socialist) group called Students for Students set up a keg outside the polling station and offered free samples. Police removed the keg after a couple of hours, but Anuzis and his slate swept into office.

Later, he used beer again to attract the crowd necessary to clog the main campus thoroughfare in protest over the installation of speed bumps.

“We tried it without beer, and only three people showed up,” he said.

Anuzis is still fond of gimmicks. He has been parading a Granholm Tax Hike Clock around the state, trying to remind voters how much $1.4 billion (the size of the tax increase) costs per minute.

Maybe not quite as much fun as beer. But you can be reasonably sure Anuzis is still having a good time.

Contact DAWSON BELL at 313-222-6604 or dbell@freepress.com.

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McCain Still Short of Nomination

February 19, 2008 at 8:24 pm (Uncategorized)

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Not so fast, Sen. McCain. John McCain’s campaign issued a statement last week claiming the Arizona senator had surpassed the number of delegates needed to secure the GOP nomination for president, after Mitt Romney endorsed him. John McCain sure looks like he has the nomination all but wrapped up. But he isn’t there yet, and here’s why:

It will take 1,191 delegates to secure the Republican nomination at the national convention this summer.

McCain has 908 delegates, including those won in primaries and caucuses as well as endorsements from party leaders who automatically attend the convention. Romney has 253, according to The Associated Press tally.

Together, that’s 1,161 delegates, which could make it tempting for some to put McCain over the top Tuesday evening if he fares well in primaries in Washington state and Wisconsin. A total of 59 delegates will be at stake.

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee has a total of 245 delegates, placing him behind a candidate who isn’t even in the race anymore.

GOP rules, however, say McCain still has work to do.

The rules vary state to state. But in general, Romney has little authority over his delegates after he releases them. The vast majority haven’t been named. Once they are, most will be free agents at the convention, free to support whomever they choose.

Huckabee has said he won’t quit until somebody reaches 1,191 delegates. And a few more Huckabee victories in upcoming primaries could prove embarrassing for McCain.

McCain’s campaign is aggressively lobbying Romney’s former supporters. At GOP conventions during the weekend in Louisiana and Michigan, McCain picked up at least 55 delegates.

Afterward, a McCain aide declined to say whether last week’s statement was a formal declaration of victory in the race for the nomination.

John Yob, McCain’s deputy political director, said Romney’s former delegates are “inching Senator McCain close to the magic number of delegates. It will take some time to verify every delegate but the results from Michigan and Louisiana were significant steps forward.”

Most of Romney’s former delegates will probably follow his lead and support McCain, especially if McCain is the only candidate left standing at the convention. But 100 percent support is not guaranteed, regardless of Romney’s endorsement.

Consider Michigan.

Romney won 23 delegates in Michigan’s Jan. 15 primary. The delegates were named at the GOP state convention, and Huckabee picked up three of Romney’s former delegates. McCain got 18 and it was unclear whom the other two would support.

The delegate numbers for Michigan are approximate because the state was stripped of half its GOP delegates for violating party rules by holding an early primary, and local officials have refused to say which delegates would be eliminated, if the penalty is enforced.

In Wyoming, Romney won eight delegates in GOP caucuses Jan. 5. Since Romney dropped out, three switched to McCain, one backed Huckabee and four said they were undecided in interviews with the AP.

Most of Romney’s other delegates won’t be named until state party conventions this spring. They will be selected by Romney’s supporters. But they will, in general, be free to support whomever they choose at the national convention.

Many of these delegates were bound by party rules to vote for Romney at the convention, unless he releases them. For some states, Romney’s public endorsement of McCain was sufficient to release the delegates.

But GOP officials in Montana, Utah and Alaska, where Romney won a total of 73 delegates, said they were waiting for official notification from the Romney campaign. None had arrived by late last week.

Until then, “The Alaska Republican delegate allocation will remain as allocated,” state GOP Chairman Randy Ruedrich said in an e-mail.

In California, state election law says each delegate released by a Republican candidate after he withdraws “shall be free to vote as he or she chooses.” Romney won at least six delegates in California’s primary on Super Tuesday, a number that could grow as absentee ballots are counted.

McCain’s campaign used projections when it claimed that Romney’s delegates would have put him over the top last week. They included delegates from primaries where the vote tally is still incomplete, inflating the delegate count for both McCain and Romney.

Looking ahead, the earliest McCain could surpass 1,191 delegates would be March 4, when delegate-rich states such as Ohio and Texas vote. To do that, McCain would have to win decisively in just about every contest between now and then.

If McCain does well in Tuesday’s primaries, Huckabee will need help from Romney’s supporters to remain a viable candidate. It is unlikely he will ever get enough help to come close to McCain’s delegate total.

But that’s not a mathematical certainty. Not yet.

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Grand Valley CR clip from CPAC

February 19, 2008 at 8:09 pm (Uncategorized)

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State GOP gathers, digs in for ‘tough year’

February 19, 2008 at 8:09 pm (Uncategorized)

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Mich. delegates lean toward McCain

February 19, 2008 at 8:07 pm (Uncategorized)

Mich. delegates lean toward McCain

Auburn Hills resident Eric Russell, 31, said McCain has about 830 of the required 1,191 delegates for the Republican Party nomination. Although he said the “general climate” Saturday favored McCain, Russell weathered the support and promoted Huckabee’s campaign.

“Some people think that it’s more important that the Republican Party wins no matter who the candidate is, and to a degree I agree with that,” he said. “Mike Huckabee is definitely the one who represents true conservatives. Anybody who is for McCain is probably just voting with the party line instead of their own brain.”

Brent Stanton, 17, of Williamston, said Romney’s exit from the race expedited the party’s solidification of McCain.

“Romney and Huckabee generally split the ultra-conservative vote,” he said. “And now that Romney has asked his delegates to support McCain at the convention, I think you’re really going to see the conservative movement start to fall behind McCain.” more

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Michigan Taxpayers Alliance email

February 19, 2008 at 8:04 pm (Uncategorized)

Dear Joe,

Is your state lawmaker one of Lansing’s biggest spenders? Or one of the most frugal?

The 2008 state budget spends $1,470,045,900 more than the 2007 budget. Below are the ten biggest-spending Republicans and Democrats in both the state House and state Senate, along with lists of the most frugal lawmakers. (Only those legislators who made all the budget votes are listed). The data was compiled by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.

It should be noted that some lawmakers may have voted against the higher-spending budget bills because the bills did not increase spending ENOUGH to earn their vote.

Ten Biggest-Spending House Republicans:
Rank Name Location/District Increased $$$
1. tie) Bill Caul Mt. Pleasant/99 $1,470,045,900
1. tie) Tory Rocca Sterling Heights/30 $1,470,045,900
3.) Brian Calley Pittsford/58 $1,463,545,900
4. tie) Tim Moore Farwell/97 $1,350,045,900
4. tie) David Palsrok Manistee/101 $1,350,045,900
6. tie) Law, David Commerce Twp./39 $1,332,045,900
6. tie) Phil LaJoy Canton/21 $1,332,045,900
6. tie) Jeff Hansen Hart/100 $1,332,045,900
6. tie) Darwin Booher Evart/102 $1,332,045,900
6. tie) Dick Ball Bennington Twp./85 $1,332,045,900
Ten Most Frugal House Republicans:
Rank Name Location/District Increased $$$
1.) Fulton Sheen Plainwell/88 $6,500,000
2. tie) Glenn Steil Cascade/72 $7,500,000
2. tie) Joe Hune Hamburg Twp./47 $7,500,000
2. tie) Jack Hoogendyk Texas Twp./61 $7,500,000
5.) Kevin Elsenheimer Bellaire/105 $45,100,000
6.) John Pastor Livonia/19 $49,835,000
7.) Brian Palmer Romeo/36 $116,500,000
8.) David Hildenbrand Lowell/86 $121,000,000
9.) John Garfield Rochester/45 $126,500,000
10.) Marty Knollenberg Troy/41 $154,100,000
22 Democrats voted for the maximum increase of $1,470,045,900:
Name Location/District Name Location/District
Andy Dillon Redford/17 Ted Hammon Burton/50
Katleen Angerer Dundee/55 Jones, Robert Kalamazoo/60
Terry Brown Pigeon/84 Law, Kathleen Gibraltar/23
Brenda Clack Flint/34 Lamar Lemmons Detroit/2
Paul Condino Southfield/35 Jeff Mayes Bay City/96
George Cushingberry Detroit/8 Andy Meisner Ferndale/27
John Espinoza Croswell/83 Gino Polidori Dearborn/15
Matt Gillard Alpena/106 Dale Sheltrown West Branch/103
Lee Gonzales Flint Twp./49 Smith, Virgil Detroit/7
Marty Griffin Jackson/64 Dudley Spade Tipton/57
Richard Hammel Mt. Morris/48 Lisa Wojno Warren/28
34 Democrats voted for $1,350,045,900 or more in increases spending. Only 2 Democrats broke with the pack and voted for less spending:
Rank Name Location/District Increased $$$
1.) Fred Miller Mt. Clemens/31 $1,211,045,900
2.) Mike Simpson Jackson/65 $1,332,045,900
Most Frugal Senate Republicans:
Rank Name Location/District Increased $$$
1.) Nancy Cassis Novi/15th $217,600,000
2.) Jud Gilbert Algonac/25 $1,339,835,000
All of the remaining Senate Republicans (who voted on all the bills) voted for the maximum $1,470,045,900.
Rank Name Location/District Increased $$$
1.) Michael Prusi Ishpeming/38 $1,205,545,900
2. tie) Deborah Cherry Burton/26 $1,219,835,000
2. tie) Irma Clark-Coleman Detroit/3 $1,219,835,000
2. tie) Dennis Olshove Warren/9 $1,219,835,000
2. tie) Gretchen Whitmer East Lansing/23 $1,219,835,000
Only 1 Senate Democrat voted for the maximum increase:
Rank Name Location/District Increased $$$
1.) Michael Switalski Roseville/10 $1,470,045,900

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Journalist Jailed for Publishing Mohammad Cartoons (in a European Country!)

February 19, 2008 at 3:41 pm (Uncategorized)

From FOX News:

MINSK, Belarus — Freedom could be years away for Aleksandr Sdvizhkov, the Belarusian journalist sentenced to three years of hard labor for republishing cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad that sparked mass demonstrations and anti-Western violence across the Muslim world.

Sdvizhkov is currently being held with no means of communication at the Belarusian Interior Ministry’s transfer prison in Minsk, said Olexei Korol, co-founder of Zgoda (Consensus) newspaper, which published the cartoons.

The population of Belarus, formerly a Soviet republic, is overwhelmingly Orthodox Christian; only about 3 percent of the 9 million residents are Muslim. Lukashenko’s oppressive, Soviet-style government has a history of quashing independent media, and it has close ties to Iran.

On Nov. 18, 2007, Belarusian Secret Service agents arrested Sdvizhkov in Borisov on charges of inciting religious hatred. The 49-year-old journalist had re-entered the country and traveled there to mark the 10th anniversary of his father’s death.

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Meet Michigans New Republican National Committeeman

February 17, 2008 at 8:22 pm (Uncategorized)

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Carl or Jack?

February 17, 2008 at 7:36 pm (Uncategorized)

WILX Poll

Who Will Win Michigan’s U.S. Senate Race?


Sen. Carl Levin (D)
State Rep. Jack Hoogendyk (R)

Vote here (lower right side)

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McCain "robo-calls" traced to Kent GOP chair

February 17, 2008 at 5:48 pm (Uncategorized)

Posted by The Grand Rapids Press February 16, 2008 14:06PM

Categories: Breaking News

Dirty tricks in North Dakota?

We may never know, though an investigation by that state’s attorney general traced illegal “robo-calls” there to an office in Wyoming.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney’s camp asked the state to look into the calls.

Romney officials traced the calls to Michigan-based Contact Services, a volunteer center for the campaign of Arizona Sen. John McCain and a business registered under Dave Dishaw, Kent County GOP chairman.

McCain spokesman John Yob said the campaign only hired people to turn out for the North Dakota presidential caucuses.

A North Dakota attorney general official concluded it wouldn’t be able to find the source of the calls without a “significant” investment. 

Read the entire Polpourri column Sunday on mlive.com/grpress or in Sunday’s Press

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