MIRS News “Top Ten Most Interesting Primaries”

June 17, 2008 at 5:21 am (Uncategorized)

Top 10 Most Interesting Primaries
At 89 years of age, Julie CANDLER — a member of the Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame who sat on a federal transportation board during the Nixon administration — wants to be a state representative in the Birmingham-based District 40.

So does James McCORMICK, who ran for governor in 1970 under the American Independent Party’s flag (Remember George WALLACE?). He’s now 82 and running for the Muskegon-based 92nd district as a Republican “So I could take some of the load off John McCAIN. He’s just a kid. He’s only 71.”

Then there’s perennial candidate Mario Nesr FUNDARSKI. This go-around he’s running in the 16th House District and is still running on the platform that state government needs to divest itself from any investments dealing with the “criminal, terrorist state of Israel.”

The 2008 primary election on Aug. 5 features its share of colorful candidates, many of whom face a stiff headwind because the party-base numbers in their particular districts are overwhelmingly against them. But there are several competitive races throughout the state Lansing observers may want to pay attention to for several reasons.

The players involved are familiar. The story line is compelling. Some of these individuals will be state representatives next year. After an exhaustive, three-week review of all 110 House races in 2008, MIRS is highlighting the following primary races as the most interesting to watch. Additional details on these races and all 110 House primaries and 15 Congressional primaries will be detailed in the MIRS 2008 MI Election Guide & Almanac that goes to the printer this week.

1. District 6, Democratic Primary
His last name isn’t Kilpatrick. It’s not even Cheeks. It’s Evans, Ajene C. EVANS, being his full name, but most Detroiters living in District 6 will go to the polls knowing the 27-year-old NAACP youth coordinator and former Mayor’s office aide as the cousin of Detroit Mayor Kwame KILPATRICK and the son of incumbent Rep. Marsha CHEEKS (D-Detroit).

Lansing will be watching to see if the Kilpatrick text-messaging scandal is splashing on his mother’s congressional re-election chances, but the 6th District may also be a bellwether. Kilpatrick-backed candidates in open House seats don’t necessarily have a good track record, anyway. Former five-month House member Fred DURHAL is running again, after losing to Cheeks for the full 6th District term in 2002. A former Michigan Democratic Party Base Vote Director, Brian WHITE, also is a person to watch in this 11-person field.

2. District 45, Republican Primary
Tom McMILLIN, the controversial ultra-conservative known for pulling out gruesome photographs of aborted fetuses to prove his pro-life point, is seeking a spot in the House after his state Board of Education bid fell short in ‘06. The former Auburn Hills Mayor, City Councilman and Oakland County Commissioner has stiff competition from the 23-year-old former aide of Senate Majority Leader Mike BISHOP, Copper RIZZO, and Rochester Hills City Councilman Scot BEATON, the favorite of incumbent Rep. John GARFIELD.

3. District 34, Democratic Primary
Woodrow STANLEY, the former recalled Flint Mayor continues his political comeback, by running to replace Rep. Brenda CLACK (D-Flint) in this urban Flint district. His opponents include former local radio personality Eleazar BARZART, former GM employee Chris DEL MORONE and former corrections officer Richard DICKS, Jr.

Remember, Stanley was bounced from office in 2002 for running up Flint’s deficit to $30 million, but was elected to the county board of commissioners in 2004 and appointed commission chair earlier this year.

4. District 82, Republican primary
One of the more competitive primaries could take place in Lapeer County, where Rep. John STAHL’s son, Benjamin John STAHL, is by far not the only candidate on the ballot. Lapeer Intermediate School Board President Gary HOWELL raised $37,225 before the year even started and the Republican Party’s 5th Congressional District chair, Randy ST. LAURENT, wasn’t far behind with $21,900.

Attica Township Supervisor Kevin DALEY is in the mix, having raised $15,948, but 2006 runner up, John STACK, is back again, too. Former minister Paul ST. LOUIS is running, too, but the best line may be from accountant Todd COURSER, who told MIRS, “Lapeer can not afford to send a moderate Republican to the Legislature.” Would Stahl be classified as a moderate?

5. District 1, Republican Primary
The son of Supreme Court Justice Maura CORRIGAN, Daniel Corrigan GRANO, is running against former Detroit News columnist Pete WALDMEIR, Grosse Pointe City Councilman John STEMPFLE, deep-pocketed business developer Mary TREDER LANG and 23-year-old engineer John SIMON in one of the state’s most competitive primaries.

The winner is expected to face Harper Woods Mayor Kenneth POYNTER in what should be another competitive race this fall in Ed GAFFNEY’s (R-Grosse Pointe Farms) district. The district showed a 52 percent Dem base in ‘06.

6. District 7, Democratic Primary
Count ‘em. Seventeen. That’s 17 Democratic candidates in this primary, the most in any state House primary in recent memory. That includes former lawmaker Sen. Henry STALLINGS, who was forced from office in 1996 for instructing a Senate staffer to work for his art gallery at state expense, among other felony charges. School Board member Jimmy WOMACK is a favorite. Financier Carol WEAVER, community organizer Al WILLIAMS, former House staffer Terra DeFOE and former School Board member Margaret BETTS.

Former Detroit Deputy Police Chief Brenda Goss ANDREWS also is in the race, as is Mary SHEFFIELD, the daughter of outspoken Kilpatrick supporter the Rev. Horace SHEFFIELD who nearly ran for Congress against U.S. Rep. John CONYERS.

7. District 62, Republican Primary
Battle Creek City Commissioner and Archway Cookies heiress Susan BALDWIN has the bucks to go toe-to-toe with Democratic County Commissioner Kate SEGAL in what could be the most hotly contested race in the general election, but Lansing types are worried Baldwin may not hit the doors as hard as County Commissioner Greg MOORE would. But questions over Moore’s residency may make the speculation irrelevant, anyway.

8. District 22, Democratic Primary
Taylor city politics is spilling into the state House race. Doug GEISS and Jill BRANDANA have butted heads on the Taylor City Council on everything from development issues to council replacements for the last couple years, and now both are seeking the seat being vacated by Rep. Hoon-Yung HOPGOOD (D-Taylor). Brandana is the more politically conservative of the two. She’s pro-gun, anti-gay marriage and doesn’t support the medical marijuana ballot proposal. Geiss favors state recognition of same-sex relationships and the medical marijuana proposal.

9. District 101,Republican Primary
Michael McMANUS, father of Sen. Michelle McMANUS (R-Lake Leelanau) has the name and the base support to succeed term-limited Rep. David PALSROK (R-Manistee), but Manistee Commissioner Janice McCRANER is working really hard. Her biggest problem is that fellow candidates Manistee Planning Commissioner Gregory FERGUSON and Onekama Council President Ray FRANZ are from her home base in Manistee County.

10. District 17, Democratic Primary
Are voters in Redford Township and Dearborn Heights really hot about House Speaker Andy DILLON (D-Redford Twp.) leading the income tax question in the House last fall? Former Redford Township Police Chief David PARKER was ticked enough about getting fired in 2005 to seek (and win) a $255,000 settlement over it. Now he’s seeking to replace Dillon. Parker tells MIRS “State government has grown to a size we can no longer afford. We must reduce the size of government and reduce taxes.”

Dillon is a political ally of Miles HANDY, the Redford Township Supervisor.

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Drill Here, Drill Now, Pay Less– Sign the Petition

June 17, 2008 at 4:33 am (Uncategorized)

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Pete Vitale to Bush: Stay out of Michigan

June 17, 2008 at 4:29 am (Uncategorized)

Michigan Republican Party Leadership detractor, Pete Vitale believes Bush visit is going to hurt Republicans in November.

I’m sure the millions of dollars a Presidential visit will bring in can’t hurt?

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Detroit News: McCain & Obama on the Economy

June 17, 2008 at 4:26 am (Uncategorized)

The economic debate: A look at proposals from John McCain and Barack Obama on key issues

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Obama schedules communist China fundraiser after news of US House computer hackings

June 13, 2008 at 1:45 am (Obama)

From MIRS:

Republicans Open Fire On Obama’s China Fundraisers
The Michigan Republican Party (MRP) blasted state Democrats over its likely presidential nominee’s decision to holding two “ill-conceived and politically tone-deaf” fundraisers in China next week.

Michigan Democrats tarred and feathered 2006 gubernatorial nominee Dick DeVOS on seemingly a daily basis for his business dealings in China. But today it was announced that the Barack OBAMA campaign is holding a pair of fundraisers in the communist country June 17 and June 19.

“During the Democrat primary, Obama couldn’t find Michigan on a map, yet he has seen fit to schedule political fundraisers in Community China,” said MRP Chair Saul ANUZIS. “If (Michigan Democratic Party Chair) Mark BREWER . . . ever want to be taken seriously again, they need to call on Obama to cancel (these fundraisers.”

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Congressional computers hacked from China, two U.S. reps say

June 13, 2008 at 12:29 am (Uncategorized)

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Pete Yost and Lara Jakes Jordan / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Multiple congressional computers have been hacked by people working from inside China, lawmakers said Wednesday, suggesting the Chinese were seeking lists of dissidents.

Two congressmen, both longtime critics of Beijing’s record on human rights, said the compromised computers contained information about political dissidents from around the world. One of the lawmakers said he’d been discouraged from disclosing the computer attacks by other U.S. officials.

Rep. Frank Wolf of Virginia said four of his computers were compromised, beginning in 2006. Rep. Chris Smith of New Jersey, a senior Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said two of his computers were attacked in December 2006 and March 2007.

Wolf said that following one of the attacks, a car with license plates belonging to Chinese officials went to the home of a dissident in Fairfax County, Va., outside Washington D.C. and photographed it.

During the same time period, the House International Relations Committee — now known as the House Foreign Affairs Committee — was targeted at least once by someone working inside China, committee spokeswoman Lynne Weil said.

Wednesday’s disclosures came as U.S. authorities investigate whether Chinese officials secretly copied the contents of a government laptop during a visit to China by Commerce Secretary Carlos M. Gutierrez and used the information to try to hack into Commerce Department computers.

Last month, the Pentagon acknowledged at a closed House Intelligence committee meeting that its vast computer network is scanned or attacked by outsiders more than 300 million times a day.

Wolf said the FBI had told him that computers of other House members and at least one House committee had been accessed by sources working from inside China. The Virginia Republican suggested that Senate computers could have been attacked as well.

The FBI and the White House declined to comment.

In Beijing, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs had no immediate comment on the allegations by Wolf and Smith.

Last week, China denied the accusations regarding Gutierrez’s laptop and the alleged effort to hack Commerce Department computers.

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Republican Liberty Caucus of MI Candidate Endorsement

June 13, 2008 at 12:15 am (Uncategorized)

Michigan


Linda Goldthorpe
U.S. Congress, District 1
Website: http://www.goldthorpeforcongress.com/

John Stempfle
State Representative, District 1
Website: http://www.johnstempfle.com/

Charles Ybema
State Representative, District 60
Website: http://www.ybema60.com/


Justin Amash
State Representative, District 72
Website: http://www.JustinAmash.com


Bob Genetski
State Representative, District 88
Website: http://www.voteforbobg.com/

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New Gang of 14 won’t back McCain

June 13, 2008 at 12:10 am (McCain)

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Posted: 06/11/08 07:48 PM [ET]
At least 14 Republican members of Congress have refused to endorse or publicly support Sen. John McCain for president, and more than a dozen others declined to answer whether they back the Arizona senator.

Many of the recalcitrant GOP members declined to detail their reasons for withholding support, but Rep. John Peterson (R-Pa.) expressed major concerns about McCain’s energy policies and Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.) cited the Iraq war.

A handful of other Republicans on Capitol Hill made the distinction between “endorsing” and “supporting,” adding that while they have not endorsed, they do support McCain.
In recent weeks, much of the discussion and debate about party unity has been on the Democrats’ side, amid their protracted presidential primary. Yet achieving harmony is a concern on both sides of the aisle this year.

It is not unusual for certain factions of the Democratic and Republican parties not to embrace their respective candidates for president. McCain’s campaign seized on some Democrats’ reticence about Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), issuing a release on Tuesday that highlighted that Rep. Dan Boren (D-Okla.) is not endorsing the presumptive nominee. While some conservative Democrats have yet to endorse Obama and didn’t back Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) in 2004, there are both centrist and conservative Republicans representing various parts of the country who are not embracing McCain.

Republican members who have not endorsed or publicly backed McCain include Sens. Chuck Hagel (Neb.) and Jeff Sessions (Ala.) and Reps. Jones, Peterson, John Doolittle (Calif.), Randy Forbes (Va.), Wayne Gilchrest (Md.), Virgil Goode (Va.), Tim Murphy (Pa.), Ron Paul (Texas), Ted Poe (Texas), Todd Tiahrt (Kan.), Dave Weldon (Fla.) and Frank Wolf (Va.). [Wolf contacted The Hill following publication of the article to correct his staff’s error. His staff had said he has “yet to endorse McCain” and did not return follow-up phone calls this week].

Throughout his career in the House and Senate, McCain has been at odds with his party on a range of issues, including campaign finance reform, earmarks, immigration, healthcare, taxes and energy.

Some Senate Republicans were especially irked with McCain’s role in the “Gang of 14” deal on judicial nominations.

Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.), who has been sharply critical of McCain on immigration, told The Hill in February, “I don’t like McCain. I don’t like him at all.”

Tancredo spokesman Mac Zimmerman said Tancredo won’t endorse McCain because he fears the senator would repudiate it like he did with the formal backing of controversial pastor John Hagee.

However, Tancredo told ABC News this week he will reluctantly vote for McCain.

Gilchrest and Hagel, who disagree with McCain’s views on Iraq, have been mum on their endorsements. Kathy Hicks, spokeswoman for Gilchrest, said, “Since he was not reelected to public office, he’s keeping his thoughts private.” Gilchrest lost in a Republican primary earlier this year.

Jones, who has voted repeatedly with Democrats on Iraq, said he can’t back McCain until he gets “a better explanation of the plans for Iraq and more discussion on the economy.” Jones added that no one from McCain’s campaign has reached out to him. more

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My interview with Between the Lines

June 12, 2008 at 7:50 pm (Uncategorized)

Michigan Conservative Dossier blogger discusses his sexuality and politics

by Todd A. Heywood

(Issue 1624 – Between The Lines News)

Joe Sylvester, 23, is deeply involved in the conservative political scene in Michigan. He has worked on several campaigns, and serves on several Republican district committees for his home of Bay City. He is what he calls a “true conservative, or a paleoconservative.” He counts among his friends Kyle Bristow, the former leader of Young Americans for Freedom at Michigan State University, and Dennis Lennox, the head of the newly-formed Campus Conservatives’ group at Central Michigan University.

In Sylvester’s blog, he rails against Michigan Federation of College Republicans state chair Justin Zatkoff as “immoral” for having pictures of himself shirtless in a hotel room with various fully clothed women. He writes about ending abortion, and rails against liberals. He is completely against John McCain and Barack Obama, and is supporting Bob Barr in his long-shot bid for the presidency. His blog is one blog that most conservatives in Michigan turn to when they want to know what the paleoconservatives in the state are thinking. He even played a role in the outing of conservative activist and then Web site manager for the Tom Tancredo for President campaign, Tyler Whitney.

But, until now, Sylvester has played his personal life close to his vest. His friends and his family know he is gay, but in an exclusive interview with Between The Lines, Sylvester for the first time confirms that he is gay and talks about his political views, his sexuality and his deeply held Catholic faith. The interview was a combination between written answers as well as a phone interview.

“I believe that everybody knows,” said Sylvester talking about his sexuality and the political allies he has. “I have not directly talked with everybody about it, but I believe everybody knows.”

Sylvester said he made the move to grant the interview because blogger Mike Rogers had contacted him. Rogers, from D.C., runs the BlogActive Web site. The site has garnered much attention over the years as Rogers, himself gay, for outing politicians who are actively pursuing an anti-gay agenda, but are secretly gay.

“Mike Rogers is looking at doing a piece to trash me, so I think it is better to get out on better terms,” Sylvester said.

But Sylvester said his sexuality really has less to do with his politics than one might imagine.

“The whole debate, gay this and gay that, it’s so skewed and often illogical,” he said. “If more people read what John Corvino (a professor at Wayne State University who has been touring his lecture series ‘What is Morally Wrong with Homosexuality?’ and is a contributing columnist for Between The Lines) writes, we would all be better off.”

Instead, Sylvester said he supports candidates and issues for the greater good of the country.

“‘How can one be gay and Republican?’ It’s a fairly easy one to answer,” Sylvester said. “I vote what is best for the nation. If people in politics don’t want to recognize me – fine, I can do without recognition from a large, bloated bureaucracy which is generally corrupt and dysfunctional. It’s not about me, it’s about the common good. If there is a candidate that is opposed to killing babies in the womb, restricting gun rights and raising taxes and opposed to gay marriage, I will support that candidate because it is what’s best for everyone.”

Sylvester is a strong Catholic and that, he said, plays into his political perspective.

“I vote according to the dictates of my conscience and that is certainly factored in,” he said. “If someone has a religious objection and espouse it in a loving way per Christian teaching I have no problem with it, although I may disagree with them. If they aren’t coming from that angle, then I do not respect them and will not vote for them. There is no virtue in being vulgar and ill informed.”

And Sylvester has no issue with the church denying Holy Communion to politicians who support abortion, or, if it were to happen, to him for being gay. He said the church is there to make moral decisions. But the issue would trouble him personally if gays were denied communion. He also said early on in the process of coming out, he struggled with his sexuality and church teachings.

“Sure, when I was first coming out when the issue was if I was gay or not. It was a struggle then,” he said. “The biggest thing was whether you believe people are born that way or if it is a perversion. I don’t believe it is a perversion, I believe it to be perfectly natural. Everybody knows themselves. You have feelings that way and you are the only person who can decipher it.”

As for the presidential race, Sylvester was clear on his support for Barr and lambasted McCain and Obama. “I could have swallowed the jagged little pill known as John McCain but he is too arrogant to even pay lip service to those in his party that want the third world hemorrhaging across the southern border to stop,” he said. “As far as Barack Obama goes…the guy is a joke. He is the most unqualified candidate to ever get a major partys nomination.”

Asked if the Barr candidacy might splinter the Republican vote, and result in Obama claiming the presidency, Sylvester said, “Ultimately its going to be a mute point. I think ultimately conservatives are going to stay home. They don’t have anybody to vote for this time.”

Sylvester was also clear that part of the issue was that the American democracy was stuck in a two party system and Bob Barr, not being in either of the two mainstream party camps, was unlikely to get the money to get his message out. Asked if the media should cover Barr like all the other candidates, Sylvester laughed.

“I think it would probably be best that you didn’t because you already dislike John McCain’s thinking,” he said referring to the alternative media like Michigan Messenger and Between The Lines. “I can imagine how the coverage would be on someone right of McCain like Barr. If you wanted to tear apart the conservative movement, yes (you should cover it). Objectively, you should cover all the people running.”

As for his connections with well known anti-gay leaders in the state like Rep. Jack Hoogendyk from Kalamazoo and Gary Glenn of the American Family Association of Michigan, Sylvester said he supported them.

“I’ve met Mr. Glenn working on the failed “Stop Overspending Initiative.” He seems to be genuine. Maybe I’ll be in his cross hairs, who knows? I don’t question his motives, only some of his logic,” Sylvester said. “Jack Hoogendyk is a good man. I support him 100 percent because I believe it for the greater good that Carl Levin be forced into retirement and Jack take his spot.”

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13th District Dem Primary Is Becoming Delightfully Vicious

June 12, 2008 at 8:25 am (Uncategorized)

Mayor’s scandal looms over mom’s congressional re-election campaign

BY KATHLEEN GRAY • FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER • June 11, 2008

Chased by two credible candidates and battling in the shadow of her beleaguered son, Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, U.S. Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick will face the biggest challenge of her congressional career in August.
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Two Democratic candidates — state Sen. Martha Scott, a veteran local, county and state politician from Highland Park, and former state Rep. Mary Waters, a scrappy Detroit politician — will face Cheeks Kilpatrick in the Aug. 5 primary election. Scott and Waters are trying to unseat the veteran politician from the 13th Congressional District seat she has held since 1996.

The veteran legislator has never gotten less than 78% of the vote in each successive election and got all but 15 write-in votes out of the 126,323 ballots cast in 2006.

Scott and Waters got into the race after Mayor Kilpatrick was charged with eight felony counts relating to a whistle-blower lawsuit, which the city ended up settling for $8.4 million in taxpayer money. The legal problems facing the mayor are quickly becoming a key ingredient in his mother’s re-election efforts.

Waters fired the first shot, releasing an ad on the Internet this week that starts off with a fiery speech given by Cheeks Kilpatrick exhorting a crowd to support her son in his 2005 re-election bid for mayor, after a tumultuous first term marked by rumors of wild parties at the mayoral mansion, misuse of the city credit card and a scandal involving a taxpayer-funded SUV for his wife.

“He didn’t just get up in here by just coming. Y’all sent him up in here. Don’t let nobody talk about y’aw’s boy,” the ad shows her saying. “Too many people died for us. We’re here to fight.”

The ad then shows Kilpatrick’s mug shot as his criminal charges scroll across the screen. It ends with an announcer saying: “Sorry, congresswoman, but we deserve much better than ‘y’aw’s boy.’ Mary Waters for Congress, because we deserve better.”

The hard-hitting ad is fair game, Waters said, because Cheeks Kilpatrick, “continues to enable her son to fail. That was her on TV saying ‘yaw’s boy.’ “

“It was her that said that we will appeal the verdict no matter what it costs the city,” Waters said, referring to an initial jury award of $6.5 million in the whistle-blower suit. “Well, Mrs. Kilpatrick, it’s not your money. You should understand better than anyone else how much the region is suffering.” more

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McCain struggles to win over conservatives

June 11, 2008 at 6:52 pm (McCain, Uncategorized)

Decision 2008

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Presidential hopeful facing challenges in uniting GOP, organizing backers to turn out votes.

Peter Wallsten / Los Angeles Times

CINCINNATI — As the architect of Ohio’s ballot measure against gay marriage, Phil Burress helped draw thousands of conservative voters to the polls in 2004, most of whom also cast ballots to re-elect President Bush. So Burress was not surprised when two high-level staffers from John McCain’s campaign dropped by his office, asking for his help this autumn.

What surprised Burress was how badly the meeting went. He says he tried, but failed, to make the McCain team understand how much work remained to overcome the skepticism of social conservatives. Burress ended up cutting off the campaign officials as they spoke. “He doesn’t want to associate with us,” Burress now says of McCain, “and we don’t want to associate with him.”

That meeting and other missteps, some Republicans say, have revealed a surprising lack of deftness on the part of McCain’s campaign as it begins to tackle some of its fundamental challenges: unifying a Republican Party that has distrusted many of his policy positions, and building the machinery needed to push voters to the polls in November.

If McCain tried to gather his volunteers in Ohio, “You could meet in a phone booth,” said Bill Cunningham, a radio host who attacks the senator regularly on his talk show. “There’s no sense in this part of Ohio that John McCain is a conservative or that his election would have a material benefit to conservatism.”

Were McCain running on President Bush’s strategy from 2004, fractures like these might be devastating.

Bush and his chief political hand, Karl Rove, built their winning plan on exciting conservatives with hard-line, often religious-themed rhetoric and policy proposals, such as backing the gay marriage ban and giving churches federal funds to perform social services.

But as the 2008 general election campaign begins, it is clear that this year will be different. Both McCain and presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama hope to energize core party activists, but each also hopes to win votes in the political center — from the independents, moderate women, blue-collar whites and the Hispanics who tend to swing from one party to the other, and who are turned off by highly partisan rhetoric.

For McCain, who has spent the last four months stockpiling money and planning the autumn campaign, these constituencies might prove difficult to balance.

Some Republicans say they also are troubled that the McCain campaign has not been faster to build a get-out-the-vote operation in Ohio, which as in past years is expected to be a key battleground.

These Republicans, who have a close-up view of events, worry that McCain will be overpowered by Obama’s proven ability to motivate activists.

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Dick Armey-Freedom Works email

June 9, 2008 at 9:16 pm (Uncategorized)

New Taxes and Regulations on Energy

There is a lot of rhetoric coming from liberals about our dependence on foreign oil and the rising gas prices around the world. But their policies and actions have blocked attempts to increase the domestic supply of oil and gas. This has forced us to depend more on foreign tyrants and miscreants for our energy supplies.  And they have stopped new refineries from being built in this country for decades.

Sent to My Inbox: A Zero-Emissions Steel Mill

Last week they were attempting to make things even worse by imposing a “cap and trade” scheme to limit carbon emissions. The Warner/Lieberman bill that we successfully defeated– for now– would have raised the cost of a gallon of gas by 50 cents. This would mean more pain at the pump for every American. Instead of imposing new regulations and taxes on our energy supplies, Congress should cut the gas tax, stop the outrageous spending and expand our domestic energy supplies by building refineries and exploring for oil and gas. Help us convince Congress to do the right thing by SIGNING OUR PETITION for lower gas prices.

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Obama’s fake “Catholic Advisory Council,” is no more

June 9, 2008 at 8:28 pm (Uncategorized)

The Catholic League reported today that the Obama campaigns “Catholic Advisory Council” appears to be dead. It was a house built on sand and opposed to most of the Churches teachings, so it’s not wonder it didn’t work. The people on the council may be Catholic, but I think very little of their actual politics reflects the Church.

I joined to Catholics for Obama group when it was first announced last year to raise hell. There was nothing about the group that reflected Church teaching. In fact it was the total opposite… it was full of non practicing Catholics who frequently argued Church teaching irrelevant when it came to the Presidential election.

June 9, 2008

OBAMA’S CATHOLIC ADVISORY COUNCIL:

HAS IT BEEN DISSOLVED?

Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments today on Sen. Barack Obama’s Catholic National Advisory Council:

“On May 2, I issued a news release calling on Sen. Obama to dissolve his Catholic National Advisory Council. My principal reason for doing so was his selection of dissident Catholics to advise him: for example, most of the public officials are so pro-abortion that they had a 100 percent NARAL record. On May 8, most members of the Advisory Council faxed me a letter defending themselves; I answered the same day taking them to task for their lame defense. But it now appears that my initial recommendation—to dissolve the group—may have been accepted.

“There is no mention anywhere on the Obama website of the Catholic National Advisory Council. On Friday, we placed three phone calls to his campaign: two to media relations and one to Mark Linton, Obama’s National Catholic Outreach Coordinator. We were told each time that someone would get back to us, but no one did. I then personally e-mailed Linton informing him of the three phone calls, requesting that he respond to my question: ‘I would like to know whether the Catholic National Advisory Council for Sen. Obama is still operative.’ He has not replied.

“It would appear, then, that the group no longer exists. It is not hard to understand why. After being criticized by the Catholic League, Archbishop Joseph Naumann of Kansas City rebuked one of Obama’s Catholic advisors, Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius: she was instructed not to present herself for Holy Communion (she is a rabid defender of abortion). At about the same time, radical Chicago priest Rev. Michael Pfleger bailed on Obama by withdrawing his name from the Advisory Council. Now we find that there is no listing for the group on the Obama website.

“Looks like the Obama campaign’s decision to quietly drop its Advisory Council didn’t work. We found out, and we’ve never been accused of being quiet.”

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Smug Mayor Kilpatrick responds to massive booing with “I guess I can’t run for state-wide office”

June 7, 2008 at 10:32 pm (Uncategorized)

Crowd’s chorus of boos mutes Kilpatrick’s praise of Wings

BY BEN SCHMITT and JOHN WISELY • FREE PRESS STAFF WRITERS • June 7, 2008

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A resounding chorus of boos greeted Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick when he took the stage about 1:20 p.m. Friday at the Red Wings’ celebratory rally.

The booing grew louder, making it difficult to hear him during a 45-second speech.

“Because we’re all here together and you’re all having a good time, the beer is on me,” the scandal-ridden mayor said as he sported a Wings championship hat and red T-shirt. “God bless you. Go Red Wings.”

Mayoral spokesman James Canning tried to explain the boos.

“The mayor has been elected to office twice by the residents of Detroit,” he said. “Based on the crowd’s reaction, I guess if he was running for mayor of Joe Louis Arena, he wouldn’t win.”

As Kilpatrick walked behind the Hart Plaza stage toward the Detroit River, a woman offered him a single yellow rose, wrapped in plastic, and said she supported him 100%. Kilpatrick thanked her.

As he left after speaking, he turned to several Detroit cops, smiled and said, “I guess I can’t run for statewide office.”

Robert Holt, 50, of Detroit, who stayed under a tree near the entrance to Hart Plaza to avoid the sun, said he couldn’t hear the mayor over the boos.

“I just shook my head,” Holt said.

Scott Wobbe, 31, of Westland was less charitable.

“Boooooo,” he screamed while motioning a thumbs-down as Kilpatrick addressed the crowd. “I think that’s what he deserves.”

Clinton Township resident Chad Nestell, 32, agreed.

“I don’t like how he represents the city,” he said. “I don’t think anyone here wants to hear what he has to say.”

Melisa Phillips, 28, of Warren said: “How could he have not expected all the booing? He knew what was coming. Now the whole country can see it.”

Contact BEN SCHMITT at 313-223-4296 or bcschmitt@freepress.com. Staff writer Michael Rosenberg contributed to this report.

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What a loser

June 7, 2008 at 10:27 pm (Uncategorized)

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Bjorn Turoque is a five-time runner-up for the national air guitar title.

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Pat Buchanan on the Colbert Report

June 7, 2008 at 8:16 pm (Uncategorized)

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Bay County native Cal Zastrow on the CO personhood amendment

June 6, 2008 at 5:55 pm (Uncategorized)

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Apparently he doesn’t ever plan on dying?

June 6, 2008 at 5:52 pm (Uncategorized)

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At 74, Levin still taking the long view

Carl Levin didn’t become one of Washington’s most respected lawmakers by focusing on the short term. So even as colleagues obsess over this fall’s presidential election, it’s not that surprising that Michigan’s senior senator, who turns 75 this month, is looking to 2012 and beyond.

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McCotter v China

June 6, 2008 at 5:47 pm (Uncategorized)

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GOP Health Care Card (Rep. Walberg)

June 6, 2008 at 5:45 pm (Uncategorized)

GOP Health Care Card (Rep. Walberg)

Hill News
June 3rd, 2008

Families in Michigan and throughout America are concerned about the rising cost of health care. Costs continue to rise, emergency rooms are filled with the uninsured, and many Americans continue in jobs they may not enjoy just to keep their health insurance.

Our current health care system is fatally flawed, and right now more than 47 million individuals find themselves without coverage and millions more are underinsured. Now is the time to step forward with solutions that make health care more affordable and accessible, and place health-care decisions with medical professionals and patients.

For too long, according to polling data, the Republican Party has been “losing” the health-care issue to the Democrats. This should not be the case, as Republicans are pushing for real common-sense solutions and credible reforms.

I for one will not allow the Democrats to claim health care as their issue, especially since most Democrats support a government-run and taxpayer-funded single provider system in which Washington, D.C., bureaucrats would have ultimate decisionmaking authority over every American’s medical coverage.

Supporters of this government-run health care approach claim it will provide every American with a level of health care coverage, but fail to elaborate on the actual quality of care that will be provided.

Government-run health-care programs all over the world are failing to meet the needs of those who need coverage. According to Britain’s Department of Health, nearly 900,000 Britons were waiting for admission to National Health Service hospitals at a given time in 2006. In other European countries with government-based health care, people can wait for weeks, months and even years for important, specialized treatments, such as heart surgery or chemotherapy.

Empowering bureaucrats through a “Hillary-Obama Care” approach would provide the same level of compassion and customer service we have come to expect from the Internal Revenue Service. This kind of one-size-fits-all, Washington-based approach is wrong, and America needs a patient-centered health-care system that gives consumers direct control and choice over their health-care decisions.

With that goal in mind, recently I introduced the Making Health Care More Affordable Act (H.R. 5995). We hear a lot of radical promises from the other side, this bill offers common sense solutions that ties together six core reforms to make patient-centered, market-driven health care more affordable and accessible to all Americans:

(1) Provide a health-insurance tax credit: If Congress provides such tax credit of up to $2,500 for individuals and $6,000 for a family of four, health insurance will become more affordable for more Americans, and families will be able to take their health insurance with them when they switch jobs. Providing these tax credits will expand the health insurance market, make the current system more equitable, reduce the number of uninsured Americans and increase the available options, while using the market to bring down health insurance costs.

(2) Create association health plans: These plans allow small businesses to band together to increase buying power in the market. Such a reform would lower overhead costs for small businesses and reduce health care prices for employees.

(3) Make insurance purchasable across state lines: This will help create a national market for health insurance by having consumers, not bureaucrats, find the coverage that best suits consumer needs. Consumers should have access to all benefits and services available throughout the United States and this reform will allow a more efficient individual market.

(4) Build on Health Savings Accounts: These HSAs allow people to take control of their health-care decisions, make health insurance more affordable and increase choice. Though relatively new, HSAs offer consumers a wide range of benefits and are becoming increasingly popular as more Americans learn about how this individual ownership plan works. The number of Americans with HSAs increased 35 percent last year, meaning more than 6 million Americans are now seeing the benefits of consumer-based health care. HSAs will let more families build health care “nest eggs.”

(5) Stop lawsuit abuse: Frivolous lawsuits are driving up costs of health care, thus limiting the number of physicians pursuing careers in certain specialties and forcing doctors to practice defensive medicine. My bill places a $250,000 cap on noneconomic damages and provides guidelines on how punitive damages are determined. For too long, trial lawyers have lined their own pockets by driving up health-care costs.

(6) Encourage health information technology: High-tech efficiencies, such as electronic health records, increase health care productivity, lower costs and reduce the potential for medical errors. In fact, a study by the nonpartisan Rand Corp. revealed widespread implementation of Health IT could save $162 billion in health-care costs and prevent 2.2 million undesired adverse drug reactions.

Democrats are not the only party discussing the lapses in coverage, high costs and bureaucratic red-tape American families are dealing with every day. Republicans are offering real reforms so important health-care decisions can be made by families, not HMOs or the whims of Washington, D.C., bureaucrats.

The GOP should rally around a consumer-based heath-care plan like the one I introduced to counter the draconian command-and-control plans of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. My legislation will improve quality of care, empower people to take control of their own health care and create a positive, consumer-driven alternative to free up our health- care system from heavy handed government mandates.

Passing the Making Health Care More Affordable Act will bring necessary reform to our broken health-care system and provide needed, high-quality health coverage to more Americans.

Rep. Walberg’s piece also appeared in the Washington Times.

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Lisa Bouchard for MSU Board of Trustees

June 6, 2008 at 5:44 pm (Uncategorized)

Dear Joe Sylvester,
If I haven’t yet introduced myself to you, my name is Lisa Bouchard and I am running for a position on the Board of Trustees at Michigan State University.  I wanted to let you know that I am launching my campaign website: www.lisabouchard.com.  I encourage you to take a look and to share it with your friends and family.  There are a number of great resources available on the site for you to use. Once you’re there, you can read about MSU in the news, follow the campaign with my Blog, signup for email updates, and you can learn about me and my concerns for Michigan State University.  Additionally, the site offers some very convenient features, including: social bookmarking, an RSS feed, links to my pages on popular social networking sites, and links to multimedia galleries on YouTube and Flickr.

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Bob Barr Criticizes Proposals to Expand FDA Regulation to Tobacco

June 6, 2008 at 5:42 pm (Uncategorized)

BobBarr2008.com

For Immediate Release –     To schedule an interview, contact Audrey Mullen at 703-548-1160

Bob Barr Criticizes Proposals to Expand FDA Regulation to Tobacco

Atlanta, GA — When all of the leading politicians agree on a policy in Washington, “you can bet the house that the public interest will suffer,” observes Bob Barr, the Libertarian Party presidential candidate.  So it is with proposed legislation to expand the authority of the Food and Drug Administration to tobacco.

We all know that smoking is bad for people’s health, but most of us also believe that America remains a free country, in which people should be able to make mistakes.  Yet for years “would-be national nannies have been attempting to give the FDA the power to regulate cigarettes and other tobacco products,” says Barr.  The latest proposal is moving through Congress with the support of the Republican and Democratic presidential contenders.

But “the last thing we need today is more regulation and more bureaucrats, which inevitably means less freedom,” explains Barr.  People know smoking is bad for their health, which is why ever fewer people light up.  Washington should leave smokers and other tobacco users alone.

“We should be particularly skeptical when a major business, in this case Philip Morris, lobbies for regulation,” notes Barr.  That usually means the proposal is written to benefit a particular company or interest rather than the public.  “If we want to preserve America’s prosperity and freedom, we need to be cutting, not increasing, regulation,” adds Barr.

Barr represented the 7th District of Georgia in the U. S. House of Representatives from 1995 to 2003, where he served as a senior member of the Judiciary Committee, as Vice-Chairman of the Government Reform Committee, and as a member of the Committee on Financial Services. Prior to his congressional career, Barr was appointed by President Reagan to serve as the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia, and also served as an official with the CIA.

Since leaving Congress, Barr has been practicing law and has teamed up with groups ranging from the American Civil Liberties Union to the American Conservative Union to actively advocate every American citizens’ right to privacy and other civil liberties guaranteed in the Bill of Rights. Along with this, Bob is committed to helping elect leaders who will strive for smaller government, lower taxes and abundant individual freedom.

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Smoking ban debate is hot topic

June 6, 2008 at 5:34 pm (Uncategorized)

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Smoke-free health benefits are touted but smokers, bars cry foul.

Kim Kozlowski and Mike Wilkinson / The Detroit News

Dianne Rose was an active, healthy 61-year-old woman until last September, when she was diagnosed with lung cancer.

Since she isn’t a smoker, Rose believes the disease she expects to take her life is linked to second-hand smoke — and that’s why she wants lawmakers to ban smoking in work places to protect the health of other Michigan citizens.

“I’ve seen a couple of people die with this disease and it isn’t pretty,” said Rose, a Highland resident with a 15 percent chance of living five years. “I wouldn’t want my family, my friends, even strangers to suffer from this.”

Stories such as hers frame the debate about whether Michigan should join more than 30 other states that ban smoking in workplaces. Lansing lawmakers are ironing out conflicting bills about how to do so. The Senate passed one that would ban smoking in all workplaces; the House last week passed a version that exempts cigar bars and casinos.

A ban would thrill health advocates, raise concerns about enforcement and infuriate some businesses and civil libertarians.

“What’s meant to be is meant to be,” said Philip Brigandi, manager of three bars in Allen Park, Southgate and Detroit. “People who jog every day and eat healthy will die of a heart attack. I can’t explain that. They lived a healthy life yet their heart gives out on them.”

He’s among those who argue that Michigan’s economic doldrums make this the worst time in the state’s history to pass the ban.

“In these economic times, we’re having a tough enough time trying to survive,” Brigandi said. “People are laid off, gas is $4 a gallon. I notice people are paying more with their credit cards because they don’t have cash. Times are tough. Why make it tougher on the small businessman who is trying to survive?”   more

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