Word: re-elected
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...Dean, you asked if the country is "willing to elect a Brahmin who grew up in wealthy East Hampton, New York, and on Manhattan's Park Avenue, who brings virtually no national-security experience to a post-9/11 nation ..." I ask if the country is willing to re-elect Bush, a Brahmin who grew up the son of a rich politician with a summer estate in Maine, who had no national-security experience when he entered office and who has effectively turned much of the world against the U.S. since 9/11. I'd take the Brahmin doctor...
...past, the fact that he is the first president with a criminal record (drunk driving) and that there is something really, really funny about the way this war was put together, have all been aired and seen by the public. But right now, the public would re-elect him anyway...
...abandon ideals for pragmatism, it’s out of a very real, very intense fear. A fear that my vote for a candidate other than Clark could help re-elect perhaps the most provocative, dangerous man ever to run this country. A fear that, by 2008, America will have rejected dozens of other international treaties and mandates, invaded Iran and North Korea, and alienated itself from its allies and the rest of the world. Most of all, a fear that America will suffer serious, perhaps even nuclear, attacks—a fear that I might die before...
...before going to war with Iraq [WORLD, Feb. 3], I was struck by how much I agree with them. Bush has failed to make his point with me too. I don't care for his cowboy attitude. I hope Americans wake up, smell the coffee and decide not to re-elect him. I have two sons, one serving in the Army in Afghanistan and the other a high school senior. I am totally at a loss as to what Bush hopes to accomplish by declaring war on Iraq. ANGIE NIEMEYER Fort Wayne...
DIED. CLARK MACGREGOR, 80, moderate G.O.P. Congressman from Minnesota turned Nixon aide; in Pompano Beach, Fla. As chairman of the Committee to Re-Elect the President just after the Watergate break-in, he oversaw the strategy that led to Nixon's landslide victory over George McGovern in 1972. Never implicated in Watergate, MacGregor later said he had been "misled, deceived ...and lied to repeatedly." After the scandal, he left politics for good...