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Only six years after Connecticut's hawkish, pro-Israel Senator Joe Lieberman was chosen to run for Vice President, the Democrats have virtually driven him out of the party. Since Lieberman has voted with his Democratic colleagues over 90% of the time during the last term of his eighteen years in the Senate, his downfall could only be a result of his refusal to backtrack on his vote to send troops into Iraq. |
| C.Ruiz August 10, 2006 12:25 PM PDT Mr. Lieberman may have learned something about what "sticking to your principles" can cost. He held his ground on his belief in the war and lost the primary. Principles are the issue, not party. Look at "Pro-choice" Senate minority leaders Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. They support the candidacy of "pro-life" Rep. Tim Roemer for DNC chair. It is difficult to be a "pro-life" Democrat. It is also difficult being a "pro-life", pro-environment Republican as I am. Republicans need to get their environmental act together, just as Democrats need to protect the environment for the unborn in the womb. Party is not the issue. What are your principles, and are you willing to stand by them no matter what the cost? | ||
| SalGal August 10, 2006 02:27 PM PDT Hey, I'm one of those "...voters who favor a strong stance on national defense, tax cuts to fuel the economy, protection for the unborn, freedom of (not from) religion and less Federal interference..." and I think I'm going Independent this year. Not necessarily for Joe, he's a good man and all, but I can't say that I fully identify with the Republicans anymore. | ||
| JM August 10, 2006 07:08 PM PDT >It is also difficult being a "pro- >life", pro-environment Republican >as I am. Why is that? There are too many restrictions on corporations that would normally use the environment carefully. There's no better steward of the environment than a corporation that expects to exist for decades to come. Why some people think that trying to wall up Nature behind glass like a museum exhibit is somehow good for it, I'll never understand. The trick is to insist that our existing laws be enforced, and infractions punished. In too many cases, that's not happening. | ||
| JM August 10, 2006 07:11 PM PDT >I can't say that I fully identify with >the Republicans anymore. I never did... that's why I'm registered unaffiliated. But of course, I was speaking of the Presidency, which I don't see a third party winning anytime soon. | ||
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