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republicans
1. benefit of the republicans that accused him was
2. Regarding the continuing debt limit negotiations between Republicans and Democrats, „Obama, who once infamously said that he"d meet with murderous tyrants such as Castro, Chavez, and Ahmadinejad “without preconditions” apparently won"t sully the office by meeting for lunch with the Republican Senate Minority Leader
3. Almost every day we Republicans are deluged with advice by the so-called „experts" to stop referring to Obama and his cohorts in the House and Senate as socialists
4. How effectively Republicans will govern remains to be seen, however
5. I‘m keeping my fingers crossed that Republicans and Conservatives, alike, will keep their campaign promises as outlined in their ―Contract with America‖, limiting the size and scope of government
6. I remain skeptical, however, of a Washington Mindset that seems to operate within its own guidelines whatever political party is in power; or so history informs me inasmuch as Republicans haven‘t been in power during my lifetime, not at the national level, at least
7. On the other hand, there may be a strong incentive among Republicans to change the political climate in Washington that will justify the people‘s confidence
8. what Liberals were hoping for! Here it comes: ―root cause‖ diatribes about the odious intolerance of Conservatives…and Republicans, that, to a news media handicapped by political blinders, will be perceived as ―Guilty by Association
9. Democrats have certainly won, with little opposition from Republicans, the Battle of Ideas
10. American Community share the same traditional values with most mainstream Republicans and Conservatives however
11. This is the message Republicans should be sending; rather than engaging in awkward, half-hearted overtures that are oftentimes perceived as transparent and insincere
12. This bill, ushered by Republicans and Democrats from both houses of Congress, promises to reduce the nation‘s deficit by $56 billion over the next seven years, not to mention increasing revenues that, everything being equal, will further reduce deficits over that period
13. It is arguable that the passage of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts was the (final) straw that broke the (proverbial) camel‘s back although I‘m not so certain considering that a greater proportion of Republicans rather than Democrats supported these measures
14. Many Republicans, especially Northeastern Republicans, generally favored New Deal programs, Welfare and Civil Rights reforms
15. The only difference separating either political party was the notion that Republicans believed they could ―deliver the goods‖ more efficiently than Democrats
16. (Not exactly a match made in heaven!) Rockefeller Republicans, in particular, have never really warmed up to these apostatizing (sic) ―upstarts
17. In this respect most Moderate to Liberal Republicans vary little with their Democratic counterparts
18. ―Moderate‖ Republicans whose anachronistic ideas about the role of government and the people it purportedly serves has transformed their political platforms into a tireless repetition of recycled platitudes that no longer seem to meet modern requirements; especially those of working men and women
19. Bush is among a long line of Moderate/Liberal Republicans; a list that includes former presidents Nixon and Ford and (would) have arguably included former Senate Minority Leader Robert Dole had he too been elected president, who simply failed to grasp the fundamental importance of lower taxes and increased productivity as the primary drivers that promote economic prosperity
20. President Bush‘s flawed Immigration Reform Bill providing ―conditional‖ amnesty to 12 million illegal aliens must be reassuring to 1) (Moderate) Republicans who would consider its passage a political opportunity to place the party in better stead with Hispanic Voters and the Business Community, 2) Corporations seeking to attract Cheap(er) Labor, 3) Democrats who, for the same reasons indicated above, are uncomfortable with the idea of controlling our nation‘s borders at the risk of alienating a sizeable voting bloc and (who) would otherwise seize the moment, for purely political reasons, to challenge Republican proposals that (surprise!) ―don‘t go far enough,‖ 4) Multiculturalists and Internationalists likely to embrace such ―reforms‖ as a (positive) first step towards achieving their (respective) Universalist Agenda, and 5) Shakers of Western Culture who would seek its destruction at any cost for its own sake and who would therefore (also) consider such measures as an appropriate step in the ―right‖ direction
21. Republicans even complained he took their positions as his own
22. Liberals and (some) Moderate Republicans voicing their opposition over the outsourcing of jobs overseas and its dampening effect on the United States economy should give equal expression (as well) to Illegal Immigration that has similarly produced dire
23. New York State‘s political traditions did not prevent Conservatives like Ronald Regan and other National Republicans from (occasionally) carrying the State during their run for the presidency or statewide office
24. That many ran as Conservative Republicans on the campaign trail only to govern as Liberal Republicans or Democrats, which I suppose is one and the same, once they were elected, may partly explain the reason for the party‘s declining popularity
25. It is just a shame that instead so far all we have is corporate welfare for insurance companies, a plan designed by conservative Republicans
26. Even the great majority of conservatives and Republicans concede it was a failure
27. Republicans, on the other hand, generally appear awkward and ill at ease with a constituency that many party leaders privately consider, an embarrassment…
28. Buchanan loathed Lincoln, and he blamed the Republicans for much of the crisis
29. It is accurate to say that the great majority of American racists are Republicans
30. I am not convinced, however, that the party‘s (so-called) failure was due entirely to an absence of Will, although some Republicans have arguably abandoned the good fight over ―divisive‖ issues that many perceive might otherwise jeopardize their political standing among moderate or left-leaning voters, but rather to a concentration of judicial/political power vested in our nation‘s courts and among its political supporters who, until quite recently, enjoyed large majorities in both Houses of Congress
31. Obviously not all Republicans are racist
32. And even the many non-racist Republicans include many who are dismissive of the damage done by racism, and willing to pander to or at least tolerate the huge numbers of racists in their midst
33. How long will it take for Republicans to wise up to the fact that (all) the entitlement and discretionary spending in (all) the world will never earn them the gratitude of Democrats and that every spending initiative that they (Democrats) would have otherwise supported, were they in power, further invites criticism? President Bush, the man who would be loved by all, continues to set himself up as an easy target by his political opponents looking for every plausible excuse to discredit him
34. Reconstruction under the so called Radical Republicans and Grant built 4,400 Black schools
35. Republicans have only themselves to blame, however
36. ‘s blush in comparison! By degree, Republicans have abandoned their ―Contract with America‖
37. With the Republicans as a strong party to compete with the Democrats, the Know-Nothings went into a sharp decline
38. Alberto Gonzalez resigned in 2007, not for his role in torture nor another controversy over illegal spying, but for revelations he forced US Attorneys out of the Justice Department to replace them with Republicans
39. So called Radical Republicans were not radical at all by today's standards
40. It was Radical Republicans who fought President Johnson’s and former Confederates’ racism every step of the way and who pushed far more consistently than Grant
41. Southern racists switched to being Republicans
42. Republicans, once the party of Emancipation and Reconstruction, have openly welcomed racists ever since the 1960s, and deserve condemnation for that
43. Carter was also challenged in his own party's primary by Ted Kennedy, the leading liberal, and also by John Anderson, one of the last liberal Republicans, running in 1980 as an independent
44. Republicans, not wanting Obama to succeed anyway, concentrated on tax cuts and sabotaging unions, both guaranteed to worsen the economy
45. Republicans deliberately limited federal money to keep teaching jobs since teachers vote Democratic
46. Republicans also sent the Post Office into bankruptcy, forcing the funding of their pensions for 80 years, to try to break postal unions
47. The nation saw the surreal spectacle of Republicans and conservatives opposing a conservative Republican healthcare solution, simply because Obama agreed to it
48. It was largely the party of southern white racists, until the 1960s when these same racists almost all became Republicans
49. America's two parties may today be Republicans and Populists
50. Or if the Populists fail, our two parties may even be Republicans and Socialists